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‘HALLOWEEN’ IS
MOVIE WINNER
LONG ROAD TO GO
FLORIDA GRAPPLES WITH PAIN IN WAKE OF HURRICANE
M-A RULING
THE PAL BAY
DATEBOOK PAGE 17 NATION PAGE 7 SPORTS PAGE 11

Leading local news coverage on the Peninsula


Monday • Oct 22, 2018 • XIX, Edition 54 www.smdailyjournal.com

Five vie for three San Carlos City Council seats


Development, budgetary measures define field
By Anna Schuessler the next four years are among the priorities
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF for the five candidates seeking seats on the
council this November.
How the next three San Carlos coun- With more than 1 million square feet of
cilmembers will approach the uptick of biotech office space to come online along
development planned in the city, monitor Industrial Road and approved mixed-use
its improving fiscal outlook and be a voice
Ken Castle John Laura Sara McDowell Adam Rak for the some 30,000 San Carlos residents in See RACE, Page 19
McDowell Parmer-Lohan

“If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it. But in this case, I’m not sure it’s broken.”
— Burlingame Councilman Ricardo Ortiz
Affordable
apartments
get rebuild
Redwood City’s Hallmark House Apartments
reconstruction to begin work in spring 2019
By Zachary Clark according to plan.
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF Affordability levels for the
apartment complex will be the
A Redwood City apartment com- same as before the fire: 30 percent
plex with 72 affordable units is of the units will be affordable at 50
finally getting rebuilt after a six- percent of area median income and
alarm fire displaced all of the ten- 70 percent of units will be afford-
ants in 2013. able at 60 percent of area median
Affordable housing developer income. There will be 70 one-bed-
NICK ROSE/DAILY JOURNAL KDF Communities, which owns room units, for which rent will
Burlingame officials are examining ways to improve parking regulations on Broadway, in recognition of concerns the Hallmark House Apartments range between $1, 330 and
raised by local merchants. property at 531 Woodside Road, $1,605, and one studio apartment.
notified the city earlier this month “It’s a big, important move for

Officials weigh Broadway parking that it had sorted out differences


with its investor and that con-
struction on the building is
expected to commence by the
the community, ” City Manager
Melissa Stevenson Diaz said. “We
know that it’s been a concern for
several years now that we lost that
Burlingame council recognizes merchants concerns, favor further study spring of 2019 if everything goes
See REBUILD, Page 5
By Austin Walsh ing to extend broken, ” he said, according to
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

Burlingame officials are seeking


permitted park-
ing meter time
limits along
video of the meeting.
Ortiz said he is always able to
find spaces in lots just behind
New design for hotel proposal
to alleviate merchant concerns Broadway to Broadway, and questioned whether By Zachary Clark meeting in March for not fitting
about parking problems along two hours. allocating city resources to DAILY JOURNAL STAFF with the character and scale of
Broadway, but stopped short of Noting ample addressing the issue would be a Half Moon Bay, among other rea-
approving investing heavily in availability of wise investment. Many of the sur- Residents and officials alike sons.
the issue until further study is spots on sur- rounding lots allow for longer celebrated the latest design for a The latest proposal includes the
completed. Ricardo Ortiz r o u n d i n g parking terms than the one-hour proposed Hyatt hotel in Half same number of rooms as before
The Burlingame City Council streets though, limits for meters on Broadway. Moon Bay, but there are persist- — 141 — but they’re spread out in
discussed Monday, Oct. 15, frus- councilmembers said they pre- The city’s Traffic, Safety and ing concerns about impacts the multiple buildings with open
trations raised by the business ferred to try to direct shoppers to Parking Commission discussed development will have on city space between them rather than in
community regarding the amount parking lots before taking on the issue previously and suggested utilities and traffic, and many one or two large buildings. It also
of time shoppers can stay in park- more comprehensive efforts. officials hire consultants to fur- questioned the need for another includes 161 parking spaces
ing spaces. Councilman Ricardo Ortiz said ther study the matter, which could hotel in the city. located mostly behind the build-
Representing the Broadway he was willing to consider the cost about $50,000. The new design was the subject ings and not along Highway 1,
Business Improvement District, concerns held by merchants, but Mayor Michael Brownrigg too of a Planning Commission study and 2,770 square feet of confer-
John Kevranian shared a petition also questioned the severity of the questioned the need for a study. session Oct. 9 and it’s a revision ence space — about 200 square
featuring nearly 50 signatures district’s parking problems. “I don’t think we should spend of a significantly different pro- feet less than before.
from local business owners seek- “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it. posal, which was criticized at a
But in this case, I’m not sure it’s See PARKING, Page 6 See HOTEL, Page 27
002 1022 mon:1022 mon 54 10/21/18 8:05 PM Page 1

2 Monday • Oct 22, 2018 FOR THE RECORD THE DAILY JOURNAL

Thought for the Day


“There is no such thing as notoriety in the
United States these days, let alone infamy.
Celebrity is all.”
— Christopher Hitchens, Anglo-American author and essayist

This Day in History


The U. S. government allowed the

1979 deposed Shah of Iran to travel to New


York for medical treatment — a deci-
sion that precipitated the Iran hostage
crisis.
In 1 7 4 6 , Princeton University was first chartered as the
College of New Jersey.
In 1 7 9 7 , French balloonist Andre-Jacques Garnerin made
the first parachute descent, landing safely from a height of
about 3,000 feet over Paris.
In 1 8 11 , composer and piano virtuoso Franz Liszt was
born in the Hungarian town of Raiding (RY’-ding) in pres-
ent-day Austria.
In 1 9 2 8 , Republican presidential nominee Herbert Hoover
spoke of the “American system of rugged individualism” in
a speech at New York’s Madison Square Garden.
In 1 9 3 4 , bank robber Charles “Pretty Boy” Floyd was shot
to death by federal agents and local police at a farm near East
Liverpool, Ohio.
REUTERS
In 1 9 6 2 , in a nationally broadcast address, President John
Gabriel Medina from Brazil surfs a wave during the WSL championship at Supertubo beach in Peniche, Portugal.
F. Kennedy revealed the presence of Soviet-built missile
bases under construction in Cuba and announced a quaran-
tine of all offensive military equipment being shipped to
the Communist island nation. In other news ...
In 1 9 8 1 , the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Clean Soles operator Rob Wickham needed to be different.
Organization was decertified by the federal government for Motorists stunned as metal previously said he typically keeps “To make people listen, you have
its strike the previous August. balls roll down Seattle street right shoes on display, while their to hook them somehow,” Ricks said.
In 1 9 8 6 , President Reagan signed into law sweeping tax-
SEATTLE — Authorities in Seattle other halves rest behind the counter. “We had to shake people up.”
overhaul legislation. A warrant says police had found a Nebraska has used several slogans
temporarily closed a street after
In 1 9 9 1 , the European Community and the European Free motorists were stunned by dozens of cash register behind the store, along in its efforts to entice tourists,
Trade Association concluded a landmark accord to create a large metal balls that spilled out of a with a backpack containing merchan- including, “America’s Frontier, ”
free trade zone of 19 nations by 1993. truck and cascaded down the street, dise worth $5, 000 and Ramirez- ‘’My Choice, Nebraska” and
damaging several cars. Godoy’s student ID. “Nebraska ... the good life.”
Birthdays A video taken by a person at the Court records show Ramirez-Godoy The slogan that debuted in 2014
scene Wednesday afternoon shows is charged with grand larceny, was: “Visit Nebraska. Visit nice.”
the balls loudly bouncing and rolling destruction of property and other One of the new video ads that will
down the street as a driver slowly counts. begin running next spring opens
backs up, apparently attempting to Despite the sweatshirt’s instruc- with a boy peering through oversized
escape the onslaught. tions, it’s unclear whether Ramirez- glasses into the camera. The back-
The Seattle Times reports that Godoy has a lawyer. ground music is quirky.
police spokesman Patrick Michaud Then comes a voice: “Nebraska is
said the balls appeared to be “really Nebraska’s message for kind of like that odd kid. Didn’t say
big ball bearings” and that it was tourists? ‘It’s not for everyone’ much in school. Slightly peculiar
unclear what caused the load of them maybe. But when you took the time
Actor Jeff Actor-comedian Reggae artist to fall out of the truck. LINCOLN, Neb. — Nebraska’s no to get to know him, turned out he was
Goldblum is 66. Bob Odenkirk is Shaggy is 50. Several cars were damaged but no longer nice, at least in its next pretty interesting.”
56. injuries were reported. tourism campaign. The new sales Another ad shows two people walk-
pitch has a decidedly self-deprecating ing and jumping over the toadstool
Black Panthers co-founder Bobby Seale is 82. Actor
Christopher Lloyd is 80. Actor Derek Jacobi is 80. Actor Tony
‘Call my lawyer’: sweater bent: “Nebraska. Honestly, it’s not rock formations at Toadstool
for everyone.” Geologic Park in northwestern
Roberts is 79. Movie director Jan de Bont is 75. Actress seized with stolen sneakers The slogan, which the Nebraska Nebraska. Words appearing on the
Catherine Deneuve is 75. Rock musician Leslie West ROANOKE, Va. — A Virginia store Tourism Commission unveiled photo say: “Famous for our flat, bor-
(Mountain) is 73. Former Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour is has had 20 right-foot shoes stolen Wednesday at a Nebraska City confer- ing landscape.”
71. Rock musician Greg Hawkes is 66. Movie director Bill over the course of three break-ins ence, will replace the current Ricks told the Lincoln Journal Star
Condon is 63. Actor Luis Guzman is 62. Actor-writer-producer this year. “Through My Eyes” campaign this that “the perception of a place to
Todd Graff is 59. Rock musician Cris Kirkwood is 58. The Roanoke Times reports spring, commission marketing man- visit in people’s heads is more
Olympic gold medal figure skater Brian Boitano is 55. Roanoke County police arrested 21- ager Jenn Gjerde said Thursday. important than the things to see and
Christian singer TobyMac is 54. Singer-songwriter John year-old Manuel Carlos Ramirez- State tourism director John Ricks do when you get there.”
Wesley Harding (Wesley Stace) is 53. Actress Valeria Golino is Godoy in Sunday’s burglary of Clean told the Omaha World-Herald that “Because, if they’re not here, they
52. Comedian Carlos Mencia is 51. Country singer Shelby Soles, seizing seven right-foot Nike because Nebraska consistently ranks don’t get to enjoy those things. ...
Lynne is 50. Movie director Spike Jonze is 49. Rapper Tracey Air Jordans and a sweatshirt printed as the least likely state tourists plan So we had to find a way to get people
Lee is 48. Actress Saffron Burrows is 46. with “Call My Lawyer.” to visit, the marketing campaign here,” he said.

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME


By David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek Lotto Local Weather Forecast
Unscramble these Jumbles, Oct. 20 Powerball Fantasy Five Mo nday : Cloudy in the morning then
one letter to each square,
Get the free JUST JUMBLE app • Follow us on Twitter @PlayJumble

to form four ordinary words. 69 4 8 10 19 23 becoming partly cloudy. Patchy fog in


16 54 57 62 23
the morning. Highs in the upper 50s to
TZYSE Powerball

Daily Four
mid 60s. West winds 10 to 20 mph.
Oct. 19 Mega Millions Mo nday ni g ht: Mostly clear in the
8 3 2 4 evening then becoming cloudy. Patchy
15 23 53 65 70 7
fog after midnight. Lows in the mid 50s.
GETIR Mega number
Daily three midday West winds 10 to 20 mph.
Oct. 20 Super Lotto Plus 2 1 3 Tues day : Cloudy in the morning then
becoming partly cloudy. Patchy fog in
19 11 36 38 45 18 Daily three evening the morning. Highs in the lower to mid 60s. West winds 10
ZABGEO Mega number

3 9 7
to 20 mph.
Tues day ni g ht: Partly cloudy. Lows in the mid 50s.
The Daily Derby race winners are Winning Spirit, No. Wednesday Through ThursdayPartly cloudy. Highs in the
09 in first place; Big Ben, No. 4, in second place; and 60s. Lows in the mid 50s.
Thurs day ni g ht: Mostly clear. Lows in the mid 50s.
RNYJIU Whirl Win, No. 6, in third place. The race time was
FridayPartly cloudy. Highs in the mid 60s to lower 70s.
clocked at 1:45.91.
Now arrange the circled letters
©2018 Tribune Content Agency, LLC to form the surprise answer, as The San Mateo Daily Journal Phone:. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . (650) 344-5200 Fax: (650) 344-5290
All Rights Reserved. suggested by the above cartoon. 1720 S. Amphlett Blvd, Suite 123, San Mateo, CA 94402 To Advertise: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ads@smdailyjournal.com
Publisher: Jerry Lee Editor in Chief: Jon Mays Events: . https://www.smdailyjournal.com/users/admin/calendar/event
jerry@smdailyjournal.com jon@smdailyjournal.com News: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . news@smdailyjournal.com
Print your answer here:
smdailyjournal.com scribd.com/smdailyjournal Delivery: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . distribution@smdailyjournal.com
(Answers tomorrow) twitter.com/smdailyjournal facebook.com/smdailyjournal Career: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . info@smdailyjournal.com
Jumbles: PLANK DITCH EXPIRE CLINIC
Saturday’s As a public service, the Daily Journal prints obituaries of approximately 200 words or less with a photo one time on the date of the family’s choosing if space allows. To submit
Answer: To win the game, the starter and the two obituaries, email information along with a jpeg photo to news@smdailyjournal.com. Free obituaries are edited for style, clarity, length and grammar. If you would like to have an
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003 1022 mon:1022 mon 54 10/21/18 8:06 PM Page 1

THE DAILY JOURNAL LOCAL Monday • Oct 22, 2018 3


Who was the Martin in Martins Beach? Police reports

There’s a charge for that


Someone stole electricity on Bounty
Drive in Foster City, it was reported at
8:40 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 11.

BURLINGAME
Petty theft. Someone stole items from a
store on Burlingame Avenue, it was reported
at 7:45 p.m. Tuesday Oct. 9.
Petty theft. Someone shoplifted items

N
ow that the U.S. Supreme Court has from a pharmacy on El Camino Real, it was
decided not to hear the Martins reported 8:17 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 6.
Beach case, which means the beach As s aul t. A fight occurred between two par-
near Half Moon Bay will stay open to the ties in a parking lot in Rollins Road, it was
public for at least the time being, there reported at 9:30 a.m. Saturday, Oct. 6.
remains one question: Who was the Martin Mal i ci o us mi s chi ef. Someone smashed
in Martins Beach? a vehicle window on Anza Boulevard, it was
The Rear View Mirror plowed through the reported at 7:09 a.m. Monday, Sept. 10.
extensive news coverage of the current court
fight between beach owner Vinod Khosla FOSTER CITY
and the Surfrider Foundation and failed to Warrant arres t. A man was arrested on a
find an answer. After dig- Gordon’s Chute.
$5,000 warrant for possession of drug para-
ging up old news stories was used by farmers on the coast, who could above the sea, were large warehouses from phernalia and for new charges of possession
from long defunct news- now ship their produce to market without which sacks of grain and other produce were of a controlled substance and drug parapher-
papers, we discovered he having to drive heavy wagons over the slid down the chute to the vessels below.” nalia on Foster City Boulevard, it was
was Nicholas Martin, coastal mountains to Redwood City or San In 1928, Roy Cloud wrote in his “History reported at 3:42 a.m. Tuesday, Oct. 9.
who died in 1915 and is Mateo. of San Mateo County” that Martin “con- Auto burg l ary. Someone broke into a
buried in Union The Redwood City Democrat reported on stantly increased his holdings and was the vehicle on Chess Drive, it was reported at
Cemetery in Redwood the chute in its July 12, 1873 edition: “The owner of Martin’s Beach,” which was origi- 10:36 p.m. Monday, Oct. 8.
City. steamer Monterey was at the chute lately and nally part of the Alviso land grant. Notice Reckl es s dri v i ng . Someone was seen
Nicholas Martin According to cemetery took aboard the balance of grain on hand, the apostrophe to show ownership. Most of speeding on Port Royal Avenue, it was
records, Martin came to some 5,000 sacks. Templeton and Company today’s news stories about the court dispute reported at 6:38 p.m. Monday, Oct. 8.
California from New York in the early are hauling considerable lumber to the chute drop the apostrophe in favor of Martins As s aul t. Someone was assaulted on Beach
1850s and settled on the coast south of Half and will have a sailing vessel to load as soon Beach. Park Boulevard, it was reported at 3:55 a.m.
Moon Bay. In addition to owning the beach, as they have sufficient cargo.” An advertisement in the 1931 Standard Thursday, Sept. 27.
his primary source of income was farming. According to historian Frank Stanger’s Democrat newspaper made the name desig- Reckl es s dri v i ng . A man was arrested for
Apparently, he was very successful because “History of San Mateo County,” the chute at nation clear by saying “The Sun is Shining reckless driving on Beach Park Boulevard it
he became deeply involved in the construc- the mouth of Tunitas Creek “was the most was reported at 1:53 p.m. Wednesday, Sept.
tion of “Gordon’s Chute,” a huge wooden daring attempt to create a port on our coast See HISTORY, Page 17 26.
slide designed to move cargo from high side.” He said a high scaffolding was built to
coastal cliffs to waiting ships below, pro- support a chute 350 feet long.
viding one of the more colorful chapters of “At the outer end a swinging portion of the
coastal history. chute was supported by a derrick and could be
Named for lumberman Alexander Gordon, lowered to the decks of vessels which
the 45 percent angled chute built in 1872 anchored just beyond the surf,” Stanger
was destroyed in a storm in 1885. The chute wrote. “On top of the bluff, over 150 feet
004 1022 mon:1022 mon 54 10/19/18 12:38 PM Page 1

4 Monday • Oct 22, 2018 LOCAL THE DAILY JOURNAL


005 1022 mon:1022 mon 54 10/21/18 8:06 PM Page 1

THE DAILY JOURNAL LOCAL Monday • Oct 22, 2018 5


Redwood City asks voters for sales tax hike
By Zachary Clark year than they were the enforcement and firefighters, I want people in the fire department, were eliminated,
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF year before and they’ll to be safe,” Councilwoman Shelly Masur along with a few city programs.
double within 10 years. said. “And issues around families and kids Residents often wonder why cuts and sales
Redwood City voters on Nov. 6 will be She added that 60 percent are super important to me. When we’re talk- tax increases are being discussed in the
asked if the city’s sales tax should increase to 70 percent of the city’s ing about cuts to Parks and Rec and library midst of a development boom, and while
by a half cent — upping the rate from 8.75 unfunded pension liabili- cuts, those are going to hit kids and families revenue has increased as a result of construc-
percent to 9.25 percent — which supporters ty is for people currently and particularly hit our most disadvantaged tion in recent years, it hasn’t increased
argue is crucial to curbing budget challenges living in retirement, not families. … I feel it’s incumbent on me to do enough to cover rising costs.
largely brought on by rising pension costs. current employees, and everything I can to make sure we don’t have Diaz said the city receives $5 million
There are no official opponents of what’s Melissa the city’s pension liabil- to make those kinds of cuts.” more in property tax and $2 million more in
known as Measure RR, but plenty of resi- Stevenson Diaz ity likely won’t level off That said, Masur suggested those pro- sales tax from downtown compared to five
dents have disparaged the proposal. for another 10 to 20 grams comprise such a significant portion years ago.
Opponents of sales taxes generally argue years. The city also spent some $20 million of the city’s budget that it’s almost impossi- “Had there been no reinvestment down-
that such measures are regressive and hit the on the Docktown relocation program. ble to avoid affecting them when cuts have town, instead of a $12 million deficit, we’d
poor hardest, and tax fatigue has undoubted- Measure RR is expected to bring in $8 to be made. be looking at a $17 million deficit,” she
ly set in for many; a countywide half-cent million annually. It has to be approved by a “[Public safety, parks and recreation and said, adding that sales tax revenue elsewhere
sales tax for transportation is also on the majority of voters and the one-half cent libraries] are 82 percent of our costs. Those in the city has been stagnant.
November ballot and if both measures pass sales tax would not apply to groceries and are the biggest cost drivers, the places Diaz also said Measure RR was only pro-
then Redwood City’s sales tax rate would be medicine. All funds generated by the measure you’re going to look to make cuts and have posed after the city exhausted numerous
9.75 percent. will go into the city’s general fund and none an impact on the budget overall,” Masur other budget-balancing strategies, including
City Manager Melissa Stevenson Diaz of those funds can be taken by the state. said. “Obviously you can make cuts in other pension reform, staffing reductions,
said if the city does nothing then it faces a If the measure doesn’t pass, supporters say places, but if it’s a small percentage it’s not increased development fees and a business
deficit of $12 million — 10 percent of the public safety services, including the number going to really address the problem.” licensing fee.
city’s operating budget — in five years and of on-duty firefighters, paramedics and To balance the budget for fiscal year 2018- “We exhausted all of those things before
pension obligations are the primary reason police officers; afterschool youth programs 2019, the City Council approved $3.7 mil- coming to voters,” Diaz said. “This is one of
why. Diaz said within four years pension and library hours and services are at stake. lion in cuts, which meant one filled staff many steps, but by no means the first step in
costs will be $10 million more each single “I want a city that has effective law position and 14.5 vacant positions, largely trying to right-size our finances.”

