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Weekend Nov.

3-4, 2012 Vol XII, Edition 67


FIERCE FINISH
NATION PAGE 8
ROMNEY, OBAMA SHARPEN CLOSING LINES
Schools focus on bullying
By Heather Murtagh
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
What is bullying? If someone is being
bullied, how should they deal with it?
How does one help others if they see a
problem? These are all questions and
conversations sparked in October
throughout San Mateo County schools
as part of the Respect! 24/7 initiative.
The two-year initiative, started by the
San Mateo County Ofce of Education
this year, was a focus for local schools
last month. Students had a chance to
enter the logo contest, educators were
offered training opportunities and,
throughout the
county, students
were given
access to the
d o c u me n t a r y
Bully. Its part
of a larger plan
to curb negative
behavior but
also for educa-
tors to consider
different ways of
a p p r o a c h i n g
p u n i s h me n t .
Many local educators are taking advan-
tage of the resources to spark changes on
campus.
Lesley Martin, principal of Taylor
Middle School in Millbrae, has seen dif-
ferences in bullying recently. It seems to
be in very subtle ways or online.
If we were ever going to see change,
it was something that needed to be part
of the whole school culture, she said.
As a result, all 900 students took part
in going to a local movie theater to
watch Bully. The group took up ve
separate screening theaters. The movie
takes a direct look at bullying. After the
lm, 10 counselors from local family-
San Mateo County effort fosters discussion, aims for solutions
TOM JUNG/DAILY JOURNAL
Lee Hirsch,right,discusses his documentary Bullyduring the
Power of Possibilities luncheon held at the Hotel Sotel in
Redwood City on Friday, Oct. 26. See BULLY, Page 24
DAILY JOURNAL FILE PHOTO
The recreational crab season opens Saturday and the commercial Dungeness crab season starts Nov. 15.
Ayres posts
$900K bail
Doctor free pending March trial
By Michelle Durand
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF REPORT
William Hamilton Ayres, the former
child psychiatrist sent to a mental hospital
before he could stand trial again for
allegedly molesting several male patients,
posted $900,000 bail and is free from cus-
tody.
Ayres bond posting came a day after a
judge ruled him mentally competent to aid
in his own defense based on a three-day hearing in which some
Napa State Hospital staff concluded the 80-year-old had used
his medical expertise to exaggerate or outright fake
Alzehimers-related dementia.
Ayres will stand trial March 11 on nine felony counts of
child molestation stemming from abuse of six patients ages 9
to 13 under the guise of medical exams between 1988 and
Farmers clash on Prop. 37
Initiative would require labeling
for genetically engineered food
By Sally Schilling
DAILY JOURNAL CORRESPONDENT
Farmers who grow genetically engineered crops have con-
cerns about the costs of complying with Proposition 37. But
organic farmers argue that labeling genetically modied foods
would be a simple law that would benet consumers.
We all have the right to know whats in our food, said
Yannick Phillips, legislative outreach advocate for the
California State Grange, which represents mostly small fami-
ly farms. The argument that food costs will go up I think is
completely ridiculous.
Phillips argued that adding to food labels is cheap for pro-
By Heather Murtagh
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
Want some crab? Grab a trap.
Saturday marks the start of the
Dungeness crab season for recreational
fisherman, according to the state
Department of Fish and Game. The
commercial season starts Nov. 15, giv-
ing recreational fishermen just more
than a week to haul in the Dungeness
without being surrounded by commer-
cial shing vessels.
Crab populations appear to be strong
coming off another record-setting year
in the commercial shery, Pete Kalvass,
Department of Fish and Game senior
environmental scientist, said in a press
release. However, crab in Northern
California above Cape Mendocino may
be somewhat underweight for the rst
few weeks of the season due to a late
molt.
Half Moon Bay Councilman John
Muller noted an increase in people driv-
ing by his farm this week with crab pots
setting up for the weekend. Muller
added the extra people coming through
town is denitely a boost. He just hopes
those taking advantage of the recreation-
al season will be safe on the water.
Recreational crabbers may keep up to
10 Dungeness crabs per day, or six crabs
if shing from a party boat south of
Mendocino County, according to the
Department of Fish and Game website.
No one may possess more than one daily
Recreational crab season begins
Commercial season set for Nov. 15; record-setting year predicted
William Ayres
See PROP. 37, Page 23
See AYRES, Page 24
See CRAB, Page 24
WRECK-IT RALPH
NOT BAD AT ALL
WEEKEND JOURNAL PAGE 19
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FOR THE RECORD 2 Weekend Nov. 3-4, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
The San Mateo Daily Journal
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Comedian-actress
Roseanne Barr is
60.
This Day in History
Thought for the Day
1992
Democrat Bill Clinton was elected the
42nd president of the United States,
defeating President George H.W. Bush.
In Illinois, Democrat Carol Moseley-
Braun became the rst black woman
elected to the U.S. Senate.
No one is so eager to gain
new experience as he who doesnt
know how to make use of the old ones.
Marie Ebner von Eschenbach, Austrian writer (1830-1916)
Former Mass. Gov.
Michael S. Dukakis
is 79.
Actor Dolph
Lundgren is 55.
Birthdays
REUTERS
Two women walk past a boat left sitting on a street blocks away from the shore by Hurricane Sandy on the south side of
hard-hit Staten Island in New York City.
Saturday: Mostly cloudy in the morning
then becoming partly cloudy. Patchy fog in
the morning. Highs in the upper 60s. North
winds 5 to 15 mph.
Saturday night: Partly cloudy. Lows in the
mid 50s. North winds 5 to 15 mph.
Sunday: Partly cloudy in the morning then
becoming sunny. Highs around 70.
Northwest winds 5 to 10 mph.
Sunday night: Clear. Lows in the mid 50s. Northwest winds
around 5 mph...Becoming northeast after midnight.
Monday: Sunny. Highs in the mid 70s.
Monday night: Clear. Lows in the 50s.
Tuesday and tuesday night: Mostly clear. Highs in the mid 70s.
Lows in the 50s.
Wednesday: Sunny. Highs in the mid 60s.
Local Weather Forecast
Lotto
The Daily Derby race winners are No. 11 Money
Bags in rst place; No. 10 Solid Gold in second
place; and No.04 Big Ben in third place.The race
time was clocked at 1:43.61.
(Answers Monday)
WEIGH BLINK DREAMY TIGHTS
Yesterdays
Jumbles:
Answer: The teams loss turned the pub into a
WHINE BAR
Now arrange the circled letters
to form the surprise answer, as
suggested by the above cartoon.
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square,
to form four ordinary words.
KEEVO
LAMDY
FIMEFD
DHNERC
2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
All Rights Reserved.
F
in
d

u
s

o
n

F
a
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k

h
t
t
p
:
/
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.
f
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Ans:
5 5 1
4 18 22 38 44 24
Mega number
Nov. 2 Mega Millions
7 9 17 20 28
Fantasy Five
Daily three midday
4 3 3 6
Daily Four
1 0 5
Daily three evening
In 1839, the rst Opium War between China and Britain broke
out.
In 1900, the rst major U.S. automobile show opened at New
Yorks Madison Square Garden under the auspices of the
Automobile Club of America.
In 1903, Panama proclaimed its independence from Colombia.
In 1911, the Chevrolet Motor Car Co. was founded in Detroit
by Louis Chevrolet and William C. Durant. (The company was
acquired by General Motors in 1918.)
In 1936, President Franklin D. Roosevelt won a landslide elec-
tion victory over Republican challenger Alfred M. Alf
Landon.
In 1957, the Soviet Union launched Sputnik 2, the second
manmade satellite, into orbit; on board was a dog named Laika
who was sacriced in the experiment.
In 1960, the Meredith Willson musical The Unsinkable Molly
Brown opened on Broadway with Tammy Grimes in the title
role.
In 1961, Burmese diplomat U Thant (oo thahnt) was appoint-
ed acting U.N. Secretary-General following the death of Dag
Hammarskjold. President John F. Kennedy established the U.S.
Agency for International Development.
In 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson soundly defeated
Republican Barry Goldwater to win a White House term in his
own right.
In 1970, Salvador Allende was inaugurated as president of
Chile.
In 1979, ve Communist Workers Party members were killed
in a clash with heavily armed Ku Klux Klansmen and neo-
Nazis during an anti-Klan protest in Greensboro, N.C.
In 1986, the Iran-Contra affair began to come to light as Ash-
Shiraa, a pro-Syrian Lebanese magazine, rst broke the story
of U.S. arms sales to Iran.
Actress Lois Smith is 82. Actor-dancer Ken Berry is 79. Tony-
winning playwright Terrence McNally is 73. Actor Shadoe
Stevens is 66. Singer Lulu is 64. Actress Kate Capshaw is 59.
Comedian Dennis Miller is 59. Actress Kathy Kinney is 59.
Singer Adam Ant is 58. Rock musician C.J. Pierce (Drowning
Pool) is 40. Olympic gold medal gure skater Evgeni Plushenko
is 30. Actress Julie Berman (TV: General Hospital) is 29.
Albert Einsteins (1879-1955) last
words will never be known. He spoke
them in German, to a nurse that did not
understand German.
***
The standard keyboard has three sets of
letters that are in alphabetical order,
reading left to right. They are f-g-h, j-k-
l and o-p.
***
The names of Popeyes four nephews
are Pipeye, Peepeye, Pupeye and
Poopeye. SweePea is Popeyes adopt-
ed son.
***
More than 60 percent of all recipients
of organ donations are between the
ages of 18 and 49.
***
The Greek words enkuklios paideia
mean general education. That is the ori-
gin of the word encyclopedia.
***
The word barbecue originated from the
Mayans. The Mayans cooked over a lat-
tice of thin sticks suspended over an
open fire called a barbacoa.
***
Do you know what group is made up of
the members Anni-Frid Lyngstad,
Benny Andersson, Bjrn Ulvaeus and
Agnetha Fltskog? See answer at end.
***
To get the most juice from a lemon,
bring the fruit to room temperature then
roll on a hard surface while pressing
down on the lemon. Or microwave the
lemon for 30 seconds to increase the
juice content.
***
North Dakota passed a bill in 1987
making English the official state lan-
guage.
***
The McDonalds advertising slogan
You deserve a break today ... at
McDonalds was created in 1970.
***
Some famous people from Alabama
are: Olympic Gold Medalist Carl
Lewis (born 1961) was born in
Birmingham, singer Nat King Cole
(1917-1965) was born in Montgomery,
baseball player Hank Aaron (born
1934) was born in Mobile in 1934 and
Helen Keller (1880-1968) was born in
Tuscumbia.
***
In weddings in the Philippines, it is tra-
dition for the groom to walk down the
aisle by himself or with his parents. The
most popular month for weddings in
the Philippines is December.
***
The Energizer Bunny, beating his drum
and wearing sunglasses and sandals,
has been going and going since appear-
ing in its first commercial in 1989.
***
The Pillsbury Doughboy made his
debut in a 1965 commercial for cres-
cent rolls. The Doughboys costar in the
commercial was Maureen McCormick
(born 1956), who went on to become
Marcia in The Brady Bunch. The
original voice of the Doughboy was
performed by Paul Frees (1920-1986),
who also did voice recordings for the
Disneyland rides the Haunted Mansion
and Pirates of the Caribbean.
***
The only metal that is liquid at room
temperature is mercury.
***
Alfred Hitchcock (1899-1980) made
his first cameo appearance in the 1926
movie The Lodger. It was the third
film Hitchcock directed.
***
Joe McVicker (1929-1992) took out a
patent for Play-Doh in 1965. More than
700 million pounds of Play-Doh have
been sold since then.
***
Answer: They are the members of the
Swedish singing group ABBA. ABBA is
an acronym of the letters of the mem-
bers first names. ABBA was also the
name of a Swedish canned fish compa-
ny, which agreed to share their name
with the musical group. The groups
first hit was Waterloo in 1974.
Know It All is by Kerry McArdle. It runs in
the weekend and Wednesday editions of the
Daily Journal. Questions? Comments?
Email knowitall@smdailyjournal.com or
call 344-5200 ext. 114.
9 16 29 31 40 20
Mega number
Oct. 31 Super Lotto Plus
3
Weekend Nov. 3-4, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
LOCAL
SAN BRUNO
Vandalism. Someone reported the rear tire of
their white Toyota Rav4 was slashed on the
1200 block of San Mateo Avenue before 1:01
p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 30.
Petty theft. Miscellaneous paperwork was
stolen from an unlocked blue Chevrolet Blazer
on the 800 block of Fifth Avenue before 9:49
a.m. Tuesday, Oct. 30.
Fraud. Someone reported an unknown subject
led tax returns in his name on the 400 block
of Boardwalk Avenue before 3:12 p.m.
Tuesday, Oct. 16.
Petty theft. A woman reported leaving her
black HTC Rezound cellphone on a table on
the 1100 block of El Camino Real before
10:29 a.m. Tuesday, Oct. 16.
HALF MOON BAY
Vandalism. A woman reported the tires of her
vehicle were slashed on the 400 block of
Capistrano Road before 9:57 p.m. Friday, Oct.
26.
DUI. A man was arrested for driving under the
inuence and with a suspended license on San
Mateo Road before 8:06 p.m. Friday, Oct. 26.
Arrest. A woman was arrested for an out-
standing misdemeanor warrant on the 500
block of Eighth Street in Montara before 8:27
a.m. on Thursday, Oct. 25.
Tow. A vehicle was towed for an expired reg-
istration on the rst block of Alcatraz before
3:30 p.m. on Monday, Oct. 22.
Police reports
Not up to code
A family member forgot the code to his
home alarm on Beach Park Boulevard in
Foster City before 3:14 p.m. on
Wednesday, Oct. 24.
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF REPORT
An elderly San Mateo mans former long-
time prostitute already on probation for taking
his money by intimidation will stand trial for
allegedly threatening him several times before
beating him with a brick and making off with
cash, his television and car.
Lynette Evette Derouen, 39, of San
Francisco, has pleaded not guilty but was held
to answer on all but one charge after a prelim-
inary hearing. Prosecutors dropped a count of
violating a probation order but a judge let
stand charges of home invasion robbery, resi-
dential burglary, embezzlement of an elderly
person, car theft and removing a wireless
device to prevent someone from seeking help.
Derouen and the 82-year-old victim had a
several-year arrangement
in which she would come
to his home to provide
services. The man ended
the business relationship
but authorities say
Derouen still came to his
home. After pressuring
him into giving her money
and write checks to her
daughters boyfriend, she
was convicted in July 2011
of felony grand theft, placed on probation and
ordered to stay away from her former client,
according to the District Attorneys Ofce.
But in April, she allegedly began returning
to the mans home, entering it several times
again to threaten him and demand money. On
May 11, Derouen is accused of entering the
house where the man was making lunch and
pushing him to the oor while she shouted
show me the money. After allegedly hitting
him with a brick she had brought with her, she
reportedly grabbed cash and a brand-new tele-
vision which she put in the mans car and ed.
She also allegedly grabbed two telephones to
prevent the man from immediately calling
police. A security camera at the San Mateo
Medical Center across the street caught
Derouen leaving the house holding the televi-
sion and driving off.
Derouen returns to court Nov. 16 to enter a
Superior Court plea and possibly set a trial
date.
She remains in custody in lieu of $500,000
bail.
Grandma claims $23M
lotto prize just in time
SAN BERNARDINO For more than ve
months while Julie Cervera struggled to
pay a $600 electrical bill, feed her family and
keep the cable company from shutting off her
service because she couldnt pay she was a
millionaire without knowing it.
Meanwhile, her $23 million lottery ticket
languished forgotten in the glove compart-
ment of her car.
On Thursday, someone texted her a photo of
her daughter, Charliena Marquez, buying the
winning ticket for her at a Palmdale Liquor
store. The photo had been released by lottery
ofcials searching for the mysterious winner
of the May drawing.
I put my 99-cent glasses on, and I had to
put two pairs on to see it, said Cervera, 69, of
Victorville. She recognized her daughter in
the grainy photo, but she still couldnt read the
caption.
I thought she robbed a bank because I
couldnt see the words on top, Cervera said
with a laugh. So I put on a third pair (of
glasses) and it said she won. I was like, No
way!
Back in May, mother and daughter were
driving home together when Marquez felt
queasy and asked her mother to pull over so
she could buy a bottle of water.
She always gets carsick, Cervera said.
Prostitute to trial for beating elderly client
Lynette
Derouen
Around the state
4
Weekend Nov. 3-4, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
LOCAL
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INDEPENDENT
LIVING
Police seek driver who struck
woman in wheelchair, left scene
Police are seeking a driver who
allegedly left after striking a woman in a
wheelchair in Belmont on Thursday
evening.
The 48-year-old woman was going
south on the west side of the 500 block
of El Camino Real at about 6:45 p.m.
Thursday when she was struck by a
vehicle turning into the driveway of a
McDonalds restaurant there, police
said.
The vehicle, a black Mercedes sedan,
stopped and its driver apparently had
some sort of interaction with the woman
but left before ofcers arrived, according
to police.
The womans disability makes com-
munication difcult so police do not yet
know what the drivers interaction was
with her.
She was taken to a hospital to be treat-
ed for injuries from the crash and is
expected to survive, police said.
The driver of the Mercedes is being
asked by investigators to come forward
to provide a statement about the colli-
sion. Anyone who has information about
the incident is also asked to call the traf-
c unit of Belmont police at (650) 595-
7400.
Local brief
John D. Kenly Wade Jr.
John D. Kenly Wade Jr. died Oct. 27, 2012 at the age of 51 due
to injuries he sustained in a motorcycle accident.
He was born in Palo Alto Sept. 19, 1961
to John and Andrea Wade.
He is survived by his daughter Melisa
Wade and his granddaughter Ella
Christensen. He also leaves behind his
mother Andrea Wade his sisters Patricia
(Cain) Serrano of Half Moon Bay;
Juanitta Wade of Phoenix, Ariz.;
Jacqueline Wade of Hayward and
Geraldine (Eddie Bandini) Wade of
Stockton. His nieces and nephews Julio (Janette) Serrano,
Cristofer (Rachel) Serrano, Adriana Serrano, Cody Wade-
Bandini, Kyle Wade-Bandini, Olivia Wade-Sautter and Nalani
Serrano.
He is preceded in death by his father John D. Kenly Wade Sr.
John served in the U.S. Navy. He was also a member of the
American Legion post 474, Master Mason and elected secretary
of San Mateo Masonic Lodge 226 and a longtime member of
The Unknown motorcycle club.
Memorial Services will be 1 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 10 at the
American Legion Hall Post 474, 470 Capistrano Road in Half
Moon Bay.
Albert Dow Coffman Jr.
Albert Dow Coffman Jr. died at his home in San Bruno Nov.
1, 2012. He was 74.
He is survived by his wife Eveline D. Coffman, his son
Benjamin Secor and his daughter Michele Coffman Jorgensen;
brothers Daniel Donahoe Coffman and Michael Cresap
Coffman; and sister Martha Coffman Schriner Coffman; and his
grandchildren Jadd Reynolds and Lindsay Reynolds Bennett.
His parents Albert Coffman Sr. and Mary Donahoe Coffman and
sister Nancy Ann Coffman Blas preceded him in death.
He greatly enjoyed his job as a bank auditor with Bank of
America and several other banks spanning a 40-year career.
Family and friends may visit after 4 p.m. Monday, Nov. 5 and
are invited to a funeral liturgy service, 1 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 6 at
the Chapel of the Highlands, 194 Millwood Drive at El Camino
Real in Millbrae. Services will conclude at the chapel.
Obituaries
5
Weekend Nov. 3-4, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
LOCAL/STATE
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Senior Showcase
FREE
ADMISSION
Presented by Health Plan of San Mateo and The Daily Journal
Senior Resources and Services
from all of San Mateo County
over 40 exhibitors!
Fer mere n|ermcIen cc|| 503445200 www.smdc|yjeurnc|.cemJsenershewccse
* While supplies last. Some restrictions apply. Events subject to change.
Free Services include
Refreshments
Door Prizes and Giveaways
Blood Pressure Check
Ask the Pharmacist
by San Mateo Pharmacists Assn.
FREE Document Shredding
by Miracle Shred
and MORE
Senior Showcase
Information Fair
Friday, November 16
9:00am to 1:00pm
Foster City Recreation Center
650 Shell Blvd. Foster City
Free Admission, Everyone Welcome
COUNTY
GOVERNMENT
The Board of
Supervisors will
accept the 2013 budg-
et of the San Mateo
County Exposition
and Fair Association
which built reserves to an estimated 26.4 per-
cent of overall expenses and projects an 8 per-
cent decrease in revenue. The Jockey Club
satellite wagering facility is operating slightly
above initial estimates and the $900,000 loan
used for renovations in 2008 will be fully paid
in June 2013, ve months ahead of schedule.
At the same meeting, Supervisor Dave
Pine will recommend a resolution calling for
the removal of California Public Utilities
Commission President Michael Peevey.
Pines resolution echoes calls by
Assemblyman Jerry Hill, D-San Mateo, the
San Bruno City Council and others that they
have lost condence in Peeveys ability to
protect the public interest and conduct the San
Bruno gas line explosion proceedings fairly.
The Board of Supervisors meets 9 a.m.
Tuesday, Nov. 6 in Board Chambers, 400
County Government Center, Redwood City.
CITY GOVERNMENT
On Monday, the Millbrae Planning
Commission will vote on the nal map to
merge two lots at 120 S. El Camino Real into
one. Then, it can create 54 residential condo-
minium units and 10 commercial condomini-
um units for an already approved mixed-use
project called Pinedera. At the same meeting,
the commission will study plans to open a
restaurant called Wonderful at 270
Broadway.
The commission meets 7 p.m. Monday,
Nov. 5 at City Hall, 621 Magnolia Ave.
The Burlingame City Council will dis-
cuss whether a community garden should be
built at Victoria Park. Survey results from
2011 resulted in the council directing staff to
work with the Burlingame Garden Club to
develop a self-sustaining community garden.
As proposed, Victoria Parks community gar-
den would include 23 planter beds measuring
4 feet by 8 feet apiece. The area would need
to be fenced in. The group raised $6,000 to
pay for the planting beds, irrigation and fenc-
ing, according to the staff report. The one-
time installation costs to the city would be less
than $10,000. The annual fee per plot is
expected to be $65. The garden would be
expected to generate $1,495.
At the same meeting, the council will con-
sider hiring Carl Yeats, retired nance direc-
tor from Palo Alto, to be the interim nance
director. Jesus Nava accepted a position with
the Santa Clara Valley Water District,
which created the opening. If hired, Yeats
would be available to start Nov. 7. He would
be paid $84.70 per hour and would be eligible
to work through Feb. 6 or 960 hours.
The council meets 7 p.m. Monday, Nov. 5
at City Hall, 501 Primrose Road.
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF REPORT
It was in a parking lot that Gary Doss rst laid his eyes on two
of the rarest PEZ candy dispensers in the world.
These were a step beyond the Holy Grail. Its like getting
Gods pipe, said Doss, owner and curator of the Burlingame
Museum of PEZ Memorabilia.
Created in 1961 as a gift to a current U.S. president, PEZ Candy
Inc. produced both a Democratic donkey dispenser and a
Republican elephant dispenser. These two dispensers have a com-
bined estimated value of $20,000 to $25,000. This weekend,
those two ivory candy dispensers will be debuted. Visitors are
asked to make a $10 donation which will benet InnVision
Shelter Network. Doss, a collector of the candy dis-
pensers for 20 years, had seen some great
fakes of the two political gures. Many
had pieces put together from other dis-
pensers. But Doss was originally skep-
tical when contacted by the Delaware
seller.
A Democratic donkey PEZ was pre-
sented to President John F. Kennedy on
his 1961 trip to Vienna, Austria. As
recently as September of this year, PEZ
Candy claimed only two Democratic
donkey dispensers existed, and both are
currently in the hands of PEZ Candy Inc.
The Republican elephant is also one of the
rarest of all PEZ dispensers, with only eight other exam-
ples known to exist.
In early September, the seller sent a number of photos to Doss
which piqued his interest. These looked to be the real thing. The
two met at a bank parking lot in a suburb of Philadelphia. After
examining the dispensers, Doss gave the man a cashiers check
for an undisclosed amount. Now Doss plans to debut the political
candy dispensers this weekend days before the presidential
election. A volunteer with InnVision Shelter Network since 2009,
the event will be in partnership with the local nonprot dedicated
to ending homelessness.
Guests will have access to the entire museum, including the
Classic Toy Museum and the Banned Toy Museum.
The Burlingame Museum of PEZ Memorabilia is located at
214 California Drive, Burlingame. Event hours are 10 a.m. to 6
p.m. For more information about the museum visit
www.burlingamepezmuseum.com. For more information about
InnVision Shelter Network visit www.ivsn.org or call 685-5880.
Political PEZ dispensers
debuting this weekend
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF REPORT
An 18-year-old Redwood City woman
accused of slipping into an ex-
boyfriends home and torching his bed
while he slept is mentally unt to stand
trial for attempted murder and arson,
according to two of three court-appoint-
ed doctors.
The conclusion means Jacqueline
Alexandra Rivera will be sent to a state
mental hospital rather than be prosecut-
ed for attempted murder and residential
burglary. She will be treated until, if
ever, she is declared competent and able
to aid in her own defense.
Two doctors previously disagreed on
Riveras mental state but the third,
whose report was submitted Friday, tilt-
ed the balance. Competency is a per-
sons mental ability for trial while sanity
is his or her condi-
tion at the time of an
alleged crime.
Rivera has already
pleaded not guilty to
the incident that left
her 21-year-old for-
mer boyfriend with
minor burns on his
arms and hands that
required hospital
treatment.
According to authorities, around 3
a.m. April 26, Rivera knocked on the
rst-oor bedroom window of the San
Mateo home where he lived with his par-
ents and sister. She reportedly asked to
talk about their relationship, was denied
and returned with the same request an
hour later. After she left the second time,
the man went to bed but told authorities
he awoke around 5:45 a.m. to nd his
mattress on re. He screamed for his
father who put out the ames with a gar-
den hose. The victim later told authori-
ties he did not immediately alert police
or firefighters because he believed
Rivera was responsible but didnt think
he could prove it.
Two weeks later, the man said he
received a text message from a woman,
later identied as Riveras friend, who
told him the defendant was responsible
for the re and had made several com-
ments about plans to hurt him. At that
point, the man contacted authorities and
Rivera was arrested May 7.
She remains in custody on $500,000
bail pending a formal commitment hear-
ing Dec. 14.
If ever tried and convicted, she faces
between 10 and 15 years in prison.
Accused bed torcher unfit for trial
By Hannah Dreier
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SACRAMENTO California has
reached an all-time high of 18.2 million
registered voters, while the number of
registered Republicans has fallen below
30 percent, signaling a worrisome
decline for the states minority party,
ofcials said Friday.
In its nal update before Tuesdays
general election, the secretary of states
ofce said the number of registered vot-
ers has increased by 950,000 since the
2008 presidential contest. Officials
attribute that surge in part to the states
new online registration system, which
helped many young, Democratic-leaning
Californians sign up to vote this fall.
That system was seen as a threat to the
California Republican Party, which has
struggled to retain members, let alone
add them. The secretary of state
announced that Republicans now make
up 29.3 percent of the states electorate,
compared with 31.4 percent in 2008.
This appears to be the lowest ebb for
the party since records have been avail-
able.
The GOP now has about 1.5 million
more voters in the state than those regis-
tered as having no party preference, pre-
viously called decline-to-state voters.
Independent voters account for 21 per-
cent of the electorate.
Democrats make up 43.7 percent of
voters, a slight decline from four years
ago. The raw number of registered
Democrats has been climbing, while the
number as well as percentage of
Republicans has fallen.
California Republican Party Chairman
Tom Del Beccaro questioned the gains
Democrats made this election cycle.
Republicans opposed the push to online
voter registration because we didnt
feel there was enough study or safe-
guards reviewed, he said.
Were going to have to see whether
those are valid registrations or actual
voters, he added.
GOP registration dips to
below 30 percent in state
Jacqueline
Rivera
6
Weekend Nov. 3-4, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
LOCAL
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T
he Bay Area Educational
Theater Company invites
you to spread the word on its
interpretation of one of the most
beloved childhood stories of all time:
C. S. Lewis Chronicles of Narnia,
the Lion, the Witch and the
Wardrobe. Four children from our
world nd a magic wardrobe that
leads them into the enchanted land of
Narnia, where brave mythical crea-
tures and talking animals suffer in a
perpetual winter imposed by the evil
White Witch. The children embark
on a quest with the great lion ruler of
Narnia, King Aslan to defeat the
White Witch and bring joy back to
the land.
Shows run on weekends Friday,
Nov. 2 through Sunday, Nov. 11.
Performances are at 7:30 p.m. Friday
and 2 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday
at the Caada College Main Stage
Theater, 4200 Farm Hill Blvd.,
Redwood City. Tickets are $14 for
students and seniors and $19 for
adults. For more information, or to
purchase tickets, visit
www.bayareaetc.org or email tick-
ets@bayareaetc.org.
***
The Jean Weingarten Peninsula
Oral School for the Deaf in
Redwood City welcomes the public
to its annual gala, The Giving Tree,
starting at 6 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 3 at
the Hyatt Regency Santa Clara,
5101 Great America Parkway, in
Santa Clara.
