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Wednesday Sept. 5, 2012 Vol XII, Edition 16
TECH UNVEILINGS
NATION PAGE 5
IS ORGANIC FOOD
BETTER FOR YOU?
FOOD PAGE 17
GADGET MAKERS LOOK FOR EDGE IN HOLIDAY LINEUPS
Family Owned & Operated
Established: 1949
National debt tops $16 trillion
By Andrew Taylor
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON The Treasury
Department said Tuesday that the national
debt has topped $16 trillion, the result of
chronic government decits that have poured
more than $50,000 worth of red ink onto fed-
eral ledgers for every man, woman and child
in the United States.
The news was greeted with a round of press
releases from Barack Obamas GOP rivals,
who used the grim-but-expected news to crit-
icize the president for the governments scal
performance over his 3 1/2 years in ofce.
Obama has presided over four straight years
of trillion dollar-plus decits after inheriting a
weak economy from his predecessor, George
W. Bush.
We can no longer push off the tough deci-
sions until tomorrow, said No. 2 House
Republican Eric Cantor, R-Va. Its time to
address the serious scal challenges we face
and stop spending money we dont have.
Last summer, Cantor dropped out of a set of
budget talks hosted by Vice President Joe
Biden, citing the insistence of the White
House on tax increases to help close decits
that require the government to borrow 33
cents of every dollar it spends.
The spiraling debt means that lawmakers
and the eventual winner of the White House in
November will have to pass a law early next
year to raise the governments borrowing cap
from the current ceiling of $16.39 trillion.
Passing such legislation last year proved enor-
mously difcult and the nations credit rating
suffered.
Gop using grim-but-expected news to criticize president for governments fiscal performance
Prop. 31 would
shift state govt
Proponents say reform is needed but
opponents suggest it sets bar too low
By Sally Schilling
DAILY JOURNAL CORRESPONDENT
For the California voter, its easy to have an opinion on
straightforward issues like the death penalty, which is on the
November ballot as Proposition 34. But when it comes to com-
plex government reform measures, like Proposition 31, voters
can nd it challenging to gure out where they stand.
The writers of Proposition 31 say they intend to create a sys-
tem of greater accountability and efciency in the state budg-
et through a number of provisions.
According to the nonpartisan analysis of a state legislative
analyst, the proposition instates a two-year budget cycle, in
place of our annual cycle. In scal emergencies, it would give
the governor powers to make budget cuts across the board if
the Legislature fails to act. The proposition would also allocate
some state sales tax money to local governmental bodies
such as school districts and county health departments that
want to try new strategic action plans.
The proposition requires periodic performance reviews of
state and local programs. New state spending measures of
San Mateo not done with
Poplar interchange study
With one plan in the works,city still considers
options that would require property takings
By Bill Silverfarb
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
Despite the San Mateo City Council approving a remedy for
the dangerous intersection at the Poplar Avenue corridor with
Highway 101, the council directed staff last night to continue
studying a design option that calls for signicant property tak-
ings near Peninsula Avenue.
In March, the council directed staff to analyze the environ-
mental impacts of installing a median on Poplar Avenue,
called Option 2A, and nixed an idea to close the Poplar Avenue
off-ramp with Highway 101, called Option 6.
BILL SILVERFARB/DAILY JOURNAL
Bill Magoolaghan speaks at a press conference in San Bruno yesterday leading up to the second anniversary of the PG&E gas
pipeline explosion and re that killed eight and destroyed nearly 40 homes.He stands alongside Mayor Jim Ruane,Assemblyman
Jerry Hill, D-San Mateo, and other residents of the neighborhood including his wife and child. The Magoolaghans are now
living back in the neighborhood after their damaged home was remodeled.
By Bill Silverfarb
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
Victims of the San Bruno gas pipeline
explosion and re that left eight of their
neighbors dead nearly two years ago
stood alongside local and state lawmak-
ers yesterday urging Pacific Gas &
Electric to x its aging infrastructure
rather than focus on prots.
The anniversary of the tragedy is this
Sunday and Assemblyman Jerry Hill, D-
San Mateo, just sent three pieces of leg-
islation to Gov. Jerry Browns desk last
week that would restrict executive com-
pensation at utilities, require the utility
to adopt National Transportation Safety
Board recommendations and penalize a
utility for poor safety performance.
PG&E wants us to forget but we
wont forget, Hill said yesterday.
Hill, San Bruno Mayor Jim Ruane and
about a dozen residents of the Glenview
neighborhood stood in a spot yesterday
where a home once stood, one of 37
properties completely destroyed during
the re Sept. 9, 2010.
Neighborhood resident Bill
Magoolaghan and his family have
moved back into their home on
Claremont Drive after it suffered exten-
sive damage from the re.
Magoolaghan thanked Hill and other
lawmakers for stepping up to defend the
victims of the tragedy and said Hills
legislation could offer guideposts for
future safety standards.
PG&E is moving in the right direc-
tion but they have lost their way before,
Magoolaghan said at a morning press
conference.
He and his family have a settlement
hearing with PG&E in November and
Hill: PG&E wants us to forget
Lawmaker touts need for change as San Bruno fire anniversary nears
See HILL Page 18
See DEBT, Page 20
See POPLAR, Page 18
See PROP. 31, Page 20
HILLSDALE OPENS
SEASON WITH WIN
SPORTS PAGE 11
FOR THE RECORD 2 Wednesday Sept. 5, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
The San Mateo Daily Journal
800 S. Claremont St., Suite 210, San Mateo, CA 94402
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Actor Michael
Keaton is 61.
This Day in History
Thought for the Day
1972
Terrorism struck the Munich Olympics
as members of the Palestinian group
Black September attacked the Israeli
delegation; 11 Israelis, ve guerrillas
and a police ofcer were killed in the
resulting siege.
Ideas are one thing, and
what happens is another.
John Cage (1912-1992)
Comedian-actor
Bob Newhart is 83.
Actress Rose
McGowan is 39.
Birthdays
REUTERS
A man in costume takes a drink during the annual West Indian Day parade in Brooklyn,, N.Y.
Wednesday: Mostly cloudy. Patchy fog in
the morning. A slight chance of thunder-
storms. Highs in the 60s to lower 70s.
Northwest winds 5 to 10 mph.
Wednesday night: Mostly cloudy. A slight
chance of thunderstorms. Patchy fog after
midnight. Lows in the lower 50s. West
winds 5 to 10 mph.
Thursday: Mostly cloudy. A slight chance of thunderstorms.
Highs in the mid 60s to lower 70s. West winds 5 to 10 mph.
Chance of thunderstorms 20 percent.
Thursday night: Partly cloudy in the evening then becoming
mostly cloudy. Patchy fog after midnight. Lows in the lower
50s. Northwest winds 5 to 10 mph.
Friday: Mostly cloudy in the morning then becoming partly
cloudy. Patchy fog. Highs in the 60s.
Local Weather Forecast
Lotto
The Daily Derby race winners are No. 02 Lucky
Star in rst place; No.07 Eureka in second place;
and No. 04 Big Ben in third place.The race time
was clocked at 1:44.55.
(Answers tomorrow)
MOTOR ISSUE SKINNY TEACUP
Yesterdays
Jumbles:
Answer: The new broker was this
STOCKY
Now arrange the circled letters
to form the surprise answer, as
suggested by the above cartoon.
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square,
to form four ordinary words.
XSTIH
MULER
NIHLCC
GEREDE
2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
All Rights Reserved.
F
in
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Print answer here:
3 4 7
16 32 39 41 53 16
Mega number
Sept. 4 Mega Millions
2 8 24 29 37
Fantasy Five
Daily three midday
1 2 9 2
Daily Four
5 3 0
Daily three evening
In 1774, the first Continental Congress assembled in
Philadelphia.
In 1793, the Reign of Terror began during the French
Revolution as the National Convention instituted harsh meas-
ures to repress counter-revolutionary activities.
In 1836, Sam Houston was elected president of the Republic of
Texas.
In 1912, American avant-garde composer John Cage was born
in Los Angeles.
In 1914, the First Battle of the Marne, resulting in a French-
British victory over Germany, began during World War I.
In 1939, four days after war had broken out in Europe,
President Franklin D. Roosevelt issued a proclamation declar-
ing U.S. neutrality in the conict.
In 1945, Japanese-American Iva Toguri DAquino, suspected
of being wartime broadcaster Tokyo Rose, was arrested in
Yokohama. (DAquino was later convicted of treason and
served six years in prison; she was pardoned in 1977 by
President Gerald R. Ford.)
In 1957, the novel On the Road, by Jack Kerouac, was rst
published by Viking Press.
In 1961, President John F. Kennedy signed legislation making
aircraft hijackings a federal crime.
In 1975, President Gerald R. Ford escaped an attempt on his
life by Lynette Squeaky Fromme, a disciple of Charles
Manson, in Sacramento.
In 1986, four hijackers who had seized a Pan Am jumbo jet on
the ground in Karachi, Pakistan, opened re when the lights
inside the plane failed; a total of 22 people were killed in the
hijacking.
Former Federal Reserve Board chairman Paul A. Volcker is 85.
Actress-singer Carol Lawrence is 80. Actor William Devane is
73. Actor George Lazenby is 73. Actress Raquel Welch is 72.
Movie director Werner Herzog is 70. Singer Al Stewart is 67.
Actor-director Dennis Dugan is 66. College Football Hall of
Famer Jerry LeVias is 66. Singer Loudon Wainwright III is 66.
Cathy cartoonist Cathy Guisewite is 62. Country musician
Jamie Oldaker (The Tractors) is 61. Actress Debbie Turner-
Larson (Film: Marta in The Sound of Music) is 56. Actress
Kristian Alfonso is 49. Rhythm-and-blues singer Terry Ellis is
49. Rock musician Brad Wilk is 44.
The slogan for Ivory Soap in 1891 was
It floats! During the soap making
process, air is whipped into the soap so
it is lighter than water, hence, it oats.
***
A person who studies sh is called an
ichthyologist.
***
The card game Canasta uses 108 cards
two packs of cards plus four jokers.
Pinochle uses 48 cards two packs of
cards, but cards lower than nine are not
used.
***
The Dodge Viper sports coupe goes
from zero to 60 mph in 3.9 seconds. The
price tag is $86,995. The Maserati
Coupe costs a little less but goes a little
slower. It costs $79,900 and goes from
zero to 60 in 4.8 seconds.
***
A tightrope walker is called a funambu-
list.
***
Variants of the Cinderella fairy tale have
been told for more than 1000 years. In
some early versions of the story, there is
no fairy godmother. Cinderellas dress
and shoes comes from a tree that grows
on her mothers grave.
***
An average avocado tree produces about
120 avocados annually.
***
The rst sentence of the Dickens (1812-
1870) novel A Tale of Two Cities
(1859) is It was the best of times, it was
the worst of times. Do you know what
era the sentence refers to? Can you name
the two cities? See answer at end.
***
The rst ads for SPAM, the miracle
meat in a can, were done by Gracie
Allen (1895-1964) and George Burns
(1896-1996) on their hit radio show in
the 1950s.
***
During the 1975 Western Open golf
tournament in Chicago, professional
golfer Lee Trevino (born 1939) was
struck by lightning.
***
King Henry VIII (1491-1547), ruler of
England from 1509 to 1547, was mar-
ried six times. He married his rst wife,
Catherine of Aragon (1485-1526), in
1509. His sixth wife was Catherine Parr
(1512-1548) whom he married in 1543.
***
The tonophone was the precursor to the
jukebox. It was the rst coin-operated
piano, invented in 1896.
***
Scripps National Spelling Bee was rst
held in 1925. The competition is open to
students under 16 years of age. The pur-
pose of the spelling bee is to help stu-
dents improve their spelling, increase
their vocabularies and develop correct
English usage.
***
The name Velcro is derived from the rst
syllables of the words velvet and cro-
chet.
***
Detective Lt. Mike Stone, played by
Karl Malden (1912-2009), and his part-
ner Inspector Steve Keller, played by
Michael Douglas (born 1944), solved
crimes together on the television police
drama The Streets of San Francisco
(1972-1977). The detective always
called his much younger partner buddy
boy.
***
Answer: The sentence refers to the
French Revolution. The two cities named
in the title are London and Paris. The
last line in the novel is It is a far, far
better thing that I do, than I have ever
done; it is a far, far better rest that I go
to than I have ever known.
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 344-
5200 ext. 114.
14 17 31 42 47 13
Mega number
Sept. 1 Super Lotto Plus
3
Wednesday Sept. 5, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
LOCAL
SAN CARLOS
Hit and run. A hit and run was reported on the
1300 block of Eaton Avenue before 6:59 p.m.
on Tuesday, Aug. 28.
Vandalism. Vandalism was reported on the
1100 block of Old County Road before 6:11
a.m. on Tuesday, Aug, 28.
DUI. A 30-year-old man was arrested and
charged with a DUI on the 1100 block of El
Camino Real before 3:03 a.m. on Sunday,
Aug. 26.
Burglary. A burglary occurred on the 800
block of Crestview Drive before 7:06 p.m. on
Friday, Aug. 24.
MENLO PARK
Battery. Someone was battered during an
attempted robbery at the intersection of Pierce
Road and Hollyburne Avenue before 9:38 a.m.
Wednesday, Aug. 29.
Burglary. A home was entered through an
open window and money was stolen on the
1100 block of University Drive before 5:16
p.m. Monday, Aug. 20.
SAN MATEO
Fraud. A man and a woman had two fake 100
dollar bills at the Hillsdale Shopping Center
before 3:52 p.m. Monday, Sept. 3.
Threat. Someone reported their 15-year-old
was being bullied and threatened via text mes-
sages and the Internet on the 1600 block of
Marina Court before 11:42 a.m. Monday, Sept.
3.
Stolen vehicle. A Palo Alto Plumbing van was
stolen on the 1100 block of Peninsula Avenue
before 9:39 a.m. Monday, Sept. 3.
Police reports
Dirty pool
A woman reported a man had approached
her daughter while she was walking the
dog and he asked if she wanted to play
pool on the rst block of West 38th
Avenue in San Mateo before 12:58 p.m.
Saturday, Sept. 1.
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF REPORT
The robbery suspect whom authorities
believe stabbed himself in the abdomen twice
after a high-speed chase from Burlingame
police pleaded not guilty yesterday to felony
robbery with a knife and evading police.
Daniel Thomas Cassidy, 24, of Burlingame,
is also charged with a felony count of hit and
run and a misdemeanor count of resisting
arrest in the Aug. 28 encounter. Cassidy
pleaded not guilty to all charges and waived
his right to a speedy trial. He returns to court
Sept. 27 for a preliminary hearing on the evi-
dence and meanwhile remains in custody in
lieu of $100,000 bail.
The string of incidents began just before 9
p.m. when police say
Cassidy approached a
woman at the ATM on
1145 Broadway and
flashed a large folding
knife. He allegedly
ordered her to withdraw
$100 three times and ed
after taking the money. A
Burlingame ofcer in the
area spotted Cassidy get-
ting into a pickup truck a block from the bank
and take off, according to police. The ofcer
pursued him at speeds of 60 mph in 35 and 25
mph zones until he lost control, went around a
turn and crashed into an occupied car. The
passenger was injured but not seriously,
according to the District Attorneys Ofce.
Cassidy continued his flight into
Hillsborough where he again lost control and
crashed into vegetation and ivy near the
Burlingame/Hillsborough border. The ofcer
shot a Taser twice at Cassidy as he ran on foot
but he was not subdued. The ofcer nally got
Cassidy cuffed in the front yard of a Forrest
View Avenue home and noticed he had cut
himself in several places with the knife,
including two stab wounds to the abdomen,
prosecutors said.
He was taken to the hospital for a psychi-
atric hold before being released and booked
into county jail.
ATM robbery suspect pleads not guilty
Daniel Cassidy
By Michelle Durand
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
An 18-year-old Foster City man pleaded not
guilty yesterday to peeping into girls bedrooms
on multiple occasions and in one case, accord-
ing to prosecutors, actually masturbating on a
teenage girl as she slept.
Justin Scott Shing was arrested Aug. 25 by
Foster City on the 700 block of Matsonia Drive
after the father of a 9-year-old girl spotted him
inside her bedroom at 3 a.m. staring at the
empty bed. Authorities say in May Shing also
looked in the window of a 17-year-old neighbor
girl at 2 a.m. On Aug. 14, he allegedly entered
the same girls bedroom
after midnight as she slept,
pulled back her comforter
and masturbated over her.
Foster City police report-
ed Shing admitted entering
the homes.
Prosecutors charged
Shing with residential bur-
glary, peeping, sexual bat-
tery and possession of bur-
glary tools. On Tuesday,
Shing pleaded not guilty to all charges and
waived his right to a speedy prosecution. He
returns to court Sept. 18 to set a preliminary
hearing. Meanwhile, he remains in custody and
the court ordered he have no contact with any of
the alleged victims.
Shing is a well-liked and well-regarded hon-
ors students who understands the seriousness of
the charges and will faithfully honor his
responsibilities to the court, defense attorney
Hugo Torbet said in a prepared statement.
Torbet said he and his client hope those with
an interest in the case will respect the judicial
process and not try the case in the media.
Anyone with information regarding the inves-
tigation should contact Foster City police at
286-3321. Information can be left anonymously
at 286-3323.
City unveils online economic tool
Redwood City has unveiled a new online
tool, the economic indicators dashboard,
offering information on the citys current con-
ditions like sales tax data and the value of
building permits issued.
The dashboard also includes at-a-glance
information such as commercial building data
and links, sales tax by business segments and
districts, top sales tax generators, top private
employers and economic news related to
Redwood City.
The dashboard is continually updated as
new and more information is available.
This dashboard is so straightforward and
user-friendly yet it provides a great deal of valu-
able information that businesses will nd indis-
pensable, said City Manager Bob Bell in a pre-
pared announcement of the new online feature.
Vice Mayor Jeff Gee and councilmembers
Rosanne Foust and Jeff Ira, both members of the
mayors economic development subcommittee,
helped create the dashboard and its web pages.
The site also includes a feedback page for users
to tell the city what other kinds of information
theyd like to access and what new businesses
would be a valuable addition to the city. The
dashboard is available on the citys website at
www.redwoodcity.org/eddashboard
Teen pleads not guilty to peeping at girls
Justin Shing
Local brief
4
Wednesday Sept. 5, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
Amy Brooks Colin Flynn Hal Coehlo
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LOCAL/NATION
Kitchen fire damages home
A kitchen re damaged a home in Pacica
on Monday morning, according to the North
County Fire Authority.
Fireghters responded to reports of re at a
two-story house in the 200 block of
Edgewood Drive at about 11:55 a.m., re
authority spokesman Matt Lucett said.
Arriving units saw smoke coming out of the
house and found the fire burning in the
kitchen.
All of the homes occupants were able to
exit safely, and the re which had spread to
an attic space was brought under control in
about two hours.
One resident was treated at the scene for
chest pain and was taken to a hospital for fur-
ther observation, Lucett said.
Investigators believe the blaze started when
food was left cooking unattended in the
kitchen.
San Bruno chamber names new chief
Jamie Monozon was named the new execu-
tive director and CEO of
the San Bruno Chamber
of Commerce, it was
announced Tuesday.
Monozon brings to the
chamber more than 27
years experience in busi-
ness ownership, executive
level leadership, market-
ing and sales manage-
ment, community involve-
ment, fundraising and
public relations, according to a press release
by the chamber.
She has lived in San Bruno for 20 years and
is raising two children with her husband
Brian, according to the chamber.
CHP officer critically
wounded in highway shooting
A California Highway Patrol ofcer was in
critical condition and a suspect was dead after
a Tuesday morning rush hour shootout on
Interstate 680 near Walnut Creek, authorities
said.
The shooting prompted the closure of the
highway in both directions as trafc came to a
standstill. The incident occurred shortly
before 8:30 a.m. after the male ofcer con-
ducted a trafc stop, CHP and Contra Costa
County sheriffs ofcials said.
Local briefs
U.S. Rep. Jackie Speier, D-San Mateo, announced her
endorsement of Warren Slocum for the District Four super-
visorial seat currently held by Supervisor Rose Jacobs
Gibson, who is being termed out.
Slocum is running against Shelly Masur in the Nov. 6 elec-
tion.
By Anick Jesdanun
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK Think of it as the opening
act at a concert: Nokia, Motorola and Amazon
are unveiling new mobile devices this week
before attention turns to a new iPhone and
possibly a smaller iPad from Apple.
Makers of consumer electronics are refresh-
ing their products for the holiday shopping
season. Apples rivals are hoping that a head
start on the buzz will translate into stronger
sales. Nokia and Microsoft, in particular, are
trying to generate interest in a new Windows
operating system out next month.
Apple dominates the market for tablet com-
puters. Seven out of every 10 tablets shipped
in the second quarter were iPads, according to
research rm IHS iSuppli. Rivals have been
trying to compete with smaller, cheaper mod-
els such as the Kindle Fire, which Amazon
is expected to update on Thursday. Now,
theres speculation that Apple will be coming
out with a smaller iPad as well.
Sales of Apples iPhones are still strong,
though the company lost the lead in smart-
phones to Samsung this year. Samsung
Electronics Co. beneted from having its
Galaxy S III out in the U.S. in June, while
Apple was still selling an iPhone model
released last October. A new iPhone is expect-
ed as early as this month, allowing Apple to
recapture the attention and the revenue.
Heres a look at what to expect:
NEW IPHONE:
Apple Inc. has been coming out with a new
iPhone each year, and thats likely to continue.
The new model is expected to work with
fourth-generation, or 4G, cellular networks
that phone companies have been building.
That capability is something the S III and
many other iPhone rivals already have. A big-
ger iPhone screen is also possible. Apple said
Tuesday that it will host an event in San
Francisco next Wednesday. The topic wasnt
disclosed, but the email invitation contains a
shadow in the shape of a 5 a sign that the
iPhone 5 is coming. Sales usually begin a
week or two after such an announcement. One
thing is known: Apple plans to update its
phone software this fall and will ditch
Googles mapping service for its own.
SMALLER IPAD:
Apple has done well selling its full-sized
tablet computer, which has a screen that meas-
ures nearly 10 inches diagonally. Many com-
panies have tried to come out with iPad alter-
natives, but the ones that have had moderate
success have tended to be those with smaller,
7-inch screens and lower price tags. Theres a
belief that Apple will come out with mini iPad
this fall possibly with a 7.85-inch screen
to compete with those competitors. Its not as
much a certainty as a new iPhone, though.
Apple hasnt said anything about its plans.
REKINDLING THE FIRE:
Amazon.com Inc.s 7-inch Kindle Fire is
one of the smaller tablets with decent sales.
Last week, Amazon said it has sold out of the
Kindle Fire, a sign that it had retooled its pro-
duction lines for a successor. Amazon has a
major event planned in Santa Monica, Calif.,
on Thursday. Amazon hasnt said anything
about what it will say, but its expected to
announce a new Kindle Fire and possibly
other Kindle e-readers, too. Barnes and Noble
Inc., which makes the 7-inch Nook Tablet,
may have an update this fall as well.
MOTOROLAS RETURN:
Though its a pioneer in the cellphone
industry, Motorola hasnt had a hit since the
Razr phone came out in 2004. Under new
owner Google Inc., Motorola Mobility is try-
ing to change that. It has scheduled an event in
New York on Wednesday. No further details
were available. It could be a new phone or a
new tablet running Googles Android operat-
ing system. Either way, it will be the rst
Motorola product announcement since
Google bought the company for $12.4 billion
in May. Google, meanwhile, continues to sell
a 7-inch Android tablet, the Nexus 7, made in
partnership with AsusTek Computer Inc.