In 2016, KDF Communities submitted Winning lottery Local briefs


REBUILD
Continued from page 1
plans and obtained a building permit. The
company was set to begin construction by
December 2017 and compete the project
ticket sold in Morgan Hill
One person in Morgan Hill purchased a
Anyone with knowledge of the incident is
asked to contact police at 616-7100.
within a year, but that never happened. California Mega Millions lottery ticket that
housing so we’re really glad to be at this
The fire is believed to have started in a matched five of the six numbers on Friday Air quality shows improvement
third-floor unit where a now-deceased man night’s $1 billion jackpot drawing, a ticket
stage. The city took an active role to bring was cooking at about 1:45 a.m. The fire that will collect nearly $3.5 mullion, Air quality in many parts of the Bay Area
the partners to the table and make sure that then moved through the 1964 complex, according to lottery officials. is expected to improve, with most areas
they got to the point of moving on so I’m which was not outfitted with sprinklers. The drawing was held at 7:45 p.m. Friday. expected to go from the “moderate” reading
pleased that’s happened and we’re now on a One-hundred people were displaced and 21 The winning numbers were 15, 23, 53, 65, of the past few days to a “good” reading, the
path to have those units back and available people were injured. 70 with a Mega number of 7. Bay Area Air Quality Management District
to the community.” Many former tenants at Hallmark House The ticket that matched five of six num- said.
Over the past several months, the city Apartments sued the owner for the lack of bers without a matching Mega number was The only exceptions are the “Coast and
has fined KDF Communities as much as sprinklers and smoke detectors at the build- sold at an AM/PM gas station at 18605 Central Bay” zone (San Francisco, Marin,
$1,075 a day for failing to rebuild the com- ing. Monterey Road in Morgan Hill. The payout San Mateo and the western edge of Contra
plex and maintain the site, though weed After the fire and another on Woodside for the ticket is $3,404,526. Costa County) and the “northern zone”, pri-
abatement was completed over the summer. Road that gutted another building, the City Tuesday’s Mega Millions jackpot is esti- marily made up of communities in Sonoma
To finance the project, the owners of the Council approved a loan forgiveness pro- mated to be $1.6 billion. and Solano counties. In both of those zones,
building plan to request an allocation of gram for property owners required to install air quality is expected to remain in the “mod-
tax-exempt bonds and tax credits in fire sprinklers to their older buildings that Man arrested on erate” category.
November, according to a Redwood City has a rent stabilization component to it.
VOICE blog post. Stevenson Diaz said the The Fire Safety First Program provides
robbery, elder abuse charges Hillsborough hosts preparedness drill
application process is competitive, and an incentive for owners to retrofit the at- Officers arrested a man on suspicion of A town-wide drill was held in
according to the blog post, construction risk residential buildings during a five-year robbery, kidnapping, assault and elder abuse Hillsborough to simulate a large-scale emer-
will begin immediately after the applica- voluntary compliance period in exchange after the victim alerted them to the crime gency event such as an earthquake.
tion is accepted. for an agreement to slow rent increases. Thursday, police said. The drill, which ran from 10 a.m. to 1
After KDF Communities bought the All properties with four or more units George Havili, 21, of Citrus Heights was p.m., focused on the formation and duties of
building for $8 million in 2003, the city built before July 1, 1989, must install arrested and booked at the San Mateo County a walking team during emergencies and sce-
provided a loan to the company to help sprinklers within five years. Those who do Jail on suspicion of the crimes, which the nario simulations of what they may
refinance the building and convert the so voluntarily will be able to secure a low- victim said were committed Oct. 13. encounter along their routes.
rental units from market rate to below mar- income loan from the city which may be for- The victim was attacked outside a San Neighboring Burlingame recently held a
ket rate. The terms of the loan require the given if property owners agree not to raise Bruno business, according to police. The similar event, during which community
units to be affordable to very-low-income rents more than 5 percent a year for at least victim reported being physically assaulted, members also built their emergency
renters until 2058 no matter who owns the five years. threatened, moved to a different location and response skills.
building. robbed, police said.
006 1022 mon:1022 mon 54 10/21/18 8:07 PM Page 1

6 Monday • Oct 22, 2018 NATION/ LOCAL THE DAILY JOURNAL

Democrats eye revival of Russia Authorities hunt for 2nd


suspect in Georgia police shooting
SNELLVILLE, Ga. — Two teenage sus-
Around the nation
charges of aggravated assault and felony
murder.

probe if they win House election


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Here’s a look at what Democrats are likely
pects, including one who is still being
sought by police, are facing charges in con-
nection with the fatal shooting of a Georgia
“Tafahree Maynard needs to turn himself
in,” Gwinnett County Police Chief Butch
Ayers said at a press conference.
to investigate if they take the House majori- police officer who was killed while respond- Police said Maynard wasn’t found in a
WASHINGTON — House Democrats are ty. ing to a suspicious vehicle parked near a house in the county that was searched
expected to re-open the investigation into school, authorities said Sunday. Sunday evening. Reports said a SWAT team
Russian interference in the 2016 election if Money laundering Authorities said they believe 18-year-old had deployed to the house but few details
they win the majority in November. But they Tafahree Maynard fatally shot Officer were provided.
Schiff has repeatedly said a priority for
would have to be selective in what they Democrats would be investigating whether Antwan Toney on Saturday afternoon in the A second suspect, 19-year-old Isaiah
investigate. Russians used laundered money for transac- Snellville area, Gwinnett County Police Pretlow, was charged with aggravated
California Rep. Adam Schiff, the top tions with the Trump Organization. said in a statement. Maynard remained at assault for allegedly pointing a firearm at an
Democrat on the House intelligence panel, Trump’s businesses have benefited from large early Sunday and should be considered officer during the pursuit after Toney’s fatal
has said his party would have to “ruthlessly Russian investment over the years. Schiff armed and dangerous, police said. He faces shooting, police said.
prioritize the most important matters first.” said he wants to know whether “this is the hour limit for meters is insufficient for their
The Republican-led Intelligence
Committee was the only House panel to
investigate Russian meddling, and its inves-
tigation is now closed. Republicans say they
leverage that the Russians have” over
Trump.
Other committees might also want to look
PARKING
into money laundering, including the House Continued from page 1
visit.
A source of the issue is the district’s tran-
sition from a retail center to a focus on serv-
found no evidence of collusion between ices, said Kevranian, and those patronizing
Financial Services panel. restaurants, fitness centers or salons in the
Russia and President Donald Trump’s cam- It’s unclear whether Mueller is probing the money,” he said. “At least, not right
paign. area need more time to park their car than
money laundering related to the president’s now.” they would if only quickly visiting a shop.
Democrats say Republicans ignored key business. Vice Mayor Donna Colson said rather “We have received many complaints from
facts and important witnesses and want to
than pay for the study, she would support the public,” said Kevranian.
restart parts of the investigation if they win More witnesses improving signs showing shoppers where In deference to the concerns held by mer-
the House. But some Democrats also worry
that there could be a political cost if they The Democrats issued a list in March of they can find available spaces nearby and chants, Brownrigg said he supported
overreach. several dozen people whom the committee measure the effectiveness of that effort. extending the parking meter limits.
hadn’t yet interviewed when the Russia Furthermore, she proposed printing maps “I’m in favor of changing it to two hours
Schiff and other lawmakers say they are
closely watching special counsel Robert investigation was shut down. Democrats of the area indicating where lots are avail- because the merchants are asking for it and I
Mueller’s Russia investigation and the would want to call in some — but probably able and placing them in storefronts so don’t see the downside to it,” he said, recog-
Senate’s Russia probe to look for gaps that not all — of those witnesses. Former Trump shoppers are aware of all their options. nizing the time limit near Burlingame
campaign advisers Michael Flynn, Paul She also suggested city officials conduct Avenue is two hours as well.
they could fill. And if Mueller issues any find-
ings, their investigative plans could change. Manafort, Rick Gates, and George an independent survey of local merchants to But acknowledging a majority of his col-
“My sense is that we want to be precise,” Papadopoulos are among them. They all glean a fuller understanding of the perspec- leagues wished to study the issue further fol-
says California Rep. Eric Swalwell, a pleaded guilty to various charges in the tives held regarding the district’s parking lowing the establishment of the new signs,
Democratic member of the intelligence Mueller probe and have cooperated with problems. Brownrigg said he would follow their lead.
prosecutors. “We need to do more wayfinding and maps “See if it improves and if it doesn’t … we
panel.
and work with businesses and outreach and may have to step up and do the study,” he
see how that goes and maybe do a more for- said.
mal convening to get more direct feedback,” For her part though, Councilwoman Ann
she said. Keighran suggested she favored the more
For his part, Kevranian said he supported comprehensive study and expected officials
such a proposal and agreed paying $50,000 will need to invest in the initiative eventu-
for a professional study is unnecessary. ally.
He did maintain though that many mer- “I can go along with this but I do think at
chants along Broadway are hearing dissatis- some point we’ll have to do this parking
faction from shoppers who feel the one- study,” she said.

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007 1022 mon:1022 mon 54 10/21/18 8:07 PM Page 1

THE DAILY JOURNAL NATION Monday • Oct 22, 2018 7


‘I don’t feel real’: Mental stress mounting after Michael did parts of New Orleans after the metro area
By Jay Reeves
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS flooded.
Dr. Irwin Redlener of the National Center
PANAMA CITY, Fla. — Amy Cross has a for Disaster Preparedness at Columbia
hard time explaining the stress of living in University observed widespread, long-last-
a city that was splintered by Hurricane ing psychological effects after Katrina. One
Michael. She’s fearful after hearing gun- study found that, five years after the storm,
shots at night, and she’s confused because parents reported more than 37 percent of
she no longer recognizes the place where children had been clinically diagnosed with
she’s spent her entire 45 years. depression, anxiety, or a behavior disorder.
“I just know I don’t feel real, and home Redlener says that’s in part because par-
doesn’t feel like home at all,” Cross said. ents are overwhelmed and are less able to
Health workers say they are seeing signs buffer their children from bad experiences.
of mental problems in residents more than a “They survived a major catastrophic
week after Michael, and the issues could event, which is good. But everything they
continue as a short-term disaster turns into a knew is gone,” he said.
long-term recovery that will take years. Research scientist David Murphey said
Tony Averbuch, who leads a disaster med- children look to their parents for cues as
ical assistance team that is seeing 80 to 100 REUTERS how to respond to completely new and
patients daily in tents set up in a parking Mark Drake, 55, of Tallahassee, helps remove a stuffed blue marlin from a home damaged by frightening situations.
lot of the badly damaged Bay Medical Hurricane Michael. “If they see parents kind of falling apart at
Sacred Heart hospital, said some people are that people have been exposed to circum- breaking,” she said. the seams, that’s going to create anxiety for
showing signs of fraying. stances that are well beyond what they nor- Signs of trauma aren’t a surprise for the children as well,” said Murphey.
It’s not hard to imagine: Just getting to mally deal with day to day,” said Averbuch, those who studied people after Hurricane Dr. Emily Harville, an associate professor
the treatment site involves navigating of Bloomfield Hills, Michigan. Katrina in 2005. Damage in Mexico Beach at Tulane University’s School of Public
streets with roadblocks and fallen utility For Cross, that meant getting new pre- was similar to that in southern Health and Tropical Medicine in New
lines, and the hospital building itself was scriptions for medicine she takes for Mississippi, where entire communities Orleans, said most people will be back to
ripped open by Michael’s powerful winds. depression. were flattened by wind and storm surge, and where they were within a year or so, but oth-
“In any kind of disaster what we find is “We’re in shock. This is a lot. It’s heart- Panama City could take years to rebuild, as ers will have difficulty for a longer period.

Bolton faces tense talks with Russia over nuclear treaty


By Jim Heintz with President Ronald was quoted as telling state news agency Tass but also all who cherish the world, especial-
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Reagan. that leaving the treaty “would be a very dan- ly a world without nuclear weapons, must
Trump said Russia has gerous step.” declare this, ” Gorbachev was quoted as
MOSCOW — U. S. National Security violated terms of the It would “cause the most serious condem- telling the Interfax news agency.
Adviser John Bolton faces two days of treaty that prohibit the nation from all members of the internation- Western reaction was mixed.
high-tension talks in Moscow beginning U. S. and Russia from al community who are committed to securi- British Defense Secretary Gavin
Monday after President Donald Trump possessing, producing or ty and stability.” Williamson said the U.K. stands “absolute-
announced his intention to withdraw from a test-flying ground- Konstatin Kosachev, head of the foreign ly resolute” with Washington on the issue
landmark nuclear weapons treaty. launched nuclear cruise affairs committee in Russia’s upper house of and called on the Kremlin to “get its house
Trump’s announcement that the United John Bolton missiles with a range of parliament, said on Facebook that a U.S. in order,” according to the Financial Times.
States would leave the Intermediate-Range 300 to 3,400 miles. withdrawal from the treaty would mean German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas
Nuclear Forces, or INF, treaty brought sharp Russia has repeatedly denied allegations “mankind is facing full chaos in the nuclear said that Trump’s announcement “raises dif-
criticism on Sunday from Russian officials that it has produced and tested such a mis- weapons sphere.” ficult questions for us and Europe,” but
and from former Soviet President Mikhail sile. “Washington’s desire to turn back poli- noted that Russia hasn’t cleared up allega-
Gorbachev, who signed the treaty in 1987 Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov tics cannot be supported. Not only Russia, tions of violating the treaty.
008 1022 mon:1022 mon 54 10/21/18 8:08 PM Page 1

8 Monday Oct 22, 2018


• NATION/ WORLD THE DAILY JOURNAL

Turkey plans to reveal details of Democrats look to Latinos to provide midterm support
probe into Khashoggi's killing By Nicholas Riccardi
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Comment on
Florida-based Latino pollster.
About 25 percent of Latino voters
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS or share this story at are reliable Republicans, but others
LAS VEGAS — Patricia Lugo rattled www.smdailyjournal.com seem willing to support the GOP amid
ISTANBUL — In a sign of growing pressure on Saudi off a string of fierce adjectives the solid economy.
Arabia, Turkey said it will announce details of its investiga- describing life under the Trump admin- “From their perspective, this
tion into the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi on istration — “ugly,” “bad,” “terrible.” positioned to flex their muscles and Trump’s crazy and a bigoted loud-
Tuesday and U.S. congressional leaders said the Gulf king- She joined a cluster of other Latinos punish the president for his actions mouth, but we deal with people like
dom — in particular its crown prince — should face severe in a Las Vegas shopping center in list- and rhetoric targeting Latino immi- this in every day of our lives,” Amadi
consequences for the death of the writer in the Saudi con- ing grievances against the president grants — most recently when he said.
sulate in Istanbul. that included referring to Mexican pledged to send troops to the border The relatively tepid showing for
The announcement on Sunday by immigrants as rapists and separating to block a northbound caravan of Democrats so far from some Latino
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan parents from children at the border. Central American migrants. voters was evident this month when
that he will “go into detail” about the Lugo is determined to support Latinos had been poised to play a the Democratic Congressional
Khashoggi case in a speech in parliament Democrats as they fight back, but prominent role in several House races Campaign Committee, which sup-
heightened hopes for some clarity in a she’s alarmed that a handful of friends in California and Senate races in ports House candidates, trimmed its
case that has been shrouded in mystery, and family have given up on voting. Florida and the southwest. financial support from candidates
conflicting accounts and shocking alle- “They say it doesn’t do anything,” But as Election Day nears, polling trying to oust Republican congress-
gations since Khashoggi, a critic of said Lugo, 56, a promoter for a shows it’s more affluent and predom- men in one west Texas district and
Prince Mohammed bin Salman, disap- footwear chain. “And it doesn’t mat- inantly white college-educated another in California’s Central
ter who votes because (politicians) women with whom Democrats have Valley.
Tayyip Ergodan peared after entering the consulate on Oct made the most inroads, while Latinos
2. do whatever they want anyway.” In Texas, polls indicate enough
Erdogan spoke after Saudi Arabia, in a statement early Trump rode to his improbable vic- haven’t fully turned against Trump Latinos are sticking with Republican
Saturday, finally acknowledged that 59-year-old Khashoggi tory in 2016 by winning a troika of and his Republican Party. Sen. Ted Cruz that he is likely to fend
had died in the consulate, though its explanation that he was Rust Belt states where there are rela- “Donald Trump is the most hostile off a challenge from Democratic Rep.
killed in a “fistfight” was met with international skepticism tively few Latinos. This was sup- president to Hispanics in American Beto O’Rourke. And in Florida,
and allegations of a cover-up designed to absolve Prince posed to be the election Latinos history, yet Donald Trump has Arizona and Nevada, Democrats
Mohammed of direct responsibility. Saudi Arabia said 18 struck back. between a 25 percent and 35 percent remain neck-and-neck with
Saudis were arrested and that several top intelligence offi- Many Democrats presumed that approval rating among some Republicans in Senate races.
cials were fired. Latinos, who are largely clustered in Hispanics — higher than 40 percent Still, there are positive signs for
Pro-government media in Turkey have reported a different a handful of states, would be better- in Florida,” said Fernand Amadi, a Democrats among Latinos.
narrative, saying a Saudi hit squad of 15 people traveled to
Turkey to kill the columnist for The Washington Post before
leaving the country hours later in private jets. Medicaid expansion becomes key issue in red states
By Grant Schulte gather over 100 petition signatures in the health insurance program to more
and Geoff Mulvihill Perkins County, where roughly 70 per- lower-income Americans. Another bal-
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS cent of the 1,963 registered voters are lot initiative, in Montana, seeks to
Republicans. Tatum, 66, also is a raise a tobacco tax to keep funding a
LINCOLN, Neb. — For nearly a Republican but differs from most of his Medicaid expansion that is set to
decade, opposition to former President party’s elected officials. He supports expire.
Barack Obama’s health care law has the Medicaid expansion because his job It also has become a focal point in
been a winning message for Nebraska as an ambulance driver brings him into numerous governor’s races.
Republicans. frequent contact with working people The election-year push in conserva-
It’s helped them win every statewide who can’t afford insurance but earn too tive-leaning states for one of the main
office, control the Legislature and hold much to qualify for regular Medicaid. aspects of Obama’s health care law has
all the state’s congressional seats. So it “When I was circulating petitions, surprised many Republican lawmakers
was something of a surprise for Bob pretty much everyone signed it without after they spent years attacking it.
Tatum when he set out to ask his fellow objection,” Tatum said. “I didn’t expect Most GOP lawmakers in Idaho
Nebraskans if they would back a ballot that to be the case in rural Nebraska.” staunchly opposed expansion efforts
initiative to expand Medicaid, one of Nebraska isn’t the only conservative there and cast it as a welfare program
the pillars of Obama’s health overhaul. state where residents are bypassing a that would deepen the state’s reliance
“There seems to be a lot more support legislature that has refused to expand on the federal government. Supporters
than I anticipated,” said Tatum, who Medicaid. responded by gathering more than
lives in a remote town near the Voters in two other Republican-dom- 75,000 petition signatures, far exceed-
Colorado border. inated states, Idaho and Utah, also will ing the minimum threshold to qualify
It took him little more than a week to decide in November whether to expand for the ballot.