The fundraiser will include a no-
host cocktail reception, dinner with
wine, silent and live auctions to ben-
et the school and a special Fund-a-
Need to provide scholarships for
those in need. Proceeds from the
event will be matched dollar for dol-
lar by a generous anonymous donor.
The school has more than 40 years
of experience in teaching deaf chil-
dren to listen, think and speak for
themselves, and is known worldwide
for its cognitive listening and spoken
language programs. Established in
1967, the program focuses on the
development of listening, language,
speech and cognitive skills in chil-
dren using hearing aids and cochlear
implants. JWPOSD is committed to
providing a model of excellence in
auditory oral education. Our goal is
to assist each child in developing to
their fullest potential in order to
access mainstream education and
integrate into the community at large.
Ticket cost for the event is $140.
For more information or to buy tickets
visit www.deafkidstalk.org or call
365-7500. Black tie is optional. Free
self-parking behind the hotel or limit-
ed valet parking at the hotel for $9.
***
Cabaret is a legendary musical
that explores the political tension of
pre-Nazi Germany and features such
well-known songs as Wilkkomen,
Mein Herr and Cabaret.
Director Allison Gamlen and
Musical Director Kevin Gallagher
are leading the Hillsdale High
School cast, crew and band in shar-
ing this tumultuous story in the
newly renovated Hillsdale Little
Theater.
John Kander and Fred Ebbs
landmark musical turns Weimar
Berlin of 1931 into a dark haven of
decadence where its extraordinary
and morally ambiguous inhabitants
are determined to keep up appear-
ances as the real world outside the
comfortable sanctuary of the cabaret
prepares for the nightmarish chaos
of war. It is here that Sally Bowles
performs nightly at the infamous Kit-
Kat Klub.
Performances are at 7 p.m. Friday,
Nov. 2 and Saturday, Nov. 3 and 2
p.m. Sunday, Nov. 4 in the Little
Theater at Hillsdale High School,
3115 Del Monte St., San Mateo.
Tickets are $15, $10 for students and
seniors, and can be purchased at
www.hillsdalehigh.com/drama or at
the box ofce one hour before show
time.
Class notes is a column dedicated to
school news. It is compiled by education
reporter Heather Murtagh. You can con-
tact her at (650) 344-5200, ext. 105 or at
heather@smdailyjournal.com.
Cabaretperformances are at 7 p.m.Friday,Nov.2 and Saturday,Nov.3 and
2 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 4 in the Little Theater at Hillsdale High School.
LOCAL/NATION 7
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DAILY JOURNAL STAFF REPORT
A South San Francisco man accused
of raping one of his girlfriends half-sis-
ters for eight years and behaving inap-
propriately with another and a neighbor
girl will stand trial in February on sever-
al felonies that could send him to prison
for life.
Kyle Clifton Vogt, 37, pleaded not
guilty to 11 counts including rape, con-
tinuous sexual abuse of a child, sending
harmful sexual matter to a minor, six
counts of lewd acts with a minor under
14 and two counts of lewd acts with a
minor over 14 by someone more than 10
years older. After entering his Superior
Court plea, Vogt was
scheduled for jury
trial Feb. 11.
South San
Francisco police
arrested Vogt earlier
this year after report-
edly learning he had
been carrying on a
sexual relationship
with his girlfriends
half-sister starting when the victim was
5. The girl told her mom what was going
on when she turned 13, according to
prosecutors.
After being taken into custody, Vogt
was also accused of molesting one of
the girlfriends other half-sisters
between 2000 and 2012 along with a
neighbor girl who was the rst victims
friend. Those acts allegedly included
sending inappropriate texts, kissing and
groping.
Vogt threatened some of girls with
bodily harm to keep them from talking,
police said.
He split his time between homes in
South San Francisco and Davis where he
lived with his 30-year-old girlfriend. Her
younger sisters often visited the couple
and periodically lived with them in both
cities, according to South San Francisco
police.
He remains in custody without bail.
Man pleads not guilty to raping girlfriends sister
Kyle Vogt
By Christopher Sullivan
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK When it came to fuel
supplies and patience, the New York
metro area was running close to empty
Friday.
From storm-scarred New Jersey to parts
of Connecticut, a widespread lack of
gasoline or electricity to pump it brought
grousing, gridlock and worse, compound-
ing frustrations as millions of Americans
struggled to return to normal days after
Superstorm Sandy. A man pulled a gun in
one gas-line fracas that led an arrest.
Lines of cars, and in many places
queues of people on foot carrying bright
red jerry cans for generators, waited for
hours for the precious fuel. And those
were the lucky ones. Other customers
gave up after nding only closed stations
or dry pumps marked with yellow tape or
No Gas signs.
EMPTY! declared the red-type head-
line dominating the New York Daily
News front page.
I drove around last night and couldnt
nd anything, said a relieved Kwabena
Sintim-Misa as he nally prepared to ll
up Friday morning in Fort Lee, N.J., near
the George Washington Bridge, where the
wait in line lasted three hours.
Arlend Pierre-Louis of Elmont, on
Long Island, said he awoke at 4:30
a.m. to try to get gas.
When he nally found some the
one working pump in Elmont the line
was so long he gave up and returned to
his home, which still has no light or hot
water.
At a Hess gas station in the Gowanus
section of Brooklyn, the 10-block line
caused confusion among passing drivers.
Theres been a little screaming, a
little yelling. And I saw one guy bang-
ing on the hood of a car, said Vince
Levine, who got in line in his van at 5
a.m. and was still waiting at 8 a.m.
But mostly its been OK.
A cabdriver stuck in a 17-block line at a
Manhattan station remained philosophi-
cal.
I dont blame anybody, said Harum
Prince. God, he knows why he brought
this storm.
Many tried to heed Mayor Michael
Bloombergs admonition to have some
patience, as the stricken metro area
recovers from the unprecedented storm
that upended daily life with power out-
ages, food shortages and other frustrations
besides lack of fuel.
Fuel shortage means gridlock in lines for gas
By Ronald Blum
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK Adam Frye got the news when he arrived
at the Javits Center on Friday to pick up his packet of material
for the New York City Marathon.
The race was canceled. Blame it on Sandy.
I just ew out today, said Frye, who lives in St. Paul, Minn.
I think Im a little bit shocked. I never really thought they
would cancel it. I kind of feel like they waited to cancel it until
people like me had already come so we could spend our
money.
He was out $250 for the race fee and $300 for the ight.
Mayor Michael Bloomberg bowed to pressure and called off
Sundays race after promising repeatedly all week that it would
be held.
This race is a very special one for me and millions of peo-
ple around the world, but I understand why it cannot be held
under the current circumstances, said Meb Keezighi, the
2009 mens champion. Any inconveniences the cancellation
causes me or the thousands of runners who trained and traveled
for this race pales in comparison to the challenges faced by
people in NYC and its vicinity in the aftermath of Sandy. New
York is my favorite place to race, so I will be back to partici-
pate in other events soon.
As for the amateur runners, Nikki Davies of London arrived
Friday looking forward to the race.
I can understand not wanting to run through devastated
parts of the city, she said. I thought if they cancel it, theyd
cancel it earlier.
But she plans to stay in New York for 10 days. On her agen-
da?
A lot of sightseeing, she said.
On Staten Island, one of the hardest-hit areas and where the
race was to start, people were waiting for gasoline on Friday
night.
I think we have other priorities to deal with at this point,
and its just not necessary to have at this time, John Sarracco
said.
In New York with
no marathon to run
Fall back: Set clocks back an hour
WASHINGTON Its nally time to reclaim that hour of
sleep you lost last spring.
Most of the country will turn back the clocks this weekend
for the annual shift back to standard time.
The majority of folks will do the switch before hitting the
sack Saturday night, even though the change doesnt become
ofcial until 2 a.m. Sunday local time.
Residents of Hawaii, most of Arizona and some U.S. territo-
ries dont have to change since they do not observe daylight-
saving time.
Public safety ofcials say this is also a good time to put a
new battery in the smoke alarm, no matter where you live.
Daylight saving time returns the second Sunday in March.
Around the nation
REUTERS
People wait in line to buy gas for cars and generators in Asbury Park, N.J.
NATION 8
Weekend Nov. 3-4, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
By Ben Feller and Kasie Hunt
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WEST CHESTER Down to a fierce fin-
ish, President Barack Obama accused Mitt
Romney of scaring voters with lies on Friday,
while the Republican challenger warned
grimly of political paralysis and another
recession if Obama reclaims the White
House. Heading into the final weekend, the
races last big report on the economy showed
hiring picking up but millions still out of
work.
Four more days! Romney supporters bel-
lowed at a rally in Wisconsin. Four more
years! Obama backers shouted as the presi-
dent campaigned in Ohio.
With Ohio at the center of it all, the candi-
dates sharpened their closing lines, both
clutching to the mainstream middle while
lashing out at one another. Virtually all of the
nine homestretch battleground states were
getting personal attention from the con-
tenders or top members of their teams, and
Romney was pressing hard to add
Pennsylvania to the last-minute mix.
Romney drew the largest crowd of his
years-long quest for the presidency at an
Ohio rally attended by 18,000 people on a
cold Friday night.
Were almost home, a confident Romney,
surrounded by family and more than a dozen
Republican officials, told a sea of supporters.
One final push will get us there.
Urgency could be felt all across the cam-
paign, from the big and boisterous crowds to
the running count that roughly 24 million
people already have voted. Outside the White
House, workers were setting the foundation
for the inaugural viewing stand for Jan. 20.
Lawyers from both camps girded for a fight
should the election end up too close to call.
Obama, for the first time, personally
assailed Romney over ads
suggesting that automak-
ers General Motors and
Chrysler are adding jobs
in China at the expense of
auto-industry dependent
Ohio. Both companies
have called the ads
untrue. The matter is sen-
sitive in Ohio, perhaps
the linchpin state of the
election.
I know were close to
an election, but this isnt a
game, Obama said from
Hilliard, Ohio, a heavily
Republican suburb of the
capital city of Columbus.
These are peoples jobs.
These are peoples lives.
... You dont scare hard-
working Americans just
to scare up some votes.
For once, the intensely scrutinized month-
ly jobs report seemed overshadowed by the
pace of the presidential race. It was unlikely
to affect the outcome.
Employers added a better-than-expected
171,000 jobs in October, underscoring that
the economy is improving. But the rate is still
short of what will be needed to seriously
shrink unemployment. The jobless rate
ticked up to 7.9 percent from 7.8 percent
mainly because more people jumped back
into the search for work.
No issue matters more to voters than the
economy, the centerpiece of a Romney mes-
sage called the closing case of his campaign.
He said an Obama presidency would mean
more broken relations with Congress, show-
downs over government shutdowns, a chill-
ing effect on the economy and perhaps
another recession.
GOP likely to hold
House after $1B campaign
WASHINGTON You can do a lot with a
billion dollars but still not change much.
This Election Day, its likely to produce
another Republican-led House thats little dif-
ferent from the existing version.
Candidates, both political parties and
hordes of corporate, labor, ideological and
other groups have spent a record $1.1 billion
on House races since this campaign cycle
began last year, according to data compiled
by the nonpartisan Center for Responsive
Politics. Yet by the time the last votes are
counted Tuesday, Democrats may pick up a
handful of districts but are widely expected to
miss their goal of gaining the 25 additional
seats they need to grab control of the cham-
ber.
The reasons:
The redrawing of congressional districts
to reect the new census. Both parties pro-
tected incumbents but Republicans shielded
more.
A preponderance of at-risk Republican-
held seats that the GOP offset with extra
nancial muscle.
A close presidential race that has pre-
vented either party from gaining a sweeping
coattail advantage.
Overarching national issues have not tilt-
ed the playing eld to one side or the other.
First and foremost its redistricting, said
Democratic pollster Dave Beattie, citing how
GOP-led state legislatures were able to
redraw congressional maps. Institutionally,
they were able in a redistricting year to pro-
tect the House gains they made in 2010,
when Republicans captured House control.
Indiana complicates
GOPs Senate math
WASHINGTON Fresh signs that
Democrats could snatch Indianas Senate seat
from the Republicans make it distinctly harder
for the GOP to seize the Senate majority in
Tuesdays election.
The latest survey out of Indiana Friday
showed Democratic Rep. Joe Donnelly leading
Republican Richard Mourdock by 11 percent-
age points after the GOP candidates awkward
debate comment last week that pregnancy
resulting from rape is something God intend-
ed.
Mourdock has scrambled to recover since
the gaffe, but it has taken a toll in the closing
days of a competitive race. The
Howey/DePauw University Battleground poll
also showed that the tea party-backed state
treasurer isnt winning over women, independ-
ents and a percentage of Republicans.
Mourdock also has struggled to satisfy back-
ers of six-term Sen. Richard Lugar, the man he
defeated handily in the May GOP primary.
The only poll Im talking about today is the
new unemployment numbers, Mourdock told
the Associated Press during a stop at his
Indianapolis campaign headquarters on Friday.
The Labor Department reported that 171,000
new jobs were created last month while the
unemployment rate ticked up to 7.9 percent.
GOP failure in the Hoosier state, combined
with the likely loss of seats in Maine and quite
possibly Massachusetts, would put
Republicans in a deep hole down seven
seats to a majority if President Barack Obama
wins a second term, needing six if Romney
prevails.
Fierce finish
Romney, Obama sharpen closing lines
Around the nation
Barack Obama
Mitt Romney
OPINION 9
Weekend Nov. 3-4, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
Letters to the editor
Support for
Bacigalupi and Chapman
Editor,
This letter is in response to the Oct. 30
story, Speier facing a new candidate in
Congress race. Speier and Eshoo were por-
trayed as professional politicians while
Bacigalupi and Chapman as candidates not
to take seriously.
Speier and Eshoo receive (and spend) mil-
lions of dollars in campaign contributions
from mega corporations and special interest
groups yet we hardly see them.
Speier and Eshoo support agendas they
dont truly understand, like regionalism
and Obamacare, while spending trillions of
dollars we no longer have on programs that
are no longer viable (real waste). Eshoo was
elected in 1992; our debt has quadrupled.
The debt has doubled since Speier became
congresswoman in 2008. Our states econo-
my competed globally, now we lose impor-
tant businesses daily. To end the article with
Speier saying she would cut the debt, after
20+ years of career politician type spending,
seems laughable. This is not representation;
this is reckless politicking.
On the other hand, you imply business-
woman Bacigalupi is out of touch because
she educates herself and others about agen-
das and legislation that threaten our U.S.
sovereignty, food and water supply and right
to own private property. Additionally, soft-
ware engineer Chapman has ideas to reform
our immigration system. Worthy issues and
candidates worthy of our respect and vote.
People want a government thats on our
side, and off our backs. Both Bacigalupi and
Chapman are hard-working citizens who
know that the career politicians seem further
and further from representing We The
People. Government is supposed to be Of
The People, By The People and For The
People.
Robert W. Heagy Jr.
San Mateo
The letter writer is a member of My
Liberty/San Mateo.
Support your local public schools
Editor,
Gov. Jerry Browns proposed tax initia-
tive, Proposition 30, raises taxes for those
who earn over $250,000 for seven years. It
also raises the sales tax by 1/4 cent for four
years. The new revenue earned will be allo-
cated entirely to schools and community
colleges (89 percent to K-12 schools and 11
percent to community colleges, see
Ballotpedia
[http://ballotpedia.org/wiki/index.php/Califo
rnia_Proposition_30,_Sales_and_Income_Ta
x_Increase_(2012)]).
After the collapse of the economy and the
decline in the housing market, public insti-
tutions took a severe hit. Thousands of
teachers were laid off and many schools
were closed. Many academic institutions
were forced to raise tuition fees, thereby
putting parents and children through misery.
The effort to defeat Proposition 30 is
largely funded by the super rich millionaires
and billionaires. We heard their arguments.
Do we really think that they care about
improving our public schools? We must not
be swayed by their distorted arguments and
scare tactics. We must carefully consider
our position on Proposition 30 and support
it. When our local public schools benefit
from the passage of Proposition 30, our
community benefits too.
C. Kalyanaraman
Redwood City
Lottery winnings for
criminals families
By Joe Galligan
S
outh San Francisco police Officer
Joshua Cabillos life changed forev-
er along with his
entire family, including
his fellow police officer
brethren and his superi-
ors all because Officer
Cabillo came upon a
drug-infested teenager
who did not stop to
answer the officers
questions, but instead
decided to run and then try and pick up the
gun that fell out of his jacket after he was
knocked down (Family seeks $10M for
sons death in the Oct. 31 edition of the
Daily Journal). Officer Cabillo, in a split
second, had to decide if he was going to go
home that night by discharging his weapon
to protect himself and the community he
swore to safeguard. Fifteen-year-old Derrick
Gaines autopsy showed that he was high on
cocaine, methamphetamine and ampheta-
mines in addition to finding in his posses-
sion marijuana and methamphetamine pills
along with the gun.
Officer Cabillos life and the lives of any
who know him will never be the same
because of Derrick Gaines. And what do we
read in the paper? Derrick Gaines family
has filed a $10 million lawsuit against
Officer Cabillo, his police chief and the city
of South San Francisco because his rights
were violated and his family has lost famil-
ial relations with Gaines, his companion-
ship, love affection, solace and moral sup-
port.
I feel terrible for Derrick because whatev-
er life was throwing at him at such an early
age had him living with his aunt in South
San Francisco versus his mom and dad. He
had a gun, was high on drugs and had drugs
to sell in his possession, so life was trou-
bling for this young man. But his parents,
who were standing shoulder to shoulder
with their attorney, said, Its not about the
money. The truth needs to come out and
the officer has to be accountable for his
actions. I feel mom and dad need to be
held accountable to the residents of South
San Francisco.
I feel the worse comment came from their
attorney, John Burris, who said that this was
a race issue and that Cabillo was motivated
by prejudice against Gaines, who was readi-
ly recognizable as African-American. The
officers conduct was extreme, unreason-
able and outrageous. I believe being high
on drugs does not have a skin color in refer-
ence to how one might act.
The reality of the situation is that a brave
attorney should represent the Cabillo family
and sue Derrick Gaines family and attorney
for the emotional distress they will have to
live with the rest of their lives due to the
actions of Derrick Gaines and the filing of
this lawsuit. The South San Francisco
Police Department did not cause this issue,
but they have the deep pockets. Until cities
and employees stand up for themselves and
go after attorneys like John Burris and fami-
lies of criminals who want to get rich quick
by the illegal actions of their deceased rela-
tives (where did Derrick get the drugs and
gun?), your taxes that pay for these lawsuits
will continue to be used as lottery winnings
for the criminals families.
What mom and dad should be doing is
working with the South San Francisco
Police Department to see who sold the
drugs and the gun to their son because that
is the person who killed their son, not
Officer Cabillo.
Joe Galligan is the former mayor of
Burlingame.
Guest
perspective
San Mateo County voters will head to the
polls Nov. 6.The Daily Journal has made
the following endorsements for state
propositions, candidates and local
measures.
Federal offices
U.S. House of Representatives-District
14
Jackie Speier (D)
U.S. House of Representatives-District
18
Anna Eshoo (D)
State propositions:
Proposition 30: Quarter-cent sales tax
increase and increase in upper-income
personal income tax for education YES
Proposition 31: Government reform and
local plan money NO
Proposition 32: Prohibition of political
contributions by payroll NO
Proposition 33: Change state auto
insurance policies NO
Proposition 34: Repeal the death penalty
NO
Proposition 35: Expand denition of
human trafcking and increase penalties
YES
Proposition 36: Repeal Three Strikeslaw
NO
Proposition 37: Require labeling for
genetically engineered food NO
Proposition 38: Increase personal income
tax to fund education NO
Proposition 39: Change taxing methods
for multistate businesses to fun clean
energy job fund NO
Proposition 40: Afrm political ofce
redistricting YES
State offices
State Senate-District 13
Jerry Hill (D)
State Assembly-District 22
Kevin Mullin (D)
State Assembly-District 24
Rich Gordon (D)
Candidates for local office
San Mateo County Board of Supervisors,
District Four: Warren Slocum
San Mateo County Board of Education,
area seven: Joe Ross
San Mateo County Harbor District Board
of Commissioners: Sabrina Brennan,
William Holsinger and Pietro Parravano
Half Moon Bay City Council: Marina
Fraser, John Muller
Sequoia Healthcare District: Kim Grifn,
Katie Kane
Local measures
Measure A: Half-cent sales tax increase for
county services NO
Measure B: County charter change to shift
to district from at-large elections for the
Board of Supervisors YES
Measure C: County charter change to
make controller position appointed YES
Measure D: $56 million bond measure for
Burlingame schools YES
Measure G: $199 annual parcel tax for San
Bruno schools NO
Measure H: $72 million bond measure for
San Carlos schools YES
Half Moon Bay Measure J: Half-cent sales
tax increase to fund city services NO
To nd your polling location or read other
nonpartisan election information prepared by
the League of Women Voters visit
http://www.smartvoter.org/.
Recommendations for the November election
Follow us on Twitter and Facebook:
facebook.com/smdailyjournal
twitter.com/smdailyjournal
Onlineeditionat scribd.com/smdailyjournal
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BUSINESS 10
Weekend Nov. 3-4, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
Dow 13,093.16 -1.05% 10-Yr Bond 1.726 +0.64%
Nasdaq2,982.13 -1.26% Oil (per barrel) 84.790001
S&P 500 1,414.19995 -0.94%Gold 1,678.40
By Daniel Wagner
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Waterlogged from Superstorm Sandy
and unmoved by a solid October jobs
report, U.S. stocks fell sharply Friday.
The Dow Jones industrial average
dropped 139 points as details about the
storms costs began to trickle out.
Verizon Communications, whose
downtown Manhattan facilities are still
without power, said the storm would
have a significant effect on its fourth-
quarter earnings. Verizon said it could
not yet estimate the cost of the storm,
which downed cell towers across the
region. Its stock fell 62 cents to $44.52.
The information coming out from
the economic impact of Sandy is a neg-
ative, said Rob Lutts, president of
Cabot Money Management in Salem,
Mass. I think the markets are trying to
digest that and understand that, so there
is a little bit of uncertainty.
Insurers, the group that will feel the
storms effects most acutely, plunged en
masse as analysts warned that the storm
will eat into their income. Raymond
James analysts lowered their estimates
for Allstate; Barclays analysts cut theirs
for Hartford Financial Services Group
Inc.
The chairman of Hartford, Liam
McGee, told investors on a conference
call that the storms costs are just begin-
ning to come into focus. Its much too
early for us to provide data with any
level of certainty, McGee said. He said
it wasnt until Thursday that adjustors
were able to view the damage to Long
Island, one of the hardest-hit areas.
Hartford fell 66 cents, or 3 percent, to
$21.26. Allstate dropped 49 cents to
$38.56. American International Group
Inc. plunged $2.52, or 7 percent, to
$32.68. Genworth Financial Inc.
dropped 16 cents, or 3 percent, to
$6.06.
After a day of steady selling, the Dow
Jones industrial average closed down
139.46 points, or 1.1 percent, at
13,093.16. The Standard & Poors 500
index dropped 13.39, or 0.9 percent, at
1,414.20. The Nasdaq composite index
lost 37.93 points, or 1.3 percent, to
2,982.13.
The day started with a burst of hope:
In the last big piece of economic news
before Tuesdays presidential election,
the Labor Department said employers
added 171,000 jobs last month, while
the unemployment rate ticked up to 7.9
percent. More jobs were added in the
previous two months than was first
reported, the government said.
Stocks waterlogged
Wall Street
Stocks that moved substantially or traded
heavily Friday on the New York Stock Exchange
and Nasdaq Stock Market:
NYSE
Alpha Natural Resources Inc., up 20 cents at
$9.06
The coal producer narrowed its losses and
posted much better earnings than Wall Street
expected during the third quarter.
Beam Inc., up $1.57 at $57.15
The maker of Jim Beam, Makers Mark and
Courvoisier posted third-quarter adjusted prot
that topped Wall Streets expectations.
Hhgregg Inc., up $1.21 at $7.60
The electronics and appliance retailer said its
second-quarter net income fell 38 percent,but
it still beat expectations.
Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia Inc., down
14 cents at $2.81
The media company said the declining value
of its publishing business and a drop in ad
revenue widened its third-quarter loss.
Boston Beer Co. Inc., up $8.58 at $116.58
The maker of Samuel Adams and other craft
beer brands posted earnings for the third
quarter that beat Wall Street expectations.
Nasdaq
Starbucks Corp., up $4.22 at $50.84
The coffee chain raised its prot forecast for its
current scal year and said that it will accelerate
store openings.
Dendreon Corp., up 62 cents at $4.47
The biotechnology company said that revenue
from its prostate cancer therapy Provenge grew
27 percent in the third quarter.
Glu Mobile Inc., down 70 cents at $2.56
The mobile game maker posted a smaller loss
than analysts expected due to the popularity
of Deer Hunter Reloaded and other games.
Big movers
By Christopher S. Rugaber
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON The United States
added a solid 171,000 jobs in October,
and more than a half-million Americans
joined the work force, the latest signs
that the uneven economic recovery is
gaining strength once again.
In addition, more jobs were added in
August and September than believed.
But the unemployment rate inched up to
7.9 percent because not all those joining
the work force found work, the govern-
ment said Friday.
The report was the nal snapshot of
the economy before the presidential
election.
The economy is in a lot better shape
than most people believe, said Joel
Naroff, president of Naroff Economic
Advisors. That sets us up for stronger
growth next year no matter who is elect-
ed on Tuesday.
A government survey of households
found that 578,000 Americans joined the
work force in October, the Labor
Department said. Of those, 470,000
found work. The difference is why the
unemployment rate rose from 7.8 per-
cent in September.
Home prices are nally rising, and
retailers and car companies this week
reported stronger sales. Consumer con-
dence in October reached its highest
point in almost ve years, and stocks are
within reach of record highs.
Big businesses are still cautious, part-
ly because of slowing global demand for
their goods. But the report found that
they continued to add jobs in greater
numbers than they did last spring.
A second government survey, of large
companies and government agencies,
yielded the 171,000 number. Companies
added 184,000 jobs, the most since
February, and federal, state and local
governments cut 13,000.
The report was compiled before
Superstorm Sandy struck the East Coast
earlier this week and devastated many
businesses. Some economists think the
rebuilding in the Northeast will add to
construction jobs in the months ahead.
The government also revised its data
to show that 84,000 more jobs were
added in August and September than
previously estimated. Augusts job gain
was revised to 192,000 from 142,000,
and Septembers to 148,000 from
114,000.
For the third time since the recovery
from the Great Recession began in June
2009, the economy appears to be picking
up momentum.
Since July, the economy has created
an average of 173,000 jobs a month.
That is up from an average of 67,000 a
month from April through June.
Uneven job growth gaining strength
By Tom Krisher
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
DETROIT Hyundai and Kia over-
stated the gas mileage on 900,000 vehi-
cles in the past three years, a discovery
that could result in sanctions from the
U.S. government and millions of dollars
in payments to car owners.
The inated gures were uncovered by
the Environmental Protection Agency in
an audit of gas mileage tests by the two
South Korean automakers. The agency,
which monitors fuel economy, said
Friday that its investigating how the
companies came up with their numbers.
The EPA found inated gas mileage
on 13 models from the 2011 through
2013 model years, including Hyundais
Elantra and Tucson, and Kias Sportage
and Rio. The window sticker mileages
were overstated on about one-third of
the cars sold by the companies during
the three years.
As a result, Hyundai and Kia will have
to knock one or two miles per gallon off
the vehicle stickers of most of their mod-
els. Some models will lose three or four
miles per gallon. The Kia Soul, a funky-
looking boxy small SUV, will lose six
from its highway gure, lowering it from
34 mpg to 28 mpg.
Consumers rely on the window stick-
er to help make informed choices about
the cars they buy, said Gina McCarthy,
assistant administrator of the EPAs air-
quality ofce. EPAs investigation will
help protect consumers and ensure a
level playing eld among automakers.
Restoration Hardware
climbs in public debut
NEW YORK Shares of Restoration
Hardware jumped in its rst day of trad-
ing, as investors decided to take a bet on
a familiar retail name and the gradual
housing recovery.
Shares rose $7.10, or 29.6 percent, to
close at $31.01 Friday on the New York
stock exchange. The home decor retailer
and its shareholders raised $124 million,
selling 5.2 million shares for $24 each.
Its been quite well received, said
Sam Hamadeh, CEO of PrivCo LLC,
which researches private companies.
Its reasonably priced and a well-
known brand.
In addition, the housing market is
slowly strengthening. The Standard &
Poors/Case Shiller index reported
Tuesday that national home prices rose 2
percent in August, the third straight
monthly increase. And new home sales
jumped in September to the highest
annual pace in the past two and a half
years.
Restoration Hardware is one way
investors could capitalize on the recov-
ery, Hamadeh said.
State supermarket
contract talks resume
WEST SACRAMENTO A major
Northern California supermarket chain
and its workers have resumed contract
talks this time with the help of a
federal mediator as the possibility
of a strike looms.
West Sacramento-based Raleys had
threatened to impose a contract this
week that includes a wage freeze and
elimination of premium pay for Sunday
shifts. But it now says it will hold off
until midnight Saturday.
