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Monday Oct. 20, 2014 Vol XV, Edition 55
FOCUSED ON EBOLA
STATE/NATION PAGE 6
SERRA TOPS
ARCHRIVAL
SPORTS PAGE 11
FURY TAKES TOP
BOX OFFICE SPOT
DATEBOOK PAGE 19
OBAMAS MANAGEMENT QUESTIONED, SWITCHES GEARS TO
CONFRONT HEALTH CRISIS
By Michelle Durand
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
Smoking inside apartments and
condominiums in the unincorpo-
rated areas of San Mateo County
would become a thing of the past
under a proposed ban coming
before the Board of Supervisors
Tuesday.
Twin proposals by supervisors
Carole Groom and Adrienne Tissier
will first amend the definitions of
smoking and tobacco product
to include electronic devices and
then add a section to county code
prohibiting smoking of all types
in and around multi-unit resi-
dences.
The proposal would only affect
County rules
target e-cigs
and smoking
By Samantha Weigel
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
A real estate firm seeking to
redevelop the blighted Avalon
Motel in San Mateo is moving
forward with plans to construct
townhomes prior to purchasing
the site.
City Ventures turned in a formal
application to the citys Planning
Division in September proposing
to construct 46 townhomes, each
with an attached two-car garage, at
the two-acre lot at 220 N.
Bayshore Blvd.
The plans are preliminary, but
the townhomes will be for sale and
likely made up of two- and three-
bedroom units, said Andrew
Warner, City Ventures director of
development.
Although the company is still
in negotiations with the proper-
tys current owner, its seeking
city approval of its proposal prior
to executing a purchase, Warner
said.
Weve got a pretty long
process in front of us, well con-
tinue to work on the design both
with the city and the community,
which is how we like to do it,
Warner said. Definitely in devel-
opment its pretty standard to
have a contract in place but not to
purchase land until entitlements
are secured.
Warner wouldnt discuss the pur-
chase price, but the asking price
was reported to be $8. 5 million in
August 2013.
The North Shoreview neighbor-
hood site is deteriorating and
police are no strangers receiving
calls at the motel, said Stacey
Townhomes proposed for blighted motel site
Board of Supervisors consider complete ban
for unincorporated area multi-unit buildings
City Ventures returns with plans for San Mateos Avalon Motel
DAILY JOURNAL FILE PHOTO
The Avalon Motel at 220 N. Bayshore Blvd. in San Mateo.
By Angela Swartz
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
In an effort to beautify its downtown, the
South San Francisco City Council is setting
into the motion plans to create a more
vibrant, transit-supportive, diverse down-
town, while protecting and celebrating the
historic nature of the area.
The city released in July a draft of the
Downtown Station Area Land Use Plan,
which is a guide to developing properties
within the half mile area of the citys
Caltrain station over the next 20 years. It
South City begins downtown revamp
ANGELA SWARTZ/DAILY JOURNAL
The citys change of the Downtown Station Area Land Use Plan includes more connectivity between each side
of Highway 101.
Street work underway, plans to be solidified in 2015
Carole
Groom
Adrienne
Tissier
ANGELA SWARTZ/DAILY JOURNAL
Luis Campos, owner of Lonora Jewelry and Watch Repair, said
he is looking forward to the citys plan to overhaul downtown.
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF REPORT
A $12. 5 million plan to reno-
vate Middlefield Road a main
county thoroughfare cutting
through North Fair Oaks is fac-
ing a final hurdle Tuesday when the
Board of Supervisors is set to vote
on the recommended redesign.
The board is expected to give the
favored blueprint its thumbs up
and direct staff to take the next
step in designs and ultimately bid-
ding out the project.
The proposal calls for convert-
ing Middlefield Road into three
lanes of traffic with bike lanes and
parallel parking between Pacific
and Fifth avenues. The goal is a
commercial corridor that is walka-
Middlefield Road makeover
nearly set for final approval
See AVALON, Page 22
See E-CIGS, Page 31
See ROAD, Page 31
See REVAMP, Page 23
Puppy found during
Massachusetts drug bust
LAWRENCE, Mass. Police search-
ing the pockets of a suspected drug
dealer in Lawrence, Massachusetts, got
an unusual surprise.
An officer pulled out a tiny three-
week-old pit bull puppy and handed it
over to animal control.
The little dog was separated from its
mother too soon and got sick and
dehydrated, but is now recovering at
BluePearl Veterinary Partners in
Waltham.
Veterinarian Kristina DePaula esti-
mates the dog is no more than three or
four weeks old.
The puppy, dubbed Pocket, of
course, should be ready for adoption
within a few weeks.
Homes found for 24
Salem bearded dragons
SALEM, Ore. A Salem woman
says an outpouring of support from all
over the country will save 24 bearded
dragons she has to move or face evic-
tion from her mobile home park.
The Statesman Journal reports rep-
tile rescuer Sherrie Baldwin is giving
away her pet lizards this week only
requiring the new owners provide vet-
erinary care.
Baldwin made news in August when
she gave one her bearded dragons CPR
after she found it floating in its small
pool. That got the attention of her
landlord who threatened to evict her
from the Sunset Village Mobile Park.
But, news coverage had people lining
up and calling to help take the scaly
reptiles off her hands.
Michigan funeral home
provides drive-thru option
SAGINAW, Mich. Only a couple
of families have taken advantage of a
new service available at a Saginaw
funeral home.
Drive-thru viewings.
Paradise Funeral Chapel recently
started offering the option, which
allows mourners to pay their last
respects on the go. It was designed in
part to cater to those with physical
limitations.
The funeral homes president, Ivan
Phillips, says he expects more cus-
tomers to opt for the drive-thru once
they learn its not a gimmick and is
safe to use.
Curtains covering the window open
when sensors underneath the pave-
ment recognize the presence of a car.
Mourners then get three minutes to
view the body as music plays.
Phillips says drive-thru viewings
are set up so they dont conflict with
traditional indoor viewings.
Man accused of stealing restaurants
plumbing
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. Police
say theyve flushed out a man accused
of stealing the handles and pipes of
toilets in parks and restaurant rest-
rooms around a Florida city.
St. Petersburg police said Friday
that they arrested a 28-year-old home-
less man. He is accused of stealing the
plumbing from Cracker Barrel, Burger
King, Bob Evans and other restau-
rants. Police released a photo of a pile
of metal toilet parts that they say
Brian Rinda stole.
Police say Rinda caused about
$1, 000 in damage and traded the brass
valve and piping at a county recycling
center.
Rinda was charged with eight counts
of grand theft and 1 count of petit
theft.
Rinda is being held at county jail on
$20, 000 bail. Its unclear whether he
retained an attorney.
Maui birthday invite
washes ashore in California
PISMO BEACH A Central
California beach outing has turned
into a mystery after a bottle turned up
with an invitation to a party in Hawaii
- four years ago.
David Wilson of Nipomo says he
and his family went to Shell Beach on
Sunday to fish but it was too rough.
Wilson lost his sandal to a wave, but
it brought him something else. While
feeling for the shoe, he found a plastic
bottle sealed with a cork. Inside was a
tattered piece of paper dated 2010 from
Maui. It appears to be a hand-written
invitation to a birthday party from a
little girl named Safina. Her mothers
name is Kim and their last name may
be Woodstocker.
FOR THE RECORD 2 Monday Oct. 20, 2014 THE DAILY JOURNAL
The San Mateo Daily Journal
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Rapper Snoop
Lion is 43.
This Day in History
Thought for the Day
1944
During World War II, Gen. Douglas
MacArthur stepped ashore at in the
Philippines, 2 1/2 years after saying,
I shall return. The cities of Belgrade
and Dubrovnik were liberated by
Russian and Yugoslav troops. The
Guatemala Revolution took place as
student and military leaders overthrew
the military dictatorship. A series of
gas storage tank explosions and fires
in Cleveland killed 130 people.
Being a politician is a poor profession.
Being a public servant is a noble one.
President Herbert C. Hoover (1874-1964).
Singer Tom Petty
is 64.
Actor John
Krasinski is 35.
Birthdays
SAMANTHA WEIGEL/DAILY JOURNAL
Children dressed in traditional Mexican costumes commemorating Dia de los Muertos parade through downtown
Half Moon Bay during the 41st annual Pumpkin Festival Saturday, Oct. 18.
Mo nday : Cloudy. A chance of rain.
Highs in the mid 60s. South winds 5 to 10
mph.
Monday ni ght: Mostly cloudy. A slight
chance of showers in the evening. Lows
in the mid 50s. West winds around 10
mph. Chance of showers 20 percent.
Tues day: Partly cloudy in the morning
then becoming sunny. Highs in the lower 60s. Northwest
winds around 5 mph.
Tues day ni gh: Mostly clear in the evening then becom-
ing partly cloudy. Lows in the mid 50s.
Wednes day through Fri day: Partly cloudy. Highs in the
upper 60s. Lows in the upper 50s.
Fri day ni ght and Saturday: Mostly cloudy. Lows in the
upper 50s. Highs in the upper 60s.
Local Weather Forecast
In 1714, the coronation of Britains King George I took
place in Westminster Abbey.
In 1803, the U. S. Senate ratified the Louisiana Purchase.
In 1914, Stay Down Here Where You Belong, an antiwar
song by Irving Berlin, was published by Waterson, Berlin &
Snyder Co. in New York.
In 1936, Helen Kellers teacher, Anne Sullivan Macy, died
in Forest Hills, New York, at age 70.
In 1947, the House Un-American Activities Committee
opened hearings into alleged Communist influence and
infiltration in the U. S. motion picture industry.
In 1964, the 31st president of the United States, Herbert C.
Hoover, died in New York at age 90.
In 1 9 6 7 , seven men were convicted in Meridian,
Mississippi, of violating the civil rights of three slain civil
rights workers.
In 1968, former first lady Jacqueline Kennedy married
Greek shipping magnate Aristotle Onassis.
In 1973, in the so-called Saturday Night Massacre, spe-
cial Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox was dismissed and
Attorney General Elliot L. Richardson and Deputy Attorney
General William B. Ruckelshaus resigned.
In 1981, a bungled armored truck robbery carried out by
members of radical groups in Nanuet, New York, left a guard
and two police officers dead.
In 1994, actor Burt Lancaster died in Los Angeles at age 80.
In other news ...
(Answers tomorrow)
FAULT NINTH WEIGHT DISMAY
Saturdays
Jumbles:
Answer: When the plane hit turbulence, everything
WENT FLYING
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.
TARFD
FYCAN
YIELLK
HURCOS
2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
All Rights Reserved.
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Answer
here:
Actor William Christopher is 82. Japans Empress Michiko
is 80. Rockabilly singer Wanda Jackson is 77. Former actress
Rev. Mother Dolores Hart is 76. Actor William Rusty Russ
is 64. Actress Melanie Mayron is 62. Retired MLB All-Star
Keith Hernandez is 61. Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., is
59. Movie director Danny Boyle is 58. Former Labor
Secretary Hilda Solis is 57. Actor Viggo Mortensen is 56.
Rock musician Jim Sonefeld (Hootie & The Blowfish) is 50.
Rock musician David Ryan is 50. Rock musician Doug
Eldridge (Oleander) is 47. Political commentator and blogger
Michelle Malkin is 44. Actor Kenneth Choi is 43.
Lotto
The Daily Derby race winners are Whirl Win No.
6,in rst place; California Classic,No.5,in second
place; and Lucky Charms, No. 12, in third place.
The race time was clocked at 1:47.55.
3 2 0
21 31 43 56 60 12
Mega number
Oct. 17 Mega Millions
20 26 27 36 54 19
Powerball
Oct. 18 Powerball
9 18 32 37 39
Fantasy Five
Daily three midday
1 5 5 7
Daily Four
4 7 3
Daily three evening
9 12 15 23 40 16
Mega number
Oct. 18 Super Lotto Plus
3
Monday Oct. 20, 2014 THE DAILY JOURNAL
LOCAL
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EVERSE
R
MILLBRAE
DUI. A woman was cited for driving under
t he i nfl uence at Hi ghway 101 and
Broadway before 12:15 a. m. Thursday,
Oct. 16.
Burg l ary . A car window was smashed
and the vehicle burglarized before 6:42
a. m. Wednesday, Oct. 15.
Drug s . A man was cited from driving
with a suspended license and possession
of mari j uana on El Cami no Real and
Crystal Springs Road before 2:45 a. m.
Wednesday, Oct. 15.
Bat t ery . A person committed battery on
the 100 block of Starlight Drive before
7:18 a. m. Tuesday, Oct. 14.
FOSTER CITY
Fraud. A man requested police after he
lost $5, 000 from a telephone scam on De
Soto Lane before 6:27 p. m. Thursday,
Oct. 16.
Di s t urbance. A driver and a bicyclist
who al most col l i ded wi t h t he vehi cl e
were i n an al t ercat i on at Edgewat er
Boulevard and Baffin Street before 4:56
p. m. Thursday, Oct. 16.
Po s s es s i o n. A man was arrest ed for
being in possession of brass knuckles on
Third Avenue before 12:40 a. m. Thursday,
Oct. 16.
Police reports
Who let the dog out?
A woman was seen usi ng a mi ni
bul l horn t o bark at peopl e at
Vet erans Boul evard and Whi ppl e
Avenue i n Redwood Ci t y before
5: 36 p. m. Thursday, Oct . 16.
T
o the west of the County Road (El
Camino Real, Highway 101), the
1868 Plat map shows almost all of
what is present day San Bruno was owned
by D. O. Mills, A. I. Easton, J. Cabannes,
P. R. Dupuy and Paula Valencia.
D. O. Mi l l s and A. I. East on (Mi l l s
brother-in-law) owned almost all of the
property from about Capuchino Drive (to
the south) in present Millbrae to Sneath
Lane (t o t he nort h) and t o Skyl i ne
Boul evard (t o t he west ). James Worn
owned the 30 acres of the Original Uncle
Toms Cabin roadhouse and property and
Paul a Val enca (hei r of Jose Ant oni o
Sanchez III of Rancho Buri Buri) owned
84. 2 acres of what was to become office
buildings and apartments (in 1970s) and
Navy-Federal Archives facilities.
The J. Cabannes/ P. R. Dupuy l and
(1, 189. 22 acres acquired by R. Sneath in
1875) is best known as the Sneath Jersey
Dairy farm. D. O. Mills and A. I. Easton
kept ownership of almost all of their land
holdings up into the 1940s, utilizing the
land for cattle grazing. Only San Brunos
Fourth Addition, Huntington Park, and
Hunt i ngt on Park #1 and #2 made any
inroads into the Mills-Easton lands. The
Easton family was developing their land
for housing in Burlingame in the early
1900s. Cows roamed the land and flower
growers rented land for flower growing in
the early 1900s.
A rumor in the early 1940s began circulat-
ing that a developer was trying to acquire
the Mills land west of the 1940 City Hall on
El Camino Real.
In March 1940, the city of San Bruno was
considering the purchase of land across El
Camino Real for a new city hall site (Angus-
Linden area) and there was talk of extending
San Bruno Avenue to Junipero Serra
Boulevard, and Elm Avenue to San Bruno
Avenue.
The key to developing the western sec-
tion of San Bruno had to be roads into the
area. Without roads, construction could not
occur. In the 1940s, two roads led to
Skyline Boulevard Sneath Lane and
Crystal Springs Road. In the late 40s, San
Bruno Avenue was extended from El Camino
Real to Elm Avenue. In March 1951, the city
wanted to extend San Bruno Avenue to the
west but had to remove 21 Quonset huts
at Homoji Navy Housing (Bayhill
Shopping Center area to Hickey Avenue)
that were built in 1944-45. In August 1952,
San Bruno was extended to Acacia Avenue.
In January of 1952, Junipero Serra
Boulevard to Crystal Springs Road was
being worked on. In 1952, the Navy
removed the Quonset huts on San Bruno
Avenue. In January 1954, San Bruno Avenue
to Junipero Serra Boulevard was opened.
In 1940, the population of San Bruno was
6, 445 a 79 percent increase over the
1930 population. On Dec. 6, 1940, plans
were submitted by George W. Williams to
the San Bruno City Council for develop-
ment of 50-foot-by-100-foot lots in what
was to be called the Mills Park Additions. A
ve-acre area was to be set aside for future
development of a New Edgemont School.
Rigid controls and standards for the type of
home development were imposed, some-
thing new in San Bruno.
On Feb. 21, 1941, ve acres of land were
purchased from Williams for site of New
Mills Addition in San Bruno
AUTHORS COLLECTION
In 1947, the Mills Addition (to the left) was being developed and the Crestmoor
Addition (right) was next for development. Notice the barracks where Bayhill Shop-
ping Center is now.
See HISTORY, Page 23
4
Monday Oct. 20, 2014 THE DAILY JOURNAL
LOCAL
Call Bridget Kelly for a tour today!
Apparent suicide at Central Park
San Mateo police are investigat-
ing an apparent suicide in Central
Park Saturday. A single gunshot
was heard around 10 a. m. near the
baseball field on El Camino Real,
according to police.
When police responded, they
found an apparent male suicide
victim who was dead on arrival.
The San Mat eo Count y
Coroners office is continuing to
investigate the case.
Earthquakes in Santa Clara,
Monterey, Humboldt counties
Two earthquakes shook parts of
Santa Clara and Monterey counties
along the San Andreas Fault on
Saturday and a stronger one hit
Sunday morning next to the fault
in Humboldt County, according to
the U. S. Geological Survey.
A 2. 6-magnitude quake was
recorded at 8:16 a. m. Saturday in
unincorporated Santa Clara
County about 4 miles east of the
east foothills outside San Jose and
at a depth of 4. 3 miles, the USGS
reported.
At 3:21 p. m. Saturday, another
2. 6-magnitude temblor happened
approximately 15 miles southeast
of Soledad in Monterey County,
around 2 miles below ground.
Then at 7:24 a. m. Sunday, the
USGS reported a quake with a larg-
er magnitude of 4. 2 about 20 miles
southwest of Rio Dell in Humboldt
County, a city around 245 miles
north of San Francisco.
BAY CITY NEWS
San Mateo and Marin counties
had the lowest unemployment
rates in the Bay Area in September
and the regions counties all had
levels lower than the average for
California, state officials reported
Friday.
Marins unemployed made up
only 3.9 percent of its workforce of
145, 800 people and San Mateo
boasted of just 4.1 percent of its
414,000-person labor pool without
jobs, according to the state
Employment Development
Department.
San Francisco and Napa counties
had relatively low jobless rates of
4.4 percent each, with workforces
of 499, 400 and 80, 900, respec-
tively.
In the rest of the Bay Area, Santa
Clara County had the next lowest
rate at 5.2 percent and a workforce
of 945,700 people, the regions
largest.
Contra Costa County had a rate of
5. 7 percent among its 543, 900
combined workers and jobless, as
did Alameda County with its pool of
789,800 persons.
In Santa Cruz County, 6.2 percent
of its labor pool of 150,900 people
were jobseekers.
Solano County had 6.3 percent of
its 219,100 workforce without jobs
and Monterey Countys rate was 6.5
percent of its pool of 225,000 with-
out work.
Californias unemployment rate
dipped to 7.3 percent in September,
compared to 8. 8 percent for
September 2013, with the number
of jobs increasing by 297,000 dur-
ing the year to 17.3 million people
employed, state officials said.
The jobless rate for the United
States in September was 5.9 percent,
also down from the month last year,
officials reported.
San Mateo, Marin counties had Bay
Areas lowest jobless rates last month
Local briefs
5
Monday Oct. 20, 2014 THE DAILY JOURNAL
STATE
By Juliet Williams
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SACRAMENTO Jerry Brown
is on the verge of doing what no
one has ever done in California
and what no one may ever do
again: get elected to a fourth term
as governor.
After sidelining opponents and
steadying the states finances, the
quirky 76-year-old Democrat is
looking to put his stamp on the
states water and transportation
infrastructure and playing states-
man on global climate change,
recently addressing a UN Climate
Change conference.
Browns relative success at
wresting control of the states
once-massive budget deficit and
his skill at distancing himself
from political controversies have
helped him eclipse his 1970s rep-
utation as the moonbeam gover-
nor. His reemergence has even
fueled speculation that he might
make a fourth run for president
against the unannounced front-
runner, Hillary Rodham Clinton.
When asked about the possibili-
ty Friday, Brown told The
Associated Press theres a lot of
speculation and Im not here to
comment on speculation.