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009 1022 mon:1030 FRI 64 10/21/18 8:08 PM Page 1

THE DAILY JOURNAL OPINION Monday • Oct. 22, 2018 9

Millbrae
Letters to the editor
structive discourse with each other, demolished Peninsula Hospital to
Yes on opera, no
Editor,
The city of Millbrae and some its
merchants have high hopes that the
with our residents and business
owners, as well as with neighbor-
ing cities and agencies. I am proud
of the positive and collaborative
build market rate housing few people
can afford. This is happening despite
being the biggest threat to public
health and safety: a lack of afford-
on Proposition 5
I
creation of a Business Improvement direction of our current council able housing for medical workers and f you want to understand opera and learn to love it,
District may solve various of their relating to internal issues and their seniors. there’s a gem of a class offered by the San Mateo Adult
current downtown problems, includ- demonstrated ability to work posi- Recently, U.S. Rep. Jackie Speier, School. And now that live productions of the New York
ing cleanliness (“Business improve- tively with others on regional D-San Mateo and state Sen. Jerry Metropolitan Opera are available at local movie theaters on
ment district plan takes shape” in the issues. Hill, D-San Mateo, wrote letters to some Saturday mornings, opera is available without spend-
Oct. 12 edition of the Daily I am familiar with all three of the district asking it to hold a hear- ing big bucks. That being said, there is nothing like a live
Journal). these councilmembers — each is ing to explore affordable housing performance which showcases beautiful voices, music,
As a resident of San Mateo since committed to representing our needs instead of what is drama and sensational scenery.
1976, I have observed a deteriora- entire Belmont community, and is planned. Congresswoman Speier In 2011, Shari Deghi and a friend decided to teach a course
tion on the appearance of our down- fully invested in listening to the wrote, “…it will be a loss to the in opera appreciation and found a welcoming home at the
town even though we have a down- needs and concerns of residents as community if primarily market rate Adult School where Deghi taught ESL. Twenty-five students
town association. seen in the shaping of the Belmont housing is created on district proper- showed up for the first class and it’s been growing strong
Perhaps Millbrae officials and General Plan Update and Vision ty.”  However, at its most recent ever since with a cadre who return each year to listen to and
merchants should visit the down- Statement. board meeting, the district appeared discuss the Met’s current simulcast productions.
town areas of San Carlos and Please join me in voting for to disregard the letters and maintain ***
Burlingame and get some good Lieberman, Mates and Stone to con- its course. I asked Deghi how she
ideas. tinue to move Belmont forward pos- On Oct. 9, another letter outlining came to love opera:
itively. the legal use of public land was sent “I never really liked or
to the district by Community Legal even enjoyed opera until my
Oscar López-Guerra Services for East Palo Alto, Housing ex-husband taught me how
San Mateo David Braunstein Leadership Council and Public to understand it. It was the
Belmont Interest Law Group. The letter warned early 1970s and we were liv-
Proposition 6 that the district may be vulnerable to ing just north of New York
a lawsuit if it proceeds with a process City, and his idea of fun was
Editor,
that is in conflict with state law. to “torture” me by playing
Want to know a good reason to It is essential that the district
Why I’m voting Bolbol operas on his phonograph
vote yes on Proposition 6? One of change its course and work to pro- and making me guess which
the projects that the state is doing Editor,   vide affordable housing for the pub- one it was. Then, which aria
with our money from the raise in There’s a growing tide of support lic good. The next District Board he was playing from which
our gas taxes is an express lane in for Deniz Bolbol for Belmont City Meeting is scheduled for 6:30 on opera. Then which singer
San Mateo County. They want us to Council. The incumbents are run- Thursday, Oct. 25 at Burlingame City was singing which aria from
pay more money for gas so they can ning as a slate, just as they vote as Hall. Interested members of the pub- which opera. After two years
charge us more to drive on our free- a slate on all important issues. Two lic should attend. of this, my head was buzzing but my ears got pretty sharp.
ways. Don’t our politicians know of the incumbents are heavily fund- Before he’d take me to an opera at the Met, we’d listen to a
why they call them freeways. ed by special interests — real record of the opera while reading along in the libretto. This
Cynthia Cornell
estate, unions and political insid- was in 1972 before supertitles became common in every
Robert Nice ers. Recently, Belmont residents Burlingame
opera house which translates the opera into English as it’s
received a mailer from the incum- sung. ... The first opera I ever saw was ‘La Boheme’ by
Redwood City
bent slate, featuring nothing but No on Belmont Puccini. My enjoyment has been greatly enhanced by learn-
Belmont political endorsements — not one measures CC and WW ing about the opera before seeing it. There’s so much to take
idea or policy. Editor, in. The story is flashing by on the supertitles, the characters
Why I am supporting the incum- Bolbol does not seek political Belmont Measures CC and WW deal are singing their hearts out, magnificent sets and costumes
bents in Belmont endorsements or accept industry with changing the elected offices of are full of minute details to study, many operas include bal-
Editor, donations — she is an independent the city clerk and the city treasurer to lets, and underpinning all of it is the orchestra with ever-
As a former mayor of Belmont, I voice putting resident interests appointed positions. As the Belmont changing colors and passion. It seems impossible to grasp
served on the Belmont City Council ahead of special interests. She is the City Council has consistently dis- it all at once.”
from 2007-2015. I have been a res- only candidate who heard resident played a lack of transparency and ***
ident since 1995, a parent of three concerns about lack of wildfire pre- Fall classes have already started but you can check it today
children who have attended schools favors appointing previously
vention, planned over-development appointed commissioners to the or the following Monday at the San Mateo Senior Center from
in our community and served the of four- to five-story high-density 2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. A charge for one class is $15, or you
community as a teacher, library council once a vacancy occurs, do we
residential replacing our downtown, really need this tight club of politi- can call the Adult School for more information.
committee member and youth and failure to permanently protect ***
sports coach. cians (who seem to always agree with
our open spaces. That’s why I’m vot- each other) to now also control two When I first heard about Proposition 5, I wondered why it
I understand how the city oper- ing for Bolbol, and only Bolbol. was necessary because seniors already have tax protection
ates, its needs and the steps being vital city departments?
I urge a rejection of these measures. when they move. Since Proposition 13 became law, voters
taken to make it even better. We Kristin Mercer have added further protections for seniors. Homeowners who
need to preserve our village feel, The current council ignores public
Belmont input and approves virtually all rec- are older than 55 — or who are disabled or whose house has
open space and neighborhoods been destroyed by natural disaster — can make a one-time
while still meeting the needs of our ommendations from appointed depart-
What’s going on with the ment heads without comment. Why “transfer” of the very low tax value of their home to a new
changing community through traf- house, as long as its market value is not higher than the old
fic improvements, healthy recre- Peninsula Health Care District? would that be? Department head job
one. But Proposition 5 would allow all homeowners older
security? Do we really need more con-
ational programs and facilities, Editor, than 55 to use this same tax break to buy a more expensive
trol by the City Council or should the
economic development, smart and What’s going on with the house, as many times as they want.
voters preserve a last vestige of inde-
balanced growth, public safety and Peninsula Health Care District and Homeowners — including those older than 55 — also
pendence as intended by the city char-
improved infrastructure. why should people in San Bruno, have another tax shelter because in 1986, voters prevented
ter. Vote no on these outrageous City
Councilmembers Warren Hillsborough, Millbrae, Burlingame, reassessments for transfers between parents and children,
Council infringements.
Lieberman, Julia Mates and Charles San Mateo and Foster City care? The which happens about 70,000 times a year. Even if they
Stone are committed to these val- district receives property tax money Dirk van Ulden don’t want to live in houses they inherit, beneficiaries can
ues. They have shown this through from those cities, yet plans to use Belmont convert them into rentals or vacation homes and keep the
their commitment to civil and con- publicly-owned land at the site of the tax break. So seniors already have protections from steep
property tax increases and don’t really need another tax
OUR MISSION: shelter.
It is the mission of the Daily Journal to be the most Proposition 5 is sponsored by the California Association
accurate, fair and relevant local news source for of Realtors, whose members would profit from increased
those who live, work or play on the MidPeninsula.
By combining local news and sports coverage, home sales. The campaign committee it is sponsoring has
Jerry Lee, Publisher BUSINESS STAFF: analysis and insight with the latest business, raised $7.2 million so far. The association says that
Jon Mays, Editor in Chief
Michael Davis Charles Gould lifestyle, state, national and world news, we seek to California has an “unfair moving penalty” that makes it
Paul Moisio Jeff Palter provide our readers with the highest quality unaffordable for many seniors to move when their homes are
Nathan Mollat, Sports Editor Joe Rudino Joy Uganiza information resource in San Mateo County.
Todd Waibel Our pages belong to you, our readers, and we too big or too far away from family. But the independent
Erik Oeverndiek, Copy Editor/Page Designer Legislative Analyst’s Office points out that 85,000 home-
choose to reflect the diverse character of this
Dave Newlands, Production Manager INTERNS, CORRESPONDENTS, CONTRACTORS: dynamic and ever-changing community. owners older than 55 already move to new houses each year.
Robert Armstrong Charlie Chapman
Will Nacouzi, Production Assistant Jim Clifford Talia Fine Proposition 5 would initially reduce property tax revenues
Kerry McArdle, Marketing & Events
Brooke Hanshaw Robert Hutchinson SMDAILYJOURNAL.COM to schools by $100 million a year; to local governments by
Tom Jung Shavonne Lin another $100 million a year and eventually by $1 billion a
Austin Walsh, Senior Reporter Diego Emilio Perez Vishu Prathikanti Follow us on Twitter and Facebook:
Nick Rose Joel Snyder facebook.com/smdailyjournal
year each.
REPORTERS: Gary Whitman No surprise that many housing advocacy groups are not
Terry Bernal, Zachary Clark, Anna Schuessler twitter.com/smdailyjournal
backing Proposition 5. Opponents argue that the measure
Susan E. Cohn, Senior Correspondent: Events Online edition at scribd.com/smdailyjournal isn’t going to help the vast majority of Californians who are
being squeezed by the affordable housing crisis. Instead,
Letters to the Editor • Emailed documents are preferred: Correction Policy many homeowners who would profit from Proposition 5 have
Should be no longer than 250 words. letters@smdailyjournal.com The Daily Journal corrects its errors.
Perspective Columns • Letter writers are limited to two submissions a If you question the accuracy of any article in the Daily already benefited from property tax breaks over the years and
Should be no longer than 600 words. month. Journal, please contact the editor at would get a huge windfall when they sell their homes.
• Illegibly handwritten letters and anonymous letters Opinions expressed in letters, columns and news@smdailyjournal.com
will not be accepted. perspectives are those of the individual writer and do or by phone at: 344-5200, ext. 107
• Please include a city of residence and phone not necessarily represent the views of the Daily Journal Editorials represent the viewpoint of the Daily Journal Sue Lempert is the former mayor of San Mateo. Her column runs
number where we can reach you. staff. editorial board and not any one individual. every Monday. She can be reached at sue@smdailyjournal.com.
010 1022 mon:1022 mon 54 10/21/18 8:08 PM Page 1

10 Monday • Oct 22, 2018 BUSINESS THE DAILY JOURNAL

Chinese broadens its propaganda drive to heartland


By Josh Funk
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

OMAHA, Neb. — China’s propaganda machine has taken


aim at American soybean farmers as part of its high-stakes
trade war with the Trump administration.
The publication last month of a four-page advertising sec-
tion in the Des Moines Register opened a new battle line in
China’s effort to break the administration’s resolve. U.S.
farmers are a key political constituency for Trump, and
Beijing has imposed tariffs on American soybeans as retalia-
tion for Trump’s tariffs on hundreds of billions in Chinese
imports.
China regularly disseminates propaganda in the West
through its China Daily newspaper to try to influence public
opinion. But the advertorial in the Register was unusual for
deploying not a national publication in New York or
Washington but a newspaper in the farm state of Iowa.
“It’s the first time I’ve ever seen anything like this in a
heartland city,” said Matt Schrader, who edits the China Brief
newsletter for the Jamestown Foundation, a Washington
research institute that monitors China’s actions.
The Iowa newspaper section was explicitly labeled a prod-
uct of China Daily, China’s official English language news-
REUTERS
paper. The articles were clearly geared to try to soften the
image of China and its president, Xi Jinping. With headlines A worker cuts steel plates inside the China Steel Corporation factory in southern Taiwan.
ranging from “Dispute: Fruit of a president’s folly” and runs the Newsonomics website. to American farmers, whose crops have been hit by Beijing’s
“Book tells of Xi’s fun days in Iowa” to Kung Fu skill helps Many experts say they doubt the propaganda drive in the retaliatory tariffs.
light up life path” and “China seeks pacts on robotics,” the United States will likely succeed. Chinese officials are used “This is the norm for the Chinese propaganda machine,”
message was a not-very-subtle one about the friendly way to operating at home, where the central government controls Chao said.
Beijing wants to be seen in the farm belt. all major media outlets. Chao noted that when a Chinese dissident won the 2010
Ken Doctor, a longtime media analyst, noted that newspa- “U.S. farmers and manufacturers are smart enough to under- Nobel Peace Prize — chosen by the Norwegian Nobel
pers have been struggling to replace revenue lost from stand their self-interest,” said Elizabeth Economy of the Committee and an embarrassment for Beijing — China
declining subscriptions and print advertisements moving Council on Foreign Relations. “They don’t need a Chinese responded by placing propaganda ads in Scandinavian news-
online. He suggested that when publications run propaganda newspaper insert to tell them how to think about the rela- papers.
like the “China Watch” sections, they should take care to be tionship between tariffs and their exports to China.” In addition to its connection to the tariffs China imposed
fully explicit about the source. Stanley Chao, a business consultant who has written a on American soybeans and other crops, Iowa is also home to
“I’d like to see newspapers that run this include an editor’s book called “Selling to China,” said it’s not entirely surpris- Terry Branstad, a former governor of the state who is now the
note to be transparent about what this is,” said Doctor, who ing that China would try to take its trade arguments directly U.S. ambassador to Beijing.

Reno’s motor lodges Mega Millions players pondering


become final resort how to spend record $1.6B prize
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHICAGO — With the Mega Millions lottery jackpot at


RENO, Nev.— They were the toast of Reno in the 1950s, a record $1.6 billion, people are snapping up tickets across
when the growing casino industry sparked a boom that for a the U.S.
time turned northern Nevada into the West’s top gambling The Powerball jackpot also has climbed. It’s up to an esti-
destination. mated $620 million for Wednesday’s drawing. That would
Dozens of downtown motor lodges provided spare but make it the fifth-largest jackpot in U.S. history.
comfortable retreats for motorists who took to the nation’s But much of the focus has been on Tuesday’s Mega
new highways to see the bright lights of the self-proclaimed Millions drawing and what would be the largest jackpot
“Biggest Little City in the World” and try their luck at the prize in U.S. history.
slot machines and blackjack tables. From San Diego to New York, people are dreaming of how
Today, the lodges still standing are in disrepair and rent they would spend the money should they beat the astro-
rooms by the week. But there is one similarity to their hey- nomical odds of winning.
day: Reno is booming again and so are the lodges — just not Little Rock, Arkansas, housekeeper LaCrystal White ini-
with vacationers or fortune-seekers. tially said her first order of business would be to pay off
They have become the housing of last resort for Reno’s bills and student loans, then buy herself a house and car. But
down-and-out, a population that has soared in recent years as the 34-year-old quickly reconsidered.
a red hot housing and rental market have priced out more and “Well, first I’m going to give something back to charity.
more people. That’s what I’m going to do,” White said. “I am. I’m going
California is partly to blame. to give back to charity and then I’m going to splurge. Put REUTERS
Silicon Valley firms from Apple to Tesla have set up oper- up college funds for my kids and just set myself up for the Customers line up to buy Mega Millions tickets in midtown
ations in the Reno area, bringing waves of well-paid tech rest of my life.” Manhattan.
and manufacturing workers. At the same time, California’s Then she told everyone who was at the gas station where “It’s gotta be in the news for me to think about it,” the
soaring home prices and rents have sent thousands of people she bought two Mega Millions tickets on Sunday that she 36-year-old, who works in finance and lives on the city’s
across the state line looking for more affordable housing. would give them $1 million each if she won. She went on to north side, said.
Four of every 10 people who will move to Nevada this year add that she planned to buy more tickets later. He said he and his wife have talked over the years about
will be from California, and most of those arriving in Reno Arkansas is one of 44 states where the Mega Millions is what they’d do if they won, and she said she’d keep work-
and its suburbs are from the San Francisco Bay Area. played. It’s also played in Washington, D.C., and the U.S. ing. “So she probably wouldn’t want me to quit my job,” he
Along with that human stampede have come rising home Virgin Islands. said.
prices and rents — as well as rising anxiety for those living Nathan Harrell was in downtown Chicago for work Harrell said that as he rode the train to work, he had
on the margins. Saturday when he stopped in at a 7-Eleven and handed the thought about what else he would. He figures he’d set up a
clerk two $20 bills — one for 10 Powerball tickets at $2 trust fund for his two children.
each and the other for 10 Mega Millions at $2 each. It’s “We wouldn’t sweat the small stuff anymore,” he said.
been a few years since he’s spent anything on the lottery. “Nothing crazy, but who knows.”
011 1022 mon:1022 mon 54 10/21/18 11:53 PM Page 1

MR. 500: SAINTS QUARTERBACK BREES BECOMES FOURTH IN NFL HISTORY TO THROW FOR 500 CAREER TOUCHDOWNS >> PAGE 12

<<< Page 13, Will Roberts receive


a hero’s welcome in Boston?
Monday • Oct. 22, 2018

How ’Dogs rode 132 yards of


offense to big win over Laney
By Terry Bernal The Bulldogs (2-0 Bay 6, 5-2 overall) scored on each of
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF their first two possessions, both with short fields, en route
to opening the game with 27 straight points. It wasn’t until
One hundred thirty-two yards of total offense isn’t usual- the back half of the third quarter that Laney (1-1, 5-2) got
ly going to lend to a win of any convincing authority. on the scoreboard, by which time it was too late as the
But it was all the offense the College of San Mateo machine that is the CSM defense held the an Eagles team
Bulldogs needed to march past Laney College 27-18 last ranking sixth in the state in points scored to just two touch-
PATRICK NGUYEN Friday in Oakland. downs.
CSM linebacker Bubba Palu, right, and defensive back Trey “We started the game with great focus and intensity and “[Defensive coordinator Hansen Sekona] and our entire
Smith stop Laney QB Jordon Brookshire on an attempt for a that set the tone for the game,” Bulldogs head coach Tim
two-point conversion last Friday night in Oakland. Tulloch said. See CSM, Page 15

Nuggets 100, Dubs 98

Bears tame the Bay Dramatic Dubs


come up short
Menlo-Atherton shuts out Sacred Heart Prep to By Pat Graham

clinch no worse than share of Bay Division title THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

DENVER — Gary Harris scored 28 points,


By Terry Bernal Juancho Hernangomez blocked a tying layup
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF just before the buzzer and the Denver Nuggets
beat the Warriors 100-98 Sunday night.
It is becoming clear no one in the Trailing by 13 points in the fourth quarter,
Peninsula Athletic League can hang with the Warriors rallied and
Menlo-Atherton. had a chance to tie it in
The Bears (4-0 PAL Bay, 6-2 overall) have the waning seconds.
marched to the top of the PAL Bay Division Stephen Curry drove
standings outscoring league opponents down the lane and passed
143-11, most recently disposing of Sacred to big man Damian
Heart Prep 30-0 Saturday afternoon at Jones, who had his shot
Palatella Field. The Gators, who entered blocked from behind by
play riding an undefeated seven-game win Hernangomez.
streak, were the only team standing between Damian Jones The Nuggets improved
M-A returning to its third league title over to 3-0 despite missing 18
the past four years. free throws, including six in the final quarter.
With its third shutout of the year, M-A Nikola Jokic had 23 points, 11 rebounds
clinched no less than a co-PAL Bay champi- and six assist in his bid for a triple-double
onship; the Bears also split the Bay crown
three ways in 2015 before winning it out- See DUBS, Page 16
right in ’16. But the march to the outright
title seems all but a formality as M-A closes
league play this coming Friday against last- Rams 39, 49ers 10
place Half Moon Bay.
Not that M-A is taking anything for granted.
“I think we did good,” M-A senior line-
backer Feleti Malupo said after Saturday’s
dismantling of SHP. “But we know we can do
better.”
That’s a frightening thought for Half TERRY BERNAL/DAILY JOURNAL
Moon Bay, considering M-A’s mighty Menlo-Atherton quarterback Jack Alexander throws during the Bears’ 30-0 win Saturday at
Sacred Heart Prep.With the win, M-A clinches no worse that a co-championship in the PAL Bay
See M-A, Page 14 Division, and will have the chance to win the title outright this Friday against Half Moon Bay.