CALLING ON WINDOWS:
Microsoft Corp. will release a new version
of the Windows operating system on Oct. 26,
one thats designed to work on both tradition-
al computers and tablet devices. A new ver-
sion of the Windows Phone system is coming
out, too. Once-dominant phone maker Nokia
Corp. has been struggling in the shadow of
Apple, and its counting on the new Windows
system for a revival. Nokia and Microsoft
have jointly scheduled an announcement in
New York on Wednesday. Its likely on new
Windows phones under Nokias Lumia brand.
SURFACE:
Microsoft plans its own tablet computer,
too. Its new territory for Microsoft, which
typically leaves it to others to make devices
using its software. Now, it will be competing
against its partners. The Surface tablet will
come in two versions, both with 10.6-inch
screens, slightly larger than the iPads. One
model will run on phone-style chips, just like
the iPad, and will be sold for a similar price. A
heavier, more expensive version will run on
Intel chips and be capable of running standard
Windows applications. The Surface will go on
sale on Oct. 26.
Gadget makers look for
edge in holiday lineups
REUTERS
Nokia and Microsoft are expected to take the
wraps off their most powerful smartphone
ever today, escalating their assault on the
market dominated by Apple and Google.
Jamie
Monozon
6
Wednesday Sept. 5, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
NATION
By David Espo and Matthew Daly
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
CHARLOTTE, N.C. Democrats
ridiculed Republican Mitt Romney as a mil-
lionaire candidate for president who quite
simply doesnt get it and worse on Tuesday,
opening night of a national convention aimed
at propelling Barack Obama to re-election
despite high unemployment and national eco-
nomic distress.
Obama knows better than anyone theres
more hard work to do to x the sputtering
economy, said San Antonio Mayor Julian
Castro, the convention keynote speaker, shar-
ing the prime-time spotlight with rst lady
Michelle Obama.
Delegates cheered as a parade of speakers
extolled Obamas support for abortion rights
and gay marriage, for consumer protections
enacted under his signature health care law
and for the auto industry bailout he won from
Congress in his rst year in ofce.
He said hed take out bin Laden, and with
our great SEAL team, he did, declared for-
mer Virginia Gov. Tim Kaine in one of sever-
al references to the mili-
tary raid that ended the
life of the terrorist master-
mind behind the attacks of
Sept. 11, 2001.
The crowd cheered even
louder when the subject
turned dismissively
to Romney.
If Mitt was Santa
Claus, hed re the rein-
deer and outsource the elves, former Ohio
Gov. Ted Strickland said in a biting speech.
After the deep recession, Castro said in
excerpts released in advance of his speech, the
nation is making progress despite incredible
odds and united Republican opposition.
He declared that 4.5 million jobs have been
created since the president took ofce
though that number refers only to private sec-
tor employment gains over the past 29 months
and leaves out state and local government jobs
that continue to disappear each month.
Obama was back home in the White House
after a campaign appearance in Virginia earli-
er in the day. He said hed be watching on tel-
evision when his wife spoke.
Democrats: Romney just doesnt get it
By Jim Kuhnhenn
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
CHARLOTTE, N.C. The nations job-
less loom over President Barack Obamas
presidential campaign. At no point will that
association be more evident than Friday when
the government reveals the nations most
recent unemployment numbers just hours after
Obama wraps up his convention pitch and sets
off on a tour of critical swing states.
No doubt, the economy has dened the
presidential race. Voters say its their top issue
and presidential challenger Mitt Romney has
made it his central theme as he prosecutes his
case against Obama. But the economy has also
provided little variation. It has been marked by
sluggish growth and a jobs at line that has
done little to alter the dynamics of the presi-
dential contest.
The most recent consensus from economists
is that the economy in August added a net of
135,000 jobs that would be down from the
163,000 added in July, but would likely keep
the unemployment rate at 8.3 percent for
another month.
By the current economys standards, thats
the kind of middling report that political ana-
lysts say wont change what has been a
remarkably tight presidential contest.
If there were 300,000 jobs created in
August, that would be a big boost we
would shout and holler, said former
Democratic Party Chairman Don Fowler. If it
were zero it would be just the opposite. The
Republicans would rejoice. If its 100,000, it
will be a continuation of the kind of not-too-
optimistic view and it would have very little
result on the campaign.
Obama looks to navigate
through sluggish economy
By Jack Gillum and Thomas Beaumont
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON Mitt Romneys presi-
dential campaign has raised at least $100 mil-
lion in August for the third consecutive
month, building upon a fundraising prowess
that has allowed him to outraise President
Barack Obama so far this summer, the
Associated Press has learned.
The early numbers, which include money
raised by the national Republican Party, will
be publicly released next week. They were
described by two people familiar with the g-
ures who spoke on condition of anonymity
because they were not authorized to share
internal campaign matters.
The numbers were revealed on the rst day
of the Democratic National Convention in
Charlotte, N.C., where delegates will nomi-
nate Obama for a second term. Federal
records show that Romney and the GOP have
pulled in more cash than Obamas re-election
effort in May, June and July, including money
collected by the Democratic Party.
It is usually difcult for a challenger to
raise more money than an incumbent holding
a major elective ofce, particularly in a presi-
dential race.
The gures exclude tens of millions of dol-
lars that outside super political action com-
mittees are pouring into the race to help
Romney. Those groups have been largely
bankrolled by wealthy Americans, thanks to
changes in recent years to campaign-nance
regulations.
Romney raised $100Min August
REUTERS
Mitt Romney speaks at a campaign rally in Cincinnati, Ohio.
Barack Obama
STATE/NATION 7
Wednesday Sept. 5, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
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Bankruptcy judge throws
out AMR pilots contract
NEW YORK American Airlines took a
major step toward emerging from bankruptcy
Tuesday, when a federal judge threw out its
pilots union contract.
The airlines management has already nego-
tiated concessions from its ight attendants,
maintenance workers and other unionized
employees. The decision by Judge Sean H.
Lane will now let the Fort Worth-Texas airline
lower its pilot payroll.
The move will quicken Americans emer-
gence from Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection,
either as a stand-alone airline or potentially
merged with US Airways Group Inc.
The judge rejected the unions contention
that American is doing much better nancial-
ly than when it entered bankruptcy protection
and didnt need to void the contract.
Judge Lanes ruling is very important
because it will allow us to implement the
changes that are necessary for our successful
restructuring, American Airlines spokesman
Bruce Hicks said.
Why does Social
Security need 174,000 bullets?
WASHINGTON It didnt take long for
the Internet to start buzzing with conspiracy
theories after the Social Security
Administration posted a notice that it was pur-
chasing 174,000 hollow-point bullets.
Why is the agency that provides benets to
retirees, disabled workers, widows and chil-
dren stockpiling ammunition? Whom are they
going to use it on?
Its not outlandish to suggest that the
Social Security Administration is purchasing
the bullets as part of preparations for civil
unrest, the website Infowars.com said.
Another website, The Daily Caller, said the
bullets must be for use against American citi-
zens, since the SSA has never been used
overseas to help foreign countries maintain
control of their citizens.
The clamor became such a distraction for
the agency that it dedicated a website to
explaining the purchase.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SACRAMENTO The number of hate
crimes reported in California dropped 4 per-
cent last year, according to a report released
Tuesday by the state attorney generals ofce.
There were 1,060 hate crimes reported in
2011, down from 1,107 in 2010.
Nearly six in 10 were based on the victims
race, ethnicity or national origin. The 587
crimes reported in 2011 were 26 fewer than
the previous year.
Nearly a third were aimed at blacks.
Crimes against Hispanics have dropped
nearly 44 percent in the last 10 years,
despite a bump in 2010 that experts attrib-
uted to the national debate over an Arizona
law targeting illegal immigrants.
Hate crimes based on sexual orientation
accounted for 23 percent of the overall total in
2011, though reports dropped 12.5 percent to
244.
Nearly 17 percent of hate crimes were based
on religion. Religion-based crimes remained
relatively steady from the year before, with
about two-thirds targeting Jews.
Attorney General Harris praised the
decrease in overall hate crime reports from
local law enforcement to her ofce.
There is no place in our inclusive Golden
State for hate crimes and their destruction of
what makes California so special, she said in
a news release accompanying the report.
State hate crime reports
drop by 4 percent in 2011
Around the nation
NATION/WORLD 8
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By Olga R. Rogriguez
and Michael Weissenstein
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
MEXICO CITY High-ranking
Mexican security ofcials are por-
traying the shooting of two CIA
agents by Mexican federal police as
a well-intentioned mishap rather
than a deliberate attack.
A series of military and law-
enforcement ofcials have empha-
sized in public statements over the
last three days that the group of 12
federal police was investigating a
kidnapping when they encountered
the two U.S. agents and a Mexican
marine captain and opened re on
their armored sport-utility vehicle.
U.S. and Mexican statements
released on the day of the shooting
contained few details, excluding
mention of the kidnapping probe. As
a result, they left open the possibili-
ty that it could have been a deliber-
ate attack on the Americans by cor-
rupt ofcers or a gross error by well-
intentioned but trigger-happy police
conducting legitimate work in a dan-
gerous rural area outside the city of
Cuernavaca.
Mexican ofcials declined to elab-
orate for more than a week after the
shooting, but now appear to be try-
ing to be making a case for the acci-
dental scenario.
Navy Secretary Mariano
Francisco Saynez told reporters after
President Felipe Calderons last
state-of-the-union address on
Monday that the attack was an error
and not a malicious act. The state-
ment carried particular signicance
coming from the highest-ranking
officer in the navy, the military
branch that includes the marines.
Interior Minister Alejandro Poire
said Tuesday that federal police of-
cials were investigating a kidnapping
that had taken place a day earlier
near the scene of the shooting. He
wouldnt give any other details
Tuesday out of respect for the kid-
napping victim.
Mexico: Attack on U.S.
embassy car anaccident
By Phil Couvrette
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
MONTREAL People in
Quebec weighed returning a sepa-
ratist party to power as they voted
Tuesday in the French-speaking
province, which could edge toward
another referendum to break away
from Canada if the Parti Quebecois
ends nearly a decade of Liberal rule
as expected.
Liberal leader Jean Charest, who
has headed Quebec for nearly a
decade, has consistently trailed in
the polls to Pauline Marois Parti
Quebecois since he called an early
election on Aug. 1. But most polls
indicate Marois who could
become the provinces rst female
premier will not have enough
votes to obtain a majority of the
seats in the Quebec Assembly,
undermining efforts to quickly hold
a referendum on separation.
Quebec has held two referendums
to split from Canada, in 1980 and
1995, the last narrowly rejecting
independence.
Polls show theres little appetite
for a new referendum and Marois
herself has left much uncertainty
about if and when one would be held
under a PQ government. A recent
poll showed support for independ-
ence under 30 percent, but analysts
say voters are weary of the Liberals
after three terms in ofce.
Quebec separatist party
may be returning to power
By Cain Burdeau
and Stacey Plaisance
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
LAPLACE, La. At the urging
of residents who have long felt for-
gotten in the shadow of more dense-
ly populated New Orleans, the Army
Corps of Engineers says it will look
into whether the citys fortified
defenses pushed oodwaters pro-
voked by Hurricane Isaac into outly-
ing areas.
However, the Corps has said it is
unlikely scientic analysis will con-
rm that theory, suggested not only
by locals, but by some of the states
most powerful politicians. Instead,
weather experts say a unique set of
circumstances about the storm
not the oodwalls surrounding the
New Orleans metro area had
more to do with ooding neighbor-
hoods that in recent years have never
been under water because of storm
surge.
Isaac was a large, slow-moving
storm that wobbled across the states
coast for about two and a half days,
pumping water into back bays and
lakes and leaving thousands of resi-
dents under water outside the mas-
sive levee system protecting metro-
politan New Orleans. It was blamed
for seven deaths and damaged thou-
sands of homes on the Gulf Coast.
The Corps study was prompted
by the suggestion that Isaacs surge
bounced off the levees and ood-
gates built since Hurricane Katrina
in 2005 and walloped communities
outside the citys ramparts.
Blaming the Army Corps of
Engineers is nothing new in southern
Louisiana, a region that is both
dependent on the Corps and by
instinct distrustful of an agency that
wields immense power in this world
of harbors, wetlands, rivers and
lakes, all of which fall under the
agencys jurisdiction.
The Corps was roundly criticized
after Hurricane Katrina, which
pushed in enough water to break
through the levees that had sur-
rounded New Orleans. Much of the
city was left under water, and since
then the government has spent mil-
lions rebuilding the system of ood-
walls protecting the metro area.
In Louisiana, residents
blame levees for floods
REUTERS
Plaquemines Parish resident Angela Serpas reacts after seeing her ooded home for the rst time following
Hurricane Isaac, as her daughter Lainy takes pictures, in Braithwaite, La.
OPINION 9
Wednesday Sept. 5, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
Stop whining
Editor,
So you paid more taxes than Mitt
Romney and youre unhappy with
that. Did Romney follow the tax
code? Yes. Did he do anything illegal
or break the law? No. Has he been
arrested by the IRS? No. How did
your friends in Washington (who
probably do the same thing) let him
get away with this? Must be the tax
code. Meanwhile, you go on Amazon
to buy merchandise to avoid paying
tax. Whats with that? Sounds like
there were opportunities for all to
avoid taxes, but just on a different
scale.
Rick Zobelein
San Mateo
More high-speed rail
Editor,
What part of wasting billions of tax-
payers money do the California vot-
ers and politicians not understand?
Amtraks recent proposal to build a
high-speed rail network between
Boston and Washington gets a $151
billion price tag as reported in Time
Magazine this week. And that is just a
proposal. Just imagine how much this
project will really end up costing.
Then, compare it with Californias
high-speed rail and you know why we
are in deep trouble. I hope the new
federal government will just stop the
funding on Mitt Romneys first day in
the White House with the same
Montblanc pen he uses to sign off on
the Keystone pipeline.
Harry Roussard
Foster City
Fixing government
Editor,
I have finally found a letter by Tony
Favero (Proposition 37 in the Sept.
3 edition of the Daily Journal) that I
actually agree with. Hes spot on in
his assessment of how things work at
the Food and Drug Administration.
They tend to be captives of the drug
and pharmaceutical industries they are
supposed to regulate. How do we fix
it, Tony? Certainly not by abolishing
the agency and leaving us to the ten-
der mercies of corporate America.
That might be the solution of the bil-
lionaire Koch brothers and their bud-
dies. We do need to institute a rigor-
ous regime of ethics and outlaw (yes,
we need laws by government, Tony)
the revolving door where conflicts of
interest are all but guaranteed.
Democracy requires constant mainte-
nance as greed never sleeps nor will it
ever. Its not rocket science, but com-
mon sense.
Several things need to be pushed
for. Money out of politics, overturn
Citizens United Supreme Court deci-
sion (see MovetoAmend.org), reform
the abused Senate filibuster, among
several others. What we dont need is
fixation on the debt during a recession
and giving billionaires more welfare
checks. Oh, and shrinking the biggest
money pit of all in government, the
military-industrial complex.
Perhaps its time to unite all major
players at the United Nations and
institute a ban on Swiss style bank
accounts where anonymity is used to
simply dodge taxes and launder cash.
I bet even George Soros might buy
into that one. That sounds like more
government regulation not less Tony,
whadayathink?
Mike Caggiano
San Mateo
Letters to the editor
T
he people of San Mateo
County are the beneciary of
two high-quality candidates to
ll the area seven seat of Memo
Morantes on the Board of Education.
Jo-Ann Sockolov Byrne and Joe Ross
are both dedicated citizens who bring
much to the table.
However, Ross has an edge in his
ideas, history of innovation and ability
to be immediately up to speed on the
divergent issues facing the county
Board of Education.
That board often ies under the radar
as its purview is dened by its support
role and limited oversight. The board is
often one of last resort in that it over-
sees community and court schools,
offers assistance to districts in distress
and decides intradistrict transfers. Day-
to-day operations of this countys
schools is left to individual districts but
the board offers support, ideas and the
ability to see the larger picture. It also
works in tandem with an elected county
superintendent, who receives her orders
from the general population when there
is an election. The current superintend-
ent, Anne Campbell, seems to be work-
ing on all cylinders with a wide array
of initiatives. One of those is the con-
cept of offering assistance to districts
looking to share services, and the mem-
bers of the board must be willing par-
ticipants in that concept. Both Ross and
Sockolov Byrne are open to ways in
which local school districts can share
services, whether it be in food services,
operations or nances.
Technology, and its role in the class-
room, is also a path in which the Board
of Education can take a lead. Ross
prefers the board and the Ofce of
Education take the lead in evaluating
technology and determine what might
have the most utility in the classroom
saving the countys myriad school
districts from the individual heavy lift-
ing such an endeavor may require. Ross
is also a strong proponent of making
students complete the requirements to
apply to a state college or university a
standard for graduation. The board has
no direct jurisdiction of such a man-
date, but it can ask for the conversation
to begin. He also is a big proponent of
increasing staff in the classroom
through additional student teachers,
which would serve an extra purpose of
preparing those student teachers for
becoming rst-year teachers. Thats a
big idea, but one in which most every-
one who cares about education and stu-
dent-teacher ratios can get behind.
As executive director of Citizen
Schools, an education nonprot that
seeks to extend learning time for mid-
dle-school students and better prepare
them for high school, college and a
career, he understands the need to
ensure education on all levels does not
fall short. By linking the best ideas
from Silicon Valley and allowing more
opportunities for advancement for both
students and teachers, Ross has found
an elected ofce in which he can put
his life work into more specic action.
Sockolov Byrne is also an engaged
candidate with a breadth of public serv-
ice and private experience. We hope she
stays involved and lends her voice to
the conversation. However, Ross gets
the edge for his experience and ideas.
The San Mateo County Ofce of
Education has always had an opportuni-
ty to offer its support to local school
districts. Through Ross, it can elevate
its responsibility into a leadership role
in creating new connections that can
only benet our districts, our schools,
our administrators, our teachers and our
students.
Ross for Board of Education
Ready or not?
S
chools have taught and graded a kaleidoscope
of individual brains by a single program, a single
set of criteria. They have rewarded and condi-
tioned some skills to the exclusion of others, failing those
whose gifts are not in the cultures most-wanted list, thus con-
vincing them for life that they are unworthy. Marilyn
Ferguson, The Aquarian
Conspiracy.
If we grew up in a fairly
supportive family, when
was the rst time we found
out whether we measured
up to others, whether we
could be proud of our abili-
ties, our personality and
ourselves, or whether we
fell short? It was when we
started school. As we
became regular students, if
we did well because learn-
ing was easy for us, we felt
valuable and well accepted.
If we had trouble learning
to read, write or do math; (or all three), if we had a problem
sitting still and paying attention and we felt that the other kids
were outdoing us, it made a great difference about how we felt
about ourselves and about school.
Many years ago, when I taught rst grade, we were very
careful to evaluate childrens abilities to see if they were ready
to begin to read. Kindergarten was a place where children
learned to adjust to real school, group activities and reading
readiness. It was also an opportunity for the teacher to evalu-
ate the maturity and abilities of each child.
Now we have Race to the Top (preceded by No Child
Left Behind) that proclaim, in the name of higher standards
of achievement, children should be introduced to academics in
preschool. Kindergarten has become more like the rst grade
of my day and the pressure on children and teachers to pro-
duce has become tremendous.
All of this emphasis on early academics and testing must be
terribly frustrating and demoralizing for a child who nds
school difcult. Imagine being faced with test after test that is
beyond your abilities. Imagine being one of the kids in the
class who is constantly under pressure to do better. Imagine
being in a school where recess has been eliminated and art,
music and other creative activities have given way to teaching
to the test. Imagine being so overwhelmed by school that you
dont want to go there any more.
Is this what we want for our children? Arent a great many
of them (and their families) under enough stress already?
Does anyone consider what it does to a child when he contin-
ually feels like he needs xing? Dont we want our children to
learn that there is more to life than reading, math and science?
Are we satised that the schools have become more limiting
when they should be more expansive? It makes you wonder if
any of those in our education hierarchy who make the deci-
sions (more academics earlier, more homework, more and
more testing, etc.) are at all familiar with real children in real
families especially those for whom life is mostly a struggle
and learning does not come easily.
Does it occur to the education hierarchy that our children
and their families are up against more hurdles and are vastly
different that they were even 25 years ago? Does it bother any-
one that by creating more frustration and dropouts we are
adding to an underclass that will become an even greater
threat to the rest of society? Has anyone considered that there
may be more compelling reasons why so many of our kids
arent scoring all that well on achievement tests reasons
such as poorly conceived tests, the great disparity in school
quality between afuent and disadvantaged districts, inade-
quate parents, the inux of immigrants and our dysfunctional
culture?
How many children are being sacriced at the altar of stan-
dards and accountability and our governments obsession
aided and abetted by corporate interests with being chief
engineer of the global economy? Susan Ohanian, in her book,
What Happened to Recess and Why Are Our Children
Struggling in Kindergarten? reminds us: Despite the sugar-
coated public-relations rhetoric, the whole standards and
accountability movement is not about helping all children to
become better learners. It is not committed to leaving no child
behind. Just the opposite. It is an elaborate sorting device, sep-
arating wheat from chaff. And dont ask what happens to the
chaff.
In her wonderful new book, Teach Your Children Well,
Madeline Levine, Ph.D., covers many of the problems chil-
dren are faced with today. Her philosophy: There are as
many ways to be competent in this world as there are children
blooming. Each and every one of them should be nurtured,
should feel that his or her skills, gifts and interests count for
something.
Shouldnt we be asking, Are they ready or not?
Since 1984, Dorothy Dimitre has written more than 500
columns for various local newspapers. Her email address is
gramsd@aceweb.com.
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BUSINESS 10
Wednesday Sept. 5, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
Dow 13,035.94 -0.42% 10-Yr Bond 1.581 +1.22%
Nasdaq3,075.06 +0.26% Oil (per barrel) 95.25
S&P 500 1,404.94 -0.12% Gold 1,698.10
By Pallavi Gogoi
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK Stocks zigged and
zagged after reports that the U.S. econo-
my is weakening at a time when China
and Europe are also slowing.
The Dow Jones industrial average
closed down 54.90 points at 13,035.94
on Tuesday. Heavy equipment maker
Caterpillar was the weakest stock in the
Dow average, slipping 3 percent, or
$2.67, to $82.66. The Standard & Poors
500 index fell 1.64 points to 1,404.94.
The Nasdaq index bucked the losing
trend, gaining 8.10 points at 3,075.06. A
big reason was that the indexs biggest
stock, Apple, rose $9.73 to $674.97
after the company invited reporters to a
news event next week at which it is
expected to announce the long-awaited
iPhone 5.
The market got off to a weak start after
the Commerce Department reported that
U.S. construction spending fell 0.9 per-
cent in July from June, driven lower by a
sharp drop in spending on home
improvement projects.
The decline, the worst in a year, fol-
lowed three months of gains powered by
increases in home and apartment con-
struction. New home construction rose
again in July, but spending on home ren-
ovation projects fell 5.5 percent.
A separate report delivered more
gloomy news on the economy: the third
straight month of contraction in U.S.
manufacturing. New orders, production
and employment all fell in August.
Factories have been a key source of jobs
and growth since the recession ended in
June 2009, but the sector has been weak
in recent months.
The Institute for Supply Management,
a trade group of purchasing managers
for manufacturers, said its index of man-
ufacturing edged down to 49.6 from 49.7
in July. It was the lowest reading in three
years. A reading below 50 indicates that
manufacturing is contracting.
Its time to go back to school and
sharpen up on stocks and pay attention
to the numbers, said Kim Forrest, equi-
ty analyst at nancial advisory rm Fort
Pitt Capital Group. The numbers show
that theres a lot of weakness out there
and investors have gotten lulled into
complacency in the last month or so.
The week will culminate with U.S.
nonfarm payroll gures Friday, one of
the most important barometers for the
worlds largest economy. Federal
Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke has
indicated that the central bank is inclined
to provide new stimulus if its needed.