Hyundai, Kia overstated gas mileage, EPA finds
Business briefs
<< Cal falls to Huskies, Tedford in hot water, page 14
Big SEC college football matchup, page 15
Weekend, Nov. 3-4, 2012
WHAT ELSE IS NEW?: CAPS JUSTIN EWING RUSHES FOR 297 AND 4 SCORES IN 45-13 WIN OVER CARLMONT >>> PAGE 12
By Julio Lara
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
Nine letters and a hashtag.
Before Friday nights do or die game
against Aragon High School, Burlingames
Benji Palu took a black pen and in big capitals
letters wrote atop the Panthers taping list a
phrase that has come to dene his teams sea-
son: #BEASTMODE.
And to a man, the
Panthers knew exactly the
kind of game they would
have to play against the
Dons if they wanted to
stamp their ticket to the
Central Coast Section
playoffs.
Beastmode means 110
percent, said Burlingames Joe Mahe. The
reason we say 110 percent is because regular
humans go 100 percent. But it takes a special
kind of human go to 110. Its all out. Thats
what you have to do.
Burlingame put together a special kind of
effort Friday night, defeating Aragon 31-24 to
nish fourth in the Peninsula Athletic League
Bay Division and thus secure a spot in the
CCS playoffs as an automatic qualier. The
Panthers used an inspired brand of football to
amass 365 yards rushing including a 3-yard
run by Mahe with 1:42 left in the game to beat
the Dons.
This one is way up there, said Burlingame
head coach John Philipopoulos when asked
where Fridays win ranks among the most
gratifying in his tenure. Considering the way
season unfolded, the injuries, the tough losses,
the adversity, and for these kids to come out
and play the way they did tonight, I dont
think anybody, other than the people on our
sideline, thought we would play this way.
They took it to us, said Aragon head
coach Steve Sell. They got off the ball and
they beat us. None of their touchdowns were
cheap or big plays, they just soundly beat us
on offense. They did a good job against our
run on defense. I thought we would have a lit-
tle more success running the football and we
had to rely on Aldo Severson and Nat Blood a
bit too much.
Not that the combination is a bad one
Severson was his usual electric self, catching
13 passes for 186 of Bloods 204 total yards.
But at the end, it was all about intensity and
desire. And with one foot in and another out
of the CCS playoffs, Burlingame wanted
Fridays game more than the Dons.
We came out and we did what we were
coached to do, we had to cut up and get all
these blocks together, said Manese Palu, who
ran for 166 yards on 19 carries. Its a team
effort out here tonight. Beastmode means to
never give up. Fight for your teammates
110 percent every day.
Burlingame began the game by forcing a
turnover on downs and taking advantage of
By Nathan Mollat
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
For the second week in a row, the Terra
Nova football team looked unstoppable in the
rst half. But, for the second week in a row,
the Tigers struggled for most of the second
half.
Unlike last week, however, when the Tigers
were stunned by Aragon 32-31, they managed
to nish the game strong in beating a physical
Menlo-Atherton squad, 38-14.
Were inconsistent, said Terra Nova coach
Bill Gray. We played a rst half like that
against Aragon and we couldnt hold on. This
week we did.
With the win, Terra Nova (3-1 PAL Bay, 5-
4 overall) put itself in position to win its
fourth-straight Peninsula Athletic League Bay
Division title. The Tigers can lock up the
crown with a win over Half Moon Bay next
week.
After a stuttering start during which Terra
Nova committed back-to-back penalties to
begin the game, the Tigers could do wrong.
Backed up to their 13 and facing second-and-
long, quarter Kren Spain aired out a long
pass down the right sideline that found Jaylen
Jones in stride. He was nally knocked out of
bounds at the M-A 10 for a 77-yard gain.
Three plays later, Spain took it himself into
the end zone from two yards to give Terra
Nova a 7-0 lead and the rst of four touch-
downs on four rst-half possessions.
After forcing Menlo-Atherton (3-2, 5-4) to
punt on its rst possession of the game, the
Tigers offense went back to work, starting at
the Bears 34-yard line. The Tigers picked up
an initial rst down and later in the drive con-
verted on fourth-and-2 to set up a Spain 9-
yard touchdown run.
The Bears did nothing on their next posses-
sion and again Terra Nova could not be
stopped. With 2:56 left in the rst quarter,
they put together a 65-yard, 15-play scoring
drive. Tanner Piccolotti gave Terra Nova its
third score of the night with a 5-yard run.
M-A nally got its offense in gear and went
74 yards for a score on its next drive, needing
seven plays to nd the end zone when Royce
By Josh Dubow
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
OAKLAND Ronde Barber and Carson
Palmer spent years in the NFL mastering
familiar systems that helped them excel at
their crafts.
Coaching changes in Tampa Bay and
Oakland this offseason led to new roles for the
two veterans that both feel have energized
their careers.
After a bit of an early learning period, the
two stars have regained that comfort level
heading into Sundays meeting in Oakland
between Barbers Buccaneers (3-4) and
Palmers Raiders (3-4).
I looked at it as a challenge, especially
some of the new terminology, Barber said.
But it was a fun thing to do, though. It took
some time, obviously. I didnt pick it up the
rst week. ... But it was something that I
looked forward to and really tried to embrace.
I think that attitude kind of helped me make
the transition a little easier.
Tigers take down Menlo-Atherton
See BGAME, Page 18
JULIO LARA/DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
Burlingames Manese Palu runs the football in the Panthers 31-24 win over Aragon. Palu nished the night with 166 yards rushing on 19
carries.With the win, Burlingame locks up a spot in the Central Coast Section playoffs as the Bay Divisions fourth place nisher.
See TIGERS, Page 16
Panthers go beastmode
San Mateo, El
Camino take
it to overtime
See page 12
INSIDE
Bucs, Raiders
adjusting to
new systems
See RAIDERS, Page 18
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
OAKLAND Marc Gasol and Mike
Conley both scored 21 points, and the
Memphis Grizzlies spoiled Golden States
home opener with a 104-94 victory Friday
night after Warriors forward Brandon Rush
injured his left knee in a scary fall.
Rudy Gay added 18 points and eight
rebounds and Zach Randolph had 15 points
and 14 rebounds to help Memphis rebound
from a loss at the Los Angeles Clippers two
nights earlier.
Randolphs foul on Rush in the rst quarter
unintentionally injured the Warriors forward,
putting a damper on Golden States rst game
at Oracle Arena this season. Rush held back
tears and had to be helped off the court. He
was scheduled to have an MRI on Saturday.
The Warriors went down 14 points follow-
ing the injury, then scored 15 straight to take a
39-38 lead before the Grizzlies ran away with
the victory in the second half.
Stephen Curry scored 26 points and had
seven assists and reserve Carl Landry added
20 points for Golden State on a night all the
good vibes from Wednesdays win at Phoenix
Warriors fall in
home opener
See WARRIORS, Page 16
SPORTS 12
Weekend Nov. 3-4, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
850 N. El Camino Real, S.M.t650-344-8200
License# 41050763 t www.sterlingcourt.com
t(SBDJPVT4FSWJDF
t'JOF%JOJOH
t"CVOEBOU"DUJWJUJFT
t5SBOTQPSUBUJPO4FSWJDFT
t8FPGGFSUIFCFTUJO*OEFQFOEFOU4FOJPS-JGFTUZMF
Come see for yourself!
Be as Independent as
You Want or Need
By Julio Lara
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
With a swing of his leg, San Mateo High
Schools Larry Campbell got to write his story-
book ending.
Once upon a time, the wide receiver and place
kicker for the Bearcats walked onto the San
Mateo campus only to endure three seasons of
losing. But on Friday afternoon, Campbell
ipped the script by booting the winning point in
the Bearcats 21-20 overtime victory over El
Camino in his nal home game donning the
black and orange.
The win means Campbell and the Bearcats
lock up second place in the Peninsula Athletic
League Lake Division with a 4-1 record their
best nish since the 2009 season.
Ive never had a winning season, Campbell
said. My freshman year, we went 0-10. Just to
know that we went 4-1 and no one can take that
away from us it just meant a lot to this team.
Most of this team has never been on a champi-
onship team. Capuchino was a hard loss and we
took that to heart and knew we werent going to
lose this game. Its my last game here at home
and it just meant a lot. It meant a lot. It meant a
lot.
Its been some tough times since freshman
year to now and he never quit, said San Mateo
head coach Jeff Scheller of Campbell. He
embodies what the program is about. He just
keeps going, keeps playing, hes going to do
whatever he can. He hasnt always been the best
eld goal kicker and to kick the game-winner in
his last home game, it is tting.
The crazy thing was Campbells fairy tale was
almost El Caminos comeback story of the sea-
son. Down two touchdowns at half, El Camino
played more like the team that came into the
contest 3-1 and with four 2012 shutouts under its
belt.
After allowing 139 yards of offense in the rst
half, El Camino clamped down and allowed just
70 in the second pitching a shutout in regula-
tion time.
Xs and Os wise, there is absolutely nothing
we would change from the second half offen-
sively or defensively, said El Camino head
coach Mark Tuner. Our guys just performed
better and they came out with more intensity.
Im not quite sure what happened early, but we
werent quite ready. Unfortunately in a game
like this, if you spot a team 14 points at the half,
youre lucky to even come back and push it
overtime. Im proud of the way we played in the
second half but it hurts to let the game go down
in overtime like this.
The nail in El Caminos cofn came on a
missed extra point doomed from the snap of the
football.
Moments later, Line Latu took a pitch off the
left side on San Mateos rst snap of overtime
and waltzed into the end zone. From there, the
not-always-money foot of Campbell kicked the
ball through the uprights and No. 22 collapsed to
his knees, pointed toward the heavens and was
mobbed by his San Mateo brothers.
Everyone knew that Line was going to get
[the touchdown] because we were going to give
everything we got just to get Line inside,
Campbell said. And when he went it, it was the
best feeling in the world.
San Mateo seized the early momentum by
stalling a promising El Camino drive and then
using seven plays to nd the end zone. A 7-yard
quarterback keeper by Taylor Sanft did the trick
to make it 7-0 with Latus bum ankle doing the
heavy lifting with a 33-yard run on third down to
set the Bearcats up deep in El Camino territory.
Then, San Mateo really asserted its defensive
presence. El Caminos next three drives netted
them 78 yards and the Colts could not get past
the San Mateo 40-yard line. Meanwhile, the
Bearcats rode the big-play ability of Latu and
the bruising running style of Kevin Garcia-
Rodela. One play into the second quarter, San
Mateo doubled its lead on a 22-yard Latu run.
But the second half was a completely different
tale. El Camino was the more physical team
that, and Jojo Wongngam was a rushing spark
for the Colts. No. 30 ran for 84 yards in the sec-
ond half and Taj Childs caught ve passes
including a 3-yard touchdown pass to tie things
Campbell, Bearcats beat El Camino in OT
By Nathan Mollat
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
Its taken nearly eight games, but all the things that have hurt
the Capuchino football team this season turnovers, bad third
quarters and mental lapses were all missing during the
Mustangs 45-13 win over Carlmont Friday afternoon in San
Bruno.
We give report cards and I gave them an A, said Capuchino
coach Adam Hyndman.
Capuchino (4-0 PAL Lake, 5-4 overall) played a nearly awless
game in beating Carlmont (0-5, 1-8). It was a performance that
earned Hyndman a Gatorade shower in the nal seconds as the
win all but sews up spot in the Central Coast Section playoffs for
the Mustangs. Capuchino still have a one-game lead over San
Mateo, which beat El Camino 21-20 in overtime Friday. Even if
the Mustangs lose to rival Mills next week, they would earn the
Lake Divisions automatic playoff berth by virtue of beating San
Mateo two weeks ago.
Im going to double check (just to be sure), Hyndman said.
The Mustangs have clinched at least a share of the Ocean
Division championship thanks to another huge game from run-
ning back Justin Ewing, who nished with 297 yards and four
touchdowns on 30 carries. He had scoring runs of 18, 55, 10 and
an unbelievable 54-yard run midway through the fourth quarter
that nearly dees description. Taking the handoff at his own 46,
Ewing got to the secondary before nearly the entire Carlmont
defense collapsed on him. But Ewing kept his legs churning and
somehow broke out the scrum and went into the end zone for one
of the most remarkable scoring runs youll ever see.
That kid is a special, special kid, said Carlmont coach Jason
Selli. He has the heart of a champion.
The 297 yards gets Ewing that much closer to the CCS single-
season rushing record of 2,798 yards set in 1997 by Burlingames
Onan Reyes. Ewing is only 279 yards away from setting the
record, but its one on which he is not necessarily focused.
Ewings magic season goes on
See MUSTANGS, Page 18
JULIO LARA/DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
SanMateos David Aranda, right, leads the way for Line Latu during the Bearcats 21-20 win.
Capuchino beats Carlmont, No. 40 rushes for 297 yards, 4 TDs
See BEARCATS, Page 16
13
Weekend Nov. 3-4, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
SPORTS 14
Weekend Nov. 3-4, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
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By Pat Graham
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
BOULDER, Colo. Stanford
quarterback Josh Nunes may get
more heat this weekend from a red-
shirt freshman pushing for his job
than from one of the worst defenses
in the nation.
Nunes will be constantly looking
over his shoulder against Colorado,
just to see if Kevin Hogan is trotting
onto the eld to take his place.
Nunes has struggled at times this
year in his bid to replace Andrew
Luck. So much so that Cardinal
coach David Shaw plans to work in
Hogan under center more than he
has all season.
Nothing all that drastic is in the
works not yet anyway. Shaw
simply wants to send in Hogan for
12 to 20 plays to see if he can ignite
the sputtering offense of No. 15
Stanford (6-2, 4-1 Pac-12).
This is as good of a time as any,
especially considering that
Colorado (1-7, 1-4) surrenders more
than 500 yards and 46 points a
game.
With big contests looming with
ranked teams such as Oregon State
and Oregon, Shaw hopes to get the
offensive malaise straightened out,
because the Cardinals stalwart
defense deserves some help.
Then again, Nunes doesnt think
the offense is all that far away from
nding its rhythm.
Its just being more consistent,
said Nunes, who has thrown 10 TD
passes and seven interceptions this
season. We know we have all the
playmakers and all the talent to put
up points and put up big numbers.
We just have to do that more consis-
tently now and make the big plays
more consistently.
Nunes and Hogan are vastly dif-
ferent types of quarterbacks, which
could trip up teams. Nunes is more
of a pocket passer just like Luck, the
No. 1 pick of the Indianapolis Colts
last spring. Living in the shadow of
Luck, though, has been anything but
easy for Nunes. At times this sea-
son, hes looked sloppy.
Thats opened the door for Hogan,
whos seen spot duty the last few
weeks. Most of his action has been
as a read-option or wildcat-style
quarterback. But Shaw hinted that
more passing situations could be on
the horizon as Hogan gets more
comfortable with the offense.
He doesnt have it all down yet,
so were not going to try to give it to
him just yet, Shaw said. But for
what he has been responsible for, he
has done exceptionally well.
Could Hogan eventually be his
starter?
Anything is possible, Shaw
said. Anything is possible, which is
always the thing when youre going
to give a guy more time at any posi-
tion. Yeah, thats possible.
The Buffs are certainly preparing
like theyll see a steady diet of both
QBs.
Ditto for Stanford.
See, Colorado has a dilemma at
quarterback as well: Does the team
stick with Jordan Webb or rely more
on Nick Hirschman?
Im sure theyll both play, said
coach Jon Embree, whose team has
lost 10 straight against ranked
teams. I want to see them compete
and things along those lines. Either
way, both of the will be in there.
This has been another lackluster
season for the Buffaloes. Still, a win
against Stanford could be just what
they need to turn around the pro-
gram. Thats defensive lineman Will
Pericaks take on things anyway.
Were going to beat somebody
were not supposed to, said
Pericak, whose team is a 27 1/2-
point underdog against Stanford.
So why not this week?
It wont be easy, though, even if
Stanford is having a mini identity
crisis at quarterback. The Cardinal
still have powerful running back
Stepfan Taylor, who is 96 yards
away from his third straight 1,000-
yard rushing season. The Buffaloes
are giving up 204 yards on the
ground.
But after facing the high-powered
offenses of USC and Oregon in
back-to-back weeks and being
outscored 120-20 this is almost a
welcome change.
This is denitely my type of
game. I love seeing a fullback in the
backeld, linebacker Doug Rippy
said. Theyre just a physical team.
Thats the way they feel they can
beat you, is if they out-physical you.
Our whole mindset is to out-physi-
cal them.
For Stanford, it boils down to this
execution. Nunes is hoping he
can get the offense back on track
this weekend, even if he has to share
snaps with Hogan.
I havent really had that much
experience with it, Nunes said of
splitting time. Its just staying alert
and being in-tune with whats going
on on the eld. When I have the
opportunity to go in there and make
plays, just go in there and do it.
NOTES: The Cardinal are mak-
ing their rst visit to Folsom Field
since 1990, when Eric Bieniemy,
whos now CUs offensive coordi-
nator, scored on fourth-and-goal
with 12 seconds left in a 21-17 win.
Shaw dressed for Stanford in that
game, but didnt play. His most
vivid memory? Easy Ralphie,
CUs mascot. I was the rst guy
out of the locker room and the rst
thing I saw was Ralphie coming full
speed with those people barely
hanging on, Shaw said. The rest
of the team is trying to come out,
and Im trying to go back in. ... The
Buffs are 61-31-5 in homecoming
games.
Stanford looks for quarterback consistency
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
BERKELEY After going more
than a year without a road win,
Washington coach Steve Sarkisian
had his players wear suits for the
plane ride to drive home the message
that this was a business trip.
The play on the eld may not have
looked as good as the players did on
the plane but the result did.
Bishop Sankey ran for a career-
high 189 yards and two touchdowns
and Washington overcame four
turnovers and 12 penalties for its
rst road win in 13 months, 21-13
over California on Friday night.
That was the whole message,
quarterback Keith Price said. Were
not here for vacation. A lot of guys
were home back here playing. Thats
not what we were here for. We were
here to get a win and we did that.
Austin Seferian-Jenkins caught
eight passes for 154 yards and a
touchdown for the Huskies (5-4, 3-3
Pac-12), who had been outscored
145-41 in three road games this sea-
son and had lost six straight away
games since beating Utah on Oct. 1,
2011.
The Golden Bears (3-7, 2-5) lost
for the fourth time in six games at
their renovated stadium and are
assured of missing out on a bowl for
the second time in three seasons.
That will only raise more questions
about the status of coach Jeff
Tedford, who has a 23-25 record
since the start of the 2009 season.
It is not something were used
to, Tedford said. You work very
hard, so it is always disappointing to
not be able to play in the postseason.
It does not happen to us often and
its not a good feeling.
Cal played the game without
injured star receiver Keenan Allen
and then lost starting quarterback
Zach Maynard to a left knee injury
late in the fourth quarter. Allen
might not be back this season, while
Maynard is undergoing an MRI and
his status is unknown.
Backup Allan Bridgford drove the
Bears to the 25 with just over a
minute left but he missed C.J.
Anderson down the sideline on
fourth-and-5 to end Cals hopes and
send the Huskies home happy.
I think its big from a psyche
standpoint that were able to get on
the plane and have success and feel
good about winning a ballgame not,
Woe is us, woe is me. That takes a
toll. At the end of the day, we found
a way to win.
Each team had four turnovers in a
sloppy game, including three lost
fumbles in a span of six plays early
in the fourth quarter. An interception
on the next drive helped seal the win
for Washington.
Shaq Thompson intercepted a pass
by Maynard near midfield and
returned it 33 yards to the Cal 28.
Making that play even more painful
for the Bears was the fact that
Thompson originally committed to
play at Cal before changing his mind
when top recruiter Tosh Lupoi left
for Washington just weeks before
signing day.
Sankey ran four straight plays and
scored from 1-yard out to give the
Huskies a 21-13 lead. Washington
needs just one win in its nal three
games against the bottom teams in
the conference, Utah, Colorado and
Washington State, to become bowl
eligible.
We knew we had to close it out
and we knew we were on their side
of the eld, Sankey said. It was on
the o-lines back and on the running
game and I feel like we did a great
job with that.
Cal settled for eld goals twice in
the third quarter after driving deep
into Washington territory, which
proved costly when Seferian-Jenkins
made a leaping grab over the small-
er Steve Williams for a 29-yard
score on third-and-goal to give the
Huskies a 14-13 lead in the nal
minute of the third quarter.
The score remained there when
Cal failed to capitalize on another
good chance. Maynard overthrew an
open Chris Harper in the end zone
and DAmato missed wide right
from 41 yards, ending a streak of 11
straight makes.
I dont think we executed all of
our plays like we were supposed to,
Harper said. We had a couple of
drops and fumbles. All of the
turnovers, we need to try to elimi-
nate them. When were close to the
zone we need to have the mentality
that we have to get in.
Cal cant hold on to lead, fall to Huskies
SPORTS 15
Weekend Nov. 3-4, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
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By Paul Newberry
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
BATON ROUGE, La. OK, so
maybe its not the Game of the
Century.
No disputing its the game of the
year.
Nothing new about that.
Alabama-LSU has undoubtedly
become the greatest rivalry in college
football, supplanting Michigan-Ohio
State, Florida-Florida State and any of
those other annual showdowns with
historic overtones. Last year, these
Southeastern Conference powerhous-
es met twice once with the
Crimson Tide ranked No. 1 and the
Tigers No. 2, the second time with the
roles reversed.
Another epic showdown looms
Saturday night in Tiger Stadium. Top-
ranked Alabama (8-0, 5-0 SEC) is
looking to stay on course for its sec-
ond straight national title, but a famil-
iar foe No. 5 LSU stands in the
way.
Youve got your Michigan-Ohio
States and stuff like that, but I feel like
those games are not what they used to
be, LSU linebacker Kevin Minter
said. This is the gusto right here.
The teams have long been SEC
rivals, but it was a largely overlooked
game on the national stage. That all
changed in 2007, when former LSU
coach Nick Saban, after a brief stint in
the NFL, returned to the college game
at Alabama, of all places.
Suddenly, this series took on a
whole new level of nastiness and vit-
riol.
It has denitely grown, LSU safe-
ty Eric Reid said. I grew up watching
LSU-Bama, and it was always a good
game, but since I got here its de-
nitely gotten way bigger. Both of our
teams have developed and become
very good football teams. Whenever
we play each other, everybody
expects a big game. We cant disap-
point them.
Indeed, these are two modern
dynasties. LSU, guided by Saban suc-
cessor Les Miles, won the national
title in 2007. Alabama nished on top
in 2009, then did it again last season
by beating the Tigers 21-0 in the
title game.
Itll denitely be the most physical
game we play all year, without a
doubt, Alabama center Barrett Jones
said. The most physical games Ive
played in my life have been against
them. We really respect the way they
play football.
When the teams met last year in
Tuscaloosa, the buildup was so
intense that everyone broke out the
Game of the Century moniker.
Alabama was the favorite but LSU
pulled out a 9-6 victory in overtime,
winning a battle of the eld goals.
This game doesnt have quite the
same luster, since LSU (7-1, 3-1)
already has a loss on its record, a 14-
6 setback at Florida.
To be honest with you, Im not
sure any game will be like that game
was last year, Minter said, shaking
his head as he remembered the hype.
That was a once-in-a-lifetime type of
game.
Turns out, it wasnt a once-in-a-sea-
son type of game.
Even though Alabama was runner-
up in the SEC West, the Crimson Tide
climbed back to No. 2 in the BCS
standings, earning a much-debated
rematch with the conference champi-
on Tigers in the national title game.
That one was no contest. The
Crimson Tide ruined LSUs perfect
season in the New Orleans
Superdome with a stiing defensive
performance, limiting the Tigers to 92
yards and ve rst downs.
LSU has been stewing about it ever
since.
They took something from us,
running back Michael Ford said. We
should have won the national champi-
onship. We got it taken away. It
should have been a magical season for
us.
Ever since Saban took over at
Alabama, the teams have met with
one or the other or both ranked
in the top ve. They have split their
previous six meetings, four of which
were decided by a touchdown or less,
including two that went to overtime.
Its not always pretty, but it sure is
intense.
Alabama-LSU renews epic rivalry
By Luke Meredith
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Fred Hoiberg returned to Iowa State
from the NBA in 2010 and inherited a
roster in dire need of talent.
The rookie coach brushed off the
old axiom that transfers were often
bad ts, bad teammates and bad
apples. He embraced guys like Royce
White and Chris Allen, talented play-
ers that many other coaches wouldnt
touch because of their supposedly
checkered pasts, and the Cyclones
won 23 games in reaching the NCAA
tournament for the rst time in seven
years.
Hoiberg is hardly the only coach to
jump on the transfer bandwagon. Its
getting crowded.
Whether its to restock a thin roster,
get an instant boost at a position of
need or simply take advantage of the
increasingly transient nature of col-
lege basketball, coaches appear to be
competing to sign transfers more than
ever. According to NCAA statistics,
about 40 percent of mens basketball
players wont be playing for their
original school by the end of their
sophomore year.
First of all, you look at the number
of transfers right now. When you get
guys that have had good seasons
before that leave the program for
whatever reason, theres a lot of inter-
est in them, said Hoiberg, who has
two more impact transfers this season
in forward Will Clyburn and guard
Korie Lucious and recently added for-
mer USC team MVP Maurice Jones
for 2013-14. Its all across the coun-
try....any time a good player comes on
the market, theres going to be a lot of
competition.
Not everybody is thrilled about it.
NCAA President Mark Emmert
announced last spring the establish-
ment of a subcommittee designed to
work on transfer rules. Suggested
changes could be announced as soon
as the next week. Spokesman
Christopher Radford told the
Associated Press that the NCAA has
identied permission to contact rules,
the one-time transfer exception and
academic concerns as the three main
areas to explore.
Any changes wouldnt be in place
until next season. So for this season,
newcomers gure have an immediate
impact across the country.
Missouri is ranked No. 15 largely
because of three new transfers from
high-major programs. Blue bloods
like Arizona, Louisville and Kentucky
gure to lean prominently on trans-
fers this season.
Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski
recently welcomed just his fourth
major college transfer in 32 years
but second since 2009 when
Rodney Hood joined the program
from Mississippi State. He will be eli-
gible next season.
For many schools, its more about
the one-and-done senior than the one-
and-done freshman. Most of those
players can use their nal year of eli-
gibility somewhere else if they nd a
school that offers a graduate program
their old one didnt.
Former Connecticut center Alex
Oriakhi is among the nations most
high-prole senior transfers. He was
eligible to play immediately at the
school of his choosing after the
NCAA ruled UConn was ineligible
for this seasons tournament.
The 6-foot-9 center picked
Missouri from among a number of
suitors, and second-year coach Frank
Haith likened him to a Christmas
present. Oriakhi joins fellow trans-
fers Earnest Ross (Auburn), Jabari
Brown (Oregon) and Keion Bell
(Pepperdine).
The time when we got the job, we
couldnt sign quality enough high
school kids I thought could come help
us compete at the level we were play-
ing. We were fortunate enough to get
a couple of transfers to help us bal-
ance our classes out, Haith said.
Impact transfers on the rise in college basketball
16
Weekend Nov. 3-4, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
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Branning hooked up with Blake Olsen for a 25-yard scoring
pass.
But the Tigers got the score right back, going 85 yards on 16
plays, culminating with a 4-yard scoring pass from Spain to
Jones.
The Terra Nova defense was just as good as the offense in
the rst two quarters. The Tigers shut down the Bears, holding
them to just 140 yards of offense in the rst half. In the rst
quarter, M-A managed only three yards of offense. A second
potential Bears scoring drive late in the half ended when Terra
Novas Aaron Worthens intercepted a pass in the end zone and
the Terra Nova led 28-7 at half.
In the second half, however, the Tigers offense could not
nd a rhythm as they managed just three second-half rst
downs after collecting 14 in the rst half. The Terra Nova
defense, however, kept M-A from taking advantage. The Bears
were dealt a serious blow to their comeback hopes, however,
when Branning was sacked from behind by Terra Novas
David Melton. Branning remained on the ground and the para-
medics and an ambulance were called for what appeared to be
a serious knee injury.
Backup Zack Moore replaced him and did a good job, for the
most part. He led M-A on an 80-yard scoring drive that was
capped by a 1-yard sneak by Moore to pull the Bears to with-
in two touchdowns, 28-14.
Terra Nova recovered the ensuing onside kick and drove to
the M-A 10 before settling for a 27-yard Olsen eld goal to
give the Tigers a 31-14 lead.
The Tigers Sam Auelua sealed the win on the next play from
scrimmage when he picked off a Moore pass and rumbled 20
yards for a touchdown with 1:59 to play.
Continued from page 11
TIGERS
including a 3-yard touchdown pass to tie things up at 14 and ulti-
mately force overtime.
They kept ghting and its a theme for them, Scheller said
of El Camino. Theyre a good team. Theyre physical, theyre
athletic and we watched them and said if were able to execute,
we might be able to sneak one out.
In overtime, El Caminos only possession resulted in a 1-yard
Ian Santos sneak over the goal line. But the Colts stayed at 20
points after the missed PAT.
Its a timing thing, Turner said. You have to be able to exe-
cute the snap, the hold and the kick. And we didnt do that. It just
hurts. It stings. But like I said, we didnt lay down, they played
extremely hard but came out at in the rst half.
After Latu scored to tie the game, the stage was set for
Campbell, who took full advantage of the opportunity.