Few in California think its
likely, partly because he is still
working to secure a legacy as gov-
ernor that is at least equal to that
of his father, a former governor
who built the states water system
that is now in need of an overhaul
amid Californias historic
drought.
Jerry Brown is a serial achiev-
er who has an unconventional
political style and is unconcerned
with pretense, said Darrell
Steinberg, outgoing leader of the
state Senate and a fellow Democrat
who has worked with Brown on all
his major policy issues over the
past four years.
You dont sit down at sort of a
formal negotiating table,
Steinberg said. The conversa-
tions are much more iterative and
theres less formality. It took me a
little bit to get used to.
Brown has already done one
thing his father never did win a
third term as governor. And he told
reporters after voting in June that
he is cognizant of the historic
nature of his quest for a fourth.
Voters imposed a two-term limit
for governors after Brown held the
office from 1975-1983.
Browns November challenger,
former U. S. Treasury official Neel
Kashkari, is a first-time candidate
who helped lead the federal bank
bailout at the height of the reces-
sion. Polls in overwhelmingly
Democratic California show
Brown leading Kashkari by 15 to
21 percentage points, and Brown
has outpaced him in fundraising
about 30-to-1.
Brown has also learned from
past mistakes and built relation-
ships with lawmakers from both
part i es. Republ i cans nearl y
unanimously endorsed his water
bond proposal and GOP leaders
have praised his fiscal restraint.
Many peopl e credi t Browns
softened tone to his wife of nine
years, Anne Gust Brown, a polit-
i cal l y ast ut e former corporat e
attorney for Gap Inc.
She has burnished the rough
edges, t he bi t t erness, sai d
Sherry Bebi t ch-Jeffe, a seni or
political science fellow at the
Uni versi t y of Sout hern
California. He knew everything
the first time around. If he still
believes that, he doesnt show it
quite as much.
She said Brown is now doing
what he likes to do and enjoys
havi ng a bul l y pul pi t out si de
California when he wants it.
Brown uses that pulpit on his
terms. He rarely holds news con-
ferences and prefers to handle
pol i t i cal feuds behi nd cl osed
doors. His ability to fly below
the radar as California emerges
from the recession has won him a
rel at i vel y hi gh 55 percent
approval rat i ng among l i kel y
voters.
I dont t hi nk you coul d
describe him as a governor whos
gone out of his way to create a
hi gh profi l e for hi msel f, but
when he does look for opportuni-
ties to connect with the public, it
t ends t o be around i ssues i n
which theres been some biparti-
san support , sai d Mark
Bal dassare, presi dent of t he
Publ i c Pol i cy Inst i t ut e of
California, which conducted the
polling.
Brown pursues lasting policy legacy
REUTERS
Gov. Jerry Brown announces emergency drought legislation at the CalOES State Operations Center in Mather in
this file photo.
6
Monday Oct. 20, 2014 THE DAILY JOURNAL
STATE/NATION
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By Jim Kuhnhenn
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON President
Barack Obama delayed acting on
immigration and an attorney gener-
al nomination this fall to dodge the
politics of the midterm campaign
season. But there was one topic he
could not push aside Ebola.
The past weeks jarring Ebola
developments have put a spot-
light on the presidents manage-
ment skills just as he was earning
praise for acting militarily
against Islamic militants.
In recent months, Obama caught
criticism for going golfing imme-
diately after speaking about the
beheading of an American, and for
attending a fundraiser after an air-
liner was shot down in Ukraine.
This time, as the Ebola threat hit
home in America, the president
suddenly cleared his schedule, can-
celing travel and appearances to
consult with Cabinet members and
talk with world leaders about how
to contain the epidemic.
By Friday, he had named a point
man for the U. S. response just as
the clamor for an Ebola czar was
nearing fever pitch.
They are resisting their usual
impulse to hunker down and wait it
out, said Jim Manley, a former
top aide to Senate Democratic
Leader Harry Reid who has in the
past consulted with the White
House. This time theyve decided
to switch gears if only because it
hasnt worked in the past.
The week began with the news
that a nurse in Dallas had become
the first known case of Ebola
being transmitted within the
United States. By weeks end, a
second nurse had been diagnosed,
and the hunt for possible expo-
sures expanded from Texas to
Ohio, from multiple domestic air-
line flights to a cruise ship denied
a port-of-call in the Caribbean.
White House officials say the
presidents approach this time
reflected the unfolding, real-time
developments that needed ongo-
ing decisions to help reassure an
increasingly alarmed public.
Seeing the issue spiral, White
House press secretary Josh
Earnest acknowledged shortcom-
ings in the federal response and
Obama himself had to call on his
government to react in a much
more aggressive way.
Still, that didnt stop the second
guessing, even within his party.
Im greatly concerned . . . that
the administration did not act fast
enough responding in Texas,
Rep. Bruce Braley, an Iowa
Democrat in a tight Senate con-
test, said during a congressional
hearing on Ebola.
At the same time, the crisis
seemed to narrow to a single polit-
ical point of debate: Should the
U. S. impose a travel or visa ban
on people from the three West
African nations bearing the brunt
of the epidemic.
Obama said he was not philo-
sophically opposed to the idea,
but that in practice it would be
counterproductive, driving travel-
ers underground and hindering
screening of potential Ebola carri-
ers. Still, polls showed the idea
had popular appeal.
Republican Senate candidates
began challenging their oppo-
nents to take a stand. And on
Friday, Democratic Sen. Kay Hagan
of North Carolina issued her own
call for a temporary travel ban.
Obamas appointment of Ron
Klain, Vice President Joe Bidens
former chief of staff, as the admin-
istrations Ebola point man drew
its own round of partisan criti-
cism. Several Republicans com-
plained that the lawyer and
Democratic insider had no public
health experience.
Three weeks before an Election
Day, and Republicans are seeking
to score political points? Stop the
presses! Earnest said dismissive-
ly of the critics.
Still, the weeks developments
had been disturbing.
The Liberian man who died in
Dallas from Ebola after traveling
to the U. S. had infected two nurs-
es, one of whom flew to Ohio and
back before being diagnosed with
the disease. Officials could not
explain how the nurses became
exposed, and the list of potential
contacts with the second nurse
grew after officials discovered she
may have had symptoms before
traveling.
Obama switches gears, confronting Ebola head on
REUTERS
U.S. President Barack Obama speaks next to Director of the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention Dr. Thomas Frieden after meeting with
his team coordinating the governments Ebola response in the Oval Office
of the White House in Washington D.C.
Baby dolphin born at
SeaWorld San Diego
SAN DIEGO A dolphin at
SeaWorld San Diego has given
birth to a 40-pound bundle of joy.
The water park says a 13-year-
old bottlenose dolphin named
Sadie gave birth Saturday after-
noon to her second calf.
Experts havent determined the
sex of the calf but the park says
mother and baby are swimming
together and bonding.
Theyre in good health but train-
ers and veterinarians will monitor
the pair around the clock.
Sadie also has a calf that was
born in 2009.
The new arrival is the parks 80th
successful dolphin birth.
Bay Area man charged in
Oregon girls disappearance
MARTINEZ Federal authori-
ties say the San Francisco Bay Area
man accused of bringing a 14-year-
old girl he met online back to his
home had traveled to Oregon with
his daughter to pick her up.
The Contra Costa Times reports
that 41-year-old Blake Robert
Johnston, of Martinez, appeared in
court on Friday. He has been
charged in U.S. District Court in
Oakland with traveling with the
intent to engage in illicit sexual
conduct.
Authorities say the girl faked
her sui ci de before Johnst on
pi cked her up from Sal em,
Oregon this week. Johnston was
al l egedl y accompani ed on t he
trip by his underage daughter.
Authorities say he and the girl
also met earlier in the month and
had a sexual encounter.
Police have said Johnston was
found with the girl at his home. She
has been reunited with her family.
Its not known whether Johnston
has an attorney.
Lottery sales top
$5B for first time
SACRAMENTO California
Lottery officials say they have had
a winning year with annual ticket
sales surpassing $5 billion for the
first time in the state lotterys 30-
year history.
Acting Lottery Director Paula
LaBrie reported Friday that lottery
sales increased by $588 million, a
little more than 13 percent, during
the fiscal year that ended in June.
She attributed the growth partly to
Californians clamoring to win big
jackpots that had built up in the
Mega Millions and newly intro-
duced Powerball games.
Despite the long odds of winning
the lottery, the agency says nearly
$22 million in winnings went
unclaimed.
The state controller announced
earlier this month that more than
$1.3 billion of the lotterys pro-
ceeds went to schools, colleges and
state educational agencies.
Lottery ticket sales have gone up
in California in each of the last five
fiscal years.
Man crossing U.S. to honor
9/11 victims nearly done
POMONA A San Diego man
who has been crossing the country
for seven years collecting signa-
tures honoring victims of the Sept.
11 attacks says hes finally in the
home stretch.
The San Gabriel Valley Tribune
reported Sunday that Armand Young
has more than 600,000 signatures.
Young, recognizable by the raft
of American flags he carries with
him, says he hopes to get last few
hundred thousand after he hits Los
Angeles later this week.
Then its on to Santa Monica,
where he began his trek across the
country and back seven years ago.
Hes had to periodically interrupt it
to return to work.
Around the state
NATION/WORLD 7
Monday Oct. 20, 2014 THE DAILY JOURNAL
By Brock Vergakis
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. After finding
remains that could be University of Virginia
student Hannah Graham, authorities inter-
viewed nearby residents and picked through
leaves on the side of a sparsely populated
highway, searching for any clues or evidence.
Forensic tests were needed to confirm
whether the remains match the 18-year-old
Graham. They were discovered by a deputy
Saturday in a heavily wooded area of
Albemarle County that is home to horse
farms about 12 miles from campus. Graham
disappeared Sept. 13 after a night out with
friends.
Her parent s were not i fi ed t hat t he
remains were found, Charlottesville Police
Chi ef Ti mot hy Longo sai d. It wasnt
immediately clear Sunday how long it
woul d t ake for t hem t o be i dent i fi ed.
Investigators also wouldnt say if they had
found anything else.
The last person seen with Graham, 32-
year-old Jesse Leroy Matthew Jr. , has been
charged with abduction with intent to defile
Graham. He is being held
in the Albemarle-
Charlottesville Regional
Jail. A preliminary hear-
ing is set for Dec. 4.
The remains were dis-
covered roughly 6 miles
from where the body of
20-year-old Virginia
Tech student Morgan
Harrington was found
three months after she
vanished in 2009.
Police have said forensic evidence con-
nects Matthew to Harringtons killing,
which in turn is linked by DNA to a 2005
sexual assault in northern Virginia. Matthew
hasnt been charged in those cases.
Albemarle County Police Department
spokesman Carter Johnson said Sunday no
additional information regarding the inves-
tigation was available.
Graham met friends at a restaurant for din-
ner Sept. 12 before stopping by two off-cam-
pus parties. She left the second party alone
and eventually texted a friend saying she was
lost, authorities said.
In surveillance video,
she can be seen walking
unsteadily and even run-
ning at times, past a pub
and a service station and
then onto a seven-block
strip of bars, restaurants
and shops. On Sunday,
the area was buzzing
with people having
brunch at outdoor cafes
on a brisk, sunny day. Grahams disappear-
ance and the discovery of human remains
was a frequent topic of conversation.
Its constant. Its everywhere. Its part of
the zeitgeist of the community because of
this just profound sense of loss and shock
and horror. I mean its on everybodys lips
wherever I go - lunch, dinner, in the streets,
said Robert Robl, a Charlottesville resident
who was having brunch.
Many people said they hoped the identifi-
cation of the remains brings closure to
Grahams friends and family.
Everybody was rattled. Everybody knew
it was coming, but you
still hope for the best.
As much as you can pre-
pare for it, you can never
prepare for it, said
Claire Meyers, a
University of Virginia
nursing student who has
friends who knew
Graham and Matthew.
Matthew was an oper-
ating room technician at
the universitys hospital, where Meyers
works as a patient care assistant.
Albemarle County resident Bill Gnas, a
retiree who lives a few miles from where the
remains were found, said helicopters flew
overhead Sunday morning and there had been
a constant police presence in the area for 24
hours. When he saw police blocking off a
road on Saturday, he suspected the worst.
Truly, I was saddened by it. After three or
four days you had to anticipate it was going
to be another Harrington event where they
were going to find the body, and the only
thing you could hope for at that point was
that there be some closure for the parents
that it was in fact discovered, he said.
Police hunt for clues near where Va. remains found
Jesse Leroy
Matthew Jr.
Hannah
Graham
Morgan
Harrington
By David Rising,
Randy Herschaft and Richard Lardner
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
OSIJEK, Croatia Former Auschwitz
guard Jakob Denzinger lived the American
dream.
His plastics company in the Rust Belt
town of Akron, Ohio, thrived. By the late
1980s, he had acquired the trappings of suc-
cess: a Cadillac DeVille and a Lincoln Town
Car, a lakefront home, investments in oil
and real estate.
Then the Nazi hunters showed up.
In 1989, as the U. S. government pre-
pared to strip him of his citizenship,
Denzinger packed a pair of suitcases and
fled to Germany. Denzinger later settled in
this pleasant town on the Drava River,
where he lives comfortably, courtesy of
U. S. taxpayers. He collects a Social
Security payment of about $1, 500 each
month, nearly twice the take-home pay of
an average Croatian worker.
Denzinger, 90, is among dozens of sus-
pected Nazi war criminals and SS guards
who collected millions of dollars in Social
Security payments after being forced out of
the United States, an Associated Press
investigation found.
The payments flowed through a legal
loophole that has given the U. S. Justice
Department leverage to persuade Nazi sus-
pects to leave. If they agreed to go, or sim-
ply fled before deportation, they could keep
their Social Security, according to inter-
views and internal government records.
Like Denzinger, many lied about their
Nazi pasts to get into the U. S. following
World War II, and eventually became
American citizens.
Among those who benefited:
armed SS troops who guarded the Nazi
network of camps where millions of Jews
perished.
an SS guard who took part in the brutal
liquidation of the Warsaw ghetto in Nazi-
occupied Poland that killed as many as
13, 000 Jews.
a Nazi collaborator who engineered the
arrest and execution of thousands of Jews in
Poland.
a German rocket scientist accused of
using slave labor to build the V-2 rocket
that pummeled London. He later won
NASAs highest honor for helping to put a
man on the moon.
The APs findings are the result of more
than two years of interviews, research and
analysis of records obtained through the
Freedom of Information Act and other
sources.
The Justice Department denied using
Social Security payments as a tool for
removing Nazi suspects. But records show
the U. S. State Department and the Social
Security Administration voiced grave con-
cerns over the methods used by the Justice
Departments Nazi-hunting unit, the Office
of Special Investigations.
State officials derogatorily called the
practice Nazi dumping and claimed the
OSI was bargaining with suspects so they
would leave voluntarily.
Expelled Nazis
paid millions in
Social Security
WORLD 8
Monday Oct. 20, 2014 THE DAILY JOURNAL
By Nicole Winfield
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
VATICAN CITY Pope Francis
on Sunday beatified Pope Paul VI,
concluding the remarkable meet-
ing of bishops debating family
issues that drew parallels to the
tumultuous reforms of the Second
Vatican Council which Paul over-
saw and implemented.
Emeritus Pope Benedict XVI was
on hand for the Mass, which took
place just hours after Catholic bish-
ops approved a document charting a
more pastoral approach to minis-
tering to Catholic families.
They failed to reach consensus
on the two most divisive issues at
the synod: on welcoming gays and
divorced and civilly remarried cou-
ples. But the issues remain up for
discussion ahead of another meet-
ing of bishops next year.
While the synod scrapped its
ground-breaking welcome and
showed deep divisions on hot-but-
ton issues, the fact that the ques-
tions are on the table is signifi-
cant given that they had been
taboo until Francis papacy.
God is not afraid of new
things! Francis exclaimed in his
homily Sunday. That is why he is
continually surprising us, open-
ing our hearts and guiding us in
unexpected ways.
He quoted Paul himself as saying
the church, particularly the synod
of bishops which Paul estab-
lished, must survey the signs of
the times to make sure the church
adapts methods to respond to the
growing needs of our time and the
changing conditions of society.
Paul was elected in 1963 to succeed
the popular Pope John XXIII, and
during his 15-year reign was respon-
sible for implementing the reforms
of Vatican II and charting the church
through the tumultuous years of the
1960s sexual revolution.
Vatican II opened the way for
Mass to be said in local languages
instead of in Latin, called for
greater involvement of the laity in
the life of the church and revolu-
tionized the churchs relations
with people of other faiths.
He is perhaps best known,
though, for the divisive 1968
encyclical Humanae Vitae, which
enshrined the churchs opposition
to artificial contraception.
More t han 50 years l at er,
Humanae Vitae still elicits criti-
cism for being unrealistic given
the vast majority of Catholics
i gnore i t s t eachi ng on bi rt h
control.
Pope beatifies Paul VI at remarkable synods end
REUTERS
Pope Francis greets cardinals at the end of a mass for the beatification of
former pope Paul VI in St. Peters square at the Vatican.
By Jim Gomez
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
OLONGAPO, Philippines
Inside a funeral parlor, a Filipino
mother sits and weeps next to a
coffin containing the body of her
daughter and demands answers. On
a hulking American assault ship
moored at a nearby port sits a man
who might have them a U. S.
Marine authorities suspect in the
brutal slaying at a cheap hotel
more than a week ago.
We dont eat without praying
first. We dont sleep without say-
ing a prayer. Where were you when
this happened? Julita Laude
beseeched God. She had so many
dreams and that killer destroyed
them all.
U. S. authorities are cooperating
in the investigation, and have
ordered the ship to stay at the
Subic Bay Freeport, about 80 kilo-
meters (50 miles) northwest of
Manila, until it is completed.
The killing of Jennifer Laude, a
26-year-old transgender whose
former name was Jeffrey, has
sparked public anger in the
Philippines and revived a debate
over the U. S. military presence in
a country seen by Washington as a
major ally in Southeast Asia. The
nations signed a new accord in
April that allows greater U. S. mil-
itary access to Philippine military
camps, part of Washingtons
pivot back to Asia where it wants
to counter Chinas rising might.
Philippine police have identi-
fied the suspect as U. S. Marine
Pfc. Joseph Scott Pemberton. He
was one of thousands of American
and Philippines military person-
nel who took part in joint exercis-
es earlier this month. He and other
U. S. personnel were on leave in
Olongapo city when Laude was
found dead.
American investigators have
worked with local police, but have
not made public any details sur-
rounding the case.
In interviews with The
Associated Press, Philippine
police and witnesses said that
Laude met Pemberton at the
Ambyanz, an Olongapo disco bar,
in the late hours of Oct. 11.
At one point, they left friends at
the bar and checked in at a nearby
motel and got a room beside the
reception desk.
About 30 minutes later,
Pemberton walked out, leaving
the door ajar, according to the
motel staff.
A housekeeper entered the room
to find Laudes body, partly wrapped
in bedsheet, in the bathroom. She
had apparently been drowned in the
toilet, according to police Chief
Inspector Gil Domingo.
Two witnesses a friend of
Laude who was with them at the
disco and the motel housekeeper
i dent i fi ed Pembert on i n a
gallery of pictures made avail-
able by U. S. military authorities
as the Caucasian male seen with
the victim at the bar and later at
the motel, said Olongapo Mayor
Rolen Paulino.
Marine accused in Philippine killing tests U.S. ties
REUTERS
Protesters chant anti U.S. slogans
during a rally against the killing of a 26-
year-old Filipino transgender Jennifer
Laude, outside the Department of
Foreign Affairs in Manila.
OPINION 9
Monday Oct. 20, 2014 THE DAILY JOURNAL
My withdrawal from the Half
Moon Bay City Council race
Editor,
I decided to run for City Council
because I was convinced we needed
better leadership for Half Moon Bay.
Having participated in three public
forums that included the two incum-
bents, I am more convinced than ever
that this is a critical time to imple-
ment change. There are three open
seats and up to now, there have been
four candidates who are pledged to
reform the council. I believe it is
important not to dilute our efforts. We
need to get three good people elected.
Consequently, I am requesting that my
supporters vote instead for the three
reform candidates who are pledged to
honesty, transparency and scal pru-
dence David Eblovi, Deborah
Ruddock and Dr. Deborah Penrose.
