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Wednesday May 7, 2014 Vol XIII, Edition 225
Chinese Cuisine
|ne In - Carry 0ut - e||very
650.595.2031 650.593.7286
FAX: 650.591.4588
1653-1655 Laurel Street, San Carlos
(near St. Francis Way)
www.sancarlosamazingwok.com
DESPERATELY DRY
STATE PAGE 6
CAP RALLIES
TO GET WIN
SPORTS PAGE 11
FIERY CHICKEN,
COOLING SALSA
FOOD PAGE 17
WATER FLOWS UPHILL? MAYBE,IN CALIFORNIA
DROUGHT
Tai Wu askedto make changes
By Angela Swartz
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
Millbraes new Tai Wu restaurant is
getting a chance to clean up its act
after a string of complaints from near-
by residents about noise and parking,
but neighbors simply want the restau-
rant gone.
The Chinese restaurant at 300 El
Camino Real has until the May 19
Planning Commission meeting to
build a 7-foot high by 20-foot long
wall as a sound barrier and establish
long-term parking lot leases. If the
commission is unsatisfied with the
results, it has the option to not extend
Tai Wus 90-day temporary occupancy
permit, which would shut it down for
period of time. The most invasive
option is rescinding the conditional
use permit, which would cause the
restaurant to begin the process of reap-
plying for the permit.
The three-story dim sum eatery was
supposed to have 111 parking spots
and valet parking available to cus-
tomers, but much of the parking is off
site and customers tend to park in the
nearby neighborhood. Last week, the
city issued a cease and desist order to
discontinue use of two air intake units
that were permitted for installation on
the restaurant roof, but were instead
installed without permission on the
roof of the utility building. Tai Wu
appealed and has a public hearing on
the appeal 6 p.m. May 16, according
to a staff report.
Neighbor Samar Noureddine, who
lives behind the restaurant, is not sat-
ised with the wall solution and said
she doesnt want to have to come back
to the Planning Commission again
after Tai Wu builds the wall and say she
still hears the noise. She described the
noise as being similar to someone
mowing the lawn 24 hours a day.
Neighbors still unsatisfied with new Millbrae restaurants conditions, parking
ANGELA SWARTZ/DAILY JOURNAL
Tai Wu at 300 El Camino Real has been the source of frustration
for Millbrae residents who say patrons and employees are
parking in their neighborhoods.
Speier faces
Republican
challenger
By Samantha Weigel
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
U.S. Rep. Jackie
Speier, D-San Mateo,
will face a Republican
challenger in the June 3
primary election who
hopes a new attitude
and fresh blood will get
Congress back on
track and encourage bipartisan cooperation.
Robin Chew, an Emerald Hills Internet entrepreneur who
focuses on marketing and online real estate courses, said
hes an optimist who wants to use his innovative business
experience to reform the unacceptable stalemate thats pre-
Transparency main focus
in secretary of state race
14th District congressional
seat up for June 3 primary vote
By Fenit Nirappil
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SACRAMENTO A string of legal cases against law-
makers that include two Democrats facing political corrup-
tion charges has magnied the usually quiet race for the
office overseeing California elections and campaign
fundraising.
ANGELA SWARTZ/DAILY JOURNAL
Rhett, a golden retriever and Labrador retriever mix, works with kids at North Elementary School.
By Angela Swartz
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
Special needs students in
Hillsborough are getting a helping
hand of the canine variety with the
schools new facility dog Rhett.
Rhett, a golden retriever and
Labrador retriever mix, was trained at
the nonprot Canine Companions for
Independence with Alice Bliquez, spe-
cial education teacher in the Learning
Center program at North Elementary
School back in January. The classroom
aide is now a staple for the class of six
students in grades K-5, assisting with
communication, ne motor and social
skills.
Rhett is very helpful with the kids,
Bliquez said. Hes very calming. It
teaches them responsibility and inde-
pendence. Its also an outlet around
school to meet people.
Rhett was trained for two years prior
to beginning his work at the school in
up to 40 commands. Rhett was raised at
a correctional facility in Portland,
Oregon, where inmates were taught
how to train him.
Now, Rhett assists the students.
Students utilize speech generating
devices called talkers in class, along
with sign language and books with
pictures. Rhett helps with calendar and
attendance using his retrieve and push
commands. The kids brush him to
strengthen their fine motor skills.
Facility dog helps Hillsborough students
Rhett works to improve skills for children in special ed class
See ELECTION, Page 23
See RACE, Page 22
See TAI WU, Page 22
Jackie Speier Robin Chew
See RHETT, Page 23
FOR THE RECORD 2 Wednesday May 7, 2014 THEDAILYJOURNAL
The San Mateo Daily Journal
800 S. Claremont St., Suite 210, San Mateo, CA 94402
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Actress Traci Lords
is 46.
This Day in History
Thought for the Day
1789
Americas rst inaugural ball was held
in New York in honor of President
George Washington, whod taken the
oath of ofce a week earlier. (His wife,
Martha, did not attend; she was back
in Virginia, attending to family busi-
ness.)
When an old man
dies, a library burns down.
African proverb
Actor Michael E.
Knight is 55.
Actor Breckin
Meyer is 40.
Birthdays
REUTERS
A paramilitary policeman crawls under re obstacles during a drill at a military base in Chaohu, Anhui province, China.
Wednesday: Sunny. Highs in the upper
50s. Northwest winds 10 to 20 mph.
Wednesday night: Mostly clear in the
evening then becoming mostly cloudy.
Lows around 50. Northwest winds 10 to
20 mph.
Thursday: Mostly cloudy. A sl i ght
chance of showers in the afternoon.
Highs in the lower 60s. West winds 5 to 15 mph. Chance of
showers 20 percent.
Thursday night: Mostly cloudy. Aslight chance of show-
ers in the evening. Lows in the lower 50s. West winds 5 to
10 mph. Chance of showers 20 percent.
Friday: Mostly cloudy in the morning then becoming
partly cloudy. Highs in the lower 60s.
Friday night: Partly cloudy in the evening.
Local Weather Forecast
I n 1763, Pontiac, chief of the Ottawa Indians, attempted to
lead a sneak attack on British-held Fort Detroit, but was
foiled because the British had been tipped off in advance.
I n 1824, Beethovens Symphony No. 9 in D minor, Op.
125, had its premiere in Vienna.
I n 1889, the Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore opened
its doors.
I n 1915, nearly 1,200 people died when a German torpedo
sank the British liner RMS Lusitania off the Irish coast.
I n 1928, the minimum voting age for British women was
lowered from 30 to 21 the same age as men.
I n 1942, U.S. Army Gen. Jonathan Wainwright went on a
Manila radio station to announce the Allied surrender of the
Philippines to Japanese forces during World War II.
I n 1945, Germany signed an unconditional surrender at
Allied headquarters in Rheims (rams), France, ending its role
in World War II.
I n 1954, the 55-day Battle of Dien Bien Phu in Vietnam
ended with Vietnamese insurgents overrunning French
forces.
I n 1964, Pacic Air Lines Flight 773, a Fairchild F27,
crashed near San Ramon, Calif., after a passenger apparent-
ly shot both pilots, then himself, killing all 44 people on
board.
I n 1975, President Gerald R. Ford formally declared an end
to the Vietnam era. In Ho Chi Minh City formerly
Saigon the Viet Cong celebrated its takeover.
I n 1984, a $180 million out-of-court settlement was
announced in the Agent Orange class-action suit brought by
Vietnam veterans who charged theyd suffered injury from
exposure to the defoliant.
T
he 100 billionth Crayola crayon
rolled off the production line in
Easton, Pennsylvania, in 1996.
***
The rst president of the United States
born in a hospital was Jimmy Carter
(born 1924), the 39th president.
***
One of Hollywoods most famous kiss-
es was between Burt Lancaster (1913-
1994) and Deborah Kerr (1921-2007) in
the movie From Here to Eternity
(1953). The scene of the passionate
kiss on a beach in the surf is only three
seconds long.
***
The only words with three dotted letters
in a row are hijinks, Beijing and Fiji.
***
The Uniform Time Act of 1966 standard-
ized the beginning and end of Daylight
Savings Time nationwide.
***
Rabbits were brought to Australia in
1859 for hunting. Soon rabbits, not
native to Australia, were reproducing at
such a rapid rate they were becoming a
plague. In 1950, the government intro-
duced a disease called myxomatosis that
successfully controlled the rabbit popu-
lation with a mortality rate of 99 per-
cent.
***
The Trumpeter swan is the largest water-
fowl in North America. Apair of trum-
peter swans mates for life. They live 20
to 30 years.
***
The worlds smallest bird is the bee
hummingbird. Found in Cuba, the tiny
birds are about the size of a bee and
weigh .07 ounces.
***
The longest outdoor covered escalator
in the world is in Hong Kong. It takes
20 minutes to ride the 2,625-foot long
Central-Mid-levels escalators, opened
in 1994. The escalator runs down from 6
a.m. to 10 a.m. and up from 10:30 p.m.
to midnight.
***
On July 16, 1945, a test took place that
was code named Trinity. Do you know
what the test was? See answer at end.
***
Elephants walk at a speed of about 4
mph.
***
French physicist Augustin Jean Fresnel
(17881827) invented the Fresnel lens
used in lighthouses. The multiprismed
lens intensied the light and focused the
beam in lighthouse lamps.
***
In 1996, the Food and Drug
Administration approved olestra, a
calorie-free fat substitute, for use in
salty snacks such as chips and crackers.
However, all snacks containing olestra
had to carry a warning label that olestra
may cause abdominal cramping and
loose stools. As of 2003, the label was
no longer required because it confused
consumers.
***
Introduced in 1930, the Motorola was
one of the rst commercially successful
car radios. The brand name came from
combining the word motor, for motor-
car, and ola, which implied sound;
thus Motorola meant sound in motion.
***
Ad campaigns for Lifebuoy Soap popu-
larized the term B.O. for body odor.
***
Harvard College, established in 1636,
was named for its rst benefactor. John
Harvard (1607-1638) of Charlestown,
Massachusetts, was a minister who left
his library and half his estate to the new
institution.
***
Actor Telly Savalas (1924-1994) was
actress Jennifer Anistons (born 1969)
godfather. Telly is short for Aristotle.
***
Answer: It was the testing of the rst
atomic bomb, conducted by the United
States. The plutonium bomb was deto-
nated on July 16, 1945 at Alamogordo,
New Mexico. The explosion was equiv-
alent to 20 kilotons of TNT and the
mushroom cloud reached 7.5 miles in
height. Trinity is considered the begin-
ning of the Atomic Age.
Know It All is by Kerry McArdle. It runs in
the weekend and Wednesday editions of the
Daily Journal. Questions? Comments?
Email knowitall(at)smdailyjournal.com or
(Answers tomorrow)
HAVOC TEMPT RADIUS MIFFED
Yesterdays
Jumbles:
Answer: The dog thought the idea of retrieving the ball
was FAR-FETCHED
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.
REWAA
UNMIS
DOWASH
CAPEUT
2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
All Rights Reserved.
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Print your
answer here:
Lotto
The Daily Derby race winners are California
Classic,No.5,in rst place; Gorgeous George,No.
8, in second place; and Big Ben, No. 4, in third
place.The race time was clocked at 1:42.88.
3 9 6
18 20 27 48 51 5
Mega number
May 6 Mega Millions
5 15 16 46 49 26
Powerball
May 3 Powerball
4 6 12 22 34
Fantasy Five
Daily three midday
2 7 9 4
Daily Four
7 2
Daily three evening
5 9
9
25 31 46 26
Mega number
May 3 Super Lotto Plus
Former Sen. Pete Domenici, R-N.M., is 82. Singer Jimmy
Rufn is 75. Rhythm-and-blues singer Thelma Houston is 71.
Actress Robin Strasser is 69. Singer-songwriter Bill Danoff is
68. Rock musician Bill Kreutzmann (Grateful Dead) is 68.
Rock musician Prairie Prince is 64. Movie writer-director Amy
Heckerling is 62. Rock musician Phil Campbell (Motorhead)
is 53. Country musician Rick Schell is 51. Rock singer-musi-
cian Chris OConnor (Primitive Radio Gods) is 49. Singer
Eagle-Eye Cherry is 43. Rock musician Matt Helders (Arctic
Monkeys) is 28. Actress-comedian Aidy Bryant (TV:
Saturday Night Live) is 27. Actor Taylor Abrahamse is 23.
3
Wednesday May 7, 2014 THEDAILYJOURNAL
LOCAL
Burlingame
Drugs. A person reported four men selling
narcotics out of a Maserati on the 1700
block of Marco Polo Way before 7:34 p.m.
Wednesday, April 16.
Suspi ci ous ci rcumstances. A man was
reported for sleeping with his pants half
down on Murchison Drive before 11:30 a.m.
Wednesday, April 16.
Assaul t. A student was reported for stab-
bing another student with a blunt pair of
medical scissors resulting in minor injury at
Burlingame Intermediate School on Quesada
Way before 1:26 p.m. Tuesday, April 15.
Burglary. Two bags were stolen from a
Dodge Durango through a smashed rear pas-
senger window on Donnelly Avenue before
11:17 p.m. Tuesday, April 8.
Disturbance. A person reported children
upstairs were screaming about changing the
TVchannel on El Camino Real before 12:58
a.m. Tuesday, April 8.
BELMONT
Suspi ci ous ci rcumst ances. A person
reported an elderly man who offers their 16-
year-old daughter candy and other items
daily as she rides the bus to school on Twin
Pines Lane before 8:07 a.m. Tuesday, April
8.
Suspi ci ous ci rcumstances. Three men
wearing red were reported for writing
NORTE on a dusty vehicle on Old County
Road before 6:33 p.m. Monday, April 7.
Police reports
Its just out of control
A person reported overgrown vegeta-
tion on Lincoln Avenue in Belmont
before 9:35 a.m. Tuesday, April 8.
By Michelle Durand
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
Theres a new assistant sheriff in town.
Sheriff Greg Munks is restructuring his
department to add a second assistant sheriff
to the ranks and naming Capt. Tom
Gallagher to the position. The Board of
Supervisors Tuesday signed off on the plan
and the Sheriffs Office announced
Gallaghers naming later that day.
Both Gallagher and current Assistant
Sheriff Trish Sanchez will report to
Undersheriff Carlos Bolanos.
The new assistant sheriff will oversee
operations, investigations and homeland
security. Sanchez will continue handling
the corrections division, jail planning unit
and technology services.
The department reorganization is a
response to the ofces signicant growth
as of late due in large part to contracting
with several cities in San Mateo County
including San Carlos,
Half Moon Bay and
Millbrae. Other factors
include significant new
projects like the Maple
Street Correctional
Center currently under
construction in Redwood
City and the Coyote
Point shooting range.
Looking to better han-
dle the expansion, the
Sheriffs Ofce hired Management Partners
for a full review of its organization and com-
parisons to other how other counties assign
their workload.
The new structure will create balance
and give Bolanos a true administrative
management role, Munks told the board in
seeking its approval to create the assistant
sheriff slot and eliminate a lieutenant posi-
tion.
The undersheriffs umbrella will be both
assistant sheriffs, the crime lab director, the
professional standards bureau lieutenant and
the administration and nance director.
The change also includes splitting the
operations division based on geography
into a north command for the northern and
coastal part of the county and south com-
mand.
The new assistant sheriff will make a
monthly salary of between approximately
$11,228 and $14,034.
Gallagher, a San Mateo County native,
graduated from Serra High School and has a
bachelors of arts degree from Union
Institute and University. He also graduated
from the Los Angeles Police Departments
Leadership Program and since 1987 has
been with the Sheriffs Ofce where his
assignments have included corrections,
patrol and investigations.
michelle@smdailyjournal.com
(650) 344-5200 ext. 102
Sheriff restructures office, adds assistant sheriff
Tom Gallagher
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF REPORT
A former temporary worker at a San
Bruno jewelry company who allegedly
sold its goods for personal profit on eBay
pleaded no contest Tuesday to felony
grand theft in return for no more than six
months in jail.
Michelle D. Buckius, 49, must also
repay $8,063 to the Stella & Dot online
accessories company by
her July 18 sentencing.
Buckius was hired in
March 2013 as a tempo-
rary accounts manager
and the companys chief
financial officer report-
edly noticed items
shipped from the East
Coast offices were miss-
ing and a box of sample jewelry went
missing from a desk at the San Bruno
office.
Surveillance video from the company
office allegedly showed Buckius removing
the stolen jewelry and investigators
reported finding the missing items for
sale on eBay all from the same seller. The
sellers account belonged to Buckius hus-
band, according to prosecutors.
She remains free from custody on
$10,000 bail pending her sentencing
hearing.
Former San Bruno jewelry company worker takes plea deal
Michelle
Buckius
4
Wednesday May 7, 2014 THEDAILYJOURNAL
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Wednesday May 7, 2014 THEDAILYJOURNAL
LOCAL/STATE
* Frescriptians & Bame
MeJicaI 5uppIies 0eIivereJ
* 3 Fharmacists an 0uty
{650} 349-1373
29 west 257B Ave.
{ear EI 0amina}
5an Matea
Amy Brooks Colin Flynn Hal Coehlo
consultant
Al Stanley
Family Owned & Operated
Established: 1949
STATE
GOVERNMENT
Legislation to
clarify that any of
Californias 1, 000
recycling or han-
dling centers shall
not pay redemption
values of cans or bottles if the center
knew, or should have known, that the
containers were not purchased in
California, passed out of the Assembl y
Monday.
As s e mbl y Bi l l 1846, authored
Assembl yman Ri ch Gordon, D-
Menlo Park, now heads to the Senate
for consideration.
CITY GOVERNMENT
The Fost er Ci ty Parks and
Recreat i on Commi t t ee will hold a
public meeting Wednesday to discuss
development ideas for its two newest
parks that run along the Bay. The city has
decided to maintain Werder and
Desti nati on parks as open space, each
with its own unique design. Destination
Park will be used as passive open space
with natural pathways. Werder Park will
host mobile concessions such as bicycle
rentals and food, provide picnic tables and
benches. Both parks will maintain bath-
rooms and be decorated with public art.
The meeting is 6:30 p.m. Wednesday,
May 7 at City Hall, 620 Foster City Blvd.
By Michelle Durand
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
Although judicial candidates are limited
in what they can say about potential future
cases and rulings, the two vying for one of
two open seats on the June ballot shared
more general views and suggestions on
local criminal justice.
Court Commissioner Susan Greenberg
and attorney Jeff Hayden are seeking the
seat vacated earlier this year by the federal
appointment of Judge Beth Labson Freeman
to the U.S. District Court in San Jose.
Greenberg and Hayden sat down individu-
ally with the Daily Journal for an in-ofce
interview and also provided answers to the
following ve questions to allow each can-
didate a forum for sharing their own words
prior to the June 3 election. Each was asked
to keep the answers to approximately 50
words and were only edited for grammar or
length.
Do you favor opti ons to pre-tri al
i ncarcerati on such as el ectro n i c
moni tori ng? Why or why not?
Greenberg: I favor many options
including release on own recognizance,
supervised release on own recognizance and
electronic monitoring. These options
should be implemented on a case by case
basis. The jails are overcrowded and we
should tailor these pretrial remedies as
appropriate to each individual situation.
Hayden: The jail population includes
people awaiting trial; realignment has fur-
ther crowded the jail. In setting the bail
amount, the court considers the nature of the
charge, the likelihood that defendant
returns to court and public safety. Setting
additional terms, electronic monitoring or
drug counseling, bears upon public safety.
How can the court calendars be
more efci ent to keep cases on track
in a timely manner?
Greenberg: The significant budget
decrease for the trial courts is the major
issue here. Our court is very efcient. I
believe we can improve efciency by keep-
ing continuances to a minimum and com-
bining some of the calendars and cases as
often as possible.
Hayden: Modest changes would allow
existing resources to be better utilized.
Electronic ling can minimize delays at the
clerks office. Utilizing judges pro tem
within courtrooms awaiting jury trial
assignments can clear short matters. Use of
part-time staff lent by rms can clear back-
logs in ling papers and issuing orders.
How do you view a judges di scre-
tion to discount a defendants pri or
criminal strikes during sentencing?
Greenberg: This is clearly permitted by
case law, based on criminal history and the
circumstances of the present offense. It has
to be done on a case by case basis and can be
appropriate for certain cases. The courts
discretion here is critical.
Hayden: Appellate court decisions prom-
ulgated guidelines when to exercise such
discretion in the interest of justice. Factors
include the age and nature of the strike, how
long has the person been crime free, the
nature of the current offense as well as miti-
gating factors; however, public safety must
always come rst.
What rol e do mi ti gati ng ci rcum-
stances l i ke i mmi grati on or pot en-
ti al l oss of a prof essi onal l i cense
pl ay i n sentenci ng?
Greenberg: These are collateral conse-
quences that traditionally
havent been and generally
are not considered by the
court at sentencing.
However, they can be
looked at on a case by case
basis when appropriate.
Hayden: In appropriate
circumstances where the interests of justice
so indicate, but even then only when public
safety is not endangered. Sentencing con-
siderations include ensuring public safety,
deterrence and the interest of justice, all of
which might be impacted when a person suf-
fers consequences not contemplated within
the black letter law.
How have the courts responded to
real i gnment?
Greenberg: Our court has responded
well. Sentencing is being handled appropri-
ately. Our court has added a weekly calendar
to hear Parole and Post Release Community
Supervision revocation cases. I have been
given this assignment by the presiding
judge of our court.
Hayden: Inadequately. Realignment
allows a court to split a sentence between
jail and supervision, much as time had been
split between prison and parole. The court
should but has yet to incorporate reha-
bilitative conditions during or after serving
jail time, so a defendant doesnt drift back
to the pattern of felonious behavior.
michelle@smdailyjournal.com
(650) 344-5200 ext. 102
Two seek rare open judicial seat
Age: 54
Occupation: Court
commissioner
Education: Economics and
accounting, Claremont
McKenna College; law
degree from Hastings
College of the Law
Experience: Former
prosecutor; private civil
attorney
Residence: San Mateo
County
Susan Greenberg
Age: 55
Occupation: Criminal
defense attorney
Education: BA, economics,
University of California,
Santa Cruz; law degree from
University of Southern
California Law Center
Experience: Law clerk, U.S.
District Court; judge pro
tem; vice president of the
San Mateo County Bar
Association
Residence: San Mateo County
Jeff Hayden
See opinion
page 9
Inside
Greenberg
for Superior
Court judge
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Proposition 41 on the June ballot asks
California voters whether $600 million in
existing veterans bonds should be redi-
rected to build, renovate and acquire apart-
ments and multifamily housing for low-
income veterans.
At least half the money would be ear-
marked for extremely low-income veter-
ans, defined as about $14,000 a year for a
single person in California. All tenants
would earn less than 80 percent of the
average income adjusted for family size
and county, which translates to about
$38,000 a year for a single person in
California.
The state would use general tax revenue
to repay the principal and interest, which
the nonpartisan Legislative Analysts
Office estimates will amount to $50 mil-
lion over 15 years.
Supporters, including former Defense
Secretary Leon Panetta and veterans
groups, say the measure honors up to
45,000 veterans returning to the state
from war some without jobs or homes.
The Assembly voted 78-0 and the Senate
voted 36-0 to place the measure for the
ballot.
Donors include the International
Brotherhood of Electrical Workers and the
State Building & Construction Trades
Council. They had contributed $44,000 as
of the end of April.
Gary Wesley, a Mountain View attorney,
was the only one to submit an opposing
argument for the secretary of states voter
guide. He said there was potential for mis-
management and waste but also applauded
the measures intent, saying the best way
to prevent homelessness among veterans
is to avoid the unnecessary commitment
of ground troops into combat.
California has about 15,000 homeless
veterans, according to a January 2013 fed-
eral government survey cited by the
Legislative Analysts Office.
Bond would be used to house low-income veterans
Comment on
or share this story at
www.smdailyjournal.com
6
Wednesday May 7, 2014 THEDAILYJOURNAL
LOCAL/STATE
California pilot who crashed was t to perform
FAIRFIELD Apilot who crashed and died while perform-
ing a stunt at a Northern California air show had recently
passed a skills test that included his ying
routines, the head of an air show trade
association said.
International Council of Air Shows
President John Cudahy said the 77-year-
old Eddie Andreini passed the test just a few
weeks before Sundays crash. Cudahy told
the Sacramento Bee that Andreini was test-
ed in over 60 areas and was judged to be
mentally and physically t for the stunts
he performed.
Andreini was ying upside-down and low to the ground in an
acrobatic maneuver during the Thunder Over Solano air
show. His vintage biplane hit the ground and burst into
ames.
Howard Plagens of the National Transportation Safety
Board said his team is trying to determine what caused the
crash, starting with an examination of the wreckage and
ground scars. They will also review the amount of time it took
for emergency crews to respond.
Witnesses said it seemed like a long time before re crews
arrived at the scene of the crash at Travis Air Force Base in
Faireld and wondered if the pilot died on impact or from the
ensuing re. Base spokesman Jim Spellman said crews were
dispatched promptly and responded within a minute or two.
None of an estimated 85,000 spectators was injured.
Federal Aviation Administration records show Andreini was
the registered owner of the 1944 Stearman biplane, a World
War II-era plane commonly used to train pilots.
Andreini was trying to perform a maneuver known as cut-
ting a ribbon where the inverted plane ies close to the
ground so a knife attached to it can slice a ribbon.
In the investigation, Plagens said his team will review
videos of the crash, environmental factors and the pilot.
Police plan to talk with San Jose airport stowaway
SAN JOSE Police said Tuesday they plan to interview a
California teen who stowed away on a Hawaii-bound ight two
weeks ago, surviving sub-freezing temperatures in the wheel
well of a jetliner as it crossed the Pacic Ocean.
The 15-year-old Somali immigrant ew back to California
over the weekend and was being cared for by Santa Clara
County Child Protective Services, San Jose police
spokesman Albert Morales said.
There are plans to speak to him, Morales said.
Yahya Abdis father, Abdilahi Yusuf, who drives a taxi in San
Jose, ew to Hawaii last week to bring his son home, but child
welfare ofcials there turned the boy over to their California
counterparts.
Law enforcement agents want to question Abdi about how he
climbed over a fence at San Jose International Airport then
got into the wheel well of a Boeing 767 and survived the April
20 ight at 35,000 feet despite the cold and a lack of oxygen.
Around the Bay
By Garance Burke
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SAN FRANCISCO Water has
flowed from Northern Californias
snow-capped peaks to the souths
parched cities ever since the California
Aqueduct was built in the 1960s. Now,
amid one of the worst droughts in his-
tory, state ofcials are considering an
audacious plan to send some of the
water back uphill.
State water engineers say using
pumps to reverse the ow of the aque-
duct would be a rst in a drought. It
would also be a complex engineering
challenge that could cost millions of
dollars,
Still, water agencies in the desper-
ately dry farmlands around Bakerseld
say the investment is worth it to keep
grapevines, pistachios and pomegran-
ate trees alive. Agencies as far north as
the San Francisco Bay Area are talking
about a similar project.
There is no place on planet Earth
where an aqueduct is designed to go
backwards, said Geoff Shaw, an engi-
neer with the state Department of
Water Resources who is reviewing the
proposal. But they have a need for
water in a place where they cant full l
it, and this is their plan to x it.
The plan the department is evaluat-
ing was drawn up by ve of the local
agencies, or districts, that sell irriga-
tion water to farmers. They would bear
the cost of the project, which they
have estimated at $1.5 million to $9.5
million.
They hope to get approval from the
state in June and start pushing the
water uphill later in the summer.
Long celebrated as an engineering
marvel, the California Aqueduct is a
420-mile system of open canals and
massive pipelines that serves millions
of Californians, including those in the
states biggest population centers: the
San Francisco Bay Area, Los Angeles
and San Diego.
Under the plan, water districts would
be allowed to pump into the aqueduct
emergency water that they store in
underground reservoirs in Kern
County, about two hours north of Los
Angeles. That banked water and other
extra supplies would raise the level of
water within a small, closed section of
the aqueduct.
Then, pumps powered by diesel
engines would push the water over
locks and back upstream, against the
southward pull of gravity.
Water flows uphill?
Maybe, in drought
By Paul Elias
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SAN FRANCISCO The California
Supreme Court appeared reluctant
Tuesday to require large retailers to
keep a debrillator in stores in case
customers suffer cardiac arrest.