In practice, we always practice PAT and say, This is for the
win and I believed in my line, Campbell said.
And its that belief that helped Campbell walk off his home
away from home after leading the San Mateo student body in
song a winner.
Continued from page 12
BEARCATS
came crashing down. New center Andrew Bogut, easing back
into game shape after left ankle surgery, had 4 points and three
rebounds in 18 minutes.
Not exactly the way the Warriors wanted opening night to
end.
A pregame video montage showed highlights from last sea-
son and mixed in shots of San Francisco, San Jose and
Oakland. Players walked through a mock Bay Bridge complete
with lights and reballs popped after each name was called.
Owner Joe Lacob sat courtside cheering in one of the blue T-
shirts every fan received. The Warriors also wore their blue
road jerseys to support the theme.
All the party planning couldnt prevent what happened next.
Rush leaped in the air for a dunk when Randolph fouled him
from behind with 4:09 left in the rst quarter. Rushs left leg
landed awkwardly, his knee bent badly and he tumbled to the
oor.
Rush got up on one leg, waved his arms violently in the air
and shook off teammates who tried to help as the announced
sellout of 19,596 halted to a hush. He covered his face in agony
and openly wept, eventually limping to the locker room with
the support of teammate Jeremy Tyler and trainers.
Randolph put his arm around Rush at one point. The
Grizzlies forward also appeared to go through the tunnel to
check on Rush later in the half.
Memphis selected third-string center Andris Biedrins to
shoot the free throws. The home fans booed Biedrins the
former starter when he checked, just as they did during
team introductions before the game, and he missed both free
throws.
Rush signed an $8 million, two-year deal in July after com-
ing over in a trade from Indiana last season. He had been
Golden States rst player off the bench and a key cog late in
games.
Continued from page 11
WARRIORS
SPORTS 17
Weekend Nov. 3-4, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W L Pct GB
New York 1 0 1.000
Philadelphia 1 0 1.000
Brooklyn 0 0 .000 1/2
Toronto 0 1 .000 1
Boston 0 2 .000 1 1/2
Southeast Division
W L Pct GB
Charlotte 1 0 1.000
Orlando 1 0 1.000
Miami 1 1 .500 1/2
Atlanta 0 1 .000 1
Washington 0 1 .000 1
Central Division
W L Pct GB
Chicago 2 0 1.000
Milwaukee 1 0 1.000 1/2
Indiana 1 1 .500 1
Cleveland 1 1 .500 1
Detroit 0 2 .000 2
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Southwest Division
W L Pct GB
Houston 2 0 1.000
San Antonio 2 0 1.000
Dallas 1 1 .500 1
Memphis 1 1 .500 1
New Orleans 1 1 .500 1
Northwest Division
W L Pct GB
Minnesota 1 0 1.000
Oklahoma City 1 1 .500 1/2
Utah 1 1 .500 1/2
Portland 1 1 .500 1/2
Denver 0 2 .000 1 1/2
PacicDivision
W L Pct GB
L.A. Clippers 2 0 1.000
Golden State 1 1 .500 1
Phoenix 1 1 .500 1
Sacramento 0 2 .000 2
L.A. Lakers 0 3 .000 2 1/2

FridaysGames
Charlotte 90, Indiana 89
Orlando 102, Denver 89
Milwaukee 99, Boston 88
Houston 109, Atlanta 102
Chicago 115, Cleveland 86
Minnesota 92, Sacramento 80
New Orleans 88, Utah 86
Oklahoma City 106, Portland 92
New York 104, Miami 84
Phoenix 92, Detroit 89
Memphis 104, Golden State 94
L.A. Clippers 105, L.A. Lakers 95
SaturdaysGames
Sacramento at Indiana, 4 p.m.
Boston at Washington, 4 p.m.
NBA STANDINGS
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct PF PA
New England 5 3 0 .625 262 170
Miami 4 3 0 .571 150 126
Buffalo 3 4 0 .429 171 227
N.Y. Jets 3 5 0 .375 168 200
South
W L T Pct PF PA
Houston 6 1 0 .857 216 128
Indianapolis 4 3 0 .571 136 171
Tennessee 3 5 0 .375 162 257
Jacksonville 1 6 0 .143 103 188
North
W L T Pct PF PA
Baltimore 5 2 0 .714 174 161
Pittsburgh 4 3 0 .571 167 144
Cincinnati 3 4 0 .429 166 187
Cleveland 2 6 0 .250 154 186
West
W L T Pct PF PA
Denver 4 3 0 .571 204 152
San Diego 4 4 0 .500 185 157
Oakland 3 4 0 .429 139 187
Kansas City 1 7 0 .125 133 240
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct PF PA
N.Y. Giants 6 2 0 .750 234 161
Philadelphia 3 4 0 .429 120 155
Dallas 3 4 0 .429 137 162
Washington 3 5 0 .375 213 227
South
W L T Pct PF PA
Atlanta 7 0 0 1.000 201 130
Tampa Bay 3 4 0 .429 184 153
New Orleans 2 5 0 .286 190 216
Carolina 1 6 0 .143 128 167
North
W L T Pct PF PA
Chicago 6 1 0 .857 185 100
Minnesota 5 3 0 .625 184 167
Green Bay 5 3 0 .625 208 170
Detroit 3 4 0 .429 161 174
West
W L T Pct PF PA
San Francisco 6 2 0 .750 189 103
Arizona 4 4 0 .500 127 142
Seattle 4 4 0 .500 140 134
St. Louis 3 5 0 .375 137 186
SundaysGames
Arizona at Green Bay, 10 a.m.
Chicago at Tennessee, 10 a.m.
Buffalo at Houston, 10 a.m.
Carolina at Washington, 10 a.m.
Detroit at Jacksonville, 10 a.m.
Denver at Cincinnati, 10 a.m.
Baltimore at Cleveland, 10 a.m.
Miami at Indianapolis, 10 a.m.
Tampa Bay at Oakland, 1:05 p.m.
Minnesota at Seattle, 1:05 p.m.
NFL STANDINGS
MLS GLANCE
WILDCARDS
Wednesday, Oct. 31: Houston 2, Chicago 1, Hous-
ton advances
Thursday, Nov. 1: Los Angeles 2, Vancouver 1, Los
Angeles advances
EASTERNCONFERENCE
Seminals
D.C. United vs. New York
Saturday, Nov. 3: New York at D.C. United, 5 p.m.
Wednesday, Nov. 7: D.C. United at New York, 5 p.m.
Kansas City vs. Houston
Sunday, Nov. 4: Kansas City at Houston, 12:30 p.m.
Wednesday, Nov. 7: Houston at Kansas City, 6 p.m.
Championship
Saturday, Nov. 10: seminal winners, 12:30 p.m.
Saturday,Nov.17 or Sunday,Nov.18:seminal win-
ners,TBD
WESTERNCONFERENCE
Seminals
San Jose vs. Los Angeles
Sunday, Nov. 4: San Jose at Los Angeles, 6 p.m.
Wednesday, Nov. 7: Los Angeles at San Jose, 8 p.m.
Seattlevs. Real Salt Lake
Friday, Nov. 2: Real Salt Lake at Seattle, 7 p.m.
Thursday, Nov. 8: Seattle at Real Salt Lake, 6:30 p.m.
Championship
Sunday, Nov, 11 or Monday, Nov. 12: seminal win-
ners, 8 or 9 p.m.
Sunday, Nov. 18: seminal winners, 9 p.m.
MLSCUP
Saturday, Dec. 1: Eastern champion vs. Western
champion, 1:30 p.m.
TRANSACTIONS
NFL
NFLFinedChicagoSChrisConte$21,000for strik-
ing Carolina WR Brandon LaFell in the head and
neckareawhenLaFell was defenseless inanOct.28
game. Fined Oakland DL Richard Seymour, New
York Giants DL Chris Canty, New York Jets LB Mar-
cusDowtin,andTennesseeDTMikeMartin,$15,750
apiece; Miami OT Jonathan Martin $10,000, and
Minnesota DE Jared Allen and Tampa Bay OT Don-
ald Penn $7,875 each for their actions in last weeks
games.
BUFFALOBILLSActivated DB Ron Brooks from
the injured reserve/return list.Placed G Chad Rine-
hart on injured reserve.
CLEVELAND BROWNSSigned DL Ronnie
Cameron from the practice squad. Activated DL
Phil Taylor from the reserve physically unable to
perform list.Placed DL Brian Sanford on injured re-
serve.
BASEBALL
MLBSuspended Baltimore SS Ryan Adams for
the rst 25 games of next season after testing pos-
itive for a banned amphetamine.
AmericanLeague
BALTIMORE ORIOLESClaimed Alexi Casilla off
waivers from Minnesota. Sent OF Lew Ford, INF
Steve Tolleson and LHP Zach Phillips outright to
Norfolk (IL). Reinstated RHP Oliver Drake, RHP Stu
Pomeranz, LHP Tsuyoshi Wada, INF Brian Roberts
and OF Nolan Reimold from the 60-day DL.
CHICAGOWHITESOXPromoted Buddy Bell to
vice president/assistant general manager.
CLEVELANDINDIANSActivatedRHPCarlosCar-
rasco, LHP Rafael Perez and RHP Josh Tomlin from
the60-dayDL.ClaimedRHPBlakeWoodoff waivers
from Kansas City.
LOCAL SCOREBOARD
COLLEGE
WOMENSWATERPOLO
Coast Conferencetournament
CSM10, DeAnza3
CSM3214 10
DeAnza0030 3
CSM goal scorers Zaldivar 4; Staben 3; Oto,
Dwyer, Ramstack. CSM goaltender saves
Kekuewa 11.
THURSDAY
BOYSWATERPOLO
PALtournament
Carlmont 11, Half MoonBay8
Half MoonBay1232 8
Carlmont 332311
Carlmont goal scorers Lavanchy 5; Yollan 2;
Callahan, Giverts, Garin, Dennis. Carlmont goal-
tender saves Shrek 8.
GIRLSWATERPOLO
WCALtournament seminals
SacredHeart Prep11, Mitty9
Mitty1413 9
SHP3143 11
SHP goal scorers Stuewe 4; Bigley, McCracken
2; Bocci, Harper, Koshy. SHP goaltender saves
Moran 9.
GIRLSVOLLEYBALL
MenloSchool def.SacredHeartPrep29-27, 17-
25, 25-19, 25-17(Highlights:MS Huber 16kills,
17 digs;Thygesen 16 kills, 16 digs; E. Merten 51 as-
sists, 9 digs, 5 blocks, 3 kills. SHP Shannon 16
kills, 20 digs, 3 blocks; Abuel-Saud 15 kills, 27 digs;
C. Merten 34 assists, 16 digs). Records Sacred
Heart Prep 9-1 WBAL Foothill, 27-5 overall; Menlo
School 9-1.
Menlo-Atherton def. Carlmont 25-18, 25-21,
23-25, 25-13(Highlights: C Bedard 15 kills, 20
digs;Wright 15 digs;Morris 8 digs;Jackman 10 kills,
6 blocks, 2 aces). Records Menlo-Atherton 14-
0 PAL Bay, 24-7 overall; Carlmont 10-4, 18-14.
Westmoor def. Jefferson 25-9, 25-15, 25-10
(Highlights: W Tam 8 kills; Tom 6 aces; Lin 6
aces).Records Westmoor 8-6 PAL Ocean, 20-14
overall.
@L.A.
6p.m.
11/4
vs. L.A.
8p.m.
11/7
vs.Miami
1:05p.m.
CBS
12/9
@Rams
10 a.m.
FOX
12/2
vs.Bears
5:00p.m.
ESPN
11/19
@Saints
1:20p.m.
FOX
11/25
vs.Rams
1:25p.m.
FOX
11/11
Bye
vs.Broncos
5:20p.m.
NFL-NET
12/6
vs.Browns
1:25p.m.
CBS
12/2
vs.Tampa
1:05p.m.
FOX
11/4
@Ravens
10a.m.
CBS
11/11
vs.Saints
1:05p.m.
FOX
11/18
@Bengals
10a.m.
CBS
11/25
@Thunder
4:30p.m.
CSN-BAY
11/18
@Kings
7p.m.
CSN-BAY
11/5
@ Wolves
5p.m.
CSN-BAY
11/16
vs.Cavs
7:30p.m.
CSN-BAY
11/7
@ Lakers
7:30p.m.
CSN-BAY
11/9
vs.Nuggets
7:30p.m.
CSN-BAY
11/10
vs.Hawks
7:30p.m.
CSN-BAY
11/14
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. The NFL
game between the Super Bowl champion New
York Giants and Pittsburgh Steelers on Sunday
will be played despite transportation and power
issues and growing concerns for weary and
heartbroken residents displaced and devastated
by Superstorm Sandy.
Commissioner Roger Goodell spoke with
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie spoke on Friday
and Christie assured him that game would not
divert any major resources from relief efforts.
Speaking at news conference in Brick at the
opening of a FEMA ofce, Christie said only a
few state troopers are assigned to the game and it
was really a decision for the NFL to make.
If they are ready, absent any change in cir-
cumstances, that we should go ahead with the
game on Sunday, Christie said, adding that dur-
ing a tour of storm damage in nearby
Moonachie, no one asked him to postpone the
game and a couple of Giants fans urged him not
to do that.
There have been 53 deaths associated with the
storm in New York and New Jersey and more
than 2 million people were still without power on
Friday. There have been long lines to purchase
gas throughout New Jersey and New York and
power is still being restored. There will be no rail
service to MetLife Stadium, the Giants said.
Giants coach Tom Coughlin always felt the
game would take place, and believes his team
will be ready to lift the spirits of the people of
New Jersey and New York.
I think the mission will be quite clear,
Coughlin said. Trying to provide a few hours of
enjoyment for so many that have been devastat-
ed. I think theyll do a good job of that.
The Steelers changed travel plans because the
hotel they booked in New Jersey did not have
power. The team will y in Sunday morning and
leave after the game.
Coughlin said the Steelers decision not to stay
in a hotel overnight was noble because it will
give space to those who lost their dwellings.
When you look at it, its a minor inconven-
ience considering what those people in New
York and New Jersey went through, Steelers
offensive tackle Max Starks said Friday. You
have seven million people without electricity,
and a football game pales in comparison to that.
Steelers-Giants game to go on as scheduled
18
Weekend Nov. 3-4, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
SPORTS
advertisment
It would be good to have, Ewing said. A
CCS record would immortalize us. It would be
icing on the cake.
What made his Marshawn Lynch-type run
even more spectacular was the fact it was going
to be his last carry of the game as Hyndman
planned to take him out.
That was going to be his last carry,
Hyndman said.
But things were going so well for Capuchino
that even his backup had a big game. Rocky
Yeung, a senior playing his rst year of football,
replaced Ewing on the Mustangs nal two
drives of the game. Yeung has had only a hand-
ful of carries of this season, but on his rst touch
Friday, the Mustangs offensive line opened a
huge hole for him. Yeung hit the hole like a sea-
soned running back and went untouched for a
65-yard score, sending the Capuchino sideline
into bedlam.
Its great to see, Hyndman said. Its great to
see someone whos waited all year to get their
chance (and take advantage of it).
The Mustangs other scores came on a Paea
Dauwe 12-yard quarterback keeper and a 26-
yard Jaime Vaquiz eld goal.
The Capuchino defense was just as good on
this day as well. After allowing Carlmont to take
the opening kickoff and drive 69 yards on 19
plays for a Derek Gomez to Pablo Cassemiro
11-yard scoring pass taking over 10 minutes
off the clock in the process the Mustangs
defense made the adjustments and shut down the
Scots for the rest of the game. After giving up 69
yards on the rst drive, the Mustangs allowed
only 94 the rest of the game.
(I was) a little surprised (to see that drive to
start the game), Selli said. Theres been time
all year where weve had a drive like that. We
were just trying to be competitive.
Carlmont added another touchdown late in the
game when Jesse Gifford went in from ve
yards out.
Despite having clinched at least a share of the
Ocean Division title, Hyndman doesnt want his
team to be content. Not when the Mustangs have
a chance to win their rst out-right title since
1989.
We should never be satised, Hyndman
said. We have to be ready and play complete
games. Our kids knew what this game meant.
This was the game.
At least wont be satised, despite having a
memorable season.
Were just focused on winning and going
undefeated (in the Lake Division), Ewing said.
Continued from page 12
MUSTANGS
Barber has moved from cornerback in a
defense that almost always featured two deep
safeties that had become a staple for years in
Tampa to safety in a more varied approach
under new coach Greg Schiano.
With three interceptions, including one
returned for a touchdown, a sack, a forced
fumble and eight passes defensed the 37-year-
old Barber has helped improve one of the
leagues worst defenses a year ago.
He absolutely ashes on lm, Palmer
said. He makes plays, hes great in coverage.
He makes a couple of unbelievable intercep-
tions off tipped balls. Hell come up and tack-
le Adrian Peterson and stuff him. Hes every-
where. He makes plays. Hes playing as good
a football as Ive seen him play.
Palmers change hasnt been nearly as dra-
matic as Barbers under new coach Dennis
Allen and offensive coordinator Greg Knapp
but has also been a success.
Instead of switching positions, he merely
changed systems from the classic, drop-back
passing game he was used to in Cincinnati and
Oakland to a West Coast system that called on
him to use more rollouts, ball fakes and short
passes than he traditionally had employed.
The changes have worked well for Palmer,
who has his highest passer rating in ve years
(85.7), is on pace for a career-high in yardage
(4,437) and has a career-low interception rate
of 1.9 percent.
He understands where to deliver the foot-
ball, Barber said. If you give him certain
looks, hes going to make the right reads. You
got to expect that out of him. Hes not one to
make many mistakes. Obviously were going
to do our best to try to force him into them.
Hes a 10-year guy now, so theres not much
that he, like me, hasnt seen.
The Bucs and Raiders have followed the
paths of their team leaders a bit. After slow
starts where both teams nished September
with 1-3 records, both are starting to play their
best football of late.
Tampa Bay is coming off a 36-17 win at
Minnesota, marking their third straight game
with at least 28 points and 400 yards of
offense.
The Bucs have paired one of the leagues
stingiest run defenses with a high-powered
offense with quarterback Josh Freeman
regaining his form from two years ago.
Continued from page 11
RAIDERS
some great eld position to take the early
lead. It took the Panthers ve plays to travel
into the end zone behind Keone Keahi and his
18-yard touchdown.
Aragon took that punch and countered with
one of its own, using the speed of JD Elzie to
nd the Promised Land around the perimeter
on a 32-yard bolt to glory with 7:59 left in the
rst quarter.
Burlingame showed just what kind of game
it was going to be when on its ensuing pos-
session a 25-yard eld goal capped off an
eight-play drive led by Keahi, who nished
the game with 160 yards rushing on 28 car-
ries.
Aragon had short elds to work with the
rest of half, but didnt capitalize on a rst-and-
goal from the 5-yard line late in the second
quarter and had to settle for a Severson 23-
yard eld goal to tie things up at 10-10.
Led by Severson to begin the second half,
Aragon jumped to a lead on a 20-yard touch-
down pass with 7:12 left in the third quarter.
But arguably, the game was won by
Burlingame on the next drive. Using 17 plays,
the Panthers imposed their will on the ground
behind Mahe, Keahi and Palu, going 80 yards
to make it 17-17.
Aragon answered emphatically, yes, with a
touchdown drive that lasted a mere 58 seconds
to make it 24-17 with 10:52 to go in the game.
But despite the score, Philipopoulos said he
felt something brewing.
Theyre explosive. They have some great
players. They run the ball real well, they play
great defense, Philipopoulos said of Aragon.
But we had that 17-play drive and I feel like
we wore them down maybe just a little bit.
Were just nickel and diming them with some
great runs, great blocks, and we nally did
what weve been trying to do all season long
four quarters against a good football team.
Love these kids, great win for the program.
Three minutes later, Keahi found the end
zone on a 2-yard run and following a three-
and-out by Aragon, the Panthers used 13 plays
to travel 95 yards and score the winning
touchdown. The drive actually involved a
gutsy call by Philipopoulos, who took three
points off the board and instead accepted a
roughing the kicker penalty to earn a rst
down at the 3-yard line. One play later, Mahe
found the end zone.
Youre putting your body out there for
your team, Benji Palu said of #Beastmode.
For the linemen, we knew we had to win this
game. We told each other we were going to
sacrice ourselves for our teammates and
were going to end up with the W.
The key for the offensive line in the second
half was, we told each other were going to
play as a unit. It showed on all three levels.
The backs believed in us and thats what
boosted our morale and we overcame the
adversity.
Continued from page 11
BGAME
By Chloee Weiner
C
lass attendance all over the Bay
Area was down on Wednesday as
many students opted out of school
and chose to instead attend the Giants World
Series parade. With the latest victory marking
two world championships in three years, it
seems tting to use the Giants franchise as
an outline for baseball success.
The rst step in this recipe for a World
Series title is to build a scouting and minor-
league system like no other. If one franchise
has the ability to produce players like Buster
Posey, Brandon Crawford and Brandon Belt
(just to name a few), the coaches and scouts
for the Giants minor-league teams (from San
Jose to Fresno) must be doing more than a
few things right. Better yet, as the three
aforementioned home-grown players are all
of 25 years of age or younger, Giants fans
might have a few more playoff runs to look
forward to in the near future. Late-season
acquisitions like Marco Scutaro and Hunter
Pence also add to the SF Giants scouts track
record of successful decisions. The next step
for success is an obvious one, but is also
what the Giants have been known for since
the Bonds era: pitching. A two-time Cy
Young Award winner and a perfect game
pitcher are the two headlines that are most
often touted when the Giants pitching staff is
talked of, but the starting rotation also holds
some of the greatest comeback stories in
baseball. All true Giants fans know the saga
that is Ryan Vogelsongs baseball career,
Barry Zitos 2012 post-season redemption
(after having been left off the roster in 2010)
and Tim Lincecums vindictive bullpen pitch-
ing in this years playoffs. Paired with
By Sandy Cohen
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
LOS ANGELES In Disneys Wreck-It Ralph
opening Friday, the title character is the bad guy
from a ctional 1980s video game. Despite faithful-
ly doing his job well for 30 years, he gets no respect
at work, so he escapes through the wires of
Litwaks Family Fun Center searching for anoth-
er game where he might prove his worth.
Along the way, Ralph takes viewers on a nos-
talgic trip through the history of video games,
from the blocky, eight-bit look of the 80s
through the swirly, colorful, Nintendo 64-
inspired games of the 90s to the gritty, ultra-
detailed rst-person shooters of today.
For director Rich Moore and the 450 artists
and animators behind the Walt Disney
Animation Studios production, video games
are as integral a part of childhood as the green
army men and pull-string cowboys celebrated
in Pixars Toy Story lms.
Theres a lot of history in video gaming
serious nostalgia, Moore said. The worlds of
video games are so fertile. They cover everything,
and so many different genres. You can kind of
make up whatever you want and it can feel like a
game.
Besides the scores of ctional game characters fea-
tured in the lm, theres also familiar arcade favorites
such as Q(asterisk)Bert, Clyde (the orange ghost from
Pac-Man), Sonic the Hedgehog and Zangief from
Street Fighter.
Its pretty awesome to animate game characters
that you knew as a child, said animation supervisor
Winning recipe
Deathtrap
Play suffers from
uneven acting
SEE PAGE 21
Learn to manage young trees
Bill Van Horbec of Bartlett Trees talks about
the importance of managing and
structurally pruning young trees to
promote desired shapes and to help
minimize structural defects as the tree
matures.The discussion takes place 1 p.m.-
3 p.m. Sunday at the Kohl Pumphouse in
San Mateos Central Park, Ninth and Palm
avenues in San Mateo.
www.SanMateoArboretum.org. 579-0536.
Free.
Author reading
Author Jeri Westerson reads from her latest
book,Blood Lance.Medieval weapons
demonstration and cheese and wine
reception.The reading takes place 3 p.m.
Sunday at the Belmont Library, 1110
Alameda de las Pulgas, Belmont. Free.
Family concert
Bay Area Kids and Families: Meet the
Orchestra! The San Francisco Chamber
Orchestra presents its rst Family Concert
of the 2012-13 season with a playful
introduction to instruments and musicians.
The event takes place 3 p.m. Sunday at the
College of San Mateo Theatre, 1700 W.
Hillsdale Blvd. in San Mateo.
www.sfchamberorchestra.org. Free.
Best bets
By Todd McCarthy
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
LOS ANGELES A boiling pot of wild
martial arts moves culled from dozens (maybe
hundreds) of violent Asian action extravagan-
zas as sifted through a Tarantino-esque fanboy
prism, The Man With the Iron Fists feels
like both a lavish vanity project and an earnest
attempt to deliver a compendium of cool
hand-to-hand combat set pieces. The vogue
for kung fu, elaborate wire work and fancy
blade ashing seems rather past its due-date at
this point, making director RZAs realization
of his childhood enthusiasms feel a bit quaint,
but you certainly cant say its dull or
uneventful. Still, in the U.S., at least, its hard
to see this Universal release breaking out
beyond hardcore action fans.
Hip-hop megastar RZA
of Wu-Tang Clan grew up
as Robert Fitzgerald Diggs
watching Asian martial arts
lms at New York neighborhood theaters in
the late 70s and 80s, and his rst big-time
outing as a director-writer-star feels like the
result of notes he might have scribbled about
the wildest, most outrageous action scenes he
saw in movies like Fists of Double K, The
36th Chamber of Shaolin, Godfathers of
Hong Kong and anything else he could track
down from the Shaw Brothers. Tarantino, on
board as presenter, entered the mix when
RZA handled the score for Kill Bill: Vol. 1
and spent a month in China watching him
shoot, which led to the connection with Eli
Roth, a co-writer and co-producer here.
A cocktail blending aspects of the Chinese
wuxia martial arts genre and the Japanese
jidaigeki itinerant samurai/craftsman/peasant
format, the Shanghai-shot Iron Fists features
more lavish production values than most of its
precursors as well as an odd but appealing
stew of international actors including
Iron Fists feels like lavish vanity project
Shanghai-shot Iron Fists features a host of international actors including Russell Crowe as a
British mercenary,Lucy Liu as an all-knowing brothel madame,World Wrestling Entertainment
star David Bautista as an invincible warrior and RZA as Blacksmith.
See IRON FIST, Page 20
Wreck-It
Ralph not
bad at all
See STUDENT, Page 20 See RALPH, Page 20
WEEKEND JOURNAL 20
Weekend Nov. 3-4, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
Madison Bumgarners consistent
power and Matt Cains dominance, the
starting five took down even the
Detroit Tigers powerhouse rotation
to the dismay of Justin Verlander and
Vegas betters alike.
Perhaps the most characteristic trait
of this years San Francisco Giants
team, however, was its resilience. A
historic series comeback against the
St. Louis Cardinals is only one exam-
ple of the teams ability to overcome
adversity. Whether it was losing their
charismatic closer, their best hitter or
one of their most-used relief pitchers,
the Giants seemed to have an answer
to any and every obstacle they faced.
This success must be at least partially
(if not fully) attributed to the chem-
istry between teammates allowed for
by the Giants managements careful
piecing together of the team. Unlike
certain National League West organi-
zations, the Giants did not go out and
buy themselves hoards of big-name
players (with, perhaps, big-name egos
to match), but instead placed their
confidence in consistent baseball vet-
erans. More than a few Giants players,
when interviewed about their postsea-
son, cited Hunter Pences motivational
speech before game five in St. Louis.
Although no one but the players and
coaches know exactly what was said
in that speech, its undeniable that the
Giants teams chemistry extends to the
fans. With the Timmy wigs, the
Romo/Wilson beard or the panda hats,
even Foxs broadcasters were unable
to deny the fervor of Giants fandom.
It would be ridiculous to say that all
of these factors were solely responsi-
ble for the Giants ultimate victory
(and even more ridiculous to say that
it should be attempted to be replicat-
ed), but they won it all and they did it
in their style.
Chloee Weiner is a senior at Crystal
Springs Uplands School. Student News
appears in the weekend edition. You can
email Student News at news@smdai-
lyjournal.com.
Continued from page 19
STUDENT
Renato dos Anjos. Its like living in a dream
world. All your favorite heroes and villains
are in your hands.
Wreck-It Ralph centers on Ralph (John C.
Reilly), the 9-foot, 643-pound bad guy from
the 80s video game Fix-It Felix Jr. Ralphs
job is to wreck the apartments of Niceland so
Felix (Jack McBrayer) can x them. But
while Felix is lauded and loved for his efforts,
Ralph is ostracized to a trash heap on the edge
of town. Fed up and bummed out especial-
ly when he realizes he wasnt invited to a 30th
anniversary party for Fix-It Felix Jr.
Ralph goes rogue, tripping through the wires
of the arcade into games where he doesnt
belong.
Hes drawn to Heros Duty, a contempo-
rary shooting game led by tough-as-battle-
armor Sergeant Calhoun (Jane Lynch), in
which soldiers who destroy the invading
CyBugs win a glittery medal tangible proof
of their heroic efforts. With such a trophy,
Ralph gures the Nicelanders would have to
appreciate him. But he isnt programmed to
handle such ultra-violent play, and when
things go awry, Ralph nds himself trapped in
the pink-hued, candy-lled world of Sugar
Rush. Here he meets another video-game mis-
fit, Vanellope Von Schweetz (Sarah
Silverman), whose pixelated programming
glitch makes her an outcast.