Eblovi is a ghter who gets things
done. He has worked to preserve parks
and the Main Street Bridge. Ruddock is
a former mayor of Half Moon Bay who
among her other achievements has
helped preserve our small town charac-
ter and improve trafc ow on State
Route 92. Dr. Penrose is a longtime
local doctor who now has a chance to
heal our community. All three of these
candidates will work together to x our
council.
I believe I can do the most good for
our community now by continuing on
as a director on the Coastside Fire
Protection District where I will contin-
ue to work for community involve-
ment in the decisions that affect us all
such as approving appropriate sites
for new re stations.
I am extremely gratefully for all the
support I have received from the com-
munity and I hope that you will
respect my decision and the reasons
for it. We deserve better government
in Half Moon Bay. I believe that my
withdrawal from this race makes that
eventuality more likely.
Harvey Rarback
Half Moon Bay
Scams keep coming
Editor,
Recently I received a call from the
IRS! They told me that I owed $3,000
and if I did not pay right now they
would send sheriffs deputies to my
home and surround the home until I
came out with my hands up, or a check.
I communicated to the IRS person
that I was married to the sheriff (Im
not) and I am in the middle of a messy
divorce, and that they should call my
husband instead. They hung up.
Afew months ago, I got yet another
call saying I didnt show up for jury
duty and that I must pay the ne imme-
diately or the district attorney would
issue a warrant for my arrest. You
guessed it. I told this idiot that I was
married to the district attorney (nope,
not married to him either) and well, he
hung up too.
Although I may be poking fun at
these morons, innocent people are
still getting scammed. Please tell your
friends, family and neighbors that no
ofcial will call and ask you to pay a
ne/ticket/taxes over the phone.
These people will target especially the
elderly and often people that may have
a language barrier.
There are also scammers who are
calling saying they are with Microsoft
and your computer has been hacked
and they want all of your passwords. I
cant use the colorful language (here)
to describe what I told them my pass-
words are.
Beware.
Phyllis McArthur
Foster City
Letters to the editor
The Oklahoman
P
resident Barack Obama has
always seen himself as an agent
of change, a la Ronald Reagan.
His goal was to do for progressive pol-
itics what Reagan had done for conser-
vatism.
Thus it was no surprise that he par-
roted a Reagan trope in recently asking
the question of whether Americans are
better off today than when he took
ofce and then answering his own
question by concluding that the coun-
try is denitely better off than we were
when I came into ofce.
For Reagan, it was a campaign strate-
gy drawn as a weapon against Jimmy
Carter in 1980. Are you better off, he
asked voters, than you were four years
ago?
Such comparisons arent unique to
Reagan and Obama, of course, but
Reagan put his own stamp on it
quite successfully as it turns out.
By every economic measure,
Obama told college students the other
day, we are better off than when I took
ofce. So not only has this president
adopted the Reagan line (even crediting
Reagan). Hes turned it into yet another
example of repeated, robotic rhetoric
in the endless campaign speeches made
by a man who is not running for any-
thing except the exit, in the words of
Caroline Baum, a former Bloomberg
News columnist.
Baum correctly notes that Obama has
set a low bar for economic measure-
ments, as did Reagan in a sense. When
the former took ofce in 2009, the
longest recession since World War II
was at its nadir. Reagan, inaugurated in
1981, took the reins at a time when
Carters legacy had produced a terrible
economy. Both Reagan and Obama
inherited bad economies. How could
people not be better off?
The problem is that Obamas stew-
ardship set in motion a sluggish recov-
ery. Unemployment has fallen, but the
labor participation rate has dropped to
a low not seen since 1978. Yes, that
was during the Carter administration.
Obamas Department of Labor says
nearly 100,000 jobless workers have
given up. This pushed the unemploy-
ment rate down to its lowest level since
the last summer of the George W. Bush
administration.
Obama doesnt mention this when
hes in his Are you better off? mode.
To bolster a weak argument, the presi-
dent repeatedly compares todays num-
bers with those of January 2009.
Therefore, writes Baum, Almost any-
thing appears better compared to the
worst recession since the Great
Depression. Whats more, Baum adds,
he has a habit of taking credit for
things he had nothing to do with: the
energy renaissance, for example.
Neither Obama nor the federal gov-
ernment is in any way responsible for
the energy boom. It was created and
sustained by the private sector and has
occurred despite the administrations
hostility to fossil fuels.
So The Great Divider has found a way
to brag about a meaningless compari-
son (the 2009 economy versus today),
ignore a troubling statistic (the labor
participation rate) and take credit for
something he basically opposes.
The mans got skills. Well hand him
that.
But whos really better off today? Not
the jobless. Not those who are paying
more for health insurance which is
most of us or whove been forced to
migrate from full-time to part-time sta-
tus because of Obamacare. Not the mid-
dle class, for whom Obama casts him-
self as a champion. Baum notes that
real median income was 4 percent lower
in 2013 than when Obama took ofce.
And the poverty rate is higher.
Just what set of statistics supports
Obamas better off boasting?
Agents of change are supposed to
change things for the better. Reagan
did. Obama has not only mismanaged
the economy, hes set it on a course
that will plague this nation for years to
come.
Obamas mismanagement Pandering to paranoia
A
s the mid-term elections approach, Republicans
are having a eld day putting the blame on
President Obama for Ebola and ISIS. One candi-
date has even called him President Ebola. How awful can it
get? There are no easy answers to quickly eliminate either
Ebola or ISIS, but so what. It makes great news.
Meanwhile, these hot topics are not the only problems
facing the chief executive. There is the refusal of our ally
Turkey to help with the ght against ISIS despite what the
government says. President Tayyip Erdogan refuses to
keep ISIS from over-running a strategic Kurdish town
inside Syria because he has his own ght with the Kurds.
Afghanistan, Iraq and Libya where the U. S. government
has played a major role, continue to unravel. And there are
no right answers in Syria. For those who say we should
arm the good guys, the good guys may be the same good
guys as in Iraq and Afghanistan who turned their guns on
their American helpers and suppliers. Even though the
economy is on the upswing, unemployment is down and
the Affordable Care Act seems to be working, the presi-
dent is not getting the credit he deserves because of these
events beyond his control. How awful can it get?
***
I was reminded of this
while watching a remark-
able play about Lyndon
Johnsons presidency at the
Oregon Shakespeare festi-
val, The Great Society.
Johnson has just been
elected in a landslide. His
deft leadership is responsi-
ble for the landmark 1964
Civil Rights Act. The play,
the second in a two part
series, takes on the rest of
Johnsons presidency from
the remainder of his term in
64 to his decision not to
seek another term. We wit-
ness the downfall of a trag-
ic hero, how this presidents amazing domestic achieve-
ments are drowned in the morass of the Vietnam War. As
the playbill explains, Things start off well. Using the
tailwinds from his 1964 victory, in Johnsons rst two
years in ofce, the ebullient Texan is able to get the most
sweeping series of social programs passed since the Great
Depression, including the Voting Rights Act, Medicare,
Head Start and the Economic Opportunity Act of 1965.
But this is not what we remember about Lyndon Baines
Johnson. Instead we hear and see the students chanting in
front of the White House, LBJ, LBJ, how many boys did
you kill today and watch the race riots erupting a over the
country. Meanwhile, the play recalls how Dr. Martin
Luther King, who worked closely with Johnson on pas-
sage of the Civil Rights Act (he is another leader besieged
by an angry constituency which badgers him to give up
non-violence and take up arms) breaks away from his for-
mer ally as more young black men are killed in Vietnam.
We see Johnson trying to keep support for his domestic
programs from a Congress which is now upset with the
escalating costs of the war, a war which seems to get
worse and without end. The generals and Secretary of
Defense Robert McNamara are telling a reluctant president
the only way to win is to send in more troops (this sound-
ed painfully familiar). The only way the president can pay
for the escalation is cutting back on his precious Great
Society programs. The 1968 election is coming up in the
midst of these developments and there are several power-
ful democrats willing to take on LBJ including Bobby
Kennedy and Gene McCarthy. Meanwhile, Richard Nixon
is attracting the support of southern Democrats. In a sur-
prise televised news conference (I watched it. Did you?),
Johnson announces he will not run for re-election. In the
nal lines of the play, a wounded Johnson turns to his
wife, and says Bird, lets go home.
***
It was difcult not to think about the present while
watching The Great Society. And the past, too.
Woodrow Wilson was another president who had great
domestic accomplishments but is only remembered for his
failure at the end of the rst world war to have his country
enter his League of Nations. Lincoln, who fares much bet-
ter historically, had his own demons with which to con-
tend. Fighting to preserve the union with incompetent
generals until the end, enormous losses on the battleeld
and a Cabinet which was pulling him in opposite direc-
tions. Probably just a few of our presidents really enjoyed
the job. That would include Teddy Roosevelt and Bill
Clinton. William Howard Taft was relieved when he was
defeated for a second term. And as for Obama. You just
have to look at how he has aged and how seldom that
famous smile appears to know that being president is not
much fun. Especially when opponents are pandering to
paranoia.
Sue Lempert is the former mayor of San Mateo. Her column
runs every Monday. She can be reached at sue@smdailyjour-
nal. com.
Other voices
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BUSINESS 10
Monday Oct. 20, 2014 THE DAILY JOURNAL
By Josh Boak and Alex Veiga
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
A sudden plunge in mortgage
rates this week raised an urgent
question for millions of
Americans:
Should I refinance my mort-
gage?
Across the country, homeown-
ers and would-be homeowners
eager for a bargain rate fired off
inquiries to lenders.
The opportunity emerged from
the tumult that seized financial
markets and sent stock prices and
bond yields tumbling. Rates on
long-term mortgages tend to track
the 10-year Treasury yield, which
fell below 2 percent for the first
time since May 2013.
Accordingly, the average rate
for a 30-year fixed mortgage,
mortgage giant Freddie Mac
reported, dipped below 4 percent
to 3. 97 percent a tantalizing
figure. As recently as January, the
average was 4. 53 percent.
Ultra-low rates do carry risks as
well as opportunities. Charges
and fees can shortchange refi-
nancers who are focused only on
the potential savings. And falling
rates are often associated with the
broader risk of an economic slow-
down that could eventually reduce
the income that some people have
to pay their mortgages.
Yet the tempting possibility of
locking in a sub-4 percent rate has
a way of motivating people.
It gets people excited, said
Michelle Meyer, an economist at
Bank of America. It gets mort-
gage bankers excited. It gets
prospective buyers excited.
The drop in rates could finally
give homeowners like Issi and Amy
Romem of Mountain View,
California, the chance to refinance.
Amy Romem bought the condo
at the peak of the housing boom
for $400, 000, using an
adjustable-rate loan with an initial
5. 875 percent rate that would reset
after 10 years. The reset would
amount to an extra $400 a month
on the condo, which the couple
now rents, Issi Romem said.
Seeing rates go down even
more is something I wasnt
expecting, he said. It reminds
me that I need to do this now,
before interest rates do go up.
Before this week, many
bankers, lenders and borrowers
had assumed that home loan rates
would soon start rising closer to a
two-decade average of 6 percent.
That was based on expectations
that the Federal Reserve would
start raising its key short-term
rate next year a move that
would likely lead to higher mort-
gage rates, too.
But that assumption fell sudden-
ly into doubt as stocks plunged on
Monday and Wednesday amid fears
about global economic weakness-
es, the spread of Ebola and the
threat of the Islamic State militia
group in the Middle East.
Seeking safety, investors
poured money into U. S. Treasurys.
Higher demand drives up prices for
those government bonds and caus-
es their yields to drop.
The yield on the 10-year note
traded as low as 1. 91 percent
Wednesday before ending the day
at 2. 14 percent. A stock market
rally on Friday helped lift the
yield to 2. 20 percent. That sug-
gested that the moment to refi-
nance might be fleeting.
Its likely to be the last time we
see these rates for a generation, if
ever again, said Jonathan
Smoke, chief economist at
Realtor. com.
Even a slight drop in mortgage
rates can translate into significant
savings over the long run. For a
median-priced home worth
$221, 000, a 0. 5 percentage point
decline in a mortgage rate would
produce savings of $50 a month,
according to a Bank of America
analysis.
Still, it takes time for the sav-
ings to offset the costs of refi-
nancing.
Theres no free lunch in this,
noted Gary Kalman, executive
vice president at the Center for
Responsible Lending.
Lenders typically charge fees for
paperwork on the loan and to pay
for a home appraisal and title
insurance, among other costs.
Market turmoil: A gift for mortgage refinancers?
REUTERS
A Bank Of America sign is pictured in the Manhattan borough of New
York.
By Bernard Condon
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK The stock market
needs to see a therapist.
Temperamental, flighty, prone
to violent mood swings, the mar-
ket took investors on a wild ride
last week. From one day to the
next, even within a few hours,
stocks swung from despair to opti-
mism, deep losses to big gains.
The Dow Jones industrial aver-
age plummeted 460 points at one
point Wednesday, but pared most
of those losses by the end of the
trading day. On Friday, it surged
263 points. The difference
between the Dows high and the
low for the week was the largest in
nearly three years.
Investors seemed buffeted from
every corner: Plunging oil prices,
signs of a slowdown in Europe and
fear of Ebola on the downside;
strong corporate earnings and
reassuring jobs market figures on
the upside.
Weve entered a high-volatility
market, and its here to stay, said
Bill Strazzullo, chief market
strategist of Bell Curve Trading.
Heres a look at the factors driv-
ing the manic trading, and the out-
look for this week:
European recession?
Investors are afraid that Europe
could slip into another recession,
perhaps deeper than the one it
emerged from just a year ago, and
the slowdown could cut into U. S.
corporate profits.
The bad news from Europe start-
ed piling up earlier this month.
Germany, the regions biggest
economy, said that manufacturing
output fell. The International
Monetary Fund cut its estimate of
2014 growth in the eurozone to an
anemic 0. 8 percent. Then came
news on Tuesday that industrial
production for the 18-country
region plunged in August, and
people really got spooked.
The Chinese economy, the
worlds second largest, is slow-
ing, too.
Can the U. S. continue to recov-
er if the major drivers of the glob-
al economy- Europe and China -
continue to struggle? I dont think
so, said Bell Curves Strazzullo.
I think well have subpar growth
and youll see that in the lower
equity prices.
Even some optimists are wor-
ried.
In this slowdown, its more
serious, said Mark Vitner, senior
economist at Wells Fargo
Securities, referring to the euro-
zone. Its Germany and France,
not just the periphery countries
(like Greece), that are causing the
damage.
Still, Vitner added, the danger to
the U. S. is easy to exaggerate. He
noted that the U. S. is a relatively
closed economy. Only 14 percent
of U. S. economic output comes
from exports, one of the lowest
such shares in the world.
One measure of trouble in the
eurozone to watch is its purchas-
ing managers index, a broad
gauge of business activity. The
next reading comes out Thursday.
Oil price plunge
Benchmark U. S. crude closed at
the $82. 75 a barrel on Friday, one
its lowest prices in years. The
drop has hammered energy compa-
nies this month. Two Dow mem-
bers, Chevron and Exxon Mobil,
have fallen 6 percent and 3 per-
cent, respectively.
Ultimately, the drop in oil could
be good for stocks, though. Thats
because a fall in prices means driv-
ers will end up paying much less
to fill up their tanks, leaving them
more money to spend on other
things, like travel and clothes and
dinners out.
Gas at the pump has already fall-
en to less than $3 a gallon in some
parts of the country, noted USAA
Investment Assistant Vice
President John Jares in a report on
Wednesday. He wrote that the drop
in gas could prove a boon to
retailers in the holiday shopping
season, and cited it as one reason
USAA mutual funds were buying
stocks this week.
U.S. economy
A pickup in spending would sure
help calm investor nerves.
One of the triggers for the sick-
ening 460 point drop in the Dow
on Wednesday was a report show-
ing retail sales declined 0. 3 per-
cent in September from the previ-
ous month. Purchases of autos,
gasoline, furniture and clothing
all slowed.
The economy remains stuck on
the same shallow growth trajecto-
ry that has been in place for the
past several years, economist
Steven Ricchiuto of Mizuho
Securities wrote to clients shortly
after the numbers came out
Wednesday.
Still, its important to put the
bad news in context. The U. S.
economy is in the best shape in
years. Employers are hiring at the
strongest pace in 15 years and
most economists expect the U. S.
to grow a healthy 3 percent this
year and next.
Investors will get more tea
leaves to read on U. S. consumers
this week. Internet powerhouse
Amazon. com reports earnings on
Thursday and shipping giant
United Parcel Service on Friday.
Whats next after wild week for stock market?
REUTERS
Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange as the market
closes Friday in New York.
Boston Private Bank & Trust Company
announced the appointment of Marshall
E. Lewis as senior vice president,
Commercial Real Estate
Lending, servicing clients in San
Mateo and surrounding areas.
Lewis brings more than 36 years of
experience in the banking industry and
is responsible for managing and
developing a lending team responsible for
managing a portfolio of existing
commercial and private banking
relationships.
On the move
By Arnie Stapleton
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
DENVER Peyton Mannings receivers
played keep-away with his milestone
memento and the NFLs new leader in career
touchdown passes toyed with the San
Francisco 49ers in the Denver Broncos
emphatic 42-17 victory Sunday night.
Manning went into the showdown two TDs
shy of Brett Favres record of 508 and threw
four touchdown passes, giving him 510.
It is quite an honor, Manning said. I do
have great appreciation for quarterbacks who
played this game
throughout the years. Its
very humbling, has taken
a lot of hard work, a lot of
people helped me get to
this point.
Manning surpassed
Favres mark with an 8-
yard strike to Demaryius
Thomas late in the second
quarter. As he went to
retrieve the football, his
teammates decided to have some fun.
Thomas tossed the historic ball over
Manning and to Emmanuel Sanders, who
then lobbed it to Wes Welker. From there,
Welker dished it back to Sanders, who then
flipped it to Julius Thomas all of
Mannings favorite targets getting into the
act.
I heard whispers about something,
Manning said. Those guys are all great ath-
letes and my vertical leap isnt what it used to
be. I havent played keep-away since I was 8
years old. That is something I will always
remember.
Finally, Manning got the ball along with
congratulations from his teammates and
coaches. The souvenir wont end up on
Mannings mantle, however the Pro
Football Hall of Fame has a nice spot all
ready for it.
During the celebration on the sideline,
Manning watched the giant scoreboard high
above him in the south end zone as his boss,
GM John Elway, and then Favre, offered their
kudos.
I want to say congratulations for breaking
the touchdown record, Favre said. Im not
surprised. Youve been a wonderful player and
Niners dismantled by Mannings record-breaking day
TERRY BERNAL/DAILY JOURNAL
Serra running back Kelepi Lataimua dives across the goal line to cap Saturdays 14-2 win over archrival St. Francis.
By Terry Bernal
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
Serra gave a defensive performance for
the ages in its storied rivalry with St.
Francis.
In the first victory over its archrival in
three years, Serra triumphed 14-2 over St.
Francis Saturday afternoon at Tom Brady
Family Stadium. With the Padres en route to
holding the Lancers offense scoreless,
however, what Serra needed was to get its
own offense rolling after trailing by a safe-
ty at halftime.
After totaling just 51 yards throughout
the first half, Serra indeed got rolling in the
second half before finally punching in a
pair of fourth-quarter touchdowns.
Meanwhile, the Padres defense checked the
Lancers for just 136 total yards in holding
St. Francis to its lowest point total in the
annual rivalry game since 1972.
With the win, Serra (3-0 in West Catholic
Athletic League play, 4-2 overall) remains
undefeated in WCAL play. It is the first loss for
St. Francis (2-1, 4-2) in league this season.
That defensive performance today by
[defensive coordinator Chris Vasseur] and
that group, thats on the pedestal, Serra
head coach Pat Walsh said. Its definitely
on the mantle.
Serra didnt muster much more offense,
but its 221 total yards was enough to
eclipse St. Francis in the late-going.
At halftime, we had to come in and we had
to wake ourselves up, and we really did that,
Serra offensive tackle Jack Dreyer said.
After gaining just one first down through-
out the first half on a strong-handed 31-yard
reception by James Outman, Serra emerged
Serra stuns St. Francis
By Terry Bernal
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
College of San Mateo freshman Miles Willis
made the first two catches of his collegiate
career count on Saturday, as the slot receiver
grabbed two touchdowns in the No. 4-ranked
Bulldogs 24-21 win over No. 3 Santa Rosa at
CSMs College Heights Stadium.