During arguments involving a law-
suit against Target in the death of a cus-
tomer, Justice Marvin Baxter asked
how a store clerk would know a cus-
tomer was suffering cardiac arrest and
whether the device could be inappro-
priately used and cause more harm to a
shopper suffering another ailment.
It may very well be that the good
intentions could backre and do more
harm than good, Baxter said.
The six other justices on the court
had similar concerns and tough ques-
tions for lawyers representing the fam-
ily of 49-year-old Mary Ann Verdugo
in a wrongful death lawsuit against
Target.
For two decades, an increasing num-
ber of public places in the U.S. have
been required to have automated exter-
nal debrillators on hand. Airports,
casinos, schools, courthouses, tness
centers, amusement parks and many
other facilities now have the devices
in case someone has sudden cardiac
arrest.
The question Tuesday was whether
Target and other businesses should
have the devices that deliver a jolt of
electricity to a stalled heart.
Debrillators can save lives if used
immediately after the onslaught of car-
diac arrest.
Verdugo suffered cardiac arrest while
shopping at a Target store in
California in 2008.
Target ofcials extended their condo-
lences to the Verdugo family, calling
the incident an unfortunate but unpre-
ventable tragedy.
California top court hears defibrillator case
Eddie Andreini
REUTERS
A tumbleweed is seen at an irrigation channel on a farm near Cantua Creek.
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REUTERS
Later this summer,the Obama administration plans to propose new regulations restricting gases
that come from existing coal-red power plants.
By Seth Borenstein
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON Most Americans are
already feeling man-made global warming,
from heat waves to wild storms to longer
allergy seasons. And it is likely to get worse
and more expensive, says a new federal report
that is heating up political debate along with
the temperature.
Shortly after the report came out Tuesday,
President Barack Obama used several televi-
sion weathermen to make his point about the
bad weather news and a need for action to curb
carbon pollution before it is too late.
We want to emphasize to the public, this
is not some distant problem of the future.
This is a problem that is affecting Americans
right now, Obama told Today show weath-
ercaster Al Roker. Whether it means
increased ooding, greater vulnerability to
drought, more severe wildres all these
things are having an impact on Americans as
we speak.
Climate changes assorted harms are
expected to become increasingly disruptive
across the nation throughout this century and
beyond, the National Climate Assessment
concluded, emphasizing the impact of too-
wild weather as well as simple warming.
Still, its not too late to prevent the worst
of climate change, says the 840-page report,
which the Obama administration is high-
lighting as it tries to jump-start often-stalled
efforts to curb heat-trapping gases. Said
White House science adviser John Holdren:
Its a good-news story about the many
opportunities to take cost-effective actions
to reduce the damage.
Release of the report, the third edition of a
congressionally mandated study, gives
Obama an opportunity to ground his cam-
paign against climate change in science and
numbers, endeavoring to blunt the arguments
of those who question the idea and human
contributions to such changes. Later this
summer, the administration plans to propose
new regulations restricting gases that come
from existing coal-red power plants.
Not everyone is persuaded.
Some fossil energy groups, conservative
think tanks and Republican senators immedi-
ately assailed the report as alarmist.
Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell
of Kentucky said Obama was likely to use
the platform to renew his call for a national
energy tax. And Im sure hell get loud cheers
from liberal elites from the kind of people
who leave a giant carbon footprint and then
lecture everybody else about low-ow toi-
lets.
Since taking ofce, Obama has not pro-
posed a specic tax on fossil fuel emissions.
He has proposed a system that caps emis-
sions and allows companies to trade carbon
pollution credits, but it has failed in
Congress.
Republican Sen. David Vitter of Louisiana
said the report was supposed to be scientic
but its more of a political one used to justi-
fy government overreach. And leaders in the
fossil fuel industry, which is responsible for
a large amount of the heat-trapping carbon
dioxide, said their energy is needed and
America cant afford to cut back.
Whether you agree or disagree with the
report, the question is: What are you going to
do about it? To us that is a major question,
said Charlie Drevna, president of the
American Fuel and Petrochemical
Manufacturers. He called the report
overblown.
The report which is full of gures, charts
and other research-generated graphics
includes 3,096 footnotes referring to other
mostly peer-reviewed research. It was written
by more than 250 scientists and government
officials, starting in 2012. A draft was
released in January 2013, but this version
has been reviewed by more scientists, includ-
ing twice by the National Academy of
Sciences which called it reasonable, and a
valuable resource.
Federal report: Warming disrupts Americans lives
NATION 8
Wednesday May 7, 2014 THEDAILYJOURNAL
By Paul Larson
MILLBRAE
Thank you thank
you thank you.
This is what I hear
over and over, year
after year, from
families that we
serve. Either
verbally or in hand-written cards or letters
families say thank you: Thank for your
help; Thank you for all you have done to
make this process easier; Thank you for
making this final tribute to my mother one
which will be fondly remembered; Thank
you for your advice; Thank you for being
there for us at a time we needed you most;
Thank you for making it all easy for us;
Thank you for being a friend, etc. To hear
Thank you time and time again is a
confirmation for me that our Chapel of the
Highlands crew is doing their best to serve
families whove been through a death, in an
appropriate and professional manner, and
that we are doing the right thing in caring
for families during a difficult situation, in
turn making it more of a comfort for them.
Normally saying Youre welcome is
the correct response. Youre welcome, or
You are welcome, can be taken a number
of different ways. Generally it means you
are always a welcome guest. It can also be
taken as a blessing meaning you wish
wellness on the person who thanked you.
Wishing wellness or health to anyone is a
nice gesture. In recent years though we all
have witnessed the term Youre welcome
being substituted with Thank you back at
the person who is doing the thanking. This
is OK, but saying Youre welcome first
is taken as a hospitable and warm gesture.
Now that Thank you and Youre
welcome have been established, I would
like to say thank you back to the families we
serve: Thank you for supporting the Chapel
of the Highlands. Thank you for your
faithful patronage. Because of you we have
been able to continue with our high
standards and excellent level of service for
many years, since 1952. Thank you to those
families who weve helped so many times in
the past. Thank you to the new families
whove discovered that we offer them
respect and provide the dignified care that
their loved one deserves.
Your support, and the continued interest
from the community in our service, is what
keeps us going strong and available when
we are needed. Our costs have always been
considered fair, and the funds taken in for
our services are also very much appreciated.
Those Chapel of the Highlands funds along
with our support sifts back to the community
in different ways. Donations to local causes,
along with the donation of time through
membership in service organizations such as
Lions, I.C.F., Historical Society, Chamber
of Commerce, etc. is natural for us. Giving
back as a volunteer via these groups helps in
binding us with our neighbors, together
creating a better community for the future.
All in all there are many ways to say
Thank you. Doing so in a variety of ways
can create a circle of gratitude, in turn
making our community a better place.
If you ever wish to discuss cremation,
funeral matters or want to make pre-
planning arrangements please feel free to
call me and my staff at the CHAPEL OF
THE HIGHLANDS in Millbrae at (650)
588-5116 and we will be happy to guide you
in a fair and helpful manner. For more info
you may also visit us on the internet at:
www.chapelofthehighlands.com.
Creating A Circle Of Gratitude
By Saying Thank You
Advertisement
Monica Lewinsky opens
up on affair with Clinton
By Calvin Woodward
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON Monica Lewinsky says theres no ques-
tion her boss Bill Clinton took advantage of her
when he was president.
But she says their affair was consensual and if there was
any abuse involved, it came afterward, when Clintons inner
circle tried to discredit her and the presidents opponents
used her as a political pawn.
The former White House intern, now 40, writes about her
life in the next issue of Vanity Fair magazine, out this
month. In released excerpts, she says shes perhaps the rst
Internet era scapegoat and wants to speak out on behalf of
other victims of online humiliation.
Her willingness to step forward may come at an inoppor-
tune time as former rst lady Hillary Rodham Clinton con-
siders running for president. Republicans have signaled they
dont consider her husbands scandal from the late 1990s out
of bounds in the realm of 2016-style political dialogue.
Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, a likely GOP presidential con-
tender, answered criticisms of the Republican record on
womens issues by saying in January that the last
Democratic president engaged in predatory behavior with
a woman, Lewinsky, who was 22 when her liaisons with
Clinton began in 1995.
REUTERS FILE PHOTO
Former White House intern Monica Lewinsky is pictured
arriving at her lawyers ofces in Washington, D.C.
By Kimberly Heing
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON Lawmakers look-
ing ahead to the November elections are
putting renewed focus on education,
tackling issues on Capitol Hill this
week ranging from expanding charter
schools to paying off student loan debt.
And, a House committee will examine
how higher education and college sports
might be affected by a regional National
Labor Relations Board ruling allowing
Northwestern University football play-
ers to unionize.
Voters rank education high among
issues of importance to them, and this
weeks activities are likely a nod to that.
House Majority Leader Eric Cantor
has made expanding school choice
options a priority. Reecting that
enthusiasm, the House as early as
Thursday will consider legislation that
would provide $300 million annually to
expand charter schools. It would con-
solidate two existing programs, provide
state grants to expand and replicate
high-quality charter schools and fund
the acquisition of buildings for the
schools. Charter schools typically use
taxpayer dollars but are run by outside
organizations.
America isnt working when our stu-
dents do not have the opportunity to
attend a school that best ts their
needs, Cantor said in a statement.
Even as many Democrats adamantly
oppose school vouchers, expanding
high-quality charter schools is an area
where the two sides have found some
common ground. The charter schools
bill, for example, has the support of
Rep. George Miller, a California law-
maker who is the ranking Democrat on
the House education committee. While
it appeared to have a strong chance of
House passage, its future was uncertain
in the Senate.
Student loans, the subject of some
contentious debate in 2013, are coming
up again in both the House and Senate.
With the doubling of interest rates
looming, Congress last year acted to
keep them at low level levels for now
but linked those rates to the nancial
markets. President Barack Obama had
trumpeted the issue in his 2012 re-elec-
tion bid, and the legislation passed with
bipartisan support.
Now, moving forward a Democratic
agenda focused on college costs leading
to the November election, Sen.
Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., on Tuesday
led a bill co-sponsored by more than
20 fellow Democratic senators that
would open the door for potentially mil-
lions of federal loan recipients to re-
nance that debt at the same rate as cur-
rent recipients. Undergraduates, for
example, qualify for loans at a 3.86 per-
centage rate.
Education gets topbilling on Capitol Hill
By Bradley Klapper
and Donna Cassata
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON House Democrats
opened the door Tuesday to participat-
ing in a special panels investigation
of the deadly attack in Benghazi, Libya,
even if they see it as little more than an
election-year ploy by Republicans to
discredit the Obama administration and
motivate GOP voters.
Laying out her partys conditions,
Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi said
Republicans must conduct interviews
and share information as part of their
new inquest into the Obama adminis-
trations response to the Sept. 11,
2012, attack on the U.S. diplomatic
past that killed four Americans. She
called for the same number of
Democrats as Republicans on the
panel, a demand the GOP majority
immediately rejected.
If this review is to be fair, it must be
truly bipartisan, Pelosi, D-Calif.,
said in a statement. Later, she told
reporters that rank-and-le Democrats
are suspicious of whatever the
Republicans are trying to do.
With midterm elections looming
closer, Republicans are sharpening
their focus on the Benghazi attack that
killed U.S. Ambassador Chris Stevens
and three other Americans. A vote to
authorize the probe is expected this
week. A senior GOP congressman has
issued a subpoena to Secretary of State
John Kerry to testify before a separate
committee. And the subject could sur-
face in multiple other congressional
hearings this week.
Democrats open door to taking part in Benghazi probe
America isnt working when
our students do not have the opportunity
to attend a school that best ts their needs.
House Majority Leader Eric Cantor
OPINION 9
Wednesday May 7, 2014 THEDAILYJOURNAL
Galligan for controller
Editor,
It would be great to have Joe
Galligans decades of accounting expe-
rience and civic service back in public
ofce. He exemplies the integrity and
personal character we should have in
all of our representatives. We have
missed his limitless capacity for com-
petency for far too long.
Martin J. Mangini
Burlingame
Support Raigoza for controller
Editor,
As a certied public accountant, I
learned that governmental accounting
differs greatly from company and
nonprot accounting. The word pub-
lic in CPArefers to companies who
sell stock to the public and are sub-
ject to rules as set by the Financial
Accounting Standards Board. The
Governmental Accounting Standards
Board sets quite a different set of rules
for governmental accounting and
reporting. My experience in the pri-
vate sector did not prepare me for
governmental work.
I point this out because in the June
3 San Mateo County controllers
election, there is only one candidate
that has the required government
accounting experience, Juan Raigoza
who has 13 years of experience in the
Controllers Ofce and is currently
assistant county controller. For that
key reason, I support Juan Raigoza
for controller.
Claudia Rodriguez
Daly City
Raigoza for controller
Editor,
As the June 3 elections approach,
many people might not vote, thinking
its just a primary and not all that
important. However, some contests are
for all the marbles and the June vote
tally will determine the winner.
One such election is for San Mateo
County controller. The controller
makes sure that each county depart-
ment spends taxpayers money in the
most efcient and responsible way
possible, much like a companys chief
nancial ofcer.
Juan Raigoza is the most qualied for
the position, having 13 years experi-
ence in the Controllers Ofce, most
recently as the San Mateo County
assistant controller. Raigoza has the
required working knowledge across
many disciplines within the
Controllers Ofce, leading the Payroll
and Information Systems Divisions
and as a senior internal auditor. Adding
to his broad range of experience and
expertise, Juan has served within state
government and the private sector.
An equally important fact, Juan is a
personable and decent person who will
work hard to continue fostering trans-
parency and openness, thus enhancing
the Controllers Ofce.
In many California counties, con-
troller is an appointed position. If this
were true in San Mateo County,
Raigoza would be the hands-down
choice. Please join me hands down
and vote for Juan Raigoza as San
Mateo County controller.
Jeff Londer
Burlingame
Same-day delivery?
Whats the big deal?
Editor,
There has recently been lots of media
coverage about Google and Amazons
Same-Day-Delivery service. I would be
glad to offer them some advice on this
topic as we have been offering a simi-
lar service for 76 years at my mom-
and-pop lumber yard.
And yes, $5 is not enough to charge
to deliver diapers. I would imagine that
fee will increase soon as it will impact
the bottom line in a negative way.
We deliver same day every day but
Sunday (we are closed Sunday) for free
when the order is over $500. We also
know your name most likely and my
customer knows me in many cases.
I would encourage the general public
to buy local and support your brick-
and-mortar stores before they go away.
You dont want that to happen.
David Thom
Mountain View
The letter writer is a lumber buyer for
Bruce Bauer Lumber & Supply.
Letters to the editor
C
ampaigns for judicial seats in
the San Mateo County
Superior Court are rare.
Typically, judges run unopposed and
races only take place if there is a
retirement or if the sitting judge is
named to a new position. That is the
case with Ofce Four, vacated when
Judge Beth Freeman was appointed to
the federal bench.
Running for her seat are two people
with long histories in this county and
in law. Jeffrey Hayden is working hard
for this seat on the bench and has
many bright ideas on how to improve
it. He also has a good mindset for what
it takes to be a judge in this county.
However, Susan Greenberg is a more
natural t for this position. With 14
years as a court commissioner under
her belt, she knows the position and
what it entails. Court commissioners
essentially act in the capacity as a
judge and are typically assigned to
lower level matters. It is that experi-
ence from which Greenberg will draw
when she takes this new position.
Still, there are other positives. While
both candidates emphasize the need for
efciency created by an understanding
and adherence to the computer age and
paperless technology, Greenberg has
already put that into practice in our
duty as court commissioner.
When it comes to sentencing and a
philosophy behind it, both point to
the success of alternative sentencing
programs such as drug treatment and
mental health court but also suggest
there needs to be funding for it to work
effectively. Both seem open to alterna-
tives to jail such as ankle monitoring
but said the sheriff has the ultimate
decision. Greenberg seems more stead-
fast in not considering factors like
immigration or the loss of a profes-
sional license in sentencing but both
said it should be case by case.
Both also seem to have a sensitivity
to the people they will serve and
acknowledgment of the sometimes
strenuous tasks in front of a judge
that decisions matter and can ultimate-
ly change lives. Hayden has a more
philosophical way of speaking and
seems to paint a broader picture when
making a point while Greenberg is
quick and very matter of fact when
making her points. That unhalted and
pragmatic approach has likely been
rened after 14 years behind the bench
as a court commissioner. In this type
of race, that straightforward approach
and experience is crucial for the posi-
tion. Greenberg deserves your vote.
Greenberg for Superior Court judge Through younger eyes
L
ooking through the eyes of a child, we see a
glimpse of tomorrow.
The second birthday of great-granddaughter Savannah
brought this 1987 column to mind that I wrote when old-
est granddaughter (Savannahs mother) was almost 3.
Now, after six more grandchildren (the youngest almost
5), I have never failed to appreciate and marvel at the mir-
acle of childhood and how important it is to nurture chil-
dren thoughtfully and lovingly. But this is about grand-
parenting and what I learned early on from the grandchil-
dren. And Im dedicating it
to Mothers Day.
When is the last time you
sat down on the ground and
watched a parade of ants or
tried to explain why birds
y? Whens the last time
you played peek-a-boo or
noticed surprised stares
from the cars next to you
when you stopped at a
stoplight while singing
Old McDonald to a restless
toddler strapped in her car
seat?
Now I know why so many
grandparents go a little crazy. Watching and taking part in
a little childs growth and development is a kind of spiri-
tual awakening, a chance to see again through the eyes of
a child and renew the child within ourselves. It is nding a
small connection with the miracle of life.
As Alice Miller wrote in For Your Own Good: I can
imagine that some day we will regard our children not as
creatures to manipulate or to change but rather as messen-
gers from a world we once deeply knew, but which we have
long since forgotten, who can reveal to us more about the
true secrets of life and also our own lives, than our parents
were able to.
Sometimes I feel the pull to cut back on my time with
my granddaughter and more ardently pursue some of the
other activities that I have put on hold in one degree or
another. Then I remember how quickly the past two and a
half years have gone and how soon it will be that she will
be going to school. Also, I remember all of the gifts she
gives me as we interact together.
Having the opportunity to again see the world through
the eyes of a baby, toddler and young child is a priceless
gift. Spending time enjoying a youngster brings out in a
grandparent whatever vestiges of physical youth that
remain. But, best of all, we can revive those long lost
childlike qualities that add zest and depth to living.
Alot of adults, especially of my generation, are overse-
rious, rigid and unable to loosen up. They have become so
imbued with shoulds, oughts and have-tos that they
are unable to allow the child within to come through
even a little. We can recapture some of that reckless aban-
don, that joy and excitement, that curiosity of little chil-
dren who havent been spoiled or repressed or taught how
to be unhappy, if we allow it.
Being involved with a young child can also renew in us:
1). Wonder and awe. There are so many fascinating and
beautiful things in this world that as we mature we neg-
lect to appreciate. Being around a little child can bring
much of this back.
2). Full enjoyment of the moment. As adults we are
often unable to enjoy the present because of our fears,
inhibitions and our preoccupation with what may occur in
the future.
3). Creativity, imagination and fantasy. Uninhibited
children are naturally very creative and imaginative. But
as we grow up, these qualities are often squelched by all of
the authoritarian aspects of culture. Joining a small child
in fantasy and creation can open up whole new vistas for
us.
4). Spontaneity and looseness. Humor, laughter and
silliness are essential to a well-rounded life. Humor and
laughter can be natural antidotes for depression, inertia
and ultra seriousness.
5). Honesty and directness. Too many adults live behind
a facade long ago having lost the ability to be them-
selves; too busy protecting an image that they think oth-
ers expect of them. With children, you always know where
you stand.
6). The desire to ght for what is decent and good. The
urge to help other children who are not as fortunate as our
grandchildren.
Our young are our own new beginnings, a testament to
our trust in the future. The innocence, the delight, the
wonder, the vitality, the openness to life, of childhood are
necessary to us. Without them we lose touch with what is
young, and tender and creative within ourselves. When we
lose our patience with childhood, and our joy in it, we
lose touch with our inner selves, with our own growing
and becoming. Eda LeShan, When Your Child Drives
You Crazy.
Happy Mothers Day!
Since 1984, Dorothy Dimitre has written more than 750
columns for various local newspapers. Her email address is
gramsd@aceweb.com.
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BUSINESS 10
Wednesday May 7, 2014 THEDAILYJOURNAL
Dow 16,401.02 -129.53 10-Yr Bond 2.60 -0.02
Nasdaq 4,080.76 -57.30 Oil (per barrel) 99.60
S&P 500 1,867.72 -16.94 Gold 1,308.40
Stocks that moved substantially or traded heavily Tuesday on the New
York Stock Exchange and the Nasdaq Stock Market:
NYSE
Merck & Co. Inc., down $1.52 to $57.11
Bayer will spend more than $14 billion to acquire the medical companys
non-prescription medicine and consumer care business.
Twitter Inc., down $6.90 to $31.85
Stock lock-ups that had prevented insiders from selling shares expired,
sending the stock of the social media company to a new low.
Ofce Depot Inc., up 66 cents to $4.83
The ofce supply retailer will close at least 400 stores as its merger with
OfceMax resulted in an overlap of store locations.
The Hillshire Brands Co., up $1.22 to $36.52
The packaged meat company beat per-share projections by a dime after
raising prices to offset the rising cost of pork and beef.
Nasdaq
Athenahealth Inc., down $17.57 to $109.21
Hedge fund manager David Einhorn said investors have vastly overvalued
the software maker, saying its shares could plunge 80 percent.
Vivus Inc., up 38 cents to $5.57
The biopharmaceutical companys rst-quarter losses were much less
severe than most Wall Street analysts had anticipated.
Discovery Communications Inc., down $3.06 to $74.71
Higher costs overseas overshadowed better-than-expected prot as
well as strong revenue numbers from the cable channel company.
First Solar Inc., down 97 cents to $67.45
The solar company will help build a pair of California solar projects that
will generate 42.76 megawatts of renewable energy.
Big movers
By Bernard Condon
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK U.S. stocks fell
broadly on Tuesday as investors found
little to cheer in corporate earnings
reports. A plunge in Twitter led
Internet companies sharply lower.
Twitter dropped 18 percent after
company insiders were allowed to sell
stock for the first time since the ini-
tial public offering last year. Netflix
fell 5 percent, Facebook and Amazon,
4 percent each, and Google, 2 per-
cent.
Nine of the ten industry groups in
the Standard and Poors 500 fell, led
by a 1.4 percent drop in financial
companies after results for insurer
American International Group fell
short of analysts expectations.
Home builder stocks dropped after
more signs of weakness in the hous-
ing market.
Jack Ablin, chief investment offi-
cer of BMO Private bank, says
investors are worried that corporate
results over the next few quarters will
not justify the surge in prices from
the start of 2013.
We ran ahead of fundamental valua-
tions, based on revenue and earn-
ings, Ablin said. Either revenue or
earnings have to catch up to the mar-
ket, or prices have to come down.
The S&P 500 dropped 16.94 points,
or 0.9 percent, to 1,867.72. The Dow
Jones industrial average fell 129.53
points, or 0.8 percent, to 16,401.02.
The Nasdaq composite dropped 57.30
points, or 1.4 percent, to 4,080.76.
Even utilities the biggest win-
ners so far this year, up 12 percent
did not escape the selling. They
slipped 0.5 percent.
The drop in the S&P 500 and the
Dow Jones index was the third in four
trading days, and comes despite recent
upbeat news on the U.S. economy.
Payrolls increased by 288,000 last
month, the fastest pace since 2012.
Steven Ricchiuto, chief economist
of Mizuho Securities, noted that, for
all the job gains, wages for U.S.
workers have not increased signifi-
cantly, and that is holding back con-
sumer spending.
People are getting weary of the
things-are-getting-better st ory,
said Steven Ricchiuto, chief econo-
mist of Mizuho Securities. Were hir-
ing more workers, but were not pay-
ing them more.
Companies in the S&P 500 index
are expected to have increased earn-
ings by 2.6 percent in the first quar-
ter, according to S&P Capital IQ, a
data provider. That is down sharply
from the nearly 8 percent jump in the
fourth quarter.
U.S. home prices rose at a slightly
slower pace in the 12 months that
ended in March, according to data
provider CoreLogic. It was another
sign that weak sales, caused in part by
rising mortgage rates, have begun to
restrain the housing markets sharp
price gains.
Home builder stocks fell broadly.
Ryland Group fell $1.08, or nearly 3
percent, to $37.68. D.R. Horton fell
55 cents, or nearly 3 percent, to
$22. 43.
American International Group fell
$2.18, or 4 percent, to $50.54. The
company reported revenue that was
below what investors expected due to
higher catastrophe losses and lower
investment income.
Investors were also keeping an eye
on the turmoil in Ukraine. In the city
of Donetsk, pro-Russia militants
armed with automatic rifles and
grenade launchers surrounded an
Interior Ministry base. And a planned
weekend referendum by pro-Russian
insurgents for autonomy and inde-
pendence in parts of eastern Ukraine
was denounced as bogus by the
Obama administration.
U.S. government bond prices rose
slightly. The yield on the 10-year
Treasury note fell to 2.59 percent
from 2.61 percent Monday. The yield
has fallen from 3 percent at the start
of January.
Stocks drop on mixed earnings; Twitter falls
By Michael Liedtke
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SAN FRANCISCO Alibaba Group,
Chinas leading e-commerce company,
is dangling a deal that could turn into
one of the biggest IPOs in U.S. histo-
ry.
In a long-awaited move made
Tuesday, Alibaba led papers for an ini-
tial public offering of stock seeking to
raise at least $1 billion.
The documents set the stage for the
technology industrys biggest IPO pub-
lic offering since Twitter and its early
investors collected $1.8 billion in the
online short messaging services mar-
ket debut last fall.
Depending on investor demand for its
stock, Alibaba could try to raise more
money and even surpass the $16 billion
that Facebook raised in its IPO two
years ago.
For now, Alibaba isnt specifying
how much stock will be sold in the IPO,
or setting a price range or saying which
exchange its stock will trade on. Those
details will emerge as the IPO progress-
es. The process is likely to take three to
four months to complete before
Alibabas shares begin trading.
The rise of e-commerce in China has
given millions of households wider
access to clothes, books and consumer
electronics in a society that in the
1980s still required ration tickets for
some supermarket items. That was aided
by Alibabas launch of an online pay-
ment system, Alipay, which lled the
gap for the shoppers who lacked credit
cards.
Still growing at an explosive rate,
online shopping is forecast by consult-
ing rm McKinsey to triple from 2011
levels to $400 billion a year by 2015.
Alibaba didnt choose an optimal
time to go public. Several Internet
company stocks that soared last year
amid high hopes have plummeted this
year as investors reassess their
prospects. Twitter Inc. has been among
the hardest hit. Since hitting a peak of
$74.73 late last year, the companys
shares have lost more than half their
value. They closed Tuesday at $31.85,
just slightly above their $26 IPO price.
Despite the skittish conditions for
Internet stocks, most analysts expect
Alibabas IPO to bring in at least $10
billion, and sell its stock at a price that
will give the 15-year-old company a
market value of $150 billion to $200
billion.
Chinas Alibaba Group aims to
raise at least $1 billion in IPO
Disney 2Q earnings
beat Street, helped by Frozen
LOS ANGELE Disney on Tuesday posted second-quar-
ter earnings that beat Wall Street forecasts, helped by the
home video sales of blockbuster movies Frozen and
Thor: The Dark World.
Both lms showed the power of buying multibillion-
dollar content brands. Thor comes from Disneys $4 bil-
lion purchase of Marvel Entertainment in 2009. Frozen
was a direct result of adding creative talent from Pixar after
Disney bought it for $7.4 billion in 2006.
When combined with its $4 billion acquisition of
Lucaslm last year and the release of three more install-
ments in the Star Wars franchise starting in December
2015, Disney CEO Bob Iger said he expects the motion-
picture business to grow, fueled by international sales,
bucking the industrywide decline in disc sales and a low-
growth domestic theatrical market.
The strategy of making branded movies is denitely
working, and I think that we really are just seeing the
beginnings of it in terms of their impact on the compa-
ny, Iger said.
Intel, PC makers broaden
support for Chromebooks
SAN FRANCISCO Another wave of laptop computers
running on Googles Chrome operating system will be
hitting stores this summer in the latest challenge to
Microsofts dominant Windows franchise.