Reilly, McBrayer and Silverman all grew up
as gamers, and say bringing life to their ani-
mated characters called upon the same imagi-
nation and determination gaming did when
they were kids.
If you were born any time after 1965,
when I was born, video games made a huge
impression, Reilly said, adding that when
Space Invaders rst came out, it was like a
spaceship landed in the bowling alley.
People cant fully appreciate what an
insane change that was, he continued.
Because there were no computers; there were
no cellphones. I didnt even have a VCR at
that point. There was no way to manipulate
something on a screen. And all of a sudden,
this thing lands in the arcade.
McBrayer grew up with an Atari 2600 sys-
tem, but we kept that over at grandmas
house so we wouldnt get too attached to it.
He remembers taking his report card to
Super Scooper, the ice-cream parlor/arcade
near his Georgia home, where good grades
were rewarded with video-game tokens. He
preferred the cutesy, non-threatening games
and the escape they provided.
So many kids wont even recognize half of
these (game references in the lm), McBray
said, but I hope they have fun just realizing
that theres this whole world of video-game
characters and environments that make up the
history of the video games theyre playing
now.
Silverman, whose early arcade favorites
included Asteroids, Missile Command
and Space Invaders, notes that video games
have been around for 30 years, but in tech-
nology years, thats like 200 years old.
The actors said they dont play video games
much these days, but the lms director does,
whipping out his iPhone during a recent inter-
view to prove the point.
I feel really, really fortunate to have been
someone who got to grow up with them, said
Moore, whose previous directing credits
include The Simpsons and Futurama. So
its an honor and a privilege to be the guy that
gets to pull from one end of the timeline to
this end of the timeline ... to put them in a
movie and put them in a story that pays trib-
ute to all of them.
Continued from page 19
RALPH
Russell Crowe as a British mercenary, Lucy
Liu as an all-knowing brothel madame, World
Wrestling Entertainment star David Bautista
as an invincible warrior and RZA as
Blacksmith, a former slave who crafts exotic
weapons for one and all.
The aptly named Jungle Village is like a
Chinese Deadwood, the baddest town on the
frontier where anything goes and outlaws
roam free. The simple setup has a clan chief
betrayed and killed for his horde of gold by
his sadistic militia leader Silver Lion
(streaked-hair rock star-type Byron Mann).
Rampaging and killing as they please, Silver
Lion and his animalistic top ghter Bronze
Lion (Cung Le) threaten to bring Jungle
Village to its knees, but handsome rightful
heir Zen Yi, The X-Blade (Rick Yune),
Crowes hedonistic Jack Knife and
Blacksmith form a Leone-esque ad hoc band
of loners each whom has his own reasons for
getting back at Silver Lion.
Zap! Pow! Wham! opening credits set the
tone for the wild and sometimes splattery pro-
ceedings. This is the sort of lm where the
main characters are dened rst and foremost
by what type of weaponry they favor: for Jack
Knife, its a fancy combo of gutting knife and
pistol; The X-Blade sports a sleek outt con-
cealing an endless array of sharp objects and
projectiles beneath black leather; and
Blacksmith fashions for himself forearms and
hands of spiked metal, which would qualify
him as a uniquely qualied opponent for the
mega-sted title character in the simultaneous
release Wreck-It-Ralph.
Within this format, RZA and Roth are free
to concoct any sort of mayhem they can invent
or lift from their extensive memory banks.
Very few minutes go by without some sort of
combat; theres plenty of spinning,
running/jumping up walls and through the air,
skull bashing, eyes and guts popping, prosti-
tutes catching ghters in a black widow-like
web, sword clashing, gory puncturing and
elaborate demolition of buildings. Most dis-
tinctive, perhaps, is the already rock-hard
torso of Bautistas aptly named Brass Body
automatically turning to metal when struck,
rather like an ancient Greek ghter in a vin-
tage Ray Harryhausen effects epic.
Its all sufciently well done and amusing
enough to satisfy the appetites of fans who
mainline this sort of thing, but it also sports a
concocted, secondhand feel common to this
sort of throwback homage when it lacks the
stylistic inspiration and imaginative air for
genre reinvention of a Leone or Tarantino. In
this sense, RZA seems more the dedicated
student than a new heir apparent.
Fun does come from the wildly imaginative
weapons designs, Lius crafty manipulations
of everyone who sets foot in her house of
pleasure, Crowes sporting holiday in a role
that would have been relished by his late
Gladiator co-star Oliver Reed, the cram-
ming of so many Asian martial arts hall-
marks/cliches into one scenario and the weird
conjunction of Chinese setting and mostly
hip-hop-style soundtrack. Production values
are certainly better than those on most of the
lms RZA idolized in his youth, while his
visual handling is more industrious than styl-
ish.
The Man With the Iron Fists, a Universal
release, is rated R for bloody violence, strong
sexuality, language and brief drug use.
Running time: 95 minutes.
Motion Picture Association of America rat-
ing denition for R: Restricted. Under 17
requires accompanying parent or adult
guardian.
Continued from page 19
IRON FIST
WEEKEND JOURNAL 21
Weekend Nov. 3-4, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
HOPE EVANGELICAL
LUTHERAN CHURCH
600 W. 42nd Ave., San Mateo
Pastor Eric Ackerman
Worship Service 10:00 AM
Sunday School 11:00 AM
Hope Lutheran Preschool
admits students of any race, color and national or ethnic origin.
License No. 410500322.
Call (650) 349-0100
HopeLutheranSanMateo.org
Baptist
PILGRIM BAPTIST CHURCH
Dr. Larry Wayne Ellis, Pastor
(650) 343-5415
217 North Grant Street, San Mateo
Sunday Worship Services at 8 & 11 am
Sunday School at 9:30 am
Website: www.pilgrimbcsm.org
LISTEN TO OUR
RADIO BROADCAST!
(KFAX 1100 on the AM Dial)
Every Sunday at 5:30 PM
Buddhist
SAN MATEO
BUDDHIST TEMPLE
Jodo ShinshuBuddhist
(Pure Land Buddhism)
2 So. Claremont St.
San Mateo
(650) 342-2541
Sunday English Service &
Dharma School - 9:30 AM
Reverend Ryuta Furumoto
www.sanmateobuddhisttemple.org
Church of Christ
CHURCH OF CHRIST
525 South Bayshore Blvd. SM
650-343-4997
Bible School 9:45am
Services 11:00am and 2:00pm
Wednesday Bible Study 7:00pm
Minister J.S. Oxendine
Clases de Biblicas Y Servicio de
Adoracion
En Espanol, Si UD. Lo Solicita
www.church-of-christ.org/cocsm
Congregational
THE
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
OF SAN MATEO - UCC
225 Tilton Ave. & San Mateo Dr.
(650) 343-3694
Worship and Church School
Every Sunday at 10:30 AM
Coffee Hour at 11:45 AM
Nursery Care Available
www.ccsm-ucc.org
Non-Denominational
Church of the
Highlands
A community of caring Christians
1900 Monterey Drive
(corner Sneath Lane) San Bruno
(650)873-4095
Adult Worship Services:
Friday: 7:30 pm (singles)
Saturday: 7:00 pm
Sun 7, 8:30, 10, & 11:30 am,
5 pm
Youth Worship Service:
For high school & young college
Sunday at 10:00 am
Sunday School
For adults & children of all ages
Sunday at 10:00 am
Donald Sheley, Founding Pastor
Leighton Sheley, Senior Pastor
REDWOOD CHURCH
Our mission...
To know Christ and make him known.
901 Madison Ave., Redwood City
(650)366-1223
Sunday services:
9:00AM & 10:45AM
www.redwoodchurch.org
By Judy Richter
DAILY JOURNAL CORRESPONDENT
Echoes of the Trojan War reverberate in
Sophocles Elektra, presented by American
Conservatory Theater in a translation and
adaptation by playwright Timberlake
Wertenbaker.
In brief, the title character, played by Ren
Augesen, is still lamenting the murder of her
father by her mother and her mothers lover
several years earlier. Elektra hopes that her
brother will return to avenge their fathers
death. Because of her unending mourning,
Elektra has become an outcast in her own
home and may be teetering on insanity.
In a tense confrontation between mother
and daughter, the steely Clytemnestra
(Caroline Lagerfelt) tells Elektra that she had
killed Agamemnon to avenge his sacricial
murder of Elektras sister Iphigenia.
Therefore, Clytemnestra felt her actions were
justied.
ACT program notes detail much of the
background leading up to this play, but
Wertenbakers accessible translation provides
basic information clearly and simply.
Running 90 minutes without intermission,
ACTs production is directed by artistic direc-
tor Carey Perloff. Unlike many other classical
Greek dramas, which use a Chorus of several
people to comment on the action, this uses
only one person, Olympia Dukakis, to ll that
role.
With her silvery hair and dignied stage
presence, Dukakis Chorus Leader serves as a
voice of reason and a welcome counterpoint
to Elektras rage. She also helps the audience
consider the plays key questions about the
nature of justice.
Augesen has the daunting challenge of sus-
taining Elektras rage, grief and the frustration
of being powerless. She meets that challenge
successfully even though her characters
extremes are hard to take.
Lagerfelts Clytemnestra evokes little sym-
pathy, yet she makes a persuasive argument
for why she was so aggrieved by her husband.
Nick Steen as Orestes, Elektras brother,
brings an aura of strength and heroism as he
returns and fullls what he and Elektra see as
his duty to avenge their fathers death.
Their sister, Chrysothemis, well played by
Allegra Rose Edwards, has curried favor with
their mother as a way of going along to get
along, but Elektra wins her over. Among the
other supporting characters, Anthony Fusco
as Orestes Tutor gives a vivid (but ctional)
description of Orestes death
Ralph Funicellos set foreshadows the
plays mood with a chain-link fence topped by
barbed wire stretching across the stage.
Lighting by Nancy Schertler reveals the grim-
ly black palace behind the fence.
Costumes by Candice Donnelly run the
gamut from, as Perloff says, ancient Greece to
haute couture. The latter is seen in
Chrysothemis, whose prissy white outfit
evokes the mod mode of the late 60s or early
70s.
Another key element is provided by com-
poser David Langs haunting score, per-
formed by cellist Theresa Wong, who sits on
one side of the stage.
Because of its near-unrelenting keening,
Elektra may be hard for some observers to
take, but the acting and design elements are
outstanding.
Elektra will continue at American
Conservatory Theater, 415 Mason St., San
Francisco, through Nov. 18. For tickets and
information call (415) 749-2228 or visit
www.act-sf.org.
With Olympia Dukakis,Elektra outstanding
By Judy Richter
DAILY JOURNAL CORRESPONDENT
Despite the rotary dial phone and manual
typewriter, Ira Levins Deathtrap remains as
fresh and surprising as it was when it became
a Broadway smash in 1978. Celebrating its
72nd season, Hillbarn Theatre makes this
point abundantly clear in its production of the
classic thriller.
The play is set in the comfortable Westport,
Conn. home of Sidney Bruhl (Paul Stout) and
his wife, Myra (Paige Cook), who has health
problems. Sidney is a well-known playwright
who has written a number of wildly success-
ful thrillers, but his recent works have
opped. Moreover, his nances are running
low.
We meet him as he sits at his desk reading a
play sent to him by a young man who had
attended one of Sidneys playwriting semi-
nars. Sidney immediately recognizes this play
as a sure-re Broadway hit. Hes also quite
jealous.
Thus the central question of Deathtrap
emerges: How far will Sidney go for this
script? To say more would spoil the fun as the
plot takes one unexpected, sometimes shock-
ing, twist after another.
As directed by Karen Byrnes, this produc-
tion works well on the surprise level, but the
acting is uneven. Stouts portrayal of Sidney
is so smug that its off-putting right from the
start. He also tends to overact. Cooks Myra is
one-dimensional, resorting to too much hand-
wringing as she becomes more nervous about
Sidneys intentions.
On the other hand, Adam Magill is convinc-
ing as the young playwright, Clifford
Anderson, whos in awe of Sidney.
Monica Cappuccini has fun with the plays
most outsized character, Helga Ten Dorp, a
famous Dutch psychic who is temporarily liv-
ing next door and who comes by to warn the
Bruhls of dire doings. Richard Albert com-
pletes the cast as Porter Milgrim, Sidneys
level-headed friend and attorney.
The handsome set is by R. Dutch Fritz,
while the effective sound and lighting are by
Valerie Clear. The costumes are by Mae
Matos. Durand Garcia served as ght chore-
ographer.
Although this isnt a perfect production, the
play itself is so well written that the audience
is in for a big treat.
Deathtrap will continue at Hillbarn
Theatre, 1285 E. Hillsdale Blvd., Foster City,
through Nov. 4. For tickets and more informa-
tion about the play or fundraiser call (650)
349-6411 or visit www.hillbarntheatre.org.
Deathtrap suffers from uneven acting
KEVIN BERNE
From left, Nick Steen as Orestes, Anthony Fusco as the Tutor and Titus Tompkins as Pylades in
Sophocles Elektra.
WEEKEND JOURNAL
22
Weekend Nov. 3-4, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
By Susan Cohn
DAILY JOURNAL SENIOR CORRESPONDENT
THE LION KING BRINGS THE CIR-
CLE OF LIFE TO SAN FRANCISCO
THROUGH THE HOLIDAYS. One of the
longest-running Broadway shows in history,
this Tony and Oliver Award-winning musi-
cal tells of the lion cub Simbas arduous
journey to claim his rightful place of lead-
ership in the animal kingdom. Based on the
1994 animated film of the same name.
Directed by Julie Taymor. Songs, with
music by Elton John and lyrics by Tim Rice,
include Circle of Life, Hakuna Matata and
Can You Feel the Love Tonight. Musical
score created by Hans Zimmer with choral
arrangements by Lebo M. Two hours and 30
minutes with one intermission. Through
Jan. 13, 2013.
STAGE DIRECTIONS: The Orpheum
Theatre, 1192 Market St., San Francisco, is
a five-minute level walk from the Civic
Center underground parking garage and is
directly above the Civic Center/UN Plaza
BART station.
TICKET INFORMATION: All guests
require a ticket, regardless of age. It is rec-
ommended that children be at least six years
old. Tickets are available at the Orpheum
Theatre Box Office, by calling (888) SHN-
1799 or at www.shnsf.com. Be wary of buy-
ing tickets from any third party website.
SHN has no way of validating, or replacing
tickets that have been purchased through
any website other than shnsf.com. If you
have any questions call (888) 746-1799
before purchasing.
OH, AND DID YOU KNOW?: Many
of the animals portrayed in the produc-
tion are actors in costume using extra
tools to move their costumes. For exam-
ple, the giraffes are portrayed by actors
carefully walking on stilts. For principal
characters such as Mufasa and Scar, the
costumes feature mechanical headpieces
that can be raised and lowered to foster
the illusion of a cat lunging at another.
Other characters, such as the hyenas,
Zazu, Timon and Pumbaa, are portrayed
by actors in life-sized puppets or cos-
tumes.
***
ACADEMY AWARD WINNER
OLYMPIA DUKAKIS IN ELEKTRA AT
AMERICAN CONSERVATORY THE-
ATRE. Love and revenge take center stage
in this new interpretation of Sophocles
timeless tragedy. After her father is mur-
dered by her mother, Elektra is consumed
by grief, perpetually reliving the horrific
event to refuel her burning need for
revenge. Academy Award winner Olympia
Dukakis as the Chorus Leader and A.C.T.
core acting company member Rene
Augesen as Elektra. Running time one hour
and 30 minutes without intermission.
Through Nov. 18. Directed by Carey
Perloff. Original music by Pulitzer Prize-
winning composer David Lang performed
by cellist Teresa Wong. Geary Theater. 415
Geary St. San Francisco. www.act-sf.org or
(415) 749-2228. Parking is available at the
Mason/OFarrell Garage. Theatregoers can
park for up to five hours for $12. Show tick-
et stub to receive this special discount. After
the shows at 2 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 11 at 2
p.m. and 2 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 14, the
audience is invited to join an onstage con-
versation with the actors, designers and
artists to learn what goes into the making of
great theater.
***
AN EVENING OF CABARET. Round
One Cabaret, an evening of new songs by
Bay Area composers and writers of musical
theater, produced by Not Quite Opera
Productions. A 100-minute musical revue,
featuring the works of Peter Alexander,
Billie Cox, Paul James Frantz, Richard
Jennings, Bill Johnson and Sandy Kasten,
Allison Lovejoy, Michael Lunsford and
Peter Master. Directed by Jonathan F.
Rosen. Music direction by Ben Prince.
Alcove Theater, 414 Mason St., fifth floor, a
block from Union Square in San Francisco.
Two consecutive Fridays and Saturdays,
Nov. 9 and 10, 16 and 17, all at 8 p.m.
Tickets $30, (415) 992-8168 or
www.TheAlcoveTheater.com.
***
BILLY CONNOLLY: THE MAN
LIVE. Perhaps best known for his perform-
ance as the loyal servant John Brown in the
film Mrs. Brown opposite Judi Dench, Billy
Connolly brings his uncensored, uncut and
unpredictable new show to San Franciscos
Marines Memorial Theatre. Nov. 27 Dec.
1. All performances begin at 8 p.m. Tickets
$55-$65 at (800) 745-3000 or www.ticket-
master.com. 609 Sutter St., second floor.
Five performances only. Nov. 27 Dec. 1,
2012.
***
SUPERCALIFRAGILISTICEXPIALI-
DOCIOUS. Tickets are now on sale for the
limited engagement of Mary Poppins at the
SHN Orpheum Theatre 1192 Market St. at
Eighth Street. May 8 12, 2013. The musi-
cal is the winner of 44 major theatre awards
around the globe, including Tony, Olivier,
Helpmann and Evening Standard awards.
Tickets from $35 are available at shnsf.com,
at (888) 746-1799 and at the Orpheum
Theatre Box Office.
Susan Cohn is a member of San Francisco Bay
Area Theatre Critics Circle and American
Theatre Critics Association. She may be reached
at susan@smdailyjournal.com.
JOAN MARCUS
Raki the mandrill calls the animals to Pride Rock where King Mufasa and Queen Sarabi
present their cub in Circle of Life, the opening number from The Lion King, at the Orpheum
Theatre in San Francisco through Jan. 13, 2013.
WEEKEND JOURNAL 23
Weekend Nov. 3-4, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL

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DR. ROGER BLANDFORD
Black Holes: The End of Time or a New Beginning?
While black holes are popularly associated with death and
doom, astrophysicists increasingly see them as creators not
destroyers. New research suggests that black holes play a
major role in the formation and evolution of galaxies, stars
and planets.
Dr. Roger Blandford of Stanfords Kavli Institute gives an
illustrated, non-technical talk summarizing why scientists
now think that black holes (of various sizes) actually do
exist, describe some of their strange properties and explain
their environmental impact on the universe at large. The
talk concludes with a preview of some new approaches to
learning about the weird and wonderful behavior of black
holes.
At Stanford, Dr. Blandford divides his time between the
Physics Department and SLAC National Accelerator
Laboratory. His research interests include black holes, cos-
mology, gravitational lensing, cosmic ray physics and com-
pact stars.
7 p.m. Wed., Nov. 14. Smithwick Theater, Foothill
College, El Monte Road and Interstate 280, in Los Altos
Hills. Parking on campus costs $3. Call the series hot-line at
949-7888 for more information and driving directions.
All events are free unless otherwise noted. Please check before the
event in case of schedule changes.
ABCs This Week 8 a.m.
David Plouffe, adviser to President Barack Obama; Ed
Gillespie, adviser to Mitt Romney's presidential
campaign.
NBCs Meet the Press 8 a.m.
Plouffe; Rep. Eric Cantor, R-Va.
CBS Face the Nation 8:30 a.m.
Political analysts.
CNNs State of the Union 3 p.m.
Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel; Sen. Rob Portman, R-
Ohio.
Fox News Sunday 8 a.m.
Rich Beeson, political director for Romney's campaign;
David Axelrod, adviser to Obama's re-election campaign.
Sunday news shows
ducers.
Corn akes now puts the Olympic
players on there, she said. If it costs that
much, why would they change the whole
page?
Greg Palla, who has a 600-acre family
farm in Kern County, took time to study
the initiatives wording.
The more I delved into it, the more I
realized its more than a simple labeling
issue, said Palla, who grows corn, cotton,
alfalfa and wheat.
In studying the compliance details of the
proposition, he noticed that all aspects of
the food, from the seed supplier to the pro-
duction to the distributor to retail, would
assume liability for mislabeling the food.
That means my business of generations
could be jeopardized because someone
misused this downstream, even if we had
records and complied, he said.
Palla called his insurance company to
ask if he would be covered in a situation in
which a food producer had mislabeled a
product that used his ingredients. His agent
was unsure of the impact on his liability
insurance.
[Proposition 37] will for sure increase
my liability insurance premium, he said.
Consumers costs and benefits
Proposition 37 would require all GE raw
agricultural foods to be labeled as
Genetically Engineered and any
processed food with GE ingredients to be
labeled Partially Produced with Genetic
Engineering by July 2014. Otherwise,
these foods will be considered misbrand-
ed.
Until 2019, food with GE ingredients
that make up less than half a percent of the
product would not be considered misla-
beled. Starting in 2019, any food that has a
trace of genetically modied organisms in
it would be required to be labeled.
The supporters say this is just a label,
but this compliance system is huge, said
Palla, who grows both GE and non-GE
foods. It requires a zero-tolerance level of
co-mingling of GE and non-GE foods by
2019. To guarantee there is no co-min-
gling of his GE and non-GE foods, he said
he would need to buy separate harvesting
equipment for the crops.
I would have to invest between
$500,000 and $700,000 more, he said.
Whos going to bare those costs ultimate-
ly? The consumer.
Opponents argue that required labeling
is unnecessary because consumers can
already buy certied organic foods, which
are legally required to be GE-free.
We dont need to have this when peo-
ple can already buy GE-free products if
they so choose, said Kathy Fairbanks,
spokesperson for the No on 37 cam-
paign.
The No on 37 campaign conducted a
study that found food costs would be
raised by $400 per year per family.
There are people who can afford to
shop at Whole Foods and buy organic,
said Fairbanks. This is going to increase
the price of food for everybody.
The Yes on 37 campaign sponsored its
own study that found Proposition 37
would not affect food costs. But this study
only looked at labeling costs, said
Fairbanks.
While the labeling would be required of
all foods sold in California, Palla feels that
local farmers would be more liable.
A Chinese or Brazilian farmer will
probably not be subject to the law, he
said, arguing that the state will probably
just take foreign producers word.
Foreign producers will not be subject to
our law. So then, we are giving misinfor-
mation to our consumers.
Palla said the labeling of GE foods
should remain up to the discretion of the
producer to respond to consumers.
If consumers want something, the sell-
ers will provide that demand, he said.
Isnt this legislation being prompted by
consumer demand? said Doniga
Markegard, who raises grass-fed beef,
milk cows and chickens on her family
farm near Half Moon Bay. She collabo-
rates with other organic and natural foods
producers to promote sustainable agricul-
ture.
It shouldnt be up to those who are
working hard to be transparent to be the
only ones that are being transparent, she
said.
Under Proposition 37, certain foods
would not have to be labeled, including
organic foods which are legally
required to be GE-free and meat and
dairy products.
Markegard argued that grass-fed ranch-
ers and organic farmers are already used to
strict compliance laws.
You should see how many labels we
put in front of our food. We let them know
its pastured, grass-fed and organic, she
said.
We need to equal out the burden. This
is a huge step in the right direction.
Health impacts
Farmer Palla, who prides himself on
providing healthy food for his community,
is concerned that the labeling of GE foods
would mislead consumers into thinking
GE foods are unhealthy.
This will instill an unfounded fear in
the minds of consumers, he said. The
preponderance of evidence is in favor of
their safety.
Markegard says the research is muddled.
A lot of studies have special interests in
mind, she said. Its hard to nd a neutral
source. Markegrd said she has found
some evidence of health benets in her
four children, who she feeds raw milk and
organic foods.
I know just from raising my kids,
theyre more vibrant, she said. [Other
children] get sick all the time, and theyre
feeding their kids packaged foods.
Palla said he wants people to know the
safety aspects of the food supply too, but
feels the labeling requirement would lead
people to think there were health risks
associated with genetically modied
organisms.
Proponents say Im a mother or Im
a father, he said. Im a father, we could
go that route.
Food diversity
The genetic engineering of food has
enabled more environmentally friendly
agricultural practices, said Palla.
We have been able to reduce pesticide
use, minimize air pollution and tillage,
which is bad for the soil, he said. Yield
increase allows us to be more efcient with
water.
While some people argue that genetical-
ly engineered foods will damage natural
food supply, Palla argues that biotechnolo-
gy is in itself a natural process.
I believe in our human capacity to dis-
cover, he said. It is the inherent nature of
our evolution. I think using technical
advancements, in medicine [for example],
are overwhelmingly benecial.
On the other hand, Markegard advocates
for a return to the natural processes of agri-
culture.
If our crops are genetically modied
and cross-pollinated with non-modied
crops, the food system is at risk of not hav-
ing any pure foods.
Her customers, who are trying to feed
their children a pure diet, are at risk, she
said. She sees manipulating nature to nd
an optimal pest control such as farmers
using Roundup-ready seeds as a cop-
out.
Its really taking nature and throwing it
out the window, she said. Its saying man
can produce something better than nature.
The food movement is going toward a
natural-based system, said Markegard. She
sees the blending of agriculture and con-
servation as essential way forward for
Californias food system.
Is it going to be a genetically modied,
monocrop wasteland? she said. Or are
we going to be working with natural ecol-
ogy in a conservation-minded way in agri-
culture?
Monsanto
Large chemical companies, including
Monsanto and Dow, have spent millions of
dollars ghting Proposition 37.
This is a Monsanto versus moms initia-
tive, said Phillips. Its not surprising that
major chemical companies are attacking a
consumers right to know, she said. We
have the right to know how much fat con-
tent, sugar and salt is in our food. We cant
rely on biotech companies such as
Monsanto to give us information.
Markegard agreed that the chemical
companies would not willingly provide the
information.
The thing that Im mainly concerned
about is that we dont know the health
implications of what is in our food, she
said. If there is nothing to hide, why
shouldnt you label?
Bayer, Dow and Monsanto are ghting
Proposition 37 because they will be sub-
ject to unfair lawsuits, said Fairbanks.
Lawyers can le lawsuits with anyone
associated with the product; the store,
processor, wholesaler, distributor and seed
company, she said.
Even producers who do not have genet-
ically modied foods could be subject to
lawsuits, she said. Then it becomes a mat-
ter of spending millions of dollars to prove
they are innocent, or settling out of court.
Continued from page 1
PROP. 37
Requires raw and processed food that contain rst-
generation genetically modied foods to be labeled
as Genetically Modiedor Partially Produced with
Genetic Engineering or May be Partially Produced
with Genetic Engineering;
Products that are second-generation genetically
modied foods are excluded, this includes animal
products in which the animals have eaten genetically
modied organisms, but were not genetically modi-
ed themselves;
Exempts alcohol and restaurant foods from required
labeling of GE foods;
By 2014, all foods that contain GE ingredients that
aremorethan.5percent of theweight of theproduct,
will be required to be labeled;
By 2019, all foods containing any amount of GE in-
gredients will be required to be labeled; and
GE foods will not be allowed to be labeled as natu-
ralor any similar phrase.
For more information on Proposition 37 visit sos.gov
Whats in Prop. 37
WEEKEND JOURNAL
24
Weekend Nov. 3-4, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
1996. Prosecutors believe the victim
count is actually more than 30 but the
statute of limitations whittled the charges
down.
Judge Jack Grandsaert set the $900,000
amount Wednesday based on concerns
Ayres was a risk for either ight or sui-
cide to avoid a second trial and possibly
prison.
Defense attorney Jonathan McDougall
had expressed an interest in seeking a
reconsideration but said the family chose
to post bail instead because the logisitics
of a hearing were impeded by
McDougalls involvement in a homicide
trial. While the family was able to do so,
McDougall said the cost of both the trial
and bail are a hardship.
Its an incredible amount of money
and continues to be a nancial drain, he
said.
Prosecutors say their goal now is to
ensure that Ayres freedom doesnt delay
his March trial.
We think one of the reason he wanted
to go to a competency trial so quickly was
because he was in custody without bail.
Now that he was lucky enough to take
advantage [of bail] we are determined to
get this case to trial and get it to trial in
March of 2012. Its just been way too
long, said Deputy District Attorney
Karen Guidotti.
As of now, McDougall said Ayres
release should not affect the trial date
although he and the family are going to
discuss their options for continuing to
challenge the competency ruling.
Dementia is a progressive disease and
Ayres may have different mental circum-
stances in a couple months, McDougall
said.
The issue of Ayres bail has raised
debate several times since his original
2007 arrest. Police apprehended him on a
$1.5 million warrant but, less than a day
later, a different judge slashed the amount
to $250,000 without explanation. Ayres
and his wife posted the cash amount a
short time later. As prosecutors added
new charges to the case, they sought a
bail increase to $1.8 million or $100,000
per alleged victim. The judge who signed
the original warrant settled on $750,000
and ordered Ayres not to renew his
expired passport.