Each of Willis receptions gave CSM a
lead. He had a 35-yard touchdown catch from
starting quarterback Jeremy Cannon in the
second quarter to break a scoreless tie. Then
in the third quarter amid a 14-14 tie, Willis
hooked up with backup quarterback Justin
Burgess for a 15-yard score to give the
Bulldogs the lead for good.
CSMs defense yielded its single highest
yard total of the season but delivered in the
clutch. Santa Rosa gained 413 total yards
with quarterback Christian McAlvains 13-
of-33 passing for 220 yards and two touch-
downs. But the Bear Cubs converted a mere
1-of-15 times in third-down situations.
When yards directly equal points, Ill care
about the yards, CSM head coach Bret
Pollack said.
Bulldogs linebacker Randy Allen led a rush
that saw CSM tab six sacks. The sophomore
Allen had two-and-a-half sacks to jump into
the top 10 in the state. He currently ranks
No. 7 among California Community College
Athletic Association sack leaders.
With the win, CSM (1-0 in Bay 6
Division, 5-1 overall) got past what is
arguably its toughest Bay 6 opponent to
start league play with a key victory.
Any chance you have to beat a 5-0 team,
theyre 5-0 for a reason, so thats very
rewarding, Pollack said.
Over the next two weeks, the Bulldogs
match up with De Anza and Foothill the
two teams have one overall win between
them before closing the season against
No. 9 Diablo Valley and No. 7 San Francisco.
The loss for Santa Rosa (0-1, 5-1) is its first
CSM perseveres against powerhouse Santa Rosa
By Terry Bernal
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
Burlingame nose tackle Vainikolo Veimau
is accustomed to brotherhood.
The fifth of six boys in his family and
the sixth of 10 children overall Veimau
and his brothers could compose a defensive
line and then some entirely on their own.
But it was his fraternity of Panthers team-
mates to whom the 6-2, 280-pound senior
was referring when he talked about brother-
hood after Fridays 46-30 win over Menlo.
Shoring up the D-line while staring down
Menlos first-
and-goal advan-
tage from the
Burlingame 6-
yard line, Veimau
and his
B u r l i n g a m e
brothers pro-
duced a pearl of a goal-line stand at the end
of the first quarter.
I trust my brothers my football team-
mates so I just went out there and plugged
the holes I was supposed to, Veimau said.
Veimau is the first of his biological fami-
ly to play at Burlingame. Before he and his
family moved to San Bruno prior to his
freshman year, he grew up in Sacramento,
and also lived in Fort Worth, Texas for a
short time. Once at Burlingame, he played
for the freshman football team. It was amid
that undefeated 9-0 season the Panthers fra-
ternal bond was born.
The 2011 freshman squad was composed of
the same core players who have helped
Burlingame to an undefeated 6-0 start this
season. And as the group has grown through
the ranks, from the freshman team to frosh-
soph, and now midway through its second
varsity season last year the team went
undefeated in Peninsula Athletic Division
Ocean Division play before being promoted
Veimau key
to Panthers
brotherhood
See NINERS, Page 14
See OTL, Page 18
See SERRA, Page 16
See CSM, Page 16
<<< Page 12, Serra water polo
goes to tourney wire with Leland
DONT STOP BELIEVING ... IN TIMMY: GIANTS SOUND OFF IN SUPPORT OF WORLD SERIES VET TIM LINCECUM >> PAGE 15
Monday Oct. 20, 2014
On the
Line
Peyton
Manning
By Terry Bernal
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
Serra couldnt hold off Lelands big gun
Kevin Asplund quite long enough.
Leland boys water polo scored a 6-5
comeback win over the Padres to claim the
Serra Tournament championship Saturday
evening under the lights of Serras Aquatics
Center.
Asplund is Lelands biggest scoring
threat, but totaled just two goals in a defen-
sive battle Saturday. The senior came
through when it counted amid a 5-5 tie, fir-
ing the game-winning shot on Lelands
final possession of the match. With 11 sec-
onds remaining, Leland head coach Shea
Coleman called a foosball-style trick play
in which all the forward blockers dove into
their marks simultaneously.
The synchronized effort cleared a path for
Asplund, who converted with a bullet from
center post.
Its a play we practice, Coleman said.
It was the perfect situation for it 11 sec-
onds left. We didnt have time to set a play,
so it made sense.
The win is important in that it gives
Leland (11-5) a decisive edge over Serra
come Central Coast Section seeding time,
according to Coleman.
After leading Leland to a pair of big wins
to qualify for the championship finale
Leland downed Mills 20-11 on Friday then
got past Monte Vista 11-5 in Saturdays
semifinal the senior twice gave his team
the lead against Serra. Deadlocked at 4-4
near the end of the third quarter, he capped a
fast break from close range to score Lelands
third unanswered goal of the period.
Then during a defensive showcase in the
final quarter, he finished the tourney with
his most dramatic game-winner of the sea-
son. Serra head coach Bob Greene said he
saw the trick play developing, but none of
his players did. Greene was yelling for the
Padres defenders to get their arms up, but his
defense did not respond in time.
There werent many arms, Asplund said.
Our guys did a good job blocking. I wasnt
going to get that shot off if the rest of the
team didnt do its job.
Other than the final play and a third-quarter
letdown, Serras defense played a sharp match.
The Padres took a 3-2 lead into halftime,
with goals from three different players. In
fact, five different players accounted for
Serras five goals throughout. Its a strategy
Greene is beholden to this season.
Lets make it so all six guys in the water
are a threat, Greene said. And its a lot
more fun to coach that way.
After an early Leland goal, Serra senior
Tyler Breen got his team on the board two-
and-a-half minutes in to tie it at 1-1. Breens
fellow senior Sean Kim followed less than
two minutes later with a left-side rocket
which found net to give Serra a 2-1 lead. Then
in the second quarter, senior Emilio Espinoza
got good height out of the water from center
post to give the Padres a 3-1 lead.
Lelands Kyle Ergas scored with under a
minute in the half to close Serras lead to a
1-point margin.
We can be hot and cold, Coleman said.
Their defense throws different drops at us.
It takes us a quarter or two to adjust.
The adjustment came after Serra senior
Nick DeLuna gave his team a 4-2 lead on the
first possession of the half. Then Leland
scored three goals within five minutes to
take the lead.
We knew we had to buckle down and get
back in command of the game and play good
defense, Asplund said. The key to that
isnt the goals. The key is the defense.
Asplunds first goal to put Leland up 5-4
closed the third quarter. But Serras defense
ratcheted down to start the fourth quarter, led
by the efforts of Breen.
It was Breens steal which set in motion
the game-tying goal. The senior fed sopho-
more Arvin Bahia on a fast break. Bahia
nearly swam past the feed, but recovered to
scoop it and find the left side of the net
exposed for a clean goal.
Serra goalkeeper Matthew Olujic had two
big saves on the following two Leland pos-
sessions. Having never tended goal prior to
this season, Olujic is playing just his fourth
game in the cage. The junior had 10 saves
on the game and racked up 29 saves in the
tournament.
Thats pretty damn good for a guy whos
never been in the cage, Greene said.
Breen is also playing well and has a
chance to make history for the Padres this
season. Entering into the year with 51
career steals, all of which he tabbed as a jun-
ior last year, he already has 56 steals this
season. Serras single-season record is 83
goals and the career mark is 144, both set
by Joe Kmak last year. Kmak is currently a
senior at Serra who is not on roster with the
water polo team this season.
This year, I think if I keep up games like
this, I could have around 100 (steals), which
would be nice, Breen said.
Serra falls in tourney finale
SPORTS 12
Monday Oct. 20, 2014 THE DAILY JOURNAL
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TERRY BERNAL/DAILY JOURNAL
Sean Kim was one of five different Padres to find the net in Saturdays 6-5 loss to Leland.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SACRAMENTO A suburban Sacramento
teenager who was paralyzed from the chest
down in a summer diving accident and
vowed not to let it stop him from succeeding
in his senior year of high school was named
his schools homecoming king on Saturday
night.
Andy Wu, who turned 17 last month, was
one of six boys vying for the honor at Bella
Vista High School in Fair Oaks.
Wu fractured his spinal cord in late June
when he dove off a rock into Folsom Lake
and hit his head in the shallow lake bed. He
remembers the whole thing, he told The
Sacramento Bee the dive, hitting his head,
being unable to move, his girlfriend and a
friend pulling him out of the water.
Before the accident that made him a quad-
riplegic, he was a sprinter on his schools
track team and like other boys his age was
enjoying the freedom that comes with a dri-
vers license. He spent the summer rst in
the hospital, then in a rehabilitation center
learning to make use of the limited function
he has left in his arms.
The hardest part was learning how to do
things by yourself, and getting used to hav-
ing to do it a different way, Wu said. You
brush your teeth the same way for 16 years
and then all of a sudden you have to nd a
way to do it a different way. Its sort of
rough.
Yet Wu returned to school within weeks of
the accident determined not to let a wheel-
chair slow him down. He spends four hours a
day on physical therapy. He is co-president
of his senior class, taking three advanced
placement classes and in the process of
applying to Stanford and University of
California, Berkeley.
Im generally a positive guy who likes to
keep on living life, but then theres the
question of will I ever get back to where I
was, he told The Bee. And all the doctors
can say is they really dont know.
Before the dance where he was named
homecoming king, Wu invited his girl-
friend, Natalie Caraway, to be his date by
asking his friends to help him hoist a large
poster that read, Wheel you roll to home-
coming with me?
Sac teen triumphs after
tragic diving accident
SPORTS 13
Monday Oct. 20, 2014 THE DAILY JOURNAL
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
BERKELEY California receiver
Trevor Davis has been released from
the hospital after he was hurt on a
kickoff return.
Davis was removed from the field on
a stretcher in the fourth quarter
Saturday against UCLA. The team says
he was taken to the hospital for tests
before being released around midnight
Sunday.
Id like to thank everyone so much
for all the prayers,
and Im blessed to
say that Im doing
good and will be
back soon, Davis
said on his Twitter
account.
Davis stayed
down on the turf
for a long time
after appearing to
take a knee to the helmet as he was
tackled Saturday. While the trainers
were tending to him, Davis team-
mates kneeled on the field and the
crowd chanted Tre-vor Da-vis! Tre-
vor Da-vis!
Davis was able to move his legs and
talk. He gave a thumbs up to the crowd
as he was taken away on a cart.
Cal lost the game 36-34.
Cal receiver released from hospital
Trevor Davis
By Josh Dubow
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
OAKLAND There have
been plenty of low points in
a decade of losing for the
Oakland Raiders.
This just might be the
lowest one yet.
Carson Palmer threw for
253 yards and two touch-
downs in his return to
Oakland and the Arizona
Cardinals sent the Raiders to
their 12th straight loss with
a 24-13 victory Sunday.
The Raiders (0-6) have not
won a game in more than 11
months and are off to their
worst start since losing their
rst 13 games in 1962
the year before late owner Al
Davis joined the franchise.
This is as bad as youre
going to get through the
rst part of the season,
safety Charles Woodson
said. We havent won a
game. How much worse can
it get than that, than not
winning a game?
There are still 10 games
left for Woodson to get an
answer to that question. The
Raiders have already red
coach Dennis Allen and are
left with few options to turn
this season around.
Oakland has not had a win-
ning record or playoff berth
since 2002 in a dismal
stretch for a franchise once
known for winning.
I think that our kids are
starting to believe theyre
close, but thats a consola-
tion right now, interim
coach Tony Sparano said.
Its not good enough. Its
not good enough for our
fans. Its not good enough
for our owner. Its not good
enough for the kids in that
locker room. Weve got to
win one of these type of
football games.
While the Raiders are the
NFLs only winless team and
in the midst of their worst
stretch in more than a half-
century, the rst-place
Cardinals (5-1) are off to
their best start since 1976.
Stepfan Taylor caught one
touchdown and ran for
another and Andre Ellington
gained 160 yards from
scrimmage to lead the way
on offense.
Its just good to be in the
drivers seat in our divi-
sion, receiver Larry
Fitzgerald said.
Palmer and a stingy
defense are the big reasons
for Arizonas success.
Despite throwing Arizonas
rst interception of the sea-
son, Palmer has mostly
avoided the big mistakes
that often doomed him dur-
ing his year and a half in
Oakland.
He also has shown the
ability to make the key
throw, with his two biggest
being a 33-yard touchdown
pass to Michael Floyd in the
second quarter and a 22-
yarder to John Brown on
third-and-8 late in the
fourth.
That set up Chandler
Catanzaros 41-yard eld
goal that sealed the win with
29 seconds to go as Palmer
won in his rst game here
since being traded following
the 2012 season.
QB Palmer leads
Cardinals over
winless Raiders
By R.B. Fallstrom
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
ST. LOUIS The St. Louis
Rams werent afraid to take
chances, especially at the
end Sunday.
Punter Johnny Hekkers
pass from the St. Louis 18
caught the Seattle Seahawks
by surprise for the last of
three big plays in a 28-26
victory over the defending
Super Bowl champions.
Stedman Bailey had a 90-
yard touchdown on a trick
ret urn t hat fool ed t he
Seahawks i nt o t hi nki ng
another player was going
t o cat ch t he punt , and
Benny Cunninghams 75-
yard kickoff return set up
an early touchdown for the
Rams (2-4).
Yes, special teams were
dangerous all day.
Russell Wilson rushed for
106 yards on seven carries
and also passed for two
touchdowns while going 23
for 36 for 313 yards,
becoming the first quarter-
back in NFL history with
300 yards passing and 100
yards rushing.
But the struggling
Seahawks fell to 3-3 with a
second straight loss.
The Seahawks dominated
statistically, outgaining the
Rams 463
yards to
272. Doug
Baldwins
9 - y a r d
recept i on
cut the
deficit to
two with
3:18 to
go, but
the Rams were able to run out
the clock after Hekkers com-
pletion to Cunningham on
fourth-and-3, and somehow
recovered a fumble by Tre
Mason in the final minute.
NFL spokesman Michael
Signora said the play was
reviewed by the league and
that there was no evidence
of a clear recovery by either
St. Louis or Seattle.
Cory Harkey was credited
with a fumble recovery, and
the Rams finished it with a
kneel-down. The Seahawks
Richard Sherman had the ball
after it popped out of
Harkeys grasp, but Harkey
apparently grabbed it back in
the scrum.
Hekker was a high school
quarterback and is 4 for 5 for
60 yards and a touchdown in
three seasons. He also
serves as the emergency
quarterback.
Rams hold off Hawks
Johnny Hekker
SPORTS 14
Monday Oct. 20, 2014 THE DAILY JOURNAL
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By Allan Kreda
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK That was quick.
Martin St. Louis and Rick Nash scored 4
seconds apart late in the second period,
tying a New York Rangers record, and
Henrik Lundqvist made 33 saves Sunday in a
4-0 victory over the San Jose Sharks.
Lundqvist extended his franchise mark
with his 51st career shutout as the Rangers
(3-3-0) won their second consecutive game
after losing three straight. He preserved the
whitewash by denying Patrick Marleau late
in the third period with an acrobatic save
after dropping his stick.
It was probably our most complete game
of the year, said Lundqvist, aided by
defenseman Matt Hunwick sweeping a loose
puck away from the goal line in the first
period. The last couple of games we have
been playing better as a group and making
smart decisions.
Carl Hagelin and Kevin Hayes also scored
for New York, which handed the Sharks (4-1-
1) their first loss in regulation this season.
We didnt have the grit and determination
we needed to have against this team in this
situation, coach Todd McLellan said. The
game was there for the taking and we didnt
take it.
Hagelin opened the
scoring at 13:01 of the
second with his first of
the season, knocking his
own rebound past Sharks
goalie Alex Stalock. The
goal awakened a quiet
crowd at Madison Square
Garden following an
unusual 5 p. m. local start
time.
St. Louis made it 2-0 at 19:16 with his
first of the season, jamming the puck past
Stalock in the crease. McLellan argued
vehemently, but the goal was upheld after
review.
The Rangers won the ensuing faceoff and
Nash immediately shot the puck on goal.
Stalock couldnt contain the rebound and
Nash put it in for his league-leading seventh
of the season at 19:20.
After that big goal, we wanted to get the
puck in deep and something good hap-
pened, Nash said. When things go right,
its a simple game.
The two goals 4 seconds apart set a
Rangers record for the fastest pair without
one being an empty-netter. Kris King and
James Patrick scored 4 seconds apart on
Oct. 9, 1991, against the New York
Islanders, with Patricks going into an
empty net.
Nash extended his torrid start, which
includes points in five of the Rangers first
six games. He already became the first play-
er in franchise history with goals in the
first four games of the season.
Hayes added an unassisted goal at 7:18 of
the third the first of his career to make
it 4-0.
I should have had one earlier on, but it
finally went in, said the 22-year-old
Hayes, a Boston College teammate of line-
mate Chris Kreider. I hope its a spring-
board into something special.
The Rangers lost the first two games of
their homestead while allowing six goals to
both Toronto and the Islanders before stop-
ping Carolina 2-1 in a shootout on
Thursday.
The Sharks beat the New Jersey Devils 4-
2 on Saturday night and were playing for the
third time in four days. They continue their
five-game trip at Boston on Tuesday.
Theyve been on the road for a while, so
we wanted to play our physical, focused
game, Lundqvist said. They didnt give us
much, but we didnt give them almost any-
thing. Sooner or later we knew we were
going to create a big chance to score.
The teams played a listless first period,
with the Rangers outshooting the Sharks 7-
5. The Rangers had a 17-15 shots advantage
in a more energetic second.
The Rangers reworked their lines, with St.
Louis going back to his usual spot on right
wing, skating with Derick Brassard at center
and Mats Zuccarello on the left.
St. Louis played center for the first five
games with the Rangers missing Derek
Stepan, who broke his left leg during train-
ing camp.
Hayes centered Nash and Kreider, and
Dominic Moore skated between Lee
Stempniak and Hagelin. Moore, a former
Shark, had two assists.
Chris Mueller made his Rangers debut,
centering Ryan Malone and Tanner Glass.
Stalock started after Antti Niemi played in
the win over the Devils. Stalock made 42
saves in a shootout loss to Islanders on
Thursday.
NOTES: The teams meet again Jan. 10 in
San Jose. . . . New York scratched rookie for-
ward Anthony Duclair and defenseman
Michael Kostka. . . . San Jose sat forwards
John Scott and James Sheppard, and
defenseman Scott Hannan.
Rangers net two in 4 seconds; Lundqvist stops Sharks
Henrik
Lundqvist
Ive enjoyed watching you play. Ive
enjoyed competing against you. I wish you
great success for the rest of the season and the
rest of your career.
Manning added a 40-yard TD throw to
Thomas after Aqib Talibs interception in the
third quarter that made it 28-10, and then
Thomas set up another score with a 49-yard
catch.
This time, running back Ronnie Hillman
darted through the line for a career-long 37-
yard run that made it 35-10. He added a 1-
yarder as the Broncos (5-1) finally found a
ground game to go with Mannings passing
prowess.
Manning completed 22 of 26 passes for
318 yards with no interceptions to go with
his four TD throws.
Demaryius Thomas caught eight of those
throws for 171 yards, giving him an eye-pop-
ping 521 yards receiving and five TDs over
the last three games.
The 49ers (4-3) did very little right in see-
ing their three-game winning streak snapped.
Their only real highlight was Colin
Kaepernicks 4-yard TD pass to Stevie
Johnson with 11 seconds left in the half
brought the 49ers to 21-10.
Kaepernick completed 24 of 39 passes for
263 yards with one TD and one interception.
He was sacked six times DeMarcus Ware
had three and Von Miller two.
His backup, Blaine Gabbert, threw a 20-
yard TD pass to Bruce Ellington with a minute
left.
This night belonged the Manning from
start to finish.
He threw a 3-yard TD pass to Sanders on
Denvers first drive and tied the record when
Welker took a pass over the middle for 39
yards. Sanders score was his first in Denver,
and he became the 47th player to catch a TD
pass from Manning.
Manning reached the milestone in his
246th regular-season game. Favre needed
302.
I think Brett has always known he is one
of my favorite players. He played the posi-
tion with so much passion, so much tough-
ness and great production as a quarterback,
Manning said. I am honored to join this club
with him.