King of queens KYLE TERADA/USA TODAY SPORTS


Rams safety John Johnson wrestles an
interception from George Kittle in the third
quarter Sunday at Levi’s Stadium.
Menlo claims WBAL crown behind King’s 30 kills
By Terry Bernal
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
was channeled into senior outside hitter
Grace King’s kill of the left side to finish off
the 25-22, 21-25, 25-13, 20-25, 15-8 vic-
Niners can’tstop
It was business as usual for the Menlo
School volleyball team.
The Lady Knights (9-0 WBAL Foothill,
tory.
“I think it’s a nice way to win a league …
but nothing emotional,” Menlo head coach
unbeaten Rams
By Josh Dubow
21-10 overall) are as stalwart a volleyball Marco Paglialunga said. “When you win a THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
program as there is in San Mateo County. battle in five (sets) like that one, it’s always
Entering the 2018 season as the reigning the best way to get you a trophy and win you SANTA CLARA — Aaron Donald and a
West Bay Athletic League Foothill Division the league. So it was fun.” dominant defense kept taking the ball away
champions, they have appeared in the state King dazzled with an epic performance, for Los Angeles and Todd Gurley turned those
tournament in four of the past five years, totaling a career-high 30 kills while hitting turnovers into touchdowns to keep the Rams
including a CIF Division IV state champi- at a .367 percentage. She recorded one of unbeaten after seven games.
onship in 2016. two Knights double-doubles in the match, Todd Gurley scored three touchdowns and
So, when Menlo clinched its second adding 11 digs. Senior outside hitter Sianna Jared Goff threw two TD passes as the Rams
straight WBAL Foothill title last Thursday Houghton produced 12 kills and 20 digs. took advantage of four takeaways and a
in a dramatic five-set win at home over King has been one of the best in the blocked punt to beat the 49ers 39-10 on
perennial contender Notre Dame-Belmont Central Coast Section this season. She PAM MCKENNEY Sunday for their first 7-0 start since 1985.
(7-2, 23-11), there was no overt celebra- Grace King attacks in Menlo’s five-set win last
tion. Most of the emotion of the moment See MENLO, Page 15 Thursday against Notre Dame-Belmont. See 49ERS, Page 12
012 1022 mon:1022 mon 54 10/21/18 10:17 PM Page 1

12 Monday • Oct 22, 2018 SPORTS THE DAILY JOURNAL

Rams 39, 49ers 10


NFL scoreboard Lions 32, Dolphins 21
Panthers 21, Eagles 17 Saints 24, Ravens 23 Colts 37, Bills 5 Patriots 38, Bears 31 Buccaneers 26, Browns 23, OT
Redskins 20, Cowboys 17 Chargers 20, Titans 19 Vikings 37, Jets 17 Texans 20, Jaguars 7 Chiefs 45, Bengals 10

Brees joins 500 TD club


By David Ginsburg
BBK leads nation in tackles
SEATTLE — Jake Browning
threw a 26-yard touchdown pass to
Pac-12 briefs
offense in the second half.
Washington linebacker Ben Burr-
Smoot scores 11 kills for ‘Cats
TUCSON, Ariz. — No. 25
Arizona volleyball scored a four-
Aaron Fuller on fourth down with Kirven had 15 tackles and inter- set victory over Utah Sunday.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS less than four minutes remaining, cepted Montez late in the fourth Arizona (16-6, 5-5 Pac-12) got 21
and the No. 15 Washington quarter. kills from Kendra Dahlke, who left
BALTIMORE — So, Drew Brees Huskies (6-2, 4-1 Pac-12) finally There are more physically gifted the match due to injury in the fourth
finally beat the Baltimore Ravens. pulled away late to beat Colorado linebackers than Washington’s set.
Years from now, the remarkable 27-13 in football action Saturday.
New Orleans quarterback will hope- 225-pound Burr-Kirven — a gradu- Notre Dame-Belmont graduate
fully recall the comeback he engi- Colorado quarterback Steven ate of Sacred Heart Prep — but Katie Smoot was also in double
neered and 500th career touchdown Montez threw for 144 yards, but maybe none more productive, as figures for the Wildcats with 11
pass — and not the unusual fashion the Buffaloes (5-2, 2-2) were shut he has logged a nation-leading kills on .417 hitting. She added
in which the Saints won the game. out and held to 86 total yards of 108 for the season. four blocks and an ace.
By virtue of the first missed con-
version in Justin Tucker’s seven- “It’s always embarrassing when
year career, the Saints pulled out a
24-23 victory Sunday.
The Ravens were the only team
49ERS you lose like that,” coach Kyle
Shanahan said. “We’ve got pride
and we’re also confident in what
Give it away
The Niners had a minus-1
turnover margin through the first
Brees had never beaten. Granted, Continued from page 11 we do. We’re not proud of our 14 quarters of the season and are
the teams meet only once every four record right now. We’re definitely minus-14 over the last 14 quarters,
years, but that was enough to saddle not proud of today. When we matching a franchise worst with a
him with an 0-4 lifetime record “With the offense we have to minus-15 turnover margin through
played better, we still feel the
against Baltimore. just keep feeding and feeding them seven games set by the 1980 team.
MITCH STRINGER/USA TODAY SPORTS same way. We’re not into any
Now it’s 1-4 after Brees helped ball,” Donald said. “If we do that, During one particularly rough
Saints QB Drew Brees drops back moral victories here. We’re as far
New Orleans put up 17 fourth-quar- they are going to put points on the stretch in the first half, the 49ers
Sunday at M&T Bank Stadium. away from one as we could have
ter points against a defense that had board. Our offense is so explo- had a five-play sequence of lost
veteran, and I look up to him.” today. We have to fix the
not allowed a touchdown in the sec- sive. We know that if we give them fumble, fumbled snap, incomplete
Said Watson: “Anything I can do turnovers. Once we fix the
ond half this season. Because the the ball good things are going to pass, sack and blocked punt.
to further his records, the happier I turnovers, then we have a chance
Saints prevailed, Brees joined Brett happen.” “You can always work on pro-
am. I was thrilled to catch the 500th to start playing football.”
Favre and Peyton Manning as the Donald and the defense made Beathard has thrown seven tecting it better,” Beathard said. “I
touchdown pass.”
only quarterbacks to beat every things easy for the Rams high- interceptions and lost three fum- think it comes down to a mindset
Incredibly, Brees insisted that
team in the league. powered offense with seven sacks, bles in four starts as the 49ers and just not letting it happen.”
Watson take the souvenir.
“They’ve had some tremendous two interceptions against C. J. have committed 14 straight
Coming off a game in Tennessee
defensive teams in the past,” Brees in which the Ravens recorded 11
Beathard and two fumble recover- turnovers since their last takeaway Injuries
said of Baltimore. “Guys like Ray ies, including one that Donald just on Sept. 30 against the Chargers.
sacks, the league’s top-ranked The 49ers lost S Adrian Colbert
Lewis, Ed Reed, Adalius Thomas, ripped out of Matt Breida’s hands. The Rams dominated defensively
defense had its hands full with Brees. (sprained right ankle), LB Reuben
Peter Boulware and Haloti Ngata.” “You have to tip your cap to the That was perhaps Donald’s best even beyond Donald’s perform- Foster (sprained shoulder) and
This unit has Terrell Suggs, Eric best ever,” Weddle said. “We had play on a day full of great ones as ance. Cory Littleton having two Breida (ankle) during the game.
Weddle, C.J. Mosley and plenty him wrapped up, and he was just he had four sacks, six tackles for sacks and a blocked punt for a safe- Rams DB Troy Hill left in the
other stars. Brees, however, was up finding a way to make a play.” loss, five quarterback hits, the ty; and Troy Hill and John Johnson first half to be evaluated for a pos-
for the challenge. The Ravens lost, but Weddle took forced fumble and fumble recovery. III also intercepted passes. sible concussion but was able to
He went 22 for 30 for 212 yards, great pleasure in matching wits “One of the best defensive per- The turnovers set up 24 points return.
increasing his NFL record in pass- with Brees for the better part of formances I’ve been around,” Goff for the Rams, who put up the big
ing yardage to 72,315. The 39- three hours. said. “It seemed like every time we scoring day despite gaining a sea- ‘The Catch’ commemorated
year-old also threw two touchdown “These are the games you live for,” sat down we got back up and went son-low 331 yards of offense.
passes, the first of which was the Weddle said. “Drew Brees is one of on the field. ... It was just a lot of Gurley scored on a 7-yard run in The 49ers unveiled statues of Joe
500th of his career, a 1-yarder to the best ever to play the game. We fun to watch.” the second quarter after a fumble by Montana and Dwight Clark before
Ben Watson in the second quarter. presented some challenges. We The Rams started 6-0 for three Breida and 1-yard run after the game commemorating “The
The only other members of the played well at times, and he made straight seasons from 1999-2001 Johnson’s interception in the Catch” that launched a dynasty in
500 club are Favre, Manning and incredible plays to continue drives.” only to lose game seven. The third. He capped his fifth three- the 1980s. The statues are 23 yards
Tom Brady. Period. That’s what Brees does, far better 49ers (1-6) made sure that would- touchdown game of the past two apart — the same distance that was
“One of the greatest things than most. n’t happen this year by repeatedly seasons with a 12-yard catch after between Montana and Clark on the
about the 500th touchdown pass, “Drew is absolutely unbeliev- giving the ball away, justifying JoJo Natson had a 36-yard punt game-winning play during the
it was caught by one of my able,” Saints guard Larry Warford the decision the NFL made to flex return to the 13. NFC title game win over Dallas on
favorite teammates of all time,” said. “One of the greatest competi- this game out of prime time fol- Gurley’s 14 TDs this season tie Jan. 10, 1982.
Brees said. “I couldn’t think of tors in the game. He never gives up. lowing the season-ending knee Priest Holmes (2002, ‘04) for the
better guy to catch this touchdown It’s a blessing to have him leading injury to San Francisco quarter- most through seven games in the
Up next
than Ben Watson. He is a terrific the team.” back Jimmy Garoppolo. Super Bowl era. The 49ers visit Arizona Sunday.

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013 1022 mon:1022 mon 54 10/21/18 10:19 PM Page 1

THE DAILY JOURNAL SPORTS Monday • Oct 22, 2018 13


Beloved in Boston Reds hire Bell
Roberts returns for World Series with LA
By Jimmy Golen “Obviously, for me personally I
away from SF
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS have a lot of fond memories of the
Red Sox and Fenway Park,” he said CINCINNATI — After serving as
BOSTON — In the souvenir after the Dodgers clinched the NL San Francisco Giants vice president
store across from Fenway Park, it pennant and advanced to the Series of player development last season,
will set you back $100 for a for the second straight year. “To be David Bell has been hired as man-
framed, autographed photo of “The wearing another uniform going in ager of the Cincinnati Reds, tasked
Steal,” Dave Roberts’ stolen base there playing for a World Series with helping turn around a team that
in the 2004 AL Championship championship is going to be spe- skidded to a 67-95 record and last-
Series that kick-started the Red cial for me.” place finish in the NL Central.
Sox comeback against the New Havlicek stole the ball, Orr The Reds said Sunday he has
York Yankees and ended Boston’s sailed through the air, and been given a
BENNY SIEU/USA TODAY SPORTS
86-year title drought. Vinatieri split the uprights (twice) three-year con-
to cement themselves in Boston Dodgers manager Dave Roberts watches his team workout prior to
“We used to have a big panorama tract that
sports history. But few athletes Game 1 of the NLCS playoffs Oct. 11 at Miller Park.
of it,” the clerk, Nick Fosman, includes a team
said, “but we sold out of them a have squeezed their way into the No matter. ninth-inning sacrifice bunt that option for
while ago.” city’s lore like Roberts. “He came here. He stole that led to an insurance run. 2022. The 46-
Other mementos from that A trade deadline acquisition who base,” said Red Sox manager Alex It was his only World Series y e a r - o l d
drought-busting championship was obtained for his speed, he had- Cora, who was Roberts’ teammate appearance as a player. Cincinnati
may fade, but the intervening n’t played in 10 days when he with the Dodgers in ‘04 and helped “I didn’t take one swing in the native is to be
years have done little to dim entered Game 4 of the ‘04 ALCS as console him after he was traded. “I World Series, and I feel like I introduced at a
Roberts’ legacy in Boston since a pinch runner in the ninth inning texted him right after he stole sec- accomplished (something), I was David Bell
news confer-
he helped the Red Sox rally from a at Fenway. The Red Sox trailed 4-3 ond base. I was like, ‘I don’t know part of the equation,” said Cora, ence Monday.
three-games-to-none deficit in the game, and 0-3 in the best- what’s going to happen here, but who also won ring as a bench The Reds fired Bryan Price after a
against the rival Yankees en route of-seven series. if this happens, you’re going to coach for the Houston Astros last 3-15 start, and Jim Riggleman was
to their first World Series crown Roberts stole second, then slid become a hero.’ season. interim manager for the rest of the
since 1918. home to score tying run that “And he is, here in this city.” The lesson, he said, is not lost season.
Now, as he returns to Boston as began Boston’s unprecedented Cora was in his last year as a on his players. Bell was a minor league manager
the manager of the Los Angeles comeback. He pinch-ran again, full-time player with the Dodgers “Every night somebody can step for the Reds from 2009-12,
Dodgers, he will be trying to pre- and scored again, in Game 5, but in ’04, and three years and two up, and somebody can be that became the Chicago Cubs’ third
vent the city that celebrates him he never appeared in another game teams later he was a utility infield- guy, ” Cora said Sunday. “They base coach in 2013, St. Louis’
from claiming a fourth title this for the Red Sox, standing by as er in Boston when the Red Sox know. They understand. . . . assistant hitting coach the follow-
century. Even so, Roberts can they swept the St. Louis Cardinals went back to the Series. He entered Everybody is all-in, and every- ing year and the Cardinals’ bench
expect a big cheer when he is to set off a celebration that gener- Game 1 as a defensive replacement body knows that when they have a coach for the next three years.
introduced before Game 1 on ations of New Englanders had been and had his only plate appearance chance, they’ve got a role and Bell and his father, Reds front-
Tuesday night. waiting for. in Game 3, when he laid down a they can contribute.” office executive Buddy, become the
fourth father-son duo to serve as

Brewers look to bright future after NLCS loss major league managers, joining
George and Dick Sisler, Bob and
Joel Skinner, and Bob and Aaron
By Jay Cohen NL Championship Series. fielder is the leading candidate for Boone. Buddy Bell managed the
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The playoff run ended with a 5-1 his first NL MVP award. Detroit Tigers (1996-1998),
loss to the more seasoned Dodgers Aguilar cruised past his previous Colorado Rockies (2000-2002)
MILWAUKEE — Christian on Saturday night, but the Brewers career highs with 35 homers and and Kansas City Royals (2005-
Yelich and the Milwaukee Brewers plan on returning to October very 108 RBIs, and Hader set a major 2007).
think they’re just getting started. soon. league record for a left-handed David Bell becomes the 63rd
Sure looks that way, too. “We feel like we’ve got a lot of reliever with a whopping 143 manager in Reds’ history. Hours
Led by breakout performances by talent here,” Yelich said. strikeouts in 81 1/3 innings. Throw after his hiring was announced, the
Yelich, Josh Hader and Jesus “Hopefully it’s just the beginning.” in center fielder Lorenzo Cain and Los Angeles Angels said they
JON DURR/USA TODAY SPORTS The 26-year-old Yelich nearly key arms Jeremy Jeffress and Corey
Aguilar, Milwaukee chased down the named Brad Ausmus their new skip-
Chicago Cubs to win the NL Central Milwaukee looks on Saturday in the won the Triple Crown in his first Knebel, and Milwaukee is ideally per. That leaves the Baltimore
for the first time since 2011. The ninth inning of Game 7 of the NLCS. season with Milwaukee after he positioned to make consecutive Orioles, Minnesota Twins, Texas
youthful Brewers then swept before taking the Los Angeles was acquired in a trade with Miami Rangers and Toronto Blue Jays
Colorado in the Division Series Dodgers all the way to Game 7 in the in January. The silky smooth out- See BREWS, Page 16 with managerial openings.
014 1022 mon:1022 mon 54 10/21/18 6:42 PM Page 1