Stocks end mixed
Wall Street
Stocks that moved substantially or traded
heavily Tuesday on the New York Stock
Exchange and Nasdaq Stock Market:
NYSE
Consol Energy Inc., down $1.37 at $28.83
The coal and natural gas company is
temporarily idling its coal mine in Virginia
because of weaker global demand for steel.
Medicis Pharmaceutical Corp., up $12.09 at
$43.65
The dermatology products maker agreed to be
bought by Valeant Pharmaceuticals
International Inc. in a $2.6 billion deal.
Heckmann Corp., up $1.02 at $3.71
The water management rm is buying privately
held Power Fuels in a $381 million deal to raise
its foothold in the fracking market.
Korn/Ferry International, up 78 cents at $15.08
The stafng rm said it purchased Global
Novations LLC in a move to bolster its leadership
and talent consulting business.
Accretive Health Inc., up 79 cents at $12.68
The company, which helps hospitals manage
their revenue, said that its board approved the
repurchase of $50 million in stock.
Nasdaq
Netix Inc., down $3.79 at $55.93
Amazon.com,which has a rival online streaming
service to Netix, signed a deal with Epix to
license movies from Paramount, MGM and
Lionsgate.
Tower Semiconductor Ltd.,up 81 cents at $8.71
The chip maker expanded its product-making
deal with Vishay Intertechnology for ve years.
Tower expects it will boost its revenue.
Medivation Inc., up $4.35 at $109.21
The drugmaker said that it received approval
from the Food and Drug Administration for its
drug Xtandi, which treats prostate cancer.
Big movers
By Tom Krisher
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
DETROIT Big pickups carried U.S.
auto sales to their highest level in three
years.
Demand for full-size pickups jumped
16 percent in August, helping to make it
the strongest sales month since August
2009. Overall auto sales increased 20
percent from a year earlier to nearly 1.3
million, according to Autodata corp.
The rising demand shows that busi-
nesses need to replace aging trucks and
feel more condent about the recovery in
U.S. housing an industry where pick-
ups are essential for hauling equipment
and crews.
Businesses dont usually go buy a
eet of trucks unless they have good rea-
son to believe that business will be ramp-
ing up, said Jesse Toprak, vice president
of market intelligence for the
TrueCar.com auto pricing service
Ford, GM and Chrysler, the biggest
makers of full-size trucks, notched dou-
ble-digit gains in overall sales last month.
In pickups, Fords F-Series, the top-
selling vehicle in America, saw a 19 per-
cent sales increase, as did Chryslers
Ram pickup. Sales of General Motors
Chevy Silverado rose 4 percent, while
the GMC Sierra was up 9 percent.
Toyotas struggling big truck, the
Tundra, posted a huge increase of 68
percent.
The rising demand helped push total
U.S. auto sales last month to an annual
rate of 14.5 million. Thats the best
monthly sales pace since the govern-
ments Cash for Clunkers rebate pro-
gram in August of 2009.
Trucks drive auto sales to three-year high
Global manufacturing
weakness hurting U.S.
By Christopher S. Rugaber
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON Manufacturing is weakening around the
globe, a trend that is weighing on U.S. growth just as the pres-
idential campaign enters its nal stretch.
U.S. factory activity shrank for a third straight month in
August, according to a survey by the Institute for Supply
Management released Tuesday.
Manufacturing has slumped as American businesses have
scaled back demand for machinery, equipment and other
investments. Its also contracting in just about every major
economy overseas, including the 17 countries that use the
euro, plus Britain, China, Japan and Brazil. In China, factory
activity fell last month to its lowest level in more than three
years.
Less factory production in the United States and abroad has
sapped a critical source of growth and jobs in the three years
since the recession ended. That trend will likely keep growth
and hiring tepid through the November elections.
ECB chief is wielding more sway than Bernanke
WASHINGTON Move over, Ben Bernanke. This is
Mario Draghis moment.
The European Central Bank president is overtaking the
Federal Reserve chairman at least for now as the central
banker with the most inuence on the global economy and
markets. Faced with a growing recession and a possible
breakup of the 17-country euro alliance, Draghi has bigger
problems than Bernanke, whos overseeing an economy in
recovery.
As head of the ECB, which meets Thursday, Draghi also has
more ammunition left than Bernanke does.
Business brief
<< Haggans off and running with 49ers, page 13
Angels beat Oakland again, page 13
Wednesday, Sept. 5, 2012
NO LATE INNING MAGIC THIS TIME: AFTER RALLYING FROM 6-1 DEFICIT, GIANTS LOSE TO ARIZONA IN 11 INNINGS >>> PAGE 12
By Tom Canavan
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. A good start is
what is on the line this time when the New York
Giants host the Dallas Cowboys in the NFL sea-
son opener.
The stakes were much greater the last time the
NFC East foes faced off to close the last regular
season. New York won to claim the division title
en route to the Super Bowl title. Dallas was left
out of the postseason.
On Wednesday night at MetLife Stadium, the
winner will take the early upper hand in the divi-
sional race.
For Eli Manning and the Super Bowl champi-
on Giants, this will be a chance to silence the crit-
ics and detractors who have sounded off repeat-
edly after they beat the New England Patriots in
February to claim their second title in ve sea-
sons.
The Giants heard it all. They were lucky to get
into the playoffs with a 9-7 record. They really
didnt beat the Packers or 49ers, they were just
handed the games. There is a lot more, but that is
the gist.
That is now over.
The goal for Tom Coughlins players is to show
they have constructed that bridge the 65-year-old
coach urged them to build to link their late-season
6-0 run to the title to the 2012 campaign.
The leadership we have on this football team,
thats going to be the spine of the bridge, if you
will, defensive captain Justin Tuck said. I think
were in a good place as far as where we want to
be coming into the game.
Giants, Cowboys open NFL season
By Nathan Mollat
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
The Hillsdale and Woodside boys water
polo teams kicked off the season in Redwood
City Tuesday afternoon and, in the end,
Hillsdale proved to be just a little bit better in
recording a 13-8 win.
That was a rough one, said Hillsdale coach
Renato Hodzic. We were missing two starters
and two others starters got kicked out of the
game.
The younger guys stepped up and we over-
came adversity.
Dont talk to Woodside rst-year coach
Luke Plurkowski about being shorthanded. He
had one substitute available and that dwindled
to none after Luis Mendoza sat out most of the
second and third periods with an eye injury,
although he did return to the match.
I thought our guys showed a lot of heart,
Plurkowski said. I cant complain about their
effort.
Both teams showed the effects playing their
rst match of the season with a lot of sloppy
play and turnovers. It appeared it would be a
long day for the Knights, who gave up two
early goals and seven power plays to the
Wildcats.
Unfortunately, Woodside managed to score
only twice on the man advantage.
We didnt take advantage of those shots in
the rst quarter, said Plurkowski, admitting
his team was a little anxious on the power play.
It was sloppy. We have to improve our exe-
cution. As a new coach, Im behind where I
want to be (with the team). Right now, the
focus is getting them game time and game sit-
uations.
Hillsdale weathered the storm and took con-
trol of the match in the second and third peri-
ods as the Knights wore down Woodside.
Hodzic said the difference was his players
ability to stay fresher longer, as most of the
Knights are swimmers who have converted to
water polo.
It helps when you have some speed,
Hodzic said.
Knights top Cats
NATHAN MOLLAT/DAILY JOURNAL
Hillsdales Danny Amaya res home one of his six goals during the Knights 13-8 win over
Woodside in the season opener for both teams.
By Julio Lara
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
For the College of San Mateo womens
water polo team, the 2012 season will truly be
a sink or swim affair. Or in the words of
Bulldogs head coach, Randy Wright, Were
taking a bunch of young little puppies into the
big pool and hopefully over the rst weekend
well turn those puppies into Bulldogs.
Wright embraced the excitement of the
unknown that comes with a ton of youth when
discussing his 2012 squad. Of the 11 players
currently on the roster, eight of them are
freshmen. Of the three sophomores, at least
one is coming off the bench that spells
four new starters for CSM.
Even with all this inexperience, there is a
silver lining.
Our starting lineup, albeit it is dominated
by freshmen, Im going to say it could be one
of the most talented starting lineups Ive ever
had, Wright said.
The backbone is returning goalie Daria
Kekuewa, a Mercy-Burlingame product who
led the state in saves last season while posting
an All-NorCal and All-Coast Conference year.
Shes a stud, Wright said, adding that
Kekuewa contemplated red-shirting this sea-
son but chose to give it a go when evaluating
the young talent on the 2012 team. With the
backbone of Daria in the cage, it allows for a
lot of exibility in terms of zone drops,
Wright said. And anytime you have speed
working in a zone defense, it just makes it that
much more difcult for other teams because
we can close gaps. With a couple of speed
girls, especially with Miya (Oto), Im coach-
ing a lot of counter attack things I havent
coached in 10 years because we didnt have
that element on our team. So thats exciting
for me.
Oto, a three-time All-American swimmer
for the Bulldogs last Spring, is the prize fresh-
man for CSM. Oto was the Coast
Conferences Most Outstanding Swimmer last
season. Her speed on a young Bulldog team is
the X-factor.
Shes not the biggest size but man, she
ies, Wright said. She can probably swim
with the ball faster than anybody can just at-
CSM water polo young but talented
By Julio Lara
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
Only at the College of San Mateo will you
hear a football team talk about having to
bounce back after a win.
But yes, thats how high the bar is right now
for the Bulldogs. Even after a 22-13 win over
Laney College, CSM went into its Tell The
Truth Monday practice and were just as crit-
ical of themselves as if they lost last Saturday.
Were treating this like it wasnt our best
performance, said Tim Tulloch, CSM defen-
sive coordinator and assistant head coach.
We talk about, all the time to our guys, Was
that the best you can do? Was that your best
performance? Offensively? Defensively?
Specials teams? And it denitely wasnt. So,
its on us to change it.
It wasnt a short practice. We addressed the
corrections.
CSM head coach Bret Pollack said after the
game Saturday his players knew they had just
gotten away with one. Against Laney, the
Bulldogs coughed up the football four times
and let a trio of touchdowns fall our of their
hands on dropped passes.
For an offense that was laser-sharp at times
in 2011, CSM was uncharacteristically dull
against Laney. And Tulloch said the players
knew that and brought a renewed focus and
attention to detail to Mondays practice
Day One of preparation for Chabot College.
As critical as CSM can be on themselves,
there were some positives from Saturdays
win.
There are a fair amount of things we need
to improve on and address, Tulloch said.
There were some good things that we battled
through.
The Bulldogs played well inside the red
zone. The Eagles took a total of 11 snaps
inside the CSM 5-yard line and couldnt run
the ball in. It took a nicely placed fade pattern
Bulldogs not
satisfied with
Laney victory
See POLO, Page 14
See CSM, Page 14 See POLO, Page 16
See NFL, Page 15
12
Wednesday Sept. 5, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
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SANTA CLARA Clark Haggans joined
the San Francisco 49ers at practice Tuesday
pledging to hit the ground running with a team
that ts the rugged style he has established
throughout a 13-year NFL career.
The veteran outside linebacker, signed by
the 49ers on Monday, will learn soon if hell
be available to play in
Sundays season opener
against the Green Bay
Packers.
Haggans faces discipline
by the league after serving
jail time in June after
pleading guilty to DUI
charges stemming from an
April 2011 incident. His
hearing before the NFL is
scheduled Wednesday.
The 49ers certainly could use the services of
the veteran with 46.5 career sacks when they
face the Packers and a prolic passing attack
led by quarterback Aaron Rodgers.
Haggans is the only backup on the roster
behind starting outside linebackers Ahmad
Brooks and Aldon Smith after San Francisco
placed 2011 starter Parys Haralson on injured
reserve Monday with a torn left triceps.
Veteran player we needed at that position
and needed him right away, 49ers coach Jim
Harbaugh said Tuesday. Pretty deep into our
playbook already. He started at page 25 when
he rst got here. I think hell assimilate very
quickly and thats one of the reasons we were
so excited to get him.
Haggans has played throughout his career in
a 3-4 defensive system thats similar to what
San Francisco runs. He started 57 games on
the edge for the Pittsburgh Steelers from 2004-
2007 before moving on to Arizona, where he
started 43 games the past three seasons.
Haggans started all 16 games for the Cardinals
last year, recording 46 tackles and three sacks.
After the Cardinals released Haggans on
Friday at the nal roster cutdown, the 49ers
were quick to come calling.
Haralson, who started 68 games over the
past ve seasons for the 49ers, was injured in
San Franciscos Aug. 26 exhibition at Denver
and underwent surgery last week. The Niners
then released four young outside linebackers
Friday to reach the 53-man nal roster limit,
leaving them with starters Brooks and Smith
as their only two healthy players at the posi-
tion.
Haggans saw San Franciscos defense
evolve into one of the NFLs best while play-
ing the 49ers twice each season over the past
four years. Now hes eager to get involved.
All the success that they had last year was
obviously earned and Im happy to be a part of
it, Haggans said. Theyre a physical team,
blue-collar, work hard. Thats like me in
and out of the weight room, running after prac-
tice, lm study and just trying to play football
with effort.
At 35, Haggans said he still can produce at a
high level and is willing to accept whatever
role the team has for him.
That role could become signicant with
Haralson gone and Smith in his rst season as
a starter after setting a 49ers rookie record with
14 sacks last season. San Franciscos defensive
scheme places a high priority on getting pres-
sure on passing downs from its edge lineback-
ers, and Haggans has produced ve or more
sacks in a season six times during his career.
Ive been in a 3-4 defense for a long time,
so a lot of the techniques are the same and its
just getting used to the terminology, Haggans
said. Im just going to dive into the playbook,
trying to be as spongy as possible and absorb
as much as I can and take it from there.
His next move is waiting to hear from the
NFL regarding a possible suspension that
could keep Haggans on the sidelines for the
start of the season.
I have my cellphone on and I made sure I
paid my bill so its working, he said. Im on
a need-to-know basis to see whats going to
transpire for the next hours to days up to the
end of the month or so. So when I get the
news, either way I have to be ready for it.
Newly signed Haggans practices
Clark Haggans
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
ALAMEDA Rolando McClain is working
on making himself more of a vocal presence
around the Oakland Raiders defense.
What the Raiders really need is for their former
rst-round pick to be a more physical presence
on the eld in his third season in the NFL.
McClain has yet to play up to the lofty billing
he received as the eighth overall pick out of
Alabama in the 2010 draft. Instead of transform-
ing a struggling defense, McClain has been part
of the problems that have held the Raiders back
the past two years.
With a new defensive scheme that better suits
McClains style and a focus on being more vocal,
the Raiders are hoping for a breakthrough from
McClain this season.
Hes more of a vocal leader, safety Michael
Huff said. Before hes been a leader but a shy,
quiet guy who really didnt want to get on people
or do that side of it. Now hes getting on people,
yelling, getting everybody into the huddle, break-
ing the huddle.
As the defensive signal caller, McClain needs
to be vocal to make sure his teammates are in the
proper position and know their assignments
before every play.
He said he had no problems doing that in col-
lege at Alabama when he helped the Crimson
Tide win a national championship in 2009, but he
said its more difcult to do that in the NFL.
Its different here. Its just different, he said.
Youre not dealing with guys your own age.
Youre dealing with grown men. Being a leader
is just not about yelling but understanding guys
that youre working with. Different people
respond to different things in different ways. Its
guring out your teammates and how they
respond to things to get them to work. Its still a
process.
McClain was supposed to be the key to a
defensive turnaround in Oakland after being
taken eighth overall in the 2010 draft. He had 85
tackles, a half-sack and one interception as a
rookie.
He showed signs of improvement last season
with 99 tackles and ve sacks but still had prob-
lems in coverage and sometimes took bad angles
in the run game, leading to big plays.
McClain has allowed 73 completions in 115
pass attempts for 794 yards and seven touch-
downs in his two seasons, according to STATS
LLC.
But he hopes this defense that will leave him in
man coverage less often and give him more
chances to blitz will better suit him.
McClain looks to be more vocal for Raiders
Angels 6, As 1
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
OAKLAND Zack Greinke pitched seven
sharp innings to win his third consecutive start
and the Los Angeles Angels beat the Oakland
Athletics 6-1 on Tuesday night.
Kendrys Morales had three hits and an RBI
for the Angels, who remained 3 1/2 games out of
a wild-card spot in the American League. Los
Angeles has won four of ve on its six-game
road trip and 11 of 14 overall.
Brandon Moss homered for the As, who have
dropped two straight to the Angels following a
nine-game winning streak. Oakland, tied for the
wild-card lead, is four games behind rst-place
Texas in the AL West and 3 1/2 ahead of the
third-place Angels.
Greinke has allowed at least one home run in
seven straight starts, the longest streak of his
career. Moss drive, however, was the only
noticeable mistake he made.
Greinke (4-2) scattered four hits, struck out
four and walked two. He also got some help
from the Angels defense when Mike Trout ran
down Josh Reddicks deep y to center in the
sixth.
Since beginning his Los Angeles career with
two losses in ve starts following a July 27 trade
from Milwaukee, Greinke has settled into a
groove. Hes yielded four runs over his last 21 2-
3 innings and has gone at least seven innings in
each of his last three starts.
Scott Downs pitched the eighth and Jason
Isringhausen worked the ninth to complete the
four-hitter.
Oakland lost for only the fourth time in 19
games.
The Angels put runners on base early against
starter Jarrod Parker (9-8) but didnt break
through until the fth.
Alberto Callaspo and Chris Iannetta singled to
put runners on the corners with one out before
Trout hit a rst-pitch RBI single up the middle.
As lose
second
in a row
SPORTS 14
Wednesday Sept. 5, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
into the back of the end zone in the rst quar-
ter to crack the Bulldogs defense and that
play was number six from inside the 2-yard
line in a sequence extended by an unsport-
manshiplike conduct penalty.
I really liked the way the D-line and the
inside linebackers were stout there, Tulloch
said. A lot of times teams, when opponents
get into the red zone or inside the 10, they feel
sorry for themselves, or woe is me. But this
team is, No, we got you right where we want
you. Well play 10-11 snaps from the 1-yard
line. So that I was really proud of. We battled
through some adversity, some sudden changes
and just went out and played.
On offense, Tulloch pointed to a pair of
freshman linemen, Hanitelli Lousi and
Dominick Jackson, as young players who had
solid games. Lousi was CSMs highest graded
lineman of the game. Both were making their
rst starts at the collegiate level.
One thing to keep an eye on as the Bulldogs
get ready for Chabot on Saturday is the quar-
terback position. John Willis played the entire
game against Laney and the CSM coaching
staff showed condence in the JamesLogan
High School - Union City product despite
some miscues.
John is competitor, Tulloch said, at-out,
to the heart, to the bone. Hes a competitor.
And there gets to be this little bit of monotony
going against yourself, same offense, same
defense that weve been going against for
eight months. So, I think that monotony got to
us and hurt us. Hes going to battle and step
up. And having Blake (Plattsmier) right there
ready to go, Blake is going to challenge him to
be the starter. And after Saturdays perform-
ance, Im sure Blake is saying OK, lets go
compete.
Last year, following a disappointing per-
formance in the season opener against Fresno,
the Bulldogs righted the ship rather quickly
pitching ve straight shutouts and leaving
their woes behind in emphatic fashion.
I think the thing about last year, the differ-
ence between Week 1 and Week 2 was so dra-
matic, the teams took such a huge step for-
ward, you would hope that this team would be
able to replicate some of that that between
Week 1 and Week 2 we make that kind of
progress, Tulloch said. The talent is there.
We have veteran guys. I sure hope were going
to take a big step forward.
CSMs progress will be tested in a big way
come Saturday. In Chabot, the Bulldogs face
the reigning Golden Gate Conference champi-
on and a team ranked No. 11 in Northern
California. They are, however, coming off a
28-20 loss to San Joaquin Delta.
Were laser-focused on Chabot, Tulloch
said. We have 100 percent of our focus there.
Theyre a good team. Were going to take
them one at a time. The good thing about a
great schedule is, every team is going to test
you in a different way and show you some-
thing different, show you a different weak-
ness. And that prepares you for conference.
Each team will expose something. And hope-
fully, if you can make the adjustments and
correct, by the time you get to league, youve
been battle-tested in lots of different ways by
good teams.
And the good thing is, if we do give our
best, we can play with anybody in the state,
Tulloch said. If we play like we did Saturday,
we dont bring our best to the table, with this
schedule, its going to be tough. With the play-
ers, were telling it like it is. We expect the
best from those guys so we keep the bar high.
out swim. Fourth quarter without a sub,
shell still be the fastest player in the pool. I
dont care if you sub your fastest girl for a
half, shes still not going to be faster than
Miya. Shes just a phenomenal swimming
athlete.
With speed and with a good goalie, it
does give you some creative opportunities to
run different defenses and isolated counter
attacks, kind of tempo things up which we
havent had the opportunity to do in the
past, Wright said. So, thats a great 1-2
punch in terms of goalie to outlet. Right
there, we got something cooking.
With such a young team, the sophomores
will be a critical part of the 2012 squad.
Andrea Carranza, a Woodside graduate,
returns for CSM. Last year, she was more of
a defensive center, but Wright said hes hop-
ing she plays a more prominent role on
offense this season. Rachel Rosas (Hillsdale)
will be coming off the bench.
But after those four players, there are plen-
ty of unknowns for CSM. Sinclaire Cheong
(Aragon), Erica Staben (Menlo-Atherton),
Kelly Dwyer (Terra Nova) and Jasmine
Zaldivar will be looked upon to contribute in
big ways as freshmen.
As far as a starting lineup right now,
Wright said, I have no idea.
Wright said the Bulldogs are moving
toward a more free-flowing, motion-friendly
offense. Were looking to use position and
speed to make things happen.
While Kekuewa is the undoubted leader
defensively, offensively the search for lead-
ership is still in its infant stages.
Im not looking for a leadership that is
raw-raw-shish-boom-bah. Im looking for a
leader to say, when things are going stale, a
little stagnant, then maybe shell call her
number, Wright said. Weve been working
on that the last few practices. Like I said, no
one is a dominant set so how do we decide
whos going in to set, whos going to play
the center position? You cant just go or else
well end up with four people going. So its
important to clear the lines of communica-
tion. The freshmen, you need a couple of
games to get over that shyness.
I preach, you can talk faster than you can
do anything. Were a no-texting, no-Internet
environment. You have to communicate, talk,
talk, talk, Wright said. Stay off those
phones. Start talking more because you dont
talk enough. Talk, talk, talk it out. Again, a
lot of these situations, you get a couple of
games under your belt and youll be like,
Oh yeah, this is what coach was talking
about. I see how easy it is. So in the game
you start to naturally do it because its
instinctual.
Adding depth and support will be Morgan
Gassmann, Rachel Wright (Mercy-
Burlingame) and Meaghan Ramstack (San
Mateo). And the team will have to gel very
quickly. CSM starts play against a beatable
Delta College squad. But after that, big tests
against Merced and Diablo Valley, two teams
theyve never beaten, await.
A lot during the summer was just
defense, Wright said. We can shore up dis-
tinct defensive strategies and center them
around our goalie and get everyone comfort-
able with the power of our goalie. Defense is
our backbone. And when you have a player
that can potentially be an All-American in
Daria, you gotta go with what you got.
Defense, defense, defense. This year will be
a little more exciting because we can defend
and run isolation counter attack with
some of the players on our team.
I just told them today, the two things I see
most troubling are, No. 1: turnovers. Theyre
not realizing how important possessions
are, Wright said. And maybe its going to
require a game the school of hard knocks
unfortunately to figure that out. And then:
vision. You cant just come out and play, the
whole vision of the field it magnifies. And
I think some of them are just playing in the
now and are having a little difficulty plan-
ning their next few moves. To be good, you
have to know what youre going to do before
that situation happens. And unfortunately, I
think thats going to require some games
under their belts, too.