As Manning approached the milestone,
Favre told The Associated Press he was
thrilled its Peyton thats doing it.
The veneration is mutual, Manning said.
Saying he appreciated Favres words of
encouragement, Manning suggested that of
all the men who have ever taken a snap in the
94-year history of the NFL, nobodys
defined longevity and career toughness more
than him.
Among those offering their congratula-
tions on the scoreboard during the game was
Fran Tarkenton, who said, Well, Peyton, its
official. Your ducks have crossed the end zone
more than anybody elses. But really, con-
gratulations. Nobody has ever played the
quarterback position better than you have.
Notes: This marked the first game for S.F.
with 40-plus passes since Sept. 26, 2010,
snapping a 67-game streak, the longest in
the league since 1978.
Paul Cornick replaced Chris Clark at right
tackle for Denver and drew a false start flag on
the Broncos second snap. He also was beaten
by linebacker Aaron Lynch for a sack on the
last play of the first quarter.
Miller extended his NFL-best sack streak to
five games.
49ers center Daniel Kilgore was carted off
the field with a left leg and ankle injury in the
third quarter.
The Broncos lost linebacker Steven
Johnson (ankle) and cornerback Omar Bolden
(possible concussion).
Continued from page 11
NINERS
SPORTS 15
Monday Oct. 20, 2014 THE DAILY JOURNAL
By Janie McCauley
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SAN FRANCISCO Tim Lincecum
walked silently through the bustling club-
house before Saturdays workout and stuck
his left arm straight out as he passed Jean
Machis locker, offering a friendly fist
bump to the reliever.
No words necessary.
Lincecum, so far an unused reliever this
postseason, is doing everything he can to
stay involved in the San Francisco Giants
latest World Series run after he was such an
important part of the previous two.
Ask anybody, and its a little bit freaky not
seeing The Freak on that familiar October
stage. Atwo-time NL Cy Young Award winner
relegated to the back of the bullpen.
Lincecum hasnt pitched since Sept. 28,
though he has thrown warmup tosses and kept
his routine to ensure hes ready for his next
chance and manager Bruce Bochy hinted he
very much expects to use the right-hander
against the Royals.
Im just trying to keep that flow in my
emotional state, as well, Lincecum said.
Just kind of stay positive and just take every
day for what it is. Every day in the playoffs is
pretty special.
Even if hes left watch-
ing and waiting for his
turn.
Lincecum pitched the
2010 Game 5 World Series
clincher at Texas. In
2012, he moved to the
bullpen for the playoffs
and emerged as a reliable
reliever when San
Francisco won another title.
After landing a new $35 million, two-year
deal last October, Lincecum tossed his second
no-hitter in less than a year June 25 against
San Diego. He went 12-9 with a 4.74 ERAin
26 starts, ending a run of three straight years
with a losing record.
His teammates understand this cant be easy
for the guy once nicknamed Franchise.
I do everything I can do to encourage him
on a daily basis because at some point in time
(his) number could be called and its going to
be in a big spot. Its the World Series now,
said Jake Peavy, the Game 2 World Series
starter. We believe in Timmy Lincecum. Hes
done amazing things, hes as big-time as any-
body and has had tremendous playoff starts as
a starter, tremendous playoff experience out
of the bullpen.
The Giants 10th overall draft pick in 2006
and was in the big leagues by the following
May, an inconsistent Lincecum lost his rota-
tion spot in late August and was replaced by
Yusmeiro Petit. Lincecum won his last two
outings pitching out of the bullpen, includ-
ing his 100th career victory Sept. 25 against
the Padres.
Even Bochy considers Lincecum, knowing
how much he wants to contribute and how
much Bochy wants him to get that opportuni-
ty, when the moment is right.
In the NL Division Series and NLCS,
Lincecum was the only player on the 25-man
roster not used.
Hes just an unbelievable teammate, hes
so selfless that it inspires each and every one
of us, right fielder Hunter Pence said. Hes
also a big-game pitcher. He has that flair for
the spectacular. Youve seen it with two no-
hitters where he lifts us up through some of
our tough times and youve seen it in the
postseason.
Lincecum didnt even enter the 18-inning
Game 2 division series win at Washington.
Bochy said he would have used him but plans
changed once the Giants took the lead.
Timmys done a lot for us, Ill start with
that, Bochy said. When you get in the post-
season, there is probably going to be a guy,
maybe two who doesnt get a lot of work, but
that doesnt mean he might not play a key
role. ... I think about Timmy, trust me, the
fact he hasnt been in there because I havent
forgotten what hes done or what he could do
for us. So far its worked out well. But still, Id
like to get him to be part of it.
Lincecum is still among the fan favorites,
and that was evident when a long line of peo-
ple waiting to see him weaved around a corner
and down the hallway for FanFest at AT&T
Park last Feb. 1.
When the 2013 season ended, Linecum
wasnt sure he would even be back in orange
and black. Instead of testing free agency, he
stuck with the only team he has known and
the comfort of remaining in a place he
belongs and knows so well.
I feel great, Lincecum said. Its just
about staying that way. ... I dont think
theres any way to kind of lose it at this time
of the year. Everybodys kind of, whatevers
left in the tank youre going to pour it on that
field whenever you get a chance. I just try to
be myself, keep a light mood. Along with
that grind, we celebrate our small accom-
plishments.
Tim Lincecum waits his turn, still yet to pitch
Tim Lincecum
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SAN FRANCISCO A lifelong San
Francisco Giants fan had a piece of team
history in his hands after Thursdays game:
the walk-off home-run ball that sent the
Giants to the World Series.
Then he gave it back.
Frank Burke, who owns a transmission
repair business in Oakdale told the San Jose
Mercury News that he wanted the hitter,
Travis Ishikawa, to have the ball.
Ishikawa is the guy who hit the ball,
Burke said. Im just the lucky guy who
caught it.
So after having it authenticated by a
Giants official and learning Ishikawa want-
ed it back, Burke went down to the club-
house area and handed it over. Ishikawa
gave him a signed bat in return.
Burke said he had asked for World Series
tickets, but was told that might not be pos-
sible.
So I said, All right. I was going to give
the ball back either way, he said.
After doing a media interview the next
morning, he got a call from the Giants.
Burke now has four tickets to Game 3 of the
World Series at San Franciscos AT&T Park
on Friday. It will be the Giants first home
game against the Kansas City Royals.
Burke was at Thursdays game with his
friend, Greg Leutza, who is battling cancer.
He wanted to do something special for
Leutza and went searching for tickets after
the Giants clinched the National League
Division Series, he told another newspaper,
the Modesto Bee.
Ishikawas drive came their way as they
sat above the stadiums right field wall in
the bottom of the ninth inning with two
Giants on base.
My main thought was to keep it in front
of me and dont let it fall to the field, Burke
told the Bee.
Fan who caught home run gives ball back
San Francisco Giants vs. Kansas City Royals
Best of 7; x-if necessary
Game 1
Tuesday, Oct. 21: Giants (Bumgarner 18-11)
at Kansas City (Shields 14-8), 5:07 p.m.
Game 2
Wednesday, Oct. 22: San Francisco (Peavy 6-4)
at Kansas City (Ventura 14-10), 5:07 p.m.
Game 3
Friday, Oct. 24: Royals (TBA)
at San Francisco (Hudson 9-13), 5:07 p.m.
Game 4
Saturday, Oct. 25: Royals (TBA)
at San Francisco (Vogelsong 8-13), 5:07 p.m.
x-Game 5
Sunday, Oct. 26: Royals at San Francisco, 5:07 p.m.
x-Game 6
Tuesday, Oct. 28: Giants at Kansas City, 5:07 p.m.
x-Game 7
Wednesday, Oct. 29: Giants at Kansas City, 5:07 p.m.
WORLD SERIES SCHEDULE
from the halftime locker room looking like
a different team. Following the final pass of
the first half by Padres quarterback Hunter
Bishop, which went for an interception, the
junior came out rocking and rolling, com-
pleting his first seven passes during the
opening drive of the second half under a
sweltering San Mateo sky.
We sped up a little bit and used the heat
to our advantage, because were a tempo-
based team, and we werent like that at all in
the first half, Walsh said.
Nothing came of the drive, however, after
an apparent 40-yard touchdown reception
by Serra junior Marcus Paini-Leaea was
called back on a face-mask penalty. Then an
errant snap on second-and-goal from the St.
Francis 8-yard line set the Padres back to
the 28, causing them to turn the ball over
on downs two plays later.
But Serra finally hit pay dirt two posses-
sions later. The pivotal strike was set up by
the first of three interceptions on the after-
noon by the Padres, a nab by junior safety
Kelepi Lataimua, giving Serra the ball at its
own 39-yard line at the end of the third quarter.
Then, with Serra starting running back
Sitaleki Nunn having departed the game on
the previous possession with a sprained
ankle, the Padres turned to sophomore T. C.
Lavulo a transfer from St. Francis who
bounced off left tackle and pounded the ball
across the goal line on his first carry of the
game for a 2-yard touchdown score, giving
Serra a 7-2 lead.
It was a great feeling, Dreyer said.
Everybody just made a decision were
not going to take this anymore. Were just
going to out-physical these guys. And we
did just that.
St. Francis went three-and-out on its fol-
lowing possession and the Padres rode the
momentum to another quick score. Serra
started the drive on the Lancers 36-yard
line and took six plays to ultimately give
Lataimua the ball for a 2-yard dive into the
end zone to take a 14-2 lead.
The Padres defense did the rest, continu-
ing its dominant performance by shutting
down the last three St. Francis drives one
on a three-and-out before totaling two sacks
and two interceptions on the final two pos-
sessions.
As [defensive line coach John
Langridge] said, he didnt want St. Francis
to be in the end zone, Serra defensive end
Billy Tuitavake said. And we just did our
job and came out successful.
Tuitavake set the tone for the defense in
the first half with two sacks. And the first
time the Padres touched the ball in the
game, Nunn seemed to set the tone with a
dynamic punt return less than three minutes
in.
When St. Francis punted the ball away
after the games first possession, Nunn
dashed for 69 yards on the return to the
Lancers 2-yard line. Nunn said Serra gener-
ally returns its punts to the right side, but
when he saw a glut of defenders closing
from that direction, he countered to the left
and sprinted up the left sideline, only to be
tripped up just short of the goal line by his
own blocker.
St. Francis defense opened with an
exceptional goal-line stand though, hold-
ing Serra at bay with a big third-down stop
by linebacker Alexander Carbonel and
defensive tackle Ben Simon, throwing
down the gauntlet for the defensive grudge
match to follow.
The Lancers biggest first-half push was
also a product of special teams. St. Francis
punter Trill Hebert booted a coffin kick to
the Serra 3-yard line. Then on fourth down,
with Serra attempting to punt, St. Francis
notched a sack of Serras punter in the end
zone for a safety to take a 2-0 lead.
We didnt think 2 would be enough, but it
could have been based on how the game was
going, St. Francis head coach Greg
Calcagno said. Offensively, we were try-
ing to get some stuff going and just could-
nt. You tip your hat to Serra.
The game wouldnt see another score until
the fourth quarter, when Lavulo produced the
go-ahead touchdown on the sophomores
biggest carry of his varsity career to date.
He didnt get a lot until today, Nunn
said. He finally had a chance to step in and
prove himself.
With Serras victory, St. Francis still
maintains a decisive advantage throughout
the history of the rivalry with an all-time
record of 44-13. While the Lancers havent
seen as low a point total against Serra since
1972 when they lost 12-0, the following
season St. Francis began a streak of domi-
nance that spanned parts of four decades by
winning the next 34 head-to-head matchups
between the two teams.
16
Monday Oct. 20, 2014 THE DAILY JOURNAL
SPORTS
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Continued from page 11
SERRA
of the season.
The next game is the De Anza Dons and
nothing else matters until we play them,
Pollack said.
CSM saw several offensive starters return
to the starting lineup Saturday after injuries
had taken a toll throughout nonconference
play. Cannon returned at quarterback and
Michael Latu at running back after the two
were banged up in Week 3. But the Bulldogs
got the biggest offensive performances from
staples Burgess and sophomore running
back Sammy Fanua, the two of whom
accounted for over half of CSMs total
offense.
Burgess emerged in the second half to com-
plete 6 of 13 passes for 96 yards. Fanua car-
ried 14 times for a career-high 77 yards and a
touchdown. The Bulldogs gained 331 total
yards throughout.
After neither team could move the ball in
the first quarter, CSM took over at its own
45-yard line early in the second quarter and
quickly cashed in. Latu started the drive with
an 18-yard carry. Two plays later, Cannon
connected with Willis for the freshmans first
collegiate reception on a 35-yard touchdown
strike.
Santa Rosa answered right back, capitaliz-
ing on an eight-play, 75-yard drive which
started with a 34-yard quarterback keeper by
McAlvain. Once inside the red zone, Santa
Rosas Desmond Nisby scored on a 2-yard
run to tie it 7-7.
The seesaw defensive battle continued until
the final possession of the half, when Santa
Rosa drove deep into CSM territory. With
second-and-goal at the Bulldogs 10-yard
line, however, Santa Rosa drew a holding
penalty. The yellow flag proved costly as
two plays later, Bear Cubs kicker Levi Paine
missed wide on a 37-yard field goal attempt
to keep the tie intact heading into the half.
Santa Rosa took its only lead of the game
early in the third quarter, when McAlvain
hooked up with Terrence Drew for a 71-yard
touchdown pass.
But the Bear Cubs 14-7 lead lasted a mere 1
minute, 21 seconds as CSM sophomore D.J.
Peluso returned the ensuing kickoff 40 yards
to set up a three-play scoring drive. Fanua
had the big play from scrimmage with a 33-
yard touchdown run, to tie it at 14-14.
Then CSM place-kicker Justin Watts pro-
duced a successful onside kick to help the
Bulldogs surge back into the lead. After a
CSM holding penalty forced a third-and-15,
Burgess completed a 29-yard pass to Elias
Vargas for a first down. On the following
play, Burgess found Willis for a 15-yard
touchdown pass to give CSM a 21-14 lead.
Early in the fourth quarter, Watts added
insurance with a 39-yard field goal to put
CSM up by 10. Santa Rosa clawed right
back. After a 52-yard run by Nisby on the fol-
lowing possession, McAlvain hit Mikal
Stoney-Quitoriano for a 2-yard touchdown.
But CSMs defense didnt allow another first
down in the game to hold its 3-point margin
until the closing gun.
I like the fact we played hard, we battled
and we reduced our penalties. It created an
advantage, Pollack said. The special
teams, for sure, were fighting hard and play-
ing hard. I like what I saw there.
Continued from page 11
CSM
PATRICK NGUYEN
CSMs Sammy Fanua ran for a career-high 77
yards in Saturdays pivotal 24-21 win over
No.3-ranked Santa Rosa.
SPORTS 17
Monday Oct. 20, 2014 THE DAILY JOURNAL
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Brad Keselowski refused to be knocked
down not by Matt Kenseth, who jumped
him from behind after a disastrous race at
Charlotte, and not by garage-wide condem-
nation over his post-race meltdown.
He kept his head up and arrived at
Talladega Superspeedway determined to
shake off a bad week that earned him a
$50, 000 fine from NASCAR and moved him
to the edge of elimination in the Chase for
the Sprint Cup championship.
Only a win would keep his title hopes
alive.
Only the toughest of drivers could tune
out everything that had happened and
ignore the weeklong chorus of criticism
from his peers.
Keselowski pulled it off Sunday with an
improbable victory that moved him into the
third round of the Chase. He used a push
from Team Penske teammate Joey Logano
on a restart in overtime, and then got last-
lap coverage from, who else? Kenseth.
I know theres probably some people out
there that arent really happy I won. I can
understand that. But Im a man like anyone
else and not real proud of last week. But Im
real proud of today, said Keselowski, who
found comedic relief in his assist from
Kenseth.
It was funny how this racing world works
out. I dont know why it is that way. I dont
know why it seems like every week where
theres either a fight in the garage or a
mishap or something like that happens,
those two cars and people end up together.
His professionalism under attack and his
season slipping away, Keselowski still
managed to focus on the
difficult task at hand. He
was in a three-way race to
Victory Lane with six-
time and defending
champion Jimmie
Johnson and Dale
Earnhardt Jr. , all three
needing to win to stave
off elimination.
It was Keselowski who
grabbed the checkered flag.
Ill take the 50 grand and the win this
week, wouldnt you? said Keselowski team
owner Roger Penske. The owner and driver
can just take the fine out of the winners
check of $288, 361.
But Penske, winner of the IndyCar title
this year with Will Power, strongly defend-
ed the driver who gave him his first career
Cup title two seasons ago.
These guys are jealous of the job hes
done this year, Penske said. Hes won six
races. Hes made poles. Hes been up front.
Nobody likes to see a guy win like that.
I want him to get mad. I dont want him
to take it. We talked about it (last week). I
said, Brad, put it in the rearview mirror.
Logano and Kevin Harvick, the winners
of the first two races in the second round,
also advanced to the third three-race round
along with Ryan Newman, Carl Edwards,
Jeff Gordon, Hamlin and Kenseth. The field
will be cut to four after the ninth race.
Points are reset after each round and the title
will be decided by finishing order in the
Nov. 16 finale at Homestead.
After the race, NASCAR said Newmans
car failed inspection because it was too low
on both sides of the back of his Chevrolet.
Penalties will likely be issued Tuesday, but
that infraction typically
is docked 15 points.
Newman holds a 27-point
lead over Kasey Kahne,
who was eliminated
Sunday.
The much-anticipated
championship battle
between Team Penske and
Hendrick Motorsports
took a major hit. Penske
got both Keselowski and
Logano into the third round, but Hendrick
had three of its four drivers eliminated
Sunday. Only Gordon advanced.
Great teams, great drivers, great friends.
I hate to see them not in there, Gordon said
about Johnson, Earnhardt and Kahne. I
really thought the chances of two of them
getting in were very good, and certainly one
of them. I thought two of us would be in
there, and I thought theres a decent chance
three could be there.
Hendrick and Penske drivers combined for
17 wins in the first 26 races, and have dueled
all season as the top two organizations in
NASCAR.
Well just go and try and win some races
before the years out, Earnhardt said. That
all weve got left.
But Talladega, one of only two tracks in
NASCAR that requires horsepower-sapping
restrictor plates and most of the field runs in
one giant pack, is a crapshoot. One slip can
trigger a massive accident, and a drivers
fate often comes down to being in the
wrong place at the wrong time.
Thats what happened to Kyle Busch, who
entered the race ranked second in the 12-
driver field but was the fourth driver elimi-
nated from the Chase because he was caught
in an early accident. He
was hit from behind, had
to go to the garage for
repairs and finished 40th
on Sunday.
We are destroyed. We
are absolutely killed,
said Busch, who
appeared to be hit by
Austin Dillon. I got
wrecked from behind. We
are done.
The drivers in danger of elimination paced
the early parts of the race. Keselowski had
to drop to the back of the field at the start
for an unapproved change to his Ford, but
he picked his way through traffic and made it
to the front of the field to lead.
Johnson and Earnhardt also charged to the
front, and the three drivers who needed to
win tried to set the early pace of the race.
Only Keselowski was where he needed to
be at the end.
Johnson, who now has to look ahead at
chasing No. 7 in 2015, perched himself on
the window of his car and watched
Keselowskis post-race celebration.
We had a chance and came up short,
Johnson said. We have to make the best of
15. We have a chance to finish fifth in
points, which would mean the world to me.
The worst Ive finished is sixth in the
points, so its not time to put our feet up.
We need to finish strong and try to be in the
top-five.
Kenseth, Clint Bowyer, Landon Cassill,
and Newman completed the top five. Danica
Patrick led 26 laps late in the race before
fading to 19th.
Keselowski keeps title hopes alive at Talladega
Brad
Keselowski
Joey
Logano
Kevin
Harvick
Warriors lose to Rockets
HIDALGO, Texas James Harden had 15
points and seven rebounds to help the
Houston Rockets beat the Golden State
Warriors 90-83 in an exhibition game
Sunday night.
Trevor Ariza added 13 points, and Dwight
Howard had 11 points and eight rebounds in
limited action for the Rockets (4-1).
Justin Holiday led Golden State (4-2) with
18 points, and Nemanja Nedovic had 16.