14 Monday • Oct 22, 2018 SPORTS THE DAILY JOURNAL

M-A Navigating through yellow flags


M-A went on to incur 110 yards in penal-
ties, some of which seemed comical. The best
Continued from page 11 example of this was a SHP punt play midway
through the third quarter when the officials lit-
tered the field with five yellow flags, each for
defense held SHP to 96 total yards. different penalties — three holdings calls, a
Add to this equation, the Bears will be look- face mask and a personal foul — with the 15-
ing to settle the score with HMB. Last season, yard personal foul ultimately being assessed.
the then senior-heavy Cougars shut them out “I have not (ever seen five flags on one
en route to claiming the Bay Division crown. play),” Ravipati said. “That was a first.”
Now, M-A is looking to reclaim its place as
the class of the league. M-A continued to navigate the lopsided win
tactically though.
“Next week is going to mean a lot, espe-
cially after last year they shut us out,” Malupo Alexander connected with senior receiver
said. “So we’re going to take our league back.” Joey Olshausen on a 42-yard fly pattern over
Malupo and the rest of the Bears defensive the middle for a touchdown to make it 20-0
juggernaut swarmed and frustrated SHP all day with 5:33 left in the third.
long. His mobility from the middle linebacker In the fourth, Hawkins set up M-A’s final
spot was a stern complement to his always- touchdown with a 37-yard run to the SHP 5.
dynamic MLB counterpart Daniel Heimuli, as Barker took the next carry five yards for the
TERRY BERNAL/DAILY JOURNAL score.
the tandem pushed SHP’s meticulous approach M-A defensive linemen Noa Ngalu, left, and Jack Hansen sack SHP quarterback Raymond
to the outsides for senior safety Malik Two plays from scrimmage later, SHP com-
Price III to force a fumble Saturday afternoon at Palatella Field. mitted its final turnover, a fumble recovered
Johnson to pick apart with a career-high nine
tackles. well-balanced attack. Sterling second effort by senior defensive end Connor Gentile. It set
“I think it’s a collaborative effort,” M-A The Bears totaled 360 yards of offense, with the stage for M-A kicker Anthony Waller’s big
senior running back Deston Hawkins rushing M-A and SHP put forth a spirited rugby-style leg, as the senior boomed a 38-yard field goal
head coach Adhir Ravipati said. “We’re big scrum for the remainder of the first quarter, but
and physical, and it makes it so we’re able to eight times for 106 yards. And senior Jaeden with plenty to spare to cap the day’s scoring.
Barker — who filled in at quarterback in Barker solved the back-and-forth with a sur-
stretch teams sideline to sideline … and we’re prising scoring run to start the second quarter.
able to counter on the perimeter.” Alexander’s absence — has flourished in his
“He’s so compact and powerful, and hard to
How it shakes out
The Gators (2-1, 7-1) all told managed eight return to running back, Saturday totaling
seven carries for 68 yards and two touchdowns. tackle,” Ravipati said. The Gators entered the week ranked No. 22
first-downs, including just three in the first Facing third-and-1 from the SHP 31, the in the Chronicle top 25 and, riding a seven-
half. They converted just 1 of 10 third-down Even in receiving less playing time than
while platooning at quarterback for three stout 5-8, 180-pound Barker lined up at quar- game winning streak, were enjoying their
opportunities, and 0 of 4 on fourth-downs. M- terback to attempt a power sneak. He pushed best stretch since 2014 under coach Pete
A also benefitted from six SHP turnovers. weeks, Barker — who prides himself on being
M-A’s utility man — said he’s happy to return for first-down yardage but was met by a trio of Lavorato when the team posted an undefeated
“Certainly they’re skilled,” SHP head coach Gators, before senior receiver Malik Johnson 13-0 record to win the Central Coast Section
to the backfield.
Mark Grieb said of the M-A defense. “They’ve plowed through with a block to free up Barker, Open Division championship.
“I am, I’m pretty happy,” Barker said. “I’m
got ability all over the field. … Their whole who quickly accelerated from the pack and “I think they were fired up coming into the
glad Jack (Alexander) is back. He can do what
front seven is good.” jaunted 31 yards for the touchdown. game and I think they played hard,” Grieb
he does the best, and I can go back to my nat-
ural position.” “I don’t know if I thought he’d go to the said. “But you’ve got to play well against a
Offense setting the tone Alexander did what he does best in engi- house; I was just hoping for a yard,” Ravipati great team. And they just didn’t make enough
Paired with M-A’s up-tempo offense — set- neering the game’s opening drive, articulat- said. plays to win a game.”
ting the stage by running eight pass plays on ing passes of 4, 21 and 14 yards inside the M-A took the 13-0 lead into the half as the
M-A — with just one league game remain-
its opening nine-play scoring drive — SHP game began taking on a farcical tone.
first four plays to advance into Gators territo- ing on its schedule — now has its fate in its
never really had a chance. ry. He later dialed up a 13-yard completion to Inside the final five minutes of the first own hands. A win Friday at home against
M-A quarterback Jack Alexander returned to sophomore Troy Franklin advancing into the half, the two teams turned over the ball HMB and the Bears are outright PAL Bay
action a week ago after a three-game injury red zone, before hitting Franklin on a 16-ayrd three times — twice by SHP and once by M- Division champs. Should HMB score an
layoff, and has swiftly settled in. The junior out-route near the front corner of the end zone A — and the trend carried over into the sec- upset, either or both of SHP and Terra Nova
was 13-of-29 passing for 199 yards and two allowing Franklin to swipe across the pylon ond half as the Gators fumbled away their would need to win their final two league games
touchdowns, and was on point in running a for the score, giving M-A a 6-0 lead. opening possession. to share the Bay Division title.
015 1022 mon:1022 mon 54 10/21/18 12:00 AM Page 1

THE DAILY JOURNAL SPORTS Monday • Oct 22, 2018 15


middle. Paglialunga said Hoffman inter-

MENLO vened, saying King deserved to take the


final swing.
“It was very mature because when you’re a
NBA suspends
Continued from page 11

ranks fifth with 335 kills among CCS teams


freshman, it’s not easy to make a decision
like that and overcall what your coach called
before,” Paglialunga said. “And I’m good
Ingram, Rondo,
reporting stats to MaxPreps.com. In the
WBAL she ranks first in kills and with 3.8
kills per set. Second in the WBAL is
with it.”
King added four blocks, sharing the
match-high with teammate, senior middle
Anna Guirogassian. Senior libero Riley
Paul in dustup
By Beth Harris
Houghton with 2.8 kills per set.
Holland totaled a match-high 23 digs, and THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
“We always have a solution with one of sophomore opposite Roxy Karrer added 10.
them front row,” Paglialunga said. NDB recorded a pair of double-doubles as LOS ANGELES — Lakers teammates
All this King has reached with a pair of well, with senior outside hitter Vanessa Pan Brandon Ingram and Rajon Rondo and Chris
freshman setters. Hanna Hoffman drove the going for a team-high 13 kills with 18 digs, Paul of the Rockets were suspended without
Menlo attack against NDB, totaling 51 and senior outside hitter Kendall Peters pay Sunday for an on-court fight, with Paul
assists. Hoffman has split time setting with totaling 12 kills and a team-high 19 digs. taking the heaviest financial hit.
freshman Zoe Gregory this season, but In winning 11 straight WBAL matches Ingram was suspended four games, Rondo
Hoffman has seen her most substantial this season, Menlo has now won 26 PAM MCKENNEY will sit out three games and Paul two games.
workload over the past two weeks, working straight league matches dating back to Menlo senior Sianna Houghton totaled 20 The NBA handed down the punishments a day
a 5-1 offense in three of the past four match- 2016. digs in last Thursday’s WBAL clincher. after the incident in the fourth quarter at
es. The Knights have one more regular-sea- win the last game of the league, ” Staples Center.
“In the last weeks, Hanna was doing real- son match to go Tuesday in travelling Paglialunga said. “And when the last game The penalty was costliest to Paul, who has
ly well,” Paglialunga said. “So we said, across the street to rival Sacred Heart Prep. of the league is against your rival Sacred the highest salary of the trio and was fined a
‘OK, let’s give her more space.’” There is nothing riding on it in terms of reg- Heart, no matter if we have a great relation- total of $491,782. Paul is president of the
King’s match-closing 30th kill not only ular-season outcome, though it is Menlo’s ship with them … the girls feel it’s an NBA Players’ Association. He began serving
was set by Hoffman, the freshman overrode final showing prior to the CCS playoffs, important game no matter what. So we’ll his suspension Sunday night and wasn’t at
Paglialunga in the preceding timeout when which open Saturday. give everything we can to win that match the arena when the Rockets lost to the
the coach wanted to run a play through the “I think that mentally you always want to and start the playoffs mentally strong.” Clippers 115-112. Rondo will be docked a
total of $186,207, while Ingram’s total is
$158,816.
“He was locked on Smart the whole game and “It became important in the game,” Tulloch

CSM he travelled with him wherever he went,”


Tulloch said.
CSM took over after a punt at the Laney 37,
said. “We just wanted to bleed the clock and fin-
ish the game the right way.”
Laney scored on a 5-yard rush by Junior Diala
Houston coach Mike D’Antoni disagreed
with the severity of Paul’s penalty.
“It’s just not equitable,” he said. “If you
wanted to suspend him one (game) I get it,
Continued from page 11 and kicker Cesar Silva used his legs in an with 6:13 in the third quarter. The Eagles
defense then hit pay dirt on a 55-yard intercep- just to make a statement. Then you’re talking
unconventional way on fourth-and-6 from the
22, producing a 7-yard run for a first down. tion return by Nahshon Wright with three min- monetarily, he’s paying three times more
defensive staff did a tremendous job getting utes to go in the quarter. Laney turned its final than the other guys are paying for missing
Three plays later, Taylor scored his second TD
those guys ready to slow down a powerful possession into a TD with 1:15 to play to close games? That doesn’t seem to be right.”
of the game on a 1-yard run to up the lead to 14-
offense,” Tulloch said. the scoring. Ingram and Rondo will start their suspen-
0.
The win catapults CSM into outright pos- Taylor led CSM with 22 carries for 81 yards sions Monday night when the Lakers host
session of first place just two games in to Then the Bulldogs followed with two explo-
sive gainers — first by their defense and then and two scores, returning to action after miss- the San Antonio Spurs.
the Bay 6 Conference schedule. Laney and ing the Bay 6 opener the previous week against The league said Ingram was suspended for
Chabot were the other two winners from by the kick return unit.
Laney’s best drive of the day started on the Santa Rosa. aggressively escalating the altercation and
opening week of conference play, but “It was one of those games where we’re both throwing a punch in the direction of Paul,
Chabot also faltered over the weekend with heals of a fumbled CSM punt return by Malik
Putney at its own 23. The Eagles moved the ball good teams and you’re going to need all phases confronting referee Jason Phillips in a hos-
a 47-40 loss at Santa Rosa Saturday. of your game to win those games,” Tulloch tile manner, and instigating the overall inci-
Laney’s defense has been as impressive as to the 3, but running back John McDonald was
stripped on the ensuing carry by Putney and said. “That was a conference championship- dent by shoving Rockets guard James
its offense this season, and ranks ahead of type game.”
sophomore Nathan Talakai, with freshman Harden.
even CSM. The Bulldogs are currently ninth
in the state in yards allowed on the season, linebacker T.C. Lavulo scooping it up and
with Laney ranking sixth. sprinting 95 yards for a touchdown.
But CSM produced quick stops on each of “It was great,” Tulloch said. “He ran as fast as
Laney’s first two possessions. A Laney three- I’ve seen him run. He knew what to do with it
and-out to open the game put the Bulldogs, once he got it into his hands.”
following a punt, at the Eagles’ 33. Then kick returner Jalen Lampley opened the CRUISES t TOURS t LAND PACKAGES t AIR
Sophomore running back Cam Taylor then second half with a bang, returning the kickoff
reeled off runs of 7, 17 and 2 yards before scor- 98 yards for a score, staking CSM to a 27-0 EXTRA!
EXTRA
A! EXTRA! S
SAVINGS
AVINGS
VIN
NGS
ing on a 1-yard burst to put CSM up 7-0. lead. KING WITH FIGONE
WHEN BOOKING NE TR AVEL
TRAVEL
Laney’s next drive stalled at its own 15 “He had another gear on the kickoff return

Two
T wo Huge
Hu
ugge T
g Tra
Travel
rav
ave
veel D
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Deals!
als
s!
when, on third-and-15, quarterback Jordon and he’s just becoming a weapon for us on the
Brookshire looked upfield for receiver Jared return game,” Tulloch said. “He’s electric on the
Smart. But CSM sophomore cornerback return game and we just want to find ways to get
Andre Neal was on the 1-on-1 matchup to the ball in his hands.”
force an incompletion. CSM just leaned on Laney from there.

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016 1022 mon:1022 mon 54 10/21/18 12:06 AM Page 1

16 Monday • Oct 22, 2018 SPORTS THE DAILY JOURNAL

USA’s Hubbell and Donohue BREWS


can sustain. So hopefully that gives
us a ways and a means to kind of
make that happen.”

win Skate America ice dance


Some of Milwaukee’s biggest
Continued from page 13 decisions heading into next sea-
son have to do with its pitching
By Mark Moschetti interpretations, ” Hubbell said. staff. Rookie right-hander Freddy
playoff appearances for only the Peralta showed some promise dur-
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS “But I think there’s something second time in franchise history.
special Zach and I can bring to ing his 14 starts, and Corbin
“What these guys accomplished, Burnes and Brandon Woodruff
EVERETT, Wash. — Madison this with the raw emotion and it’s something I hope every one of
Hubbell and Zachary Donohue had absolute intensity that goes into became versatile options out of
these guys doesn’t forget,” said vet- the bullpen after they were highly
always thought about incorporat- dying for the person you love. So eran catcher Erik Kratz, who came
ing some elements of “Romeo and we’ll see where it goes” regarded starters in the minors.
over in a May 25 trade with the New The Brewers could use Peralta,
Juliet” into their ice dance routine. Later Sunday, Japan’s Satoko York Yankees and made a couple of
At the suggestion of their Miyahara and Kaori Sakamoto Burnes and Woodruff to strengthen
big plays in the postseason. their rotation next year, or they
coach, they decided to build their went 1-2 in the ladies competition “We made it to Game 7, and that
whole routine around it for the new for the second straight year. could be options for Counsell if he
JOE NICHOLSON/USA TODAY SPORTS can be a positive. Hopefully they tries more of the bullpen-oriented
season. Miyahara, last season’s bronze don’t stop there. Hopefully Yelli
Turned out to be a winning deci- Madison Hubbell and Zachary medalist at Worlds and fourth at approach he employed so success-
Donohue perform Saturday. doesn’t stop with one MVP award. fully in the playoffs. Jimmy
sion. the Olympics, totaled 219. 71 Hopefully LoCain doesn’t stop
World silver medalists Hubbell two Americans, who have been points. That included the top short Nelson, who missed the entire sea-
with one Gold Glove. I think the son after he had shoulder surgery
and Donohue of the United States skating together since 2011, are program mark on Saturday (73.86) game allows everybody to either
broke the 200-point total for the defending U. S. champions and and Sunday’s high mark in the free in September 2017, also could be
be content with what happened, or an option in the rotation.
first time in their long career competed at the Pyeongchang skate (145. 85). Sakamoto fin- try to build on it. As a group here,
together and captured the gold Olympics, was 197. 42 at last ished with 213.90 points. It’s also unclear what might hap-
these guys can’t do anything but pen with third baseman Mike
medal at Skate America on Sunday. month’s U. S. International Newcomer Sofia Samudurova of build on it.”
Hubbell and Donohue finished Classic in Salt Lake City, which Russia earned bronze with 198.70. Moustakas after he came over in a
U. S. champion Bradie Tennell, After Milwaukee lost to St. July trade with Kansas City and
with 200.82 points: 78.43 for they won for the fourth year in a
fifth after the short program, Louis in the 2011 NLCS, the provided valuable leadership for
Saturday’s rhythm dance and row.
moved up to fourth with a solid Brewers slipped to 83-79 the fol- the Brewers in the playoffs. The
another 122.39 for Sunday’s free “I think there have been a mil-
free skate, and totaled 192.89. lowing year and all the way to 74- 30-year-old Moustakas was look-
dance. The previous best for the lion beautiful ‘Romeo and Juliet’
88 in 2013. They finally made it ing for a multiyear deal last winter
back to the playoffs this year. before returning to the Royals for
So don’t expect manager Craig a $6.5 million, one-year contract
Counsell, who played for the 2011 that included a mutual option for
team and grew up in Milwaukee, to 2019.
take anything for granted. “All that stuff in the offseason,
“That’s going to be what we spend I’m not going to think about that
a lot of time talking about next year, for a while,” Moustakas said after
probably, is sustaining this,” he the loss in Game 7. “I’m going to
said. “But we feel like that’s at the soak this in, being in this club-
forefront of all of our decisions is house this last time this season
how do we build something that we and hanging out with these guys.”

tie the game at 99-all with 9.6 sec-

DUBS onds remaining, but his second free


throw rolled out. Jamal Murray
made one of two free throws on the
Continued from page 11 other end to make it 100-98 and set
the stage for Hernangomez.
on a second straight night. Kevin Durant showed off his true
The 3-0 start is Denver’s best colors — wearing a yellow shoe
since the 2009-10 squad led by on his right foot to go with a gold,
Carmelo Anthony and Chauncey white and hint of blue one on his
Billups began 5-0. This victory left. He finished with 20 points
was driven by defense. Denver was and 11 rebounds.
sluggish in the second game of a Murray briefly left in the third
back-to-back but turned up the quarter with what appeared to be a left
defensive intensity. The Nuggets leg ailment. The team was already
forced 18 turnovers. missing versatile forward Will
No surprise, Curry hit three Barton, who was carted off the court
straight 3-pointers in a 1:11 span Saturday with a right hip injury.
to lead the comeback. He finished With Barton sidelined, the
with 30 points and had six 3-point- Nuggets went with a rotation of
ers to move him past Paul Pierce for Torrey Craig, Juancho
sixth place on the NBA’s career list. Hernangomez and Trey Lyles.
Draymond Green had a chance to They combined for 19 points.
017 1022 mon:1022 mon 54 10/21/18 8:09 PM Page 1

THE DAILY JOURNAL DATEBOOK Monday • Oct 22, 2018 17


Alec Bald-Wing?
A
s you probably imagine, most animals come to us
nameless. Most in fact come to us not only name-
less but without any history at all other than what
we can determine based on their physical and emotional
health. However, when it comes to our animals, despite
the fact that we literally save thousands of lives every
year, each is an individual. And each individual needs a
name. We often give an animal a name based on a physical
characteristic, like Onyx for a mostly
black dog. Sometimes a piece of pop-
ular culture enters the mix, like Tina
Fey for an especially “bossypants”
little kitten. Sometimes we just get
downright silly, like Alec Bald-Wing
(for a small parrot who came to us
The newest ‘Halloween’ movie was the world’s most popular film last week. injured and missing some of his feath-
ers). 
’Halloween’ scares up $77.5 million in tickets
By Lindsey Bahr “Halloween” earned $14.3 million from 23 markets.
If a family surrenders an animal to
us we keep the name to help ease the
stress that animal may be going
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Blumhouse, the shop behind “Get Out” and numerous other through while transitioning through the shelter into a new
modestly budgeted horror films, co-produced “Halloween” home. Names have meaning and history and more often
LOS ANGELES — Forty years after he first appeared in the- with Miramax. It cost only $10 million to make. than not, people have associations with names. Like the
aters, Michael Myers is still drawing huge audiences for a “You take the nostalgia for ‘Halloween,’ especially with name of our organization, for example, which sounds very
good scare. the return of Jamie Lee Curtis, and you combine that with the similar to other animal organizations, including national
Universal Pictures said Sunday that “Halloween” took in Blumhouse brand and its contemporary currency in the genre ones. Yet we are 100 percent local and depend 100 percent
an estimated $77.5 million in ticket sales from North and it just made for a ridiculously potent combination at the on local donations. 
American theaters. box office this weekend,” said Jim Orr, Universal’s president We receive no funding nor do we take any direction from
It captured first place at the box office with the second- of domestic distribution. any of the groups with national-sounding names (like
highest horror opening of all time, behind last year’s “It.” With 10 days to go until the holiday, including another Humane Society of the United States, or ASPCA). There are
It also marked the second highest October opening ever weekend, the studio expects “Halloween” to enjoy a much thousands of humane societies and SPCAs around the
behind “Venom’s” $80.3 million launch earlier this month. longer life than typical horror films that usually drop off world, but none of us is in any way related. Just like every
The studio also says it’s the biggest movie opening ever significantly after the first weekend. Jane and Joe is their own Jane and their own Joe, not a
with a female lead over 55, in star Jamie Lee Curtis. “Halloween” was enough to bump the comic-book film cousin of the millions of Janes and Joes out there.
David Gordon Green directed “Halloween,” which brings “Venom” out of the No. 1 spot and into third place. In its PHS/SPCA is YOUR humane society and SPCA. When you
back Curtis as Laurie Strode and Nick Castle as Michael third weekend in theaters, it collected $18.1 million, bring- adopt an animal from PHS/SPCA, you help us save a life.
Myers and essentially ignores the events of the other sequels ing its domestic total to $171.1 million. When you volunteer at PHS/SPCA, you help us save more
and spinoffs aside from John Carpenter’s original. Meanwhile “A Star Is Born” held on to second place in its lives. And when you donate to PHS/SPCA you help us save
Reviews have been largely positive for the new install- third weekend with $19.3 million. The Bradley Cooper and the thousands of lives who come to us in need of so very
ment, with an 80 percent fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes Lady Gaga drama has grossed $126.4 million from North much: medical attention, food, behavioral help, shelter,
and a B+ Cinema Score from audiences that were mostly older American theaters and is cruising to break $200 million comfort, love — and, yes, even in need of a name.
(59 percent over 25) and male (53 percent). Internationally, worldwide Sunday.
Ken White is the president of the Peninsula Humane Society
wedding announcement in the San Mateo Times-Gazette: & SPCA.