The latest line of Chromebooks unveiled Tuesday run on
a new generation of faster Intel microprocessors that
dont devour as much battery power. The machines will be
shipped by major personal computer makers such as
Lenovo Group, Acer, Dell, ASUS and Toshiba. They will
sell for $300 to $400.
The widening selection of Chromebooks reects the
building momentum for Google Inc.s attempt to create a
compelling alternative to Windows-powered machines
and Apple Inc.s Mac computers.
Intel Corp. and all the PC makers embracing
Chromebooks also are longtime Microsoft Corp. partners
that helped make Windows so inuential and lucrative dur-
ing the past two decades.
Twitter stock slumps as lock-up expires
NEWYORK Twitters stock sank to an all-time low
after a post-IPO lock-up period preventing employees and
early investors from selling expired on Tuesday.
Lock-up periods prevent company insiders from selling
stock following an initial public offering. CEO Dick
Costolo and co-founders Jack Dorsey and Evan Williams
have said that they had no plans to sell their stock when
the lock-up expired, 180 days after Twitters initial public
offering.
Still, Twitters stock plunged nearly 18 percent to close
at $31.85 on Tuesday. Earlier, its shares hit their lowest
point ever at $31.72. Trading volume was unusually
heavy.
Business briefs
By Linda A. Johnson
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
TRENTON, N.J. Germanys Bayer
plans to buy U.S.-based Merck & Co.s
consumer health business, creating a
combined medicine cabinet of house-
hold names from Bayers aspirin to
Mercks Claritin allergy pills.
The $14.2 billion deal announced
Tuesday would vault Bayer AG atop
the nonprescription medicine busi-
ness across North and Latin
America. It would make Bayer No. 1
worldwide in skin and gastrointesti-
nal products, a strong No. 2 in the
huge cold and allergy category, and
No. 3 in pain relievers.
We are combining two highly com-
plementary businesses with virtually
no overlap that will improve our prod-
uct position over multiple categories,
Marijn Dekkers, Bayers CEO, said on
a conference call with journalists.
Merck, widely considered the most
research-driven U.S. pharmaceutical
company, would divest a slow-grow-
ing business it inherited in 2009 when
it bought Schering-Plough Corp. to
get its experimental prescription med-
icines.
Bayer, which invented aspirin more
than a century ago, already has a major
over-the-counter division whose
brands include Aleve pain reliever,
Alka-Seltzer and One-A-Day vitamins.
It would add Mercks Claritin, the
Coppertone sun-care line, Dr. Scholls
foot-care products and MiraLAX laxa-
tive.
The transaction is part of a recent
surge in pharmaceutical industry deals.
Some drugmakers are selling or swap-
ping business segments to focus on
areas where they have the most expert-
ise, marketing prowess and prospects
for growth, as Merck is doing. Others,
like Bayer, are making acquisitions to
beef up their portfolios of products or
experimental drugs to boost future
sales.
Bayer to buy Merck consumer business for $14.2B
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
PITTSBURGH Stanford
University has become the largest
school to say it wont invest in coal
mining companies because of cli-
mate change concerns.
Stanfords Board of Trustees made
the announcement Tuesday.
The school says the move reflects
the availability of alternate energy
sources with lower greenhouse gas
emissions and provides leadership
on a critical issue for the world.
The resolution means that
Stanford wont use any of its $18.7
billion endowment to directly
invest in about 100 publicly traded
companies that primarily extract
coal.
Jason Hayes of the American Coal
Council calls the move a big PR
stunt since Stanford students still
use products that are produced with
coal, such as steel. Hayes says other
investors will buy the coal stocks
that Stanford sells.
Stanford University votes to stop coal investments
<<< Page 12, OKCs Kevin
Durant named NBAs MVP
NEARLY PERFECT: HILLSDALES ROHITH MAHANTY PITCHED A NO-HITTER AND DROVE IN THREE RUNS IN WIN OVER MILLS >> PAGE 12
Wednesday, May 7, 2014
By Antonio Gonzalez
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
OAKLAND Mark Jackson came to the
Golden State Warriors talking big and
brash. He promised playoff appearances and
championships, and he delivered plenty of
wins along the way.
Away from the court, though, Jackson
never backed down from doing things how
he wanted. His inability to mesh with man-
agement and managements inability to
mesh with Jackson increasingly over-
shadowed his success
and ultimately cost him
his job.
The Warriors fired
Jackson after three sea-
sons Tuesday, ending the
franchises most success-
ful coaching tenure in the
past two decades but also
one lled with drama and
distractions.
Obviously it was not made exclusively
on wins and losses, Warriors owner Joe
Lacob said.
Lacob and general manager Bob Myers
both thanked Jackson, saying he helped
make the Warriors a more attractive fran-
chise. But Myers said the decision to dis-
miss Jackson was unanimous among the
teams executives though still not easy
in part because the Warriors want a coach
who can develop a synergy with every-
body in basketball operations.
Jacksons time with the Warriors will be
remembered for the way he helped turn a
perennially losing franchise into a consis-
tent winner and the bold
and bombastic way in
which he did it.
He guaranteed Golden
State would make the
playoffs in his rst sea-
son, then nished 23-36
after the NBA labor lock-
out. The Warriors went
47-35 last season and had
a memorable run to the
Jackson out as Warriors coach
NATHAN MOLLAT/DAILY JOURNAL
Capuchinos Joe Galea,left,high-ves Anthony Orcholski after he scored the go-ahead run on
a Dylan Arsenault single in the top of the seventh inning. The Mustangs held on to beat
Aragon 7-6 and remain in rst place in the PAL OceanDivision, while the Dons fell to second.
By Nathan Mollat
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
Four baseball teams in the Peninsula Athletic
Leagues Ocean Division entered the nal week
of the regular season in a tie for rst place,
including Capuchino and Aragon.
The Dons hosted the Mustangs Tuesday and
were on the verge of staying in at least a tie for
rst, but Capuchino turned the tables.
Down 6-3 after ve innings, the Mustang
scored twice in the sixth and two more in the
seventh to snatch a 7-6 victory and drop the
Dons into second place.
It started from the rst pitch and lasted to the
last out. It was a nail-biter, said Capuchino
manager Matt Wilson. Its baseball. You never
know whats going to happen.
In a game full of heroes, sophomore right
elder Dylan Arsenault provided the nal hero-
ic effort. Appearing in just his second game
since being called up from the frosh-soph team,
Arsenault took a 3-2 fastball from Aragon
reliever Chris Davis and stroked a single up the
middle, driving in Anthony Orcholski from
second with the winning run.
Its probably my rst (game-winning hit) in
high school. Im only a sophomore, Arsenault
said. [This win is] big. One more win and we
win it all. Its good momentum for Thursday.
In two games, Arsenault is batting .500, hav-
ing gone 4 for 8 from the plate.
Arsenaults game-winning hit was only pos-
sible because of a towering home run hit by
sophomore catcher Ramon Enriquez, who
crushed a 1-0 pitch over the fence in right-cen-
ter eld to tie the score at 6.
Hes hit a couple (homers) this year,
Wilson said. Hes a baseball player. He under-
stands the situation he was in.
The loss was galling for the Dons who,
despite scoring six runs against Capuchino ace
Joe Galea, failed to take advantage of some
other scoring opportunities.
That runs there somewhere, said Aragon
manager Lenny Souza. You have to tip you hat
to Cap.
Aragon (8-5 PALOcean, 13-10-1 overall) had
a chance to do more damage, but ran out of a
couple of scoring opportunities in the fourth
Cap rallies, beats Dons
By Josh Dubow
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
ALAMEDA For a general manager who
preaches building through the draft, Reggie
McKenzie has struggled to nd impact play-
ers his rst two years in Oakland.
With all of his picks on the rst two days
for the rst time in three drafts with the
Raiders, McKenzie is looking to add players
who can be part of the foundation of the
rebuilding project in
Oakland.
Its my goal and the
Raiders goal to hit on my
picks, and to be right in
everything we do, he
said. This year, Im more
excited. I cant call it
pressure. Im more excit-
ed because of the founda-
tion that weve built this
offseason.
The Raiders enter the draft with the fth
overall pick and also have choices near the
top of the second, third and fourth rounds.
Oakland has traded its fth- and sixth-round
picks away but does have three selections in
the seventh round.
The Raiders didnt pick until 95th overall
in 2012 because of previous deals. But
McKenzie was unable to nd any hidden
gems as none of the six players selected
started a single game last season.
Oakland had premium picks a year ago,
but rst-round cornerback D.J. Hayden was
hampered as he recovered from heart surgery
and struggled in his limited playing time.
Second-round offensive lineman Menelik
Watson barely made it on the eld because
of injuries.
I want to get it right every year, with
every pick, McKenzie said. Will you be
100 percent right? Absolutely not.
Raiders look for better success in draft
By Terry Bernal
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
While Caada baseball faltered in its regional
playoff series at Chabot this past weekend,
Saturdays Game 2 was the punctuation on a
remarkable season for sophomore pitcher Sam
Alton.
The right-hander pitched the Colts to their
only win in the best-of-three playoff series, tak-
ing a no-decision through seven innings as
Caada scored the go-ahead run in the bottom of
the eighth to win 3-2.
It was the only game to go Caadas way in
the series. The Colts
dropped Game 1 Friday 2-0,
before getting dismantled
20-4 Saturday in the deci-
sive doubleheader nightcap
Game 3. But Altons turn-
around since a horric
freshman season at City
College of San Francisco in
2012 was an afrmation of
what it is to be a communi-
ty college athlete.
Inside three years, Alton went from posting a
1-10 record as a freshman to posting an inverse
10-1 record as a redshirt sophomore this season.
For his efforts, Alton was named the Coast
Pacic Conference Pitcher of the Year, posting
one the great seasons in Caada baseball histo-
ry, according to Colts manager Tony Lucca.
He denitely, in my opinion, had one of the
best seasons in the history of the school out of
anybody, Lucca said. Theres been some pret-
ty quality pitchers and some pretty quality
ballplayers that have come out of here. But the
season Sam had for us ranks up there with the
best of them. It wasnt just a good year. It
really was a dominating year for him. And when
you talk about guys going down in history,
thats what you talk about guys who domi-
nate.
Luccas playoff series epitomized the overall
frustrations Caada experienced in being defeat-
ed by the Northern California No. 1 seed
Gladiators. The Colts skipper was ejected in
Game 1 for arguing a botched call at second base
Altons turnaround
highlights Caada
baseball season
See WARRIORS, Page 16
See COLTS, Page 14 See CAP, Page 14
See RAIDERS, Page 16
Mark Jackson Joe Lacob
Reggie
McKenzie
SamAlton
SPORTS 12
Wednesday May 7, 2014 THEDAILYJOURNAL
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By Will Graves
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
PITTSBURGH Buster Posey tagged
Starling Marte and headed to the dugout to
prepare for extra innings.
The San Francisco catcher ended up going
straight to the clubhouse after the streaking
Giants were undone by a nifty slide and the
uninching eye in the sky.
Marte was called out, then ruled safe on a
replay review with two outs in the bottom of
the ninth inning, lifting the Pittsburgh
Pirates to a 2-1 victory Tuesday night to end
San Franciscos six-game winning streak.
It was 1-all when Marte tripled off the wall
in right eld off Tim Hudson. Marte slid into
third, got up and bolted home when the relay
from second baseman Ehire Adrianza skipped
by third baseman Pablo Sandoval.
Sandoval recovered to throw home and
plate umpire Quinn Wolcott initially ruled
Marte out. A brief review showed Martes
right hand touched the plate before Posey
was able to swipe Martes chest.
Looking at it, it was really close, Posey
said. I feel like most of the plays like this
that could go either way stay the way they
were called on the eld. I dont know if they
(the umpires) had a different angle than what
I saw but I dont think so.
San Francisco manager Bruce Bochy placed
some of the blame on Adrianzas ill-fated
decision to try and get Marte at third.
We made a mistake there, Bochy said.
Its a hard call for the relay man because your
instinct is to wheel and throw but with two
outs its a dangerous play.
One that ruined an otherwise spectacular
night by Hudson (4-2). The 38-year-olds bid
for his rst start of nine innings in nearly
two years ended with his second loss of the
season. He was masterful until Martes deci-
sive swing. Hudson allowed two runs and ve
hits in 8 2-3 innings, striking out ve and
walking one as his ERAdipped to 2.15.
He had unbelievable game, Bochy said of
Hudson. Two outs, two strikes in the ninth
inning, its a tough loss for him. He pitched
his heart out.
Yet Hudson allowed he left the ball up over
the plate to Marte. One of baseballs fastest
players sprinted 270 feet and popped up
when Pirates third base coach Nick Leyva
told him to take off for home after the ball
skipped past Sandoval, whose left hand was
inadvertently kicked by Marte.
I really think he would have been out if I
would have been able to catch the ball,
Sandoval said. He didnt do it on purpose
and its a bad break for us.
Tony Watson (3-0) worked around two sin-
gles in the ninth to pick up the win. Marte
scored both Pittsburgh runs and Ike Davis
added two hits.
Pittsburgh starter Charlie Morton pitched
eight innings, giving up one unearned run
and three hits, walking two and striking out
three.
Both teams were looking for length out of
their starters after a 5-hour, 13-inning
marathon on Monday night won by the
Giants 11-10 left the bullpens taxed.
Going deep into games hasnt been a prob-
lem for Hudson, who worked with his typical
efciency while giving the relievers some
needed down time.
Hudson has thrown at least seven innings
in all seven of his starts this season. He had
little trouble getting through eight innings,
keeping the Pirates off-balance with his typ-
ically impeccable control.
Marte reached on an ineld single with one
out in the second and moved to third on a sin-
gle just inside the rst base bag by Davis
before scoring on a groundout by Tony
Sanchez.
San Franciscos only run came in the sec-
ond as Sanchezs throwing issues from
behind the plate resurfaced.
Brandon Belt hit a leadoff single, stole sec-
ond and moved to third when Sanchezs throw
sailed into shallow center eld. Belt scored
on Adrianzas sacrice y.
NOTES: The Giants called up RHPreliever
George Kontos from Triple-A Fresno on
Tuesday and sent Jake Dunning back to the
minors. Kontos had a 4.91 ERA in 18 1-3
innings in Fresno.
Overturned call costs Giants
Pirates 2, Giants 1
SanFrancisco AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Pagan cf 4 0 0 0 0 0 .323
Pence rf 4 0 0 0 0 0 .262
Posey c 4 0 1 0 0 0 .291
Morse lf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .295
Belt 1b 2 1 2 0 1 0 .258
Sandoval 3b 4 0 0 0 0 2 .167
B.Crawford ss 3 0 1 0 1 1 .265
Adrianza 2b 3 0 1 1 0 0 .200
T.Hudson p 2 0 0 0 0 0 .125
Totals 30 1 5 1 2 4
Los Angeles AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
J.Harrison rf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .275
Watson p 0 0 0 0 0 0 ---
N.Walker 2b 3 0 0 0 0 1 .254
A.McCutchen cf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .315
P.Alvarez 3b 3 0 0 0 1 0 .210
S.Marte lf 4 2 2 0 0 1 .267
I.Davis 1b 3 0 2 0 0 0 .208
T.Sanchez c 3 0 0 1 0 1 .273
Mercer ss 3 0 0 0 0 0 .167
Morton p 2 0 0 0 0 1 .000
a-Snider ph-rf 1 0 0 0 0 0 .211
Totals 30 2 5 1 1 5
SanFrancisco 010 000 000 1 5 1
Pittsburgh 010 000 001 2 5 1
Two outs when winning run scored.
a-ied out for Morton in the 8th.
EAdrianza(2),T.Sanchez(4).LOBSanFrancisco7,
Pittsburgh 4.2BI.Davis (4).3BS.Marte (2).RBIs
Adrianza(3),T.Sanchez(7).SBBelt (3),B.Crawford(2),
P.Alvarez (3). SFAdrianza.
Runners left in scoring positionSan Francisco 3
(Sandoval, Adrianza 2); Pittsburgh 3 (Mercer,
T.Sanchez,S.Marte).RISPSanFrancisco0for 3;Pitts-
burgh 0 for 4.
Runners moved upT.Sanchez. GIDPP.Alvarez.
DPSan Francisco 1 (B.Crawford, Belt).
SanFrancisco IP H R ER BB SO
T.Hudson L, 4-2 8 2-3 5 2 1 1
Pittsburgh IP H R ER BB SO
Morton 8 3 1 0 2 3
Watson W, 3-0 1 2 0 0 0 1
HBPby T.Hudson (N.Walker), by Morton (T.Hudson,
Belt).WPMorton.
UmpiresHome, Quinn Wolcott; First, Gerry Davis; Sec-
ond, Chris Conroy;Third, Phil Cuzzi.
T2:41. A18,881 (38,362).
By Cliff Brunt
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
OKLAHOMA CITY Kevin Durant has
plenty of scoring titles. Now, he nally has
an MVP trophy to go with them.
The Oklahoma City Thunder star won the
NBAs top individual honor Tuesday, receiv-
ing 119 rst-place votes. Miamis LeBron
James, who had won the last two MVP
awards and four of the previous ve, nished
second with six rst-place votes, and Blake
Grifn of the Los Angeles Clippers was
third.
Everything in my life,
I had to take it, Durant
said at a ceremony in
Edmond. Theyre not
going to give it to you
out of sympathy. I would-
nt want it any other way.
This was another case, if I
wanted to win the MVP, I
had to go take it. I felt
that this was the year I
did that.
Durant won his fourth scoring crown in
ve years by averaging 32 points. The 6-
foot-9 forward helped the Thunder go 59-23,
second-best in the league, despite playing
much of the season without three-time All-
Star Russell Westbrook by his side because
of a nagging knee injury.
Hes basically put himself in front of
everybody else in the league and shown that
hes the best player in the world,
Westbrook said at the end of the regular sea-
son.
James agreed, saying Monday: Much
respect to him and he deserves it. He had a
big-time MVP season.
Durants run of 41 consecutive games this
season with at least 25 points was the third-
longest streak in NBAhistory.
It was a two-man race, and then toward
the end, it was kind of a no-brainer, Grifn
said.
James averaged 27.1 points, 6.9 rebounds
and 6.3 assists while shooting nearly 57
percent from the eld.
Grifn averaged 24.1 points and 10.1
rebounds.
Its an honor, really, he said of nish-
ing third. Its hard to believe. Im honored
and humbled by that.
Durant scored at least 40 points 14 times.
He also averaged 7.4 rebounds and a career-
high 5.5 assists while shooting 50 percent
from the eld.
Durant dethrones LeBron as NBAs MVP
Kevin Durant
SPORTS 13
Wednesday May 7, 2014 THEDAILYJOURNAL
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Admission prices vary. Discount advance tickets available.
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The International Gem & Jewelry Show
Expo Hall
May 30, 12 pm 6 pm
May 31, 10 am 6 pm
June 1, 11 am 5 pm
Admission Fee: Tickets: One low ticket price good for all three days ($8.00) or you can
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**New policy - Children 8 and under are not permitted**
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June 7, 11 am 10 pm June 12, 12 pm 10 pm
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Baseball
Hillsdale 4, Mills 0
The Knights made it a three-way tie atop
the Peninsula Athletic League Ocean
Division standings in emphatic fashion.
It was the Rohith Mahanty show Tuesday
as he red a no-hitter on the mound and was
2 for 3 with a home run and three RBIs at the
plate.
Mahanty was a walk away from a perfect
game.
Hillsdale, Sequoia and Capuchino go into
Thursdays regular-season nale all tied for
rst place with 9-4 record.
Hillsdale was held scoreless the rst three
innings before scoring once in the fourth
and fth, and adding a pair of runs in the
sixth.
Sequoia 3, Woodside 1
The Cherokees kept pace with Capuchino
and Hillsdale atop the PAL Ocean Division
standings by beating the rival Wildcats
Tuesday.
Sequoias Kyle Cambron threw yet anoth-
er complete game, holding Woodside to just
one run on three hits, improving his record
to 10-1 on the year. His Woodside counter-
part, Jamie Kreuger, was just as good, hold-
ing the Cherokees to three runs on three
hits.
Antonio Arellano came off the bench to
supply the big hit for Sequoia (9-4 PAL
Ocean, 18-6-1 overall), drilling a two-out,
two-run, pinch-hit single in the bottom of
the fourth inning to turn a 1-0 Sequoia
decit into a 2-1 advantage. Liam Clifford
added an RBI groundout in the fth, scoring
Tommy Lopiparo, who had doubled and went
to third on a Jarrett Crowell sacrice bunt.
South City 12, Pinewood 1
The Warriors completed a perfect run
through PAL Lake Division with a big win
over visiting Pinewood Tuesday.
South City (12-0 PAL Lake, 15-12 over-
all) scored all 12 run of its runs in the fth,
sending 16 batters to the plate in the
process. Jesus Jimenez had a pair of hits,
including a bases-loaded triple, and drove in
four runs all in the fth to lead the
Warriors offense. Carlos Solis added a pair
of doubles in the inning as well. James
Felix had three hits and an RBI for the
Warriors.
That was more than enough offensive sup-
port for starter pitcher Daniel Perez, who
after giving up an unearned run in the rst,
cruised to a complete-game win, limiting
the Panthers to just ve hits while striking
out 12.
Crystal Springs 15, Harker School 5
Junior Jack Davidson picked up his rst
win of the season, pitching a complete-
game, six-hitter for the Gryphons.
Grifn Young and Bryce Huerta each drove
in three runs for Crystal Springs, while Tim
Stiles and David Young each had a pair of
hits in the win.
Serra 2, Bellarmine 0
Sophomore right hander John Besse went
seven innings, allowing just two hits to
pick up the win in the Padres victory over
the Bells Tuesday afternoon.
Angelo Bortolin drove in a rst-inning
run with a single, while Nolan Dempsey
reached base three timers, doubling in the
third and singling in the sixth.
Softball
Mercy-Burlingame 14, Harker School 7
Michela Hovland hit a rst-inning grand
slam to highlight a nine-run rst inning for
the Crusaders Tuesday afternoon.
After Harker score a run in the second and
added two more in the third to close 9-3,
Mercy (5-3 WBAL Foothill, 9-12 overall)
extended its lead to 11-3 on a two-run blast
by Alexis Luciano. Sabrina Miller then
capped the scoring for the Crusaders by hit-
ting a three-run bomb in the bottom of the
sixth.
Erin Dougherty added four hits for Mercy
in the win as well.
Notre Dame-Belmont 3, Gunn 0
Lindsey Mifsud pitched a shutout in a non-
league win over the Titans, limiting Gunn to
just ve hits.
Notre Dame (11-7 overall) scored single
runs in the rst, third and fth innings. The
Tigers were led by Soa Magnani, Soa
Reyes and Mifsud, who each drove in a run.
Megan Cosgrove added a pair of hits for
Notre Dame in the win.
Boys tennis
CCS tournament
The Central Coast Section team tourna-
ment kicks off Wednesday with no fewer
than six San Mateo County teams making
the draw.
All matches begin at 3 p.m.
Menlo School was, once again, selected
the No. 1 seed and will have a rst-round
bye. The Knights (17-3) will host the win-
ner of St. Francis-Leland in a second-round
match Friday.
Menlo-Atherton (17-4) and Serra (13-5)
will also have rst-round byes as seeded
teams. The Bears garnered the No. 3 seed and
will face either Homestead (16-0) or Pioneer
(6-6) Friday in Atherton. The Padres were
awarded the No. 6 seed and will play either
Los Gatos (13-6) or St. Ignatius (13-5) at
College of San Mateo Friday.
In rst-round action Wednesday, PAL tour-
nament champion Aragon (13-6) will host
Robert Louis Stevenson-Pebble Beach (6-
6). Crystal Springs (12-5) will be on the
road at Seascape Tennis Club in Aptos to
take on 16-1 Santa Cruz, while Sacred Heart
Prep (12-10) will host Mitty (15-5).
Local sports roundup
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
OAKLAND Rookie Roenis Elias struck
out six while pitching into the seventh to
win consecutive starts for the rst time,
Justin Smoak drove in three runs and the
Seattle Mariners beat the Oakland Athletics
8-3 on Tuesday night for their season-best
fourth straight victory.
Smoak hit an RBI double and Dustin
Ackley an RBI single in the rst to back
Elias (3-2), who followed up a 10-strikeout
gem at Yankee Stadium his last time out with
another impressive start.
The Mariners jumped on Jesse Chavez (2-
1) to take a quick rst-inning lead for the
second straight game against the As and
Seattle scored all three of its rst-inning
runs with two outs on the way to its ninth
win in 11 games overall.
Chavez got a scare and escaped injury in
the fourth when he saved himself from a
hard-hit liner by Michael Saunders by catch-
ing the screamer that was going right for
his face.
Making the play knocked him off his feet
to end the fourth, and the small Coliseum
crowd of 12,106 briey fell silent.
Chavez got a double play to face the min-
imum in the fth, but his night ended after
allowing Mike Zuninos sixth-inning sacri-
ce y following a hit batsman and a walk.
As fall to
Mariners
Mariners 8, As 3
SPORTS 14
Wednesday May 7, 2014 THEDAILYJOURNAL
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in the fth inning. As per California


Community College baseball rules,
Lucca was required to serve a one-
game suspension. As a result, he did
not manage the nal win of
Caadas season as Alton dealt in
Game 2. He did, however, resume
the helm for Game 3 in the second
game of Saturdays twin bill.
I got a nice little ovation from
our fans and from our team when I
walked into the dugout, which was
nice, Lucca said.
But things swiftly and denitive-
ly took a turn for the worst, as
Chabot jumped on Canada starting
pitcher Joe Marcucci for seven runs
in the rst inning. With the Colts
playing their fourth game in ve
days Alton started both games
Caada won the teams pitching
depth was as thin as it had been for
any game all season.
It was one of those cases where
[Marcucci] looked really, really
good in the bullpen and it just didnt
translate into the game, Lucca said.
In the game of baseball, you have
days like that. Unfortunately it was
the wrong day to have one of those
type of days.
It wasnt that Marcucci came
entirely undone. The freshman
right-hander surrendered eight runs
over two innings, though only ve
of the runs were earned. It was a
nightmare of a series for the defense
though, as the Colts ineld made
seven errors in the series, six of
which were committed by shortstop
Kyle Zirbes.
In Game 1, Zirbes made three
errors in the second inning which
led to both of Chabots runs on the
day. Both runs were unearned. In
Game 3, Zirbes committed three
more errors, with one in each of a
pair of seven-run innings for
Chabot.
Zirbes had a tough series all the
way around, Lucca said. I mean, he
got a couple hits, but I think he
made some mistakes and made some
decisions that obviously were not
the best. Hes a good player. He
played hard, its just it wasnt his
series.
And Caadas overall postseason
frustrations continue as well, as the
team has yet to advance past the rst
round of the playoffs during Luccas
tenure.
We just cant get out of this rst
round for whatever reason, Lucca
said. I dont know what it is.
It was still a successful regular
season for the Colts though, as the
team nished with a 26-14 overall
record and nished in second place
with a 17-7 record in Coast Pacic
Conference play. And the team ral-
lied late in the season, winning
their nal six games to land the nal
No. 16 seed in the Nor Cal playoffs.
Im proud of this group, Lucca
said. They went out there, they
played hard. We made it to the
postseason. It was a very successful
season. We had a Pitcher of the Year.
Theres a lot of good things to look
back and really appreciate.
It was Altons performance down
the stretch that highlighted the suc-
cessful season. The sophomore put
the team on his shoulders during an
extra-inning game April 3, in which
the Colts won 1-0 after battling
Cabrillo for 13 innings. Alton
worked 11 innings and while
Cabrillo pitcher Nat Hamby went
10 innings in a pitching duel for the
ages.
Alton has yet to commit to a
transfer. Lucca said Alton being able
to pitch at the four-year college
level is in the bag. And his upside
could even see him pitch beyond
that.
Hes denitely got a couple more
years left of college ball, Lucca
said. Hes denitely going to play.
And if he continues to get stronger,
and if he can light up the gun a
little bit more with his fastball, I
think he denitely has a chance to
play after college baseball because
of his ability to locate pitches in
any count, his whole demeanor and
everything. Wherever he lands
these next two years, somebody is
going to be very happy with him,
Im sure.