Ayres briey went back into custody
before posting bond again. He remained
free throughout the rst criminal trial,
which ended with a hung jury, and a sub-
sequent trial on his competency which
also ended when jurors could not unani-
mously agree. The prosecution ultimately
stipulated to Ayres incompetence and
after several months he was admitted to
Napa State Hospital.
Earlier this year, the hospital sent Ayres
back to San Mateo County on the strength
of a report concluding he was competent
and was malingering, the medical term
for faking or exaggerating a condition.
In August, Ayres defense pushed for
his release on $50,000 bail, arguing the
situation was no different than when he
was previously free awaiting trial.
Grandsaert declined, saying the law did
not allow him to set a reasonable bail
until Ayres was certied as competent.
He remained jailed through the recent
hearing to determine if his competency
was restored. Unlike the previous trial,
Grandsaert alone rather than a jury ren-
dered the verdict.
Prior to his arrest, Ayres was well
known as president of the American
Academy of Child and Adolescent
Psychiatry and for hosting the sex educa-
tion series Time of Your Life. Ayres
received juvenile court referrals up
through 2004 even as San Mateo police
continued its investigation. Police began
looking at him in 2002 after a former
patient accused him of molestation during
the 1970s when he was 13. After a U.S.
Supreme Court ruling on the statute of
limitations nixed criminal prosecution,
the victim and Ayres reached a conden-
tial settlement in July 2005. In a deposi-
tion for the lawsuit, Ayres reportedly
admitted conducting physical exams of
patients as part of his care.
Continued from page 1
AYRES
oriented nonprot StarVista were on hand
to discuss bullying which can come in a
variety of forms.
The screening was part of an ongoing
school focus of respecting others. Giving
children the tools to know how to act,
who to contact and how to help has
already created changes, Martin said.
Shes noticed more students coming for-
ward to bring attention to problems.
Its great to have awareness. The chal-
lenge is to try to keep it alive, she said.
One piece of that for the Taylor com-
munity will be working with parents,
which Martin hopes to do soon.
Jason Bradeen, a counselor at Charles
Armstrong School in Belmont, said the
school took all the sixth through eighth
graders, about 100 students, to see the
lm.
Charles Armstrong, which works with
students with language-based learning
differences, offers a resiliency class. It
was within that class that students were
introduced to the movie they would see.
A number of the students were previous-
ly bullied because of the way they learn,
said Bradeen. But this gave the students
an opportunity to have a better perspec-
tive about the world.
Students who attended the lm were
asked to do something in response like
write a song or create a letter to one of the
characters in the lm. Those are starting
to come in and will be shared throughout
the year at assemblies.
In total, more than 3,200 students and
270 adults took advantage of watching
Bully. That was just a conversation
starter. As Bradeen pointed out, normally
the child doing the bullying is also expe-
riencing some troubles. With that in
mind, the county effort is also taking a
focus on how school ofcials deal with
problems.
On Oct. 12, education ofcials were
invited to attend the rst in a series of spe-
cial seminars called A Call to Action for
Positive School Climate.
Nancy Magee, spokeswoman for the
San Mateo County Ofce of Education,
explained that recent data at the national,
state and local levels shows an increase in
using out of school suspensions for man-
aging student discipline. The goal was to
work with districts to create ways to
respond to student behavior through
interventions to create a more positive
experience at school, said Magee.
Educators are also hoping to give local
students a positive place online to share
stories and ideas. As a result, a Facebook
page was recently started.
Continued from page 1
BULLY
bag limit, and no Dungeness crab may
be taken from San Francisco or San
Pablo bays, which are important crab
nursery areas, according to the website.
The recreational size limit for
Dungeness crab is ve and three-quarter
inches measured across the shell, direct-
ly in front of and excluding the lateral
spines. Crab taken from party boats must
measure at least six inches across.
Wednesday, Nov. 15 is the earliest
commercial fishermen will have a
chance to hit the winter seas.
Fisherman Pietro Parravano started
working on crab ships in the 80s. A for-
mer teacher, Parravano fell in love with
the challenges of being on the ocean dur-
ing colder months.
Hes anticipating a good crop of the
crustaceans this year based on a couple
of factors. First, last year there were a
number of crab a bit too small for har-
vesting which should be good to go this
year, he said. Second, the cooler water
often leads to harder shells a good
sign, said Parravano.
Getting started on Nov. 15 will allow
those who want the traditional seafood
for Thanksgiving dinner to get some-
thing fresh. Parravano suggests those
interesting in buying crab from sher-
men should visit the harbor in the after-
noons. Weekends are the busiest time, so
stop by during the week if possible, he
said.
Last year, the start of crab season was
delayed until after Thanksgiving until a
price could be agreed upon. As a result,
holiday dinners went without a Bay Area
staple.
But, if things start on time
this year, coastal visitors will
have a new way to get crab.
Tom Borden of Half Moon
Bay is set to launch a seasonal
crab shack with his family.
Poppys Crab Shack, named
after the Bordens young
daughter, was a business idea
that was able to get started this
season through crowd funding.
Originally, the goal on
Kickstarter was to raise
$10,000. The family raised
$18,000. That extra funding
has come in handy as the fami-
ly starts getting all the little
things together.
With less than two weeks
away from the start date of the
season, Borden is trying to
finalize where to launch
Poppys Crab Shack. Hes hop-
ing to set up shop near the har-
bor.
For more information about
Poppys Crab Shack visit
www.poppyscrabshack.com.
Continued from page 1
CRAB
SATURDAY, NOV. 3
Open House at Sportshouse Multi-
Sport Complex. 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. 3151
Edison Way, Redwood City.
Refreshments provided by Gatorade.
Free. For more information call 362-
4100 or visit
www.sportshouseonline.com.
The Cats Designer Pajamas. 9:30
a.m. to 1:30 p.m. 73 Wilburn Ave.,
Atherton. There will be a sale of
womens and mens designer clothing
for low prices. Benets the Nine Lives
Foundation, which is a no kill cat
shelter in Redwood City. For more
information call 368-1365 or visit
ninelivesfoundation.org.
The Johnston House Holiday
Boutique. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., located
on Highway 1, south of the City of Half
Moon Bay on the east side of Highway
1 at Higgins-Purisima Road. This is a
shopping extravaganza and an
opportunity to tour this historic
home. Shop for unique holiday crafts,
amongst decorated Christmas trees
in every room. Free admission. For
more information call 726-0329.
Books, Movies and Apps Galore:
Downloading Media toYour Apple
Products. 11 a.m. Menlo Park City
Council Chambers, 701 Laurel St.,
Menlo Park. Q&A session and
demonstration on how to operate
digital book readers and other Apple
products. Free. For more information
call 330-2525.
Support your local artists! 11 a.m.
to 3 p.m. Isle Cove Clubhouse, 825
Dorado Lane, Foster City. Show and
sale includes oil paintings,
watercolors, acrylic paintings,
miniature paintings, greeting cards,
Christmas decorations and more.
Refreshments served. For more
information call 574-0706.
Maritime Day. 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. San
Mateo County History Museum, 2200
Broadway, Redwood City, $5 for adults.
$3 for students and seniors. Free for
children ages 5 and under. For more
information call 299-0104 or visit
historysmc.org.
Notre Dame de Namur University
Presents: Hay Fever. 2 p.m. NDNU
Theatre, 1500 Ralston Ave., Belmont.
The NDNU Theatre Department
presents Noel Cowards play, Hay
Fever. $10. For more information call
508-3456.
Bay Area e.T.c. Presents NARNIA
The Musical. 2 p.m. Caada College
Main Stage Theater, 4200 Farm Hill
Blvd., Redwood City. $14 for students
and seniors and $19 for adults. For
more information and to order tickets
visit www.bayareaetc.org.
ATour of Recent Genetic Advances:
A Slide Talk with Professor Tim
Stearns. 3 p.m. Belmont Library, 1110
Alameda de las Pulgas, Belmont. Free.
For more information call 369-2004.
Michael Parkes One Man Show. 5
p.m. to 8 p.m. Borsini-Burr Gallery, 401
Main St., Montara. Michael Parkes will
show new work from his 2013
Renaissance Collection. Refreshments
provided. Opportunity to win an
original Michael Parkes sketch. Free.
For more information visit
www.borsini-burr.com.
Rumba, Cha Cha. 5 p.m. to 11:30 p.m.
Boogie Woogie Ballroom, 551 Foster
City Blvd., Suite G, Foster City. 5 p.m.
to 6 p.m. International Rumba Class.
$12 at 8 p.m. for Cha Cha lesson and
Same-Sex Dance Party. $10 at 9 p.m.
for Same-Sex Dance Party. For more
information visit
boogiewoogieballroom.com.
Panorama: The Art of Photo
Stitching Show Reception. 5 p.m. to
8 p.m. Coastal Arts League, 300 Main
St., Half Moon Bay. Photography by
Drew Campbell, Maggie Graham,
Kirsten Klagenberg and Jeff
Klagenberg. For more information
visit www.coastalartleague.com.
Boy Scout Annual Auction. 6:30 p.m.
Lucie Stern Center Ballroom, 1305
Middleeld Road, Palo Alto. Silent and
live auction, proceeds will go to
scholarships for youth. Food and
refreshments provided. $30 per
person. To RSVP call 341-5633. For
more information visit
www.packsy.org.
Cabaret. 7 p.m. Little Theatre at
Hillsdale High School, 3115 Del Monte
St., San Mateo. Director Allison
Gamlen and musical director Kevin
Gallagher are leading the Hillsdale
High School cast in sharing this
tumultuous story in the newly
renovated Hillsdale Little Theater.
Adults $15. Students and seniors $10.
To purchase tickets visit
http://hillsdalehigh.com/drama.
Rock for Schools Benet Concert. 7
p.m. to 10 p.m. The Vibe, 670 Shell
Blvd., Foster City. Proceeds will go to
the San Mateo Foster City Education
foundation and will specifically
benet the music programs in the San
Mateo and Foster City elementary and
middle school districts. Tickets are
available online or at the door on the
day of the event. Suggested donation
of $10. For more information and for
tickets visit rockforschoolsfc.com.
Deathtrap. 8 p.m. Hillbarn Theatre,
1285 E. Hillsdale Blvd., Foster City.
Tickets available 60 minutes prior to
curtain at Hillbarn Theatre. Adults and
seniors $34. Students ages 17 and
under with current student ID should
call 349-6411 for pricing. To purchase
tickets and for more information visit
hillbarntheatre.org.
SUNDAY, NOV. 4
Open House at Sportshouse Multi-
Sport Complex. 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. 3151
Edison Way, Redwood City.
Refreshments provided by Gatorade.
Free. For more information call 362-
4100 or visit
www.sportshouseonline.com.
The Johnston House Holiday
Boutique. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., located
on Highway 1, south of the City of Half
Moon Bay on the east side of Highway
1 at Higgins-Purisima Road. This is a
shopping extravaganza and an
opportunity to tour this historic
home. Shop for unique holiday crafts,
amongst decorated Christmas trees
in every room. Free admission. For
more information call 726-0329.
Michael Parkes One Man Show. 11
a.m. to 2 p.m. Borsini-Burr Gallery, 401
Main St., Montara. Michael Parkes will
show new work from his 2013
Renaissance Collection. Refreshments
provided. Opportunity to win an
original Michael Parkes sketch. Free.
For more information visit
www.borsini-burr.com.
The Crestmont Conservatory of
Music Piano Marathon. Noon to 8
p.m. 2575 Flores St., San Mateo. $20.
For more information call 574-4633.
Master Gardener Plant Clinic:
Managing Young Trees. 1 p.m. to 3
p.m. San Mateo Arboretum Society,
Kohl Pumphouse, 101 Ninth Ave., San
Mateo. Free. For more information call
579-0536 or visit
sanmateoarboretum.org.
Cabaret. 2 p.m. Little Theatre at
Hillsdale High School, 3115 Del Monte
St., San Mateo. Director Allison
Gamlen and musical director Kevin
Gallagher are leading the Hillsdale
High School cast in sharing this
tumultuous story in the newly
renovated Hillsdale Little Theater.
Adults $15. Students and seniors $10.
To purchase tickets visit
http://hillsdalehigh.com/drama.
Deathtrap. 2 p.m. Hillbarn Theatre,
1285 E. Hillsdale Blvd., Foster City.
Tickets available 60 minutes prior to
curtain at Hillbarn Theatre. Adults and
seniors $34. Students ages 17 and
under with current student ID should
call 349-6411 for pricing. To purchase
tickets and for more information visit
hillbarntheatre.org.
Bay Area e.T.c. Presents NARNIA
The Musical. 2 p.m. Caada College
Main Stage Theater, 4200 Farm Hill
Blvd., Redwood City. $14 for students
and seniors and $19 for adults. For
more information and to order tickets
visit www.bayareaetc.org.
An Afternoon with Author Jeri
Westerson. 3 p.m. Belmont Library,
1110 Alameda de las Pulgas, Belmont.
Westerson will read from her latest
book, Blood Lance. Medieval weapons
demonstration and cheese and wine
reception. Free. For more information
email conrad@smcl.org.
Bay Area Kids and Families: Meet
the Orchestra! 3 p.m. College of San
Mateo Theatre, 1700 W. Hillsdale Blvd.,
San mateo. The San Francisco
Chamber Orchestra presents their rst
Family Concert of the 2012-13 season
with a playful introduction to the
instruments (and musicians) who
constitute the Bay Areas favorite
chamber orchestra. Free. For more
information visit
http://www.sfchamberorchestra.org.
Pathways to College A Free
Workshop. 4 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Elks
Lodge, 229 W. 20th Ave., San Mateo.
Experts from Custom College Visits
discuss how to navigate the college
search process and prepare for
successful college tours. For more
information or to register call 931-
4515.
Wayne Wallace Latin Jazz Quintet.
4:30 p.m. Doors open at 3 p.m.
Douglas Beach House, 307 Mirada
Road, Half Moon Bay. $35. For more
information call 726-2020.
MONDAY, NOV. 5
Lecture: Using Your Family Dog to
Prevent Falls. 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. San
Mateo Senior Center, 2645 Alameda
de las Pulgas, San Mateo. Free. For
more information and to register call
522-7490.
Hearing Loss Association of the
Peninsula Meeting. 1 p.m. Veterans
Memorial Senior Center located at
1455 Madison Ave., Redwood City.
Presentation on Auditory Aging. Free.
For more information call 345-4551.
Calendar
For more events visit
smdailyjournal.com, click Calendar.
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2012
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -- Someone who has a
chance to do you a big favor might not recognize it or
even be aware that you need one. Dont brood over
it, because if the roles were reversed, youd be likely
to respond in a similar fashion.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -- If you discover
that someone whom you thought was your friend
really isnt, handle it philosophically. The real loss is
really his or hers, not yours.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- Someone with
whom youre closely associated could do something
that you might fear would affect your reputation as
well. Calm down, because others will judge only the
culprit, not you.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -- Even if you are an
innately artistic person, there can always be times
when your talent isnt operating, for one reason or
another. Dont fret too much when this occurs -- your
special something will never vanish for good.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -- Be exceptionally care-
ful of whom you try to charm and how you go about
it. Sometimes, friendliness can be misinterpreted
and taken in ways that you never intended.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) -- It behooves you to
strive to be as much of a giver as a taker. If you are
too self-serving, it will encourage others to treat you
the same way, and you wont like it.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -- Others will take you at
your word, so if you make a promise, be prepared to
keep it. If you dont come through, important people
will remember it down the line.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -- Your extravagant whims
could be quite prevalent and, as such, cause you to
foolishly squander your resources. Make sure you
dont do anything that brings you regrets.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) -- In order to further your
personal interests, there is a strong likelihood that
you could be somewhat offensive if youre not care-
ful. Play to win, but do so with class.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- If youre upset over some-
thing, you could easily misinterpret the intentions
of others, coming to a very negative and incorrect
conclusion. If you do so, itll spoil your day.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- No matter how much
we have, there is always someone who has more, so
jealousy is futile and only hurts ourselves. Instead of
being envious of another, enjoy what you have.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -- Even if you feel that an
adversary has prevented you from getting the rec-
ognition you so rightfully deserve, keep it to yourself.
With time, the truth will out and make you look better
than ever.
COPYRIGHT 2012 United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
COMICS/GAMES
11-3-12
WEDNESDAYS PUZZLE SOLVED
PREVIOUS
SUDOkU
ANSWERS
Want More Fun
and Games?
Jumble Page 2 La Times Crossword Puzzle Classifeds
Tundra & Over the Hedge Comics Classifeds
kids Across/Parents Down Puzzle Family Resource Guide


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

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

Freebies: Fill in single-box cages with the number in the
top-left corner.
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ACROSS
1 Clocks front
5 Big swallow
9 Qt. parts
12 -- spumante
13 Writer -- Seton
14 Puffn kin
15 Raise crops
16 Pick out
18 Clavell book (hyph.)
20 Shoulder muscles
21 Bossys offspring
22 Pleased sigh
23 Millionaires toy
26 Blarney Stone site
30 FedEx vehicle
33 Very funny person
34 Kuwaiti leader
35 Nerve cell part
37 Podium
39 Faux --
40 Name in blue jeans
41 Be outstanding
43 Norm
45 Trevi Fountain site
48 Dripping sounds
51 Wayne genre
53 Large leaves (2 wds.)
56 Ensnare
57 Jackies second
58 Cruel
59 Seine tributary
60 Chinese principle
61 Vernes captain
62 Rabbit dish
DOWN
1 Flaky
2 Asimov or Hayes
3 Open-air lobbies
4 Without vigor
5 Proft
6 Et, for Hans
7 Strong soap
8 Bamboo muncher
9 Water holder
10 Bunch of feathers
11 The -- the limit!
17 Giggle (hyph.)
19 Miles away
22 Storage place
24 Apple product
25 Fraud
27 Baby sitters bane
28 Narrow inlet
29 Uhs kin
30 Actor -- Kilmer
31 Bunyans tool
32 Fall mo.
36 Frosty
38 Immunity shots
42 Numbers games
44 Quaking tree
46 Promotion basis
47 Get the lead out?
48 Urban map
49 Milan money, once
50 Hodgepodge
51 Fjord port
52 Gush forth
54 Blvd.
55 Hard to see
DILBERT CROSSWORD PUZZLE
fUTURE SHOCk
PEARLS BEfORE SWINE
GET fUZZY
Weekend Nov. 3-4, 2012 25
THE DAILY JOURNAL
26
Weekend Nov. 3-4, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
NOW HIRING
Caregivers/CNAs
Experience working with individuals who have
Alzheimers or dementia strongly preferred.
We are currently offering a hiring bonus
for our Caregivers!
$250: $125 upon hire and $125 after 90 days.
Please apply in person at:
1301 Ralston Avenue, Belmont, CA 94002
104 Training
TERMS & CONDITIONS
The San Mateo Daily Journal Classi-
fieds will not be responsible for more
than one incorrect insertion, and its lia-
bility shall be limited to the price of one
insertion. No allowance will be made for
errors not materially affecting the value
of the ad. All error claims must be sub-
mitted within 30 days. For full advertis-
ing conditions, please ask for a Rate
Card.
110 Employment
AUTHENTIC SYRIAN CHEF, minimum 3
years exp. Full-time, starting at $16.10
per hour. Send resume to
tastein2009@att.net.
Taste in Mediterranean, 1199 Broadway
Burlingame. (650) 348-3097
BROILE EXPRESS
Looking for experience cashier & Dish-
washer. Apply in person at 895 Laurel
St., San Carlos. No Phone Calls.
CAREGIVER -
FT/PT Live-In caregiver on the Penin-
sula and in the South Bay. Valid driv-
ers license and car a must.Must have
exp. and refs. Call 415-683-3171 or
visit www.sageeldercare.com.
HOME CARE AIDES
Multiple shifts to meet your needs. Great
pay & benefits, Sign-on bonus, 1yr exp
required.
Matched Caregivers (650)839-2273,
(408)280-7039 or (888)340-2273
STYLIST/BARBER & ASSISTANT
MANAGERS - Built-in clientele. Hourly +
commissions + bonuses + Sign-on
Bonus $. Call Juan (650)515-3195
110 Employment
IRISH HELP AT HOME
Caregivers wanted.
High Quality Home Care.
Qualified, Experienced
Caregivers for Hourly and Live in
placements in San Mateo.
Inquire at: (650)347-6903
www.irishhelpathome.com
LOOKING FOR FT/PT American
breakfast cook at the Pantry Restaurant,
Call (650)345-4544
110 Employment
NEWSPAPER
INTERNS
JOURNALISM
The Daily Journal is looking for in-
terns to do entry level reporting, re-
search, updates of our ongoing fea-
tures and interviews. Photo interns al-
so welcome.
We expect a commitment of four to
eight hours a week for at least four
months. The internship is unpaid, but
intelligent, aggressive and talented in-
terns have progressed in time into
paid correspondents and full-time re-
porters.
College students or recent graduates
are encouraged to apply. Newspaper
experience is preferred but not neces-
sarily required.
Please send a cover letter describing
your interest in newspapers, a resume
and three recent clips. Before you ap-
ply, you should familiarize yourself
with our publication. Our Web site:
www.smdailyjournal.com.
Send your information via e-mail to
news@smdailyjournal.com or by reg-
ular mail to 800 S. Claremont St #210,
San Mateo CA 94402.
NOVELLES DEVELOPMENTAL SERV-
ICES is seeking Program Instructors for
our medically based day program in Bur-
lingame serving individuals with develop-
mental disabilities. Monday-Friday, flexi-
ble hours. Call 650-692-2400 for more in-
formation.
110 Employment
RESTAURANT -
Cooks, Cashiers, Avanti Pizza. Menlo
Park. (650)854-1222.
RETAIL JEWELRY SALES
Full + Part-time + Seasonal
Start up to $13 Exp up to $20
Benefits-Bonus-No Nights!
650-367-6500 FX 367-6400
jobs@jewelryexchange.com
SALES/MARKETING
INTERNSHIPS
The San Mateo Daily Journal is looking
for ambitious interns who are eager to
jump into the business arena with both
feet and hands. Learn the ins and outs
of the newspaper and media industries.
This position will provide valuable
experience for your bright future.
Email resume
info@smdailyjournal.com
120 Child Care Services
AGAPE VILLAGES
Foster Family Agency
Become a Foster Parent!
We Need Loving Homes for
Disadvantaged Children
Entrusted to Our Care.
Monthly Compensation Provided.
Call 1-800-566-2225
Lic #397001741
127 Elderly Care
FAMILY RESOURCE
GUIDE
The San Mateo Daily Journals
twice-a-week resource guide for
children and families.
EVERY TUESDAY
& WEEKEND
Look for it in todays paper to
find information on family
resources in the local area,
including childcare.
203 Public Notices
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #252410
The following person is doing business
as: Spotted Dog Publishing, 26 Hayward
Ave #207, SAN MATEO, CA 94401 is
hereby registered by the following owner:
Janice Wolfe, same address. The busi-
ness is conducted by an Individual. The
registrants commenced to transact busi-
ness under the FBN on
/s/ Janice Wolfe /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 09/20/2012. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
10/13/12, 10/20/12, 10/27/12, 11/03/12).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #252688
The following person is doing business
as: 1) Flocchini Wines, 2) Flocchini
Winery, 3) Flocchini Wine, 1001 Wash-
ington St., SAN CARLOS, CA 94070 is
hereby registered by the following owner:
Flo Enterprise, LLC. The business is
conducted by a Limited Liability Compa-
ny. The registrants commenced to trans-
act business under the FBN on
03/17/2011
/s/ Drea Helfer /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 10/09/2012. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
10/27/12, 11/03/12, 11/10/12, 11/17/12).
203 Public Notices
CASE# CIV 516992
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR
CHANGE OF NAME
SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA,
COUNTY OF SAN MATEO,
400 COUNTY CENTER RD,
REDWOOD CITY CA 94063
PETITION OF
Augusto Giovanni Gonzalez
TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS:
Petitioner, Augusto Giovanni Gonzalez
filed a petition with this court for a decree
changing name as follows:
Present name: Augusto Giovanni Gonza-
lez, aka Augusto G. Gonzalez, aka Gio-
vanni Gonzalez
Proposed name: Giovanni Dubois
THE COURT ORDERS that all persons
interested in this matter shall appear be-
fore this court at the hearing indicated
below to show cause, if any, why the pe-
tition for change of name should not be
granted. Any person objecting to the
name changes described above must file
a written objection that includes the rea-
sons for the objection at least two court
days before the matter is scheduled to
be heard and must appear at the hearing
to show cause why the petition should
not be granted. If no written objection is
timely filed, the court may grant the peti-
tion without a hearing. A HEARING on
the petition shall be held on November
27, 2012 at 9 a.m., Dept. PJ, Room 2E,
at 400 County Center, Redwood City, CA
94063. A copy of this Order to Show
Cause shall be published at least once
each week for four successive weeks pri-
or to the date set for hearing on the peti-
tion in the following newspaper of gener-
al circulation: Daily Journal
Filed: 10/03/2012
/s/ Beth Freeman/
Judge of the Superior Court
Dated: 10/01/2012
(Published, 10/13/12, 10/20/12,
10/27/12, 11/03/12)
27 Weekend Nov. 3-4, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
Tundra Tundra Tundra
Over the Hedge Over the Hedge Over the Hedge
203 Public Notices
CASE# CIV 517228
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR
CHANGE OF NAME
SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA,
COUNTY OF SAN MATEO,
400 COUNTY CENTER RD,
REDWOOD CITY CA 94063
PETITION OF
Cynthia Flynn
TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS:
Petitioner, Cynthia Flynn filed a petition
with this court for a decree changing
name as follows:
Present name: Cynthia Flynn, aka Cyn-
thia MaCay
Proposed name: Cynthia MaCay
THE COURT ORDERS that all persons
interested in this matter shall appear be-
fore this court at the hearing indicated
below to show cause, if any, why the pe-
tition for change of name should not be
granted. Any person objecting to the
name changes described above must file
a written objection that includes the rea-
sons for the objection at least two court
days before the matter is scheduled to
be heard and must appear at the hearing
to show cause why the petition should
not be granted. If no written objection is
timely filed, the court may grant the peti-
tion without a hearing. A HEARING on
the petition shall be held on December
13, 2012 at 9 a.m., Dept. PJ, Room 2E,
at 400 County Center, Redwood City, CA
94063. A copy of this Order to Show
Cause shall be published at least once
each week for four successive weeks pri-
or to the date set for hearing on the peti-
tion in the following newspaper of gener-
al circulation: Daily Journal
Filed: 10/19/2012
/s/ Joseph C. Scott/
Judge of the Superior Court
Dated: 10/19/2012
(Published, 10/27/12, 11/03/12,
11/10/12, 11/17/12)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #252618
The following person is doing business
as: Masonic Music Inc., 130 Newton
Drive, BURLINGAME, CA 94010 is here-
by registered by the following owner: Ma-
sonic Music Inc., CA. The business is
conducted by a Corporation. The regis-
trants commenced to transact business
under the FBN on 10/01/2012.
/s/ Mason Bates /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 10/04/2012. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
10/20/12, 10/27/12, 11/03/12, 11/10/12).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #252721
The following person is doing business
as: Queens Comb, 1662 Holly Avenue,
SAN BRUNO, CA 94066 is hereby regis-
tered by the following owner: Richard
Watkins, same address. The business is
conducted by an Individual. The regis-
trants commenced to transact business
under the FBN on
/s/ Richard Watkins /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 10/11/2012. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
10/20/12, 10/27/12, 11/03/12, 11/10/12).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #252824
The following person is doing business
as: Glass Plus Film, 1255 Annette Ave.,
REDWOOD CITY, CA 94063 is hereby
registered by the following owner: Chad
W. Weston, same address. The business
is conducted by an Individual. The regis-
trants commenced to transact business
under the FBN on 08/01/2012.
/s/ Chad Weston /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 10/18/2012. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
10/20/12, 10/27/12, 11/03/12, 11/10/12).
203 Public Notices
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #252919
The following person is doing business
as: Nowras Consulting, 124 Barneson
Ave, SAN MATEO, CA 94402 is hereby
registered by the following owner: Ayman
Asfour, same address. The business is
conducted by an Individual. The regis-
trants commenced to transact business
under the FBN on N/A
/s/ Ayman Asfour /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 10/26/2012. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
10/27/12, 11/03/12, 11/10/12, 11/17/12).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #252995
The following person is doing business
as: Riverseine Production, 534 Shorebird
Circle, #17203, REDWOOD CITY, CA
94065 is hereby registered by the follow-
ing owner: Steven L. Pariseau, same ad-
dress. The business is conducted by an
Individual. The registrants commenced to
transact business under the FBN on.
/s/ Steven L. Pariseau /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 11/01/2012. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
11/03/12, 11/10/12, 11/17/12, 11/24/12).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #252955
The following person is doing business
as: Izanami Japanese Cuisine, 257
Grand Ave., SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO,
CA 94080 is hereby registered by the fol-
lowing owner: Drapillar Corp., CA. The
business is conducted by a Corporation.
The registrants commenced to transact
business under the FBN on.
/s/ Minh Qnang Le /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 10/30/2012. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
11/03/12, 11/10/12, 11/17/12, 11/24/12).
STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT of
USE of FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT # M-247699
The following persons have abandoned
the use of the fictitious business name:
Canyon Cleaners, 3207A Oak-Knoll Dr.,
REDWOOD CITY, CA 94062. The ficti-
tious business name referred to above
was filed in County on 11/18/11. The
business was conducted by: Gun Noh
and Sook Noh, 954 Glennan Dr., Red-
wood City, CA 94061.