Continued from page 11
CSM
Continued from page 11
POLO
CAROL LAPINSKI-ERDIE/
SPECIAL TO THE DAILY JOURNAL
College of San Mateo defensive back Joseph
Turner intercepts a Laney College pass
during the Bulldogs 22-13 win last Saturday.
SPORTS 15
Wednesday Sept. 5, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
Weve already showed people who we are,
safety Antrel Rolle said. We can care less about
that. We leave that up to spectators. Were just
going out there and playing ball. And that is what
it is all about. We can care less about what kind
of recognition we are getting or who is crowning
us and who is not crowning us. None of that mat-
ters coming into the 2012 season.
Jerry Jones Cowboys face a much different
task after an 8-8 campaign that ended with an
embarrassing 31-14 loss to the Giants on New
Years Day.
The outspoken owner, who boasted to fans that
his team would kick the Giants posteriors in
Dallas when the clubs meet a second time this
season on Oct. 28, knows the window for the
aging Cowboys to return to the franchises glory
years is fading fast.
Its a great opportunity for us is how I look at
it, Jones said of the season opener. So very
meaningful. Everybody has all the appreciation
in the world for what were up against here, the
quality of the team, so to have success up there
would be very meaningful.
As in any game in the NFL, its certainly not
how you ultimately will wind up one way or the
other, but it is a big game in front of really the
entire world of sports, high visible game against
the world champions.
Romo will again be under the spotlight. He has
yet to lead the Boys to a title, and many wonder
whether he will after a late-season meltdown in
which Dallas lost four of its nal ve games,
including two to the Giants.
I think they always stick with you, Romo
said of the last game. Thats what fuels you in
the offseason and makes you ... you want to
remember those moments so you can improve
from them. As a football team, weve taken an
approach that we need to get better. I think weve
done that with the personnel and our approach
and the way the guys have been committed. Its
been great to see. Now its time to take it to the
eld.
There are a couple of key matchups to watch.
Manning and receivers Victor Cruz and
Hakeem Nicks combined for 14 receptions for
237 yards in New Yorks 37-34 win in Dallas on
Dec. 11, and they had 11 more catches for 254
yards and two touchdowns in the division-decid-
ing game.
Continued from page 11
NFL
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SAN FRANCISCO Aaron Hill had a
career-high ve hits and Jason Kubel tripled
home the tiebreaking run in the 11th inning to
lead the Arizona Diamondbacks over the San
Francisco Giants 8-6 on Tuesday night.
The rst-place Giants used 11 pitches, match-
ing a major league record for extra-inning
games. They remained 4 1/2 games ahead of Los
Angeles in the NL West because the Dodgers
also lost at home in extra innings, to San Diego.
Hill drove in two runs and was a triple shy of
his third cycle this season. John McDonald also
had two RBIs for the Diamondbacks, who ended
a three-game skid.
Brandon Belt had three hits, including a two-
run homer, for San Francisco. Pablo Sandoval
knocked in two runs but the Giants had their
three-game winning streak stopped.
Giants lose in 11
Dbacks 8, Giants 6
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
LOS ANGELES Logan Forsythe hit a
two-run single with the bases loaded in the
11th inning after Yasmani Grandal tied the
score with a two-run homer in the eighth, and
the San Diego Padres beat the Los Angeles
Dodgers 6-3 Tuesday night.
The Dodgers wasted an excellent outing
from ace Clayton Kershaw and dropped 1 1/2
games behind St. Louis for the second NL
wild card.
John Ely (0-1), working his second inning
of relief, gave up a leadoff single to Cameron
Maybin in the 11th. Everth Cabrera followed
with a bunt single, and both runners took an
extra base on third baseman Luis Cruzs
throwing error to rst.
Padres beat Dodgers
16
Wednesday Sept. 5, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
SPORTS
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650.369.8900
Fighting for victims
and their families
FREE CONSULTATION
(800) 308-0870
Motor Vehicle
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East Division
W L Pct GB
Washington 82 52 .612
Atlanta 76 59 .563 6 1/2
Philadelphia 65 70 .481 17 1/2
New York 64 71 .474 18 1/2
Miami 60 75 .444 22 1/2
Central Division
W L Pct GB
Cincinnati 82 54 .603
St. Louis 73 62 .541 8 1/2
Pittsburgh 70 64 .522 11
Milwaukee 65 69 .485 16
Chicago 51 83 .381 30
Houston 42 93 .311 39 1/2
West Division
W L Pct GB
San Francisco 77 59 .566
Los Angeles 73 64 .533 4 1/2
Arizona 67 70 .489 10 1/2
San Diego 63 74 .460 15
Colorado 56 78 .418 20 1/2
Tuesdays Games
Chicago Cubs at Washington, 7:05 p.m.
Houston at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m.
Colorado at Atlanta, 7:10 p.m.
Milwaukee at Miami, 7:10 p.m.
Philadelphia at Cincinnati, 7:10 p.m.
N.Y. Mets at St. Louis, 8:15 p.m.
San Diego 6, L.A. Dodgers 3, 11 innings
Arizona 8, San Francisco 6, 11 innings
WednesdaysGames
Philadelphia (Halladay 8-7) at Cincinnati (Leake 7-
8), 9:35 a.m.
N.Y.Mets (Dickey 17-4) at St.Louis (Wainwright 13-
11), 10:45 a.m.
Chicago Cubs (Volstad 2-9) at Washington (G.Gon-
zalez 17-7), 4:05 p.m.
Houston (Abad 0-2) at Pittsburgh (Correia 9-8),4:05
p.m.
Colorado (White 2-7) at Atlanta (Minor 7-10), 4:10
p.m.
Milwaukee (W.Peralta 0-0) at Miami (Eovaldi 4-10),
4:10 p.m.
East Division
W L Pct GB
Baltimore 76 59 .563
New York 76 59 .563
Tampa Bay 75 61 .551 1 1/2
Boston 63 74 .460 14
Toronto 60 75 .444 16
Central Division
W L Pct GB
Chicago 73 62 .541
Detroit 72 63 .533 1
Kansas City 61 74 .452 12
Cleveland 58 78 .426 15 1/2
Minnesota 56 80 .412 17 1/2
West Division
W L Pct GB
Texas 80 55 .593
Oakland 76 59 .563 4
Los Angeles 73 63 .537 7 1/2
Seattle 66 71 .482 15
TuesdaysGames
Cleveland 3, Detroit 2
Baltimore 12,Toronto 0
Tampa Bay 5, N.Y.Yankees 2
Minnesota 18, Chicago White Sox 9
Kansas City 6,Texas 3
L.A. Angels 6, Oakland 1
Boston 4, Seattle 3
WednesdaysGames
Minnesota (Walters 2-2) at Chicago White Sox
(Peavy 9-10), 11:10 a.m.
L.A. Angels (Haren 9-10) at Oakland (McCarthy 8-
5), 12:35 p.m.
Cleveland (Jimenez 9-14) at Detroit (Fister 7-8),
4:05 p.m.
Baltimore (Mig.Gonzalez 6-3) at Toronto (Morrow
8-5), 4:07 p.m.
N.Y.Yankees(Kuroda12-10) atTampaBay(M.Moore
10-8), 4:10 p.m.
Texas (Dempster 4-1) at Kansas City (Teaford 1-3),
5:10 p.m.
NL STANDINGS AL STANDINGS
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct PF PA
New England 1 3 0 .250 55 69
Buffalo 0 4 0 .000 59 119
Miami 0 4 0 .000 43 96
N.Y. Jets 0 4 0 .000 31 88
South
W L T Pct PF PA
Houston 3 1 0 .750 101 80
Jacksonville 3 1 0 .750 100 117
Tennessee 3 1 0 .750 89 67
Indianapolis 2 2 0 .500 99 75
North
W L T Pct PF PA
Pittsburgh 3 1 0 .750 104 71
Baltimore 2 2 0 .500 108 92
Cincinnati 2 2 0 .500 70 72
Cleveland 2 2 0 .500 84 82
West
W L T Pct PF PA
San Diego 3 1 0 .750 64 78
Denver 2 2 0 .500 81 75
Kansas City 1 3 0 .250 61 116
Oakland 1 3 0 .250 61 75
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct PF PA
Philadelphia 4 0 0 1.000 106 60
Dallas 3 1 0 .750 73 60
Washington 3 1 0 .750 98 59
N.Y. Giants 2 2 0 .500 80 58
South
W L T Pct PF PA
Carolina 2 2 0 .500 69 72
Tampa Bay 2 2 0 .500 60 95
New Orleans 2 3 0 .400 87 81
Atlanta 1 3 0 .250 73 85
North
W L T Pct PF PA
Chicago 3 1 0 .750 84 99
Detroit 2 2 0 .500 102 94
Green Bay 2 2 0 .500 74 72
Minnesota 1 3 0 .250 76 71
West
W L T Pct PF PA
Seattle 4 0 0 1.000 122 44
San Francisco 3 1 0 .750 90 53
St. Louis 2 2 0 .500 84 92
Arizona 1 4 0 .200 98 119
WednesdaysGames
Dallas at N.Y. Giants, 5:30 p.m.
SundaysGames
Indianapolis at Chicago, 10 a.m.
Jacksonville at Minnesota, 10 a.m.
Miami at Houston, 10 a.m.
New England at Tennessee, 10 a.m.
Washington at New Orleans, 10 a.m.
Atlanta at Kansas City, 10 a.m.
Buffalo at N.Y. Jets, 10 a.m.
St. Louis at Detroit, 10 a.m.
Philadelphia at Cleveland, 10 a.m.
Seattle at Arizona, 1:25 p.m.
San Francisco at Green Bay, 1:25 p.m.
Carolina at Tampa Bay, 1:25 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Denver, 5:20 p.m.
MondaysGames
Cincinnati at Baltimore, 4 p.m.
San Diego at Oakland, 7:15 p.m.
NFL PRESEASON
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA
Kansas City 15 7 5 50 34 24
New York 13 7 7 46 46 39
Chicago 13 8 5 44 35 31
Houston 11 7 9 42 39 33
Columbus 12 8 6 42 33 30
D.C. 12 10 5 41 43 38
Montreal 12 14 3 39 43 46
Philadelphia 7 13 5 26 25 30
New England 6 14 7 25 33 38
Toronto FC 5 16 6 21 30 48
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA
San Jose 16 6 5 53 56 33
Real Salt Lake 14 10 4 46 38 32
Seattle 12 6 8 44 41 27
Los Angeles 13 11 4 43 48 40
Vancouver 10 11 7 37 29 37
FC Dallas 8 12 9 33 34 38
Chivas USA 7 11 7 28 20 39
Portland 7 13 6 27 27 43
Colorado 8 17 2 26 33 41
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie.
Saturdays Games
New England 0, Philadelphia 0, tie
Columbus 2, Montreal 1
Sporting Kansas City 2, Toronto FC 1
Real Salt Lake 1, D.C. United 0
Los Angeles 2, Vancouver 0
Sundays Games
FC Dallas 1, Seattle FC 1, tie
Chicago 3, Houston 1
San Jose 4, Chivas USA 0
Wednesday, Sept. 5
Columbus at New England, 5 p.m.
Portland at Colorado, 6 p.m.
Thursday, Sept. 6
Real Salt Lake at Houston, 5:30 p.m.
Saturday, Sept. 8
Chivas USA at Seattle FC, 1 p.m.
MLS STANDINGS
BOYSWATERPOLO
Hillsdale13, Woodside8
Hillsdale246113
Woodside23218
Goal scorers: H Amaya 6; Rosas 4; Joly, Cassin,
Tom.W Dea3;Cremers2;Mendoza,Fortes,Bour-
geois.Goalie saves:H Papas 15.W 8.Records
Hillsdale 1-0 overall; Woodside 0-1.
GIRLSVOLLEYBALL
SacredHeart Prepdef. Menlo-Atherton25-19,
25-21, 25-23(Highlights:SHP Shannon 13 kills,
4 blocks; Abuel-Saud 9 kills, 10 digs; Merten 26 as-
sists). Records Sacred Heart Prep 6-1 overall.
GIRLS GOLF
SacredHeartPrep249, Mercy-Burlingame319
At SharonHeights G&CC, par 36
SHP Koenig 42; Ellison 48; Fishback 49; Dake 53;
Ulam 57; Flynn 62.
MB Wiss 46; Patricio, Yup 67; Paulino 69; Zell;
Daulton 76.
Records Sacred Heart Prep 1-0 WBAL; Mercy-
Burlingame 0-1.
GIRLSTENNIS
Crystal Springs 6, Hillsdale1
SINGLES Iinuma (H) d.Chui 6-1,6-0;Tsuei (CS) d.
Palizoc 6-1,6-3; Schulz (CS) d.Ota 6-4,5-7,(9-7); Ma-
luth (CS) d. Bodin 6-3, 6-0. DOUBLES Loh-Park
(CS) d. Branting-Shayo 6-1, 6-0; Milligan-Wang (CS)
d. Mercado-Wong 6-0, 6-1; Chu-McCrum (CS) by
forfeit. Records Crystal Springs 1-0 overall.
LOCAL SCOREBOARD
Dodgers
5:05p.m.
ESPN
9/9
@Colorado
6p.m.
CSN-CAL
10/6
Galaxy
7:30p.m.
CSN-CAL
10/21
vs.SanLuis
7:30p.m.
CSN+
9/5
@Chivas
7:30p.m.
CSN+
9/15
vs.Timbers
7:30p.m.
CSN-CAL
9/19
@Seattle
7p.m.
CSN-CAL
9/23
Dodgers
7:15p.m.
CSN-BAY
9/7
vs.FCDallas
7:30p.m.
CSN-CAL
9/29
Angels
12:35p.m.
CSN-CAL
9/5
@Mariners
1:10p.m.
CSN-CAL
9/9
@Mariners
7:10p.m.
CSN-CAL
9/7
@Rockies
5:40p.m.
CSN-BAY
9/11
@Angels
7:05p.m.
CSN-CAL
9/11
@Mariners
6:10p.m.
CSN-CAL
9/8
Dodgers
1:05p.m.
FOX
9/8
@Rockies
5:40p.m.
CSN-BAY
9/12
@Rockies
5:40p.m.
CSN-BAY
9/10
@Angels
7:05p.m.
CSN-CAL
9/12
Dbacks
7:15p.m.
CSN-BAY
9/5
@Angels
7:05p.m.
CSN-CAL
9/10
@Jets
10a.m.
FOX
9/30
vs.Seattle
5:20p.m.
NFL-NET
10/18
vs.Bills
4:25p.m.
CBS
10/7
@Packers
1:25p.m.
FOX
9/9
vs.Giants
1:25p.m.
FOX
10/14
vs.Lions
5:20p.m.
NBC
9/16
@ Vikings
10a.m.
FOX
9/23
@Broncos
1:05p.m.
CBS
9/30
vs.Jaguars
1:25p.m.
CBS
10/21
BYE
10/7
vs.Chargers
7:15p.m.
ESPN
9/10
@Falcons
10a.m.
CBS
10/14
@Miami
10a.m.
CBS
9/16
vs.Steelers
1:25p.m.
CBS
9/23
The match was tied at 2 after the
rst period before Hillsdale scored
the rst two goals of the second peri-
od to take a lead it would not relin-
quish. Kenton Toms goal from the
point, followed by the rst of Danny
Amayas six goals, gave the Knights
a 4-2 lead.
Danny Amaya played an out-
standing game, Hodzic said. He
put the team on his shoulders.
Woodsides Johnny Fortes got a
goal back when he oated a shot
home and the two teams traded goals
for the rest of the half with Hillsdale
holding a 6-5 lead at the break.
In the third period, the Knights
pulled away, outscoring the Wildcats
6-2. Woodside pulled to 8-7 on a
backhanded sweeper from Matt
Cremers that caught the Hillsdale
goaltender off guard, but the Knights
answered with four straight goals
three coming from Javier Rosas,
including one with a second left in
the period to give Hillsdale a 12-7
lead going into the nal seven min-
utes.
Credit to Woodside, which came
out ring and putting tons of pres-
sure on the Hillsdale defense. It
appeared the Wildcats were poised
for a comeback when Austin Dea
scored 30 seconds in to cut his
teams decit to 12-8.
Hillsdale goaltender Tony Pappas,
however, would not allow another.
Woodside managed 10 shots on goal
in the fourth period, but Pappas
came up with eight saves.
We put a lot of faith and trust in
the goalie and he came through for
us, Hodzic said of Pappas.
Continued from page 11
POLO
Skov set to return for
No. 25 Stanford vs. Duke
STANFORD Shayne Skov felt
helpless at home watching Stanford
stumble to a season-opening 20-17 win
over San Jose State while he served a
one-game suspension for a DUI arrest.
The teams leading tackler from the
2010 season nally returns when No.
25 Stanford (1-0) hosts Duke (1-0) on
Saturday night. Skovs presence will be
much needed after a dismal defensive
effort and with a matchup against No. 2
Southern California looming,
Sports brief
FOOD 17
Wednesday Sept. 5, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
EVERY
THURSDAY
THURS SDDAAA GHT GGGHT T H GGGHT T YY WINE NIGHT AAA THURSDAY WINE NIGHT
E V EV EV E E E E V VE VVV EV EVERR RRRRRRRR RRYYYYY Y YY RRRRR RRR
S S RS RS RS RS R R U UR U HU H H T TH TT T S SS SS S S U U URR RR R T T THH H HUU U SSS S RR R HH H DD DDD DD DDD DA AA A A DDDDAA AAAAA AAA AY YY AYYY AAY AAYYY Y A AA AAAA AAAA AA
EVERY
THURSDAY
By Lauran Neergaard
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON Patient after
patient asked: Is eating organic food,
which costs more, really better for me?
Unsure, Stanford University doctors
dug through reams of research to nd
out and concluded theres little evi-
dence that going organic is much health-
ier, citing only a few differences involv-
ing pesticides and antibiotics.
Eating organic fruit and vegetables
can lower exposure to pesticides, includ-
ing for children but the amount meas-
ured from conventionally grown produce
was within safety limits, the researchers
reported Monday.
Nor did the organic foods prove more
nutritious.
I was absolutely surprised, said Dr.
Dena Bravata, a senior research afliate
at Stanford and long-time internist who
began the analysis because so many of
her patients asked if they should switch.
There are many reasons why some-
one might choose organic foods over
conventional foods, from environmen-
tal concerns to taste preferences, Bravata
stressed. But when it comes to individ-
ual health, there isnt much difference.
Her team did nd a notable difference
with antibiotic-resistant germs, a public
health concern because they are harder
to treat if they cause food poisoning.
Specialists long have said that organic
or not, the chances of bacterial contami-
nation of food are the same, and
Mondays analysis agreed. But when
bacteria did lurk in chicken or pork,
germs in the non-organic meats had a 33
percent higher risk of being resistant to
multiple antibiotics, the researchers
reported Monday in the journal Annals
of Internal Medicine.
That nding comes amid debate over
feeding animals antibiotics, not because
theyre sick but to fatten them up.
Farmers say its necessary to meet
demand for cheap meat. Public health
advocates say its one contributor to the
nations growing problem with increas-
ingly hard-to-treat germs. Caroline
Smith DeWaal, food safety director at
the Center for Science in the Public
Interest, counted 24 outbreaks linked to
multidrug-resistant germs in food
between 2000 and 2010.
The government has begun steps to
curb the nonmedical use of antibiotics
on the farm.
Organic foods account for 4.2 percent
of retail food sales, according to the U.S.
Department of Agriculture. It certies
products as organic if they meet certain
requirements including being produced
without synthetic pesticides or fertiliz-
ers, or routine use of antibiotics or
growth hormones.
Consumers can pay a lot more for
some organic products but demand is
rising: Organic foods accounted for
$31.4 billion sales last year, according to
a recent Obama administration report.
Thats up from $3.6 billion in 1997.
The Stanford team combed through
thousands of studies to analyze the 237
that most rigorously compared organic
and conventional foods. Bravata was dis-
mayed that just 17 compared how people
fared eating either diet while the rest
investigated properties of the foods
themselves.
Organic produce had a 30 percent
lower risk of containing detectable pesti-
cide levels. In two studies of children,
urine testing showed lower pesticide lev-
els in those on organic diets. But Bravata
cautioned that both groups harbored
very small amounts and said one
study suggested insecticide use in their
homes may be more to blame than their
food.
Still, some studies have suggested that
even small pesticide exposures might be
risky for some children, and the Organic
Trade Association said the Stanford
work conrms that organics can help
consumers lower their exposure.
CSPIs DeWaal noted that difference,
but added that the issue is more compli-
cated. Some fruit and vegetables can
harbor more pesticide residue than oth-
ers she listed peaches from Chile as
topping a recent testing list. Overall lev-
els have dropped in North American pro-
duce over the last decade as farms imple
Study questions how much better organic food is
There are many reasons why someone might
choose organic foods over conventional foods.But when
it comes to individual health,there isnt much difference.
Dr. Dena Bravata, a senior research afliate at Stanford
Organic foods account for 4.2 percent of retail food sales,
according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
See ORGANIC, Page 18
18
Wednesday Sept. 5, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
FOOD/LOCAL
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mented some new standards addressing child concerns, she
said.
Parents with young children should consider where their
produce is coming from, DeWaal said, calling types grown in
the U.S. or Canada a safer bet for lower pesticide levels.
As for antibiotics, some farms that arent certied organic
have begun selling antibiotic-free meat or hormone-free milk,
to address specic consumer demands, noted Bravata.
Continued from page 17
ORGANIC
are seeking civil damages.
Of the homes that were destroyed in the
neighborhood, eight have been reconstructed.
Building permits have been issued for 12
other homes and planning reviews are pending
for two more. Of the homes that were dam-
aged, repairs are complete on 13 houses and
permits have been issued for the remaining
four.
This is not just a San Bruno specic inci-
dent, Ruane said at the press conference.
This could have been prevented.
Hill contends PG&E diverted funds for
prots and bonuses rather than for needed
safety upgrades. He also contends the
California Public Utilities Commission has
not done enough to oversee PG&E and other
state utilities when it comes to safety.
I think PG&E would like us to forget
what happened here and the PUC, too,
Hill said yesterday.
Currently, the governor has three pieces of
Hill legislation on his desk related to utilities
and previously signed three other Hill bills
that requires remote-controlled shutoff valves
and comprehensive testing and record keeping
of its gas transmission lines; exempts victims
of the re from paying taxes on recovery
money; and another tax relief measure.
So far, PG&E has paid out about $145 mil-
lion in settlements for personal injury and
property damage up to June 30 and expects
that number to climb past $450 million,
PG&E spokeswoman Brittany Chord said.
It is currently crafting a pipeline safety plan
that needs to be approved by the CPUC and
will cost $2.2 billion for the rst phase of
infrastructure upgrades.
Hill, however, said PG&E will actually
prot nearly $1.5 billion for the rst phase of
improvements based on an approved rate of
return by the CPUC.
It is offensive that they will prot nearly
$1.5 billion, Hill said. He also said ratepay-
ers should not have to foot the bill for the util-
itys neglect but that its shareholders should.
Ratepayers, Chord said, will be on the hook
for about 85 percent of the xes needed to
improve the transmission system while share-
holders will cover about 15 percent of the
costs.
The average customers bill will increase
about $2 a month under the plan, Chord said.
Shareholders, however, have shelled out
about $1.5 billion in 2010 and 2011 for any
fixes to PG&Es statewide system from
Bakerseld to Eureka, Chord said.
PG&E, Hill said, knew about weld prob-
lems in its system going back to the 1970s and
failed to act for decades on NTSB recommen-
dations.
We have learned so much about our past
operations and culture and we are committed
to a culture of safety rst, Chord told the
Daily Journal. We are out there every day
testing and replacing pipelines to ensure the
system is safe.
One of the bills Hill sent to the governor last
week, Assembly Bill 578, would require the
CPUC to adopt gas pipeline safety recom-
mendations of the NTSB. The bill will ensure
that the NTSBs safety recommendations are
adopted since it has no power to enforce its
recommendations.