Continued from page 11
COLTS
inning. Brenden Donnelly, who was
on third with one out, was tagged out
trying to score when Chad Franquez
hit a comebacker to Galea.
Later in the inning, Davis was
tagged out trying to score from sec-
ond on a Steven Hughes single after
Franquez had already scored.
(Donnellys out is) on me. I didnt
make sure the ball cleared the pitch-
er, Souza said. And I thought the
ball scooted further away from the
center elder when I sent Davis.
The comeback by Capuchino (9-4,
19-7) made a winner of Galea, who
grinded through six innings, allow-
ing six runs (four earned). He scat-
tered eight hits and then gave way to
Rory McDaid, who retired in order
the heart of the Aragon lineup.
It became clear early on that the
game would be a wild affair.
Capuchino took a quick 1-0 lead in
the top of the rst on a Galea bloop
single to shallow left eld that drove
in McDaid, who singled with two
outs.
It was the rst of Galeas three hits
and two RBIs on the day.
Aragon, however, came back with
two runs in the bottom of the rst,
also with two outs. Davis was hit by
a pitch and Hughes walked. Both run-
ners moved up on a balk and both
came home on Brennan Careys sin-
gle to center.
The Mustangs responded with two
more runs in the second. Orcholski
started the rally with a lead-off single
and moved to second on a groundout.
Arsenault singled to put runners on
the corners and he moved to second
on a wild pitch. With two outs, Chris
Kosta singled up the middle to plate
both runners and give the Mustangs
a 3-2 lead.
Back came the Dons, who scored
two more in the bottom of the frame
for a 4-3 advantage. Justin Johnson
walked to lead off the inning before
Kyle Hamilton put down a perfect
bunt and beat it out when the
Capuchino third baseman was unable
to make a bare-handed grab. The
rally was slowed when the Mustangs
turned a double play, but a double
from Matt Foppiano drove in
Johnson and he scored when
Franquezs shot to the rst baseman
caught him between hops and scoot-
ed into the outeld.
Aragon made it 5-3 on Hughes
solo home run in the bottom of the
third and doubled up the Mustangs on
a Hughes RBI single in the fourth.
Galea, however, shut down the
Dons over the nal three innings,
giving his teammates a chance to
rally and give him the win.
Aragon starter Kevin Hahn ended
up with a no-decision after working
ve innings, giving up 11 hits and
ve runs only three of which were
earned.
In addition to Galeas three hits,
McDaid, Enriquez and Arsenault all
had a pair of hits. Hughes and
Donnelly each had two hits for the
Dons.
No one said (winning a division
title) was going to be easy, Wilson
said.
Continued from page 11
CAP
Im proud of this group.They went out
there, they played hard. We made it to the
postseason. It was a very successful season.
Tony Lucca, Caada manager
SPORTS 15
Wednesday May 7, 2014 THEDAILYJOURNAL
East Division
W L Pct GB
Baltimore 16 14 .533
New York 16 15 .516 1/2
Boston 16 17 .485 1 1/2
Toronto 16 17 .485 1 1/2
Tampa Bay 15 18 .455 2 1/2
Central Division
W L Pct GB
Detroit 19 9 .679
Chicago 17 17 .500 5
Minnesota 15 16 .484 5 1/2
Kansas City 15 17 .469 6
Cleveland 14 19 .424 7 1/2
West Division
W L Pct GB
As 19 14 .576
Los Angeles 16 15 .516 2
Seattle 16 15 .516 2
Texas 17 16 .515 2
Houston 10 23 .303 9
TuesdaysGames
Cleveland4,Minnesota2
Toronto6,Philadelphia5,10innings
Detroit 11,Houston4
Baltimore5,TampaBay3
Boston4,Cincinnati 3,12innings
ChicagoWhiteSox5,ChicagoCubs 1
Colorado12,Texas 1
N.Y.Yankees 4,L.A.Angels 3
Seattle8,Oakland3
Kansas City3,SanDiego1,11innings
WednesdaysGames
Seattle(F.Hernandez 3-1) at Oakland(Straily1-2), 12:35
p.m.,1st game
Kansas City (Shields 3-3) at San Diego (Cashner 2-4),
12:40p.m.
Minnesota(Nolasco2-3) at Cleveland(Salazar 1-3),4:05
p.m.
Seattle(E.Ramirez1-3) at Oakland(Leon0-0),4:05p.m.,
2ndgame
Philadelphia (Cl.Lee 3-2) at Toronto (Buehrle 5-1), 4:07
p.m.
Houston(Peacock0-2)atDetroit(Porcello4-1),4:08p.m.
Baltimore(B.Norris2-2)atTampaBay(C.Ramos1-1),4:10
p.m.
Cincinnati (Leake2-3) at Boston(Peavy1-1),4:10p.m.
Colorado(J.DeLaRosa3-3)atTexas(Lewis2-1),5:05p.m.
Chicago Cubs (T.Wood 2-3) at Chicago White Sox
(Joh.Danks 2-2),5:10p.m.
N.Y.Yankees (Nuno0-0) at L.A. Angels (H.Santiago0-5),
7:05p.m.
ThursdaysGames
Minnesotaat Cleveland,9:05a.m.
Houstonat Detroit,10:08a.m.
PhiladelphiaatToronto,4:07p.m.
BaltimoreatTampaBay,4:10p.m.
ColoradoatTexas,5:05p.m.
ChicagoCubs at ChicagoWhiteSox,5:10p.m.
Kansas Cityat Seattle,7:10p.m.
AL GLANCE
East Division
W L Pct GB
Atlanta 18 14 .563
Miami 18 15 .545 1/2
Washington 18 15 .545 1/2
New York 16 16 .500 2
Philadelphia 15 16 .484 2 1/2
Central Division
W L Pct GB
Milwaukee 22 12 .647
St. Louis 17 17 .500 5
Cincinnati 15 17 .469 6
Pittsburgh 13 20 .394 8 1/2
Chicago 11 20 .355 9 1/2
West Division
W L Pct GB
Giants 21 12 .636
Colorado 21 14 .600 1
Los Angeles 19 15 .559 2 1/2
San Diego 15 19 .441 6 1/2
Arizona 12 24 .333 10 1/2
TuesdaysGames
L.A.Dodgers8,Washington3
Pittsburgh2,SanFrancisco1
Toronto6,Philadelphia5,10innings
Boston4,Cincinnati3,12innings
Miami3,N.Y.Mets0
Atlanta2,St.Louis1
ChicagoWhiteSox5,ChicagoCubs1
Arizona7,Milwaukee5
Colorado12,Texas1
SanDiego6,KansasCity5,12innings
WednesdaysGames
SanFrancisco(Lincecum2-1) at Pittsburgh(Cole2-2),9:35
p.m.
N.Y.Mets(Z.Wheeler1-3)atMiami(Koehler3-2),9:40p.m.
L.A.Dodgers(Haren4-0)atWashington(Strasburg2-2),10:05
a.m.
Arizona(Arroyo2-2)atMilwaukee(W.Peralta4-1),10:10a.m.
Kansas City(Shields 3-3) at SanDiego(Cashner 2-4),12:40
p.m.
Philadelphia(Cl.Lee3-2)atToronto(Buehrle5-1),4:07p.m.
Cincinnati(Leake2-3)atBoston(Peavy1-1),4:10p.m.
St.Louis(Wainwright5-2)atAtlanta(Minor0-1),4:10p.m.
Colorado(J.DeLaRosa3-3)atTexas(Lewis2-1),5:05p.m.
ChicagoCubs(T.Wood2-3)atChicagoWhiteSox(Joh.Danks
2-2),5:10p.m.
ThursdaysGames
PhiladelphiaatToronto,4:07p.m.
ColoradoatTexas,5:05p.m.
ChicagoCubsatChicagoWhiteSox,5:10p.m.
MiamiatSanDiego,7:10p.m.
SanFranciscoatL.A.Dodgers,7:10p.m.
NL GLANCE
WEDNESDAY
Baseball
Sacred Heart Prep at Burlingame, Menlo School at
Carlmont,Terra Nova at Menlo-Atherton, 4 p.m.
Softball
Mills vs.South City at Ponderosa,El Camino at Terra
Nova,Mercy-Burlingame at Kings Academy,4 p.m.
Swimming
WBAL trial at Sacred Heart Prep, 4 p.m.
Boys lacrosse
Serra at Mitty, 5 p.m.
Trackandeld
Mitty/Notre Dame-Belmont at Serra, 3 p.m.
THURSDAY
Badminton
South City at Mills,Westmoor at El Camino,Aragon
at Carlmont,Capuchino at Hillsdale,Burlingame at
Jefferson,Woodside at Menlo-Atherton, 4 p.m.
Baseball
San Mateo at Westmoor, Pinewood vs. Crystal
Springs at Sea Cloud Park,Jefferson at Harker,Carl-
mont at Half Moon Bay, 4 p.m.
Softball
Carlmont at Half MoonBay,Sequoiaat Burlingame,
Woodside at Capuchino, Mercy-Burlingame at
Castilleja, 4 p.m.
Swimming
WCAL girls trials at Serra, WBAL nals at Sacred
Heart Prep, 4 p.m.
FRIDAY
Baseball
St. Ignatius at Serra, Terra Nova at Burlingame, Half
MoonBayatMenloSchool,Menlo-AthertonatSacred
Heart Prep,4p.m.
Softball
Mitty at Notre Dame-Belmont, 3:30 p.m.; Mills vs. El
CaminoatTerrabay,TerraNovaat SanMateo,Menlo-
Atherton vs. South City at Ponderosa, Mercy-SF at
Crystal Springs,PrioryatAlmaHeights,Aragonvs.Hills-
daleat ChanteloupField,7p.m.
Trackandeld
PALtrialsatTerraNova,4p.m.
Girlslacrosse
Menlo-Atherton at Burlingame, Castilleja at Menlo
School,MittyatSacredHeartPrep,Mercy-Burlingame
atWoodside,4p.m.
Swimming
WCALboystrialsat Serra,4p.m.
SATURDAY
Trackandeld
WBAL trials at Gunn High School, 9 a.m.
Swimming
PAL Bay Division championships at Burlingame, 1
p.m.; WCAL nals at Serra, 3 p.m.
WHATS ON TAP
CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Miami 1, Brooklyn0
Tuesday, May6: Miami 107, Brooklyn86
Thursday, May 8: Brooklyn at Miami, 4 p.m.
Saturday, May 10: Miami at Brooklyn, 5 p.m.
Monday, May 12: Miami at Brooklyn, 5 p.m.
x-Wednesday, May 14: Brooklyn at Miami,TBA
x-Friday, May 16: Miami at Brooklyn,TBA
x-Sunday, May 18: Brooklyn at Miami,TBA
Washington1, Indiana0
Monday, May5: Washington102, Indiana96
Wednesday, May 7:Washington at Indiana, 4 p.m.
Friday, May 9: Indiana at Washington, 5 p.m.
Sunday, May 11: Indiana at Washington, 5 p.m.
x-Tuesday, May 13:Washington at Indiana,TBA
x-Thursday, May 15: Indiana at Washington,TBA
x-Sunday, May 18:Washington at Indiana,TBA
WESTERNCONFERENCE
SanAntonio1, Portland0
Tuesday, May6: SanAntonio116, Portland92
Thursday,May 8:Portland at San Antonio,6:30 p.m.
Saturday,May10:SanAntonioat Portland,7:30p.m.
Monday, May 12: at San Antonio at Portland, 7:30
p.m.
x-Wednesday,May14:Portlandat SanAntonio,TBA
x-Friday, May 16: San Antonio at Portland,TBA
x-Monday, May 19: Portland at San Antonio,TBA
L.A. Clippers 1, OklahomaCity0
Monday, May 5: L.A. Clippers 122, Oklahoma
City105
Wednesday, May 7: L.A. Clippers at Oklahoma City,
6:30 p.m.
Friday, May 9: Oklahoma City at L.A. Clippers, 7:30
p.m.
Sunday, May 11: Oklahoma City at L.A. Clippers,
12:30 p.m.
x-Tuesday, May 13: L.A. Clippers at Oklahoma City,
TBA
x-Thursday,May 15:Oklahoma City at L.A.Clippers,
TBA
x-Sunday, May 18: L.A. Clippers at Oklahoma City,
TBA
NBA PLAYOFFS
CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS
EASTERNCONFERENCE
Montreal 2, Boston1
Thursday, May1: Montreal 4, Boston3, 2OT
Saturday, May3: Boston5, Montreal 3
Tuesday, May6: Montreal 4, Boston2
Thursday, May 8: Boston at Montreal, 4:30 p.m.
Saturday, May 10: Montreal at Boston, 4 p.m.
x-Monday, May 12: Boston at Montreal,TBA
x-Wednesday, May 14: Montreal at Boston,TBA
Pittsburgh2, N.Y. Rangers 1
Friday, May2: N.Y. Rangers 3, Pittsburgh2, OT
Sunday, May4: Pittsburgh3, N.Y. Rangers 0
Monday, May5: Pittsburgh2, N.Y. Rangers 0
Wednesday, May 7: Pittsburgh at N.Y. Rangers, 4:30
p.m.
Friday, May 9: N.Y. Rangers at Pittsburgh, 4 p.m.
x-Sunday, May 11: Pittsburgh at N.Y. Rangers,TBA
x-Tuesday, May 13: N.Y. Rangers at Pittsburgh,TBA
WESTERNCONFERENCE
Chicago2, Minnesota1
Friday, May2: Chicago5, Minnesota2
Sunday, May4: Chicago4, Minnesota1
Tuesday, May6: Minnesota4, Chicago0
Friday, May 9: Chicago at Minnesota, 6:30 p.m.
Sunday, May 11: Minnesota at Chicago,TBA
x-Tuesday, May 13: Chicago at Minnesota,TBA
x-Thursday, May 15: Minnesota at Chicago,TBA
Saturday, May3: Los Angeles 3, Anaheim2, OT
Monday, May5: Los Angeles 3, Anaheim1
Thursday, May 8: Anaheim at Los Angeles, 7 p.m.
Saturday,May10:Anaheimat LosAngeles,6:30p.m.
x-Monday, May 12: Los Angeles at Anaheim,TBA
x-Wednesday,May 14:Anaheim at Los Angeles,TBA
x-Friday, May 16: Los Angeles at Anaheim,TBA
NHL PLAYOFFS
BASEBALL
AmericanLeague
BALTIMORE ORIOLES Optioned RHP Brad
Brach to Norfolk (IL). Recalled LHP T.J. McFarland
from Norfolk.
CLEVELAND INDIANS Designated C George
Kottaras for assignment. Recalled RHP Josh Tom-
lin from Columbus (IL).
DETROIT TIGERS Optioned RHP Jose Ortega
to Toledo (IL). Selected the contract of LHP Robbie
Ray from Toledo.
KANSASCITYROYALSReinstated OF Lorenzo
Cain from the 15-day DL.
NEWYORKYANKEESAssigned RHP Chris Ler-
oux outright to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL).
Reinstated RHP Michael Pineda from the sus-
pended list and placed him on the 15-day DL.
Reinstated INF Brendan Ryan from the 15-day DL.
TEXAS RANGERS Sent LHP Joe Saunders to
Frisco (TL) for a rehab assignment.
National League
CHICAGO CUBS Sent RHP Jose Veras to Ten-
nessee (SL) for a rehab assignment.
CINCINNATI REDSPlaced OF Jay Bruce on the
15-day DL. Selected the contract of OF Roger
Bernadina from Louisville (IL).
LOSANGELESDODGERSOptioned RHP Pedro
Baez to Chattanooga (SL). Reinstated LHP Clayton
Kershaw from the 15-day DL.
MIAMI MARLINSReleased INF Greg Dobbs.
PITTSBURGHPIRATESOptionedLHPJeff Locke
to Indianapolis (IL).Recalled RHP Phil Irwin from In-
dianapolis.
SANDIEGOPADRESSent 3B Chase Headley to
Lake Elsinore (Cal) for a rehab assignment.
WASHINGTONNATIONALSRecalledRHPBlake
Treinen from Syracuse (IL). Optioned RHP Ryan
Mattheus to Syracuse.
TRANSACTIONS
Miami 107, Brooklyn 86
MIAMI LeBron James scored 22
points, Ray Allen added 19 and Miami
stayed perfect in this postseason by beating
Brooklyn 107-86 on Tuesday night in Game
1 of their Eastern Conference seminal.
It was the rst win for Miami in ve meet-
ings with Brooklyn this season.
Chris Bosh scored 15 points and grabbed
11 rebounds, Dwyane Wade nished with 14
points and Mario Chalmers had 12 for
Miami, which lost to Brooklyn four times
by a total of 12 points.
Deron Williams and Joe Johnson scored
17 points each for the Nets, who got only
eight from Paul Pierce and no points from
Kevin Garnett in 16 minutes.
Game 2 of the best-of-seven series is
Thursday night.
A24-9 run in the third quarter blew things
open for the Heat, who hadnt played in
eight days after sweeping Charlotte in the
opening round. James nished 10 for 15
from the eld and Allen who had never
faced his former Boston Big 3 compatri-
ots Pierce and Garnett in the playoffs was
4 of 7 from 3-point land.
Spurs 116, Trail Blazers 92
SAN ANTONIO Tony Parker had 33
points and nine assists and San Antonio
never trailed in Game 1 of the Western
Conference seminal.
Kawhi Leonard had 16 points and Tim
Duncan added 12 points and 11 rebounds for
San Antonio.
More importantly for the Spurs, their
bench contributed mightily after being vir-
tually non-existent in the opening-round
series against Dallas. Marco Belinelli had
19 points and the Australian connection of
Aron Baynes and Patty Mills had 10 points
apiece.
LaMarcus Aldridge had 32 points and 14
rebounds and Damian Lillard had 17 points
for Portland, but the All-Star duo combined
for just 17 points in the rst half as San
Antonio built a 26-point lead.
The Trail Blazers were coming off a rst-
round upset of Houston.
NBAplayoff roundup
16
Wednesday May 7, 2014 THEDAILYJOURNAL
SPORTS
650.259.9200
second round of the playoffs, and they were
51-31 this season before losing in seven
games to the Los Angeles Clippers in the rst
round.
The Warriors, who have surrounded star
Stephen Curry with a talented nucleus since
Lacobs group bought the franchise in 2010,
had not made the playoffs in consecutive
years since 1991-92. They had made the post-
season once in 17 years before Jackson
arrived.
Lacob compared the decision to replace
Jackson to his work as a venture capitalist in
Silicon Valley.
Theres a different CEO that may be required
to achieve success at different stages of an
organizations development, Lacob said.
When youre a startup company its one
thing, when youre a small-growth company
its one thing and when youre a mature com-
pany thats trying to reach a billion in sales
or in this case win an NBAchampionship
perhaps thats a different person. And we
just felt overall we needed a different person.
Lacob and Myers declined to discuss the
coaching search, other than to say it would
begin immediately. Former NBA player and
TNT broadcaster Steve Kerr, former Orlando
Magic coach Stan Van Gundy, Iowa States
Fred Hoiberg and Connecticuts Kevin Ollie
have been among the most talked-about can-
didates this offseason.
The Warriors know a new coach comes with
the risk of disrupting team chemistry, espe-
cially considering nearly every player pub-
licly called for Jackson to return, especially
Curry, whom Lacob said was informed of the
decision ahead of time. Myers also spoke to
several players after he and Lacob informed
Jackson of their decision in a meeting Tuesday
morning.
The hope and belief after talking to them is
that they trust us and they believe that we
make decisions to win as well, Myers said.
Jackson took to Twitter to thank the organ-
ization, players and fans. Several of his pres-
ent and past players also applauded the job he
had done.
Jackson, a former NBApoint guard who had
his best seasons with the New York Knicks
and Indiana Pacers, had never been a head
coach at any level when Lacob hired him away
from the ESPN/ABC broadcast table in June
2011. Aminister who runs a church with his
wife near their Southern California home,
Jackson often spoke of his Christian beliefs
while surprisingly turning the Warriors into
one of the NBAs best defensive teams.
But Jacksons boisterous personality at
times did not play well with Warriors manage-
ment, his staff and to a much lesser extent
his players. And his attitude, which bor-
dered on condence and cockiness, also came
off as increasingly insecure when the team
struggled.
The Warriors still stuck by Jackson even
when he created news off the court, including
when reports surfaced in June 2012 that he and
his family were the targets of an extortion
attempt related to an extramarital affair he had
six years prior, which led to questions about
his credibility and morals.
The pressure on Jackson really heated up
when the Warriors decided to pick up his con-
tract option for the 2014-15 season last sum-
mer instead of negotiating a long-term deal as
he had wanted. Management also encouraged
Jackson to hire a strong tactician after top
assistant Michael Malone who had several
disagreements with Jackson left to become
the coach of the Sacramento Kings.
Instead, Jackson promoted Pete Myers and
other assistants and hired Lindsey Hunter and
Brian Scalabrine. And while reports of rifts
within the team surfaced on occasion, dis-
missing two assistants Scalabrine and
Darren Erman in a 12-day span before the
playoffs perpetuated the idea that Jackson had
fostered an environment of dysfunction
which Jackson repeatedly refuted.
Continued from page 11
WARRIORS
Here are ve things to watch with the
Raiders when the draft starts Thursday
night:
Quarterback quandary
The Raiders entered the offseason in need
of nding a starting quarterback. After trad-
ing a sixth-round pick for Matt Schaub in
March, McKenzie no longer needs to l l
that hole through the draft.
Thats still a position that well look at,
but I think what it does is, you dont feel
that pressure that you have to go out there
and try and draft a quarterback, coach
Dennis Allen said. You kind of let every-
thing fall to you now.
Win now
The Raiders have spent the rst two years
under the leadership of McKenzie and Allen
tearing down the franchise after years of
poor management under late owner Al
Davis. Now they are in the rebuild mode, but
owner Mark Davis is losing patience after
consecutive four-win seasons. McKenzie
said that does not put pressure on him to nd
players who can contribute immediately.
You draft for the future, McKenzie said.
You dont draft for right now. Thats not the
way I do it.
Going deep
One of the deepest positions in this draft
is receiver, where more than a dozen players
are projected to go in the rst three rounds.
Even after adding veteran James Jones in
free agency, the Raiders could look for a
playmaker in the draft. Clemsons Sammy
Watkins is considered the best of the group,
but the Raiders also could wait to get a qual-
ity receiver in the second or third round.
If I feel like this guy is an impact player,
Im not going to bypass him just because
theres some other good, solid receivers,
McKenzie said. When youre comparing
great to good, Id rather have great.
Draft dealings
McKenzie has not been shy about making
draft-day trades. He has moved down in the
draft four times in his rst two years to add
additional picks, including dropping nine
spots in the rst round last year to take
Hayden 12th overall and add the pick for
Watson in the second round.
Thats what makes it fun the uncer-
tainty, he said. But I cannot plan that at
all. I can just be hardheaded and stubborn
and say, Im not moving. But thats not
my style.
Undrafted gems
A GMs work is not done once Mr.
Irrelevant is picked. McKenzie has done a
good job nding some gems in the undraft-
ed free agent market with receiver Rod
Streater, quarterback Matt McGloin, punter
Marquette King and offensive lineman Lucas
Nix all making contributions the past two
years after joining Oakland as undrafted free
agents.
Continued from page 11
RAIDERS
FOOD 17
Wednesday May 7, 2014 THEDAILYJOURNAL
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Chinese Cuisine
By Sara Moulton
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Its barbecue season, and chicken is
the ideal candidate to get you grilling.
Why? Chicken is light, it easily
picks up the marinade of your choice,
and it cooks quickly. But this recipe is
not for your everyday grilled chicken.
This is spicy Jamaican-style jerk
chicken.
Jerk refers both to a unique blend
of seasonings and to a method of slow
cooking. It is said to have been
invented by Jamaicas Maroons,
slaves who escaped from Spanish-
owned plantations when the British
took over and established free commu-
nities in Jamaicas mountainous inte-
rior. The Maroons hunted wild boars,
then preserved the meat with a spice
mix that contained a hefty amount of
salt. When it was time to eat, the meat
was cooked in a pit or grilled very
slowly over a fire. Eventually,
Jamaicans began to cook all kinds of
meats jerk-style.
Jerk seasoning consists of a base
blend of scallions, thyme, allspice
(known as pimento in Jamaica),
Scotch bonnet chilies, salt and, not
infrequently, cinnamon or nutmeg.
This may look like an awful lot of
ingredients to slice and dice, but thats
not the case. Toss them all into a
blender, pulverize everything to a
paste, then youre good to go.
But you do need to be careful when
youre messing with those Scotch
bonnets. I advise wearing gloves.
Seriously. A cousin of the habanero,
Scotch bonnets are serious chilies. I
call for a whole chili here, but you can
use less if you want to tamp down the
heat. Happily, Scotch bonnets arent
solely about heat; they also are unique-
ly avorful like a cross between a
mango and chili with a wonderfully
fruity scent. If you cant nd Scotch
bonnets, use a habanero. If you cant
nd either, reach for a jalapeno or ser-
rano.
I left the skin on the chicken to pre-
vent it from drying out while its being
grilled, so when you marinate the
chicken be sure to put the spice paste
under the skin as well as on top of it. If
you want to cut calories, youre wel-
come to discard the skin after youre
done grilling. The meat itself will be
plenty spicy.
The job of the watermelon salsa is to
balance the heat of the chilies. All by
itself, of course, ripe watermelon is
one of the top reasons to love summer.
But they happen to be plenty healthy,
too. Theyre full of water, which makes
them an excellent hot weather thirst-
quencher, and theyre a great source of
lycopene, vitamin C and beta-
carotene.
And these days you dont have to buy
mega-melons. There are plenty of
smaller versions, most of them seed-
less (or at least with soft little seeds),
the result of hybridization. At the
supermarket, look for a melon with a
large yellow spot on the bottom. The
bottom, or underbelly, of a watermelon
is the spot where it was resting on the
ground. If that ground spot is white
or green, the watermelon is unlikely to
be fully ripe. Once your melon is
home, dont store it in the fridge, at
least not until its sliced.
So, jerk and watermelon. Hot and
sweet. What could be more summery?
GRILLED JERK CHICKEN BREASTS
WITH WATERMELON SALSA
Start to nish: 1 hour 15 minutes (45
minutes active), plus 24 hours mari-
nating
Healthy way with fiery chicken and cooling salsa
Jerk seasoning consists of a base blend of scallions, thyme, allspice (known as pimento in Jamaica),
Scotch bonnet chilies, salt and, not infrequently, cinnamon or nutmeg.
See JERK, Page 20
18
Wednesday May 7, 2014 THEDAILYJOURNAL
FOOD
By J.M. Hirsch
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
And you thought the lines to get a Cronut
were bad before!
Last year, New York pastry chef
Dominique Ansel needed crowd control and
rationing to handle the frenzy over his
trademarked doughnut-croissant hybrid that
became a viral success and spawned numer-
ous knockoffs. But just as the furor was fad-
ing, the James Beard Foundation has put
him back at the center of the culinary map,
on Monday naming him the nations top
pastry chef.
Ansel gained fame last summer when his
innovative sweet treat had New Yorkers lin-
ing up at dawn outside his Dominique Ansel
Bakery to nab one of the 200 or so he made
per day. There even was a Cronut black mar-
ket, with some selling for as much as $40
online.
The Beard Foundation also gave a nod to
the savory side of the baking aisle, naming
Los Angeles bread and pizza guru Nancy
Silverton the nations most outstanding
chef. Shes only the fourth woman to get the
honor since it began in 1991. The others
include Alice Waters (1992), Lidia
Bastianich (2002) and Judy Rodgers (2004).
Silverton whose early career included a
stint as head pastry chef for Wolfgang
Pucks Spago was at the fore of the arti-
sanal bread movement. When she opened
her restaurant, Campanile, she was frustrat-
ed when she couldnt nd a baker making the
rustic sourdough breads shed had during her
training in Europe. So she taught herself to
bake it.
In 1989, she opened La Brea Bakery next
door to Campanile, and it quickly was
regarded as one of the nations top bakeries.
Two years later, the Beard Foundation named
her the nations top pastry chef. Today, her
restaurants include Pizzeria Mozza in Los
Angeles, which she owns with Mario
Batali.
On Monday, she said the decision to
cook wasnt easy, and she expected her
family to be unhappy.