/s/ Gun Noh/
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk-Recorder of San Mateo
County on 09/28/2012. (Published in the
San Mateo Daily Journal, 10/13/12,
10/20/12, 10/27/12, 11/3/12).
NOTICE OF PETITION TO
ADMINISTER ESTATE OF
Edward Darvell Burns
Case Number 122606
To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, con-
tingent creditors, and persons who may
otherwise be interested in the will or es-
tate, or both, of: Edward Darvell Burns.
A Petition for Probate has been filed by
Raymona Fisher-Burns in the Superior
Court of California, County of San Mateo.
The Petition for Probate requests that
Raymona Fisher-Burns be appointed as
personal representative to administer the
estate of the decedent.
The petition requests authority to admin-
ster the estate under the Independent
Administration of Estates Act. (This au-
thority will allow the personal representa-
tive to take many actions without obtain-
ing court approval. Before taking certain
very important actions, however, the per-
sonal representative will be required to
give notice to interested persons unless
they have waived notice or consented to
the proposed action.) The independent
administration authority will be granted
unless an interested person files an ob-
jection to the petition and shows good
203 Public Notices
cause why the court should not grant the
authority.
A hearing on the petition will be held in
this court as follows: November 20, 2012
at 9:00 a.m., Dept. 28, Superior Court of
California, County of San Mateo, 400
County Center, Redwood City, CA
94063. If you object to the granting of
the petition, you should appear at the
hearing and state your objections or file
written objections with the court before
the hearing. Your appearance may be in
person or by your attorney. If you are a
creditor or a contingent creditor of the
decedent, you must file your claim with
the court and mail a copy to the personal
representative appointed by the court
within four months from the date of first
issuance of letters as provided in Pro-
bate Code section 9100. The time for fil-
ing claims will not expire before four
months from the hearing date noticed
above. You may examine the file kept by
the court. If you are a person interested
in the estate, you may file with the court
a Request for Special Notice (form DE-
154) of the filing of an inventory and ap-
praisal of estate assets or of any petition
or account as provided in Probate Code
section 1250. A Request for Special No-
tice form is available from the court clerk.
Attorney for Petitioner:
Alexandra Gadzo, #209127
Gadzo Law, P.C.
2600 El Camino Real, Suite #412
Palo Alto, CA 94306
(650)321-3050
Dated: 08/07/12
Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal
on November 3, 10, 17, 2012.
203 Public Notices
SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE
OF CALIFORNIA IN AND FOR THE
COUNTY OF MONTEREY
CITATION FOR FREEDOM FROM
PARENTAL CUSTODY AND CON-
TROL OF PRESUMED FATHER
JONATHAN SIEDMAN
(Family Code 7666, 7882)
Case No.: A-4949
Petitioners: Benjamin and Jessie
Kreeger
In the Adoption of:
BABY GIRL KREEGER, a Minor.
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF
CALIFORNIA, to respondent JONA-
THAN SIEDMAN of San Mateo, Cali-
fornia:
Greetings:
YOU ARE HEREBY advised that you
are required to appear in the Superior
Court of the State of California, for the
County of Monterey, at the Court
Room of Department thereof, located
at 1200 Aguajito Road, Monterey, CA
93940, (831)647-5800, Monterey,
California, County of Monterey, State
of California, on December 19, 2012
at 8:30 a.m. of that day, then and
there to show cause, if any, why MI-
NOR ESTHER ROSE KREEGER (MI-
NOR) should not be declared free
from parental custody and control for
the purpose of placement for adoption
as prayed for in the petition on file
herein.
You are advised that if Petitioners and
MINOR are present at the time and
place above stated, the Judge will
read the petition and if requested may
explain the effect of the granting of
the petition and if requested, the
Judge shall explain any term or alle-
gation contained therein and the na-
ture of the proceeding , its procedures
and possible consequences and may
continue the matter for not more than
thirty (30) days for the appointment of
counsel or to give counsel time to pre-
pare.
The court may appoint counsel to rep-
resent MINOR whether or not MINOR
is able to afford counsel. If any parent
appears and is unable to afford coun-
sel, the court shall appoint counsel to
represent each parent who appears
unless such representation is know-
ingly and intelligently waived.
If you wish to seek the advice of an
attorney in this matter, you should
do so promptly so that your plead-
ing, if any, may be filed on time.
DATED: OCT. 26, 2012
Clerk of the Superior Court
SIgned by: J. Cedillo
Attorney for Petitioners:
David C. Laredo, CSBN 66532
Heidi A. Quinn, CSBN 180880
Alex J. Lorca, CSBN 266444
DeLAY & LAREDO
606 Forest Avenue
Pacific Grove, CA 93950
(831)646-1502
Published in the San Mateo Daily
Journal on November 3, 10, 17, 24,
2012.
210 Lost & Found
FOUND - Evan - I found your iPod, call
(650)261-9656
FOUND- LITTLE tan male chihuahua,
Found on Davit Street in Redwood
Shores Tuesday, August 28th. Please
call (650)533-9942
LOST - Small Love Bird, birght green
with orange breast. Adeline Dr. & Bernal
Ave., Burlingame. Escaped Labor Day
weekend. REWARD! (650)343-6922
LOST CHIHUAHUA/TERRIER mix in
SSF, tan color, 12 lbs., scar on stomach
from being spade, $300. REWARD!
(650)303-2550
LOST: SMALL diamond cross, silver
necklace with VERY sentimental
meaning. Lost in San Mateo 2/6/12
(650)578-0323.
RING FOUND Tue. Oct 23 2012 in Mill-
brae call (650)464-9359
294 Baby Stuff
B.O.B. DUALLIE STROLLER, for two.
Excellent condition. Blue. $300.
Call 650-303-8727.
294 Baby Stuff
BABY CAR SEAT AND CARRIER $20
(650)458-8280
NURSERY SET - 6 piece nursery set -
$25., (650)341-1861
295 Art
WALL ART, from Pier 1, indoor/outdoor,
$15. Very nice! (650)290-1960
296 Appliances
HAIR DRYER, Salon Master, $10.
(650)854-4109
HUNTER OSCILLATING FAN, excellent
condition. 3 speed. $35. (650)854-4109
MIROMATIC PRESSURE cooker flash
canner 4qt. $25. 415 333-8540
RADIATOR HEATER, oil filled, electric,
1500 watts $25. (650)504-3621
REFRIGERATOR - Whirlpool, side-by-
side, free, needs compressor, (650)726-
1641
ROTISSERIE GE, US Made, IN-door or
out door, Holds large turkey 24 wide,
Like new, $80, OBO (650)344-8549
SHOP VACUUM rigid brand 3.5 horse
power 9 gal wet/dry $40. (650)591-2393
SMALL SLOW cooker. Used once, $12
(650)368-3037
SUNBEAM TOASTER -Automatic, ex-
cellent condition, $30., (415)346-6038
VACUUM CLEANER excellent condition
$45. (650)878-9542
WATER HEATER $75, (650)333-4400
297 Bicycles
BIKE RACK Roof mounted, holds up to
4 bikes, $65 (650)594-1494
298 Collectibles
1 BAG of Hot Wheels and Matchbox
Cars, from the 70s, Appx 40, $30
(650)589-8348
15 HARDCOVERS WWII - new condi-
tion, $80.obo, (650)345-5502
1937 LOS ANGELES SID GRAUMANS
Chinese Theatre, playgoer August pro-
gram, featuring Gloria Stuart, George
Sanders, Paul Muni, Louise Rainer, $20.,
San Mateo, (650)341-8342
1969 LIFE MAGAZINE - Special Issue,
Off to the Moon, featuring Armstrong,
Aldrin, and Collins, and a special article
by Charles Lindburgh, $25., San Mateo,
(650)341-8342
1982 PRINT 'A Tune Off The Top Of My
Head' 82/125 $80 (650) 204-0587
2 FIGURINES - 1 dancing couple, 1
clown face. both $15. (650)364-0902
62 USED European Postage Stamps.
Many issued in the early 1900s. All dif-
ferent and detached from envelopes.
$5.00 (650)787-8600
67 OLD Used U.S. Postage Stamps.
Many issued before World War II. All
different. $4.00, (650)787-8600
ARMY SHIRT, long sleeves, with pock-
ets. XL $15 each (408)249-3858
BAY MEADOWS bag - $30.each,
(650)345-1111
BAY MEADOWS BAG - mint condition,
original package, $20., (650)365-3987
BEAUTIFUL RUSTIE doll Winter Bliss w/
stole & muffs, 23, $90. OBO, (650)754-
3597
CASINO CHIP Collection Original Chips
from various casinos $99 obo
(650)315-3240
COLORIZED TERRITORIAL Quarters
uncirculated with Holder $15/all,
(408)249-3858
GAYLORD PERRY 8x10 signed photo
$10 (650)692-3260
JOE MONTANA signed authentic retire-
ment book, $39., (650)692-3260
LIONEL TRAIN Wall Clock with working
train $45 (650)589-8348
MARK MCGUIRE hats, cards, beanie
babies, all for $98., (650)520-8558
MICHAEL JORDAN POSTER - 1994,
World Cup, $10., (650)365-3987
NHL SPORTS Figures, (20) new, un-
used, original packaging, SOLD!
298 Collectibles
ORIGINAL SMURF FIGURES - 1979-
1981, 18+ mushroom hut, 1 1/2 x 3 1/2,
all $40., (650)518-0813
POSTER - New Kids On The Block
1980s, $12., call Maria, (650)873-8167
SPORTS CARDS - 3200 lots of stars
and rookies, $40. all, (650)365-3987
SPORTS CARDS - 50 Authentic Signa-
tures, SOLD!
STACKING MINI-KETTLES - 3
Pots/cover: ea. 6 diam. Brown speckle
enamelware, $20., SOLD!
SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY Alums! Want
a "Bill Orange" SU flag for Game Day
displays? $3., 650-375-8044
VINTAGE 1970S Grecian Made Size 6-7
Dresses $35 each, Royal Pink 1980s
Ruffled Dress size 7ish $30, 1880s Re-
production White Lace Gown $150 Size
6-7 Petite, (650)873-8167
VINTAGE HOLLIE HOBBIE LUNCH-
BOX with Thermos, 1980s, $25., Call
Maria 650-873-8167
VINTAGE TEEN BEAT MAGAZINES
(20) 1980s $2 each, Call Maria 650-873-
8167
WANTED:
OLDER PLASTIC MODEL KITS.
Aurora, Revell, Monogram.
Immediate cash.
Pat 650-759-0793.
YUGIOH CARD - 2,000, some rare, 1st
Edition, $60 all, SOLD!
299 Computers
HP PRINTER Deskjet 970c color printer.
Excellent condition. Software & accesso-
ries included. $30. 650-574-3865
300 Toys
2 MODEL ships in box $30
(650)589-8348
PLASTIC TOY army set from the 70's
many pieces, SOLD!
302 Antiques
1912 COFFEE Percolator Urn. perfect
condition includes electric cord $85.
(415)565-6719
1920 MAYTAG wringer washer - electric,
gray color, $100., (650)851-0878
ANTIQUE BEVEL MIRROR - framed,
14 x 21, carved top, $45.,
(650)341-7890
ANTIQUE ITALIAN lamp 18 high, $70
(650)387-4002
ANTIQUE WASHING machine, some
rust on legs, rust free drum and ringer.
$45/obo, (650)574-4439
BREADBOX, METAL with shelf and cut-
ting board, $30 (650)365-3987
J&J HOPKINSON 1890-1900's walnut
piano with daffodil inlay on the front. Ivo-
ries in great condition. Can be played as
is, but will benefit from a good tuning.
$600.00 includes stool. Email
frisz@comcast.net for photos
303 Electronics
3 SHELF SPEAKERS - 8 OM, $15.
each, (650)364-0902
32 TOSHIBA Flat screen TV like new,
bought 9/9/11 with box. SOLD!
46 MITSUBISHI Projector TV, great
condition. $400. (650)261-1541.
BIG SONY TV 37" - Excellent Condition
Worth $2300 will Sacrifice for only $95.,
(650)878-9542
FLIP CAMCORDER $50. (650)583-2767
HOME THEATRE SYSTEM - 3 speak-
ers, woofer, DVD player, USB connec-
tion, $80., (714)818-8782
LEFT-HAND ERGONOMIC keyboard
with 'A-shape' key layout Num pad, $20
(650)204-0587
LSI SCSI Ultra320 Controller + (2) 10k
RPM 36GB SCSI II hard drives $40
(650)204-0587
28
Weekend Nov. 3-4, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
ACROSS
1 An almond in
every bite candy
8 Magic Johnsons
10,141
15 Solution for
repairing snagged
nylons
17 Fitness-focused
parents purchase
18 Rueful
exclamation
19 Ecstatic hymn
20 1950s Reds
nickname
21 The Whiffenpoof
Song sound
effects
22 Jerseys environs
23 Matching
24 Paris-to-Vichy dir.
25 Post-larval
insects
26 Item with which
Osiris is usually
pictured
27 Clintons FBI
director
28 It can have a tail
but never legs
29 __ House:
Pennsylvania
Ave. guest
quarters
30 Blowout
substitute?
31 Cut-up
32 Be a Scrooge
33 Cassidy who
played a Hardy
Boy
34 Knighted mystery
writer who
championed the
Boer War
35 Enter the pool
38 Sultry Mink,
Shmink singer
39 Coppers in
London
40 Assembled
41 Ducks home, on
the ticker
42 Event where
lumberjacks get
wet
43 Spock specialty
44 Spider webs
abundance
47 Fail to get caught
48 Red fox of
medieval lore
49 1993 Kentucky
Derby winner sired
by Polish Navy
DOWN
1 Theyre often
filled with teens
2 Some hellos ...
and goodbyes
3 Marleys music
4 Gurus
5 Some French
wheels
6 Novelist Beattie
7 Incongruous-
sounding high-
end stationery
8 Tweaks, say
9 Surf feature
10 Directly
11 Down with
something
12 Source of soft
fabric
13 The Hollow Men
poet
14 Dwindled
16 Old Testament
prophet
22 Expected to land
23 Basic chord
25 Tasty crustacean
26 Beloved, in
Bordeaux
27 Thumb ones
nose at
28 Shopworn
29 Glaring quality
30 Stops
patronizing
31 Like many a 12-
Down
32 Forthcoming
33 Button, notably
34 Remove element
#82 from
35 Hefty product
36 One working on
drafts
37 Prefix with babble
39 Gondolier, e.g.
40 Number before a
slash, maybe
42 Strahan co-host
43 Hyena in Lil
Abner
45 Japanese
surname addition
46 Mr. __!: old
whodunit game
By Brad Wilber
(c)2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
11/03/12
11/03/12
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:
Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis
xwordeditor@aol.com
304 Furniture
2 DINETTE Chairs both for $29
(650)692-3260
2 END Tables solid maple '60's era
$40/both. (650)670-7545
4 DRAWER metal file cabinet, black, no
lock model, like new $50 SOLD!
AFGAN PRAYER rug beautiful original
very ornate $100 (650)348-6428
ALASKAN SEEN painting 40" high 53"
wide includes matching frame $99 firm
(650)592-2648
ANTIQUE CHAIRS - (2) $40 each, Un-
finished craftsmen style, One needs
some repair. Picture available via email,
(650)595-5549
ARMOIRE CABINET - $90., Call
(415)375-1617
BENT WOOD ICE CREAM CHAIRS -(3)
$15 each, Cane Seats, Also 4 parts
chairs, Black or Tan,Picture available via
email, (650)595-5549
CHAIR MODERN light wood made in Ita-
ly $99 (415)334-1980
CHANDELIER WITH 5 lights/ candela-
bre base with glass shades $20.
(650)504-3621
COMPUTER DESK from Ikea, $40
(650)348-5169
COUCH & LOVE SEAT- Floral Design.
Great Condition, $350.00, SOLD!
COUCH-FREE. OLD world pattern, soft
fabric. Some cat scratch damage-not too
noticeable. 650-303-6002
DINETTE TABLE walnut with chrome
legs. 36x58 with one leaf 11 1/2. $50,
San Mateo (650)341-5347
DINING ROOM SET - table, four chairs,
lighted hutch, $500. all, (650)296-3189
DISPLAY CASE wood & glass 31 x 19
inches $30. (650)873-4030
DRESSER SET - 3 pieces, wood, $50.,
(650)589-8348
DRUM TABLE - brown, perfect condi-
tion, nice design, with storage, $45.,
(650)345-1111
304 Furniture
END TABLES (2) - One for $5. hand
carved, other table is antique white mar-
ble top with drawer $40., (650)308-6381
END TABLES (2)- Cherry finish, still in
box, need to assemble, 26L x 21W x
21H, $100. for both, (650)592-2648
FOLDING PICNIC table - 8 x 30, 7 fold-
ing, padded chairs, $80. (650)364-0902
FUTON DELUXE plus other items all for
$90 650 341-2397 (U haul away)
HAND MADE portable jewelry display
case wood and see through lid $45. 25 x
20 x 4 inches. (650)592-2648.
LOUNGE CHAIRS - 2 new, with cover &
plastic carring case & headrest, $35.
each, (650)592-7483
MODULAR DESK/BOOKCASE/STOR-
AGE unit - Cherry veneer, white lami-
nate, $75., (650)888-0039
OAK ROUND CLAW FOOTED TABLE
Six Matching Oak chairs and Leaf. $350,
Cash Only, (650)857-1045
OFFICE LAMP, small. Black & white with
pen holder and paper holder. Brand new,
in the box. $10 (650)867-2720
PAPASAN CHAIRS (2) -with cushions
$45. each set, (650)347-8061
PEDESTAL DINETTE 36 Square Table
- $65., (650)347-8061
RATTAN PAPASAN Chair with Brown
cushion excellent shape $45 (650)592-
2648
RECLINER CHAIR very comfortable vi-
nyl medium brown $70, (650)368-3037
ROCKING CHAIR - Beautiful light wood
rocking chair, very good condition, $65.,
OBO, (650)952-3063
ROCKING CHAIR - excellent condition,
oak, with pads, $85.obo, (650)369-9762
ROCKING CHAIR - Traditional, full size
Rocking chair. Excellent condition $100.,
(650)504-3621
SMALL STORAGE/ HUTCH - Stained
green, pretty. $40, (650)290-1960
304 Furniture
STEREO CABINET walnut w/3 black
shelves 16x 22x42. $30, 650-341-5347
STORAGE TABLE light brown lots of
storage good cond. $45. (650)867-2720
TEA CHEST , Bombay, burgundy, glass
top, perfect cond. $35 (650)345-1111
TRUNDLE BED - Single with wheels,
$40., (650)347-8061
VANITY ETHAN Allen maple w/drawer
and liftup mirror like new $95
(650)349-2195
VINTAGE UPHOLSTERED wooden
chairs, $25 each or both for $40. nice
set. (650)583-8069
VINTAGE WINGBACK CHAIR $75,
(650)583-8069
306 Housewares
"PRINCESS HOUSE decorator urn
"Vase" cream with blue flower 13 inch H
$25., (650)868-0436
28" by 15" by 1/4" thick glass shelves,
cost $35 each sell at $15 ea. Five availa-
ble, Call (650)345-5502
6 BOXES of Victorian lights ceiling & wall
$90., (650)340-9644
AUTO WINE OPENER - mint condition,
one-touch, rechargeable, adapter, foil
cutter, built-in light, easy open, great gift,
$12.00, SOLD!
BATTERY CHARGER, holds 4 AA/AAA,
Panasonic, $5, (650)595-3933
BEDSPREAD - queen size maroon &
pink bedspread - Fairly new, $50. obo,
(650)834-2583
BUFFET SERVER, stainless, cook &
serve same dish, $20 (650)595-3933
CANDLEHOLDER - Gold, angel on it,
tall, purchased from Brueners, originally
$100., selling for $30.,(650)867-2720
DINING ROOM Victorian Chandelier
seven light, $90., (650)340-9644
306 Housewares
DRIVE MEDICAL design locking elevat-
ed toilet seat. New. $45. (650)343-4461
KLASSY CHROME KITCHEN CANIS-
TERS: Set of four. (2--4"x 4"w x 4"h);
(2--4"x 4" x 9"h.). Stackable, sharp.
$20.00 (650)375-8044
PERSIAN TEA set for 8. Including
spoon, candy dish, and tray. Gold Plated.
$100. (650) 867-2720
RIVAL "CUTABOVE": Small task quik-
food chopper, electric, under cabinet
model; includes beverage mixer attach-
ment, $ 20., SOLD!
SOLID TEAK floor model 16 wine rack
with turntable $60. (650)592-7483
SUNBEAN TOASTER excellent condi-
tion (415)346-6038
307 Jewelry & Clothing
BRACELET - Ladies authentic Murano
glass from Italy, vibrant colors, like new,
$100., (650)991-2353 Daly City
GALLON SIZE bag of costume jewelry -
various sizes, colors, $100. for bag,
(650)589-2893
LADIES GOLD Lame' elbow length-
gloves sz 7.5 $15 New. (650)868-0436
WATCHES (21) - original packaging,
stainless steel, need batteries, $60. all,
(650)365-3987
308 Tools
71 1/4" WORM drive skill saw $80
(650)521-3542
CIRCULAR SAW, Craftsman-brand, 10,
4 long x 20 wide. Comes w/ stand - $70.
(650)678-1018
CRAFTMAN 3X20 1 BELT SANDER -
with extra belts, $35., (650)521-3542
CRAFTMAN RADIAL SAW, with cabinet
stand, $200 Cash Only, (650)857-1045
CRAFTSMAN 3/4 horse power 3,450
RPM $60 (650)347-5373
CRAFTSMAN ARC-WELDER - 30-250
amp, and accessories, $275., (650)341-
0282
CRAFTSMAN HEAVY DUTY JIGSAW -
extra blades, $35., (650)521-3542
DAYTON ELECTRIC 1 1/2 horse power
1,725 RPM $60 (650)347-5373
FMC TIRE changer Machine, $650
(650)333-4400
GENERATOR 13,000 WATTS Brand
New 20hp Honda $2800 (650)333-4400
LAWN MOWER reel type push with
height adjustments. Just sharpened $45
650-591-2144 San Carlos
TABLE SAW 10", very good condition
$85. (650) 787-8219
309 Office Equipment
DESK - 7 drawer wood desk, 5X2X2.5'
$25., (650)726-9658
ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER Smith Corona
$60. (650)878-9542
310 Misc. For Sale
1 CUSTOM Medicine Cabinet, White
with Mirror $25 obo, (650)589-8348
1 PAIR of matching outdoor planting pots
$20., (650)871-7200
10 PLANTS (assorted) for $3.00 each,
(650)349-6059
14 PLAYBOY magazines all for $80
(650)592-4529
300 HOME LIBRARY BOOKS - $3. or
$5. each obo, World & US History and
American Novel Classic, must see to ap-
preciate, (650)345-5502
4 IN 1 STERO UNIT. CD player broken.
$20., (650)834-4926
40 ADULT VHS Tapes - $100.,
(650)361-1148
310 Misc. For Sale
6 BASKETS assorted sizes and different
shapes very good condition $13 for all
(650)347-5104
7 UNDERBED STORAGE BINS - Vinyl
with metal frame, 42 X 18 X 6, zipper
closure, $5. ea., (650)364-0902
9 CARRY-ON bags (assorted) - extra
large, good condition, $10. each obo,
(650)349-6059
ADJUSTABLE WALKER - 2 front
wheels, new, $50., (650)345-5446
ADULT VIDEOS - (3) DVDs classics fea-
turing older women, $25. each,
(650)212-7020
AFGHAN PRAYER RUG - very ornate,
2 1/2' by 5,' $99., (650)348-6428
ALUMINUM WINDOWS - (10)double
pane, different sizes, $10. each,
(415)819-3835
AMERICAN HERITAGE books 107 Vol-
umes Dec.'54-March '81 $99/all SOLD!
ARTIFICIAL FICUS Tree 6 ft. life like, full
branches. in basket $55. (650)269-3712
ARTS & CRAFTS variety, $50
(650)368-3037
BABY BJORN potty & toilet trainer, in
perfect cond., $15 each (650)595-3933
BARBIE BEACH vacation & Barbie prin-
cess bride computer games $15 each,
(650)367-8949
BEADS - Glass beads for jewelry mak-
ing, $75. all, (650)676-0732
BLANKET- Double bed size, dusty rose,
satin bindings, warm, like new, washa-
ble. $8., SOLD!
BLUETOOTH WITH CHARGER - like
new, $20., (415)410-5937
BOOK "LIFETIME" WW1 $12.,
(408)249-3858
BOOK NATIONAL Geographic Nation-
al Air Museums, $15 (408)249-3858
BOOK SELECTION, Mystery, Romance,
Biography, SOLD!
CARRY ON suitcase, wheels, many
compartments, exel,Only $20,
(650)595-3933
COMFORTER - King size, like new, $30
SSF, (650)871-7200
DOOM (3) computer games $15/each 2
total, (650)367-8949
DVD'S TV programs 24 4 seasons $20
ea. (650)952-3466
ELECTRONIC TYPEWRITER good con-
dition $50., (650)878-9542
EXOTIC EROTIC Ball SF & Mardi gras 2
dvd's $25 ea. (415)971-7555
FOLDING LEG table 6' by 21/2' $25
(415)346-6038
GAME "BEAT THE EXPERTS" never
used $8., (408)249-3858
GEORGE Magazines, 30, all intact
$50/all OBO. (650)574-3229, Foster City
HARDCOVER MYSTERY BOOKS -
Current authors, $2. each (10), (650)364-
7777
HARLEY DAVIDSON black phone, per-
fect condition, $65., (650) 867-2720
HARMON/KANDON SPEAKERS (2)
mint condition, work great for small of-
fice/room, extra speakers, 4 1/2 in. high,
includes cords. $8.00, SOLD!
ICE CHEST $15 (650)347-8061
INFLATED 4'6" in diameter swimming
pool float $12 (415)346-6038
JAMES PATTERSON books 2 Hard
backs at $3 ea. (650)341-1861
JAMES PATTERSON books 5 paper
backs at $1 ea. (650)341-1861
310 Misc. For Sale
JONATHAN KELLERMAN - Hardback
books, (5) $3. each, (650)341-1861
KITCHEN FAUCET / single handle with
sprayer (never used) $19, (650)494-1687
Palo Alto
MENU FROM Steam Ship Lurline Aug.
20 1967 $10 (650)755-8238
METAL COWBOY STATUE - $50.,
SOLD!
MIRROR, ETHAN ALLEN - 57-in. high x
21-in. wide, maple frame and floor base,
like new, $95., (650)349-2195
NATURAL GRAVITY WATER SYSTEM
- Alkaline, PH Balance water, with anti-
oxident properties, good for home or of-
fice, brand new, $100., (650)619-9203.
NELSON DE MILLE -Hardback books 5
@ $3 each, (650)341-1861
NEW CEDAR shake shingles, enough
for a Medium size dog house. $20,
(650)341-8342 San Mateo
NEW LIVING Yoga Tape for Beginners
$8. 650-578-8306
OBLONG SECURITY mirror 24" by 15"
$75 (650)341-7079
OLD WOODEN Gun case $75 OBO,
(650)345-7352
OUTDOOR SCREEN - New 4 Panel
Outdoor Screen, Retail $130 With Metal
Supports, $80/obo. (650)873-8167
PICTORIAL WORLD History Books
$80/all (650)345-5502
PROFESSIONAL BEAUTY STYLING
STATION - Complete with mirrors, draw-
ers, and styling chair, $99. obo,
(650)315-3240
PUNCH BOWL SET- 10 cup plus one
extra nice white color Motif, $25.,
(650)873-8167
ROCKING HORSE- solid hardwood,
perfect condition ideal gift, Only $30.,
650-595-3933
SESAME STREET toilet seat excellent
condition $12 650 349-6059
SF GREETING CARDS -(300 with enve-
lopes), factory sealed, $10. (650)365-
3987
SHOW CONTAINERS for show, with pin
frog, 10-25 containers, $25 all, (650)871-
7200
SHOWER DOOR custom made 48 x 69
$70 (650)692-3260
SONY EREADER - Model #PRS-500, 6,
$60., (650)294-9652
SPECIAL EDITION 3 DVD Set of The
Freeze. English Subtitles, new $10.
(650)871-7200
STEAMER TRUNK $65 OBO (650)345-
7352
STEP 2 sandbox Large with cover $25
(650)343-4329
TIRE CHAINS - brand new, in box, never
used, multiple tire sizes, $25., (650)594-
1494
TOILET - very good condition, white,
FREE! (650)573-6981
TOILET SINK - like new with all of the
accessories ready to be installed, $55.
obo, (650)369-9762
TRAVEL GARMENT BAG - High quali-
ty, 50"length, zipper close, all-weather,
wrap-around hangar, $15., 650-375-8044
VAN ROOF rack 3 piece. clamp-on, $75
(650)948-4895
VASE WITH flowers 2 piece good for the
Holidays, $25., (650) 867-2720
VIDEO CENTER 38 inches H 21 inches
W still in box $45., (408)249-3858
VOLVO STATION Wagon car cover $50
650 888-9624
WALKER - brand new, $20., SSF,
(415)410-5937
WALKER - never used, $85.,
(415)239-9063
WALL LIGHT FIXTURE - 2 lamp with
frosted fluted shades, gold metal, never
used, $15., Burl, (650)347-5104
WEATHER STATION, temp., barometer
and humidity, only $10 (650)595-3933
311 Musical Instruments
2 ORGANS, antique tramp, $100 each.
(650)376-3762
3 ACCORDIONS $110/ea. 1 Small
Accordion $82. (650)376-3762.