HISTORY
Continued from page 3
“Miss Alice Martin, the amiable daughter of Nicholas
Martin of Lobitos, was arrested by constable Joel
Mansfield and brought before Justice John Pitcher on a
charge of living a single life. On Constable Mansfield
promising to protect the young lady through the world and
at Martin’s Beach,” adding that the public was welcome and care for her in the future, they were married by the justice.”
offered “special rates to weekly vacationists (sic). Make
your reservations now. Cabins, fishing, bathing.”
Martin and his wife Emma were parents of five daughters, The Rear View Mirror by history columnist Jim Clifford
among them Alice who married coastal constable and future appears in the Daily Journal ev ery other Monday. Objects in
sheriff Joel Mansfield in 1884, resulting in this unusual The Mirror are closer than they appear.

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018 1022 mon:1022 mon 54 10/21/18 8:10 PM Page 1

18 Monday • Oct 22, 2018 THE DAILY JOURNAL

On Wednesday October 10, the Child Care Coordinating Council (4Cs) of San Mateo County
presented its 2018 Leadership Awards at a celebration held at the Devil's Canyon Brewery in
San Carlos. Holding their awards in the front row (left to right), are Anne Campbell , winner of
the Mary Petsche Visionary Leadership Award; Karen Haas-Foletta, winner of the Mary Petsche
Visionary Leadership Award; and Kitty Lopez, accepting the Silicon Valley Community
Foundation’s Community Partnership Award on behalf of First 5 San Mateo County. In the
Back Row (left to right) are presenter Avo Makdessian, Silicon Valley Community Foundation
TOM JUNG/DAILY JOURNAL
Vice President and Director of the Center for Early Learning; presenter Jean-Marie Houston,
Officer Kayla Froomin of the San Mateo Police Department get a "thumbs up" for service San Mateo County Office of Education; 4 C’s Executive Director David Fleishman; and presenter
from Jim and Melody Cole during ‘Tip A Cop,’ a fundraising event held at California Pizza and San Mateo County Board President Dave Pine. For over 40 years, 4Cs has connected and
Kitchen in San Mateo's Hillsdale Shopping Center on Oct. 18. Tips collected by the officers empowered families, educators, and child care providers with resources today for a stronger
will help to fund the Special Olympics of Northern California. San Mateo County tomorrow.
Kwame and Nei l Vachharajani and Li s a Buda, of Menlo Park, ***
E m m a gave birth to a baby boy at Sequoia Hospital in Redwood Ko ns tanti n and Madi na Ev chenko , of Foster City,
Harl i n , of City Sept. 26, 2018. gave birth to a baby boy at Sequoia Hospital in Redwood
Foster City, *** City Oct. 1, 2018.
gave birth to a Ganes h Iy er and Veena Cheni cheri , of San Mateo, ***
baby boy at gave birth to a baby boy at Sequoia Hospital in Redwood Carl eto n and Cai l een Go o l d, o f Menl o Park, gave
S e q u o i a City Sept. 27, 2018. birth to a baby girl at Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City
Hospital in *** Oct. 2, 2018.
Redwood City Rafael and Ana Av endano , of Redwood City, gave ***
Sept. 18, 2018. birth to a baby girl at Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City Hi rav and Jo rdan Gandhi , of Redwood City, gave
*** Sept. 28, 2018. birth to a baby girl at Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City
Umut and Ul ku Ozertem, of San Carlos, gave birth to *** Oct. 5, 2018.
a baby boy at Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City Sept. 19, Juan and Stephani e Muno z, of Redwood City, gave ***
2018. birth to a baby boy at Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City Jarrel l Bi s ho p and Vi rg i ni a Lo pez, of Redwood
*** Sept. 28, 2018. City, gave birth to a baby boy at Sequoia Hospital in
Ti en and Al l i s o n Ng uy en, of San Carlos, gave birth *** Redwood City Oct. 5, 2018.
to a baby girl at Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City Sept. Shanno n and Benjami n Fenech, of San Carlos, gave ***
20, 2018. birth to a baby girl at Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City Paul and Jenni fer O’Sul l i v an, of San Mateo, gave
*** Sept. 28, 2018. birth to a baby boy at Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City
Aus ti n and Eri n Haug en, of San Carlos, gave birth to *** Oct. 6, 2018.
a baby boy at Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City Sept. 20, Derek and Bri ttnew O’Co nno r, of Redwood City, ***
2018. gave birth to a baby boy at Sequoia Hospital in Redwood Ry an and Apri l Kaher, of Indio, gave birth to a baby
*** City Sept. 28, 2018. girl at Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City Oct. 6, 2018.
Ro bert and Anas taci a Parenti , of Oakley, gave birth *** ***
to a baby boy at Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City Sept. James and Laura Dav i ds o n, of Emerald Hills, gave Ni khi l and Cas i a Rav i , of Redwood City, gave birth
21, 2018. birth to a baby girl at Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City to a baby boy at Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City Oct. 9,
*** Oct. 1, 2018. 2018.
Garett and El i s abeth Wel i v er, of Burlingame, gave *** ***
birth to a baby girl at Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City Yuy a and Katheri ne Ko bay as hi , of Menlo Park, Erzhen Li n and Xi Chen, of Foster City, gave birth to
Sept. 21, 2018. gave birth to a baby boy at Sequoia Hospital in Redwood a baby boy, Cooper Lin, at Sequoia Hospital in Redwood
*** City Oct. 1, 2018. City Oct. 10, 2018.

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019 1022 mon:1022 mon 54 10/21/18 8:10 PM Page 1

THE DAILY JOURNAL LOCAL Monday • Oct 22, 2018 19


of a building’s total floor area to its lot

MONDAY, OCT. 22
Calendar
Annual dues are $60 per year, and
RACE
Continued from page 1
size, could provide guidance for home-
owners and architects while also limit
the impact of new home projects.
Peninsula Humane Society’s Mr. members will enjoy solid referrals
Acknowledging the variety of lots in
Moo’s Story-time. 11 a.m. Peninsula from other business members within the city, Rak advocated for councilmem-
Humane Society and SPCA, 1450 the group. Make sure to bring your developments like the 109-unit Wheeler bers to include in whatever set of recom-
Rollins Road, Burlingame. Learn business cards, company brochures Plaza taking shape downtown, how new
about different animal species and other informational materials. mendations they approve a provision to
through puppet interactions, music For more information, call 430-6500. developments will affect traffic conges- study the impact of the changes in 18
and stories. For children free. For tion and other city infrastructure and months or two years and make sure they
more information call 340-7022. Online Discovery: Kanopy Kids. 4
p.m. South San Francisco Library, 840 resources was top of mind for all five understand their effects and can adjust as
Iyengar Yoga. 11 a.m. to noon. Little W. Orange Ave., South San Francisco. candidates. needed.
House, The Roslyn G. Morris Activity Exploring internet resources for kids. Among them are Ken Castle, business
Center, 800 Middle Ave., Menlo Park. For more information call 829-3860. “We need to keep looking at this issue
Repeats every nine weeks on development consultant; John because it’s a complicated one, but … I
Monday until Monday, Dec. 17. Cost Substance Abuse 101. 6:30 p.m. to McDowell, small business owner; Sara
$130. For more information call 326- 7:30 p.m. San Bruno Public Library, 7- think it’s going to take more time to get
2025. 1 Angus Ave. W, San Bruno. Free. McDowell, community volunteer; it right,” he said.
Learn how to recognize and prevent Laura Parmer-Lohan, small business Both Castle and John McDowell sup-
3D Printed Jack-o-Lantern Faces. 4 drug abuse in our community. For
owner; and Adam Rak, public policy agencies and develop strategies for
p.m. Grand Avenue Branch Library, more information call 616-7078.
boosting the city’s stock of affordable ported the recommendations crafted by
306 Walnut Ave., South San consultant. the volunteer group Good Growth San
Francisco. For more information call If Only: Living With Regret. 6:30 Situated in the center of a growing units.
877-8530. p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Bethany Lutheran Though she acknowledged develop- Carlos, which has advocated for a maxi-
Church, 1095 Cloud Ave., Menlo Park. economy, San Carlos’ some six square mum floor area ratio in line with neigh-
Peninsula Humane Society Puppy This event will discuss how to over- miles have been dealing with change on ers have the option of paying in-lieu
Kindergarten. 6:15 p.m. to 7:15 p.m. come past mistakes. For more infor- fees instead of including affordable boring cities among other recommenda-
Peninsula Humane Society and mation call 854-5897. multiple levels, including an uptick in tions aimed at mitigating the effect of
SPCA, 1450 Rollins Road, Burlingame. jobs, increased traffic congestion and units in residential projects, she said
Teaches good habits such as sitting, Paint Like Jack son Pollock. 6:30 officials should encourage developers large home projects on neighbors and
staying and not biting. For puppies 4- p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Belmont Library, strained infrastructure, said Parmer- the neighborhood.
6 months old. Class series. $135. For 1110 Alameda de las Pulgas, Lohan. Having decided to run for a seat to build affordable units where possible
more information call 340-7022. Belmont. All supplies will be provid- and consider studying underutilized For Castle, who has seen several large
ed. For ages 18 and older. Free. For
on the council more than a year ago, homes go up in White Oaks and impose
Parmer-Lohan said she’s hoping to fos- city properties as potential housing
Staged Reading of ‘Tournament de more information call 591-8286.
sites. on their neighbors, the city’s current
Champions.’ 7:30 p.m. Dragon ter increased dialogue among San Carlos standards should have been more care-
Productions Theatre Co., 2120 THURSDAY, OCT. 25
residents about the changes taking “I think it’s the creative out-of-the-
Broadway, Redwood City. A new play Seeing Patterns. 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The
box thinking that we need to go for,” fully studied before they allowed such
by Max Tachis. A comedy about Main Gallery, 1018 Main St., Redwood shape in the city and what can be done large home projects. He noted officials
Blockbuster in 2010. $5-$6. For more City. A solo exhibition of gallery artist
to best address them. she said. “I’d like to revisit [in-lieu
information call 493-2006. Jean Thrift. Thrift’s work shows us the fees] on council and really push for the and residents have made progress on
beauty in patterns all around us. Free. “That’s causing some stress and peo- developing new standards in recent
TUESDAY, OCT. 23 For more information call (415) 987- ple feeling like the community they affordable units to be built instead.”
The Art of Drawing. 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. 7360. Having grown up in San Carlos, months, but didn’t think there should be
San Carlos Adult Community Center, bought into is evaporating,” she said. any rush to approve new recommenda-
601 Chestnut St., San Carlos. Learn Building Futures: A Luncheon to “A lot of the developers want to leave John McDowell said he’s observed the
basic skills and explore a variety of B enefit The Peninsula College small-town charm that’s attracted many tions before the three new councilmem-
drawing tools and subject matter. Fund. 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Sharon the place better than they found it, but bers are elected to give the conversation
18+. Cost is $30 for eight two-hour Heights Golf & Country Club, 2900 they haven’t really been asked.” to the city disappear in the face of
classes. For more information call San Hill Road, Menlo Park. To register unchecked development. Though he the space it requires.
802-4384. or for more information contact
Parmer-Lohan said she has spoken “I don’t feel there should be any rush
phil.ekedahl@peninsulacollege- with parents and developers in San voiced support for efforts such as those
Workshop for Parents of Young the San Mateo County Community to judgment to the council,” he said.
fund.org. Carlos about the scarcity of child care in
Kids with Developmental Delays. College District is taking on to pro- “You can’t really make a hard and fast
10 a.m. to 12 p.m. Bay Room, Sobrato Book Munchers Book Club. 4 p.m. the city in the hopes a critical resource rule for any particular type of property.”
Center, 330 Twin Dolphin Drive, South San Francisco Library, 840 W. with a big impact on a family’s cost of vide workforce housing, he also advo-
Redwood City. Free. For more infor- Orange Ave., South San Francisco. For cated for taking a look at how office Most of the candidates felt the city’s
mation call (415) 377-7941. kids ages 5-8. They can pick up a free living can be bolstered. Rak, Castle and decision to contract with the San Mateo
book. For more information call 829- Sara McDowell, who has no relation to developments drive demand for hous-
5 Keys to Maximize Social Security 3860. ing and exploring a moratorium on County Sheriff’s Office for public safety
and Retirement Income. Noon to 1
John McDowell, joined Parmer-Lohan services and the Redwood City Fire
p.m. 1900 S. Norfolk St., Suite 350, San Running Team. 5 p.m. to 6 p.m. in casting a focus on working with commercial development, which he
said could ease the housing shortage Department for the city’s fire services
Mateo. Complimentary lunch and Belmont Library, 1110 Alameda de developers to ensure community bene-
workshop on Social Security and las Pulgas, Belmont. No experience while affording the city time to study after the 2008 recession made sense for
Retirement Income. Free. For more required. Wear running clothes. For fits such as parks and traffic mitigation the city and didn’t compromise the qual-
information call 446-5440. more information call 591-8286. measures are included in large projects, the impact of its current zoning.
“I’d like to see the City Council take ity of those services. For Parmer-
Marv’s Music Memories - Irving Author Talk: Plight of the living and also in pushing residential develop- Lohan, ensuring the city’s planning
Berlin: The Later Years. 1:30 p.m. to dead with Matthew Simon. 6 p.m. ers to include affordable housing units the approach of revisiting our General
2:30 p.m. The Roslyn G. Morris to 11:59 p.m. South San Francisco Plan and look at the zoning issues we department is appropriately staffed and
Activity Center, 800 Middle Ave., Library, 840 W. Orange Ave., South
in plans for new projects. paid a livable wage is critical given the
Though he acknowledged the hous- have here,” he said.
Menlo Park. Free. For more informa- San Francisco. Learn about the natu-
Rak, who also served on the board of high volume of development proposals
tion call 326-2025. ral evolution of zombieism and mind ing shortage is a regional issue, Rak and plans the city must review. Though
control. Free. For more information
noted San Carlos can contribute to the the San Carlos Elementary School
Second Harvest Food Bank : call 829-3860.
District, also acknowledged the chal- he acknowledged some departments in
Calfresh and Food Programs. 2 county’s stock of affordable housing the city may need additional staffing,
p.m. Grand Avenue Branch Library, FRIDAY, OCT. 26
and pegged stretches of Old County lenge of managing a yearslong discus-
306 Walnut Ave., South San Basic Facilitation Training. 8 a.m. to
sion about recommended changes to John McDowell supported using a con-
Francisco. Volunteer information ses- 4 p.m. PS Business Parkenins, 1710 Road and East San Carlos Avenue for tract model out of concern for the poten-
sion. For more information call 877- South Amphlett Blvd., Suite 126 San future study as transit-oriented areas the city’s residential zoning standards.
8530. Mateo. A two day, 12-hour, interac- Aimed at addressing concerns about the tial of layoffs in an impending econom-
tive, skills-building training to where higher-density developments ic downturn.
Exploring the Insides of a PC. 4 p.m. learn the building blocks for effective could be accommodated. Castle favored mass and scale of new homes and
South San Francisco Library, 840 W. meetings. For more information call remodels while also affording home- The candidates also lauded the coun-
Orange Ave., South San Francisco. All 513-0030. forming a Peninsula-wide development cil’s decision earlier this year to use $7
ages welcome. For more information association bringing nonprofits owners the ability to meet the needs of
call 829-3860. Seeing Patterns. 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The their families, proposed home-size million of San Carlos’ unfunded liabili-
Main Gallery, 1018 Main St., Redwood
together with developers and cities to ty reserve to pay down the city’s
Medicare Advantage and City. A solo exhibition of gallery artist look for sites where high-density regulations were released in May after
Prescription Drug Plans Talk. 6 p.m Jean Thrift. Thrift’s work shows us the months of meetings between the city’s employee pension obligations. Rak
to 7 p.m. Burlingame Public Library, beauty in patterns all around us. Free.
housing developments can be accom- and John McDowell advocated for using
modated across the county. Single-family House Advisory
480 Primrose Road, Burlingame. com- For more information call (415) 987-
Committee, on which Parmer-Lohan reserves to pay down the city’s pension
munity educator Aileen Fisher will 7360. As chair of the city’s Economic liabilities during strong economic
explain the importance of the period
Development Advisory Commission, served. Conversations about what
and how HICAP of SMC, the Medicare Kidz in Motion. 10:15 a.m. South San
changes would be most effective have times to avoid having to cut services
counseling program, can help bene- Francisco Library, 840 W. Orange Ave., Sara McDowell said she has heard from during a slow economy. Concerned
ficiaries save. Free. For more informa- South San Francisco. Kids will move, San Carlos business owners about the continued at Planning Commission
tion, call (650) 627-9350. play games, sing, stretch and balance and City Council meetings since then. about the turnover in full-time employ-
to foster gross motor skills. For more difficulty of hiring local workers and ees, Castle voiced support for studying
Electric Vehicle Work shop: information call 829-3860. emphasized the importance of working Most of the candidates agreed restric-
Everything You Need to Know to tions on the floor area ratio, or the ratio how other cities and states are address-
Go EV. 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Burlingame 3D Open House. 3:30 p.m. to 4:30 with nonprofits, developers and state ing their pension obligations.
Recreation Center, 850 Burlingame p.m. San Bruno Public Library, 701
Ave., Burlingame. Learn about the Angus Ave. W, San Bruno. See a
benefits of electric vehicles. For more LulzBot 3D printer in action. Free. For A
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Activity Center, 800 Middle Ave. American Legion Post 409, 757 San

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Noon to 1 p.m. Central Park Bistro,
181 E. Fourth Ave., San Mateo.
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020 1022 mon:1022 mon 54 10/19/18 12:39 PM Page 1

20 Monday • Oct 22, 2018 LOCAL THE DAILY JOURNAL

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021-026 1022 mon 54:Class Master Odd 10/19/18 3:48 PM Page 1

THE DAILY JOURNAL Monday • Oct. 22, 2018 21

104 Training 110 employment 110 employment


TerMs & coNDiTioNs a/v supervisor
The San Mateo Daily Journal Classi- FT/Ex. Benes. Support and ops
of sound, lighting, video and
caregivers
fieds will not be responsible for more staging for high use conference
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of the ad. All error claims must be sub- saLes - Telemarketing and Inside Sales
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021-026 1022 mon 54:Class Master Odd 10/19/18 3:49 PM Page 2

22 Monday • Oct. 22, 2018 THE DAILY JOURNAL

110 Employment 110 Employment 110 Employment tundra tundra tundra


houSEKEEpEr -
Owner of a luxury home in Hillsborough
Ca. is seeking an experienced house-
keeper. This is a part-time position pay-
ing $20 per hour, 20 hours a week. Du-
ties include light housekeeping, supervis-
ing sub-contractors and handymen to
make sure that repairs and updates are
completed in a timely manner. This
would be a perfect position for a retired
person. Please send your resume
to jobs2284@gmail.com

housekeeper Wanted
We’re looking for a housekeeper for 5
days a week. The ideal candidate will
be reliable, detail oriented, self-moti- over the hedge over the hedge over the hedge
vated, and experienced in working in
a busy family home!
*Full-time Individuals only –
Companies need not apply.*
Contact Brenda Jimenez
650-365-3310
bjimenez@emergencyuniversity.com

buscando ama de Casa


Estamos buscando un ama de casa
durante 5 días a la semana. ¡El candi-
dato ideal será confiable, orientado a
los detalles, auto motivado y con ex-
periencia trabajando en una casa de
familia ocupada!
* Solo personas de tiempo completo:
las empresas no necesitan presentar
una solicitud.*
Contacte a Brenda Jiménez
650-365-3310 110 Employment 110 Employment 110 Employment
bjimenez@emergencyuniversity.com
NEWSpapEr iNtErNS
JourNaLiSM
The Daily Journal is looking for in-
SaLES/MarKEtiNg terns to do entry level reporting, re-
iNtErNShipS search, updates of our ongoing fea-
The San Mateo Daily Journal is looking tures and interviews. Photo interns al-
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We expect a commitment of four to
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This position will provide valuable intelligent, aggressive and talented in-
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Email resume paid correspondents and full-time re-
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the best career seekers news@smdailyjournal.com or by reg-
read the daily Journal. Caregivers Wanted
Caregivers Wanted ular mail to 1900 Alameda de las Pul-
gas #112, San Mateo CA 94403
Home CCare
Home are Jobs
We will help you recruit qualified, talented
individuals to join your company or organization. (650) 600-8108
EEmail:
mail: jobs@starlightcaregivers.com
jobs@starlightcaregivers.com pEt SittErS &
the daily Journal’s readership covers a wide
range of qualifications for all types of positions. www.starlightcaregivers.com
w ww.starlightcaregivers.com dog WaLKErS
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Email: Lynda@bayareapetpals.com
for more info today!