I was in my senior
year of college, when
cooks were cooks. There
were no celebrity chefs. I
called my father up and
said, Im dropping out of
college. I want to cook,
Silverton said. And he
said, As long as you go
to Le Cordon Bleu. And
so he sent me to Le
Cordon Bleu. And here I
am today.
The James Beard awards
honor those who follow
in the footsteps of Beard,
considered the dean of
American cooking when
he died in 1985.
Mondays ceremony in
New York honored chefs
and restaurants; a similar
event on Friday was held
for book and other media awards. Last years
top chef honor was shared by David Chang
and Paul Kahan.
The foundations outstanding restaurateur
award went to Boston chef Barbara Lynch,
marking only the second time the honor has
gone to a woman. Lynch oversees half a
dozen restaurants, including her rst No.
9 Park and her most recent, Menton and
is credited with fostering the citys burgeon-
ing food scene.
San Franciscos The Slanted Door, where
classic Vietnamese food gets a modern
rethinking by owner and chef Charles Phan,
was named the nations most outstanding
restaurant.
Donald Links Peche Seafood Grill in New
Orleans known for its rustic coastal
seafood cooked in an open hearth gar-
nered two awards Monday: best new restau-
rant overall, as well as a tie for best region-
al chef in the South for chef/partner Ryan
Prewitt. He tied with Sue Zemanick of
Dominique Ansel, Nancy Silverton get Beard honors
Dominique
Ansel
Nancy
Silverton
NATIONAL CHEF AWARDS:
Outstanding Chef
Nancy Silverton of Pizzeria Mozza in Los Angeles
Outstanding Restaurant
The Slanted Door in San Francisco
Rising star Chef of the Year
Jimmy Bannos Jr.of The Purple Pig in Chicago and Blaine
Wetzel of The Willows Inn on Lummi Island in Lummi
Island,Washington
Outstanding Restaurateur
Barbara Lynch of Barbara Lynch Gruppo (No. 9 Park,
Menton, B&G Oysters, and others) in Boston
Best New Restaurant
Peche Seafood Grill in New Orleans
Outstanding Pastry Chef
DominiqueAnsel of DominiqueAnsel BakeryinNewYork
City
Outstanding Service
The Restaurant at Meadowood in St. Helena, California
Outstanding Wine, Beer or Spirits Professional
Garrett Oliver of Brooklyn Brewery in Brooklyn, New York
Outstanding Wine Program
The Barn at Blackberry Farm in Walland,Tennessee
Outstanding Bar Program
The Bar at the NoMad Hotel in New York City
REGIONAL CHEF AWARDS
Great Lakes
Dave Beran of Next in Chicago
Mid-Atlantic
Vikram Sunderam of Rasika in Washington, D.C.
Midwest
Justin Aprahamian of Sanford in Milwaukee
NewYork City
April Bloomeld of The Spotted Pig
Northeast
Jamie Bissonnette of Coppa in Boston
Northwest
Naomi Pomeroy of Beast in Portland, Oregon
South
Ryan Prewitt of Peche Seafood Grill in New Orleans
and Sue Zemanick of Gautreaus in New Orleans
Southeast
AshleyChristensenof PoolesDowntownDiner inRaleigh,
North Carolina
Southwest
Chris Shepherd of Underbelly in Houston
West
Daniel Patterson of Coi in San Francisco
2014 James Beard restaurant, chef award winners
See WINNERS Page 20
See BEARD, Page 20
19
Wednesday May 7, 2014 THEDAILYJOURNAL
FOOD 20
Wednesday May 7, 2014 THEDAILYJOURNAL
Servings: 8
For the marinade:
4 tablespoons vegetable oil, divided
8 scallions, white and green parts, coarse-
ly chopped
1 to 2 (to taste) Scotch bonnet chilies,
coarsely chopped
3 tablespoons soy sauce
3 tablespoons lime juice
1 1/2 tablespoons ground allspice
1 1/2 tablespoons Colmans Mustard
(English-style mustard)
2 bay leaves
2 large cloves garlic, crushed
1 teaspoon kosher salt
2 teaspoons sugar
2 teaspoons dried thyme
4 chicken breast halves (4 pounds total)
on the bone with the skin, each chicken
breast half cut in half
For the salsa:
2 cups diced seedless watermelon
1 cup diced seedless cucumber
2 tablespoons nely chopped shallot
1/4 cup nely shredded fresh mint
3 tablespoons lime juice
2 teaspoons packed brown sugar
Salt
In a blender, combine 4 tablespoons of
the oil, the scallions, chilies, soy sauce,
lime juice, allspice, mustard, bay leaves,
garlic, salt, sugar and thyme. Blend until the
mixture forms a ne paste. Transfer the mix-
ture to a re-sealable plastic bag. Add the
chicken and turn it to coat well on all sides.
Refrigerate for at least 24 hours and up to 2
days.
When ready to cook, heat the grill to
medium.
To make the salsa, in a medium bowl,
combine the watermelon, cucumber, shal-
lot, mint, lime juice and sugar. Season with
salt, then set aside.
Remove the chicken from the marinade,
discarding the marinade. Using an oil-
soaked paper towel held with tongs, oil the
grill grates. Add the chicken, skin side
down, and grill for 10 to 15 minutes. Turn
the pieces of chicken, then grill for another
10 to 15 minutes, or just cooked through.
Transfer the chicken to a plate, cover with
foil and let rest 5 minutes. Serve each por-
tion topped with some of the salsa.
Nutrition information per serving: 380
calories; 180 calories from fat (47 percent
total calories); 20 g fat (5 g saturated; 0 g
trans fats); 115 mg cholesterol; 9 g carbo-
hydrate; 1 g ber; 6 g sugar; 39 g protein;
650 mg sodium.
Continued from page 17
JERK
James Beard
Foundation Americas Classics
Hansens Sno-Bliz in New Orleans
Owner: Ashley Hansen
Nicks Italian Cafe in McMinnville, Oregon
Owners: Nick Peirano, Carmen Peirano and Eric Ferguson
Olneyville NewYork System in Providence, Rhode
Island
Owners: Stephanie Stevens Turini and Greg Stevens
Perini Ranch Steakhouse in Buffalo Gap,Texas
Owners: Lisa and Tom Perini
Sokolowskis University Inn in Cleveland
Owners: Bernard Sokolowski, Mary Balbier and Michael
Sokolowski
James Beard Foundation
Whos Who of Food and
Beverage in America Inductees
Edward Behr, food writer, St. Johnsbury,Vermont
John Besh, chef and restaurateur, New Orleans
David Chang, chef and restaurateur, NewYork City
Barry Estabrook, writer,Vergennes,Vermont
Paul Kahan, chef and restaurateur, Chicago
SherryYard, pastry chef and author, Los Angeles
***
James Beard Foundation Lifetime Achievement
Award
Sirio Maccioni of Le Cirque in New York City
James Beard Foundation Humanitarian of the Year
Matt Haley, philanthropist and restaurateur, Rehoboth
Beach, Delaware
Continued from page 18
WINNERS
Gautreaus, also in New Orleans.
The groups Lifetime Achievement award
went to Sirio Maccioni, the restaurateur
behind New York Citys famed Le Cirque.
Maccioni opened Le Cirque French for
the circus in 1974 and it soon became a
landmark on the citys restaurant scene,
helping to launch the careers of numerous
chefs, including Daniel Boulud, David
Bouley, Jacques Torres, Bill Telepan and
Geoffrey Zakarian.
The Humanitarian of the Year honor went
to Matt Haley, a restaurateur with seven
restaurants in Delaware who works with
multiple nonprofit groups, including
Celebrity Chefs Beach Brunch for Meals on
Wheels.
Im a member of the most compassion-
ate, caring industry in the world, he said.
Im forever grateful for that. I will spend
the rest of my life leveraging my business
for good.
The Beard Foundation also named its top
regional chefs around the country: Dave
Beran of Next in Chicago (Great Lakes);
Vikram Sunderam of Rasika in Washington,
D.C. (Mid-Atlantic); Justin Aprahamian of
Sanford in Milwaukee (Midwest); April
Bloomeld of The Spotted Pig in New York
City (New York City); Jamie Bissonnette of
Coppa in Boston (Northeast); Naomi
Pomeroy of Beast in Portland, Oregon
(Northwest); Ryan Prewitt of Peche Seafood
Grill in New Orleans and Sue Zemanick of
Gautreaus in New Orleans (South); Ashley
Christensen of Pooles Downtown Diner in
Raleigh, North Carolina (Southeast); Chris
Shepherd of Underbelly in Houston
(Southwest); and Daniel Patterson of Coi in
San Francisco (West).
Continued from page 18
BEARD
By Candice Choi
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEWYORK Subway is testing hummus
and thinner slices of deli meats that look
more appealing as it looks to keep pace
with changing eating trends.
Tony Pace, Subways chief marketing of-
cer, said in interview Tuesday that the chain
began testing hummus as a topping in early
April. Pace noted that many customers
already order vegetarian sandwiches and that
the chickpea spread would give people
looking for meatless options another
choice.
Its something weve been talking about
for the last three or four years, Pace said,
saying it has tremendous potential.
If the test is successful, Pace said it would
be the rst time the chain rolled out hummus
nationally. Individual franchisees may have
offered it independently in the past, he said.
Getting hummus as a topping will cost
more, much like the avocado Subway added
to its menu in recent years.
The hummus test comes at a time when
many Americans are trying to cut back on
how much meat they eat. In particular, Pace
noted that people in their 20s are more
nutritionally aware than any other past
generation. In coming years, he predicted
their eating habits will force the restaurant
industry to adapt their menus.
Executives at Chipotle Mexican Grill,
which recently began rolling out a vegan
tofu topping for its burritos and bowls, have
also noted that meatless options help the
chain cultivate a relationship with younger
consumers, who often experiment with
being a vegetarian or vegan.
In a separate interview, Subway co-
founder Fred DeLuca said the chain also
started testing thinner slices of deli meat in
December.
Subway tests hummus
and thinner meat slices
FOOD 21
Wednesday May 7, 2014 THEDAILYJOURNAL
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Starts @ $11/hour
By Alison Ladman
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The secret to this simple Mothers
Day dessert is frozen puff pastry. It is
easy to work with and bakes up into a
deliciously aky pastry.
Youll nd puff pastry in the grocers
freezer section, usually near the frozen
fruit and pie shells. Be sure to thaw it
completely before trying to unfold the
sheets of pastry. You can place the box
in the refrigerator overnight, or leave
it (unopened) on the counter for about
an hour.
We like the combination of black-
berries and orange, but feel free to sub-
stitute any berry. Blueberries, raspber-
ries and strawberries all would be deli-
cious. This dessert also can be prepped
ahead of time. Just bake the pastry
squares, then store them covered at
room temperature.
BLACKBERRY,
ORANGE NAPOLEONS
Start to nish: 30 minutes
Servings: 9
17.3-ounce package puff pastry
(each package contains 2 sheets),
thawed
4 tablespoons granulated sugar,
divided
2 cups fresh blackberries
Zest and juice of 1 orange
16-ounce container mascarpone
3 tablespoons powdered sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Heat the oven to 375 F. Line a bak-
ing sheet with kitchen parchment.
Unfold each sheet of puff pastry and
lay at on a work surface. Use 2 table-
spoons of the sugar to sprinkle both
sides of both sheets of puff pastry.
Using a pizza wheel or a paring knife,
cut each sheet into 9 squares.
Arrange the squares on the prepared
baking sheet, then place another piece
of parchment on top of them. Place a
second baking sheet on top of that so
that the puff pastry is sandwiched
between them. Bake for 20 to 25 min-
utes, or until golden brown. Remove
the top baking sheet and allow the
squares to cool completely.
Meanwhile, in a medium bowl com-
bine the blackberries with the remain-
ing 2 tablespoons of sugar and the
orange zest and juice. Set aside.
In another bowl, stir together the
mascarpone, powdered sugar and vanil-
la.
To assemble, place 1 pastry square
on each serving plate. Top the square
with 1 tablespoon of the mascarpone
mixture, then 1 tablespoon of the
berries. Top with another square of
pastry, followed by another layer each
of mascarpone and berries. Serve
immediately.
Mothers Day dessert
thats easy, delicious
This dessert also can be prepped ahead of time.Just bake the pastry squares,then
store them covered at room temperature.
Mothers Day ricotta spinach tart
Start to nish: 1 hour (20 minutes active)
Servings: 6
1 package prepared pie dough
1 teaspoon olive oil
1 clove garlic, minced
5-ounce package baby spinach
1 egg
2 cups ricotta cheese
2 tablespoons chopped fresh thyme
Zest of 1 lemon
1/4 teaspoon kosher salt
1/4 teaspoon ground black pepper
1/2 cup grated Asiago cheese
Heat the oven to 375 F. Coat an 8-inch tart pan with a
removable bottom with cooking spray. Press the pie dough
into the tart pan, trimming any excess.
In a skillet over medium-high, heat the oil. Add the garlic
and cook for 1 minute. Add the spinach and cook until com-
pletely soft and most the of the liquid has evaporated, 4 to 5
minutes. Transfer the spinach to a ne mesh strainer. Using a
spoon or silicone spatula, press the spinach to extract any
remaining liquid.
In a medium bowl, beat the egg, then add the ricotta, thyme,
lemon zest, salt, pepper and spinach. Stir to combine. Spread
the mixture in the prepared tart shell and sprinkle with Asiago
cheese. Place on a baking sheet and bake for 35 to 40 minutes,
or until puffed and golden brown. Allow to cool slightly.
Serve warm or at room temperature.
Food brief
LOCAL/NATION
22
Wednesday May 7, 2014 THEDAILYJOURNAL
By Paul Wiseman and Joe McDonald
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON After watching China
narrow the U.S. lead as the worlds largest
economy, Americans might be tempted to
cheer signs that the Chinese economy
might be stumbling.
Any schadenfreude would be short-sight-
ed.
In an interconnected global economy, bad
news for one economic superpower is typi-
cally bad news for another even a erce
rival.
It hurts, says Mark Zandi, chief econo-
mist at Moodys Analytics. China is the
second-largest economy on the planet. If
growth slows there, it affects everybody.
Zandi estimates that each 1 percentage
point drop in Chinas economic growth
causes as much damage to the U.S. economy
as a $20-a-barrel increase in oil prices: It
shaves 0.2 percentage point off annual U.S.
growth.
That isnt catastrophic. But to regain its
full health nearly ve years after the Great
Recession ofcially ended, the U.S. econo-
my needs whatever help it can get.
Slowing Chinese economy likely to pinch U.S., too
I did not see any of the acoustics engi-
neers come to my backyard to hear any of
these sounds fans make, said neighbor
Samar Noureddine. You put a seven-foot wall
and we pretty much dont have any light; my
lemon trees are going dead. It should be on
the roof like its supposed to be. I would
invite anyone to come into my backyard on
a day they dont know youre coming.
The restaurant disagrees. Robert Fong, the
owners son, said things are improving. An
appeal letter from Tai Wu in response to the
cease and desist order issued on April 25
states the restaurant is committed to building
a good long-term relationship with the city
and the adjacent residents.
Weve had the units on low for two plus
weeks in consideration of the neighbors, he
said. If we do implement such a wall, it will
make it (the sound) unnoticeable. It was
the second we got noise complaints we
turned it on to low.
Parking is the second largest issue the
restaurant is dealing with given that mem-
bers of the Hemlock and Bayside Manor
neighborhoods complained about employ-
ees and customers parking in front of their
homes. At the end of April, the City Council
moved to allow expanded preferential park-
ing permits for these neighborhoods. The
restaurant is proposing adding spaces at
Universal Supply to the north, while also
maintaining spaces leased in the parking
lots of nearby Burger King and Speedee. The
lease with Universal Supply is only month-
to-month, so the commission requested a
longer-term lease be sought since there
would be uncertainty about the long-term
availability of the spaces.
Residents wanted to know why the city did-
nt consider the parking problems when the
restaurant was rst approved, said resident
Barbara Moreman.
Theres no room for where people used to
park, she said.
Another restaurant owner named Paul said
most of Tai Wus customers never park in the
designated parking spots and fears a bad acci-
dent is going to happen.
There was ample parking, but there were a
great deal of spaces patrons and employees
did not use, said Planning Commissioner
Catherine Quigg. Additionally, the valet
service didnt work since customers were
reluctant to pay for parking or to entrust their
cars to staff. An April 21 memo to staff asked
employees to not park in resident areas, car-
pool with other employees if they live with-
in a mile of each other, park in designated
spots, show proof of using public trans-
portation for a 10 percent discount to family
and friends at the restaurant and to be courte-
ous to neighbors.
When things grew tense between Tai Wu
representatives and neighborhood members
at a Monday night meeting, Planning
Commissioner Lorrie Kalos-Gunn said its
better for each side if they dont play a tit-
for-tat game.
Its about lets get as much information as
quickly as possible, she said. It will make
the process go much quicker.
Other issues the city is looking into
include seating in excess of the approved
limit; strong kitchen and/or trash odors; pri-
vacy intrusion from rear windows; noise
from a PG&E meter; an enclosure needed for
an unsightly re apparatus; a front sign need-
ing inspection; and parking lot landscaping.
Some of these matters have been addressed.
With the proposed changes to the parking
and air intake units, Planning Commissioner
Jean Joh is hopeful things work out. If the
wall option doesnt work, moving the units
back to the restaurants roof might be the
only option, she said.
We want to be able to welcome businesses
to Millbrae, Joh said. They spent a lot of
time and money to come here.
Others still arent satised. Such a massive
restaurant shouldnt have been approved at
this location, said Camille Lopez, a Hemlock
resident.
We cant just take their word for it, she
said. The city should supervise everything
and make sure the xes are effective. They
(Tai Wu) should not be operational until
these issues are effectively resolved. We
cant live like this anymore. Weve never had
issues with any of the other businesses. Why
are we catering to them?
But Kalos-Gunn explained legally, the
process requires the restaurant a certain
amount of time to make corrections. She
acknowledged parking is the biggest issue
with the restaurant.
They needed some time to hear yes you
can do this or no you cant do that, she
said. The parking situation didnt work. Its
about educating their customer base about
what places are available for parking; they
could have a parking attendant. Who
knows? Maybe the new options work fabu-
lously.
Continued from page 1
TAI WU
Candidates vying to become secretary of
state are offering competing plans to inject
transparency and restore public faith in gov-
ernment.
Arace that typically exists in the political
backwaters of a California election season
popped on to the public stage earlier this year
when one of the top candidates, Democratic
state Sen. Leland Yee, was arrested and later
indicted on federal corruption charges as part
of a wider probe into illicit dealings in San
Franciscos Chinatown. Yee has since pleaded
not guilty and dropped his candidacy, even
though his name will remain on the June 3
primary ballot.
The charges against Yee include allegations
that he peddled his inuence in the
Legislature in exchange for campaign contri-
butions from undercover FBI agents.
State Sen. Ron Calderon, D-Montebello, is
ghting similar charges in a separate federal
case, while Democratic Sen. Rod Wright was
convicted of perjury and voter fraud for lying
about his legal residency in the Los Angeles
area. Their fellow senators suspended all
three.
In April, the California Fair Political
Practices Commission ned state Sen. Tom
Berryhill, R-Twain Harte, and his brother
Bill, a former Republican member of the
Assembly, for illegally transferring cam-
paign cash.
Secretary of state candidates seeking to
replace the termed out incumbent, Democrat
Debra Bowen, are capitalizing on the cases to
propose reforms.
Among them is overhauling the Cal-Access
database that tracks campaign spending and
contributions. The system, maligned as out-
dated and cumbersome, has long been target-
ed for a reboot.
Anyone who uses it today knows its too
slow, and even if you make it faster, thats
still not enough, said state Sen. Alex
Padilla, D-Los Angeles.
Candidates are suggesting a variety of
changes and updates: Padilla wants notica-
tions of new activity and prompt disclosure;
Republican Pete Peterson, who runs a civic
engagement think tank at Pepperdine
University, wants Californians to compare
politicians campaign nances with their
economic interests; and Derek Cressman, a
former leader of the advocacy group Common
Cause, wants contributions coded by indus-
try.
Independent Dan Schnur said the bigger job
for the secretary of state is advocating for
policies that force politicians to spend more
time governing and less time fundraising.
Transparency promises are a perennial
issue in secretary of state races, says San Jose
State University professor Larry Gerston, yet
often go nowhere after the election. The can-
didates point to their respective backgrounds
to show how they will deliver.
Peterson said he has been immersed in a
world that seeks to make government data
accessible, as an adviser to OpenGov and
through initiatives at his institute at the uni-
versity in Malibu.
If there is one thing government needs to
be bigger about, it is supporting and promot-
ing civic engagement, Peterson said during a
recent candidates debate.
He has rejected the strategies of
Republicans elsewhere in the country to
require voter identication at the polls and
restrict voting hours.
Cressman said he has managerial experi-
ence as vice president of state operations at
Common Cause ghting big money in poli-
tics.
Schnur, a former Republican strategist who
also was chairman of the California Fair
Political Practices Commission, says he
tackled the database during his time leading
the states campaign watchdog agency. He
convened a taskforce identifying affordable
ways to allow candidates to le records online
with the secretary of state, although the rec-
ommendations ultimately were not adopted.
Padilla, the only elected ofcial still in the
race, said he is the only candidate versed in
budget negotiations and policy making. He
has written multiple ethics-reform bills that
are moving through the Legislature, includ-
ing a ban on lawmakers fundraising during
the last 100 days of the legislative session.
Padilla said his bill would separate special
interest money from key votes. But Schnur
says it doesnt go far enough, calling for an
end to fundraising during the entire nine-
month session.
While Peterson supports Schnurs idea, he
said lawmakers and special interests would
likely nd a way around it. Cressman and
Green Party candidate David Curtis support
public nancing of campaigns to eliminate
the need for politicians to fundraise at all.
We need to get the big money out of poli-
tics, not just reschedule it, said Cressman,
who advocates against corporate spending in
politics.
Its not clear how much the lawmaker scan-
dals and reform proposals will resonate with
voters in the June primary.
The trouble with this race is the secretary
of state deals with issues that are both impor-
tant and boring, said Jack Pitney, a political
science professor at Claremont McKenna
College. Most voters havent the faintest
idea what the secretary of state does.
That leaves party afliation as the deciding
factor for many voters.
But a constitutional amendment proposed
by Republican state Assemblyman Jeff Gorell
would make the ofce nonpartisan as an
attempt to elevate it above partisan politics.
Schnur, who teaches politics and communi-
cations at the University of Southern
California and UC Berkeley, said a partisan
secretary of state is inherently conicted
when managing elections and that he would
be the states loudest voice for good govern-
ment without partisan baggage.
Continued from page 1
RACE
DATEBOOK 23
Wednesday May 7, 2014 THEDAILYJOURNAL
WEDNESDAY, MAY 7
San Mateo Professional Alliance
Weekly Networking Lunch. Noon
to 1 p.m. Spiedo Ristorante, 223 E.
Fourth Ave., San Mateo. Free admis-
sion, lunch is $17. For more informa-
tion call 430-6500.
Digital Bookmobile Discover
eBooks with Amy Wigton. Noon to
6 p.m. Redwood Shores Branch
Library, 399 Marine Parkway,
Redwood City. Amy will perform live
in concert at 4 p.m. For more infor-
mation email rkutler@redwoodci-
ty.org.
Presentation: Understanding
Medicare. 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. The
Community Room at the Redwood
City Public Library, 1044 Middleeld
Road, Redwood City. Free. For more
information email Dave at
davidf@selfhelpelderly.org.
Faces of Hope Gallery. 6 p.m. to 8
p.m. Half Moon Bay Library, 620
Correas St., Half Moon Bay. This
gallery will showcase the faces and
stories of resilience and hope from
San Mateo County residents living
with a mental illness or substance
abuse condition. Free. for more infor-
mation call 573-2541.
Performance by lauded banjoist
and composer Jayme Stone. 6:30
p.m. to 8 p.m. Peninsula Jewish
Community Center, 800 Foster City
Blvd., Foster City. Reservations are
$15 for PJCC members, $18 for pub-
lic and $10 for youth ages two to 18.
For more information call 378-2703
or go to www.pjcc.org.
Growing Your Own Organic and
Sustainable Garden. 7 p.m. to 9
p.m. Millbrae Library, 1 Library Ave.,
Millbrae. Learn how to grow a boun-
tiful vegetable garden. Enter a rafe
for a compost bin. Free. For more
information call 259-2339.
An evening with Deva Dalporto. 7
p.m. Belmont Library, 1110 Alameda
de las Pulgas, Belmont. For more
information email conrad@smcl.org.
Steve Freund and Friends Host the
Club Fox Blues Jam. 7 p.m. to 11
p.m. 2209 Broadway, Redwood City.
$5. For more information go to
rwcbluesjam.com.
Lifetree Cafe Conversations:
Dealing with Anger. 7 p.m. Bethany
Lutheran Church, 1095 Cloud Ave.,
Menlo Park. Complimentary snacks.
For more information call 854-5897.
Climate Hope! at meeting of San
Mateo County Democracy for
America. 7 p.m. Woodside Road
Methodist Church, 2000 Woodside
Road, Redwood City. Speaker Dave
Massen of Citizens Climate Lobby
will explain their plan. For more
information call 573-7544.
THURSDAY, MAY 8
Lifetree Cafe Conversations:
Dealing with Anger. 9:15 a.m.
Bethany Lutheran Church, 1095
Cloud Ave., Menlo Park.
Complimentary snacks. For more
information call 854-5897.
Movie Daze and Discussion-
Gravity. 1 p.m. City of San Mateo
Senior Center, 2645 Alameda de las
Pulgas, San Mateo. Free. For more
information call 522-7490.
Memoir Writing Classes. 1:30 p.m.
to 2:30 p.m. Deborahs Palm
Womens Center, 555 Lytton Ave.,
Palo Alto. $15 drop in fee and $50 for
set of four classes. Classes meet
Thursdays (May 8, 15, 22 and 29). For
more information email butler-phyl-
lis@att.net.
CuriOdyssey Mobile Museum. 3:30
p.m. Belmont Library, 1110 Alameda
de las Pulgas, Belmont. Free. For
more information email
conrad@smcl.org.
Peninsula Girls Chorus Auditions.
5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Burlingame United
Methodist Church, 1443 Howard
Ave., Burlingame. For girls ages six
through 18. For more information go
to www.peninsulagirlschorus.org.
Stanford in Redwood City Speaker
Series. 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. Fox
Theatre, 2215 Broadway, Redwood
City. Free. Speakers include JB
Straubel, co-founder and chief tech-
nical officer of Tesla Motors. For
more information or to RSVP go to
stanfordredwoodcity.com. The event
will be followed by a reception fea-
turing the Stanford University
Marching Band in Redwood Citys
Courthouse Square.
Faces of Hope Gallery. 6 p.m. to 8
p.m. Foster City Library, 1000 E.
Hillsdale Blvd., Foster City. This
gallery will showcase the faces and
stories of resilience and hope from
San Mateo County residents living
with a mental illness or substance
abuse condition. Free. for more infor-
mation call 573-2541.
The Presidency of Woodrow
Wilson. 7 p.m. San Mateo Public
Library, 55 W. Third Ave., San Mateo.
Michael Svanevik will discuss the
economic, social and political chal-
lenges President Wilson faced. Free
and open to the public. For more
information call 868-9261.
An Evening with Author Claire
Cameron. 7 p.m. Belmont Library,
1110 Alameda de las Pulgas,
Belmont. Free. For more information
email conrad@smcl.org.
Food Addicts in Recovery
Anonymous (FA). 7:30 p.m. 1500
Easton Drive, Burlingame. For more
information contact
borison_david@yahoo.com.
FRIDAY, MAY 9
Law Enforcement Against
Prohibition. 7:30 a.m. Crystal
Springs Golf Course, 6650 Golf
Course Drive, Burlingame. Breakfast
included. $15. For more information
call 515-5891.
Alice in Wanderland. Coastal
Theatre Conservatory, Coastal
Repertory Theater, 1167 Main St.,
Half Moon Bay. $20-$30. Runs
through May 18. For more informa-
tion call 569-3266.
Armchair Travel and Adventure-
Secret Yellowstone. 1 p.m. City of
San Mateo Senior Center, 2645
Alameda de las Pulgas, San Mateo.
Free. For more information call 522-
7490.
Presentation on Elder Abuse,
Scams and Frauds. 1:30 p.m.
Nazareth Vista Senior Community,
900 Sixth Ave., Belmont.
Refreshments will be provided. To
RSVP, or for more information, call
Eleanor at 591-2008.