In the past year, pipeline explosions and
res in Cupertino and Roseville exposed a
vulnerability to brittle, older plastic pipe. The
NTSB had recommended that pipes replace-
ment, but those recommendations were not
heeded, according to Hills ofce.
In a ling two weeks ago with the CPUC,
the commissions safety program wrote that
after the explosion PG&E made meaning-
less pledges while doing nothing to change
its corporate emphasis on prots over ensur-
ing the safety of its gas pipeline system.
PG&E Co. has not delivered real corporate
culture change, safety program manager
Raffy Stepanian wrote in urging the CPUC to
sanction the company, which faces hundreds
of millions of dollars in nes.
A remembrance event marking the two-year
anniversary of the disaster is planned for 5
p.m. Sunday at San Bruno City Park on
Crystal Springs Road.
Continued from page 1
HILL
The city has already moved forward with
installing a median on Poplar but that remedy
has been called a short-term solution or tem-
porary Band-Aid by residents and council
members alike.
Although the council expressed favor for
Option 2A, it also requested a reevaluation of
a plan, called Option 15, that calls for elimi-
nating the on- and off-ramps at Poplar alto-
gether and adding southbound on- and off-
ramps at Peninsula Avenue using a tight dia-
mond design.
The council and about 40 members of the
public got its rst glimpse of a deeper analy-
sis of Option 15 last night at a study session
that showed up to as many as 21 properties
that could be impacted by the design.
Despite the possibility for eminent domain
being needed for the projects construction,
the council directed staff last night to dig
deeper into Option 15 to see what the true
impacts of the project would be, especially
along North Amphlett Boulevard.
Deputy Mayor David Lim, however, said
the city should drop the idea last night since it
has already approved a remedy for Poplar by
adding a center median leading up to the off-
and- on-ramps with Highway 101.
Id rather kill it tonight, Lim said about
Option 15.
But the other four members of the council
opted for staff to pursue more studies on the
Peninsula Avenue solution.
The Poplar x is not a permanent solu-
tion, Mayor Brandt Grotte said. We need to
look for a long-term solution.
Councilman Jack Matthews agreed.
We dont have enough information. I dont
think weve studied this enough. It could show
the option to be too disruptive and costly,
Matthews said about Option 15.
Some business owners on Amphlett said the
city has put them in limbo considering the
uncertainty related to eminent domain.
Some challenged whether the goal was to
really improve safety on Poplar.
If you are that worried about safety,
wouldnt you have done something already?
asked Lynn Lenardon, who owns Alert Door
on the 900 block of North Amphlett.
She said it would be hard to sell her build-
ing with the specter of eminent domain
hanging over the area.
Some were surprised the city was still con-
sidering Option 15.
There will be very severe eminent domain
impacts in the area, said attorney Herman
Fitzgerald, who said his client had thought
Option 15 was off the table.
Public Works Director Larry Patterson said
knowing the true impacts with the Peninsula
Avenue option would not be known for possi-
bly years since there is currently no project.
Option 15 would have to go through an
environmental review process before being
approved.
That process is also meant to protect the
property owner, Patterson said last night.
The city has studied up to 13 different
design options for the intersection over the
past eight years and has since whittled that
number down to two.
An increase in accidents prompted San
Mateo city ofcials to look at changing the
Highway 101 off-ramp at Poplar Avenue and
Amphlett Boulevard back in 2004. The city
began to consider changes at the Poplar
Avenue interchange once Caltrans approved
the widening of the Peninsula Avenue over-
pass that divides San Mateo and Burlingame.
The center median along Poplar, Option 2A,
is considered to be the low-cost alternative
that can be constructed quickly. Trafc con-
icts will be reduced on Poplar, however, the
option increases trafc on Humboldt Street
and requires Humboldt to become a truck
route, according to staff.
Closure of the Poplar ramps with construc-
tion of southbound on- and off-ramps at
Peninsula, which involves a tight diamond
design, is the most complex and costly of the
options. Option 15 improves trafc safety on
Poplar but adds traffic to Peninsula and
Humboldt.
Continued from page 1
POPLAR
FOOD 19
Wednesday Sept. 5, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL


Open for Dinner
Wednesday to
Sunday
5PM to 9PM
Borel Shopping Center
59 Bovet Road San Mateo
650-525-1941
Now Serving
Fresh Homemade Pasta
with our Family Sauces.
Charlie The Meatball" Esposto
loves it, so will you!
By Sara Moulton
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
One of the great delights of
autumn is the abundance of fresh,
ripe, local and delicious apples. Of
course, theyre available year-round
these days, but theyre at their best
right now, not least because there
are more varieties to choose from in
the fall, especially if you take
advantage of your neighborhood
farmers market or visit one of those
pick-your-own orchards.
Everyone in my family has their
favorite. My daughter Ruthie loves
Ginger Gold. My son Sam is a fan
of Honey Crisp. And the husband
prefers a Granny Smith. Me, I go
with Golden Delicious. I know, not
a very exotic choice. Golden
Delicious is second only to Red
Delicious as the most popular kind
of apple. All I can say is that its a
winner for a reason. When the
Golden Delicious is baked, its a-
vor intensies and becomes honey-
like.
Then again, Ive never met an
apple I didnt like. They all have
their strong points. Some, like the
Honey Crisp, are perfect right off
the tree juicy, with a snappy tex-
ture. Others dont really begin to
shine until they are cooked. Granny
Smith and Rome apples hold their
shape perfectly in the oven, while
Macintosh fall completely apart
(which, happily, make them great
candidates for applesauce).
Which kind of apple should you
use for my apple cranberry brulee?
In this recipe it doesnt matter. Just
pick the one or two kinds you like
best.
Preparing this recipe is surpris-
ingly easy. I peel the apples, halve
them by cutting down through the
stem end, remove the core with a
melon baller (a good little trick to
remember), then thinly slice them to
speed up the baking time. Baking
the apples, rather than sauteing
them, allows me to avoid adding
any extra fat (aside from the egg
yolk).
I avor the apples with maple
syrup and brandy. I recommend
Grade B maple syrup, if you can
nd it. It is harvested at the end of
the season and is much darker in
color than Grade A. It also is more
avorful and, usually, cheaper. I
dont just use Grade B in baking, I
put it on everything. As for the
brandy, if you want to lose it, feel
free. This dish is plenty tasty with-
out it.
This treat is a cross between a
baked pancake, a souffle and a
creme brulee. It has an eggy top-
ping, reminiscent of a pancake, but
the egg white in the topping has
been beaten to soft peaks, which
makes it lighter and airier. In the
end, it is sprinkled with sieved
brown sugar and popped back in the
oven until it gets a dark brown crust
that tastes like the burnt sugar on the
famous custard. The nished prod-
uct embodies the best of three great
recipes, though nothing outshines
the apples.
APPLE CRANBERRY BRULEE
Start to nish: 1 hour 10 minutes
(30 minutes active)
Servings: 6
2 medium apples (about 1 pound),
peeled, cored, quartered and thinly
sliced
1/3 cup dried cranberries, cherries
or raisins
5 tablespoons maple syrup
(preferably Grade B), divided
3 tablespoons brandy, bourbon or
rum, divided (optional)
1 large egg yolk
1 tablespoon cornstarch
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
Pinch table salt
2 large egg whites, room temper-
ature
2 tablespoons dark brown sugar
Heat the oven to 450 F.
In a 9-inch round shallow baking
dish, combine the apples, cranber-
ries, 2 tablespoons of the maple
syrup and 2 tablespoons of the
brandy, if using. Cover the baking
dish with foil and bake in the mid-
dle of the oven for 35 to 40 minutes,
or until a paring knife goes through
the apples very easily. Remove the
apples from the oven and increase
the oven heat to 500 F.
While the apples are baking, in a
medium bowl, whisk together the
egg yolk, remaining 3 tablespoons
maple syrup, remaining tablespoon
of brandy, the cornstarch, vanilla
and salt. Set aside.
Once the apples are tender, in
another medium bowl, beat the egg
whites until they form soft peaks.
Stir one half of the whites into the
yolk mixture, then gently but thor-
oughly fold in the remaining whites.
Spread the mixture evenly over the
top of the apples.
Place the brown sugar in a mesh
sieve. Hold the sieve above the egg
topping and press the sugar through
it to evenly sprinkle it over the top-
ping. Bake the dessert in the top
third of the oven until nicely
browned, about 2 minutes. Serve
right away.
Nutrition information per serving:
150 calories; 10 calories from fat (7
percent of total calories); 1 g fat (0
g saturated; 0 g trans fats); 30 mg
cholesterol; 31 g carbohydrate; 2 g
ber; 25 g sugar; 2 g protein; 50 mg
sodium.
Give apples healthy brulee treatment
Which kind of apple should you use for my apple cranberry brulee? In this recipe it doesnt matter. Just pick the
one or two kinds you like best.
Weight loss groups
back New York Citys
sugary drinks plan
By Jennifer Peltz
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK The citys planned
crackdown on super-sized sugary
drinks got prominent backing
Tuesday from Weight Watchers,
Jenny Craig and other diet compa-
nies, who added their inuence to the
campaign ahead of a vote next week.
The announcement made at a
press conference featuring Mayor
Michael Bloomberg and a top Weight
Watchers ofcial was the latest in
a volley of statements of support for
both advocates and critics of the plan,
which calls for restaurants, movie the-
aters, sports arenas, food carts and
delis to stop selling sodas and other
sugary drinks in servings larger than
16 ounces.
Bloomberg and other proponents
call it a sensible way to encourage
people to cut calories. Opponents see
it as government overreaching and
question its effectiveness.
To the diet groups, its a tool that
ts with their approach to making
healthy eating easier.
Today, we live in a world where
despite our best intentions, its often-
times very difcult on your own to
make the healthy choice, said David
Burwick, president of Weight
Watchers North America. We all
need to take more personal responsi-
bility for our own weight and eating
habits, but it helps to remember what
a healthy portion size is in a world
where super-size portions have
become the norm.
The proposal is set for a Sept. 13
vote at the city Board of Health,
whose members are appointed by
Bloomberg. If approved, it would take
effect as early as March.
Bloomberg has been the leading
advocate for the plan, which follows
other efforts to spur New Yorkers to
mind what they eat. During his 11-
year tenure, the city has barred arti-
cial trans fats from food served in
restaurants and compelled chain
restaurants to post calorie counts on
menus.
Still, the city spends roughly $4 bil-
lion a year on weight-related health
problems, the mayor says. He sees
limiting the serving size of sugary
drinks as a meaningful step but not
an inexible order to keep people
from downing calories they might not
even think about.
DATEBOOK 20
Wednesday Sept. 5, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
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WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 5
Weight Loss Challenge. Noon to 1
p.m. 1730 S. Amphlett Blvd.,
conference room 145, San Mateo.
Learn how to safely lose weight with
personal coach, group support, free
tness evaluation, etc. $35. For more
information call 579-2995.
Naruto Jeopardy. 3:30 p.m. Belmont
Library, 1110 Alameda de las Pulgas,
Belmont. Team up with up to four of
your friends and answer Jeopardy-
style questions to win a prize. For ages
13-19. For more information contact
conrad@smcl.org.
Free Chocolate Taster. 6:30 p.m.
Hilton Garden Inn, 2000 Bridgepointe
Circle, San Mateo.Taste delicious, high-
antioxidant chocolate. For more
information call 255-5476.
Man Ray and Lee Miller: Partners in
Surrealism. 7 p.m. Millbrae Library, 1
Library Ave., Millbrae. Free. For more
information call 697-7607.
Rayme Waters discusses The
Angels Share. 7 p.m. Books Inc., 855
El Camino Real, Palo Alto. For more
information call 321-0600.
Bluestate (Club Fox Blues Jam). 7
p.m. Club Fox, 2209 Broadway,
Redwood City. $5. For more
information call 369-7770.
Argentine Tango and Bachata
Classes. 7:30 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. Boogie
Woogie Ballroom, 551 Foster City Blvd.,
Suite G, Foster City. Beginning
Argentine Tango class, Intermediate
Argentine Tango class, and Argentine
Tango Practica. For more information
call 627-4854.
THURSDAY, SEPT. 6
Health screening for seniors. 9 a.m.
to 11:30 a.m. Lincoln Park Community
Center, 901 Brunswick Ave., Daly City.
For ages 60 and older.Those who plan
to participate should only consume
water and medicine 12 hours before
blood tests (if prescribed, diabetes
medicines should be delayed but
blood pressure medicines should be
taken). Exercise should not be
participated in the morning of the
screening. Appointments should be
made with the community center.
Free. For more information visit mills-
peninsula.org.
Fun with Paper: Origami and Paper
Airplanes. Noon to 2 p.m. Dove and
Olive Works Building, 178 South Blvd.,
San Mateo. Esmeralda Cabrera and
Derrick Kikuchi will teach the craft to
children of all ages. The event will
combine art, math, science and
whimsy. Free. For more information
visit readandteach.com/s/origami.
Gallerie Citi opens its doors. 5:30
p.m. to 7 p.m. Gallerie Citi, 1115
Howard Blvd., Burlingame. New
contemporary art gallery featuring
Bay Area artists such as Elizabeth
Barlow, Kim Frohsin, David Holmes,
Jane Kim and Sahba. For more
information call (415) 722-2119.
My Liberty San Mateo Meeting. 6
p.m. to 8 p.m. American Legion Hall,
130 South Blvd., San Mateo. Free. For
more information visit
mylibertysanmateo.com.
Fashions Night Out. 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Hillsdale Shopping Center, 60 31st
Ave., San Mateo. A global initiative
created to celebrate fashion, culture,
lifestyle, restore consumer condence
and boost the retail industrys
economy. Many stores offering
shopping incentives. For more
information call 345-8222.
Food Exhibition Opening
Reception. 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Fibre Arts
Design Gallery, 935 Industrial Ave., Palo
Alto. Free. For more information call
485-2121.
Four DayYoga, Sudarshan Kryla and
Meditation Course. 6:30 p.m. to 9:30
p.m. on weekdays and 2:30 p.m. to 7:30
p.m. on weekends. Highlands
Recreation Course, 1852 Lexington
Ave., San Mateo. For more information
contact jtang73@gmail.com.
VictoryTales of a Tuskegee Airman.
7 p.m. Lane Room, Burlingame Public
Library, 480 Primrose Lane,
Burlingame. Captain Les Williams will
talk about his experiences as one of
the first African American combat
pilots in WWII as an original member
of the famed Tuskegee Airmen. Free.
For more information call 558-7444.
San Bruno Fire Film Preview. 7 p.m.
San Mateo County History Museum,
2200 Broadway, Redwood City. The
lm features footage from the re and
interviews with firefighters, victims
and city leaders. Film will be
introduced my the director, Jon Rubin.
San Bruno Mayor Jim Ruane and City
Manager Connie Jackson will field
questions from the audience after the
film is shown. Free with cost of
admission to museum, $5 adults and
$3 students and seniors. For more
information call 299-0104.
FRIDAY, SEPT. 7
Free First Fridays. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
San Mateo County History Museum,
2200 Broadway, Redwood City.
Program at 11 a.m. for preschool
children to learn about growing plants
for food. Museum docents will lead
tours of the Museum for adults at 2
p.m. Free. For more information call
299-0104.
Music on the Square. 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Courthouse Square, 2200 Broadway,
Redwood City. Super Huey Reggae.
Free. For more information call 780-
7340.
Movie in the Park. 8 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Baseball eld in Washington Park, 850
Burlingame Ave., Burlingame.
Screening Puss in Boots. Access to
concession stand. Free. For more
information call 558-7300.
Friday Ballroom Dance Party. 8 p.m.
to midnight. Boogie Woogie Ballroom,
551 Foster City Blvd., Suite G, Foster
City. There will be a drop-in Foxtrot
lesson until 9 p.m. followed by the
dance party. $10 for lesson and dance.
$5 for dance only. For more
information call 627-4854.
Salsa, Bachata, Merengue and Cha
Cha Cha. 9 p.m. Club Fox, 2209
Broadway, Redwood City. $10. For
more information call 369-7770.
SATURDAY, SEPT. 8
Free compost giveaway. 8 a.m. to
noon. Belmont City Hall Parking Lot, 1
Twin Pines Lane, Belmont. Residents
of Belmont can pick up up to six
garbage bags of compost for organic
farming, gardening and landscaping.
Free. For more information call 595-
7460.
Sea Cloud Park and Port Royal Park
Ribbon Cutting and Park Opening
Celebration. 8 a.m. Sea Cloud Park,
Foster City then Port Royal Park, Foster
City. For more information call 286-
3388.
Annual Foreclosure Resource Fair.
8:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Redwood Shores
Sobrato Center for Nonprofits, 350
Twin Dolphin Drive, Redwood City.
Free help for homeowners currently
in foreclosure or underwater on their
mortgage. For more information call
363-4570.
Princeton Review SAT/ACT Combo
PracticeTest. 9 a.m. Belmont Library,
1110 Alameda de las Pulgas, Belmont.
Free. Register in person or by phone.
For more information contact
conrad@smcl.org.
Friends of the South San Francisco
Library Annual Fall Book Sale. 10
a.m. to 2 p.m. Main Library, 840 W.
Orange Ave., South San Francisco.
Childrens books, adult ction and an
array of non-fiction titles will be
featured. A section of the sale will have
chairs and ofce supplies. Admission is
free. Prices vary. For more information
call 829-3876.
Calendar
For more events visit
smdailyjournal.com, click Calendar.
more than $25 million will be required to
identify where revenue or spending cuts
would be made to offset the new expenditures,
according to the state legislative analyst.
The nancial impact would be $200 million
in annual sales tax revenue going toward the
local bodies that choose to create a strategic
action plan.
Local strategic action plans
Whether these provisions will help or hurt
the state is up for debate.
Proposition 31 will put into the
Constitution an accountability framework to
improve what people care about; education,
safety and health, said Jim Mayer, executive
director of California Forward, the govern-
ment reform advocacy group that wrote
Proposition 31.
One provision grants local governments
state money to create strategic action plans.
Seventy percent of the state budget gets spent
on communities, Mayer said. So the state
budget is really a local budget.
Allowing local entities to form new plans
and receive some extra state money would
encourage innovation and efciency, Mayer
said.
But Wayne Lusvardi, who has worked on
the budgets of community agencies in Los
Angeles, said implementing the strategic
action plans would further complicate state
bureaucracy and administration.
The revenue would ow to this committee
instead of to the city or county, said Lusvardi.
Were talking about another layer of govern-
ment.
However, Mayer said these new voluntary
committees would be able to make the
changes that are truly needed in their own
communities.
The state is in a habit of trying to write
rules that apply everywhere, said Mayer.
Proposition 31 would give counties like San
Mateo the exibility to meet their own needs,
he said.
This would allow a county the exibility
implement something its officials thought
would work better, for example, a better way
to use resources to protect children in foster
homes, he said.
Lusvardi countered that the provision would
enable the new local committees to potential-
ly go around state laws.
Its not the authority to override, its the
authority to propose, said Mayer.
New spending
San Jose high school teacher Don Dawson
is against Proposition 31. Requiring new
expenditures to nd where the offsetting rev-
enue or spending cuts would come from
would prevent new ows of school funding,
he said.
We are at historically low levels of state
spending, said Dawson, a board member of
the California Teachers Association, which is
against Proposition 31. This initiative would
say, youve been ratcheted down from crisis
and thats the amount were going to use as we
go forward.
Dawson said the measure puts a spending
cap on education, but Mayer argues there is no
spending cap imposed by Proposition 31.
Some say this locks in spending at the bot-
tom of the recession, but this doesnt lock in
spending anywhere, Mayer said. Under a
pay-as-you-go (PAYGO) program allowing
only spending that does not increase the
decit money can be spent, but there can-
not be an arbitrary cutting of taxes just
because it is a good year, he said.
With already $10 billion deferred from edu-
cation funding, Dawson said, this is not a good
starting point for stricter spending require-
ments. Dawson said he might be in support of
the proposition if it were enacted ve years
ago, when education spending was $20 billion
higher than it is today.
Were stuck in this historic low where
many schools have no librarians, he said. To
say that this is the new normal is just unfair to
students.
Dr. James Fishkin, director of the Center for
Deliberative Democracy at Stanford
University, said Proposition 31 could actually
help teachers. We have all these billion dollar
surprises and teacher layoffs, he said. I think
stability would be great advantage.
But Dawson said if you grow from a low
spot, youre holding things down.
If youre only working 80 percent of the
time and someone says well we need some
predictability going forward so well hold you
down at that level, that wouldnt be fair to
you, he said.
For more information on Prop. 31 visit:
sos.ca.gov.
Continued from page 1
PROP. 31
Require new spending bills of more than
$25 million to identify revenue or other
spending cuts to offset the funds;
Local entities (i.e.counties,school districts,
water districts) may receive state funding
for implementation of a strategic action
planand may alter how state laws apply to
these entities;
Create a two-year budget plan (instead
of the current annual cycle);
Give the governor power to make budget
cuts in a scal crisis;
Requires periodic performance reviews
of state and local programs; and
Bills must be made public for three days
prior to a legislative session.
What Prop. 31 would do
First, however, lawmakers will try during a
post-election lame duck session to renew
Bush-era tax cuts and head off a round of
forced budget austerity as automatic budget
cuts are scheduled in January to slam both the
Pentagon and domestic programs. Those cuts
were required by another failed set of budget
talks last fall by a bipartisan supercommit-
tee.
GOP vice presidential nominee Rep. Paul
Ryan of Wisconsin piled on as well.
Of all the broken promises from President
Obama, this is probably the worst one,
because this debt is threatening jobs today, its
threatening prosperity today and it is guaran-
teeing that our children and grandchildren get
a diminished future, Ryan told supporters in
Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Ryan was named to
Obamas debt commission but voted against a
proposal by its co-chairs. He declined an invi-
tation by House Speaker John Boehner, R-
Ohio, to try again on the supercommittee.
Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, said: This debt
will not only be a liability for our kids and
grandkids, but economists also tell us that it
will limit economic growth and kill millions
of jobs now and in the future. Portman was a
member of last years failed supercommittee,
which deadlocked over taxes and cuts to pop-
ular benet programs.
The debt topped the $16 trillion mark on
Friday.
Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner has
said the government will likely reach its debt
limit at the end of the year. However, Geithner
has said he will be able to employ various
extraordinary measures to keep the govern-
ment operating until sometime early next year.
Geithner would need to use these measures if
Congress, as expected, fails to tackle the debt
limit by years end.
Last years prolonged impasse between the
GOP-dominated House and Democrats con-
trolling the Senate and the White House con-
tributed to a move by the ratings agency
Standard & Poors to lower Americas AAA
bond rating for the rst time in the countrys
history, nudging it down a notch to AA+ for
long-term securities.
GOP presidential nominee Mitt Romney
promises sharp spending cuts and a balanced
budget by 2020 if he wins the White House,
but has provided little detail about how that
might be accomplished.
For his part, Obama has declined to tackle
the spiraling growth of benet programs like
Medicare and the Medicaid health program
for the poor and disabled. His proposals to
hike taxes on upper income earners have been
repeatedly rejected by Republicans, but he
promises to insist on them if he wins re-elec-
tion.
Continued from page 1
DEBT
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 2012
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- Should you fnd yourself
facing a situation similar to one you handled
successfully once before, dont try to do anything
different. What worked well in the past will work well
again.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -- Financial trends appear
to be exceptionally encouraging for you at this point
in time. Now is the day to look for ways to make
extra funds and get rid of old debts.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -- Partnership arrange-
ments tend to have better chances for success at
this time than do solo efforts. However, should you
form an alliance, you will need to play a strong sup-
portive role.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -- Strong, benefcial
interests will be favoring you at this point in time.