Lakers rally past Jazz
LOS ANGELES Kobe Bryant scored 26
points and Carlos Boozer added 19, leading
the Los Angeles Lakers to a 98-91 preseason
victory over the Utah Jazz on Sunday night.
Boozer also had nine rebounds and six of
the Lakers 17 steals. Los
Angeles converted 29
Jazz turnovers into 34
points and outscored
them 17-8 in second-
chance points.
Alec Burks scored 21
for the Jazz, who had
only one field goal after
his jumper with 5:16
remaining. Enes Kanter
had 14 points in 38 minutes before fouling
out with 15. 2 seconds left.
The lead changed hands six times in the
fourth quarter before Ed Davis hook shot
put the Lakers ahead for good at 86-85 with
4:50 to play. Wayne Ellington added two
free throws and a 3-pointer that extended the
margin to 91-85 with 2:50 remaining, and
Bryant helped close it out with five free
throws in the final 1:24.
NBA preseason
Kobe Bryant
18
Monday Oct. 20, 2014 THE DAILY JOURNAL
SPORTS
its second varsity season last
year the team went undefeated in
Peninsula Athletic Division
Ocean Division play before being
promoted to the Bay Division
this season the team has
encountered mostly success.
We know our class is kind of
special, Veimau said. If we add
up all the games weve played (in
four years), weve lost like five or
six games.
Veimau, however, didnt play
for two of those seasons.
Following his freshman season,
he admittedly ran into grade trou-
ble. While it rendered him academ-
ically ineligible, he didnt mind
so much as he honed his athletics
focus on the rugby scene. His
favorite sport, Veimau took up
rugby with the Peninsula Green
club team out of Redwood City.
Last year, however, as a junior
at Burlingame, Veimau got seri-
ous about making grades. And by
the end of the 2013-14 school
year, he reported to Burlingame
football practice in an effort to
earn a roster spot. Even though
he informed his coaches he could-
nt attend summer workouts
because of his season for
Peninsula Green, he earned an
audition with the team come the
start of his senior year.
I think rugby got me into
shape, Veimau said. Over the
summer, I didnt practice with the
football team
because rugby
was still going
on. So, I got
conditioned
there.
Once official
fall practice
began, it took
Veimau two
weeks to earn a
starting spot as
a defensive tackle. And with his
addition to the D-line, a team which
posted an overall 11-1 record last
season its only loss coming in
the Central Coast Section semifi-
nals only stood to get better.
Since Burlingame started PAL
Bay Division play Oct. 10 at
Menlo-Atherton, the team has
shown just how better. After
allowing just 52 points through
four non-league victories, the
Panthers downed Menlo-Atherton
35-14 with Veimau giving his
best varsity performance with
eight tackles in the game.
A week later, he totaled just
three tackles against Menlos
quick run-and-shoot attack. But
his fourth-down stop along with
safety Andrew Kennedy directly
equated to a 7-point differential
on the scoreboard.
Not a lot of guys have got into
the red zone on us, Kennedy said.
When they score, its usually on a
big play. That was new for us, but
we held them down pretty well.
The defensive stand was preced-
ed by a pair of big-gain passes by
Menlo. One was for 29 yards on
an outlet to Garrett Matsuda on
which Knights quarterback Austin
Dambra was leveled as he
released the ball by Burlingame
linebacker Tommy Dryden.
Dambra gave way to Jack Marren
at the helm for one play before
reentering to execute a shovel
pass for 15 yards to Marren.
Once at the 6, Marren
Menlos best quarterback option
for short-yardage plays because of
his ability to execute the dive play
again took the helm. It took
two draw plays by fullback Charlie
Roth to advance the ball to the 1-
yard line. Then Menlo called back-
to-back quarterback dives.
We didnt talk as much but we all
knew what we had to do, Veimau
said. We knew what was coming.
The first dive, on third down,
was met with a sharp hit from
Kennedy, who stopped Marren
cold. But Marren didnt back
down. On fourth down, he got
closer to the ground in an attempt
to counter Kennedy, but Veimau
delivered a low wrap with
Kennedy timing a high hit to
drive Marren backward, keeping
the Knights out of the end zone
and off the scoreboard.
If they score that, it changes
the game, Burlingame head
coach John Philipopoulos said.
Our defense really stepped up and
did a great job most of the game.
The win essentially clinched a
CCS playoff berth. And with
Burlingame looking to add to its one
2004 CCS title in the trophy case,
the Panther brotherhood is certainly
keeping their eyes on the prize.
Defense, we think thats
key, Veimau said. Defense
wins championships.
Continued from page 11
OTL
Vainikolo
Veimau
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East W L T Pct PF PA
New England 5 2 0 .714 187 154
Buffalo 4 3 0 .571 135 142
Miami 3 3 0 .500 147 138
N.Y. Jets 1 6 0 .143 121 185
South W L T Pct PF PA
Indianapolis 5 2 0 .714 216 136
Houston 3 3 0 .500 132 120
Tennessee 2 5 0 .286 121 172
Jacksonville 1 6 0 .143 105 191
North W L T Pct PF PA
Baltimore 5 2 0 .714 193 104
Cincinnati 3 2 1 .583 134 140
Pittsburgh 3 3 0 .500 124 139
Cleveland 3 3 0 .500 140 139
West W L T Pct PF PA
Denver 5 1 0 .833 189 121
San Diego 5 2 0 .714 184 114
Kansas City 3 3 0 .500 142 121
Raiders 0 6 0 .000 92 158
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East W L T Pct PF PA
Dallas 6 1 0 .857 196 147
Philadelphia 5 1 0 .833 183 132
N.Y. Giants 3 4 0 .429 154 169
Washington 2 5 0 .286 151 183
South W L T Pct PF PA
Carolina 3 3 1 .500 158 195
New Orleans 2 4 0 .333 155 165
Atlanta 2 5 0 .286 171 199
Tampa Bay 1 5 0 .167 120 204
North W L T Pct PF PA
Detroit 5 2 0 .714 140 105
Green Bay 5 2 0 .714 199 147
Chicago 3 4 0 .429 157 171
Minnesota 2 5 0 .286 120 160
West W L T Pct PF PA
Arizona 5 1 0 .833 140 119
49ers 4 3 0 .571 158 165
Seattle 3 3 0 .500 159 141
St. Louis 2 4 0 .333 129 176
Sundays Games
St. Louis 28, Seattle 26
Miami 27, Chicago 14
Green Bay 38, Carolina 17
Baltimore 29, Atlanta 7
Washington 19,Tennessee 17
Jacksonville 24, Cleveland 6
Indianapolis 27, Cincinnati 0
Buffalo 17, Minnesota 16
Detroit 24, New Orleans 23
Kansas City 23, San Diego 20
Arizona 24, Oakland 13
Dallas 31, N.Y. Giants 21
Denver 42, San Francisco 17
Open: Philadelphia,Tampa Bay
Mondays Game
Houston at Pittsburgh, 5:30 p.m.
NFL GLANCE
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Montreal 6 5 1 0 10 20 20
Ottawa 5 4 1 0 8 14 10
Tampa Bay 5 3 1 1 7 17 10
Detroit 5 3 1 1 7 11 8
Boston 7 3 4 0 6 15 17
Toronto 6 2 3 1 5 15 19
Florida 5 1 2 2 4 5 11
Buffalo 6 1 5 0 2 8 22
Metropolitan Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
N.Y. Islanders5 4 1 0 8 20 15
Washington 5 3 0 2 8 18 11
Pittsburgh 4 3 1 0 6 16 10
Columbus 5 3 2 0 6 15 12
New Jersey 5 3 2 0 6 17 16
N.Y. Rangers 6 3 3 0 6 17 20
Philadelphia 5 1 2 2 4 17 21
Carolina 4 0 2 2 2 10 15
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Nashville 5 3 0 2 8 12 8
Chicago 4 3 0 1 7 12 7
Dallas 5 2 1 2 6 15 17
St. Louis 5 2 2 1 5 12 9
Minnesota 4 2 2 0 4 10 4
Colorado 6 1 4 1 3 9 20
Winnipeg 5 1 4 0 2 8 15
Pacic Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Anaheim 6 5 1 0 10 21 13
Sharks 6 4 1 1 9 15 10
San Jose 6 4 1 1 9 20 15
Calgary 7 4 3 0 8 19 17
Vancouver 4 3 1 0 6 13 10
Arizona 4 2 2 0 4 13 18
Edmonton 5 0 4 1 1 11 25
Sundays Games
Los Angeles 2, Minnesota 1
N.Y. Rangers 4, San Jose 0
Calgary 4,Winnipeg 1
Anaheim 3, St. Louis 0
Mondays Games
Tampa Bay at Edmonton, 6:30 p.m.
Tuesdays Games
San Jose at Boston, 4 p.m.
N.Y. Rangers at New Jersey, 4 p.m.
Toronto at N.Y. Islanders, 4 p.m.
Detroit at Montreal, 4:30 p.m.
Arizona at Nashville, 5 p.m.
Carolina at Winnipeg, 5 p.m.
Philadelphia at Chicago, 5:30 p.m.
Vancouver at Dallas, 5:30 p.m.
Florida at Colorado, 6 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Calgary, 6 p.m.
NHL GLANCE
Stanford off to
best start since 1994
With its 18th straight win
since the outset of the sea-
son, Stanford volleyball is
off to its best start since
1994.
The Cardinal (8-0 in Pac-
12, 18-0 overall) topped
Utah in four sets Sunday, 25-
20, 25-21, 23-25, 25-19 and
got a career night from
opposite Morgan Boukather.
The senior tabbed a career-
high 18 kills while hitting
at a . 467 clip. She also had
11 digs and four blocks.
Junior middle Inky
Ajanaku added 10 kills and
six blocks.
Former club volleyball
rivals Jordan Burgess and
Madi Bugg teamed for anoth-
er prolific match for
Stanford. Burgess tabbed her
10th double-double of the
year with 12 kills and 15
digs. Bugg continued her
prowess as one of the top
setters in the nation, as the
6-foot junior also tabbed a
double-double with 52
assists.
No. 1-ranked Stanford
returns home Friday to take
on No. 19 UCLA at 6 p. m.
Volley brief
DATEBOOK 19
Monday Oct. 20, 2014 THE DAILY JOURNAL
EXAMINATIONS
and
TREATMENT
of
Di seases & Di sorders
of t he Eye
EYEGLASSES
and
CONTACT LENSES
DR. ANDREW C. SOSS
OD, FAAO
GLAUCOMA
STATE BOARD CERT
1159 BROADWAY
BURLINGAME
650- 579- 7774
Provi der for VSP and most maj or medi cal
i nsurances i ncl udi ng Medi care and HPSM
www. Dr- AndrewSoss. net
Eveni ng and Sat urday appt s
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650.839.6000
WHERE THE READY GET READY
Every Battery For Every Need

I
had to wear a tie for our recent fashion show
fundraiser. But, since the event is more fun than
formal, I went with a black shirt and orange pais-
ley tie, which doubled as Giants colors and a Halloween
look. My young son hasnt seen me wear a tie many
times. He gave me a double take and asked what that
thing was on my shirt. Then, I let him look at my tie
collection (all six or seven!). I think hes much more
interested in Murrays neckwear, and did notice when
we gave him a tick collar. Dogs, these days, have as
much variety in neckwear as the poor guys who still
wear ties daily. Our obedience class trainers and adop-
tion counselors are asked which dog collar style gets
the humane society stamp of approval. Our least
favorite is a metal prong collar. Some owners with
strong pullers choose this collar, believing it will give
them control since pulling will make the metal prongs
dig into their dogs neck. We dont like this as it can
injure a dog. Were not fans of choke chains either.
Denitely old school. Still, owners get them and
seem comfortable walking a dog they can only control
by jerking the chain over and over. Thats just a lousy,
unenjoyable way to walk for everyone. PHS/SPCA rec-
ommends at collars (those that close like a belt),
Gentle Leaders (the ones that look like muzzles, but
arent) and halties. The Gentle Leader applies pressure
to a dogs nose when he pulls. Some dogs will stop
pulling after wearing a Gentle Leader for just a few
weeks, and then they can move to a simpler at collar.
We urge owners to use positive reinforcement and teach
their dogs that something good will happen when they
walk correctly, rather than teach their dog to fear some-
thing painful will happen if they pull.
Scott oversees PHS/SPCAs Customer Service,
Behavior and Training, Education, Outreach, Field
Services, Cruelty Investigation, Volunteer and
Media/PR program areas and staff. His companion,
Murray, oversees him.
By Sandy Cohen
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
LOS ANGELES The bl oody
Worl d War II drama Fury bl ew
past Gone Gi rl at t heat ers t hi s
weekend.
Gone Gi rl was t ops at t he box
offi ce for t wo weeks before Brad
Pi t t and hi s rag-t ag group of t ank
mat es i n Fury bl ast ed t he fi l m t o
second pl ace. Sonys Fury cap-
t ured $23. 5 mi l l i on i n t i cket sal es
duri ng i t s openi ng weekend,
accordi ng t o st udi o est i mat es
Sunday. Foxs Gone Gi rl fol l owed
wi t h $17. 8 mi l l i on.
The weeks t op t wo fi l ms are R-
rat ed adul t dramas, fol l owed by t wo
PG fami l y fi l ms.
The fal l movi e season i s al l
about maki ng t he t ransi t i on from
PG-13 worl d of summer t o t he R-
rat ed, edgi er worl d of t he fal l and
awards season, sai d Paul
Dergarabedi an, seni or medi a ana-
l yst for box-offi ce t racker Rent rak.
The ani mat ed Fox feat ure The
Book of Li fe opened i n t hi rd pl ace
wi t h $17 mi l l i on, fol l owed by
Di sneys Al exander and t he
Terri bl e, Horri bl e, No Good, Very
Bad Day wi t h $12 mi l l i on.
Were now i n ful l adul t movi e-
goi ng season and wel l see a l ot
more adul t -skewi ng fare, sai d Fox
di st ri but i on chi ef Chri s Aronson,
who added t hat t he col orful Book
of Li fe sui t s any audi ence.
Anot her new fi l m rounds out t he
t op fi ve: Rel at i vi t ys Ni chol as
Sparks romance The Best of Me,
st arri ng Mi chel l e Monaghan and
James Marsden, debut ed wi t h $10. 2
mi l l i on.
Bi rdman, t he Al ej andro
Gonzal ez Inarri t u drama st arri ng
Mi chael Keat on, opened i n j us t
four t heat ers and boast ed a per-
screen average of $103, 750. It
opens i n addi t i onal l ocat i ons next
week.
Overal l box offi ce i s up al most
25 percent from t he same weekend
l ast year, Dergarabedi an sai d, and
t he st rong fal l showi ng at ci nemas
i s maki ng up for a year-t o-dat e
box-offi ce defi ci t t hat dropped
from 6 percent t o 4 percent i n t he
l ast mont h.

Est i mat ed t i cket sal es for Fri day


t hrough Sunday at U. S. and
Canadi an t heat ers , accordi ng t o
Rent rak. Where avai l abl e, t he l at -
est i nt ernat i onal numbers are al so
i ncl uded. Fi nal domes t i c fi gures
wi l l be rel eased Monday.
Fury blasts Gone Girl
from top of box office
REUTERS
Actors Logan Lerman, Brad Pitt and Shia LaBeouf pose during a photocall for their
film Furyin London.
1. Fury,$23.5 million.
2. Gone Girl, $17.8 million ($20.2
million international).
3. The Book of Life, $17 million
($8.6 million international).
4. Alexander and the Terrible, Hor-
rible, No Good, Very Bad Day, $12
million ($1.3 million international).
5. The Best of Me, $10.2 million
($1.1 million international).
6. Dracula Untold, $9.9 million
($22.5 million international).
7. The Judge, $7.94 million ($6.5
million international).
8. Annabelle,$7.92 million ($19.2
million international).
9. The Equalizer, $5.4 million ($8
million international).
10. The Maze Runner,$4.5 million
($17.1 million international).
Top 10 movies
20
Monday Oct. 20, 2014
THE DAILY JOURNAL
Do you have a spare bedroom?
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w w w . M e n t o r s W a n t e d . c o m
Lonny and Mi chel l e Es qui vel , of
South San Francisco, gave birth to a baby
boy at Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City
Sept. 16, 2014.
Ry an and
Jami Bri g ht,
of Redwood
City, gave birth
to a baby girl at
Sequoia Hospital in
Redwood City Sept. 29, 2014.
Geo rg i o s Ro umpo s and Li zel l e
Vega, of Redwood City, gave birth to a
baby boy at Sequoia Hospital in Redwood
City Oct. 8, 2014.
Sant o s h Adari and Anupama
Ks hatri , of Milpitas, gave birth to a baby
boy at Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City
Oct. 9, 2014.
Jes s e and Vi rg i e Germano , of
Redwood City, gave birth to a baby boy at
Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City Oct. 9,
2014.
Mi chael Ho ney man and Jay a
Savkar, of San Francisco, gave birth to a
baby girl at Sequoia Hospital in Redwood
City Oct. 9, 2014.
Lui s and Penel o pe Ci f uent es , of
Redwood City, gave birth to a baby girl at
Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City Oct.
10, 2014.
Mi chael and Whi tney Lau, of Menlo
Park, gave birth to a baby girl at Sequoia
Hospital in Redwood City Oct. 11, 2014.
Andrew and Lynda Sanders on, of
Pacifica, gave birth to twins, a baby boy
and a baby girl, at Sequoia Hospital in
Redwood City Oct. 11, 2014.
Kei t h Spat aro and Shanno n
Os borne, of San Mateo, gave birth to a
baby boy at Sequoia Hospital in Redwood
City Oct. 11, 2014.
Patri ck and Veroni ca Fel l owes , of
San Mateo, gave birth to a baby boy at
Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City Oct. 12,
2014.
Tomi o Mack and Carol i ne Ekman,
of San Bruno, gave birth to a baby girl at
Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City Oct. 13,
2014.
Kev i n and Jo an Laf f ert y , of
Burlingame, gave birth to a baby girl at
Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City Oct. 13,
2014.
Eri k and Al l i s on Cos tl ow, of San
Carlos, gave birth to a baby boy at Sequoia
Hospital in Redwood City Oct. 14, 2014.
Chri s topher and Sara Fong, of San
Mateo, gave birth to a baby boy at Sequoia
Hospital in Redwood City Oct. 14, 2014.
Edward and Angel a Madrak, of Foster
City, gave birth to a baby girl at Sequoia
Hospital in Redwood City Oct. 14, 2014.
San Mateo County Supervisor Don Horsley with 49ers great Guy McIntyre at Caminar for
Mental Healths 50th anniversary celebration at Levis Stadium Sept. 25. The event raised
$410,000 for the nonprofits programs and services for adults with mental, physical and
developmental disabilities in San Mateo,Santa Clara,San Francisco,Solano and Butte counties.
Glenda, a longtime YMCA employee, and Dave Jones renewed their vows for the fifth time
in front of their Sequoia YMCA family in Redwood City.Every day,Glenda,a Parkinsons survivor,
encourages YMCA members to improve their health and never give up. A number of local
YMCAs offer a Parkinsons exercise class designed to empower people with Parkinsons disease
by optimizing their physical function and help to delay the progression of symptoms.
Celebrating 50 years of Caminar Renewing vows and encouraging hope
The Foster City Lions Club held its eighth annual White Cane Bingo and Dinner fundraiser at
the William Walker Recreation Center in Foster City Saturday,Oct.4 with proceeds dedicated
to eye conservation projects.Veterans from VA Palo Alto Health Care Systems Western Blind
Rehabilitation Center attended and Foster City Cub Scouts made sure veterans did not miss
a single number on their bingo sheets.
Playing bingo to help the blind
WORLD 21
Monday Oct. 20, 2014 THE DAILY JOURNAL
By Christopher Torchia
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
JOHANNESBURG In the United States,
some parents fearful of deadly Ebola pulled
children out of a school after the principal
returned from Zambia, an African nation far
from the area hit by the disease. In Geneva,
a top U. N. official warned against anti-
African discrimination fueled by fears of
Ebola. The disease has ravaged a small part
of Africa, but the international image of the
whole continent is increasingly under
siege, reinforcing some old stereotypes.
Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone the
African countries afflicted by the Ebola out-
break have a combined population of
about 22 million on a continent with more
than 1 billion people. Their corner of West
Africa encompasses an area the size of
California, or almost as big as Morocco.