Five Steps to Convert Social Media
Leads Into Real Business. 9 a.m. to
12:30 p.m. Bayshore Corporate
Center, 1710 S. Amphlett Blvd., Suite
126, San Mateo. $15 in advance, $25
at the door. For more information
email cathy@proserver.com.
Teen Open Mic Night. 6:30 p.m.
Belmont Library, 1110 Alameda de
las Pulgas, Belmont. Free. For more
information email conrad@smcl.org.
Foster City Monthly Social Dance.
7:30 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. Foster City
Recreation Center, 650 Shell Blvd.,
Foster City. Two step lessons from
7:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Ballroom
dance party 8:30 p.m. to 11:30 p.m.
Snacks included. Couples and sin-
gles welcome. $12 from 7:30 p.m. to
8:30 p.m., which includes dance les-
son. $10 after 8:30 p.m. For more
information contact Cheryl Steeper
at 571-0836.
Hillbarn Theatre Closes its 73rd
Season with The Color Purple. 8
p.m. Thursdays to Saturdays and 2
p.m. Sundays. Hillbarn Theatre, 1285
E. Hillsdale Blvd., Foster City. $23-$40
for adults and seniors. Runs through
June 1. For more information go to
hillbarntheatre.org.
SATURDAY, MAY 10
Art Exhibit: April Dawn Parker.
Gallerie Citi, Burlingame. Continues
through June 17. For more informa-
tion call 577-3799.
Peninsula Metropolitan
Community Church Third Annual
Rummage Sale. 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.
1150 W. Hillsdale Blvd., San Mateo.
For more information call 515-0900.
Housing Resources Fair. 9 a.m. to 1
p.m. Municipal Services Building, 33
Arroyo Drive, South San Francisco.
Free. For more information go to
www.hlcsmc.org.
Stanford Medicine presents
Health Matters. 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Li Ka
Shing Center, 291 Campus Drive,
Stanford. This is a free, one-day com-
munity event hosted by Stanford
Medicine that explains that latest
advancements in medicine and the
health topics that matter most to
families. Capacity is limited and
attendance will be honored on a
first-come, first-served basis.
Register at www.healthmatters.stan-
ford.edu.
San Bruno Friends of the Library
Booksale. 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 701
Angus Ave. W., San Bruno. For more
information go to sbpl@plsinfo.org.
Birth and Family Fair. 10 a.m. to 4
p.m. Downtown Community Center
at All Saints Church, 555 Waverley
St., Palo Alto. For more information
email mjh.bixby@gmail.com.
Caltrain Celebration. 11 a.m. to 2
p.m. San Bruno Caltrain Station. The
community is celebrating the com-
pletion of the San Bruno Grade
Separation Project.
Open Studio Saturdays at Allied
Arts Guild. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Allied
Arts Guild, 75 Arbor Road, Menlo
Park. Free.
A. Scott Berg Book Signing. Noon
to 1 p.m. San Mateo Public Library,
Third Ave., San Mateo. The Pulitzer
Prize-winning biographer will be at
the library to sign books. Free and
open to the public. For more infor-
mation call 868-9261.
Calendar
For more events visit
smdailyjournal.com, click Calendar.
venting the country from moving for-
ward.
What I want to do is bring a note of
positive, entrepreneurial spirit, the
can-do attitude thats here in the Bay
Area to the U.S. Congress, Chew
said. And stop yelling past each other
and find ways to work together,
whether they have an R in front of
their name or a D in front of their
name.
Speier said she has a long history of
public service with results and wants
to continue her work on strengthening
womens rights while addressing
income inequality and the need for
affordable housing in the Bay Area.
Speier, of Hillsborough, has served
in Congress since 2008 and currently
represents the 14th District, mostly in
San Mateo County. With Californias
open primary, the top two candidates
in a race, regardless of party, will face
off in the November general election.
Because there are only two candidates
in this primary, both Chew and Speier
will face off again in November.
Speier and Chew share goals such as
immigration reform and encouraging a
worker visa program, more govern-
ment oversight on military spending
and believe a sustainable future of
mass transit is imperative for the
growing Bay Area.
Environment
Speier and Chew agree climate
change is inevitable and needs to be a
focus for Congress.
San Mateo County alone has been
predicted to experience more than a
foot of sea level rise in the Bay over
the next 30 years, Speier said. She
fears Americans arent prepared and
shes joined other politicians in the
county to host educational seminars to
help illustrate the effects of climate
change.
Both want the nation to reduce car-
bon emissions and Chew said the rhet-
oric and causal assumptions surround-
ing climate change need to be set
aside. Congress should focus on feasi-
ble and meaningful changes and create
effective policies that include holding
those who negatively impact the envi-
ronment accountable.
Chew said he wants to see the gov-
ernment invest in its failing infra-
structure such as levees and bridges and
support the private sector to help
boost economic growth and small
businesses.
Chew said his experience in online
education makes him uniquely quali-
ed. He wants educators to be equipped
with the tools needed to ensure stu-
dents are competitive in a global econ-
omy. Chew said he would like to see
technology better used in classrooms.
With technology, children could
advance in a lesson if others need more
time and extra attention from teachers.
Inequality, the military
Speier said the government needs to
do more to ensure everyone, regardless
of gender or location, has the chance
to be competitive.
I feel very strongly that we have to
do more in terms of bridging the gap
between the haves and the have nots.
Ive been an outspoken person in the
issue of food stamps and addressing
income inequality. I think the housing
in this region is something we have to
address, Speier said. Its uncon-
scionable that a one-bedroom apart-
ment in San Mateo County should cost
$3,000 a month.
In San Mateo County, about 7 per-
cent of the population is below the
poverty line and the unemployment
rate is about 5 percent, the lowest in
the state, Speier said. However, nearly
15 percent of East Palo Alto residents
are unemployed and 18 percent are
below the poverty line, Speier said.
Speier said shes been a dedicated
advocate for womens rights including
accessibility to family planning serv-
ices, amended a House resolution to
expand sexual harassment training for
congressional employees and wants to
continue her work on ending military
sexual assault.
Chew said women should never be
discouraged from serving in the mili-
tary.
He would like to see Congress shift
its reaction to foreign conict from a
forceful and immediate reaction to a
strategic and carefully calculated
approach.
Peace through strength is really the
cornerstone of my military and foreign
policy, Chew said. I want us to, cer-
tainly if we need to, use our military in
defense of our nation but it should
be a process of elimination. using
all of our other national assets to
accomplish our objectives.
Immigration reform
Both Chew and Speier want to see
bipartisan immigration reform. Chew
said the process is overly cumbersome
to some who wish to come to the
United States legally and has resulted
in the country militarizing its board-
ers.
Do we really want to be the nation
that goes at gunpoint to apartment
complexes and arrests 11 million peo-
ple out of their homes and marches
them to the border? There has to be
some way to regulate their status other
than walk them to the border at gun-
point, Chew said.
Speier said shes wants a practical
path to citizenship that provides
opportunities and generates revenue,
but the issue of immigration reform is
an example of Republican disconnect.
I actually think that theres a will-
ingness to meet the Republicans
halfway. But they wont even come to
the table. Theyre so focused on their
own election and fearful [of] losing to
someone whos so extreme there are
some who are unwilling to talk about
it. They refuse, Speier said.
Chew contends this job requires
more turnover and given the chance,
said he intends to remind Congress
they represent all constituents regard-
less of party lines.
The division in Congress is under-
mining its work, Chew said. Id put
[constituents] ahead of any party,
because theyre the American people.
Theyre the people that we serve.
Continued from page 1
ELECTION
They also discuss him using their
sound generating devices on iPads
or other tablets, giving commands
such as can I walk Rhett, brush
Rhett or feed Rhett? He also helps
during adaptive physical education
by running, retrieving balls, model-
ing stretches, kicking and other
actions. Rhett uses his retrieve
command to hold bags so the kids
can drop bean bags inside. He also
pushes buttons on a musical toy.
Students look forward to seeing the
dog and students type out expressions
on their talkers such as I feel excited
when asked how theyre doing before
working with Rhett.
Students are willing to take more
risks with Rhett around, said Mary
Elizabeth Maher, director of student
services for the Hillsborough City
Elementary School District.
Its a phenomenal opportunity for
dogs, she said. Its very productive.
The program means that Bliquez
even got a new pet, as she takes Rhett
home with her after school.
There are access tests to make sure
hes keeping up with his commands
and not just eating bacon off the
table, she said.
Facility dogs like Rhett provide a
huge motivating factor for children
and others participating in therapy,
said Angie Schacht, development
associate for the Canine Companions
for Independence Northwest Region.
One story I heard about is a dog
working primarily with children with
autism, she said. One boy never said
a word for a year in the special educa-
tion classroom. After a month he start-
ed to say dog.
For more on the program go to
cci.org.
Continued from page 1
RHETT
COMICS/GAMES
5-7-14
TUESDAYS PUZZLE SOLVED
PREVIOUS
SUDOKU
ANSWERS
Want More Fun
and Games?
Jumble Page 2 La Times Crossword Puzzle Classieds
Tundra & Over the Hedge Comics Classieds
Boggle Puzzle Everyday in DateBook


Each row and each column must contain the
numbers 1 through 6 without repeating.

The numbers within the heavily outlined boxes,
called cages, must combine using the given operation
(in any order) to produce the target numbers in the
top-left corners.

Freebies: Fill in single-box cages with the number in
the top-left corner.
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1 and peck
5 Chest-beater
8 Sloping walk
12 Libretto feature
13 PC key
14 Bread spread
15 Sugar amts.
16 Hearty dinner (2 wds.)
18 Attack
20 Elevator maker
21 Baseball stat
22 PC brain
23 Seal a tub
26 Zoo employee
29 Rough shelters
30 Rackets
31 Blushing
33 Previous to
34 Jargon
35 Type of arch
36 Climb
38 Pooh-pooh
39 Lemon cooler
40 Morse signal
41 Skin opening
43 Go to a restaurant (2 wds.)
46 Garbage collector
48 Jail on a ship
50 Jacques girl
51 Elev.
52 Ferber or Best
53 Marshal Dillon
54 Enterprise
55 Felt remorse
DOWN
1 Derby
2 Livys bear
3 Puppys bites
4 Mortarboard features
5 Open-air lobbies
6 Mop companion
7 Flow back
8 Dislodge with a hoe
(2 wds.)
9 Jai
10 Sergeants supper
11 Flower container
17 Wields a lasso
19 Ozarks st.
22 Copper coin
23 Ernesto Guevara
24 Mystique
25 Salt Lake City team
26 Thoughtful
27 Cogito sum
28 Scuba diving site
30 Great dog
32 Phone trio
34 Yields
35 Halloween time
37 Floor covering
38 Convene
40 Pub game
41 Catamount
42 Leave out
43 Morays
44 Pakistans language
45 Antler prong
46 Block, as a stream
47 T, in Athens
49 Flit about
DILBERT CROSSWORD PUZZLE
CRANKY GIRL
PEARLS BEFORE SWINE
GET FUZZY
WEDNESDAY, MAY 7, 2014
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Someone will be overly
sensitive. Dont waste time on a no-win situation.
Move on to more valuable projects, working with
people who will contribute as much as you.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You will be in a
celebratory mood today. Get out and party, or nd
other ways to share your happiness. Your power of
attraction will help you get closer to someone special.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Finish any incomplete
paperwork and tie up loose ends regarding investments,
health issues or legal matters. The less you leave to
chance, the better you will feel about the future.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Its a good day to take
part in networking functions and mingle with your
peers. You will make new allies and nd a platform to
express your plans for the future.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You may be inundated
with conicting information. If someone is pressuring
you, back away and take time to think things over. A
mistake will turn out to be costly.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Love and romance will
put a smile on your face. Plan a little surprise for
someone you enjoy spending time with. Your kind
gesture will pay off in many ways.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) A family member may
not be interested in your plans. Give him or her space,
and carry on with your agenda. A physical challenge
will be stimulating and rewarding.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) A seminar, lecture
or special interest group will provide the information
and stimulation you desire. Attend a conference or
travel to an unfamiliar destination.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Before making
a financial decision, consult with the people who
will be affected by the choice you make. Get all of
the details firsthand before you trust someone with
your hard-earned cash.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) You will be restless
and looking for an adventure today. Plan a day trip
or learn something new that can enhance your
professional future. Dont be afraid to share your
feelings and intentions.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Get ready for a
challenge and a chance to put your energy to good
use. Proceed with creative plans that youve been
considering. Youll get the backing you need from
someone important.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) Get back on course
where your health and fitness goals are concerned.
Start with a nutritional diet. If you feel good, you
will excel.
COPYRIGHT 2014 United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
24 Wednesday May 7, 2014
THE DAILY JOURNAL
25 Wednesday May 7, 2014 THEDAILYJOURNAL
BUS DRIVER JOBS
AVAILABLE TODAY
AT MV TRANSPORTATION
Join us in providing safe, reliable and professional community
transportation in San Mateo County.
Please call your nearest MV Division in:
Redwood City 934 Brewster Ave (650) 482-9370
Half Moon Bay 121 Main St (650) 560-0360 ext. 0
CDLDrivers
needed immediately for Passenger Vehicle and
Small Bus routes.
Paid classroom and behind-the-wheel training from exception-
al instructors and trainers. The future is bright for Bus Drivers
with an expected 12.5% growth in positions over the next ten
years!
MV Transportation, Inc. provides equal employment and affir-
mative action opportunities to minorities, females, veterans,
and disabled individuals, as well as other protected groups.
DELIVERY
DRIVER
PENINSULA
ROUTES
Wanted: Independent Contractor to provide
delivery of the Daily Journal six days per week,
Monday 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
eligible. Papers are available for pickup in down-
town San Mateo at 3:30 a.m.
Please apply in person Monday-Friday, 9am 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.
110 Employment
Limo Driver, Wanted, full time, paid
weekly, between $500 and $700,
(650)921-2071
110 Employment
NOW HIRING
Kitchen Staff
$9.00 per hr.
Apply in Person at or
email resume to
info@greenhillsretirement.com
Marymount Greenhills
Retirement Center
1201 Broadway, Millbrae
(650)742-9150
No experience necessary
DOJ/FBI Clearance required
110 Employment
CAREGIVERS,
HHA, CNAS
NEEDED IMMEDIATELY
15 N. Ellsworth Avenue, Ste. 200
San Mateo, CA 94401
Please Call
650-206-5200
Or Toll Free:
800-380-7988
Please apply in person from Monday to Friday
(Between 10:00am to 4:00pm)
You can also call for an appointment or apply
online at www.assistainhomecare.com
BUSY SAN CARLOS RESTAURANTS
looking for Experienced Servers,
Bartenders and FOH positions
Apply in writing to:
info@johnstonsaltbox.com
CAREGIVERS
2 years experience
required.
Immediate placement
on all assignments.
Call (650)777-9000
SOFTWARE -
File Systm Engr in Mtn View, CA-Devlp
architect/design specs file systm. Req
incl MS+2 yrs exp, incl C/C++ file systm
data strctrs & algorthms, writing code.
Mail res: Tintri, Inc. 201 Ravendale Dr.,
Mountain View CA 94043 Attn: HR
110 Employment
CRYSTAL CLEANING
CENTER
San Mateo, CA
Customer Service
Are you..Dependable, friendly,
detail oriented,
willing to learn new skills?
Do you have.Good English
skills, a desire for steady
employment and employment
benefits?
If you possess the above
qualities, please call for an
Appointment: 650-342-6978
DAYCARE -
Experienced Daycare Assistant for fast
paced environment. Working with Infanta
& Toddlers. P/T must be flexible. Stu-
dents welcome to apply. (650)245-6950
HOME CARE AIDES
Multiple shifts to meet your needs. Great
pay & benefits, Sign-on bonus, 1yr exp
required.
Matched Caregivers (650)839-2273,
(408)280-7039 or (888)340-2273
SALES/MARKETING
INTERNSHIPS
The San Mateo Daily Journal is looking
for ambitious interns who are eager to
jump into the business arena with both
feet and hands. Learn the ins and outs
of the newspaper and media industries.
This position will provide valuable
experience for your bright future.
Email resume
info@smdailyjournal.com
110 Employment
PAYROLL COORDINATOR
25-30 hrs / M-F
$18-$20 PER HOUR
STUDENT UNION, INC.
SAN JOSE STATE
UNIVERSITY
APPLY:
http://www.applitrack.com/sjsu/onlineapp/
RETAIL -
RETAIL JEWELRY SALES +
EXPERIENCED DIAMOND
SALES ASSOC& ASST MGR
Benefits-Bonus-No Nights!
650-367-6500 FX 367-6400
jobs@jewelryexchange.com
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.
SOFTWARE -
Sr. Engr for Systm Mgmt in Mtn View,
CA-Devlp design specs for srvr compo-
nents of systm mgmt solution. Req incl
MS+2 yrs exp, incl devlpmt, web back-
end compnents, perf imprvmt, web apps.
Mail res: Tintri, Inc.201 Ravendale Dr.,
Mountain View, CA 94043 Attn: HR
TAXI DRIVER
NEEDED IMMEDIATELY
Clean DMV and background. $2000
Guaranteed per Month. Taxi Permit
required Call (650)703-8654
26 Wednesday May 7, 2014 THEDAILYJOURNAL
Tundra Tundra Tundra
Over the Hedge Over the Hedge Over the Hedge
EVENT MARKETING SALES
Join the Daily Journal Event marketing
team as a Sales and Business Development
Specialist. Duties include sales and
customer service of event sponsorships,
partners, exhibitors and more. Interface
and interact with local businesses to
enlist participants at the Daily Journals
ever expanding inventory of community
events such as the Senior Showcase,
Family Resource Fair, Job Fairs, and
more. You will also be part of the project
management process. But rst and
foremost, we will rely on you for sales
and business development.
This is one of the fastest areas of the
Daily Journal, and we are looking to grow
the team.
Must have a successful track record of
sales and business development.
TELEMARKETING/INSIDE SALES
We are looking for a telemarketing whiz,
who can cold call without hesitation and
close sales over the phone. Experience
preferred. Must have superior verbal,
phone and written communication skills.
Computer prociency is also required.
Self-management and strong business
intelligence also a must.
To apply for either position,
please send info to
jerry@smdailyjournal.com or call
650-344-5200.
The Daily Journal seeks
two sales professionals
for the following positions:
Leading local news coverage on the Peninsula
HELP WANTED
SALES
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
CASE# CIV 527223
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
Mark Serrante
TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS:
Petitioner, Mark Sarrante filed a petition
with this court for a decree changing
name as follows:
Present name: Mark Serrante
Propsed Name: Michael Civella
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 May 9, 2014
at 9 a.m., Dept. PJ, Room 2J, 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: 03/20/ 2014
/s/ Robert D. Foiles /
Judge of the Superior Court
Dated: 03/19/2014
(Published, 04/16/14, 04/23/2014,
04/30/2014, 05/07/2014)
CASE# CIV 527742
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
Yan Ping Huang
TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS:
Petitioner, Yan Ping Huang filed a peti-
tion with this court for a decree changing
name as follows:
Present name: Yan Ping Huang
Propsed Name: Anna Yan Huang
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 May 29,
2014 at 9 a.m., Dept. PJ, Room 2J, 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: 04/17/ 2014
/s/ Robert D. Foiles /
Judge of the Superior Court
Dated: 04/14/2014
(Published, 04/23/14, 04/30/2014,
05/07/2014, 05/14/2014)
203 Public Notices
CASE# CIV 528094
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
Mohamed Nazim Foufa
TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS:
Petitioner, Mohamed Nazim Foufa filed a
petition with this court for a decree
changing name as follows:
Present name:Mohamed Nazim Foufa
Propsed Name: Nazim Mohamed Foufa
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 June 12,
2014 at 9 a.m., Dept. PJ, Room 2J, 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: 04/22/ 2014
/s/ Robert D. Foiles /
Judge of the Superior Court
Dated: 04/21/2014
(Published, 04/30/14, 05/07/2014,
05/14/2014, 05/21/2014)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #260382
The following person is doing business
as: Tru Invites, 3311 Bay Ct., BELMONT,
CA 94002 is hereby registered by the fol-
lowing owner: The Belmont Group, Inc,
CA. The business is conducted by a
Corporation. The registrants commenced
to transact business under the FBN on
N/A.
/s/ Dennis Homer /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 04/14/2014. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
04/16/14, 04/23/14, 04/30/14, 05/07/14).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #260285
The following person is doing business
as: Eye of Passion, 490 Alhombra Rd.,
SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94080 is
hereby registered by the following owner:
Juan Carlos Pometta, same address.
The business is conducted by an Individ-
ual. The registrants commenced to trans-
act business under the FBN on 12/2013.
/s/ Juan Carlos Pometta /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 04/03/2014. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
04/23/14, 04/30/14, 05/07/14, 05/14/14).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #260138
The following person is doing business
as: JW Consulting, 930 Vista Rd., HILLS-
BOROUGH, CA 94010 is hereby regis-
tered by the following owner: Jacqueline
Mary Walling, same address. The busi-
ness is conducted by an Individual. The
registrants commenced to transact busi-
ness under the FBN on.
/s/ Jacqueline Walling /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 03/21/2014. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
04/23/14, 04/30/14, 05/07/14, 05/14/14).
203 Public Notices
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #260323
The following person is doing business
as: Flowing Wave Studios, 230 California
Ave., MOSS BEACH, CA 94038 is here-
by registered by the following owner: Da-
vid Theroff, same address. The busi-
ness is conducted by an Individual. The
registrants commenced to transact busi-
ness under the FBN on 01/01/2014.
/s/ David Theroff /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 03/21/2014. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
04/23/14, 04/30/14, 05/07/14, 05/14/14).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #260183
The following person is doing business
as: Alliance Escrow Company, 1021 S.
El Camino Real, SAN MATEO, CA
94402 is hereby registered by the follow-
ing owner: ROG Alliance Corp, CA. The
business is conducted by a Corporation.
The registrants commenced to transact
business under the FBN on .
/s/ Rachel Solidum /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 03/26/2014. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
04/23/14, 04/30/14, 05/07/14, 05/14/14).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #260453
The following person is doing business
as: Mr. Pickles Sandwich Shop, 1432 S.
El Camino Real, SAN MATEO, CA
94402 is hereby registered by the follow-
ing owner: Shinn & Sons, Inc, CA. The
business is conducted by a Corporation.
The registrants commenced to transact
business under the FBN on.
/s/ Doug Shinn /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 04/18/2014. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
04/23/14, 04/30/14, 05/07/14, 05/14/14).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #260422
The following person is doing business
as: California Cabinets, 83 37th Ave.,
SAN MATEO, CA 94403 is hereby regis-
tered by the following owner: Megan Ma-
loney, 1075 Park Place #109, San Ma-
teo, CA 94403 and Carlols Vasquez,
807Sextant Ct., San Mateo, CA 94404.
The business is conducted by a General
Partnership. The registrants commenced
to transact business under the FBN on.
/s/ Megan Maloney /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 04/17/2014. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
04/30/14, 05/07/14, 05/14/14 05/21/14).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #260362
The following person is doing business
as: Handsome Windows, 1435 Enchant-
ed Way, SAN MATEO, CA 94402 is
hereby registered by the following owner:
Lucas Ottoboni, same address, and Dan-
iele Pallocca, 842 Hopkins Ave., Red-
wood City, CA 94063. The business is
conducted by a General Partnership. The
registrants commenced to transact busi-
ness under the FBN on.
/s/ Daniele Pallocca/
/s/ Lucas Ottoboni /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 04/10/2014. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
04/30/14, 05/07/14, 05/14/14 05/21/14).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #260575
The following person is doing business
as: IN-WC Ignatius Nelson Consulting,
1039 Ringwood Ave, MENLO PARK, CA
94025 is hereby registered by the follow-
ing owner: Ignatius Nelson and Karen E.
Nelson, same address. The business is
conducted by a Married Couple. The reg-
istrants commenced to transact business
under the FBN on 09/2010.
/s/ Karen Nelson /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 04/28/2014. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
04/30/14, 05/07/14, 05/14/14 05/21/14).
203 Public Notices
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #260577
The following person is doing business
as: Drone Analyst, 63 Woodsworth Ave.,
REDWOOD CITY, CA 94062 is hereby
registered by the following owner: Colin
M. Snow, same address. The business is
conducted by an Individual. The regis-
trants commenced to transact business
under the FBN on N/A.
/s/ Colin M. Snow /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 04/28/2014. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
04/30/14, 05/07/14, 05/14/14 05/21/14).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #260680
The following person is doing business
as: Beauty Place Evolution, 5-M Serra-
monte Center Space #901, DALY CITY,
CA 94015 is hereby registered by the fol-
lowing owner: Revaz Yakobashvili, 2390
Lucretia Ave., #1716 San Jose, CA
95122. The business is conducted by an
Individual. The registrants commenced to
transact business under the FBN on .
/s/ Revaz Yakobashvili /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 05/05/2014. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
05/07/14, 05/14/14, 05/21/14 05/28/14).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #260629
The following person is doing business
as: AGCFS, 180A Utah Ave., SOUTH
SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94080 is hereby
registered by the following owner: A G
World Transport, Inc., CA. The business
is conducted by a Corporation. The reg-
istrants commenced to transact business
under the FBN on 06/01/2014.
/s/ Kapo Yeung /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 05/01/2014. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
05/07/14, 05/14/14, 05/21/14 05/28/14).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #260454
The following person is doing business
as: S&S Solutions, 1300 Industrial Rd.
#13, SAN CARLOS, CA 94070 is hereby
registered by the following owner: Sur-
face and Shading Solutions, Inc, CA. The
business is conducted by a Corporation.
The registrants commenced to transact
business under the FBN on.
/s/ Norman Madison /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 04/18/2014. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
05/07/14, 05/14/14, 05/21/14 05/28/14).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #260345
The following person is doing business
as: Togos Great Sandwiches, 137 E. 3rd
Ave., SAN MATEO, CA 94401 is hereby
registered by the following owner: Bob
Singh, 1408 Halibut St., Foster City, CA
94404. The business is conducted by an
Individual. The registrants commenced to
transact business under the FBN on .
/s/ Bob Singh /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 04/09/2014. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
05/07/14, 05/14/14, 05/21/14 05/28/14).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #260692
The following person is doing business
as: Dr. Yong Kim, D.C L.AC, 6150 Mis-
sion St. #101, DALY CITY, CA 94014 is
hereby registered by the following owner:
Yong H Yeon Kim, 54 Parkrose Ave. Da-
ly City, CA 94014. The business is con-
ducted by an Individual. The registrants
commenced to transact business under
the FBN on .
/s/ Yong H Yeon Kim /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 05/06/2014. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
05/07/14, 05/14/14, 05/21/14 05/28/14).
203 Public Notices
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #260705
The following person is doing business
as: Andes Cafe San Mateo, 2319 S. El
Camino Real, SAN MATEO, CA 94403 is
hereby registered by the following owner:
Daniel Yengle, 2401 Pilot Knob Dr., San-
ta Clara, CA 95051. The business is con-
ducted by an Individual. The registrants
commenced to transact business under
the FBN on .
/s/ Daniel Yengle /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 05/06/2014. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
05/07/14, 05/14/14, 05/21/14 05/28/14).
NOTICE OF PETITION TO
ADMINISTER ESTATE OF
Anna Maria M. Zabala
Case Number: 124393
To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, con-
tingent creditors, and persons who may
otherwise be interested in the will or es-
tate, or both, of: Anna Maria M. Zabala.
A Petition for Probate has been filed by
J. luis Zabala, Jr. abd Paul J. Zabala in
the Superior Court of California, County
of San Mateo. The Petition for Probate
requests that J. Luis Zabala, Jr. and Paul
J. Zabala be appointed as personal rep-
resentative to administer the estate of
the decedent.
The petition requests authority to admin-
ister 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: May 20, 2014 at
9:00 a.m., Dept. 28, Superior Court of
California, County of San Mateo, 400
County Center, Redwood City, CA
94063.
If you object to the granting of the peti-
tion, you should appear at the hearing
and state your objections or file written
objections with the court before the hear-
ing. Your appearance may be in person
or by your attorney.