Dedicate all your efforts toward generating as much
income as you possibly can.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- When and where
there is a need to assert authority, do so without any
hesitation. Youll instinctively know how to do so in
ways that wont cause others to take offense.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -- Youll have a special
knack for ably managing matters that have stumped
all previous comers. You might have to utilize this gift
in two cases.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -- Your judgment is
excellent at this juncture, and all involved should
beneft. A critical decision is likely to be required that
will affect others as well as yourself.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) -- Both buying and selling
will be wise things for you to do. This is because
youll be equally as shrewd a purchaser as you are a
producer. Do what suits your needs.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -- Youll be equally as
adept at fguring out what will sell as you are getting
the help you need to produce it. You may fnd both
assets among people you already know.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -- Do your best to perform
at a top level instead of doing just enough to be ac-
ceptable. Accomplishing something signifcant will be
noted and rewarded by the powers that be.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) -- Chances are there is
plenty of justifcation for your expectations to be run-
ning high at this time. You are now in a cycle where
some remarkable things can be accomplished.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- There is a strong possibil-
ity that you will be a bit luckier than usual where
your career and/or earnings are concerned. Take
measures to produce something ambitious and
wide-ranging.
COPYRIGHT 2012 United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
COMICS/GAMES
9-5-12
TUESDAYS PUZZLE SOLVED
PREVIOUS
SUDOkU
ANSWERS
Want More Fun
and Games?
Jumble Page 2 La Times Crossword Puzzle Classifeds
Tundra & Over the Hedge Comics Classifeds
kids Across/Parents Down Puzzle Family Resource Guide


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.
K
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9
-
5
-
1
2
ACROSS
1 Runs at a mild pace
5 Refute by evidence
10 Voting number
12 -- borealis
13 Dag Hammarskjolds
successor
14 Made cat noises
15 Helper, briefy
16 Prefx for classic
18 Not aboveboard
19 Creepy-crawly
22 Big hit on Broadway
25 Wandered
29 Keep ones distance from
30 Snerts owner
32 Kind of gun
33 Really steamed
34 Mirage site
37 Type of pool
38 Evolution expert
40 Payment for services
43 IV x XIII
44 Bronze and Iron
48 Not out of the ordinary
50 Potential
52 Forewarning
53 Like some restaurants
54 Not poetry
55 Time to beware
DOWN
1 Extends outward
2 Gasps of delight
3 Pleases
4 Catch some rays
5 Weep over
6 Mythical archer
7 Cereal holder
8 Heavy hydrogen
discoverer
9 Tiny amount
10 Sine -- non
11 Natural elevs.
12 Onetime Exxon rival
17 Poetic adverb
20 Dozed off
21 South Seas paradise
22 Ebenezers oath
23 Livy contemporary
24 Golfers yell
26 Steeped
27 Mild oath
28 Information
31 Aunt or bro.
35 Political bash
36 Numerical prefx
39 Go limp
40 Afternoon hour
41 Thus
42 Flightless birds
45 -- -splicing
46 Winds down
47 Barnyard enclosure
48 Rest
49 How -- things?
51 Jackies tycoon
DILBERT CROSSWORD PUZZLE
fUTURE SHOCk
PEARLS BEfORE SWINE
GET fUZZY
Wednesday Sept. 5, 2012 21
THE DAILY JOURNAL
22
Wednesday Sept. 5, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
DELIVERY DRIVER
ALL ROUTES
Wanted: Independent Contractor to provide deliv-
ery of the Daily Journal six days per week, Mon-
day thru Saturday, early morning. Experience
with newspaper delivery required.
Must have valid license and appropriate insurance
coverage to provide this service in order to be eli-
gible. Papers are available for pickup in San Ma-
teo at 3:00 a.m. or San Francisco earlier.
Please apply in person Monday-Friday only, 10am
to 4pm at The Daily Journal, 800 S. Claremont St
#210, San Mateo.
GOT JOBS?
The best career seekers
read the Daily Journal.
We will help you recruit qualified, talented
individuals to join your company or organization.
The Daily Journals readership covers a wide
range of qualifications for all types of positions.
For the best value and the best results,
recruit from the Daily Journal...
Contact us for a free consultation
Call (650) 344-5200 or
Email: ads@smdailyjournal.com
104 Training
TERMS & CONDITIONS
The San Mateo Daily Journal Classi-
fieds will not be responsible for more
than one incorrect insertion, and its lia-
bility 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 sub-
mitted within 30 days. For full advertis-
ing conditions, please ask for a Rate
Card.
105 Education/Instruction
CALVARY
PRESCHOOL
OPEN
ENROLLMENT
Little Learners: age 2.5-3.5
Big Explorers: age 3.5-5
calvarypreschoolmillbrae.com
(650)588-8030
106 Tutoring
TUTORING
English Language & Literature
History & Social Studies
Grades 7-12
Essay Writing
Reading Comprehension
(650)579-2653
106 Tutoring
TUTORING
Spanish, French,
Italian
Certificated Local
Teacher
All Ages!
(650)573-9718
110 Employment
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
JEWELRY SALES
FUN! No Nights! Benefits & 401K!
(650)367-6500 FX:(650)367-6400
jobs@jewelryexchange.com
SALES/MARKETING
INTERNSHIPS
The San Mateo Daily Journal is looking
for ambitious interns who are eager to
jump into the business arena with both
feet and hands. Learn the ins and outs
of the newspaper and media industries.
This position will provide valuable
experience for your bright future.
Email resume
info@smdailyjournal.com
TAXI DRIVER wanted. Pay cash every-
day. (650)766-9878
110 Employment
NEWSPAPER INTERNS
JOURNALISM
The Daily Journal is looking for in-
terns to do entry level reporting, re-
search, updates of our ongoing fea-
tures and interviews. Photo interns al-
so 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 in-
terns have progressed in time into
paid correspondents and full-time re-
porters.
College students or recent graduates
are encouraged to apply. Newspaper
experience is preferred but not neces-
sarily required.
Please send a cover letter describing
your interest in newspapers, a resume
and three recent clips. Before you ap-
ply, 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 reg-
ular mail to 800 S. Claremont St #210,
San Mateo CA 94402.
RESTAURANT -
Experienced line cook, Night / Week-
ends. Apply in person,1201 San Carlos
Ave., San Carlos.
WAREHOUSE/DRIVER - P/T Distributor
in San Carlos seeks employed person
with Van, SUV or covered Truck. Ware-
house work and delivery. (650)595-1768
WEEKLY
SALARY + BONUS
Flexible Hour,
Outside Position,
Full Training
NO EXPERIENCE REQUIRED
to $38.75 per hour
Call Mr. Cannon
(650)372-2810
VETERANS WELCOME
203 Public Notices
CASE# CIV 515771
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
Mabel Esmel da Betancourth Casco
TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS:
Petitioner, Mabel Esmel da Betancourth
Casco filed a petition with this court for a
decree changing name as follows:
Present name: Mabel E. Betancourth
Casco, aka Mabel E. Calvario
Proposed name: Mabel Esmelda Calvar-
io
THE COURT ORDERS that all persons
interested in this matter shall appear be-
fore this court at the hearing indicated
below to show cause, if any, why the pe-
tition 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 rea-
sons 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 peti-
tion without a hearing. A HEARING on
the petition shall be held on September
26, 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 pri-
or to the date set for hearing on the peti-
tion in the following newspaper of gener-
al circulation: Daily Journal
Filed: 08/16/2012
/s/ Beth Freeman/
Judge of the Superior Court
Dated: 08/15/2012
(Published, 08/22/12, 08/29/12,
09/05/12, 09/12/12)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #251718
The following person is doing business
as: Menlo Designer Rugs, 714 Santa
Cruz Avenue, MENLO PARK, CA 94025
is hereby registered by the following
owner: Kamili Imports, Inc., CA. The
business is conducted by a Corporation.
The registrants commenced to transact
business under the FBN on 08/15/2012.
/s/ Showkut Hussain Kamili /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 08/06/2012. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
08/15/12, 08/22/12, 08/29/12, 09/05/12).
23 Wednesday Sept. 5, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
Tundra Tundra Tundra
Over the Hedge Over the Hedge Over the Hedge
CITY OF SAN BRUNO - NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Wastewater Service Lateral Truck
The City of San Bruno is accepting bids, subject to the specifi-
cations and conditions as stated in Bid No. E13-6310-01.
The Bid Packet is available at
http://www.sanbruno.ca.gov/finance_biddingopp.html.
Bids must be submitted to the San Bruno City Clerks Office,
in City Hall, located at 567 El Camino Real, San Bruno, by
3:00 p.m. Monday, September 10, 2012, at which time they
will be publicly opened and read.
Contact the Finance Department at 650-616-7034 to obtain a
copy of the bid documents or for more information.
/s/ Carol Bonner,
San Bruno City Clerk
August 27, 2012
LEGAL NOTICES
Fictitious Business Name Statements, Trustee
Sale Notice, Alcohol Beverage License, Name
Change, Probate, Notice of Adoption, Divorce
Summons, Notice of Public Sales, and More.
Published in the Daily Journal for San Mateo County.
Fax your request to: 650-344-5290
Email them to: ads@smdailyjournal.com
203 Public Notices
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #M-251437
The following person is doing business
as: American Extradition Specialists, 504
Monterey Road, #F, PACIFICA, CA
94044 is hereby registered by the follow-
ing owner: Stephen M. Sanzeri, 11155
Main St., Sheep Ranch, CA 95246. The
business is conducted by an Individual.
The registrants commenced to transact
business under the FBN on
/s/ Stephen M. Sanzeri /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 07/18/2012. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
08/15/12, 08/22/12, 08/29/12, 09/05/12).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #251923
The following person is doing business
as: KT Nails, 1045 Laurel St., SAN CAR-
LOS, CA 94070 is hereby registered by
the following owner: Jennifer Trinh, 1480
Cypress Ct., Gilroy, CA 95020. The
business is conducted by an Individual.
The registrants commenced to transact
business under the FBN on
/s/ Jennifer Trinh /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 08/20/2012. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
08/22/12, 08/29/12, 09/05/12, 09/12/12).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #251817
The following person is doing business
as: 411 Information Services, 932 Penin-
sula Ave., #411, SAN MATEO, CA
94401 is hereby registered by the follow-
ing owner: Stannie Holt, same address.
The business is conducted by an Individ-
ual. The registrants commenced to trans-
act business under the FBN on
04/19/2007.
/s/ Stannie Holt /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 08/13/2012. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
08/22/12, 08/29/12, 09/05/12, 09/12/12).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #251417
The following person is doing business
as: Ondvirg Entertainment Productions,
63 Yacht Lane, DALY CITY, CA 94014
is hereby registered by the following
owner: Virgilio B. Casanada, same ad-
dress. The business is conducted by an
Individual. The registrants commenced to
transact business under the FBN on N/A.
/s/ Virgilio B. Casanada /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 07/17/2012. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
08/22/12, 08/29/12, 09/05/12, 09/12/12).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #251815
The following person is doing business
as: Dimples and Kisses, 41 Commons
Lane, FOSTER CITY, CA 94404 is here-
by registered by the following owner:
Cathy J. Freeman, same address. The
business is conducted by an Individual.
The registrants commenced to transact
business under the FBN on
/s/ Cathy J. Freeman /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 08/13/2012. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
08/22/12, 08/29/12, 09/05/12, 09/12/12).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #251924
The following person is doing business
as: Broadway Prime, 1316 Broadway
Avenue, BURLINGAME, CA 94010 is
hereby registered by the following owner:
Tianmar, Inc., CA. The business is con-
ducted by a Corporation. The registrants
commenced to transact business under
the FBN on
/s/ Tian-Hong Tan /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 08/20/2012. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
08/22/12, 08/29/12, 09/05/12, 09/12/12).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #251781
The following person is doing business
as: Soccer Pro RC, 2737 El Camino Re-
al, REDWOOD CITY, CA 94061 is here-
by registered by the following owner:
Norma P. Zapien, 37168 Walnut St.,
Newark, CA 94560. The business is
conducted by an Individual. The regis-
trants commenced to transact business
under the FBN on
/s/ Norma P. Zapien /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 08/09/2012. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
08/29/12, 09/05/12, 09/12/12, 09/19/12).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #251691
The following person is doing business
as: J & M Painting, 815 Humboldt St.,
#207, SAN MATEO, CA 94401 is hereby
registered by the following owner: Jona-
than Brandan, same address. The busi-
ness is conducted by an Individual. The
registrants commenced to transact busi-
ness under the FBN on
/s/ Jonathan Brandan /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 08/02/2012. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
08/29/12, 09/05/12, 09/12/12, 09/19/12).
203 Public Notices
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #251589
The following person is doing business
as: Playful Planner, 724 Fiesta Drive,
SAN MATEO, CA 94402 is hereby regis-
tered by the following owner: Megan
Sandoval, same address. The business
is conducted by an Individual. The regis-
trants commenced to transact business
under the FBN on
/s/ Megan Sandoval /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 07/27/2012. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
08/29/12, 09/05/12, 09/12/12, 09/19/12).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #252012
The following person is doing business
as: Hillsdale Market, 212 E. Hillsdale
Blvd., SAN MATEO, CA 94403 is hereby
registered by the following owner: Man-
ubhai B. Tandel, 336 Alden St., Red-
wood City, CA 94063. The business is
conducted by an Individual. The regis-
trants commenced to transact business
under the FBN on September. 1, 2012
/s/ Manubhai B. Tandel /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 08/27/2012. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
08/29/12, 09/05/12, 09/12/12, 09/19/12).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #251771
The following person is doing business
as: Shy July, 274 Harbor Way, SOUTH
SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94080 is hereby
registered by the following owner: Shy
July, LLC, CA. The business is conduct-
ed by a Limited Liability Company. The
registrants commenced to transact busi-
ness under the FBN on
/s/ Jimmy Zhirong Yu /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 08/09/2012. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
08/29/12, 09/05/12, 09/12/12, 09/19/12).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #252092
The following person is doing business
as: Pak Chiropratic 520 S. El Camino
Real, Ste. 520, SAN MATEO, CA 94402
is hereby registered by the following
owner: Jin Pak, 2250 Monroe St. #283,
Santa Clara, CA 95050. The business is
conducted by an Individual. The regis-
trants commenced to transact business
under the FBN on 09/01/2012
/s/ Jin Pak /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 08/30/2012. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
09/05/12, 09/12/12, 09/19/12, 09/26/12).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #252093
The following person is doing business
as: The Animal Connection II, 1429 Bur-
lingame Ave., BURLINGAME, CA 94010
is hereby registered by the following
owner: Peter Weaver, 980 Teresita Blvd.,
San Francisco, CA 94127. The business
is conducted by an Individual. The regis-
trants commenced to transact business
under the FBN on
/s/ Peter Weaver /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 08/30/2012. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
09/05/12, 09/12/12, 09/19/12, 09/26/12).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #252125
The following person is doing business
as: Alban Interior Plant Service, 215 2nd
Ave. Apt. 233, SAN MATEO, CA 94401
is hereby registered by the following
owner: Moises Ubaldo Alban Lozano,
same address. The business is conduct-
ed by an Individual. The registrants com-
menced to transact business under the
FBN on 10/01/2012.
/s/ Moises Ubaldo Alban Lozano /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 09/04/2012. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
09/05/12, 09/12/12, 09/19/12, 09/26/12).
203 Public Notices
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #252089
The following person is doing business
as: Angry Bicycle Press, 301 Hillcrest
Road, SAN CARLOS, CA 94070 is here-
by registered by the following owner:
Wendy Diane Walter, same address.
The business is conducted by an Individ-
ual. The registrants commenced to trans-
act business under the FBN on
/s/ Wendy D. Walter /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 08/30/2012. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
09/05/12, 09/12/12, 09/19/12, 09/26/12).
NOTICE OF PETITION TO
ADMINISTER ESTATE OF
Mary A. Marshall
aka Mary Albertina Marshall
Case Number 122657
To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, con-
tingent creditors, and persons who may
otherwise be interested in the will or es-
tate, or both, of: Mary A. Marshall aka
Mary Albertina Marshall. A Petition for
Probate has been filed by Marilyn M.
Moon in the Superior Court of California,
County of San Mateo. The Petition for
Probate requests that Marilyn M. Moon
be appointed as personal representative
to administer the estate of the decedent.
The petition requests the decedents will
and codicils, if any, be admitted to pro-
bate. The will and any codicils are avail-
able for examination in the file kept by
the court.
The petition requests authority to admin-
ster the estate under the Independent
Administration of Estates Act. (This au-
thority will allow the personal representa-
tive to take many actions without obtain-
ing court approval. Before taking certain
very important actions, however, the per-
sonal representative will be required to
give notice to interested persons unless
they have waived notice or consented to
the proposed action.) The independent
administration authority will be granted
unless an interested person files an ob-
jection to the petition and shows good
cause why the court should not grant the
authority.
A hearing on the petition will be held in
this court as follows: October 2, 2012 at
9:00 a.m., Dept. 28, Superior Court of
California, County of San Mateo, 400
County Center, 1st Floor, Redwood City,
CA 94063. If you object to the granting
of the petition, you should appear at the
hearing and state your objections or file
written objections with the court before
the hearing. Your appearance may be in
person or by your attorney. If you are a
creditor or a contingent creditor of the
decedent, you must file your claim with
the court and mail a copy to the personal
representative appointed by the court
within four months from the date of first
issuance of letters as provided in Pro-
bate Code section 9100. The time for fil-
ing claims will not expire before four
months from the hearing date noticed
above. You may examine the file kept by
the court. If you are a person interested
in the estate, you may file with the court
a Request for Special Notice (form DE-
154) of the filing of an inventory and ap-
praisal of estate assets or of any petition
or account as provided in Probate Code
section 1250. A Request for Special No-
tice form is available from the court clerk.
Attorney for Petitioner:
Alexandra Gadzo, #209127
Gadzo Law, P.C.
2600 El Camino Real, Suite #412
Palo Alto, CA 94306
(650)321-3050
Dated: 08/30/12
Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal
on September 5, 12, 19, 2012.
SUMMONS
(CITACION JUDICIAL)
CASE NUMBER: CIV508028
NOTICE TO DEFENDANT: (Aviso Al
Demandado): WELLS FARGO BANK,
N.A., SUCCESSOR BY MERGER TO
WELLS FARGO BANK SOUTHWEST,
N.A. F/K/A WACHOVIA MORTGAGE,
FSB, F/K/A WORLD SAVINGS BANK,
FSB; and/or WELLS FARGO BANK,
N.A., AND F/K/A WACHOVIA MORT-
GAGE, FSB; WASHINGTONMUTUAL
BANK, a Federal Association, A/K/A
WASHINGTON MUTUAL, INC., A/K/A
J.P.MORGAN CHASE; NDEx West,
L.L.C., a Texas Limited Liability Compa-
ny; LILIAN LUM; RENE WAN LO; DAN-
IEL C. YEE; and DOES 1-20, Inclusive,
YOU ARE BEING SUED BY PLAIN-
TIFF: (Lo esta demandando el deman-
dante): JAMES LUM
NOTICE! You have been sued. The
court may decide against you without
your being heard unless you respond
within 30 days. Read the information be-
low.
You have 30 calendar days after this
summons and legal papers are served
on you to file a written response at the
court and have a copy served on the
plaintiff. A letter or phone call will not pro-
tect you. Your written response must be
in proper legal form if you want the court
to hear your case. There may be a court
form that you can use for your response.
You can find these court forms and more
information at the California Courts On-
line Self-Help Center
(www.courtinfo.ca.gov/selfhelp), your
county law library, or the courthouse
nearest you. If you cannot pay the filing
fee, ask the court clerk for a fee waiver
form. If you do not file your response on
time, you may lose the case by default,
and your wages, money, and property
may be taken without further warning
from the court.
There are other legal requirements. You
may want to call an attorney right away.
If you do not know an attorney, you may
want to call an attorney referral service.
If you cannot afford an attorney, you may
be eligible for free legal services from a
nonprofit legal services program. You
203 Public Notices
can locate these nonprofit groups at the
California Legal Services Web site
(www.lawhelpcalifornia.org), the Califor-
nia Courts Online Self-Help Center
(www.courtinfo.ca.gov/selfhelp), or by
contacting your local court or county bar
association. NOTE: The court has a stat-
utory lien for waived fees and costs on
any settlement or arbitration award of
$10,000 or more in a civil case. The
courts lien must be paid before the court
will dismiss the case.
AVISO! Lo han demando. Si no re-
sponde dentro de 30 dias, la corte puede
decidir en su contra sin escuchar su ver-
sion. Lea la informacion a continuacion.
Tiene 30 dias de calendario despues de
que le entreguen esta citacion y papeles
legales para presentar una respuesta por
escrito en esta corte y hacer que se en-
tregue ena copia al demandante. Una
carta o una llamada telefonica no lo pro-
tegen. Su respuesta por escrito tiene
que estar en formato legal correcto si de-
sea que procesen su caso en la corte.
Es posible que haya un formulario que
usted pueda usar para su respuesta.
Puede encontrar estos formularios de la
corte y mas informacion en el Centro de
Ayuda de las Cortes de California
(www.courtinfo.ca.gov/selfhelp/espanol/),
en la biblio teca de leyes de su condado
o en la corte que le quede mas cerca. Si
no puede pagar la cuota de presenta-
cion, pida al secretario de la corte que le
de un formulario de exencion de pago de
cuotas. Si no presenta su respuesta a
tiempo, puede perder el caso por incum-
plimiento y la corte le podra quitar su su-
eldo, dinero y bienes sin mas adverten-
cia. Hay otros requisitos legales. Es re-
comendable que llame a un abogado in-
mediatamente. Si no conoce a un abo-
dado, puede llamar a de servicio de re-
mision a abogados. Si no puede pagar a
un abogado, es posible que cumpia con
los requisitos para obtener servicios le-
gales gratuitos de un programa de servi-
cios legales sin fines de lucro. Puede
encontrar estos grupos sin fines de lucro
en el sitio web de California Legal Serv-
ices Web site
(www.lawhelpcalifornia.org), en el Centro
de Ayuda de las Cortes de California,
(www.courtinfo.ca.gov/selfhelp/espanol/)
o poniendose en contacto con la corte o
el colegio de abogados locales. AVISO:
Por ley, la corte tiene derecho a reclamar
las cuotas y costos exentos por imponer
un gravamen sobre cualquier recupera-
cion de $10,000 o mas de valor recibida
mediante un acuerdo o una concesion
de arbitraje en un caso de derecho civil.
Tiene que pagar el gravamen de la corte
antes de que la corte pueda desechar el
caso.
The name and address of the court is:
(El nombre y direccion de la corte es):
San Mateo County Superior Court, Hall
of Justice, 400 County Center, Redwood
City, CA 94063-1655
The name, address, and telephone num-
ber of the plaintiffs attorney, or plaintiff
without an attorney, is: (El nombre, direc-
cion y numero de telefono del abogado
del demandante, o del demandante que
no tiene abogado, es):
John H. OReilly #072145
244 Kearny St., #900
San Francisco, CA 94108
(415)392-2860
Date: (Fecha) Aug. 29, 2011
John C. Fitton, Clerk, Deputy (Adjunto)
Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal
September 5, 12, 19, 26, 2012.
210 Lost & Found
FOUND - Evan - I found your iPod, call
(650)261-9656
FOUND- LITTLE tan male chihuahua,
Found on Davit Street in Redwood
Shores Tuesday, August 28th. Please
call (650)533-9942
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 CHIHUAHUA/TERRIER mix in
SSF, tan color, 12 lbs., scar on stomach
from being spade, $300. REWARD!
(650)303-2550
210 Lost & Found
LOST SIAMESE CAT on 5/21 in
Belmont. Dark brown& tan, blue eyes.
FOUND!
LOST: SMALL diamond cross, silver
necklace with VERY sentimental
meaning. Lost in San Mateo 2/6/12
(650)578-0323.