Yet the epidemic feeds into a narrative of
disaster on a continent of 54 countries that
has seen some progress in past years, and
false perceptions of Ebolas reach are hurt-
ing African business distant from the affect-
ed areas.
It speaks to a whole discourse about the
danger of Africa, said Michael Jennings, a
senior lecturer in international develop-
ment at the School of Oriental and African
Studies in London.
He cited the recent decision of a British
school to postpone a visit by a teacher
from the West African country of Ghana
after parents expressed concern about the
Ebola virus. Ghana does not border the
hard-hit nations and has not reported any
cases of the disease.
Jennings said fearful people dont neces-
sarily react in a rational way and the mes-
sage of some comments on social media in
Britain is: Why dont we just stop every-
one in West Africa from coming?
Africa has had a troubled image. Famine
in Ethiopia, chaos in Somalia and genocide
in Rwanda drove the idea of a continent in
perpetual crisis. In recent years, though, an
end to a number of wars and ensuing stabil-
ity and growth pointed to a turnaround that
some enthusiasts dubbed Africa Rising.
Now the economic impact of Ebola fears
is being felt in many parts of Africa.
Hotels, tourism operators and conference
organizers are recording increasing cancel-
lations.
Thirty international buyers pulled out of
an annual tourism expo that began Thursday
in Zimbabwes resort town of Victoria
Falls, said Karikoga Kaseke, the national
tourism agency chief. He said business trav-
elers from China and Malaysia were among
those who recently canceled trips, and
Jamaican musicians have also skipped
Zimbabwean shows.
The southern African country is more than
4, 800 kilometers (3, 000 miles) from
Ebola-hit Liberia, or about twice the dis-
tance between London and Moscow.
In the U. S. state of Mississippi, a middle
school principal has taken a week of vaca-
tion in an attempt to allay parents fears
about Ebola after he returned from a trip to
Zambia, another southern African nation
without any reported Ebola cases. In
Pennsylvania, two high school soccer
coaches resigned last week after their play-
ers hurled Ebola taunts at an opponent from
West Africa.
Soccer players on Sierra Leones national
team have been treated as Ebola risks in
African Cup qualifying games even though
none of the squad lives in Sierra Leone
because they play for clubs in Europe and
elsewhere. Opponents have sometimes
refused to shake the hands of the Sierra
Leoneans or swap shirts a soccer tradi-
tion after a game because of fears of
catching the deadly virus.
U. N. High Commissioner for Human
Rights Zeid Raad Al Hussein has warned
against a mentality that locks people into
rigid identity groups and reduces all
Africans or all West Africans, or some
smaller, national or local group to a
stereotype.
Jens David Ohlin, a professor at Cornell
Law School in the United States, said dis-
crimination was a concern as states seek to
prevent the Ebola virus from entering their
borders, but he warned against oversensi-
tivity to discrimination that will prevent
governments from appropriately dealing
with the situation.
The early international response to
Ebolas spread, described by some as slow,
is linked to its location, according to
Ohlin.
He said: Because it was in Africa, people
just sort of threw their hands up.
Ebola: Africas image takes a hit
REUTERS
Pupils wash their hands with as a preventive measure against Ebola at Anono school
in Abidjan.
By Robert Burns
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON The U. S. mi l i t ary
sai d Sunday i t had ai rdropped weapons,
ammuni t i on and medi cal suppl i es t o
Kurdi sh forces defendi ng t he Syri an ci t y
of Kobani agai nst Isl ami c St at e mi l i -
t ant s.
The airdrops Sunday were the first of
their kind and followed weeks of U. S. and
coalition airstrikes in and near Kobani,
near the Turkish border. The U. S. said ear-
l i er Sunday t hat i t had l aunched 11
airstrikes overnight in the Kobani area.
In a st at ement Sunday ni ght , U. S.
Central Command said U. S. C-130 cargo
planes made multiple drops of arms and
supplies provided by Kurdish authorities
i n Iraq. It sai d t hey were i nt ended t o
enabl e cont i nued resi st ance t o Isl ami c
St at e effort s t o t ake ful l cont rol of
Kobani.
The airdrops are almost certain to anger
the Turkish government, which has said
it would oppose any U. S. arms transfers
to the Kurdish rebels in Syria. Turkey
views the main Kurdish group in Syria as
an extension of the Turkish Kurd group
known as the PKK, which has waged a 30-
year insurgency in Turkey and is desig-
nated a terror group by the U. S. and by
NATO.
In a wri t t en st at ement , Cent ral
Command said its forces have conducted
more than 135 airstrikes against Islamic
State forces in Kobani.
Using an acronym for the Islamic State
group, Cent ral Command sai d,
Combined with continued resistance to
ISIL on the ground, indications are that
these strikes have slowed ISIL advances
into the city, killed hundreds of their
fighters and destroyed or damaged scores
of pieces of ISIL combat equipment and
fighting positions.
In a conference call with reporters after
Cent ral Command announced t he ai r-
drops, seni or admi ni st rat i on offi ci al s
said three C-130 planes dropped 27 bun-
dles of small arms, ammunition and med-
ical supplies. The officials spoke on con-
dition of anonymity under ground rules
set by the White House.
One official said that while the results
of the mission are still being assessed, it
appeared that the vast majority of the
suppl i es reached t he i nt ended Kurdi sh
fighters.
The offi ci al al so sai d t he C-130s
encount ered no resi st ance from t he
ground in Syria during their flights in and
out of Syrian airspace.
U.S. airdrops arms to Kurds
in Syrian town of Kobani
LOCAL
22
Monday Oct. 20, 2014 THE DAILY JOURNAL
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Tuesday October 21st 10:00AM to 12:00PM
Peninsula Jewish Community Center
800 Foster City Blvd., Foster City, CA 94404
Conference Room A
(THIS EVENT/PROGRAM IS NOT SPONSORED BY THE PJCC)
Tuesday October 28th 10:00AM to 12:00PM
Sharis Caf
2010 Rollingwood Drive, San Bruno, CA 94066
Tuesday October 21st 2:00PM to 4:00PM
Basque Cultural Center
599 Railroad Avenue, So. San Francisco, CA 94080
Tuesday October 28th 2:00PM to 4:00PM
Hilton Garden Inn Oakland/San Leandro - Garden Room 1
510 Lewelling Blvd., San Leandro, CA 94579
Wednesday October 22nd 10:00AM to 12:00PM
Community Activities Building CAB Rm #1
1400 Roosevelt Avenue, Redwood City, CA 94063
(Nearest Cross Streets Roosevelt & Balota Avenue)
THIS IS NOT A SPONSORED PROGRAM BY THE CITY OF REDWOOD CITY
Wednesday October 29th 2:00PM to 4:00PM
La Promenade Caf
3643 Balboa Street, San Francisco, CA 94121
Wednesday October 22nd 2:00PM to 4:00PM
CyBelles Front Room Restaurant
1385 9th Avenue, San Francisco, CA 94122
(Sunset District)
Wednesday October 29th 10:00AM to 12:00PM
Hawthorn Suites by Wyndham
1628 Webster Street, Alameda, CA 94501
Thursday October 23rd 10:00AM to 12:00PM
Courtyard Marriott
3150 Garrity Way, Richmond, CA 94806
Thursday October 30th 10:00AM to 12:00PM
Mimis Caf
2208 Bridgepointe Parkway, San Mateo, CA 94404
Thursday October 23rd 2:00PM to 4:00PM
Jewish Center of San Francisco Room 209
3200 California Street, San Francisco, CA 94118
THIS IS NOT A PROGRAM BY THE JCCSF (Parking underneath building
Bring Self-Parking Ticket into Seminar for Validation)
Thursday October 30th 2:00PM to 4:00PM
Hampton Inn & Suites Skyline Room
2700 Junipero Serra Blvd., Daly City, CA 94015
Weiss, who lives two blocks from the
Avalon.
It has been a fixture (in the neighbor-
hood, ) unfortunately the use is not anyones
preferred use, Weiss said. Its not really
maintained well so even though the archi-
tecture is nice, the place itself is kind of run
down and I know there have been problems
there from time to time. So those things
make it a good candidate for redevelop-
ment.
San Mateo police Sgt. Rick Decker said
its the most inexpensive long-stay motel
in town and they have had investigations of
drugs and prostitution there in the past.
The manager has always been extremely
cooperative when we do respond there. We
do tend to have waves of more calls for serv-
ice there compared to other hotels, Decker
said. It can range from your typical loud
music disturbance to maybe domestic vio-
lence.
Warner said City Ventures was drawn to
San Mateos strong real estate market and
sees the site as ripe with opportunities.
We think its a great location for what
weve got proposed. Theres a lot of single-
family homes in the area. We love the
North Shoreview Montessori School near-
by, Warner said. City Ventures, the com-
pany, really focuses on these kinds of infill
sites. On identifying sites that are blighted,
that dont really work with the rest of the
community, and cleaning them up and mak-
ing them much better.
While the site is in need of major repairs,
Weiss said the neighborhood is beginning
to experience increasingly dense traffic.
Weve been noticing since the economy
has returned and everyone now has GPS, a
lot of traffic that has normally been on
Bayshore [Boulevard], because it gets so
backed up, a lot of cars are going through
North Shoreview, Weiss said. An addi-
tional 40 some odd homes with two people
or more will add that much more traffic.
Weiss said some of the neighbors are wor-
ried the new development wont provide suf-
ficient visitor parking and a two-car garage
may not be sufficient for a two- or three-bed-
room apartment.
Its not transit-oriented development,
there is a bus there, but its not exactly next
to the train station. So having so few park-
ing spaces in a location that remote from
services is not realistic, Weiss said.
The North Shoreview Neighborhood
Association is currently disbanded, but in
2000, neighbors rallied against a high-den-
sity proposal by a group that wanted to tear
down the 48-room motor court motel that
was built in 1936 to construct a 194-room
AmeriSuites hotel. Neighbors protested the
Planning Commissions approval of that
project and it was never built.
Warner said City Ventures has very differ-
ent intentions and will continue to work
with the city and the community to create a
plan that works.
We are not maximizing the density of the
property, Weiss said. Were proposing
something that we think fits pretty well for
this site, thats going to be a lot nicer than
whats there.
San Mateo city staff is currently review-
ing City Ventures application and no meet-
ings have been scheduled at this time. For
more information visit cityofsanmateo. org.
samantha@smdailyjournal.com
(650) 344-5200 ext. 106
Continued from page 1
LOCAL
DATEBOOK 23
Monday Oct. 20, 2014 THE DAILY JOURNAL
MONDAY, OCT. 20
Dance Connection With Music by the
Ron Borelli Trio. Free dance lessons 6:30
p.m.-7 p.m. with open dance from 7 p.m.-
9:30 p.m. Burlingame Womans Club, 241
Park Road, Burlingame.
Hollywood/Halloween night (costumes
encouraged). Bring a new first-time male
friend and receive free entry for yourselg.
Only one free entry per new dancer. Free
admission for male dance hosts. Admission
is $9 members, $11 guests. For more infor-
mation call 342-2221.
Pub Style Trivia. 7 p.m. Belmont Library,
1110 Alameda de las Pulgas, Belmont. Test
your knowledge of pop culture, geekdom
and random school facts with a Halloween
theme. Beer and pub snacks will be served,
ages 21+. For more information email bel-
mont@smcl.org.
In My Life - A Musical Tribute to the
Beatles. 7:30 p.m. Featuring live music
from renowned tribute band Abbey Road,
the show is widely considered by industry
insiders to be the most unique Beatles
show in decades. $35 to $45. For more
information or to purchase tickets go to
www.heritagetheatre.org.
TUESDAY, OCT. 21
Filolis End of Season Sale. 10 a.m. Filoli,
86 Canada Road, Woodside. Fifty percent
off select items until Sunday, Oct. 26. For
more information call 364-8300.
Computer Coach. 10 a.m. to noon. San
Carlos Library, 610 Elm St., San Carlos.
Meets every Tuesday. Free and open to the
public. For more information call Rhea
Bradley at 591-0341 ext. 237.
POL Sale & Mobile Adoptions. Noon to 3
p.m. Pick of the Litter Thrift Shop, 1127
Chula Vista, Burlingame.
Changing the Game, My Journey
Through Life and Sports. 1:30 p.m. to 2:30
p.m. Little House, 800 Middle Ave., Menlo
Park. Free for members; $3 for nonmem-
bers. For more information go to
www.peninsulavolunteers.org.
Artists Reception and Silent Auction. 5
p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Caldwell Gallery Hall of
Justice Main Floor, 400 County Center,
Redwood City. Featuring the works of
artists with disabilities. $10 in advance, $12
at the door; $5 for children 5-12. For more
information call 573-2480.
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 22
San Mateo Professional Alliance Weekly
Networking Lunch. Noon to 1 p.m.
Spiedo Ristorante, 223 E. Fourth Ave., San
Mateo. Free admission, but lunch is $17. For
more information call 430-6500 or see
www.sanmateoprofessionalalliance.com.
Millbrae Library Film Program. 6 p.m. to
8 p.m. Millbrae Library, 1 Library Ave.,
Millbrae. King of Masks is a 2000 Chinese
film with English subtitles set in 1930s
Sichuan, China. Free. For more information
call 697-7607.
History Makers Dinner. 6 p.m. Hotel
Sofitel, Redwood City. The San Mateo
Historical Association honors football
great and longtime San Francisco peninsu-
la resident Y.A. Tittle as its 2014 History
Maker. For more information call 299-0104
or email development@historysmc.org.
Workshop for Homeowners on Energy
Efficiency Rebates and Incentivees. 6:30
p.m. to 8:30 p.m. San Mateo Public Library,
Oak Room, 55 W. Third Ave., San Mateo.
Free. RSVP online at http://energyupgrade-
smc.eventbrite.com. For more information
call 866-878-6008.
Lifetree Cafe Conversations: Living a
Lie. 6:30 p.m. Bethany Lutheran Church,
1095 Cloud Ave., Menlo Park.
Complimentary snacks and beverages will
be served. For more information call 854-
5897.
Free Workshop for Homeowners. 7 p.m.
to 8:30 p.m. San Mateo Public Library, Oak
Room, 55 W. Third Ave., San Mateo.
Workshop on energy efficiency rebates
and incentives. For more information email
Andrea Chow at achow@smcgov.org.
THURSDAY, OCT. 23
Once on this Island. Oct. 23-26. San Mateo
Performing Arts Center. San Mateo High
School presents a modern adaptation of
The Little Mermaid. $20 for adult reserved
seats; $15 for student reserved seats; $5 for
general admission at the door. For more
information contact lmadden@smhsdra-
ma.org.
AARP Sponsored Save Driver Refresher
Course. 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. San Bruno
Senior Center, 1555 Crystal Springs Road,
San Bruno. $15 for AARP members, $20 for
non-AARP members. For more information
call 616-7150.
Lifetree Cafe Conversations: Living a
Lie. 9:15 a.m. Bethany Lutheran Church,
1095 Cloud Ave., Menlo Park.
Complimentary snacks and beverages will
be served. For more information call 854-
5897.
Community Forum. 11 a.m. to Noon. Little
House, 800 Middle Ave., Menlo Park. Learn
about My Health Concierge, a dedicated
team of oncology professionals who suc-
cessfully navigate clients through cancer
diagnoses and treatment. Free. For more
information go to www.peninsulavolun-
teers.org.
Rotary Club of Half Moon Bay presents
guest speaker Amy Fothergill. 12:30 p.m. to
1:30 p.m. Portuguese Community Center,
724 Kelly St., Half Moon Bay. $25 for guests.
Amy Fothergill is a chef and author and
will speak about the popularity of gluten-
free foods. For more information go to
rotaryofhalfmoonbay.com.
Movies for School Age Children: The
Lego Movie. 4 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. San Mateo
Public Library, 55 W. Third Ave., San Mateo.
Listen to Superhero stories and take pic-
tures. Free. For more information contact
Alison Day at aday@cityofsanmateo.org or
Addie Spanbock at aspanbock@cityofsan-
mateo.org or call 522-7813.
Peninsula Recruitment Mixer. 6 p.m. to
8:30 p.m. Burlingame Public Library, Lane
Room, 480 Primrose Road, Burlingame. A
chance to network with job seekers with
diverse skill sets in an informal setting.
Refreshments will be served. For more
information call 574-1766.
Special author program: Ray Coca. San
Mateo Public Library, 55 W. Third Ave., San
Mateo. For more information call 522-
7818.
Food Addiction? 7:30 p.m. 1500 Easton
Drive, Burlingame. Free twelve step recov-
ery program for anyone suffering from
food obsession, overeating, under-eating
or bulimia. For more information call 781-
932-6300 or visit foodaddicts.org.
The Woman in Black. 8 p.m. Dragon
Productions Theater, 2120 Broadway,
Redwood City. For more information email
rentals@dragonproductions.net.
FRIDAY, OCT. 24
Free job fair. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Free resume
critiquing services and access to free
employment resources at the event.
Residents of South San Francisco will have
VIP early access which is from 9 a.m. to 10
p.m. For more information visit
www.ssf.net or www.ssfchamber.com.
Esther Ehrlich Author Event. 3:30 p.m.
Easton Library, 1800 Easton Drive,
Burlingame. Meet the author and find out
about her newest book, Nest. For more
information contact piche@pisinfo.org.
Halloween Tween Evening. 5 p.m. to 7:45
p.m. San Mateo Public Library, 55 West
Third Ave, San Mateo. Night includes
pumpkin decorating, Halloween games,
and watching The Witches. For tweens in
fifth to eigth grade. For more information
and to sign up, call 522-7838.
2014 Millbrae Man & Woman of the Year
Dinner. 6 p.m. Green Hills Country Club,
500 Ludeman Lane, Millbrae. Dinner hon-
oring 2014 Millbrae Man of the Year Denis
Fama and Woman of the Year Gaetane
Andrews. $50 per person. Contact Jack
Gardner at 777-0061 for an invitation. RSVP
by Oct. 17.
Wine and Canvas Painting Event. 6:30
p.m. to 9:30 p.m. Sofitel San Francisco Bay,
223 Twin Dolphin Drive, Redwood City.
Tickets are $35. For more information visit
www.sofitelsfdining.com.
Groovy Judy Gets Her Groove On. 7:30
p.m. to 9:30 p.m. Back Yard Coffee Co., 965
Brewster Ave., Redwood City. All ages. Free.
For more information go to
www.groovyjudy.com.
Haunted House of Moss Beach. 7:30 p.m. to
11 p.m. 601 Kelmore Street, Moss Beach.
Free; donatins of any amount appreciated
for UNICEF. For more information visit
www.hauntedhouseofmossbeach.com.
Tri-School Productions presents The
Diary of Anne Frank. 7:30 p.m. Gellert
Auditorium, Serra High School, 451 W. 20th
Ave., San Mateo. For more information go
to www.trischoolproductions.com.
The Woman in Black. 8 p.m. Coastal
Repertory Theatre, 1167 Main St. in Half
Moon Bay. The Woman in Black, a play
written in 1987, is based on the 1983 hor-
ror novella by Susan Hill. $17 to $30. For
more information call 569-3266.
SATURDAY, OCT. 25
Community Breakfast. 8:30 a.m. to 11
a.m. The American Legion San Bruno Post
#409, 757 San Mateo Ave., San Bruno. There
will be eggs, pancakes, bacon, French toast,
omelets, juice and coffee. $8 per person, $5
for children under 10. Enjoy the friendship
and service from American Legion mem-
bers.
CORAs 2014 Walk a Mile in Her Shoes. 9
a.m. to Noon. 2211 Palm Ave., San Mateo.
Helps raise awareness of domestic vio-
lence by walking a mile in womens shoes.
Registration and shoes can be taken care
of by visiting corasupport.org. For more
information call Marisa at 652-0800 x 171.
Free Recyling Event. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Beresford Park parking lot, 2720 Alameda
De Las Pulgas, San Mateo. Features e-waste
drop off, community paper shred, give-n-
go to Goodwill. For more information call
522-7329 or email rkasper@cityofsanma-
teo.org.
PreSchool Family 31st Annual Fun Day.
9:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. PreSchool Family
Campus, 4120 Middlefield Road, Palo Alto.
Raffle, train rides, carnival games, magic
shows, live music, food and bake sale, and
used book sale. Free. For more information
call 856-0833.