If you are a creditor or a contingent cred-
itor of the decedent, you must file your
claim with the court and mail a copy to
the personal representative appointed by
the court within the later of either (1) four
months from the date of first issuance of
letters to a general personal representa-
tive, as defined in section 58(b) of the
California Probate Code, or (2) 60 days
from the date of mailing or personal de-
livery to you of a notice under section
9052 of the California Probate Code.
Other California statutes and legal au-
thority may affect your rights as a cred-
itor. You may want to consult with an at-
torney knowledgeable in California law.
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:
Thomas Bohnen, Esq.
Bohnen, Rosenthal & Kreeft
787 Munras Ave., Ste. 200
MONTEREY, CA 93940
(831)649-5551
Dated: April 16, 2014
Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal
on April 23, 30, May 7, 2014.
203 Public Notices
STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF
THE USE OF A FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT #258900
The following person is abandoning the
use of the fictitious business name:
WebDAM, 1730 S. Amphlett Blvd., SAN
MATEO, CA 94402. The fictitious busi-
ness name was filed on 12/17/2013 in
the county of San Mateo. The business
was conducted by: Michele Humeston
116 W. Hillsdale Blvd., San Mateo, CA
94403. The business was conducted by
a Limited Liability Company.
/s/ Michele Humeston /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk-Recorder of San Mateo
County on 04/08/2014. (Published in the
San Mateo Daily Journal, 04/30/2014,
05/07/2014, 05/14/2014, 05/21/2014).
STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF
THE USE OF A FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT #M-241142
The following person is abandoning the
use of the fictitious business name: 1)
Dr. Yong Kim, D.C L.AC, 2) Dr. Young
Again Chiropractic, 151 87th, #1, DALY
CITY, CA 94015. The fictitious business
name was filed on 07/27/2010 in the
county of San Mateo. The business was
conducted by: Yong H Yeon Kim, 59
Park Rose Ave., Daly City, CA 94015.
The business was conducted by an Indi-
vidual.
/s/ Yong H Yeon Kim /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk-Recorder of San Mateo
County on 05/06/2014. (Published in the
San Mateo Daily Journal, 05/07/2014,
05/14/2014, 05/21/2014, 05/28/2014).
210 Lost & Found
FOUND: KEYS (3) on ring with 49'ers
belt clip. One is car key to a Honda.
Found in Home Depot parking lot in San
Carlos on Sunday 2/23/14. Call 650 490-
0921 - Leave message if no answer.
FOUND: RING Silver color ring found
on 1/7/2014 in Burlingame. Parking Lot
M (next to Dethrone). Brand inscribed.
Gary @ (650)347-2301
LOST AFRICAN GRAY PARROT -
(415)377-0859 REWARD!
LOST DOG-SMALL TERRIER-$5000
REWARD Norfolk Terrier missing from
Woodside Rd near High Rd on Dec 13.
Violet is 11mths, 7lbs, tan, female, no
collar, microchipped. Please help bring
her home! (650)568-9642
LOST GOLD Cross at Carlmont Shop-
ping Cente, by Lunardis market
(Reward) (415)559-7291
LOST GOLD WATCH - with brown lizard
strap. Unique design. REWARD! Call
(650)326-2772.
LOST SET OF CAR KEYS near Millbrae
Post Office on June 18, 2013, at 3:00
p.m. Reward! Call (650)692-4100
LOST: SMALL diamond cross, silver
necklace with VERY sentimental
meaning. Lost in San Mateo 2/6/12
(650)578-0323.
REWARD!! LOST DOG - 15LB All White
Dog, needs meds, in the area of Oaknoll
RWC on 3/23/13, (650)400-1175
27 Wednesday May 7, 2014 THEDAILYJOURNAL
Books
16 BOOKS on History of WWII Excellent
condition. $95 all obo, (650)345-5502
50 SHADES of Grey Trilogy, Excellent
Condition $25. (650)615-0256
BOOK "LIFETIME" WW1 $12.,
(408)249-3858
JONATHAN KELLERMAN - Hardback
books, (5) $3. each, (650)341-1861
RICHARD NORTH Patterson 5 Hard-
back Books @$3 each (650)341-1861
TRAVIS MCGEE (Wikipedia) best mys-
teries 18 classic paperbacks for $25.
Steve (650) 518-6614
295 Art
"AMERICAN GRIZZLEY" limited print by
Michael Coleman. Signed & numbered.
Professionally framed 22x25.. $99. 650-
654-9252
5 prints, nude figures, 14 x 18, signed
Andrea Medina, 1980s. $40/all. SOLD!
ALASKAN SCENE painting 40" high 53"
wide includes matching frame $99 firm
(650)592-2648
LANDSCAPE PICTURES (3) hand
painted 25" long 21" wide, wooden
frame, $60 for all 3, (650)201-9166
POSTER, LINCOLN, advertising Honest
Ale, old stock, green and black color.
$15. (650)348-5169
296 Appliances
COIN-OP GAS DRYER - $100., SOLD!
HOOD, G.E. Good condition, clean,
white.. $30. (650)348-5169
OMELETTE MAKER $10. also hot pock-
ets, etc. EZ clean 650-595-3933
PONDEROSA WOOD STOVE, like new,
used one load for only 14 hours. $1,200.
Call (650)333-4400
RADIATOR HEATER, oil filled, electric,
1500 watts $25. (650)504-3621
RED DEVIL VACUUM CLEANER - $25.,
(650)593-0893
ROTISSERIE GE, IN-door or out door,
Holds large turkey 24 wide, Like new,
$80, OBO (650)344-8549
SANYO MINI REFRIGERATOR- $40.,
(415)346-6038
297 Bicycles
GIRLS BIKE 18 Pink, Looks New, Hard-
ly Used $80 (650)293-7313
MAGNA 26 Female Bike, like brand
new cond $80. (650)756-9516. Daly City
298 Collectibles
1920'S AQUA Glass Beaded Flapper
Purse (drawstring bag) & Faux Pearl
Flapper Collar. $50. 650-762-6048
1940 VINTAGE telephone bench maple
antiques collectibles $75 (650)755-9833
1982 PRINT 'A Tune Off The Top Of My
Head' 82/125 $80 (650) 204-0587
2 VINTAGE Light Bulbs circa 1905. Edi-
son Mazda Lamps. Both still working -
$50 (650)-762-6048
4 NOLAN RYAN - Uncut Sheets, Rare
Gold Cards $90 (650)365-3987
400 YEARBOOKS - Sports Illustrated
Sports Book 70-90s $90 all (650)365-
3987
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, $50. OBO,
(650)754-3597
298 Collectibles
BOX OF 2000 Sports Cards, 1997-2004
years, $20 (650)592-2648
CASINO CHIP Collection Original Chips
from various casinos $99 obo
(650)315-3240
COLORIZED TERRITORIAL Quarters
uncirculated with Holder $15/all,
(408)249-3858
FRANKLIN MINT Thimble collection with
display rack. $55. 650-291-4779
JOE MONTANA signed authentic retire-
ment book, $39., (650)692-3260
MEMORABILIA CARD COLLECTION,
large collection, Marilyn Monroe, James
Dean, John Wayne and hundreds more.
$3,300/obo.. Over 50% off
(650)319-5334.
SCHILLER HIPPIE poster, linen, Sparta
graphics 1968. Mint condition. $600.00.
(650)701-0276
TEA POTS - (6) collectables, good con-
dition, $10. each, (650)571-5899
299 Computers
1982 TEXAS Instruments TI-99/4A com-
puter, new condition, complete accesso-
ries, original box. $99. (650)676-0974
300 Toys
14 HOTWHEELS - Redline, 32
Ford/Mustang/Corv. $90 all (650)365-
3987
66 CHEVELLE TOY CAR, Blue collecti-
ble. $12. (415)337-1690
K'NEX BUILDING ideas $30. (650)622-
6695
LEGO DUPLO Set ages 1 to 5. $30
(650)622-6695
PILGRIM DOLLS, 15 boy & girl, new,
from Harvest Festival, adorable $25 650-
345-3277
PINK BARBIE 57 Chevy Convertible
28" long (sells on E-Bay for $250) in box
$99 (650)591-9769
RADIO CONTROL car; Jeep with off
road with equipment $99 OBO
(650)851-0878
SMALL WOOD dollhouse 4 furnished
rooms. $35 650-558-8142
STEP 2 sandbox Large with cover $25
(650)343-4329
TOY - Barney interactive activity, musical
learning, talking, great for the car, $16.
obo, (650)349-6059
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.,
SOLD!
ANTIQUE CRYSTAL/ARCADE Coffee
Grinder. $80. 650-596-0513
ANTIQUE ITALIAN lamp 18 high, $70
(650)387-4002
ANTIQUE KILIM RUNNER woven zig
zag design 7' by 6" by 4' $99.,
(650)580-3316
ANTIQUE LANTERN Olde Brooklyn lan-
terns, battery operated, safe, new in box,
$100, (650)726-1037
ANTIQUE OLD Copper Wash Tub, 30 x
12 x 13 with handles, $65 (650)591-3313
MAHOGANY ANTIQUE Secretary desk,
72 x 40 , 3 drawers, Display case, bev-
elled glass, $700. (650)766-3024
OLD VINTAGE Wooden Sea Captains
Tool Chest 35 x 16 x 16, $65 (650)591-
3313
STERLING SILVER loving cup 10" circa
with walnut base 1912 $65
(650)520-3425
303 Electronics
20 SONY TRINITRON TV - very good
cond., picture and sound. Remote. Not
flat. $35 (650)357-7484
46 MITSUBISHI Projector TV, great
condition. $400. (650)261-1541.
AUTO TOP hoist still in box
$99.00 or best offer (650)493-9993
BIG SONY TV 37" - Excellent Condition
Worth $2300 will Sacrifice for only $95.,
(650)878-9542
BLACKBERRY PHONE good condition
$99.00 or best offer (650)493-9993
BLUETOOTH WITH CHARGER - like
new, $20., (415)410-5937
DVD PLAYER, $25. Call (650)558-0206
FLIP CAMCORDER $50. (650)583-2767
IPHONE GOOD condition $99.00 or best
offer (650)493-9993
LEFT-HAND ERGONOMIC keyboard
with 'A-shape' key layout Num pad, $20
(650)204-0587
PHILLIPS ENERGY STAR 20 color TV
with remote. Good condition, $20
(650)888-0129
SET OF 3 wireless phones all for $50
(650)342-8436
SONY PROJECTION TV 48" with re-
mote good condition $99 (650)345-1111
SONY TRINITRON 21 Color TV. Great
Picture and Sound. $39. (650)302-2143
WESTINGHOUSE 32 Flatscreen TV,
model#SK32H240S, with HDMI plug in
and remote, excellent condition. Two
available, $175 each. (650)400-4174
304 Furniture
2 END Tables solid maple '60's era
$40/both. (650)670-7545
3 PIECE cocktail table with 2 end tables,
glass tops. good condition, $99.
(650)574-4021l
ANODYZED BRONZE ETEGERE Tall
bankers rack. Beautiful style; for plants
flowers sculptures $70 (415)585-3622
BBQ GRILL, Ducane, propane $90
(650)591-4927
CHAIRS 2 Blue Good Condition $50
OBO (650)345-5644
CHAIRS, WITH Chrome Frame, Brown
Vinyl seats $15.00 each. (650)726-5549
CHINESE LACQUERED cabinet, 2
shelves and doors. Beautiful. 23 width 30
height 11 depth $75 (650)591-4927
COMPUTER DESK $25 , drawer for key-
board, 40" x 19.5" (619)417-0465
CRAFTSMAN 18-IN.REEL mower in
very good condition $40.(650)756-9516
Daly City
DINETTE SET, round 42" glass table,
with 4 chairs, pick up Foster City. Free.
SOLD!
DINETTE SET, Seats 4, Oak wood up-
holstered chairs $99. (650)574-4021
DINING ROOM SET - table, four chairs,
lighted hutch, $500. all, (650)296-3189
DISPLAY CABINET 72x 21 x39 1/2
High Top Display, 2 shelves in rear $99
(650)591-3313
DRUM TABLE - brown, perfect condi-
tion, nice design, with storage, $45.,
(650)345-1111
DURALINER ROCKING CHAIR, Maple
Finish, Cream Cushion w matching otto-
man $70 (650)583-4943.
EZ CHAIR, large, $15. Call
(650)558-0206
FLAT TOP DESK, $35.. Call
(650)558-0206
FULL SIZE mattress & box in very good
condition $80.(650)756-9516. Daly City
304 Furniture
I-JOY MASSAGE chair, exc condition
$95 (650)591-4927
KITCHEN CABINETS - 3 metal base
kitchen cabinets with drawers and wood
doors, $99., (650)347-8061
LAWN CHAIRS (4) White, plastic, $8.
each, (415)346-6038
LAWN CHAIRS (4) White, plastic, $8.
each, (415)346-6038
LOUNGE CHAIRS - 2 new, with cover &
plastic carring case & headrest, $35.
each, (650)592-7483
LOVE SEAT, Upholstered pale yellow
floral $99. (650)574-4021
MIRROR, SOLID OAK. 30" x 19 1/2",
curved edges; beautiful. $85.00 OBO.
Linda 650 366-2135.
MIRRORS, large, $25. Call
(650)558-0206
MODULAR DESK/BOOKCASE/STOR-
AGE unit - Cherry veneer, white lami-
nate, $75., (650)888-0039
NICHOLS AND Stone antique brown
spindle wood rocking chair. $99
650 302 2143
OAK BOOKCASE, 30"x30" x12". $25.
(650)726-6429
OUTDOOR WOOD SCREEN - NEW $80
OBO RETAIL $130 (650)873-8167
PAPASAN CHAIRS (2) -with cushions
$45. each set, (650)347-8061
PATIO TABLE with 4 chairs, glass top,
good condition 41 in diameter $95
(650)591-4927
PEDESTAL SINK $25 (650)766-4858
PORTABLE JEWELRY display case
wood, see through lid $45. 25 x 20 x 4 in-
ches. (650)592-2648.
RECLINER LA-Z-BOY Dark green print
fabric, medium size. $60. (650)343-8206
ROCKING CHAIR Great condition,
1970s style, dark brown, wooden,
suede cushion, photo availble, $99.,
(650)716-3337
SEWING TABLE, folding, $20. Call
(650)558-0206
SHELVING UNIT from IKEA interior
metal, glass nice condition $50/obo.
(650)589-8348
SOFA - excelleNT condition. 8 ft neutral
color $99 OBO (650)345-5644
SOLID WOOD BOOKCASE 33 x 78
with flip bar ask $75 obo (650)743-4274
STEREO CABINET walnut w/3 black
shelves 16x 22x42. $30, 650-341-5347
TEA/ UTILITY CART, $15. (650)573-
7035, (650)504-6057
TEAK CABINET 28"x32", used for ster-
eo equipment $25. (650)726-6429
TRUNDLE BED - Single with wheels,
$40., (650)347-8061
TV STAND brown. $40.00 OBO
(650) 995-0012
TV STAND, Oak Wood on wheels, with
inclosed cabinet $40. (650)574-4021
VIDEO CENTER 38 inches H 21 inches
W still in box $45., (408)249-3858
WALL CLOCK - 31 day windup, 26
long, $99 (650)592-2648
WALNUT CHEST, small (4 drawer with
upper bookcase $50. (650)726-6429
WHITE 5 Drawer dresser.Excellent con-
dition. Moving. Must sell $90.00 OBO
(650) 995-0012
WICKER DRESSER, white, 3 drawers,
exc condition 31 width 32 height 21.5
depth $35 (650)591-4927
WOOD - wall Unit - 30" long x 6' tall x
17.5" deep. $90. (650)631-9311
304 Furniture
WOOD BOOKCASE unit - good condi-
tion $65.00 (650)504-6058
WOOD BOOKCASE, 3-shelf, very good
condition, 40" wide x 39" tall x 10" deep.
$35. 650-861-0088.
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. Three avail-
able, (650)345-5502
CALIFORNIA KING WHITE BEDDING,
immaculate, 2 each: Pillow covers,
shams, 1 spread/ cover, washable $25.
(650)578-9208
COFFEE MAKER, Makes 4 cups $12,
(650)368-3037
COOKING POTS(2) stainless steel, tem-
perature-resistent handles, 21/2 & 4 gal.
$5 for both. (650) 574-3229.
DRIVE MEDICAL design locking elevat-
ed toilet seat. New. $45. (650)343-4461
HOUSE HEATER Excellent condition.
Works great. Must sell. $30.00 OBO
(650) 995-0012
MANGLE-SIMPLEX FLOOR model,
Working, $20 (650)344-6565
NEW FLOURESCENT lights, ten T-12
tubes, only $2.50 ea 650-595-3933
PERSIAN TEA set for 8. Including
spoon, candy dish, and tray. Gold Plated.
$100. (650) 867-2720
QUEENSIZE BEDSPREAD w/2 Pillow
Shams (print) $30.00 (650)341-1861
REVERSIBLE KING BEDSPREAD bur-
gundy; for the new extra deep beds. New
$60 (415)585-3622
SINGER ELECTRONIC sewing machine
model #9022. Cord, foot controller
included. $99 O.B.O. (650)274-9601 or
(650)468-6884
SOLID TEAK floor model 16 wine rack
with turntable $60. (650)592-7483
VACUMN EXCELLENT condition. Works
great.Moving. Must sell. $35.00 OBO
(650) 995-0012
307 Jewelry & Clothing
COSTUME JEWELRY Earrings $25.00
Call: 650-368-0748
LADIES GLOVES - gold lame' elbow
length gloves, size 7.5, $15. new,
(650)868-0436
308 Tools
BLACK & Decker 17" Electric Hedge
Trimmer. Like new. $20. 650-326-2235.
BOSTITCH 16 gage Finish nailer Model
SB 664FN $99 (650)359-9269
CRACO 395 SP-PRO, electronic paint
sprayer.Commercial grade. Used only
once. $600/obo. (650)784-3427
CRAFTMAN JIG Saw 3.9 amp. with vari-
able speeds $65 (650)359-9269
CRAFTMAN RADIAL SAW, with cabinet
stand, $200 Cash Only, (650)851-1045
CRAFTSMAN 1/2" drill press $40.50.
(650)573-5269
CRAFTSMAN 3/4 horse power 3,450
RPM $60 (650)347-5373
CRAFTSMAN 6" bench grinder $40.
(650)573-5269
CRAFTSMAN 6" bench grinder $40.
(650)573-5269
CRAFTSMAN 9" Radial Arm Saw with 6"
dado set. No stand. $55 (650)341-6402
CRAFTSMAN BELT & disc sander $99.
(650)573-5269
308 Tools
DAYTON ELECTRIC 1 1/2 horse power
1,725 RPM $60 (650)347-5373
LAWN MOWER reel type push with
height adjustments. Just sharpened $45
650-591-2144 San Carlos
LOG CHAIN (HEAVY DUTY) 14' $75
(650)948-0912
ROLLING STEEL Ladder10 steps, Like
New. $475 obo, SOLD!
WHEELBARROW. BRAND new, never
used. Wood handles. $50 or best offer.
(650) 595-4617
309 Office Equipment
CANON ALL in One Photo Printer PIX-
MA MP620 Never used. In original box
$150 (650)477-2177
CANON COPIER, $55. Call
(650)558-0206
PANASONIC FAX machine, works
great, $20. SOLD!
310 Misc. For Sale
ARTIFICIAL FICUS TREE 6 ft. life like,
full branches. in basket $55.
(650)269-3712
CHEESESET 6 small and 1 large plate
Italian design never used Ceramica Cas-
tellania $25. (650)644-9027
ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER selectric II
good condition, needs ribbon (type
needed attached) $35 San Bruno
(650)588-1946
ELECTRONIC TYPEWRITER good
condition $50., (650)878-9542
FLOWER POT w/ 10 Different cute
succulents, $5.(650)952-4354
GAME "BEAT THE EXPERTS" never
used $8., (408)249-3858
GOURMET SET for cooking on your ta-
ble. European style. $15 (650)644-9027
GRANDFATHER CLOCK with bevel
glass in front and sides (650)355-2996
HARLEY DAVIDSON black phone, per-
fect condition, $65., (650) 867-2720
ICE CHEST $15 (650)347-8061
IGLOO COOLER - 3 gallon beverage
cooler, new, still in box, $15.,
(650)345-3840
KENNESAW ORIGINAL salute cannon
$30. (650)726-1037
LITTLE PLAYMATE by IGLOO 10"x10",
cooler includes icepak. $20
(650)574-3229
MEDICINE CABINET - 18 X 24, almost
new, mirror, $20., (650)515-2605
MERITAGE PICNIC Time Wine and
Cheese Tote - new black $45
(650)644-9027
NATIVITY SET, new, beautiful, ceramic,
gold-trimmed, 11-pc.,.asking: $50.
Call: 650-345-3277 /message
NEW LIVING Yoga Tape for Beginners
$8. 650-578-8306
NEW SONICARE Toothbrush in box 3e
series, rechargeable, $49 650-595-3933
OVAL MIRROR $10 (650)766-4858
SHOWER DOOR custom made 48 x 69
$70 (650)692-3260
VASE WITH flowers 2 piece good for the
Holidays, $25., (650) 867-2720
VINTAGE WHITE Punch Bowl/Serving
Bowl Set with 10 cups plus one extra
$35. (650)873-8167
WICKER PICNIC basket, mint condition,
handles, light weight, pale tan color.
$10.00 (650)578-9208
311 Musical Instruments
HAILUN PIANO for sale, brand new, ex-
cellent condition. $6,000. (650)308-5296
28 Wednesday May 7, 2014 THEDAILYJOURNAL
ACROSS
1 Takes out in an
arcade, as bad
guys
5 Longtime AFL
president
Gompers
11 Rank above cpl.
14 Spread unit
15 Really enjoys
16 Quattro meno
uno
17 Chinese noodle
dish
20 Clothes line
21 Antiquing agent
22 A Farewell to __
23 1995 Shania
Twain album
27 Lincoln Town
Cars, e.g.
30 Highest point
31 Jeopardy! name
32 Hanging around
37 Org. for Hawks
but not Eagles
38 Whiskas
alternative ... or,
literally, whats
hidden in 17-,
23-, 47- and
57-Across
40 Pivotal
41 Commonly
yellow blooms
43 Clothes line
44 Not quite closed
45 WWII fleet
47 Greeter of new
homeowners
52 Missouri River
tribe
53 Dies __
54 Deluge refuge
57 Will Schuester
portrayer on
Glee
62 Was tricked by a
worm?
63 Pull into, as a
motel
64 Late-night rival of
Jimmy and
Jimmy
65 Pavement
warning
66 __ here:
Poltergeist
67 Expel with force
DOWN
1 The Hangover
actor Galifianakis
2 Workout
consequence
3 Schoolmarmish
4 Hold on a __!
5 Extended attacks
6 Good __: fully
restored
7 Start to manage?
8 The Wildcats of
the America East
Conf.
9 1940s mil. zone
10 Cattle call
11 Back at sea
12 Fairy tale brother
13 High-strung
18 Lyricist Gus
19 Champion skier
known as the
Herminator
23 Strain
24 Seriously injures
25 Overture follower
26 Breaking Bad
setting: Abbr.
27 Beach pailful
28 Where Napoleon
was exiled
29 Like The Whos
Tommy
32 River through
Tours
33 Head-rotating
bird
34 Source of much
dorm furniture
35 Groovy!
36 Fitness centers
38 Magic amulet
39 Mild cheese
42 Gem surface
43 George W., to
George
45 Lorres
Casablanca
role
46 Certain Afrikaner
47 Areas for
development
48 Cybercommerce
49 Numbers game
50 Not macho at all
51 Like a loud crowd
54 By yesterday!
letters
55 Gad about
56 Had down cold
58 FDR successor
59 Biblical verb suffix
60 Misfortune
61 They may be
checked at the
door
By John Dunn
(c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
05/07/14
05/07/14
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:
Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis
xwordeditor@aol.com
311 Musical Instruments
BALDWIN GRAND PIANO, 6 foot, ex-
cellent condition, $8,500/obo. Call
(510)784-2598
GULBRANSEN BABY GRAND PIANO -
Appraised @$5450., want $3500 obo,
(650)343-4461
HAMMOND B-3 Organ and 122 Leslie
Speaker. Excellent condition. $8,500. pri-
vate owner, (650)349-1172
KAMAKA CONCERT sized Ukelele,
w/friction tuners, solid Koa wood body,
made in Hawaii, 2007 great tone, excel-
lent condition, w/ normal wear & tear.
$850. (650)342-5004
WURLITZER PIANO, console, 40 high,
light brown, good condition. $490.
(650)593-7001
312 Pets & Animals
AQUARIUM, MARINA Cool 10, 2.65
gallons, new pump. $20. (650)591-1500
BAMBOO BIRD Cage - very intricate de-
sign - 21"x15"x16". $50 (650)341-6402
FREE HORSE
Standardbred Mare (10 years). Deserves
quality retirement home with experienced
horse person. 40 wins while racing. Seri-
ous only Leave message (650)344-9353
312 Pets & Animals
GECKO GLASS case 10 gal.with heat
pad, thermometer, Wheeled stand if
needed $20. (650)591-1500
315 Wanted to Buy
WANTED SILVER Dollars
(650)492-1298
WE BUY
Gold, Silver, Platinum
Always True & Honest values
Millbrae Jewelers
Est. 1957
400 Broadway - Millbrae
650-697-2685
316 Clothes
ALPINESTAR JEANS - Tags Attached.
Twin Stitched. Knee Protection. Never
Used! Blue/Grey Sz34 $65. (650)357-
7484
BEAUTIFUL FAUX mink fur jacket (pics
avail) Like new. Sz 10. 650-349-6969
BLACK Leather pants Mrs. made in
France size 40 $99. (650)558-1975
316 Clothes
BLACK LEATHER tap shoes 9M great
condition $99. (650)558-1975
DAINESE BOOTS - Zipper/Velcro Clo-
sure. Cushioned Ankle. Reflective Strip.
Excellent Condition! Unisex EU40 $65.
(650)357-7484
LADIES COAT Medium, dark lavender
$25 (650)368-3037
LADIES DONEGAL design 100% wool
cap from Wicklow, Ireland, $20. Call
(650)341-8342
LADIES FUR Jacket (fake) size 12 good
condition $30 (650)692-3260
LARRY LEVINE Women's Hooded down
jacket. Medium. Scarlet. Good as new.
Asking $40 OBO (650)888-0129
LEATHER JACKET, brown bomber, with
pockets.Sz XL, $88. (415)337-1690
MINK CAPE, beautiful with satin lining,
light color $75 obo (650)591-4927
NIKE PULLOVER mens heavy jacket
Navy Blue & Red, Reg. price $200 sell-
ing for $59 (650)692-3260
PROM PARTY Dress, Long sleeveless
size 6, magenta, with shawl like new $40
obo (650)349-6059
VINTAGE 1970S GRECIAN MADE
DRESS SIZE 6-8, $35 (650)873-8167
316 Clothes
VELVET DRAPE, 100% cotton, new
beautiful burgundy 82"X52" W/6"hems:
$45 (415)585-3622
WHITE LACE 1880s reproduction dress
- size 6, $100., (650)873-8167
317 Building Materials
30 FLUORESCENT Lamps 48" (brand
new in box) $75 for all (650)369-9762
BATHROOM VANITY, antique, with top
and sink: - $65. (650)348-6955
BRAND NEW Millgard window + frame -
$85. (650)348-6955
318 Sports Equipment
BAMBOO FLY rod 9 ft 2 piece good
condition South Bend brand. $50
(650)591-6842
BODY BY JAKE AB Scissor Exercise
Machine w/instructions. $50. (650)637-
0930
BUCKET OF 260 golf balls, $25.
(650)339-3195
DARTBOARD - New, regulation 18 di-
meter, Halex brand w/mounting hard-
ware, 6 brass darts, $16., (650)681-7358
DIGITAL PEDOMETER, distance, calo-
ries etc. $7.50 650-595-3933
GOTT 10-GAL beverage cooler $20.
(650)345-3840
HJC MOTORCYCLE Helmet, size large,
perfect cond $29 650-595-3933
IN-GROUND BASKETBALL hoop, fiber-
glass backboard, adjustable height, $80
obo 650-364-1270
LADIES STEP thruRoadmaster 10
speed bike w. shop-basket Good
Condition. $55 OBO call: (650) 342-8510
MENS ROLLER Blades size 101/2 never
used $25 (650)520-3425
NORDIC TRACK 505, Excellent condi-
tion but missing speed dial (not nec. for
use) $35. 650-861-0088.