210 Lost & found


LoSt Cat. Black and White. Black
patch on right eye. REWARD.
Call (323) 439-7713.

books
JaMES pattErSoN hardback books.
2 @ $3.00 each. (650)341-1861

NiChoLaS SparKS hardback books.


2 @ $3.00 each. Call (650)341-1861
v.LogviNov, uNuSuaL Journey to the
Country of Cyclic Arithmetic, 2017, Rus-
sian, 104p $25 (650)638-1695

295 art
bruShEd fiNiSh, 15" X 20" frame
holds 18 various size photos. Never
used. $20. 650-369-2486.

296 appliances
air CoNditioNEr 10000 BTU w/re-
mote. Slider model fits all windows. LG
brand $199 runs like new. (650)235-
0898

hotpoiNt hEavy Duty Dryer excellent


working condition Burlingame $50 Call
Dan (408)656-0958
KENMorE WiNdoW A/C (vert. open-
ing) 8700 btu. New in box. $200.00 as
is. David Butler (415)608- 1214.
Maytag WaShEr excellent working
condition Burlingame $50 Call Dan
(408)656-0958
Mfg h20LabS Model 300 exc cond
counter top $25 Burl (650)248-3839.
Mixa MixEr with bowel twin motor
$50.00 (650)576-5026
NEW, SiNgEr Sewing Machine Univer-
sal Carry Case Model 620, Free Arm Ma-
chine Compatible, $35, (650)483-1222
021-026 1022 mon 54:Class Master Odd 10/19/18 3:49 PM Page 3

THE DAILY JOURNAL Monday • Oct. 22, 2018 23

296 Appliances 299 Computers 304 Furniture 308 Tools 311 Musical Instruments 318 Sports Equipment
RICCAR 500 hi performance upright vac- 19" COLOR Monitor with stand VG con- COMMOdE, GOOd condition. $20 obo. vINTAGE CRAFTSMAN Jig Saw. Circa PIANO-1955 bALdWIN Acrosonic 36” TOTAL GyM XLS, excellent condition.
uum $75.00 (650)576-5026 dition power cord/owners manual includ- Please call (650)745-6309 1947. $60. (650)245-7517 High, Free for anyone to pick-up Paid $2,500. Yours for $900. Call
ed $60.00 OBO 1-415-279-4857 (650)295-9121. (650)588-0828
ROOM HEATER Electric 1320 Watts, Ar- COMPUTER dESK (glass) & chair. Like vINTAGE SHOPSMITH and bANd
vin Air Fan Forced Automatic $5. I-PAd KEybOARd. $25.00. (650)588- new $75 OBO (650)704-4709 or SAW, good shape. $300/obo. Call PLAyER PIANO 1916 W/Bench 25 mu- TOUREdGE REACTION ii uniflex sys-
(650)952-3500 0842 gtecher@comcast.net (650)342-6993 sic rolls $950 Don (415)309-3892 tem 8 irons 3-9 and pitch irons
www.elo.deals new $75. Call May (650)349-0430
SEWING MACHINE-ROyAL XL 6000 RECORdAbLE Cd-R 74, Sealed, Unop- COMPUTER SWIvEL CHAIR. Padded
Dressmaker Sewing Machine. $150. ened, original packaging, Samsung, 12X, Leather. $80. (650) 455-3409 vINTAGE LINGERIE Washboard circa TREAdMILL IN very good condition. Pic-
(650)342-8436. (650) 578 9208 WELdER- LINCOLN AC 220 amps 240 1920’s The Zinc King #703. Suitable for ture available on request. $50 obo.
dESK, Gd. cond. $99.99 or b.o. volts $199.00 (650)948-4895 strumming $50 (650)369-2486 650 322 9598.
vACUUM CLEANER (reconditioned) (650)458-3578
$20 Call Ed (415)298-0645 300 Toys
309 Office Equipment zILjIAN CyMbALS with stands, 21”
ride, 18” crash. Paistie 18” crash - $99
TREAdMILL-HORIzON LIKE New, limit-
ed use, Paid $750-Asking $450 OBO
WESTERN WASHbOARd Sales made AMERICAN FLyER locomotive runs dINING ROOM Table-Antique,Oak, (916)826-5964 (650)508-8662
of brass and wood, Golden Beam #25-C. good #21085 $75.00 (650) 867-7433 5chairs, w/ extension $350 (650)290- LAPTOP CASE or bag. Black. Like new.
$75. phone 650-369-2486. 3188 Hardly used. $25. (650)697-1564.
TREK MOUNTAIN train tag a long; exec
LARGE STUFFEd ANIMALS - $3 each 312 Pets & Animals condition;$75;will text photo; (650)218-
297 bicycles Great for Kids (650) 952-3500 310 Misc. For Sale 0121 San Carlos
dINING TAbLE (36"x54") and 4 match- AIRLINE CARRIER for cats, pur. from
STAR WARS Celebration 3 Darth Vader ing chairs, sturdy oak, cost $600, sell for 200 PLASTIC trading card holders; $15; Southwest Airlines, $25, 2 available. Call
AdULT bIKES 1 regular and 2 with bal- $20 new w/case Dan (650)303-3568 TUNTURIC STATIONARy Bike $45.
$250 .(650)-654-1930. (650)591-9769 San Carlos (505)228-1480 local. Daly City-(650) 878-8403
loon tires $30 Each (650) 347-2356

CHILd’S SCHWINN bICyCLE, bLUE in


302 Antiques dINING TAbLE - WITH Extension, six 500-600 bIG Band-era 78's--most mint, ONE KENNEL Cab ll one Pet Taxi ani- vINTAGE NASH Cruisers Mens/ Wom-
chairs, Solid wood, Vintage 1950’s, $500 no sleeves--$50 for all-(650)574-5459 mal carriers 26x16. Excellent cond. $60.. ens Roller Skates Blue indoor/outdoor sz
good condition. $20. (650) 355-5189. (650)692-8012. 6-8. $60 B/O. (650)574-4439
ANTIqUE HEMINGRAy Glass Tele- (650)593-2066
graph Pole Insulator. Aqua colored. Pris- bESSy SMALL Evening Hand Bag With
Mountain bike for sale $35. Runs good. dRESSER 4-dRAWER in Belmont for Beige Cord $75.00 (650)678-5371
Burlingame. Phone 650-342-5220. tine condition. 4.5"X3.25" $15 (650)762- PARROT CAGE, Steel, Large - approx WORKOUT bENCH, weights, bars, for
6048 $75. Good condition; good for children. 4 ft by 4 ft, Excellent condition $300 best flat/incline bench and legs. $100.
Call (650)678-8585 bIFOLd SHUTTERS 2x28”x79 $10.00 (650)861-2411
MOUNTAIN bIKE new 21 gears $100. (650)544-5306 offer. (650)245-4084
(650)722-3634 bEER STEINS-ORIGINAL from Germa- dRESSER-ANTIqUE vANITy Combo, 3 PET CARRIER for small dog or cat in ex- yAMAHA ROOF RACK, 58 inches $75.
ny, three different $99 ea. Call for info beveled mirrors, Eight Drawers, $550 bLUE OySTER cult lp signed by donald
MOUNTAIN bIKE. Top brand. Runs (650)592-7483 r. Eric b. And Wilcox. $40. Cash cellent condition $30. Claudia (650) 349- (650)458-3255
good. $39. (660)342-5220 (650)209-3188 6059
(408)661-6019
FULL SIzE bed wood frame with pillow PET TAxI Animal Carrier. Brand: Delux
340 Camera & Photo Equip.
298 Collectibles MAHOGANy ANTIqUE Secretary desk, top mattress $100.00 B/O (650)576-5026 CASH REGISTER Parts; Much Skin Not
Nature Miracle - Excellent Condition for
72” x 40” , 3 drawers, Display case, bev- Guts $500 (415)269-4784 NIKON 18-140 zoom lenses (3), excel-
elled glass, $150. (650)766-3024. $25. Call (650)349-6059. lent condition. $200 each. (650)592-9044
80’S TOPS Complete Factory Set All GLIdER rocker and ottoman, oak, excel-
lent condition. $100 (650)345-5644. COMEALONG 3/4 ton chain $25 (650)
Years $99 Call Rick (415) 999-4474. 873-6304
ROSEvILLE TULIP Pitcher, Ca: 1900.
$45. (650)574-2490. IKEA dRESSER, black, 3 shelf. 23" x
316 Clothes OMEGA b600 Condenser Enlarger, In-
bAdGE, 7 Star Special Security Offi- COSCO PLAy Pen with travel bag. Used struction Manual & 50mm El-Omegar En-
15"deep x 50" high. $65. (650)598-9804. 5 bOxES male & female square dance larging Lens $95 (415)260-6940
cer;$25- will text picture (650)218-0121 once $35 (650)591-2981
San Carlos 303 Electronics IKEA TAbLE, black 58" x 21" x 14" high. clothing. Excellent Condition. As a
dELUxE FOLdER Walker - 5" wheels - bunch $200 Maryann (650)574-4439. vIvITAR v 2000 W/35-70 zoom and
$ 30. (650)598-9804. original manual. Like new. $99 SSF
CANNON COPIER. $20. 650-342-5220. Never Used - $40 (650)341-5347
bARbIE dOLL of the World collection (650)583-6636
MASSAGE TAbLE, excellent condition, bLUE TAHARI NWT wool button-up
$75.00. Call (650)872-2371 FREE TELEvISION - Mitsubishi, folding, $25, (650) 552-9556. FREE MAGAzINES. Library discards jacket $25 (650)952-3466
26"W,22"H,18"D Works Great, Not year old ones. Wide variety. Good for 345 Medical Equipment
bEAUTIFUL HERMAN Miller pendulum Flatscreen, Text (650) 333-8323 Local NEW dELUxE Twin Folding Bed, Lin- crafts, light reading. (650)952-9074 bOx OF used men's Levi's and misc.
clock. Rich wood finish - works well; nice Delivery available. ens, cover, Cost $618. Sale $250. Must jeans $99.00 or best offer fair condition AdjUSTAbLE bATH shower transfer
chime! $65; 650-591-8851. Sell! (650) 875-8159. HAT, T-SHIRT, sweatshirt and comput- (650)589-0764
erbag $80.00 for all (650)592-2648 bench with sidebar $15 (510)770-1976
MOTOROLA bRAvO MB 520 (android
dEPRESSION GLASS Dining Plate. 8 4.1 upgrade) smart phone 35$ 8GB SD NEW TWIN Mattress set plus frame dAWGS bRANd Kaymann black and dRIvE 3-IN-1 commode with seat,buck-
card Belmont (650)595-8855 $30.00 (650) 347-2356 LIONEL CHRISTMAS Holiday expan- white snake print loafers size 7 (9.3”) $25
3/4", crows foot pattern, clear ruby red. sion Set. New OB $99 (650)368-7537 et,cover,splash sheild,armrests $10
$12 (650)762-6048 (650)369-2486 (510)770-1976
ONKyO Av Receiver HT-R570 .Digital NIAGARA vIbRATING Adjustable bed
good condition Burlingame $90 Call Dan LIONEL WESTERN Union Pass car and FANCy HIGH heel shoes, never worn
Surround, HDMI, Dolby, Sirius Ready, dining car. New OB $99 (650)368-7537 dRIvE dELUxE two button walker $10
LENNOx REd Rose, Unused, hand Cinema Filter.$95/ Offer (650)591-2393 (408)656-0958 size 8 1/2 $20.00 (650)592-2648
painted, porcelain, authenticity papers, (510)770-1976
LOREx 14” B&W Surveillance System
$12.00. (650) 578 9208. PHILLIPS-50” COLOR T.v., Heavy, $99 OFFICE TyPE 34"X 60" heavy solid Model SG14S1042C-A $75 (415)407- HOMEdICS dUAL Shiatsu Massage
(650)591-8062 wood with formica wood grain top $25 2360 RWC loction. FAUx FUR Coat Woman's brown multi Cushion. 3 Zone. $45.00. (650)207-4162
MILLER LITE Neon sign , work good (650) 787-9753 color in excellent condition 3/4
length $50 (650)692-8012 INvERSION THERAPy table back
$59 call (650)218-6528 304 Furniture RECLINING CHAIR, wine colored $30,
MEILINK SAFE-FIRE Proof,
stretcher w/ heat $99.00 joe (650)573-
50”x31”X31”, 2200lbs $1200
OLd, ANTIqUE, Bottle Collection: 20 (650)-583-4985 www.elo.deals (415)309-3892 KAyANO MEN’S Running shoes size 11 5269
2 WALNUT 3-drawer nitestands. Tops good condition $20 (650)520-7045
bottles in total. $40 for all. (650)762-6048 need work but very good cond. $20/ea RETRO HUTCH Needs refinishing other- OMT TAbLE, excellent condition, fold-
(650)952-3466. wise good condition. Top detaches from LAdIES CLOTHING, some w/tags. ing, $25, (650) 552-9556.
PORCELAIN dOLL collection $10.00. bottom $25. (650)712-9962 MOTLEy CRUE lp signed by neil lee $99.00 (650)589-0764.
Call (650)872-2371. sixx and mars $75 cash (408)661-6019
ANTIqUE dINING table for six people RAdIATION PROTECTION 1/2-apron
with chairs $99. (650)580-6324 SOLId WOOd Dining table with exten- LAdIES SEqUIN dress, blue, size XL, Pb free; .5mm Pb equivalent, xl, adjusta-
SMALL RUG beater. $15.00 (650)207- NEGRINI FENCING Epee mask size M pure silk lining, $40.00, (650) 578-9208
sion great piece great condition black & France Lames 5 epee blade $95 ble buckle, gently used; $60; 607-227-
4162 ANTIqUE MOHAGANy Bookcase. Four $80 (650)364-5263 (415)260-6940 7742.
feet tall. $75. (415) 282-0966. MEN'S STETSON hat, size large, new,
STAR WARS R2-D2, original 1998 un- SOLId WOOd Entertainment Center- rim, solid black, large, great gift. $40
bEdSTEAd SINGLE, poster style, box NEW LAWN SWING 5'1/2" W x 5 '6" H (650) 578-9208 Garage Sales
opened action figure. $15 in San Carlos. TurnTable, Am-Fm, Eight Track, Built In $100 (650) 678-6428 aft. 6pm
Steve 650-518-6614 spring, mattress available. $40.00. Speakers, Sony 26’ Smart T.V.(68.75 in.
(650)593-7408 X 25.5inch X28inch) $500 o.b.o NEW WITH tags Wool or cotton Men's
OLd STyLE Water dispenser-iron stand- pullover sweaters (XL) $15/each
TELESCOPE-CELESTRON ASTRO (925)482-5742 clay pot-5gal. glass bottle $75. (650)873-
Master Newtonian Reflector, w/ tro/pod
stand, Like New $150.00
bEIGE SOFA $99. Excellent Condition
(650) 315-2319 TAbLE 24"x48" folding legs each end.
6304
(650)952-3466
NWT zEGNA medium brown plaid cash-
GARAGE SALES
Melamine top, 500# capacity. Cost
Call (415)239-1348. bLACK METAL 4 drawer file cabinet
$10. good condition. call (650)872-2371
$130. Sell $50. 650-591-4141
RAy-bAN TOP Bar Sunglasses
RB31832 BlackFrameSemi rimless semi-
wrap Lens:GreyUV UltraSleek Light-
mere blazer, XL $20 (650)952-3466 ESTATE SALES
TOPPS bASEbALL complete set 1987 TWIN bEd frame-black wrought iron SHOES SIzE 5 1/2 and 6 for $50 or less
bUNK bEdS for sale. Cherry Wood, 2 weight New w/case $65.00 (650)591- (650)508-8662
thru 1992, 1998,1999 $99 Rick (415)999- years old. Includes Mattresses. $600 or from Crate & Barrel $65 (650)631-1341 6596 Make money, make room!
4474 B/O (650)685-2494 TWIN bEd, mattress, box spring, frame TUxEdO SIzE 40, black, including white
SAMSONITE 26" tan hard-sided suit shirt, excellent cond. $50 (650)355-5189
$ 50. (650)598-9804. case, lt. wt., wheels, used once/like new.
WORK bOOTS. Iron Age, size 10-1/2,
List your upcoming
$45. (650)328-6709
SAN BRUNO PARK SCHOOL DISTRICT TWIN bEd- Free you pick up. Call
(650)344-2109 brown, with steel metatarsal protection.
In box, $45, OBO. (650)594-1494
garage sale,
San Bruno, California 94066 SILK SAREE 6 yards new nice color.for
USEd bEdROOM Furniture, FREE. Call $35 only. Call(650)515-2605 for more in-
formation.
moving sale,
(650)573-7381. 318 Sports Equipment estate sale,
NOTICE vENEER CHEST 6.5’ high, 3 ft. wide
$99 (650)322-2814.
SINK, 33”x22” Top mount with faucet,
$15.00 (650)544-5306 bIG bERTHA, Golfsmith Titanium Driver yard sale,
Intention to Sell ,Mid Driver, Stinger 1 3 5 - $99 Rick
3± acres of Real Property and WALL UNIT/ROOM Divider. Simple
lines. Breaks down for transportation.
SLR LENS Pentax 28-90mm f3.5-5.6
Pentax K Mount $25 (650)436-7171
(415)999-4474 rummage sale,
20,000± sq. ft. of school buildings known as the
El Crystal School Site
$25.(650)712-9962 leave message
SLR LENS Sigma 28-105mm f3.8-5.6
bOW FLEx Max Trainer M-3-Very Good clearance sale, or
Condition, Like New, Assembled, Paid
201 balboa Way WALNUT CHEST, small (4 drawer with
upper bookcase $50. (650)726-6429
Sigma SA Mount $25 (650)436-7171
$1200 asking $800 Call Michael whatever sale you
(650)784-1061.
San bruno, CA 94066
WHITE WICKER Armoire, asking $100,
TIRES-SET OF four P225 45 R18 $80
OBO (650)359-2238. have...
great condition, text for picture (650)571- bRANd NEW Golf bag with Stand.
RESOLUTION # 18-08-01 stating the District’s intention to sell 0947 TUNTURI ROWING Machine, Good Makes a great gift. $70. 415-867-6444.
approximately three acres and 20,000± sf of buildings known Condition, $75, (650)483-1222
WOOd - wall Unit - 30" long x 6' tall x bRANd NEW golf clubs: 1, 3 Woods; Reach over 83,450 readers
as the El Crystal School site, was PASSED AND ADOPTED 17.5" deep. $90. (650)631-9311
UNIdEN HARLEy Davidson Gas Tank Irons: 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 pw. Makes a great from South San Francisco
by the Board of Trustees of the SAN BRUNO PARK SCHOOL phone. $100 or best offer. (650)863-8485 gift $99. 415-867-6444.
DISTRICT at its meeting held on September 12, 2018. to Palo Alto.
306 Housewares WALKER - Good Condition - Like New -
EASTON ALUMINUM bat.33 inches, 30 in your local newspaper.
$35 (650)341-5347
oz, 2 3/4 barrel. $30. (650)596-0513
At 3:00 pm on Thursday, November 1, 2018 in the San Bruno COMPLETE SET OF CHINA - Windsor
Park School District Offices at 500 Acacia Avenue, San Bruno, Garden, Noritake. Four place-settings, 311 Musical Instruments ELLIPTICAL-NORdIC TRACK Like new
Call (650)344-5200
20-pieces in original box, never used. Barely Used, Paid $600, Asking $300
California, 94066, a representative of the District will accept $250 per box (3 boxes available). 1929 ANTIqUE Alto Selmer, Cigar Cut- obo. (650)235-0066.
sealed responses to a Request for Proposal to purchase the (650)342-5630 ter, Newly Refurbished $6,000 OBO Call
above site. No minimum price is stated. Proposals must in- CRySTAL (LEAdEd glass) lamp $30.
(650)742-6776. EvERLAST 80# MMA Heavy Bag and
clude a $100,000 refundable deposit. Proposals must be sub- Stand. Like New. $99 (650)654-9966
Can send picture. (650)464-7860
mitted no later than 3:00 pm on Thursday, November 1, 2018 bALdWIN bAby GRAND 1928 vintage GOLF bALLS Titlest ProV1, 50, perfect
addressed to the District’s property consultant: Tom Shannon MIKASA SET. White. Modern (square) in walnut. $7500.00 w/bench (415)608- condition, each at $ 0.50. (650)345-5446 379 Open Houses
Setting for 4 $30 (415)734-1152. 1214
c/o San Bruno Park School District, 500 Acacia Avenue, San GOLF CLUbS {13}, Bag, & Pull Cart all--
Bruno, CA 94066 SINK dOUbLE cast iron. Good condi-
CHROMATIC HARMONICA: Horner $90.00 (650)341-8342
tion. $99.00. (650)593-7408
The 64 Chomonica, German Made $180,
GUTHy-RENKER POWER Rider,Ever-
OPEN HOUSE
For more information and/or a Request for Proposal (RFP)
package, call Tom Shannon (408) 230-7095.
308 Tools (650)278-5776. last 2 1/2 ankle weights, kegel thigh ex-
erciser $20 (510)770-1976
LISTINGS
ANTIqUE IRON Hand Drills. 3 available
at $30 each. (650)339-3672 Ron EPIPHONE LES Paul Custom Prophecy KNEE RIdER $ 50.00 joe (650)573-5269 List your Open House
ATTEST Andrew Mason Electric Guitar. Mint. $625.00. in the Daily Journal.
Clerk, Board of Trustees, bRIGGS & Stratton Lawn Mower with (650)421-5469. LEATHER GOLF bag with 23 clubs $90.
SAN BRUNO PARK SCHOOL DISTRICT Mulch rear bag-like new- $95.00. (650) 592-2648. Reach over 83,450
County of San Mateo, State of California (650)771-6324. EvERETT UPRIGHT antique piano. potential home buyers &
Lovely sound. $99. 650-365-5718. MEN'S ROSSIGNOL Skis. $95.00,
_____________________________________ CRAFTSMAN 9" Radial Arm Saw with 6" good condition, (650)341-0282. renters a day,
dado set. No stand. $55 (650)341-6402 HUGE LUdWIG Drum Set Silver Sparkle ONE dOzEN Official League Diamond
from South San Francisco
Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, October 1, 8, 15, LG CRAFTSMEN shop vac 6.5hp $60
& Chrome, Zelgian, Pasite & Sabian Baseballs. Brand New. $35. Call Roger to Palo Alto.
22, 2018. (510)943-9221 Cymbals, 24 in. Timpany $3,500 (650)771-6324. in your local newspaper.
(916)975-4969
SHOPSMITH MARK V 50th Anniversary PRINCE TENNIS 2 section nylon black Call (650)344-5200
most attachments. $1,500/OBO. PIANO, UPRIGHT, in excellent condi- Bag with Prince Pro Graphite Racket-
(650)504-0585 tion. Asking $345. (650)366-4769 $55.(650)341-8342
021-026 1022 mon 54:Class Master Odd 10/19/18 3:49 PM Page 4