ANTIQUE COLLECTIBLE Bongo's $65.,
SOLD!
HAMMOND B-3 Organ and 122 Leslie
Speaker. Excellent condition. $8,500. pri-
vate owner, (650)349-1172
HOHNER CUE stick guitar HW 300 G
Handcrafted $75 650 771-8513
PIANO ORGAN, good condition. $110.
(650)376-3762
YAMAHA KEYBOARD with stand $75,
(650)631-8902
312 Pets & Animals
PET MATE Vari Kennel 38" length by 24"
wide and 26" high $90 SSF
SOLD!
REPTILE CAGE - Medium size, $20.,
(650)348-0372
SMALL DOG wire cage; pink, two doors
with divider $50. (650) 743-9534.
29 Weekend Nov. 3-4, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
315 Wanted to Buy
GO GREEN!
We Buy GOLD
You Get The
$ Green $
Millbrae Jewelers
Est. 1957
400 Broadway - Millbrae
650-697-2685
316 Clothes
2 SAN Francisco Giants Jackets 1 is
made by (Starter) LG/XLG excellent con-
dition $99 for both (650)571-5790
2. WOMEN'S Pink & White Motocycle
Helmet KBC $50 (415)375-1617
A BAG of Summer ties $15 OBO
(650)245-3661
BLACK Leather pants Mrs. size made in
France size 40 $99. (650)558-1975
BLACK LEATHER tap shoes 9M great
condition $99. (650)558-1975
BLOUSES SWEATERS and tops. Many
different styles & colors, med. to lrg., ex-
cellent condition $5 ea., have 20,
(650)592-2648
EUROPEAN STYLE nubek leather la-
dies winter coat - tan colored with green
lapel & hoodie, $100., (650)888-0129
HARDING PARK mens golf dress shirts
(new) asking $25 (650)871-7200
LADIES BOOTS, thigh high, fold down
brown, leather, and beige suede leather
pair, tassels on back excellent, Condition
$40 ea. (650)592-2648
LADIES COAT Medium, dark lavender
$25 (650)368-3037
LADIES FAUX FUR COAT - Satin lining,
size M/L, $100. obo, (650)525-1990
LADIES JACKET size 3x 70% wool 30%
nylon never worn $50. (650)592-2648
LEATHER COAT - 3/4 length, black,
never worn, $85., (650)345-7352
LEATHER COAT medium size (snake
skin design) $25 (650)755-8238
LEATHER JACKET, mans XL, black, 5
pockets, storm flap, $39 (650)595-3933
MENS JEANS (8) Brand names verious
sizes 32,33,34 waist 30,32 length $99 for
all (650)347-5104
NEW BROWN LEATHER JACKET- XL
$25., 650-364-0902
SNOW BOOTS, MEN'S size 12. Brand
New, Thermolite brand,(with zippers),
black, $18. (510) 527-6602
TUXEDOS, FORMAL, 3, Black, White,
Maroon Silk brocade, Like new. Size 36,
$100 All OBO (650)344-8549
VINTAGE 1930 Ermine fur coat Black full
length $35 SOLD!
317 Building Materials
(1) 2" FAUX WOOD WINDOW BLIND,
with 50" and 71" height, still in box, $50
obo (650)345-5502
(2) 50 lb. bags Ultra Flex/RS, new, rapid
setting tile mortar with polymer, $30.
each, (808)271-3183
DRAIN PIPE - flexible, 3 & 4, approx.
20 of 3, 40 ft. of 4, $25.all, (650)851-
0878
FLOOR BASEBOARDS - Professionally
walnut finished, 6 room house, longest
13- 3/8 x 1 3/8, excellent condition,
$30.all, San Bruno, (650)588-1946
317 Building Materials
PVC - 1, 100 feet, 20 ft. lengths, $25.,
(650)851-0878
318 Sports Equipment
"EVERLAST FOR HER" Machine to
help lose weight $40., (650)368-3037
13 ASSORTED GOLF CLUBS- Good
Quality $3.50 each. Call (650) 349-6059.
BACKPACK - Large for overnight camp-
ing, excellent condition, $65., (650)212-
7020
BASKETBALL RIM, net & backboard
$35/all 650-345-7132 Leave message.
COLEMAN "GLO-MASTER" 1- burner
camp stove for boaters or camping. Mint
condition. $35.00 (650)375-8044
DARTBOARD - New, regulation 18 di-
meter, Halex brand w/mounting hard-
ware, 6 brass darts, $16., (650)681-7358
DL1000 BOAT Winch Rope & More,
$50., (650)726-9658
EXERCISE MAT used once, lavender
$12, (650)368-3037
GIRLS BIKE, Princess 16 wheels with
helmet, $50 San Mateo (650)341-5347
GOLF BALLS Many brands 150 total,
$30 Or best offer, (650)341-5347
GOLF CLUBS Driver, 7 wood, putter, 9
irons, bag, & pull cart. $99
(650)952-0620
PING CRAZ-E Putter w/ cover. 35in.
Like New $75 call(650)208-5758
SHIMANO 4500 Bait runner real with 6'
white rhino fishing pole $45
(650)521-3542
THULE BIKE RACK - Fits rectangular
load bars. Holds bike upright. $100.
(650)594-1494
TREADMILL - Proform XB 550S, local
pickup, $100., (650)294-9652
TREADMILL PROFORM 75 EKG incline
an Staionery Bike, both $400. Or sepa-
rate: $150 for the bike, $350 for the
treadmill. Call (650)992-8757
YOGA VIDEOS (2) - Never used, one
with Patrisha Walden, one by Rebok with
booklet. Both $6 (650)755-8238
322 Garage Sales
3 FAMILY
GARAGE SALE
REDWOOD CITY
361 Encina Ave.
Sat. & Sun.
Nov. 3 & 4
10 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Many brand new items.
Furniture, appliances
new clothing, toys
and much more!
322 Garage Sales
GARAGE
SALE
166 Rockridge Rd,
San Carlos
Sat., Nov. 3rd,
9am-4pm
Designer Clothing,
Shoes, Jewelry, &
Handbags,Vintage
Goods. Also
children's clothing,
active wear,couch,
plates, candle
holders, and other
odds & ends.
Women's clothing
sizes 0-6, shoe
sizes 7-8.
And Much More!
335 Garden Equipment
CRAFTSMAN 4 HP ROTARY LAWN-
MOWER - 20 rear discharge, extra new
grasscatcher, $85., (650)368-0748
340 Camera & Photo Equip.
SONY CYBERSHOT DSC-T-50 - 7.2 MP
digital camera (black) with case, $175.,
(650)208-5598
YASAHICA 108 model 35mm SLR Cam-
era with flash and 2 zoom lenses $99
(415)971-7555
440 Apartments
BELMONT - prime, quiet location, view,
1 bedroom, 2 bedroom, New carpets,
new granite counters, dishwasher, balco-
ny, covered carports, storage, pool, no
pets. (650) 591-4046
470 Rooms
HIP HOUSING
Non-Profit Home Sharing Program
San Mateo County
(650)348-6660
Rooms For Rent
Travel Inn, San Carlos
$49-59 daily + tax
$294-$322 weekly + tax
Clean Quiet Convenient
Cable TV, WiFi & Private Bathroom
Microwave and Refrigerator & A/C
950 El Camino Real San Carlos
(650) 593-3136
Mention Daily Journal
620 Automobiles
CHEVY HHR 08 - Grey, spunky car
loaded, even seat warmers, $9,500.
(408)807-6529.
HONDA 10 ACCORD LX - 4 door se-
dan, low miles, SOLD!
MERCEDES 06 C230 - 6 cylinder, navy
blue, 60K miles, 2 year warranty,
$18,000, (650)455-7461
625 Classic Cars
DATSUN 72 - 240Z with Chevy 350, au-
tomatic, custom, $3,600 or trade.
(415) 412-7030
635 Vans
NISSAN 01 Quest - GLE, leather seats,
sun roof, TV/DVR equipment. Looks
new, $15,500. (650)219-6008
640 Motorcycles/Scooters
BMW 03 F650 GS, $3899 OBO. Call
650-995-0003
HARLEY DAVIDSON 01 - Softail Blue
and Cream, low mileage, extras, $7,400.,
Call Greg @ (650)574-2012
HARLEY DAVIDSON 83 Shovelhead
special construction, 1340 ccs,
Awesome! $5,950/obo
Rob (415)602-4535.
645 Boats
BANSHEE SAILBOAT - 13 ft. with ex-
tras, $750., (650)343-6563
650 RVs
73 Chevy Model 30 Van, Runs
good, Rebuilt Transmission, Fiber-
glass Bubble Top $1,795. Owner
financing.
Call for appointments. (650)364-1374.
CHEVROLET RV 91 Model 30 Van,
Good Condition $9,500., (650)591-1707
or (650)644-5179
655 Trailers
TENT TRAILER - Good Condition
Sleeps 6. Electric, Water Hook-ups,
Stove, SOLD!
670 Auto Service
MB GARAGE, INC.
Repair Restore Sales
Mercedes-Benz Specialists
2165 Palm Ave.
San Mateo
(650)349-2744
ON TRACK
AUTOMOTIVE
Complete Auto Repair
foreign & domestic
www.ontrackautomotive.com
1129 California Dr.
Burlingame
(650)343-4594
People you can trust;
service you can trust
NORDIC MOTORS, INC.
Specializing in Volvo, Saab,
Subaru
65 Winslow Road
Redwood City
(650) 595-0170
www.nordicmotors.com
SAN CARLOS AUTO
SERVICE & TUNE UP
A Full Service Auto Repair
Facility
760 El Camino Real
San Carlos
(650)593-8085
670 Auto Parts
'91 TOYOTA COROLLA RADIATOR.
Original equipment. Excellent cond. Cop-
per fins. $60. San Bruno, (415)999-4947
670 Auto Parts
1974 OWNERS MANUAL - Mercedes
280, 230 - like new condition, $20., San
Bruno, (650)588-1946
2 SNOW/CABLE chains good condition
fits 13-15 inch rims, SOLD!
5 HUBCAPS for 1966 Alfa Romeo $50.,
(650)580-3316
67-68 CAMERO PARTS - $85.,
(650)592-3887
CAMPER/TRAILER/TRUCK OUTSIDE
backup mirror 8 diameter fixture. SOLD!
MAZDA 3 2010 CAR COVER - Cover-
kraft multibond inside & outside cover,
like new, $50., (650)678-3557
MERCEDES TOOL KIT - 1974, 10
piece, original, like new condition, $20.,
San Bruno, (650)588-1946
SHOP MANUALS 2 1955 Pontiac
manual, 4 1984 Ford/Lincoln manuals, &
1 gray marine diesel manual $40 or B/O
(650)583-5208
TRUCK RADIATOR - fits older Ford,
never used, $100., (650)504-3621
672 Auto Stereos
MONNEY
CAR AUDIO
We Sell, Install and
Repair All Brands of
Car Stereos
iPod & iPhone Wired
to Any Car for Music
Quieter Car Ride
Sound Proof Your Car
31 Years Experience
2001 Middlefield Road
Redwood City
(650)299-9991
680 Autos Wanted
DONATE YOUR CAR
Tax Deduction, We do the Paperwork,
Free Pickup, Running or Not - in most
cases. Help yourself and the Polly Klaas
Foundation. Call (800)380-5257.
Wanted 62-75 Chevrolets
Novas, running or not
Parts collection etc.
So clean out that garage
Give me a call
Joe 650 342-2483
340 Camera & Photo Equip.
Pictures on Yelp
Qualing
Special
at & low
slope roofs
650-594-1717
Cabinetry
Cleaning Concrete
Construction
Construction
650 868 - 8492
PATRICK BRADY PATRICK BRADY
GENERAL CONTRACTOR
ADDITIONS WALL REMOVAL
BATHS KITCHENS AND MORE!
PATBRADY1957@SBCGLOBAL.NET
License # 479385
Frame
Structural
Foundation
Roots & ALL
I make your
life better!
LARGE OR SMALL
I do them all!
30
Weekend Nov. 3-4, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
Construction
Decks & Fences
MARSH FENCE
& DECK CO.
State License #377047
Licensed Insured Bonded
Fences - Gates - Decks
Stairs - Retaining Walls
10-year guarantee
Quality work w/reasonable prices
Call for free estimate
(650)571-1500
Electricians
ALL ELECTRICAL
SERVICE
650-322-9288
for all your electrical needs
ELECTRIC SERVICE GROUP
ELECTRICIAN
For all your
electrical needs
Residential, Commercial,
Troubleshooting,
Wiring & Repairing
Call Ben at (650)685-6617
Lic # 427952
Gutters
O.K.S RAINGUTTER
New Rain Gutters
Down Spouts
Gutter Cleaning & Screening,
Roof & Gutter Repairs
Friendly Service
10% Senior Discount
CA Lic# 794353/Bonded
(650)556-9780
Handy Help
CONTRERAS
HANDYMAN
Fences Decks Patios
Power Washes Concrete
Work Maintenance
Clean Ups Arbors
Free Estimates!
Call us Today!
(650)350-9968
(650)389-3053
contreras1270@yahoo.com
DISCOUNT HANDYMAN
& PLUMBING
Carpentry Plumbing Drain
Cleaning Kitchens Bathrooms
Dry Rot Decks
Priced for You! Call John
(650)296-0568
Free Estimates
Lic.#834170
FLORES HANDYMAN
Serving you is a privilege.
Painting-Interior & Exterior Roof Re-
pair Base Boards New Fence
Hardwood Floors Plumbing Tile
Mirrors Chain Link Fence Windows
Bus Lic# 41942
Call today for free estimate.
(650)274-6133
HONEST HANDYMAN
Remodeling, Plumbing.
Electrical, Carpentry,
General Home Repair,
Maintenance,
New Construction
No Job Too Small
Lic.# 891766
(650)740-8602
SENIOR HANDYMAN
Specializing in Any Size Projects
Painting Electrical
Carpentry Dry Rot
Carpet Installation
40 Yrs. Experience
Retired Licensed Contractor
(650)201-6854
Hardwood Floors
KO-AM
HARDWOOD
FLOORING
Hardwood & Laminate
Installation & Repair
Refinish
High Quality @ Low Prices
Call 24/7 for Free Estimate
800-300-3218
408-979-9665
Lic. #794899
Hauling
CHEAP
HAULING!
Light moving!
Haul Debris!
650-583-6700
HAULING
Low Rates
Residential and Commercial
Free Estimates,
General Clean-Ups, Garage
Clean-Outs, Construction Clean-Ups
Call (650)630-0116
or (650)636-6016
INDEPENDENT HAULERS
$50 & Up HAUL
Since 1988 Free Estimates
Licensed/Insured
A+ BBB rating
(650)341-7482
JUNK HAULING
AND DEMOLITION
Clean up and Haul away all Junk
We also do Demolition
Call George
(650)384-1894
Landscaping
Moving
Bay Area
Relocation Services
Specializing in:
Homes, Apts., Storages
Professional, friendly, careful.
Peninsulas Personal Mover
Commercial/Residential
Fully Lic. & Bonded CAL -T190632
Call Armando (650) 630-0424
Painting
BEST RATES
PRO PAINTING
Residential/Commercial
Interior/Exterior, Pressure Washing
Professional/Courteous/Punctual
FREE ESTIMATES
Sean (415)707-9127
seanmcvey@mcveypaint.com
CSL# 752943
CRAIGS PAINTING
Interior & Exterior
Quality Work w/
Reasonable Rates
Free Estimates
(650)553-9653
Lic# 857741
GOLDEN WEST
PAINTING
Since 1975
Interior/Exterior,
Complete Preparation.
Will Beat any
Professional Estimate!
CSL#321586
(415)722-9281
JM PAINTING &
PLUMBING
New Construction,
Remodel & Repair
(415)350-1908
Lic.# C36C33
JON LA MOTTE
PAINTING
Interior & Exterior
Pressure Washing
Free Estimates
(650)368-8861
Lic #514269
Painting
MTP
Painting/Waterproofing
Drywall Repair/Tape/Texture
Power Washing-Decks, Fences
No Job Too Big or Small
Lic.# 896174
Call Mike the Painter
(650)271-1320
Plumbing
$89 TO CLEAN
ANY CLOGGED DRAIN!
Installation of
Trenchless Pipes,
Water Heaters & Faucets
(650) 461-0326
Lic#933572
Remodeling
CORNERSTONE HOME DESIGN
Complete Kitchen & Bath Resource
Showroom: Countertops Cabinets
Plumbing Fixtures Fine Tile
Open M-F 8:30-5:30 SAT 10-4
168 Marco Way
South San Francisco, 94080
(650)866-3222
www.cornerstoneHD.com
CA License #94260
KITCHEN & BATH
REMODELING
50% off cabinets
(manufacturers list price)
CABINET WORLD
1501 Laurel St.
San Carlos
(650)592-8020
Home Improvement
CINNABAR HOME
Making Peninsula homes
more beautiful since 1996
* Home furnishings & accessories
* Drapery & window treatments:
blinds & shades
* Free in-home consultation
853 Industrial Rd. Ste E San Carlos
Wed Sat 12:00- 5:30pm, or by appt.
650-388-8836
www.cinnabarhome.com
Tile
CUBIAS TILE
Marble, Stone & porcelain
Kitchens, bathrooms, floors,
fireplaces, entryways, decks,
tile, ceramic tile
repair, grout repair
Free Estimates Lic.# 955492
Mario Cubias
(650)784-3079
JZ TILE
Installation and Design
Portfolio and References,
Great Prices
Free Estimates
Lic. 670794
Call John Zerille
(650)245-8212
Window Coverings
RUDOLPHS INTERIORS
Satisfying customers with world-
class service and products since
1952. Let us help you create the
home of your dreams. Please
phone for an appointment.
(650)227-4882
Window Fashions
247 California Dr
Burlingame 650-348-1268
990 Industrial Rd Ste 106
San Carlos 650-508-8518
www.rebarts.com
BLINDS, SHADES, SHUTTERS, DRAPERIES
Free estimates Free installation
Window Washing
Notices
NOTICE TO READERS:
California law requires that contractors
taking jobs that total $500 or more (labor
or materials) be licensed by the Contrac-
tors State License Board. State law also
requires that contractors include their li-
cense number in their advertising. You
can check the status of your licensed
contractor at www.cslb.ca.gov or 800-
321-CSLB. Unlicensed contractors taking
jobs that total less than $500 must state
in their advertisements that they are not
licensed by the Contractors State Li-
cense Board.
Attorneys
* BANKRUPTCY *
Huge credit card debt?
Job loss? Foreclosure?
Medical bills?
YOU HAVE OPTIONS
Call for a free consultation
(650)363-2600
This law firm is a debt relief agency
Law Office of
Jason Honaker
BANKRUPTCY
Chapter 7 &13
Call us for a consultation
650-259-9200
www.honakerlegal.com
Beauty
KAYS
HEALTH & BEAUTY
Facials, Waxing, Fitness
Body Fat Reduction
Pure Organic Facial $48.
1 Hillcrest Blvd, Millbrae
(650)697-6868
Business Services
PUT YOUR
BUSINESS INFO
ON THE
INTERNET
FREE
Link the phone number
in your classified ad
directly to online details
about your business
ZypPages.com
Barbara@ZypPages.com
Dental Services
DR. SAMIR NANJAPA DDS
Family Dentistry &
Smile Restoration
UCSF Dentistry Faculty
Cantonese, Mandarin &
Hindi Spoken
650-477-6920
320 N. San Mateo Dr. Ste 2
San Mateo
MILLBRAE SMILE CENTER
Valerie de Leon, DDS
Implant, Cosmetic and
Family Dentistry
Spanish and Tagalog Spoken
(650)697-9000
15 El Camino Real,
MILLBRAE, CA
Food
BROADWAY GRILL
Express Lunch
Special $8.00
1400 Broadway
Burlingame
(650)343-9733
www.bwgrill.com
GOT BEER?
We Do!
Steelhead Brewing Co.
333 California Dr.
Burlingame
(650)344-6050
www.steelheadbrewery.com
SUNSHINE CAFE
Breakfast Lunch Dinner
1750 El Camino Real
San Mateo
(Borel Square)
(650)357-8383
Food
JACKS
RESTAURANT
Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
1050 Admiral Ct., #A
San Bruno
(650)589-2222
JacksRestaurants.com
NEALS COFFEE
SHOP
Breakfast Lunch Dinner
Senior Meals, Kids Menu
www.nealscoffeeshop.com
1845 El Camino Real
Burlingame
(650)692-4281
SUNDAY CHAMPAGNE
BRUNCH
Crowne Plaza
1221 Chess Dr., Hwy. 92 at
Foster City Blvd. Exit
Foster City
(650)570-5700
31 Weekend Nov. 3-4, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
Food
NEW ENGLAND
LOBSTER CO.
Market & Eatery
Now Open in Burlingame
824 Cowan Road
newenglandlobster.net
LIve Lobster ,Lobster Tail,
Lobster meat & Dungeness Crab
THE AMERICAN BULL
BAR & GRILL
19 large screen HD TVs
Full Bar & Restaurant
www.theamericanbull.com
1819 El Camino, in
Burlingame Plaza
(650)652-4908
Financial
RELATIONSHIP BANKING
Partnership. Service. Trust.
UNITED AMERICAN BANK
Half Moon Bay, Redwood City,
Sunnyvale
unitedamericanbank.com
San Mateo
(650)579-1500
Fitness
DOJO USA
World Training Center
Martial Arts & Tae Bo Training
www.dojousa.net
731 Kains Ave, San Bruno
(650)589-9148
Furniture
Bedroom Express
Where Dreams Begin
2833 El Camino Real
San Mateo - (650)458-8881
184 El Camino Real
So. S. Francisco -(650)583-2221
www.bedroomexpress.com
Health & Medical
BACK, LEG PAIN OR
NUMBNESS?
Non-Surgical
Spinal Decompression
Dr. Thomas Ferrigno D.C.
650-231-4754
177 Bovet Rd. #150 San Mateo
BayAreaBackPain.com
Health & Medical
JANET R. STEELE, LMFT
MFC31794
Counseling for relationship
difficulties; chronic illness/
disabilities; trauma/PTSD
Individuals, couples, families,
teens and veterans welcome!
(650)380-4459
Le Juin Day Spa & Clinic
Special Combination Pricing:
Facials, Microdermabrasion,
Waxing , Body Scrubs, Acu-
puncture , Foot & Body Massage
155 E. 5th Avenue
Downtown San Mateo
www.LeJuinDaySpa.com
(650) 347-6668
SLEEP APNEA
We can treat it
without CPAP!
Call for a free
sleep apnea screening
650-583-5880
Millbrae Dental
STRESSED OUT?
IN PAIN?
I CAN HELP YOU
Sessions start from $20
Call 650-235-6761
Will Chen ACUPUNCTURE
12220 6th Ave, Belmont
www. willchenacupuncture.com
TOENAIL FUNGUS?
FREE Consultation for
Laser Treatment
(650)347-0761
Dr. Richard Woo, DPM
400 S. El Camino Real
San Mateo
Home Care
CALIFORNIA HOARDING
REMEDIATION
Free Estimates
Whole House & Office
Cleanup Too!
Serving SF Bay Area
(650)762-8183
Call Karen Now!
Insurance
AANTHEM BLUE
CROSS
www.ericbarrettinsurance.com
Eric L. Barrett,
CLU, RHU, REBC, CLTC, LUTCF
President
Barrett Insurance Services
(650)513-5690
CA. Insurance License #0737226
INSURANCE BY AN ITALIAN
Have a Policy you cant
Refuse!
DOMINICE INSURANCE
AGENCY
Contractor & Truckers
Commercial Business Specialist
Personal Auto - AARP rep.
401K & IRA, Rollovers & Life
(650)871-6511
Joe Dominice
Since 1964
CA Lic.# 0276301
Jewelers
KUPFER JEWELRY
We Buy
Coins, Jewelry,
Watches, Platinum,
& Diamonds.
Expert fine watch
& jewelry repair.
Deal with experts.
1211 Burlingame Ave.
Burlingame
www.kupferjewelry.com
(650) 347-7007
Legal Services
LEGAL
DOCUMENTS PLUS
Non-Attorney document
preparation: Divorce,
Pre-Nup, Adoption, Living Trust,
Conservatorship, Probate,
Notary Public. Response to
Lawsuits: Credit Card
Issues,Breach of Contract
Jeri Blatt, LDA #11
Registered & Bonded
(650)574-2087
legaldocumentsplus.com
"I am not an attorney. I can only
provide self help services at your
specific direction."
Loans
REVERSE MORTGAGE
Are you age 62+ & own your
home?
Call for a free, easy to read
brochure or quote
650-453-3244
Carol Bertocchini, CPA
Marketing
GROW
YOUR SMALL BUSINESS
Get free help from
The Growth Coach
Go to
www.buildandbalance.com
Sign up for the free newsletter
Massage Therapy
ASIAN MASSAGE
$48 per Hour
New Customers Only
For First 20 Visits
Open 7 days, 10 am -10 pm
633 Veterans Blvd., #C
Redwood City
(650)556-9888
ENJOY THE BEST
ASIAN MASSAGE
$40 for 1/2 hour
Angel Spa
667 El Camino Real, Redwood City
(650)363-8806
7 days a week, 9:30am-9:30pm
GRAND OPENING
$45 ONE HOUR
HEALING MASSAGE
2305-A Carlos Street
Moss Beach
(On Hwy 1 next to Post office)
(650)563-9771
GRAND OPENING!
CRYSTAL WAVE SPA
Body & Foot Massage
Facial Treatment
1205 Capuchino Ave.
Burlingame
(650)558-1199
Massage Therapy
SUNFLOWER MASSAGE
Grand Opening!
$10. Off 1-Hour Session!
1482 Laurel St.
San Carlos
(Behind Trader Joes)
Open 7 Days/Week, 10am-10pm
(650)508-8758
TRANQUIL
MASSAGE
951 Old County Road
Suite 1
Belmont
650-654-2829
YOU HAVE IT-
WELL BUY IT
We buy and pawn:
Gold Jewelry
Art Watches
Musical Instrument
Paintings Diamonds
Silverware Electronics
Antique Furniture
Computers TVs Cars
Open 7 days
Buy *Sell*Loan
590 Veterans Blvd.
Redwood City
(650)368-6855
Needlework
LUV2
STITCH.COM
Needlepoint!
Fiesta Shopping Center
747 Bermuda Dr., San Mateo
(650)571-9999
Real Estate Loans
REAL ESTATE LOANS
We Fund Bank Turndowns!
Direct Private Lender
Homes Multi-family
Mixed-Use Commercial
WE BUY TRUST DEED NOTES
FICO Credit Score Not a Factor
PURCHASE, REFINANCE,
CASH OUT
Investors welcome
Loan servicing since 1979
650-348-7191
Wachter Investments, Inc.
Real Estate Broker #746683
Nationwide Mortgage
Licensing System ID #348268
CA Dept. of Real Estate
Real Estate Services
ODOWD ESTATES
Representing Buyers
& Sellers
Commission Negotiable
odowdestates.com
(650)794-9858
Seniors
AFFORDABLE
24-hour Assisted Living
Care located in
Burlingame
Mills Estate Villa
&
Burlingame Villa
- Short Term Stays
- Dementia & Alzheimers
Care
- Hospice Care
(650)692-0600
Lic.#4105088251/
415600633
LASTING IMPRESSIONS
ARE OUR FIRST PRIORITY
Cypress Lawn
1370 El Camino Real
Colma
(650)755-0580
www.cypresslawn.com
LASTING IMPRESSIONS
ARE OUR FIRST PRIORITY
Cypress Lawn
1370 El Camino Real
Colma
(650)755-0580
www.cypresslawn.com
MANUFACTURED
HOME COMMUNITY
For Ages 55+
Canada Cove,
Half Moon Bay
(650) 726-5503
www.theaccenthome.com
Walk to the Beach
STERLING COURT
ACTIVE INDEPENDENT &
ASSISTED LIVING
Tours 10AM-4PM
2 BR,1BR & Studio
Luxury Rental
650-344-8200
850 N. El Camino Real San Mateo
sterlingcourt.com
32 Weekend Nov. 3-4, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
Coins Dental Jewelry Silver Watches Diamonds
1Z11 80fll808M0 90 0J400
Expert Fine Watch
& Jewelry Repair
Not afliated with any watch company.
Only Authentic ROLEX Factory Parts Are Used
t%FBMWJUI&YQFSUTt2VJDL4FSWJDF
t6OFRVBM$VTUPNFS$BSF
XXX#FTU3BUFE(PME#VZFSTDPN
Tuesday - Saturday
11:00am to 4:00pm
www.BestRatedGoldBuyers.com
KUPFER JEWELRYsBURLINGAME
(650) 347-7007
ROLEX SERVICE
OR REPAIR
MUST PRESENT COUPON.
EXPIRES 11/30/12
WEBUY
$0
OFF ANY
$0
OFF ANY

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