294 Baby Stuff
B.O.B. DUALLIE STROLLER, for two.
Excellent condition. Blue. $300.
Call 650-303-8727.
BABY BJORN potty $10 (650)595-3933
BABY CAR SEAT AND CARRIER $20
(650)458-8280
DEX SAFE Sleeper Ultra bed rail $10
(650)595-3933
295 Art
WALL ART, from Pier 1, indoor/outdoor,
$15. Very nice! (650)290-1960
296 Appliances
HAIR DRYER, Salon Master, $10.
(650)854-4109
HUNTER OSCILLATING FAN, excellent
condition. 3 speed. $35. (650)854-4109
MIROMATIC PRESSURE cooker flash
canner 4qt. $25. 415 333-8540
RADIATOR HEATER, oil filled, electric,
1500 watts $25. (650)504-3621
ROTISSERIE GE, US Made, IN-door or
out door, Holds large turkey 24 wide,
Like new, $80, OBO (650)344-8549
SHOP VACUUM rigid brand 3.5 horse
power 9 gal wet/dry $40. (650)591-2393
SMALL SLOW cooker. Used once, $12
(650)368-3037
SUNBEAM TOASTER -Automatic, ex-
cellent condition, $30., (415)346-6038
VACUUM CLEANER excellent condition
$45. (650)878-9542
WASHER AND Dryer, $200
(650)333-4400
WATER HEATER $75, (650)333-4400
297 Bicycles
BIKE RACK Roof mounted, holds up to
4 bikes, $65 (650)594-1494
298 Collectibles
1968 SILVER MEXICAN OLYMPIC
COIN - 25 pesos, $50., SOLD!
1982 PRINT 'A Tune Off The Top Of My
Head' 82/125 $80 (650) 204-0587
2 FIGURINES - 1 dancing couple, 1
clown face. both $15. (650)364-0902
67 OLD Used U.S. Postage Stamps.
Many issued before World War II. All
different. $4.00, (650)787-8600
AMISH QUILLOW, brand new, authen-
tic, $50. (650)589-8348
ANTIQUE TRAIN set from the 40's com-
plete set in the box $80 OBO (650)589-
8348
ARMY SHIRT, long sleeves, with pock-
ets. XL $15 each (408)249-3858
BAY MEADOWS bag - $30.each,
(650)345-1111
BEAUTIFUL RUSTIE doll Winter Bliss w/
stole & muffs, 23, $90. OBO, (650)754-
3597
CHILDHOOD COMIC book collection
many titles from the 70's & 80's whole
collection $50 OBO (650)589-8348
COLORIZED TERRITORIAL Quarters
uncirculated with Holder $15/all,
(408)249-3858
FIVE RARE Non-Mint 1954 Dan Dee
Baseball Cards (Lemon, Wynn, Schoen-
dienst, Mitchell, Hegan), Each $20, All
$95, (650)787-8600
GAYLORD PERRY 8x10 signed photo
$10 (650)692-3260
JOE MONTANA signed authentic retire-
ment book, $39., (650)692-3260
MARK MCGUIRE hats, cards, beanie
babies, all for $98., (650)520-8558
ORIGINAL SMURF FIGURES - 1979-
1981, 18+ mushroom hut, 1 1/2 x 3 1/2,
all $40., (650)518-0813
298 Collectibles
RARE BASEBALL CARDS
Five Non-Mint 1954 Dan Dee Baseball
Cards (Lemon, Wynn, Schoendienst,
Mitchell, Hegan), All $95, (650)787-8600
SPORTS CARDS 50 Authentic Signa-
tures $60 all, (650)365-3987
STACKING MINI-KETTLES - 3
Pots/cover: ea. 6 diam. Brown speckle
enamelware, $20., (650)341-3288
VINTAGE HOLLIE HOBBIE LUNCH-
BOX with Thermos, 1980s, $25., Call
Maria 650-873-8167
WANTED:
OLDER PLASTIC MODEL KITS.
Aurora, Revell, Monogram.
Immediate cash.
Pat 650-759-0793.
YUGIOH CARD 2,000 some rare 1st
Edition, $60 all, (650)365-3987
299 Computers
HP PRINTER Deskjet 970c color printer.
Excellent condition. Software & accesso-
ries included. $30. 650-574-3865
300 Toys
AMERICAN FLYER train set $75 OBO
(650)589-8348
ANTIQUE ELECTRIC train set with steel
engine full set from the 50's $75 OBO
(650)589-8348
BILINGUAL POWER lap top
6 actividaes $18 SOLD!
302 Antiques
1912 COFFEE Percolator Urn. perfect
condition includes electric cord $85.
(415)565-6719
ANTIQUE BEVEL MIRROR - framed,
14 x 21, carved top, $45., (650)341-
7890
ANTIQUE ITALIAN lamp 18 high, $70
(650)387-4002
ANTIQUE WASHING machine, some
rust on legs, rust free drum and ringer.
$45/obo, (650)574-4439
CHINA CABINET - Vintage, 6 foot,
solid mahogany. $300/obo.
(650)867-0379
J&J HOPKINSON 1890-1900's walnut
piano with daffodil inlay on the front. Ivo-
ries in great condition. Can be played as
is, but will benefit from a good tuning.
$600.00 includes stool. Email
frisz@comcast.net for photos
STICKLEY STYLE solid oak Mission
Chair, SOLD!
303 Electronics
3 SHELF SPEAKERS - 8 OM, $15.
each, (650)364-0902
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
H/P WINDOWS Desk Jet 840C Printer.
Like New. All hookups. $30.00 SOLD!
HOME THEATRE SYSTEM - 3 speak-
ers, woofer, DVD player, USB connec-
tion, $80., (714)818-8782
LEFT-HAND ERGONOMIC keyboard
with 'A-shape' key layout Num pad, $20
(650)204-0587
LSI SCSI Ultra320 Controller + (2) 10k
RPM 36GB SCSI II hard drives $40
(650)204-0587
NIGHT STANDS $20, obo (650)952-
3063
NINTENDO NES plus 8 games,Works,
$30 SOLD!
PROSCAM 36" color TV with cabinet
and 2 glass doors like new $90 obo
(650)952-3063
24
Wednesday Sept. 5, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
ACROSS
1 Home to the
Ibsen Museum
5 Online auction
payment, say
10 Animation
14 Part of a Clue
guess
15 Salsa holder
16 Political pal
17 *Saw
19 1997 Peter
Fonda role
20 Like some
stadiums
21 Drove (on)
22 *Head
26 Like prison
windows
30 Doesnt mention
31 Toe the line
32 Peach pit
33 Close, as a
windbreaker
36 *Come
40 Glamour VIPs
41 Denmarks __
Islands
42 Suffix with tip or
trick
43 Erin of Happy
Days
44 Mathematician
Pascal
46 *Board
49 Decree
50 Tummy soother
55 One in a four-
part harmony
56 *Do
59 Gubernatorial
turndown
60 Cassette half
61 Prefix missing
from the starred
clues
62 Composer Satie
63 __ once in a
while
64 Like Broadways
Yankees
DOWN
1 Inexact words
2 Gazpacho, e.g.
3 Easy run
4 Hint of things to
come
5 Begrudged
6 Meaningful pile
of stones
7 Bldg. coolers
8 Steady as __
goes
9 Masons tray
10 Comics rewards
11 Any
volunteers?
reply
12 Sails force?
13 Scrutinized
18 Award two stars
to, say
21 Glyceride, for
one
23 Improper
24 Start of a
parliamentary
proposal
25 Math ratio
26 Hint of things to
come
27 Not yet stirring
28 Game callers
29 Caraway-seeded
bread, often
32 Comic
Silverman
33 Tubular pasta
34 Urban addition
35 Ceremonial pile
37 In progress, to
Sherlock
38 Causing puckers
39 Fed. benefits
agency
43 N. Zealands
highest peak
44 Deep
penetrating pain
relief brand
45 Subject to a
penalty fee,
maybe
46 Thumb twiddler
47 Capone
henchman
48 More wise
49 Roof overhang
51 2007 A.L. MVP
52 Vena __
53 Gossip column
couple
54 Coming Home
actor
56 Language suffix
57 Letters for Louis
Quatorze
58 Lemony
quencher
By Mel Rosen
(c)2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
09/05/12
09/05/12
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:
Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis
xwordeditor@aol.com
304 Furniture
2 DINETTE Chairs both for $29
(650)692-3260
2 END Tables solid maple '60's era
$40/both. (650)670-7545
4 DRAWER metal file cabinet, black, no
lock model, like new $50 (650)204-0587
ARMOIRE CABINET - $90., Call
(415)375-1617
CHAIR MODERN light wood made in Ita-
ly $99 (415)334-1980
CHANDELIER WITH 5 lights/ candela-
bre base with glass shades $20.
(650)504-3621
COFFEE TABLE - 30 x 58, light oak,
heavy, 1980s, $40., (650)348-5169
COMPUTER DESK from Ikea, $40
(650)348-5169
COUCH-FREE. OLD world pattern, soft
fabric. Some cat scratch damage-not too
noticeable. 650-303-6002
DESK SOLID wood 21/2' by 5' 3 leather
inlays manufactured by Sligh 35 years
old $100 (must pick up) (650)231-8009
DINING ROOM SET - table, four chairs,
lighted hutch, $500. all, (650)296-3189
DISPLAY CASE wood & glass 31 x 19
inches $30. (650)873-4030
DRUM TABLE - brown, perfect condi-
tion, nice design, with storage, $45.,
(650)345-1111
END TABLES (2) - One for $5. hand
carved, other table is antique white mar-
ble 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
FOLDING PICNIC table - 8 x 30, 7 fold-
ing, padded chairs, $80. (650)364-0902
FUTON DELUXE plus other items all for
$90 650 341-2397 (U haul away)
HAND MADE portable jewelry display
case wood and see through lid $45. 25 x
20 x 4 inches. (650)592-2648.
PAPASAN CHAIRS (2) -with cushions
$45. each set, (650)347-8061
304 Furniture
HAWAIIAN STYLE living room chair Re-
tton with split bamboo, blue and white
stripe cushion $99 (650)343-4461
KITCHEN TABLE walnut with chrome
legs. 36x58 with one leaf 11 1/2. $50,
San Mateo (650)341-5347
LOUNGE CHAIRS - 2 new, with cover &
plastic carring case & headrest, $35.
each, (650)592-7483
LOVE SEAT. Like New. Olive/green.
33" High, 60" wide, 42" deep. Very com-
fortable. $20.00 or B/O (650)578-1411
MODULAR DESK/BOOKCASE/STOR-
AGE unit - Cherry veneer, white lami-
nate, $75., (650)888-0039
NIGHT STANDS $35, (650)952-3063
OFFICE LAMP, small. Black & white with
pen holder and paper holder. Brand new,
in the box. $10 (650)867-2720
PEDESTAL DINETTE 36 Square Table
- $65., (650)347-8061
RECLINER CHAIR very comfortable vi-
nyl medium brown $70, (650)368-3037
ROCKING CHAIR - excellent condition,
oak, with pads, $85.obo, (650)369-9762
ROCKING CHAIR - Traditional, full size
Rocking chair. Excellent condition $100.,
(650)504-3621
SMALL STORAGE/ Hutch, Stained
Green, pretty. $40, (650)290-1960
STEREO CABINET walnut w/3 black
shelves 16x 22x42. $30, 650-341-5347
STORAGE TABLE light brown lots of
storage good cond. $45. (650)867-2720
TEA CHEST , Bombay, burgundy, glass
top, perfect cond. $35 (650)345-1111
TRUNDLE BED - Single with wheels,
$40., (650)347-8061
VANITY ETHAN Allen maple w/drawer
and liftup mirror like new $95
(650)349-2195
304 Furniture
VINTAGE UPHOLSTERED wooden
chairs, $25 each or both for $40. nice
set. (650)583-8069
VINTAGE WING back chair $75,
(650)583-8069
306 Housewares
"PRINCESS HOUSE decorator urn
"Vase" cream with blue flower 13 inch H
$25., (650)868-0436
28" by 15" by 1/4" thick glass shelves,
cost $35 each sell at $15 ea. Five availa-
ble, Call (650)345-5502
6 BOXES of Victorian lights ceiling & wall
$90., (650)340-9644
BEDSPREAD - queen size maroon &
pink bedspread - Fairly new, $50. obo,
(650)834-2583
CANDLEHOLDER - Gold, angel on it,
tall, purchased from Brueners, originally
$100., selling for $30.,(650)867-2720
COCKTAIL GLASSES - beautiful, rich,
smokey hue, oak tree design, wide base,
set of 12, $25., (650)341-8342
DINING ROOM Victorian Chandelier
seven light, $90., (650)340-9644
DRIVE MEDICAL design locking elevat-
ed toilet seat. New. $45. (650)343-4461
IRONING BOARD $15 (650)347-8061
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
SUNBEAN TOASTER excellent condi-
tion (415)346-6038
307 Jewelry & Clothing
BRACELET - Ladies authentic Murano
glass from Italy, vibrant colors, like new,
$100., (650)991-2353 Daly City
GALLON SIZE bag of costume jewelry -
various sizes, colors, $100. for bag,
(650)589-2893
307 Jewelry & Clothing
LADIES GOLD Lame' elbow length-
gloves sz 7.5 $15 New. (650)868-0436
WE BUY GOLD
Highest Prices Paid on
Jewelry or Scrap
Michaels Jewelry
Since 1963
253 Park Road
Burlingame
(650)342-4461
308 Tools
3 ALUMINUM ladders 8', 16', & 28' good
condition all for $90 SOLD!
49 TOOLS Varity of tools all for $98,
SOLD!
AIR COMPRESSOR, 220 Volt 2hp
20gal Tank $60, SOLD!
CEMENT MIXER, Never used 3.5 Cu. Ft.
SOLD!
CIRCULAR SAW, Craftsman-brand, 10,
4 long x 20 wide. Comes w/ stand - $70.
(650)678-1018
CRAFTSMAN 3/4 horse power 3,450
RPM $60 (650)347-5373
CRAFTSMAN ARC-WELDER - 30-250
amp, and accessories, $275., (650)341-
0282
CRAFTSMAN GASLESS Wire feed
welder New in the box , SOLD!
CRAFTSMAN RADIO ARM SAW -
needs a switch, $20., SOLD!
DAYTON ELECTRIC 1 1/2 horse power
1,725 RPM $60 (650)347-5373
DEWALT COMBO 14.4v - Drill, saw,
charger, 2 batteries. $40.00 cash, firm.
SOLD through the Daily Journal!
ENGINE HOIST PROFESSIONAL - no
leaks, American made, $90., SOLD!
FLOOR JACK, American Made, no
leaks, $60 SOLD!
FMC TIRE changer Machine, $650
(650)333-4400
GENERATOR 13,000 WATTS Brand
New 20hp Honda $2800 (650)333-4400
LAWN MOWER reel type push with
height adjustments. Just sharpened $45
650-591-2144 San Carlos
MICRO METER Set, 0 to 12. 12 mikes
Total, $75, SOLD!
SCNCO TRIM Nail Gun, $100
(650) 521-3542
STADILA LEVEL 6ft, $60
(650) 521-3542
TABLE SAW 10", very good condition
$85. (650) 787-8219
TABLE SAW, Upright, craftsman 10
Blade, $20., SOLD!
TABLE SAW- Craftsman 10" saw. brand
new, never used $85. SOLD!
WOOD JOINTER, Craftsman Model
#113206931, 6 Blade 36 Table 36 tall,
$50., SOLD!
309 Office Equipment
ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER Smith Corona
$60. (650)878-9542
310 Misc. For Sale
1 PAIR of matching outdoor planting pots
$20., (650)871-7200
10 PLANTS (assorted) for $3.00 each,
(650)349-6059
14 PLAYBOY magazines all for $80
(650)592-4529
14 SEGA genius games 2 controllers
$20 (650)589-8348
300 HOME LIBRARY BOOKS - $3. or
$5. each obo, World & US History and
American Novel Classic, must see to ap-
preciate, (650)345-5502
3D MOVIE glasses, (12) unopened,
sealed plastic, Real 3D, SOLD!
4 IN 1 STERO UNIT. CD player broken.
$20., (650)834-4926
40 ADULT VHS Tapes $100,
(650)361-1148
5 PHOTOGRAPHIC CIVIL WAR
BOOKS plus 4 volumes of Abraham Lin-
coln books, $90., (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
ADULT VIDEOS - (3) classics featuring
older women, $25. each, (650)212-7020
AFGAN PRAYER rug beautiful original
very ornate $100 (650)348-6428
AMERICAN HERITAGE books 107 Vol-
umes Dec.'54-March '81 $99/all
(650)345-5502
ARTIFICIAL FICUS Tree 6 ft. life like, full
branches. in basket $55. (650)269-3712
ARTS & CRAFTS variety, $50
(650)368-3037
BARBIE BEACH vacation & Barbie prin-
cess bride computer games $15 each,
(650)367-8949
BEADS - Glass beads for jewelry mak-
ing, $75. all, (650)676-0732
BLUETOOTH WITH CHARGER - like
new, $20., (415)410-5937
BOOK "LIFETIME" WW1 $12.,
(408)249-3858
BOOK NATIONAL Geographic Nation-
al Air Museums, $15 (408)249-3858
BOOK SELECTION, Mystery, Romance,
Biography, many authors, hard cover,
paperbacks, many authors, mint condi-
tion. 50 cents each (650) 578-9208.
BOOKS 20 HARDCOVER WW2 USMC
Korea, Europe. SOLD!
BROADWAY by the Bay, Chorus Line
Sat 9/22; Broadway by Year Sat. 11/10
Section 4 main level $80.00 all.
(650)578-9208
CLEAN CAR Kit, unopened sealed box,
7 full size containers for leather, spots,
glass, interior, paint, chamois, $25.00
(650)578-9208
DELONGHI-CONVENTION ROTISSER-
IE crome with glass door excellent condi-
tion $55 OBO (650)343-4461
DOOM (3) computer games $15/each 2
total, (650)367-8949
DVD'S TV programs 24 4 seasons $20
ea. (650)952-3466
310 Misc. For Sale
ELECTRONIC TYPEWRITER good con-
dition $50., (650)878-9542
EXOTIC EROTIC Ball SF & Mardi gras 2
dvd's $25 ea. (415)971-7555
FOLDING LEG table 6' by 21/2' $25
(415)346-6038
GAME "BEAT THE EXPERTS" never
used $8., (408)249-3858
GEORGE Magazines, 30, all intact
$50/all OBO. (650)574-3229, Foster City
HARDCOVER MYSTERY BOOKS -
Current authors, $2. each (10), (650)364-
7777
HARLEY DAVIDSON black phone, per-
fect condition, $65., (650) 867-2720
HYPO ALERGETIC Pillows (2) Great for
those with alergies, easy to clean,
$10.00 both, (650)578-9208
ICE CHEST $15 (650)347-8061
INFLATED 4'6" in diameter swimming
pool float $12 (415)346-6038
MASSAGER CHAIR - Homedics, Heat,
Timer, Remote, like new, $45. SOLD
MENU FROM Steam Ship Lurline Aug.
20 1967 $10 (650)755-8238
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 anti-
oxident properties, good for home or of-
fice, brand new, $100., (650)619-9203.
NELSON DE MILLE -Hardback books 5
@ $3 each, (650)341-1861
NEW LIVING Yoga Tape for Beginners
$8. 650-578-8306
OBLONG SECURITY mirror 24" by 15"
$75 (650)341-7079
OLD 5 gal. glass water cooler bottle $20
(650) 521-3542
OUTDOOR SCREEN - New 4 Panel
Outdoor Screen, Retail $130 With Metal
Supports, $80/obo. (650)873-8167
PICTORIAL WORLD History Books
$80/all (650)345-5502
PROFESSIONAL BEAUTY STATION -
Complete with mirrors, drawers, and styl-
ing chair, $99. obo, (650)315-3240
QUEEN SIZE inflatable mattress with
built in battery air pump used twice $40,
(650)343-4461
QUEEN SIZE inflatable mattress with
built in battery air pump used twice $40,
(650)343-4461
SESAME STREET toilet seat excellent
condition $12 650 349-6059
SF GREETING Cards (300 w/envelopes)
factory sealed $10. (650)365-3987
SHOWER DOOR custom made 48 x 69
$70 (650)692-3260
SPECIAL EDITION 3 DVD Set of The
Freeze. English Subtitles, new $18
(650)871-7200
STEP 2 sandbox Large with cover $25
(650)343-4329
STUART WOODS Hardback Books
2 @ $3.00 each. (650)341-1861
TABLECLOTH - Medium Blue color rec-
tangular tablecloth 70" long 52" wide with
12 napkins $15., SOLD!
TIRE CHAINS - brand new, in box, never
used, multiple tire sizes, $25., (650)594-
1494
TIRE CHAINS - used once includes rub-
ber tighteners plus carrying case. call for
corresponding tire size, $20.,
(650)345-5446
TOILET SINK - like new with all of the
accessories ready to be installed, $55.
obo, (650)369-9762
VAN ROOF rack 3 piece. clamp-on, $75
(650)948-4895
VASE WITH flowers 2 piece good for the
Holidays, $25., (650) 867-2720
VICTORIAN DAYS In The Park Wine
Glasses 6 count. Fifteenth Annual $10
obo (650)873-8167
VIDEO CENTER 38 inches H 21 inches
W still in box $45., (408)249-3858
VOLVO STATION Wagon car cover $50
650 888-9624
WALKER - brand new, $20., SSF,
(415)410-5937
WALKER - never used, $85.,
(415)239-9063
WALL LIGHT fixture - 2 lamp with frost-
ed fluted shades, gold metal, never used,
$15., Burl, (650)347-5104
311 Musical Instruments
2 ORGANS, antique tramp, $100 each.
(650)376-3762
3 ACCORDIONS $110/ea. 1 Small
Accordion $82. (650)376-3762.
HAMMOND B-3 Organ and 122 Leslie
Speaker. Excellent condition. $8,500. pri-
vate owner, (650)349-1172
HOHNER CUE stick guitar HW 300 G
Handcrafted $75 650 771-8513
PIANO ORGAN, good condition. $110.
(650)376-3762
312 Pets & Animals
HAMSTER HABITAT SYSTEM - 2 cage
system with interconnecting tunnels,
Large: 9 1/2 x 19 1/2; SOLD!
PETMATE DOG CARRIER - XL size,39
1/2 L x 27 W x 30 like new, $95. firm,
SSF, (650)871-7200
REPTILE CAGE - Medium size, $20.,
(650)348-0372
25 Wednesday Sept. 5, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
312 Pets & Animals
SMALL DOG wire cage; pink, two doors
with divider $50. (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
WILL PAY Cash for vintage designer
handbags. Louis Vuitton, Chanel, Gucci,
etc. (650)593-0757
316 Clothes
2. WOMEN'S Pink & White Motocycle
Helmet KBC $50 (415)375-1617
A BAG of Summer ties $15 OBO
(650)245-3661
BATHROBE MENS navy blue plush-ter-
ry and belt. Maroon piping trim, 2 pock-
ets. Medium. $10., (650)341-3288
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
BLOUSES SWEATERS and tops. Many
different styles & colors, med. to lrg., ex-
cellent condition $5 ea., have 20,
(650)592-2648
COWBOY BOOTS size 9 Black - superb
condition $40 (650)595-3933
COWBOY BOOTS size 9 Silver.gray
good condition $30 (650)595-3933
EUROPEAN STYLE nubek leather la-
dies winter coat - tan colored with green
lapel & hoodie, $100., (650)888-0129
GEORGE STRAIT Collection Resistol
oval shape, off white Hat size 7 1/8 $40
(650)571-5790
HARDING PARK mens golf dress shirts
(new) asking $25 (650)871-7200
LADIES BOOTS, thigh high, fold down
brown, leather, and beige suede leather
pair, tassels on back excellent, Condition
$40 ea. (650)592-2648
LADIES COAT Medium, dark lavender
$25 (650)368-3037
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 PLUS Clothing - mint condition,
Fancy/plain sweaters, tops, dresses, out-
fits, summer and winter. $4.00 each,
(650)578-9208
LEATHER COAT medium size (snake
skin design) $25 (650)755-8238
MEN'S SUIT almost new $25.