24 Monday • Oct. 22, 2018 THE DAILY JOURNAL

440 Apartments 620 Automobiles 645 boats 670 Auto Service 670 Auto Parts 680 Autos Wanted
belmont APArtmentS -1br, 2br, boAt- 7 FT Livingston Fiber Glass., 2.5 Gm truCk/SuV 1994? Large Vehicle. Wanted 62-75 Chevrolets
3br; Prime Location, Quiet Buildings, No
Smoking, No Pets, $2100.00 and up
Got An older HP. NIssan Outboard Motor. $800.
(650) 591-5404.
AA SmoG Front Bumper/plastic/grill unit Novas, running or not
Parts collection etc.
(650)595-0805 CAr, boAt, or rV? Complete Repair & Service complete/perfect. Perfect/photos availa- So clean out that garage
Do the humane thing. $39.75 plus certificate fee ble .$75. (650)727-7266 Give me a call
Donate it to the boAt-rACinG C-ClASS, 40 hp Joe 650 342-2483
Tohatsu Engine, Spare Parts included (most cars)
470 rooms Humane Society. $2,000 obo Call Vince (650)515-6091 869 California Drive . mini CooPer- Hood Best offer-
Call 1- 866-899-3051 Burlingame www.elo.deals Call Don(415)309-3892
hiP houSinG mAlibu 24 ft with tower. Completely re- (650) 340-0492
Non-Profit Home Sharing Program
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620 Automobiles
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16 City founded by
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6 Put the kibosh on 46 Rwandan native 58 Prefix for “ten”
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17 Simple __ of
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10 Cassini of
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opposite
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12 Be a ham
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Sell your vehicle in the
13 Obama
0878
daily Journal’s feature
Auto Classifieds. merCedeS ‘89 300e, Low Miles, Excel.
24 Guthrie at daughter
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We’ll run it
630 trucks & SuV’s export 26 Honor society
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ford ‘10 F150 Super Crew cab, 78K
miles. System-One toolboxes and rack. 28 Denials 27 Got ready for the
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30 Site for crafters surprise party
from South Sf to
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cry 29 Deposed Iranian
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Call (650)344-5200
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leXuS '08 RX400 179K, fully loaded, 37 Prefix with -gram
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42 How wealthy 34 Tres menos dos 10/22/18
CAdillAC ’90 El Dorado Runs Great, 635 Vans people live
47 Arrived
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toyotA ‘08 SIENNA LE, excellent con-
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84K
dition, camera, bluetooth, trailer, 94K 48 One-man show
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craigslist for pics. about Capote
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(408)807-6529. 640 motorcycles/Scooters athlete
CheVy ‘10 HHR . 68K. EXCELLENT bmW ‘03 F650 GS, $3899 OBO. Call 50 Bay Area airport
letters
CONDITION. $8888. (650)274-8284. (650) 995-0003
dodGe ‘99 mAintenAnCe Van, ,
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$35. Call (650)670-2888
Redding
57 Keep something
in mind
61 Christmastide
62 In first place
63 Perjurer
65 Bana of “Hulk”
66 Orange Bowl city
67 Sole
68 Perlman of
“Cheers”
69 Kenneth Lay’s
scandalized
company
70 Eye rudely

DOWN
1 Longoria of
“Desperate By Ed Sessa
10/22/18
Housewives” ©2018 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
021-026 1022 mon 54:Class Master odd 10/19/18 3:49 PM Page 5

THE DAILY JOURNAL Monday • Oct. 22, 2018 25

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26 Monday • Oct. 22, 2018 THE DAILY JOURNAL

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027 1022 mon:1022 mon 54 10/21/18 8:11 PM Page 1

THE DAILY JOURNAL NATION/ LOCAL Monday • Oct 22, 2018 27


Police applicants asked Around the Bay Area
to disclose if sex assault victims and could not find another instance of
Who follows Speaker Ryan?
OAKLAND — The Oakland police depart-
ment asks officer applicants to disclose
screening for sexual assault victims.
Legal experts told the newspaper the Battle for GOP power looms
whether they have been sexually assaulted, inquiry is odd and potentially problematic, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS said GOP Rep. Tom Cole
which appears to be a rare and potentially but there is disagreement over whether it’s of Oklahoma, a veteran
problematic inquiry, a newspaper reported illegal. WASHINGTON — Win or lose in the race of leadership battles who
Sunday. Oakland police officials said a candidate for the majority, House Republicans are at said he’s never seen any-
would not be denied a position for being a risk of plunging into a messy leadership thing like the “high
The San Francisco Chronicle queried battle after the November election, with the drama” that’s about to
sexual assault victim.
police in the state’s 10 most populous cities party lacking a clear heir apparent to take unfold. “Usually the elec-
is it a good design, and it is a nice design,” the place of House Speaker Paul Ryan. tion settles all the issues.

HOTEL
Continued from page 1
resident David Schorr said. “The question
is: is this appropriate for our town?
Guiding principle number one of the G-Pac
President Donald Trump has signaled he’d
be happy with next-in-line Kevin
McCarthy, the majority leader, a longtime
ally whom the president calls “My Kevin.”
Paul Ryan
This one won’t.”
Polls are seesawing in
the final weeks before
and general plan update is preserve small- the election, creating suspense about
town charm and character. I don’t care how But Trump is also saying kind words about whether Democrats will regain control of
The building with the conference room pretty the design is, you can’t do that with the No. 3 Republican, GOP Whip Steve the House for the first time since 2010. Yet
will be modeled after a barn, two buildings a 90,000 square foot, 141-room hotel that Scalise, whom he calls the “legend from it’s almost certain that the often unruly
containing the guestrooms will be stretches for 400 feet along highway Louisiana.” Scalise survived life-threaten- House GOP contingent will be smaller next
designed to look like farmhouses and a frontage. You simple cannot do it — that is ing injuries after he was shot at a congres- year. Republicans hope to hold the majori-
swimming pool and fitness center will be not a small-town attribute.” sional baseball practice in 2017. ty, but fully expect to lose some seats.
housed in a glass structure reminiscent of a Schorr was also less than pleased with And there’s a third lawmaker in the mix: The election is likely to produce a more
greenhouse. the conference center component of the conservative Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio, who conservative, pro-Trump Republican lineup
“I was struck by how completely different project in part for bringing in hundreds of is waging a longshot bid to take the gavel. in the House, as most of the GOP incum-
this is from the previous project we vehicle trips a day.  Trump appeared with Jordan at an Ohio rally bents at risk of losing hail from moderate-
received, ” said Planning Commission Other residents said additional confer- in the summer and beamed when the crowd leaning districts and suburbs. Their defeat
Chair Rick Hernandez, according to a video ence space is needed in Half Moon Bay and started chanting, “Speaker of the House!” would probably concentrate more power in
of the meeting. “While it’s similar in terms celebrated the proposal for bringing an “There’s going to be a contest, for sure,” the hands of the House Freedom Caucus.
of the number of rooms, the sheer scale of “intermediate hotel” option to a town that
it has been reduced … you’ve tried to incor- has few vacancies on weekends.
porate a lot of elements that really capture And resident Paul McGregor said the new
the small-town feel, which is what our com- hotel will bring much-needed jobs.
munity has articulated as a priority and also “What better place to have a hotel than
paying homage to the agriculture feel of our right across the street from the Main Street
community.” housing project. These people could use
The project site is a 5-acre triangle- that kind of work,” he said. “And they
shaped parcel at the intersection of won’t be going on the roads, it’ll actually
Highway 1, South Main Street and Higgins take traffic off the roads. ... This isn’t the
Canyon Road — a location many refer to as project that will exacerbate traffic prob-
the southern gateway to Half Moon Bay. lems in this area.”
The buildings won’t rise above three sto- Hernandez reminded residents that an
ries, or 34 feet, and total floor area for the extensive environmental impact report
project is 91,999 square feet. The develop- will address the concerns about traffic,
er also aims to preserve wetlands on the sewage and water. 
west side of the site, with plans to con- Commissioner Les Deman said the devel-
struct a pedestrian and bike path around opment might be more appealing to resi-
them that will serve as a buffer.   dents if more community benefits were
It is estimated that the hotel would bring offered, for example renting out some hotel
in about $1 million in transient occupancy rooms to local workers on a temporary
tax in its first year in business, according basis or allowing residents to use the pool
to project plans.   at certain times.
Nearly everyone agreed that the latest Community Development Director Jill
design is an upgrade over the previous one, Ekas said a draft EIR should be prepared in
and despite the reduction in size, many res- the next four to six months, which is fol-
idents still described it as too big and lowed up a 45-day public comment period.
impactful. There will also be another Planning
“The question isn’t is it pretty, is it nice, Commission hearing during that period.

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028 1022 mon:1022 mon 54 10/21/18 8:11 PM Page 1

28 Monday • Oct 22, 2018 WORLD THE DAILY JOURNAL

A ragged, growing army of migrants resumes march toward US


By Mark Stevenson group of about 1,000 migrants crossed into the country from
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Honduras on Sunday.
After praising Mexico for its no-nonsense response when
TAPACHULA, Mexico — A ragged army of Honduran police at a southern border bridge pushed the migrants back
migrants streamed through southern Mexico on Sunday head- with riot shields and pepper spray, U.S. President Donald
ing toward the United States, after making an end-run around Trump again hammered Democratic Party opponents over
Mexican agents who briefly blocked them at the Guatemalan what he apparently sees as a winning issue for Republicans a
border. little over two weeks ahead of midterm elections.
They received help at every turn from sympathetic After blaming the Democrats for “weak laws” on immigra-
Mexicans who offered food, water and clothing. Hundreds of tion a few days earlier, Trump said via Twitter: “The Caravans
locals driving pickups, vans and cargo trucks stopped to let are a disgrace to the Democrat party. Change the immigration
them clamber aboard. laws NOW!”
Besi Jaqueline Lopez of the Honduran city of San Pedro “Full efforts are being made to stop the onslaught of illegal
Sula carried a stuffed polar bear in a winter cap that seemed out aliens from crossing our Souther (sic) Border,” he said in
of place in the tropical heat. It’s the favorite — and only — another tweet. “People have to apply for asylum in Mexico
toy of her two daughters, 4-year-old Victoria and 3-year-old first, and if they fail to do that, the U.S. will turn them away.
Elisabeth, who trudged beside her gleaming with sweat. The courts are asking the U.S. to do things that are not
A business administration graduate, Lopez said she could- doable!”
n’t find work back home and hopes to reach the United States, Hundreds of migrants from the caravan did just that —
but would stay in Mexico if she could find employment here. applied for refugee status in Mexico in the southern city of
“My goal is to find work for a better future for my daugh- Ciudad Hidalgo.
ters,” she said. But a far bigger group forded the Suchiate River from
In dozens of interviews along the journey, they have said Guatemala to the Mexican side individually and dozens at a
they are fleeing widespread violence, poverty and corruption time, and resumed the trek at first light, marching 10 abreast
in Honduras. The caravan is unlike previous mass migrations on the highway. REUTERS
for its unprecedented large numbers, and because it largely “Si se pudo!” they chanted in Spanish — “Yes, we did!” A caravan of thousands of migrants from Central America
began spontaneously through word of mouth. The throng grew even larger than when the migrants walk towards Tapachula from Ciudad Hidalgo while en route
Guatemala’s migration agency confirmed that another arrived at the border bridge, swelling overnight to 5,000. to the United States, in Frontera Hidalgo, Mexico.

Saudi Prince Salman likely to survive worst crisis yet


By Jon Gambrell efforts to revamp the country’s oil- have sent a message to Saudi Arabia that
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS dependent economy, but now the monar- this will never happen again?” Stephens
chy faces possible sanctions over the added. “Some may feel this is inadequate,
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — The killing of Saudi killing. Saudi Arabia has threatened to while others, like the Americans, may
journalist Jamal Khashoggi at the kingdom’s consulate in retaliate against any punitive action, but feel this is going too far.”
Istanbul is unlikely to halt Crown Prince Mohammed bin analysts say that wielding its main Senior aides close to the prince have
Salman’s rise to power, but could cause irreparable harm to weapon — oil production — could back- been fired over Khashoggi’s killing, and
relations with Western governments and businesses, fire, putting the prince’s economic goals 18 suspects have been arrested. But the
potentially endangering his ambitious reform plans. even further out of reach. prince himself, protected by his 82-year-
International outrage over Khashoggi’s Oct. 2 slaying at Prince Salman “The issue now is how Western gov- Jamal old father, King Salman, has been tapped
the hands of Saudi officials, under still-disputed circum- ernments coordinate a response and to Khashoggi to lead a panel to reform the kingdom’s
stances, has marked the greatest crisis in the 33-year-old’s what extent they wish to escalate this in a coordinated intelligence services, a sign he will
rapid rise, already tarnished by a catastrophic war in Yemen fashion,” said Michael Stephens, a senior research fellow remain next in line to the throne.
and a sweeping roundup of Saudi businessmen and who focuses on the Mideast at London’s Royal United The king has the authority to change the line of succes-
activists. Services Institute for Defense and Security Studies. sion — as he did when he appointed his son crown prince
The prince had hoped to galvanize world support for his “Would financial sanctions be considered sufficient as to in the first place, upending the previous royal consensus.

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Full Mouth Implant Rehabilitation
LEI LUO, DDS ͻůůͲKŶͲ&ŽƵƌdĞĐŚŶŝƋƵĞ͗
&ĂŵŝůLJΘ/ŵƉůĂŶƚĞŶƟƐƚƌLJ ^ĂŵĞĂLJ/ŵŵĞĚŝĂƚĞ
/ŵƉůĂŶƚWůĂĐĞŵĞŶƚĂŶĚ
&ŝdžĞĚ&ƵůůĞŶƚƵƌĞ
Over 20 years of experience
2009-2018 American Top Dentists
Cosmetic Dentistry
2018 Diamond Certified ͻ^ŵŝůĞĞƐŝŐŶ
ͻůůĞƌĂŵŝĐƌŽǁŶ
“Best dentist I have ever been to! ͻsĞŶĞĞƌƐ
Caring and knows what he is doing.
Like everything about him.”
'3&&t$POTVMUBUJPOBOE&YBN
- R. Olson
t%93BZ*NBHF

Complete Dental Care: Special Discount


ͻ^ĞŶŝŽƌƐ͕'ƌŽƵƉ͕DƵůƟƉůĞ
ͻ'ĞŶĞƌĂů͕ZŽŽƚĂŶĂů͕'ƵŵŝƐĞĂƐĞ ŝŵƉůĂŶƚƚƌĞĂƚŵĞŶƚ
ͻůůŝŐŝƚĂůƋƵŝƉƚŵĞŶƚ ͻsĂƌŝĂďůĞWĂLJŵĞŶƚWůĂŶ
ͻ&ƌŝĞŶĚůLJĂŶĚĂƌŝŶŐƵƐƚŽŵĞƌ^ĞƌǀŝĐĞ ͻEŽ/ŶƚĞƌĞƐƚ>ŽĂŶ

ϱϲϬ:ĞŶĞǀĞŝŶǀĞŶƵĞ͕^ĂŶƌƵŶŽ650.583.6032
ǁǁǁ͘ĚĞŶƟƐƚƐĂŶďƌƵŶŽ͘ĐŽŵ

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