NORDIC TRACK Pro, $95. (650)333-
4400
POWER PLUS Exercise Machine $99
(650)368-3037
VINTAGE ENGLISH ladies ice skates -
up to size 7-8, $40., (650)873-8167
WET SUIT - medium size, $95., call for
info (650)851-0878
WOMAN'S BOWLING ball, 12 lbs, "Lin-
da", with size 7 shoes and bag, $15.
SOLD!
WOMEN'S LADY Cougar gold iron set
set - $25. (650)348-6955
322 Garage Sales
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
2 FLOWER pots with Gardenia's both for
$20 (650)369-9762
LAWNMOWER - American made, man-
ual/push, excellent condition, $50.,
(650)342-8436
REMINGTON ELECTRIC lawn mower,
$40. (650)355-2996
340 Camera & Photo Equip.
CLASSICAL YASHICA camera
in leather case $25. (650)644-9027
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 $79
(415)971-7555
345 Medical Equipment
PRIDE MECHANICAL Lift Chair, hardly
used. Paid $950. Asking $350 orb est of-
fer. (650)400-7435
WALKER - brand new, $20., SSF,
(415)410-5937
WALKER WITH basket $30. Invacare
Excellent condition (650)622-6695
345 Medical Equipment
WHEEL CHAIR asking $75 OBO
(650)834-2583
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.
435 Rental Needed
EMPLOYED MALE, 60 years old look-
ing for room. Can afford up to $550 per
month. (650)771-6762
440 Apartments
BELMONT - prime, quiet location, view,
1 bedrooms, new carpets, new granite
counters, dishwasher, balcony, covered
carports, storage, pool, no pets.
(650)591-4046.
450 Homes for Rent
SAN MATEO 3 bedroom, 2 bath home
for rent, $5,200/month. (650)773-6824
(650)341-5532.
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 & A/C
950 El Camino Real San Carlos
(650) 593-3136
Mention Daily Journal
620 Automobiles
Dont lose money
on a trade-in or
consignment!
Sell your vehicle in the
Daily Journals
Auto Classifieds.
Just $40
Well run it
til you sell it!
Reach 76,500 drivers
from South SF to
Palo Alto
Call (650)344-5200
ads@smdailyjournal.com
CHEVY HHR 08 - Grey, spunky car
loaded, even seat warmers, $9,500.
(408)807-6529.
DODGE 99 Van, Good Condition,
$4,500 OBO (650)481-5296
MERCEDES 06 C230 - 6 cylinder, navy
blue, 60K miles, 2 year warranty,
$18,000, (650)455-7461
OLDSMOBILE 99 Intrigue, green, 4
door sedan, 143K miles. $1,500.
(650)740-6007.
SUBARU 98 Outback Limited, 175K
miles, $5,500. Recent work. Mint condiit-
ton. High Car Fax, View at sharpcar.com
#126837 SOLD!
620 Automobiles
VOLVO 85 244 Turbo, automatic, very
rare! 74,700 original miles. New muffler,
new starter, new battery, tires have only
200 miles on it. $4,900. (650)726-8623.
625 Classic Cars
FORD 63 THUNDERBIRD Hardtop, 390
engine, Leather Interior. Will consider
$6,500 /OBO (650)364-1374
VOLVO 85 244 Turbo, automatic, very
rare! 74,700 original miles. New muffler,
new starter, new battery, tires have only
200 miles on it. $4,900. (650)726-8623.
630 Trucks & SUVs
DODGE 01 DURANGO, V-8 SUV, 1
owner, dark blue, CLEAN! $5,000/obo.
Call (650)492-1298
FORD 98 EXPLORER 6 cylinder, 167K
miles, excellent condition, good tires,
good brakes, very dependable! $2000 or
best offer. Moving, must sell! Call
(650)274-4337
635 Vans
67 INTERNATIONAL Step Van 1500,
Typical UPS type size. $1,950/OBO,
(650)364-1374
DODGE 90 RAM PASSENGER VAN,
B-150, V-8, automatic, seats 8, good
condition, $1,700. SOLD!.
640 Motorcycles/Scooters
1973 FXE Harley Shovel Head 1400cc
stroked & balanced motor. Runs perfect.
Low milage, $6,600 Call (650)369-8013
BMW 03 F650 GS, $3899 OBO. Call
650-995-0003
MOTORCYCLE GLOVES - Excellent
condition, black leather, $35. obo,
(650)223-7187
MOTORCYCLE SADDLEBAGS with
brackets and other parts, $35.,
(650)670-2888
670 Auto Service
SAN CARLOS AUTO
SERVICE & TUNE UP
A Full Service Auto Repair
Facility
760 El Camino Real
San Carlos
(650)593-8085
670 Auto Parts
CAR TOWchain 9' $35 (650)948-0912
HONDA SPARE tire 13" $25
(415)999-4947
SHOP MANUALS 2 1955 Pontiac
manual, 4 1984 Ford/Lincoln manuals, 1
gray marine diesel manual $40
(650)583-5208
SHOP MANUALS for GM Suv's
Year 2002 all for $40 (650)948-0912
SNOW CHAIN cables made by Shur
Grip - brand new-never used. In the
original case. $25 650-654-9252.
SNOW CHAINS metal cambell brand
never used 2 sets multi sizes $20 each
obo (650)591-6842
TIRE CHAIN cables $23. (650)766-4858
680 Autos Wanted
Wanted 62-75 Chevrolets
Novas, running or not
Parts collection etc.
So clean out that garage
Give me a call
Joe 650 342-2483
29 Wednesday May 7, 2014 THEDAILYJOURNAL
ADVERTISE
YOUR SERVICE
in the
HOME & GARDEN SECTION
Offer your services to 76,500 readers a day, from
Palo Alto to South San Francisco
and all points between!
Call (650)344-5200
ads@smdailyjournal.com
Cabinetry
Cleaning
Concrete
RJ POLLOCK
CONCRETE SERVICE
Driveways Patios Masonry
Brick and Slate Flagstone
Stamp Concrete
Exposed Aggregate
(650)759-1965
Lic# 987912
Construction
DEVOE
CONSTRUCTION
Kitchen & Bath
Remodeling
Belmont, CA
(650) 318-3993
LEMUS CONSTRUCTION
(650)271-3955
Dry Rot Decks Fences
Handyman Painting
Bath Remodels & much more
Based in N. Peninsula
Free Estimates ... Lic# 913461
MARIN CONSTRUCTION
Home Improvement Specialists
* custom decks * Framing * remodel-
ing * foundation Rep.*Dry Rot * Ter-
mite Rep * And Much More
Ask about our 20% signing and
senior discounts
(650)486-1298
OSULLIVAN
CONSTRUCTION
New Construction,
Remodeling,
Kitchen/Bathrooms,
Decks/ Fences
(650)589-0372
Licensed and Insured
Lic. #589596
WARREN BUILDER
Contractor & Electrician
Kitchen, Bathroom, Additions
Design & Drafting Lowest Rate
Lic#964001, Ins. & BBB member
Warren Young
(650)465-8787
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
ELECTRICIAN
For all your
electrical needs
Residential, Commercial,
Troubleshooting,
Wiring & Repairing
Call Ben (650)685-6617
Lic # 427952
INSIDE OUT ELECTRIC INC
Service Upgrades
Remodels / Repairs
The tradesman you will
trust and recommend
Lic# 808182
(650)515-1123
Gardening
KEEP YOUR LAWN
LOOKING GREEN
Time to Aerate your lawn
We also do seed/sod of lawns
Spring planting
Sprinklers and irrigation
Pressure washing
Call Robert
STERLING GARDENS
650-703-3831 Lic #751832
Flooring
SHOP
AT HOME
WE WILL
BRING THE
SAMPLES
TO YOU.
Call for a
FREE in-home
estimate
FLAMINGOS FLOORING
CARPET
VINYL
LAMINATE
TILE
HARDWOOD
650-655-6600
SLATER FLOORS
. Restore old floors to new
. Dustless Sanding
. Install new custom & refinished
hardwood floors
Licensed. Bonded. Insured
www.slaterfloors.com
(650) 593-3700
Showroom by appointment
Gutters
O.K.S RAINGUTTER
New Rain Gutter, Down Spouts,
Gutter Cleaning & Screening,
Free Gutter & Roof Inspections
Friendly Service
10% Senior Discount
CA Lic# 794353/Bonded
CALL TODAY
(650)556-9780
Handy Help
AAA HANDYMAN
& MORE
Since 1985
Repairs Maintenance Painting
Carpentry Plumbing Electrical
All Work Guaranteed
(650) 995-4385
Handy Help
DISCOUNT HANDYMAN
& PLUMBING
Kitchen/Bathroom Remodeling,
Tile Installation,
Door & Window Installation
Priced for You! Call John
(650)296-0568
Free Estimates
Lic.#834170
SENIOR HANDYMAN
Specializing in Any Size Projects
Painting Electrical
Carpentry Dry Rot
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
AAA RATED!
INDEPENDENT HAULERS
$40 & UP
HAUL
Since 1988/Licensed & Insured
Monthly Specials
Fast, Dependable Service
Free Estimates
A+ BBB Rating
(650)341-7482
CHAINEY HAULING
Junk & Debris Clean Up
Furniture / Appliance / Disposal
Tree / Bush / Dirt / Concrete Demo
Starting at $40& Up
www.chaineyhauling.com
Free Estimates
(650)207-6592
CHEAP
HAULING!
Light moving!
Haul Debris!
650-583-6700
Landscaping
SERVANDO ARRELLIN
The Garden Doctor
Landscaping & Demolition,
Fences, Interlocking Pavers,
Clean-ups, Hauling,
Retaining Walls
(650)771-2276
Lic# 36267
Landscaping
NATE LANDSCAPING
Tree Service Fence Deck
Paint Pruning & Removal
New Lawn All concrete
Ret. Wall Pavers
Yard clean-up & Haul
Free Estimate
(650)353-6554
Lic. #973081
Painting
JON LA MOTTE
PAINTING
Interior & Exterior
Quality Work, Reasonable
Rates, Free Estimates
(650)368-8861
Lic #514269
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
NICK MEJIA PAINTING
A+ Member BBB Since 1975
Large & Small Jobs
Residential & Commercial
Classic Brushwork, Matching, Stain-
ing, Varnishing, Cabinet Finishing
Wall Effects, Murals, More!
(415)971-8763
Lic. #479564
Plumbing
Screens
DONT SHARE
YOUR HOUSE
WITH BUGS!
We repair and install all types of
Window & Door Screens
Free Estimates
(650)299-9107
PENINSULA SCREEN SHOP
Mention this ad for 20% OFF!
Tree Service
Hillside Tree
Service
LOCALLY OWNED
Family Owned Since 2000
Trimming Pruning
Shaping
Large Removal
Stump Grinding
Free
Estimates
Mention
The Daily Journal
to get 10% off
for new customers
Call Luis (650) 704-9635
Tile
CUBIAS TILE
Entryways Kitchens
Decks Bathrooms
Tile Repair Floors
Grout Repair Fireplaces
Call Mario Cubias for Free Estimates
(650)784-3079
Lic.# 955492
30 Wednesday May 7, 2014 THEDAILYJOURNAL
Window Washing
Windows
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
BANKRUPTCY
Huge credit card debit?
Job loss? Foreclosure?
Medical bills?
YOU HAVE OPTIONS
Call for a free consultation
(650-363-2600
This law firm is a debt relife agency
Law Office of Jason Honaker
BANKRUPTCY
Chapter 7 &13
Call us for a consultation
650-259-9200
www.honakerlegal.com
Clothing
$5 CHARLEY'S
Sporting apparel from your
49ers, Giants & Warriors,
low prices, large selection.
450 W. San Bruno Ave.
San Bruno
(650)771-6564
Dental Services
ALBORZI, DDS, MDS, INC.
$500 OFF INVISALIGN TREATMENT
a clear alternative to braces even for
patients who have
been told that they were not invisalign
candidates
235 N SAN MATEO DR #300,
SAN MATEO
(650)342-4171
MILLBRAE SMILE CENTER
Valerie de Leon, DDS
Implant, Cosmetic and
Family Dentistry
Spanish and Tagalog Spoken
(650)697-9000
15 El Camino Real,
MILLBRAE, CA
RUSSO DENTAL CARE
Dental Implants
Free Consultation& Panoramic
Digital Survey
1101 El Camino RL ,San Bruno
(650)583-2273
www.russodentalcare.com
Food
CROWNE PLAZA
Foster City-San Mateo
Champagne Sunday Brunch
Wedding, Event &
Meeting Facilities
(650) 295-6123
1221 Chess Drive Foster City
Hwy 92 at Foster City Blvd. Exit
GET HAPPY!
Happy Hour 4-6 M-F
Steelhead Brewing Co.
333 California Dr.
Burlingame
(650)344-6050
www.steelheadbrewery.com
JACKS
RESTAURANT
Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
1050 Admiral Ct., #A
San Bruno
(650)589-2222
JacksRestaurants.com
PANCHO VILLA
TAQUERIA
Because Flavor Still Matters
365 B Street
San Mateo
www.sfpanchovillia.com
Food
PRIME STEAKS
SUPERB VALUE
BASHAMICHI
Steak & Seafood
1390 El Camino Real
Millbrae
www.bashamichirestaurant.com
SEAFOOD FOR SALE
FRESH OFF THE BOAT
(650) 726-5727
Pillar Point Harbor:
1 Johnson Pier
Half Moon Bay
Oyster Point Marina
95 Harbor Master Rd..
South San Francisco
Financial
UNITED AMERICAN BANK
San Mateo , Redwood City,
Half Moon Bay
Call (650)579-1500
for simply better banking
unitedamericanbank.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
WESTERN FURNITURE
Everything Marked Down !
601 El Camino Real
San Bruno, CA
Mon. - Sat. 10AM -7PM
Sunday Noon -6PM
We don't meet our competition,
we beat it !
Guns
PENINSULA GUNS
(650) 588-8886
Handguns.Shotguns.Rifles
Tactical and
Hunting Accessories
Buy.Sell.Trade
360 El Camino Real, San Bruno
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
DENTAL
IMPLANTS
Save $500 on
Implant Abutment &
Crown Package.
Call Millbrae Dental
for details
650-583-5880
EYE EXAMINATIONS
579-7774
1159 Broadway
Burlingame
Dr. Andrew Soss
OD, FAAO
www.Dr-AndrewSoss.net
NCP COLLEGE OF NURSING
& CAREER COLLEGE
Train to become a Licensed
Vocational Nurse in 12 months or a
Certified Nursing Assistant in as little
as 8 weeks.
Call (800) 339-5145 for more
information or visit
ncpcollegeofnursing.edu and
ncpcareercollege.com
Health & Medical
SLEEP APNEA
We can treat it
without CPAP!
Call for a free
sleep apnea screening
650-583-5880
Millbrae Dental
Insurance
AANTHEM BLUE
CROSS
www.ericbarrettinsurance.com
Eric L. Barrett,
CLU, RHU, REBC, CLTC, LUTCF
President
Barrett Insurance Services
(650)513-5690
CA. Insurance License #0737226
AFFORDABLE
HEALTH INSURANCE
Personal & Professional Service
JOHN LANGRIDGE
(650) 854-8963
Bay Area Health Insurance Marketing
CA License 0C60215
a Diamond Certified Company
Jewelers
INTERSTATE
ALL BATTERY CENTER
570 El Camino Real #160
Redwood City
(650)839-6000
Watch batteries $8.99
including installation.
KUPFER JEWELRY
est. 1979
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
Locks
COMPLETE LOCKSMITH
SERVICES
Full stocked shop
& Mobile van
MILLBRAE LOCKS
(650)583-5698
311 El Camino Real
MILLBRAE
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
$29
ONE HOUR MASSAGE
(650)354-8010
1030 Curtis St #203,
Menlo Park
ACUHEALTH
Best Asian Body Massage
$28/hr
Free Parking
(650)692-1989
1838 El Camino #103, Burlingame
sites.google.com/site/acuhealthSFbay
ASIAN MASSAGE
$45 per Hour
Present ad for special price
Open 7 days, 10 am -10 pm
633 Veterans Blvd., #C
Redwood City
(650)556-9888
ENJOY THE BEST
ASIAN MASSAGE
$40 for 1/2 hour
Angel Spa
667 El Camino Real, Redwood City
(650)363-8806
7 days a week, 9:30am-9:30pm
HEALING MASSAGE
Newly remodeled
New Masseuses every two
weeks
$50/Hr. Special
2305-A Carlos St.,
Moss Beach
(Cash Only)
851 Cherry Ave. #29, San Bruno
in Bayhill Shopping Center
Open 7 Days 10:30am- 10:30pm
650. 737. 0788
Foot Massage $19.99/hr
ComboMassage $29.99/hr
Free Sauna (with this Ad)
Body Massage $39.99/hr
Hot StoneMassage $49.99/hr
GRAND OPENING
OSETRA WELLNESS
MASSAGE THERAPY
Prenatal, Reiki, Energy
$20 OFF your First Treatment
(not valid with other promotions)
(650)212-2966
1730 S. Amphlett Blvd. #206
San Mateo
osetrawellness.com
RELAX
REJUVENATE
RECHARGE
in our luxury bath house
Water Lounge Day Spa
2500 S. El Camino
San Mateo
(650)389-7090
Pet Services
CATS, DOGS,
POCKET PETS
Mid-Peninsula Animal Hospital
Free New Client Exam
(650) 325-5671
www.midpen.com
Open Nights & Weekends
Real Estate Loans
REAL ESTATE LOANS
We Fund Bank Turndowns!
Equity based direct lender
Homes Multi-family
Mixed-use Commercial
Good or Bad Credit
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 Bureau of Real Estate
Retirement
Independent Living, Assisted Liv-
ing, and Memory Care. full time R.N.
Please call us at (650)742-9150 to
schedule a tour, to pursue your life-
long dream.
Marymount Greenhills
Retirement Center
1201 Broadway
Millbrae, Ca 94030
www.greenhillsretirement.com
Schools
HILLSIDE CHRISTIAN
ACADEMY
Where every child is a gift from God
K-8
High Academic Standards
Small Class Size
South San Francisco
(650)588-6860
ww.hillsidechristian.com
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
LASTING IMPRESSIONS
ARE OUR FIRST PRIORITY
Cypress Lawn
1370 El Camino Real
Colma
(650)755-0580
www.cypresslawn.com
NAZARETH VISTA
Best Kept Secret in Town !
Independent Living, Assisted Living
and Skilled Nursing Care.
Daily Tours/Complimentary Lunch
650.591.2008
900 Sixth Avenue
Belmont, CA 94002
crd@belmontvista.com
www.nazarethhealthcare.com
Travel
FIGONE TRAVEL
GROUP
(650) 595-7750
www.cruisemarketplace.com
Cruises Land & Family vacations
Personalized & Experienced
Family Owned & Operated
Since 1939
1495 Laurel St. SAN CARLOS
CST#100209-10
WORLD 31
Wednesday May 7, 2014 THEDAILYJOURNAL
BANKRUPTCY
Eliminate Debt
Get a Fresh Start
Business & Personal
Law Ofces of Brian Irion
~ HELPING CLIENTS FOR OVER 25 YEARS ~
FREE CONSULTATION (650) 363-2600
611 Veterans Boulevard, Suite 209, Redwood City
www.biesq.com
www.CiminoCare.com
Burlingame Villa
24-hr. Alzheimers
& Dementia Care
1117 Rhinette Ave.
Burlingame
(behind Walgreens on Broadway)
(650) 344-7074
Lic #410508825
Mills Estate Villa
24-hr. Assisted Living
Board & Care
1733 California Dr.
Burlingame
(650) 692-0600
Lic #41560033
When Mom Needed
24 Hour Care ...
We found a home-like
a[ oroa(c ,ovIol
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
TEHRAN, Iran A large re broke out
Tuesday in an oil and wood storage facility
in an industrial city in northern Iran, but
only one person was injured, ofcials said.
The mayor of Qazvin, Masoud Nosrati,
denied earlier reports that there was an
explosion at the site. He also said reght-
ers had contained the blaze.
Qazvin, some 130 kilometers (80 miles)
west of the capital, Tehran, is home to many
cargo depots and industrial sites ranging
from glassware workshops to tire factories.
The semiofcial Fars news agency initial-
ly said an explosion had gone off in a wood
and oil storage facility, injuring nearly 50
people. Fars also said police had closed off
roads to the area where the explosion took
place. But Nosrati told the ofcial IRNA
news agency that reports of an explosion
were incorrect.
The head of the emergency department
Habibollah Behtooei also rejected earlier
reports about a large number of casualties,
saying nobody was in the facility when the
re began and only one rescue worker was
injured.
Local media in Iran frequently issue con-
icting reports amid the chaos that breaks
out during emergency situations and it is
difcult to independently conrm them.
Fire breaks out in industrial Iranian city
By John Heilprin and Nicole Wineld
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
GENEVA The Vatican revealed Tuesday
that over the past decade, it has defrocked
848 priests who raped or molested children
and sanctioned another 2,572 with lesser
penalties, providing the rst ever break-
down of how it handled the more than 3,400
cases of abuse reported to the Holy See
since 2004.
The Vaticans U.N. ambassador in
Geneva, Archbishop Silvano Tomasi,
released the gures during a second day of
grilling by a U.N. committee monitoring
implementation of the U.N. treaty against
torture.
Tomasi insisted that the Holy See was
only obliged to abide by the torture treaty
inside the tiny Vatican City State, which
has a population of only a few hundred peo-
ple.
But signicantly, he didnt dispute the
committees contention that sexual vio-
lence against children can be considered
torture. Legal experts have said that classi-
fying sexual abuse as torture could expose
the Catholic Church to a new wave of law-
suits since torture cases in much of the
world dont carry statutes of limitations.
Tomasi also provided statistics about how
the Holy See has adjudicated sex abuse cases
for the past decade. The Vatican in 2001
required bishops and religious superiors to
forward all credible cases of abuse to Rome
for review after determining that they were
shufing pedophile priests from diocese to
diocese rather than subjecting them to
church trials. Only in 2010 did the Vatican
explicitly tell bishops and superiors to also
report credible cases to police where local
reporting laws require them to.
The Vatican statistics are notable in that
they show how the peaks in numbers over
the years both of cases reported and sanc-
tions meted out roughly parallels the
years in which abuse scandals were in the
news. And they showed that far from dimin-
ishing in recent years, the number of cases
reported annually to the Vatican has
remained a fairly constant 400 or so since
2010, the last year the scandal erupted in
public around the globe. These cases, how-
ever, concern mostly abuse that occurred
decades ago.
The Associated Press reported in January
that then-Pope Benedict XVI had defrocked
384 priests in the nal two years of his
pontificate, citing documentation that
Tomasis delegation had prepared for anoth-
er U.N. hearing monitoring a treaty on the
rights of children. That documentation
matched data contained in the Vaticans sta-
tistical yearbooks.
Tomasi told the AP on Tuesday that the
January gures were incomplete and that
the data he provided to the U.N. committee
Tuesday was the rst ever comprehensive
year-by-year breakdown of cases reported
and adjudicated. The gures, however, only
cover cases handled directly by the Holy
See, not those handled by local diocesan tri-
bunals, meaning the total number of sanc-
tioned priests is likely far higher.
The data showed that since 2004, the
Vatican had received some 3,400 cases, had
defrocked 848 priests and sanctioned anoth-
er 2,572 to lesser penalties.
Vatican: 848 priests defrocked for abuse since 04
REUTERS
Pope Francis talks with children during a special audience with members of the Catholic
Action in Paul VI hall at the Vatican.
WORLD 32 Wednesday May 7, 2014 THEDAILYJOURNAL
By Peter Leonard
and Yuras Karanau
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
DONETSK, Ukraine A pro-
Russia militia holding an eastern
Ukrainian city came under further
pressure Tuesday from advancing
government troops, but militants
acted with impunity elsewhere in
the turbulent region.
The foreign ministers of
Ukraine and Russia met Tuesday,
but their open disagreements did
nothing to suggest a diplomatic
solution was near.
Diplomacy was to be taken up
again on Wednesday during a
meeting in Moscow between
Russian President Vladimir Putin
and Swiss President Didier
Burkhalter, whose country cur-
rently chairs the Organization for
Security and Cooperation in
Europe. Russia and the West have
expressed a desire for the OSCE to
play a greater role in defusing the
tensions in Ukraine.
Ukrainian military operations
that began Monday to expunge
pro-Russia forces from the city of
Slovyansk were the interim gov-
ernments most ambitious effort
so far to quell weeks of unrest in
Ukraines mainly Russian-speak-
ing east.
Four government troops and 30
militants were killed in the gun-
battles, Ukraines interior minis-
ter said Tuesday. The pro-Russia
militia said 10 people were killed,
including civilians. There was no
immediate way to reconcile the
gures.
In the southwest, Kiev authori-
ties also attempted to reassert con-
trol over the region around
Odessa, a major Black Sea port, by
appointing a new governor on
Tuesday.
This nation of 46 million was
thrown into a political crisis after
its Moscow-leaning president,
whose base was in eastern
Ukraine, ed to Russia in February
following months of protests in
Kiev. Across the region in recent
weeks, armed insurgents who have
seized dozens of government
buildings and police stations are
now at odds with western and cen-
tral Ukraine, which seek closer
ties with Europe and largely back
the government in Kiev.
Interior Minister Arsen Avakov
gave the death toll on his
Facebook page Tuesday, adding
that 20 government troops were
also injured during fighting in
Slovyansk. He said about 800 pro-
Russia forces in and around
Slovyansk used large-caliber
weapons and mortars on Monday.
By Tuesday morning, Ukrainian
forces had taken hold of a key
checkpoint north of the city, deal-
ing a blow to insurgent lines of
communication.
In Donetsk, a major city 120
kilometers (75 miles) south of
Slovyansk, the airport was closed
during the day to international
flights following a government
order but reopened later.
In the afternoon, about 30 pro-
Russia militants armed with auto-
matic ries and grenade launchers
surrounded an Interior Ministry
base in Donetsk, demanding that
the troops inside not join any
government operations against
pro-Russia forces.
Ukraine tightens cordon around rebellious city
REUTERS
Pro-Russian armed separatists guard a street near an administrative building
in Donetsk, Ukraine.
By Jim Kuhnhenn
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON Top execu-
tives at major United States com-
panies are reconsidering or with-
drawing their participation in a
Russian international economic
forum amid requests from the
Obama administration in the face
of the growing crisis in Ukraine.
Some executives have been
pressed to cancel their attendance
direct appeals from ofcials such
as Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew
and Valerie Jarrett, a senior advis-
er to President Barack Obama.
The St. Petersburg International
Economic Forum, held this year
from May 22 to May 24, is an
annual affair prized by Russian
President Vladimir Putin as valida-
tion of his countrys economic
inuence.
Morgan Stanley Chairman
James Gorman, who is listed as a
forum participant, has cancelled
his plans to attend. And Goldman
Sachs chairman and CEO Lloyd
Blankfein, also listed as a partici-
pant in the forums website, is
also unlikely to participate, a per-
son briefed on the decision said.
The person was not authorized to
comment publicly by name and
insisted on anonymity.
Among those who participated
in last years forum but wont this
year are Citigroup CEO Michael
Corbat, Alcoa chief executive
Klaus Kleinfeld and
ConocoPhillips CEO Ryan Lance.
Citigroup spokesman Mark
Costiglio said that while Corbat
would not attend, the company
would have several other represen-
tatives at the forum.
Obviously companies will
have to make their own decisions,
but we believe that the most sen-
ior business executives traveling
to Russia to make high-prole
appearances with Russian govern-
ment ofcials at events such as
this would send an inappropriate
message, given Russias behav-
ior, including its clear failure to
carry out its commitments under
the Geneva accord, White House
spokeswoman Laura Lucas
Magnuson said.
She said U.S. government of-
cials will not attend the forum this
year.
The U.S. and the European
Union both ordered sanctions
against Russian ofcials and indi-
viduals in the aftermath of
Moscows annexation of the
Crimean Peninsula. They have
stopped short of imposing broad-
er sanctions on Russias econom-
ic sectors, but Obama and German
Chancellor Angela Merkel said
last week that they would move to
harsher penalties if Russia dis-
rupts Ukraines May 25 presiden-
tial elections.
White House urging U.S.
CEOs to skipRussian forum

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