650-573-6981
NEW BROWN LEATHER JACKET- XL
$25., 650-364-0902
REVERSIBLE, SOUVENIR JACKET
Weatherproof 2-tone tan.; Inner: navy
fleece, $15. (650)341-3288
SNOW BOOTS, MEN'S size 12. Brand
New, Thermolite brand,(with zippers),
black, $18. (510) 527-6602
TUXEDOS, FORMAL, 3, Black, White,
Maroon Silk brocade, Like new. Size 36,
$100 All OBO (650)344-8549
VINTAGE 1930 Ermine fur coat Black full
length $35 650 755-9833
316 Clothes
WESTERN/COWBOY SHIRTS
7 pearl snap front, snap pockets XL and
XXL, $12 - $15 (650)595-3933
WOMENS SUMMER 3 pc.SUIT:
blue/white stripe seersucker, size 12,
$10., (650)341-3288
317 Building Materials
50 NEW Gray brick, standard size,
8x4x2, SOLD!
FLUORESCENT LIGHT Fixture, New in
Box, 24, $15 (650)341-8342
TILES, DARK Red clay, 6x6x1/2 6
Dozen at 50 ea (650)341-8342
WHITE STORM/SCREEN door. Size is
35 1/4" x 79 1/4". Asking $50.00. Call
(650)341-1861
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.
BACKPACK - Large for overnight camp-
ing, excellent condition, $65., (650)212-
7020
BASKETBALL RIM, net & backboard
$35/all 650-345-7132 Leave message.
BOYS BICYCLE with Helmet. Triax,
Good Condition, $50, San Mateo
(650)341-5347
COLEMAN "GLO-MASTER" 1- burner
camp stove for boaters or camping. Mint
condition. $35.00 (650)341-3288
COMPLETE PORTABLE BASKET-
BALL SYSTEM - by Life Time, brand
new, $100., Pacific, (650)355-0236
DARTBOARD - New, regulation 18 di-
meter, Halex brand w/mounting hard-
ware, 6 brass darts, $16., (650)681-7358
EXERCISE MAT used once, lavender
$12, (650)368-3037
GIRLS BIKE, Princess 16 wheels. $50
San Mateo (650)341-5347
GOLF CLUBS Driver, 7 wood, putter, 9
irons, bag, & pull cart. $99
(650)952-0620
ONE BUCKET of golf balls - 250 total,
various brands, $25., SOLD!
ORBITREK LEG & arm workout ma-
chine - SOLD!
PING CRAZ-E Putter w/ cover. 35in.
Like New $75 call(650)208-5758
THULE BIKE RACK - Fits rectangular
load bars. Holds bike upright. $100.
(650)594-1494
TREADMILL PROFORM 75 EKG incline
an Staionery Bike, both $400. Or sepa-
rate: $150 for the bike, $350 for the
treadmill. Call (650)992-8757
TREK TRANSPORT BICYCLE CARRI-
ER - brand new, SOLD!
TWO YOGA Videos. Never used, one
with Patrisha Walden, one by Rebok with
booklet. Both $6 (650)755-8238
322 Garage Sales
FLEA
MARKET
San Bruno
City Park
(Crystal Springs and
Oak Ave).
Sunday,
Sept. 9
9am-4pm
Don't miss
shopping
for great deals
from
85 vendors.
Furniture,
sporting goods,
antiques and
more!
GARAGE SALES
ESTATE SALES
Make money, make room!
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 76,500 readers
from South San Francisco
to Palo Alto.
in your local newspaper.
Call (650)344-5200
335 Garden Equipment
CRAFTSMAN 4 HP ROTARY LAWN-
MOWER - 20 rear discharge, extra new
grasscatcher, $85., (650)368-0748
340 Camera & Photo Equip.
HONEYWELL PENTAX 35mm excellent
lens, with case $65. SOLD!
SONY CYBERSHOT DSC-T-50 - 7.2 MP
digital camera (black) with case, $175.,
(650)208-5598
YASAHICA 108 model 35mm SLR Cam-
era with flash and 2 zoom lenses $99
(415)971-7555
379 Open Houses
OPEN HOUSE
LISTINGS
List your Open House
in the Daily Journal.
Reach over 76,500
potential home buyers &
renters a day,
from South San Francisco
to Palo Alto.
in your local newspaper.
Call (650)344-5200
380 Real Estate Services
HOMES & PROPERTIES
The San Mateo Daily Journals
weekly Real Estate Section.
Look for it
every Friday and Weekend
to find information on fine homes
and properties throughout
the local area.
440 Apartments
BELMONT - prime, quiet location, view,
1 bedroom, 2 bedroom, New carpets,
new granite counters, dishwasher, balco-
ny, covered carports, storage, pool, no
pets. (650) 591-4046
470 Rooms
HIP HOUSING
Non-Profit Home Sharing Program
San Mateo County
(650)348-6660
Rooms For Rent
Travel Inn, San Carlos
$49-59 daily + tax
$294-$322 weekly + tax
Clean Quiet Convenient
Cable TV, WiFi & Private Bathroom
Microwave and Refrigerator
950 El Camino Real San Carlos
(650) 593-3136
Mention Daily Journal
620 Automobiles
2005 SCION TC $6,000, 100k Runs
Excellent, (650)583-1543
93 FLEETWOOD Chrome wheels Grey
leather interior 237k miles Sedan $ 2,500
or Trade, Good Condition (650)481-5296
Dont lose money
on a trade-in or
consignment!
Sell your vehicle in the
Daily Journals
Auto Classifieds.
Just $3 per day.
Reach 76,500 drivers
from South SF to
Palo Alto
Call (650)344-5200
ads@smdailyjournal.com
620 Automobiles
CHEVY HHR 08 - Grey, spunky car
loaded, even seat warmers, $9,500.
(408)807-6529.
HONDA 10 ACCORD LX - 4 door se-
dan, low miles, $19K, (650)573-6981
MERCEDES 06 C230 - 6 cylinder, navy
blue, 60K miles, 2 year warranty,
$18,000, (650)455-7461
625 Classic Cars
DATSUN 72 - 240Z with Chevy 350, au-
tomatic, custom, $3,600 or trade.
(415) 412-7030
635 Vans
NISSAN 01 Quest - GLE, leather seats,
sun roof, TV/DVR equipment. Looks
new, $15,500. (650)219-6008
640 Motorcycles/Scooters
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.
645 Boats
BANSHEE SAILBOAT - 13 ft. with ex-
tras, $750., (650)343-6563
650 RVs
73 Chevy Model 30 Van, Runs
good, Rebuilt Transmission, Fiber-
glass Bubble Top $1,795. Owner
financing.
Call for appointments. (650)364-1374.
670 Auto Service
MB GARAGE, INC.
Repair Restore Sales
Mercedes-Benz Specialists
2165 Palm Ave.
San Mateo
(650)349-2744
ON TRACK
AUTOMOTIVE
Complete Auto Repair
foreign & domestic
www.ontrackautomotive.com
1129 California Dr.
Burlingame
(650)343-4594
People you can trust;
service you can trust
NORDIC MOTORS, INC.
Specializing in Volvo, Saab,
Subaru
65 Winslow Road
Redwood City
(650) 595-0170
www.nordicmotors.com
SAN CARLOS AUTO
SERVICE & TUNE UP
A Full Service Auto Repair
Facility
760 El Camino Real
San Carlos
(650)593-8085
670 Auto Parts
'91 TOYOTA COROLLA RADIATOR.
Original equipment. Excellent cond. Cop-
per fins. $60. San Bruno, (415)999-4947
2 SNOW/CABLE chains good condition
fits 13-15 inch rims $10/both San Bruno
650-588-1946
5 HUBCAPS for 1966 Alfa Romeo $50.,
(650)580-3316
67-68 CAMERO PARTS - $85.,
(650)592-3887
CAMPER/TRAILER/TRUCK OUTSIDE
backup mirror 8 diameter fixture. $30.
650-588-1946
CAR COVER / CAMRY, not used, in
box. $12. SOLD!
MAZDA 3 2010 CAR COVER - Cover-
kraft multibond inside & outside cover,
like new, $50., (650)678-3557
SHOP MANUALS 2 1955 Pontiac
manual, 4 1984 Ford/Lincoln manuals, &
1 gray marine diesel manual $40 or B/O
(650)583-5208
TRUCK RADIATOR - fits older Ford,
never used, $100., (650)504-3621
672 Auto Stereos
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
31 Years Experience
2001 Middlefield Road
Redwood City
(650)299-9991
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
Cabinetry
Contractors
HUSHER
CONSTRUCTION
Full Service General Contractor
Remodels and Additions
Residential, Commercial
Lic #789107
www.husherconstruction.com
(650)873-4743 (650)873-4743
Cleaning Cleaning
GALA MAIDS
Residential & Commercial
14 Years Experience
Excellent References
(650)773-4516 (650)773-4516
www.galamaids.com
Concrete
Concrete
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
Construction
Construction Construction
650 868 - 8492
PATRICK BRADY PATRICK BRADY
GENERAL CONTRACTOR
ADDITIONS WALL REMOVAL
BATHS KITCHENS AND MORE!
PATBRADY1957@SBCGLOBAL.NET
License # 479385
Frame
Structural
Foundation
Roots & ALL
I make your
life better!
LARGE OR SMALL
I do them all!
26
Wednesday Sept. 5, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
Decks & Fences
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
Electricians
ALL ELECTRICAL
SERVICE
650-322-9288
for all your electrical needs
ELECTRIC SERVICE GROUP
Gardening
Servicing Hillsborough,
Burlingame, Millbrae,
and San Mateo
We are a full service
gardening company
650 218-0657
Quality
Gardening

Weekly Lawn Care
Hedges, Fertilizing,
Leaf Blowing
Rose Care
Get ready for
Fall planting

J.B. GARDENING SERVICE


Maintenance, New Lawns,
Sprinkler Systems, Clean Ups,
Fences, Tree Trimming,
Concrete work, Brick Work,
Pavers, and Retaining Walls.
Free Estimates
Cell: (650) 400- 5604
Gutters
O.K.S RAINGUTTER
New Rain Gutters
Down Spouts
Gutter Cleaning & Screening,
Roof & Gutter Repairs
Friendly Service
10% Senior Discount
CA Lic# 794353/Bonded
(650)556-9780
Handy Help
CONTRERAS
HANDYMAN
Fences Decks Patios
Power Washes Concrete
Work Maintenance Clean
Ups Arbors
Free Estimates!
Call us Today!
(650)350-9968
contreras1270@yahoo.com
DISCOUNT HANDYMAN
& PLUMBING
Carpentry Plumbing Drain
Cleaning Kitchens Bathrooms
Dry Rot Decks
Priced for You! Call John
(650)296-0568
Free Estimates
Lic.#834170
FLORES HANDYMAN
Serving you is a privilege.
Painting-Interior & Exterior Roof Re-
pair Base Boards New Fence
Hardwood Floors Plumbing Tile
Mirrors Chain Link Fence Window
Glass Water Heater Installation
Bus Lic# 41942
Call today for free estimate.
(650)274-6133
HONEST HANDYMAN
Remodeling, Plumbing.
Electrical, Carpentry,
General Home Repair,
Maintenance,
New Construction
No Job Too Small
Lic.# 891766
(650)740-8602
SENIOR HANDYMAN
Specializing in Any Size Projects
Painting electrical
Carpentry Dry Rot
Carpet Installation
40 Yrs. Experience
Retired Licensed Contractor
(650)201-6854
Hardwood Floors
KO-AM
HARDWOOD FLOORING
Hardwood & Laminate
Installation & Repair
Refinish
High Quality @ Low Prices
Call 24/7 for Free Estimate
800-300-3218
408-979-9665
Lic. #794899
Hauling
CHEAP
HAULING!
Light moving!
Haul Debris!
650-583-6700
Hauling
Landscaping
COMPLETE TREE
SERVICE
Stamp Concrete
Brick Work
BEST PRICES!
Licensed & Insured
(650)222-4733
New Lawns
Lawn Renovations
Sprinklers
General CleanUp
Commercial
& Industrial Maint.
Fisher Garden
& Landscape
Since 1972
(650) 347-2636
sher-garden-landscape.com
FREE ESTIMATES QAC. Lic. C24951
Landscaping
LEAKPROFESSIONALS
LEAKS? SAME DAY SERVICE!
Valves Sprinklers
Wiring Broken Pipes
Retrofits
(800)770-7778
CSL #585999
Moving
Bay Area
Relocation Services
Specializing in:
Homes, Apts., Storages
Professional, friendly, careful.
Peninsulas Personal Mover
Commercial/Residential
Fully Lic. & Bonded CAL -T190632
Call Armando (650) 630-0424
Painting
CRAIGS PAINTING
Interior & Exterior
Quality Work w/
Reasonable Rates
Free Estimates
(650)553-9653
Lic# 857741
GOLDEN WEST
PAINTING
Since 1975
Interior/Exterior,
Complete Preparation.
Will Beat any
Professional Estimate!
CSL#321586
(415)722-9281
JON LA MOTTE
PAINTING
Interior & Exterior
Pressure Washing
Free Estimates
(650)368-8861
Lic #514269
LEMUS PAINTING
650.271.3955 650.271.3955
Interiors / Exteriors
Residential / Commercial
Free Estimates
Reasonable Rates
Lic#913961
Painting
MTP
Painting/Waterproofing
Drywall Repair/Tape/Texture
Power Washing-Decks, Fences
No Job Too Big or Small
Lic.# 896174
Call Mike the Painter
(650)271-1320
Plumbing
Remodeling
CORNERSTONE HOME DESIGN
Complete Kitchen & Bath Resource
Showroom: Countertops Cabinets
Plumbing Fixtures Fine Tile
Open M-F 8:30-5:30 SAT 10-4
168 Marco Way
South San Francisco, 94080
(650)866-3222
www.cornerstoneHD.com
CA License #94260
KITCHEN & BATH
REMODELING
50% off cabinets
(manufacturers list price)
CABINET WORLD
1501 Laurel St.
San Carlos
(650)592-8020
Home Improvement
CINNABAR HOME
Making Peninsula homes
more beautiful since 1996
* Home furnishings & accessories
* Drapery & window treatments:
blinds & shades
* Free in-home consultation
853 Industrial Rd. Ste E San Carlos
Wed Sat 12:00- 5:30pm, or by appt.
650-388-8836
www.cinnabarhome.com
Tile
CUBIAS TILE
Marble, Stone & porcelain
Kitchens, bathrooms, floors,
fireplaces, entryways, decks,
tile, ceramic tile
repair, grout repair
Free Estimates Lic.# 955492
Mario Cubias
(650)784-3079
Tile
JZ TILE
Installation and Design
Portfolio and References,
Great Prices
Free Estimates
Lic. 670794
Call John Zerille
(650)245-8212
Window Coverings
Window Fashions
247 California Dr
Burlingame 650-348-1268
990 Industrial Rd Ste 106
San Carlos 650-508-8518
www.rebarts.com
BLINDS, SHADES, SHUTTERS, DRAPERIES
Free estimates Free installation
RUDOLPHS INTERIORS
Satisfying customers with world-
class service and products since
1952. Let us help you create the
home of your dreams. Please
phone for an appointment.
(650)227-4882
Window Washing
Notices
NOTICE TO READERS:
California law requires that contractors
taking jobs that total $500 or more (labor
or materials) be licensed by the Contrac-
tors State License Board. State law also
requires that contractors include their li-
cense number in their advertising. You
can check the status of your licensed
contractor at www.cslb.ca.gov or 800-
321-CSLB. Unlicensed contractors taking
jobs that total less than $500 must state
in their advertisements that they are not
licensed by the Contractors State Li-
cense Board.
Attorneys
Law Office of
Jason Honaker
BANKRUPTCY
Chapter 7 &13
Call us for a consultation
650-259-9200 650-259-9200
www.honakerlegal.com
Attorneys
* BANKRUPTCY *
Huge credit card debt?
Job loss? Foreclosure?
Medical bills?
YOU HAVE OPTIONS
Call for a free consultation
(650)363-2600
This law firm is a debt relief agency
Beauty
GRAND OPENING SPECIALS:
Facials , Eyebrow Waxing ,
Microdermabrasion
Full Body Salt Scrub &
Seaweed Wrap
Le Juin Day Spa & Clinic
155 E. 5th Avenue
Downtown San Mateo
(650) 347-6668
KAYS
HEALTH & BEAUTY
Facials, Waxing, Fitness
Body Fat Reduction
Pure Organic Facial $48.
1 Hillcrest Blvd, Millbrae
(650)697-6868
27 Wednesday Sept. 5, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
Business Services
BUSINESS
TRANSACTIONS
Robert Preskill, Esq.
Tech & Media Contracts
Franchise and Licensing
Call (415) 377-3919
robert@preskilllaw.net
CBN# 221315
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
Food
AYA SUSHI
The Best Sushi
& Ramen in Town
1070 Holly Street
San Carlos
(650)654-1212
BROADWAY GRILL
Express Lunch
Special $8.00
1400 Broadway
Burlingame
(650)343-9733
www.bwgrill.com
FIND OUT!
What everybody is
talking about!
South Harbor
Restaurant & Bar
425 Marina Blvd., SSF
(650)589-1641
GOT BEER?
We Do!
Steelhead Brewing Co.
333 California Dr.
Burlingame
(650)344-6050
www.steelheadbrewery.com
Food
GULLIVERS
RESTAURANT
Early Bird Special
Prime Rib Complete Dinner
Mon-Thu
1699 Old Bayshore Blvd. Burlingame
(650)692-6060
JACKS
RESTAURANT
Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
1050 Admiral Ct., #A
San Bruno
(650)589-2222
JacksRestaurants.com
NEALS COFFEE
SHOP
Breakfast Lunch Dinner
Senior Meals, Kids Menu
www.nealscoffeeshop.com
1845 El Camino Real
Burlingame
(650)692-4281
SUNDAY CHAMPAGNE
BRUNCH
Crowne Plaza
1221 Chess Dr., Hwy. 92 at
Foster City Blvd. Exit
Foster City
(650)570-5700
SUNSHINE CAFE
Breakfast Lunch Dinner
1750 El Camino Real
San Mateo
(Borel Square)
(650)357-8383
THE AMERICAN BULL
BAR & GRILL
19 large screen HD TVs
Full Bar & Restaurant
www.theamericanbull.com
1819 El Camino, in
Burlingame Plaza
(650)652-4908 (650)652-4908
Financial
RELATIONSHIP BANKING
Partnership. Service. Trust.
UNITED AMERICAN BANK
Half Moon Bay, Redwood City,
Sunnyvale
unitedamericanbank.com
San Mateo
(650)579-1500
Fitness
DOJO USA
World Training Center
Martial Arts & Tae Bo Training
www.dojousa.net
731 Kains Ave, San Bruno
(650)589-9148
STAND UP &
TRAIN!
Train at Home & Reach your
Fitness Goals
Group Classes or
One On One
using TRX Suspension &
Kettlebell training ,
Custom Designed fitness
program
Call Chris Nash
(650)799-0608
alternativewayfitness@gmail.com
Furniture
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
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
Health & Medical
General Dentistry
for Adults & Children
DR. ANNA P. LIVIZ, DDS
324 N. San Mateo Drive, #2
San Mateo 94401
(650)343-5555
SLEEP APNEA
We can treat it
without CPAP!
Call for a free
sleep apnea screening
650-583-5880
Millbrae Dental
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
TOENAIL FUNGUS?
FREE Consultation for
Laser Treatment
(650)347-0761
Dr. Richard Woo, DPM
400 S. El Camino Real
San Mateo
Home Care
CALIFORNIA HOARDING
REMEDIATION
Free Estimates
Whole House & Office
Cleanup Too!
Serving SF Bay Area
(650)762-8183
Call Karen Now!
Insurance
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
BARRETT
INSURANCE
www.barrettinsuranceservices.net
Eric L. Barrett,
CLU, RHU, REBC, CLTC, LUTCF
President
Barrett Insurance Services
(650)513-5690
CA. Insurance License #0737226
Insurance
HEALTH INSURANCE
Paying too much for COBRA?
No coverage?
.... Not good!
I can help.
John Bowman
(650)525-9180
CA Lic #0E08395
Jewelers
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) 347-7007
Legal Services
LEGAL
DOCUMENTS PLUS
Non-Attorney document
preparation: Divorce,
Pre-Nup, Adoption, Living Trust,
Conservatorship, Probate,
Notary Public. Response to
Lawsuits: Credit Card
Issues,Breach of Contract
Jeri Blatt, LDA #11
Registered & Bonded
(650)574-2087
legaldocumentsplus.com
"I am not an attorney. I can only
provide self help services at your
specific direction."
Loans
REVERSE MORTGAGE
Are you age 62+ & own your
home?
Call for a free, easy to read
brochure or quote
650-453-3244
Carol Bertocchini, CPA
Marketing
GROW
YOUR SMALL BUSINESS
Get free help from
The Growth Coach
Go to
www.buildandbalance.com
Sign up for the free newsletter
Massage Therapy
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)556-9888
GRAND OPENING
ASIAN MASSAGE
$50 for 1 hour
Angel Spa
667 El Camino Real, Redwood City
(650)363-8806
7 days a week, 9:30am-9:30pm
GRAND OPENING!
CRYSTAL WAVE SPA
Body & Foot Massage
Facial Treatment
1205 Capuchino Ave.
Burlingame
(650)558-1199
Massage Therapy
HAPPY FEET
Massage
2608 S. El Camino Real
& 25th Ave., San Mateo
(650)638-9399
$30.00/Hr Foot Massage
$50.00/Hr Full Body Massage
SUNFLOWER MASSAGE
Grand Opening!
$10. Off 1-Hour Session!
1482 Laurel St.
San Carlos
(Behind Trader Joes)
Open 7 Days/Week, 10am-10pm
(650)508-8758
TRANQUIL
MASSAGE
951 Old County Road
Suite 1
Belmont
650-654-2829
YOU HAVE IT-
WELL BUY IT
We buy and pawn:
Gold Jewelry
Art Watches
Musical Instrument
Paintings Diamonds
Silverware Electronics
Antique Furniture
Computers TVs Cars
Open 7 days
Buy *Sell*Loan
590 Veterans Blvd.
Redwood City
(650)368-6855
Needlework
LUV2
STITCH.COM
Needlepoint!
Fiesta Shopping Center
747 Bermuda Dr., San Mateo
(650)571-9999
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
650-348-7191
Wachter Investments, Inc.
Real Estate Broker #746683
Nationwide Mortgage
Licensing System ID #348268
CA Dept. of Real Estate
Real Estate Services
ODOWD ESTATES
Representing Buyers
& Sellers
Commission Negotiable
odowdestates.com
(650)794-9858
Seniors
AFFORDABLE
24-hour Assisted Living
Care located in
Burlingame
Mills Estate Villa
&
Burlingame Villa
- Short Term Stays
- Dementia & Alzheimers
Care
- Hospice Care
(650)692-0600
Lic.#4105088251/
415600633
Health & Medical Massage Therapy
Seniors
LASTING IMPRESSIONS
ARE OUR FIRST PRIORITY
Cypress Lawn
1370 El Camino Real
Colma
(650)755-0580
www.cypresslawn.com
STERLING COURT
ACTIVE INDEPENDENT &
ASSISTED LIVING
Tours 10AM-4PM
2 BR,1BR & Studio
Luxury Rental
650-344-8200
850 N. El Camino Real San Mateo
sterlingcourt.com
28
Wednesday Sept. 5, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL

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