Vote. 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Registration &
Elections Division, 40 Tower Road, San
Mateo or 555 County Center, first floor,
Redwood City. Cast your ballot or return a
voted mail ballot for the Statewide General
Election. Early voting period lasts until Nov.
3 (on weekdays from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.). Free.
For more information call 312-5222.
Assistance League of San Mateo
County: Make a Difference Day
Childrens Book Drive. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Turnstyle Resale Shop, 60 N. B St., San
Mateo. Every child that visits the shop will
receive a free book. For more information
call 342-2357 or email Karen Mead at assis-
tanceleagueofsanmateo@gmail.com.
Little Dog Adoption Day. Foster City
Library, Foster City. Adoption counselor
and small dog adoptions. Available dogs
are suitable for families with children eight
years old and up. For more information call
574-4842.
Halloween Festival. 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. The
VIBE. A spooktacular day of food, games
and fun. Geared toward preschoolers to
fifth-grade. For more information call 286-
3254 or visit www.fostercity.org.
Health and Safety Fair. 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.
The Tanforan Shopping Center, 1150 El
Camino Real, San Bruno. Features free
health screenings, information on family
wellness, nutrition and fitness, safety tips
on fire, poison, toys and much more, CPR
demonstration and disaster readiness. Free
and open to the public. For more informa-
tion call 349-2200.
Open Studios. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. 1777
California Drive, Burllingame. 28 artists
welcoming public to their studios.
Refreshments will be served. Raffle and
class sign ups. For more information visit
peninsulaartinstitute.org or call 692-2101.
For more events visit
smdailyjournal.com, click Calendar.
Calendar
Edgemont Elementary School on
Angus Avenue, Elm Street and Linden
Avenue corner. Cost of the land was
$5, 075. The new school was to be
completed around October 1941.
On May 16, 1941, the San Bruno
City Hall site on 567 El Camino Real
was purchased from Williams for
$4, 250.
On Oct. 10, 1941, Harrison and
Dorman purchased 20 lots from
Williams for construction of Mills
Park homes in the $6, 000 range.
On Dec. 5, 1941, 40 homes were
already built in Mills Park with one-
story dwellings and one-car garages.
War was declared on Japan on Dec. 8,
1941; Germany declared war on the
United States later.
During the war years, materials for
buildings were put on a priority list
and public housing was a low priority.
George Williams construction of
Mills Park was virtually stopped until
the war was over in 1945.
Victory in Europe was May 8, 1945.
Victory in Japan was Sept. 2, 1945.
City Clerk Ralph Woodman proudly
announced that there would be no more
tin can drives for the war effort. The
end of 1945 was to be the beginning of
tremendous changes in San Bruno and
the Peninsula. Wartime rationing was
to end at 12:01 a. m. Jan. 1, 1946,
leaving only sugar rationing to be
dropped from the war effort.
On April 6, 1945, plans are
announced that Mills Park #3 with 225
homes and a park is to be developed by
American Homes, Inc. , the same
developer of Mills Park #1 and #2.
Williams Avenue and Burrows
Avenue were named for the developers
of Mills Park Addition.
In June 1950, the population of San
Bruno was 12, 409.
Mills Park was essentially complet-
ed by the end of 1955. George
Williams moved on to organize the
Consolidated Land Company and
develop the Crestmoor Addition to the
west.
Rediscovering the Peninsula by Darold
Fredricks appears in the Monday edi-
tion of the Daily Journal.
Continued from page 3
HISTORY
begins with changing parking from
angled to parallel, redoing facades,
offering loans for putting in new
awnings, working on sidewalks, adding
three plazas and perhaps creating a
pedestrian-only part of Grand Avenue.
Eventually, it plans to add more high-
density, mixed-use development with
workforce and market rate housing,
retail and office space.
Its a blueprint for what we hope to
do, said Vice Mayor Rich Garbarino.
Clean it up a little bit. Nothing is set
in stone.
So far, the streets have been restriped
and the city is working on installing
new parking meters and bike racks.
Another part of the plan is to reconfig-
ure the Caltrain station by extending
the platform south of its current loca-
tion and construction of a $20 million
below-grade pedestrian/bicycle under-
pass at the southeast corner of the
Grand Avenue and Airport Boulevard
beneath Highway 101. The underpass
would provide access to the platform to
better connect the areas east and west of
the freeway. Also planned is expanding
Railroad Avenue to the east to connect
it to Gateway Boulevard and adding new
roads to connect Sylvester Road to the
Railroad Avenue extension and Gateway
Boulevard.
The city has listened to concerns
about housing and people being dis-
placed as a result of the changes,
Garbarino said.
Were looking at the whole picture;
for the good of the community and
neighborhood, he said. How do we
make our city a destination spot? How
do we get people to come to South San
Francisco?
Ri si ng home pri ces are causi ng
great concern for residents in general,
said City Manager Mike Futrell. Still,
even if the city wasnt working on
plans to revitalize downtown, hous-
ing prices would still be an issue.
If we are successful, it could cause
property values to rise even more, he
said. Were wrestling with that issue
and we dont yet really have an answer
to the rising rent crisis on the
Peninsula.
New housing would amount to 1,400
dwelling units. There would be 800,000
square feet of commercial space,
21,000 square feet for industrial uses
and 1. 2 million square feet of new
office/research and development space.
Meanwhile, business owners on
Grand Avenue seem excited about the
plan, including Luis Campos, who has
owned Lonora Jewelry and Watch Repair
at 383 Grand Ave. for the past 26 years.
He attributes his stores success to
knowing the community and living in
it, but the last six years have been with
the hope everything will turn around.
Its a good idea, he said. We need
to have a beautiful downtown.
Newer business owners like Meredith
Lantz, co-founder of Bitters + Bottles at
240 Grand Ave., are also enthusiastic
about the plan.
We are excited that the city is taking
steps towards creating a more pedestri-
an and merchant friendly old town envi-
ronment, adding more housing that will
better serve South San Franciscos
diverse and growing community, as
well working to diversify the Grand
Avenue businesses to help give the
local biotech community more reasons
to shop locally, Lantz said in an email.
We are equally excited that South City
is committed to preserving the inde-
pendently owned and run mom-and-pop
type business corridor that Grand
Avenue has always been.
The plan is moving along pretty
briskly, said Futrell, There are already
three developments in the works that
include 266 units of rental housing in
downtown, 80 more separate units and
90 units of affordable senior housing.
These developments depend on changes
within the plan, including altering
building code, increasing density limita-
tions and building heights and changing
parking requirements. Building heights
would be greatest within one-fourth mile
of the Caltrain station to allow the high-
est densities of residents and employees
within an easy walk of the transit serv-
ice, according to the plan.
We meet with three to four develop-
ers a week who want to do housing in
South San Francisco, Futrell said.
Although its a called a 20-year plan, I
hope its a lot shorter.
Within 12 months, the city hopes to
begin construction of the City Hall
Plaza, which would allow the city to
block off the street for pedestrians and
street fairs. Two other plazas include a
Caltrain Plaza and a Linden
Neighborhood Plaza. A $15.4 million
new streetscape from Airport Boulevard
to Spruce Avenue would also be part of
the plan. Within 24 months, the city
hopes it will have the first plaza built
and the sidewalks extended from 9 feet
to 15 feet wide, while also adding dedi-
cated bike lanes.
The plan can also be amended in the
future as the economy changes and new
councilmembers take over, Garbarino
said. Potential funding could come from
creating financing districts, assess-
ment districts, a business improvement
district, development impact fees, a
city affordable housing trust fund and
city housing bonds. Other options
include utilizing the countys half cent
sales tax called Measure A, a city hous-
ing fund, revenue bonds, general obli-
gation bonds, the citys general fund, a
public benefit assessment district,
grants from the region and state, along
with other federal funding.
Ameeting is tentatively scheduled for
the Planning Commission to take pub-
lic comments on the environmental
impact report Nov. 6. The plan, first
initiated in 2012, will go to the
Planning Commission for vote in
December, then to the City Council in
January 2015.
For more information, go to ssfdown-
townplan.org.
angela@smdailyjournal.com
(650) 344-5200 ext. 105
Continued from page 1
REVAMP
COMICS/GAMES
10-20-14
WEEKENDS PUZZLE SOLVED
PREVIOUS
SUDOKU
ANSWERS
Want More Fun
and Games?
Jumble Page 2 La Times Crossword Puzzle Classieds
Tundra & Over the Hedge Comics Classieds
Boggle Puzzle Everyday in DateBook


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

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

Freebies: Fill in single-box cages with the number in
the top-left corner.
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4
ACROSS
1 Tablet
4 Addition
8 Golly!
11 Pub pint
12 Bias
13 Yang complement
14 Onlooker
16 Med. scan
17 Largest bird
18 Facilitated
20 Umbrage
21 Tierra Fuego
22 Actor Ed
25 Metes out
29 Feverish chill
30 Distant
31 Big parrot
32 Ad
33 Noahs boat
34 Wind resistance
35 Skeptically
38 Under (secret)
39 Canape topper
40 Moo goo pan
41 Dustup (hyph.)
44 Bakery goodies
48 Avenger Emma
49 Orchard unit (2 wds.)
51 CD preceders
52 They turn litmus red
53 we there yet?
54 That muchacha
55 Scale deduction
56 Silent bid
DOWN
1 El , Texas
2 Hannibals route
3 Bug repellent
4 Finish second
5 Strip of wood
6 Famous numero
7 Public way
8 Fitness centers
9 Blarney Stone locale
10 Ms. Blyton
12 Blends
15 Whodunit start
19 Boxing great
21 Dim
22 Tee-hee kin (hyph.)
23 Id companions
24 Gamblers need
25 Not frequent
26 Gumbo ingredient
27 Lowest high tide
28 Wilts
30 Visage
34 Wander
36 Jackies tycoon
37 Like skim milk
38 Blows gently
40 Sherpa, often
41 Axiom
42 Refs kin
43 Shuttle org.
44 Naturalist John
45 Persia, now
46 Orchid-loving Wolfe
47 Gardeners purchase
50 TV brand
DILBERT CROSSWORD PUZZLE
HOLY MOLE
PEARLS BEFORE SWINE
GET FUZZY
MONDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2014
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Get your facts straight
and your paperwork in order before dealing with
banks, government agencies or other institutions.
A creative solution to a professional challenge will
improve your chances of advancement.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Greater freedom
will be yours if you ask for help. You will get a good
response from people who are in a position to
inuence your future.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Consider the
consequences before taking action. Ignoring problems
will only make matters worse. Not everyone will play
by the rules, so make the appropriate preparations
and then counterattack.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) An opportunity to
travel should not be missed. You have a lot to learn, but
you must be willing to listen to others. Incorporate new
skills and knowledge into your job performance.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) You need to have
a serious discussion with a loved one. The time is
right to discuss the future and the pros and cons of
moving in a new direction.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Money is headed your
way. Now is the time to make a lasting impression.
You will be hard to resist, so let everyone know what
you want and expect.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) Consider all of the
options available to you. Think about altering your
location or lifestyle to get the most out of an opportunity.
Change can be benecial if you move quickly.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Love is in the
stars. If something is important to you, see to the
arrangements yourself. Waiting for someone else to
make things happen will be a waste of time.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Your strengths and
weaknesses will be tested. It may seem that you are
meeting opposition at every turn, but with a little
persistence, you will come out ahead.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Communication is your
strength. Group discussions with people from different
backgrounds will give you greater insight and ideas
that you can utilize in your personal projects.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Whether you need to
collect money or possessions or pay someone back,
its time to deal with such matters. If your life is not
going the way you envisioned, determine whats
required to improve it.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Dont neglect your
responsibilities. If things have become unsettled
or out of control, back up and consider what
contributed to your current position and the best
way to turn things around.
COPYRIGHT 2014 United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
24 Monday Oct. 20, 2014
THE DAILY JOURNAL
25 Monday Oct. 20, 2014 THE DAILY JOURNAL
HELP WANTED
Te Abigail welcomes applicants for our next hiring
phase. Join our new facility for the elderly, in
Redwood City. Seeking positive individuals with a
traditional work ethic.
Caregivers - Experience On|y
Med Tech - Experience On|y
Housekeeping/Laundry Eng|ish not required
Receptionist - Part Time Weekends
Maintenance/Handy Man - On Ca||
EOE, Division of Labor Standards Wage Order 5
Call 650.995.7123
Email - assistance@abigailcompletecare.com
HELP WANTED
Complete Senior Living welcomes applicants for
our next hiring phase. Join our upscale and
established facility in San Mateo. Seeking positive
individuals with a traditional work ethic.
Caregivers - Experience On|y
Med Tech - Experience On|y
EOE, Division of Labor Standards Wage Order 5
Call 650.995.7123
Email - assistance@abigailcompletecare.com
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26 Monday Oct. 20, 2014 THE DAILY JOURNAL
0KD:H7 0KD:H7 0KD:H7
+L;H J>; $;:=; +L;H J>; $;:=; +L;H J>; $;:=;
EVENT MARKETING SALES
Join the Daily Journal Event marketing
team as a Sales and Business Development
Specialist. Duties include sales and
customer service of event sponsorships,
partners, exhibitors and more. Interface
and interact with local businesses to
enlist participants at the Daily Journals
ever expanding inventory of community
events such as the Senior Showcase,
Family Resource Fair, Job Fairs, and
more. You will also be part of the project
management process. But rst and
foremost, we will rely on you for sales
and business development.
This is one of the fastest areas of the
Daily Journal, and we are looking to grow
the team.
Must have a successful track record of
sales and business development.
TELEMARKETING/INSIDE SALES
We are looking for a telemarketing whiz,
who can cold call without hesitation and
close sales over the phone. Experience
preferred. Must have superior verbal,
phone and written communication skills.
Computer prociency is also required.
Self-management and strong business
intelligence also a must.
To apply for either position,
please send info to
jerry@smdailyjournal.com or call
650-344-5200.
The Daily Journal seeks
two sales professionals
for the following positions:
Leading local news coverage on the Peninsula
HELP WANTED
SALES
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27 Monday Oct. 20, 2014 THE DAILY JOURNAL
ACROSS
1 Toast spreads
5 Head-and-
shoulders
statuette
9 Charitable sort
14 Cains victim
15 Lotion additive
16 Drab color
17 Ashram authority
18 Agent Scully on
The X-Files
19 Rubber tree
product used in
paint
20 What is our
flatware made of,
Lone Ranger?
23 Pea container
24 Sonic the
Hedgehog
developer
25 NFL scores
28 Red, White or
Black
30 Reddish-yellow
35 Toward the ships
rear
36 What does it
take to succeed
in Hollywood,
Tonto?
39 Quahog, for one
41 In the past
42 Write with acid
43 What makes up
my mane, Roy
Rogers?
48 Environmental
prefix
49 Meryl who played
Julia Child
50 Nine-digit-
number issuing
org.
51 Bad-mouth
52 Rock concert
gear
55 CBS forensic
drama
57 Start of the
Mister Ed
theme song, and
hint to who is
asking 20-, 36-
and 43-Across
64 North Carolina
fort
65 Its a __!:
Easy!
66 Abound
67 Quotable Yogi
68 Canterbury
story
69 Eves mate
70 Bakery array
71 Google find
72 VAIO PC maker
DOWN
1 Sporty English
autos
2 Lie against
3 Nothing more
than
4 Drink inelegantly
5 I wouldnt do that
if I were you
6 __ Bator
7 Top 40 numbers
8 Poke fun at
9 Cents partner
10 One of five
Norwegian kings
11 Evening, in ads
12 Above
13 Tyrannosaurus
__
21 ABC drama
about a missing
plane
22 __ Rhythm
25 Dials next to
speedometers,
for short
26 C sharp
equivalent
27 Step in a flight
29 Jai __
31 Blackjack half
32 Pre-eminent
33 Designer Aldo
34 Spirit of a culture
37 With 38-Down,
yuletide quaffs
38 See 37-Down
40 G.I. field ration
44 Riot squads
supply
45 Readings on 25-
Down: Abbr.
46 Bloodhounds
quarry
47 Unthinking
53 Orkin targets
54 Mount in Exodus
56 Greek is
57 Field of expertise
58 Quaint Listen!
59 Fairy tale baddie
60 Crystals in a
shaker
61 Change the
decor of
62 Actor Connery
63 Television award
64 Doctor Who
network
By David W. Cromer
2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
10/20/14
10/20/14
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis
xwordeditor@aol.com
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30 Monday Oct. 20, 2014 THE DAILY JOURNAL
EVENT MARKETING SALES
Join the Daily Journal Event marketing
team as a Sales and Business Development
Specialist. Duties include sales and
customer service of event sponsorships,
partners, exhibitors and more. Interface
and interact with local businesses to
enlist participants at the Daily Journals
ever expanding inventory of community
events such as the Senior Showcase,
Family Resource Fair, Job Fairs, and
more. You will also be part of the project
management process. But rst and
foremost, we will rely on you for sales
and business development.
This is one of the fastest areas of the
Daily Journal, and we are looking to grow
the team.
Must have a successful track record of
sales and business development.
TELEMARKETING/INSIDE SALES
We are looking for a telemarketing whiz,
who can cold call without hesitation and
close sales over the phone. Experience
preferred. Must have superior verbal,
phone and written communication skills.
Computer prociency is also required.
Self-management and strong business
intelligence also a must.
To apply for either position,
please send info to
jerry@smdailyjournal.com or call
650-344-5200.
The Daily Journal seeks
two sales professionals
for the following positions:
Leading local news coverage on the Peninsula
HELP WANTED
SALES
470 .EECI
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#?L; C; 7 97BB
&E; 650 342-2483
C78?D;JHO

Free showroom
design consultation & quote

BELOW HOME
DEPOT PRICES

PLEASE VISIT
bestbuycabinets.com
or call
650-294-3360
"+. 5+1. CAB%*!0 *!!/
" 0.1/0 !4,!.%!*C!"
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"H;; !IJ?C7J;I
(650)533-0187
(?9# 947476
CED9H;J;
by Greenstarr
Rambo
Concrete
Works
Walkways
Driveways
Pat|os
0o|ored
Aggregate
8|ock wa||s
8eta|n|ng wa||s
Stamped 0oncrete
0rnamenta| concrete
Sw|mm|ng poo| remova|
Tom 650.834.2365
Licensed Bonded and Insured
www.greenstarr.net
Since 1985 License # 752250
CEDIJHK9J?ED
(!)1/ C+*/0.1C0%+*
(650)271-3955
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29 Monday Oct. 20, 2014 THE DAILY JOURNAL
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/0!.(%*# #A.!*/
650-703-3831 (?9 #751832
"BEEH?D=
Contact us for a
FREE In-Home
Estimate
info@amingosooring.com
www.amingosooring.com
We carry all major brands!
Flamingos Flooring
CARPET
LUXURY VINYL TILE
SHEET VINYL
LAMINATE
TILE
HARDWOOD
650-655-6600
SHOP
AT HOME
WE WILL
BRING THE
SAMPLES
TO YOU.
$EKI;9B;7D?D=
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800-300-3218
408-979-9665
(?9. #794899
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Mon#hl& Secial"
Fa"#, Deendable Se!%ice
"H;; !IJ?C7J;I
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(650)341-7482
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$7KB ;8H?I!
650-583-6700
by Greenstarr
&
Chriss Hauling
Yard clean up - attic,
basement
Junk metal removal
including cars, trucks and
motorcycles
Demolition
Concrete removal
Excavation
Swimming pool removal
Tom 650. 834. 2365
Chri s 415. 999. 1223
Licensed Bonded and Insured
www.yardboss.net
Since 1985 License # 752250
$7KB?D=
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30 Monday Oct. 20, 2014 THE DAILY JOURNAL
Always Local - Always Free
San Mateo Daily Journal
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LOCAL 31
Monday Oct. 20, 2014 THE DAILY JOURNAL
housi ng i n t he count ys uni ncorporat ed
areas whi ch i ncl udes 1, 069 apart ment s of
whi ch 835 are i n t he uni ncorporat ed
vi ci ni t y of Redwood Ci t y. The ordi nance
woul d prohi bi t smoki ng wi t hi n 30 feet
of t he compl exes, i ncl udi ng decks,
pat i os and ot her common areas. The ban
woul d not affect mot el s, hot el s, det ached
si ngl e-fami l y homes or i n-l aw uni t s.
Medi cal mari j uana woul d al so be exempt .
The ordi nance wi l l al so requi re t he
post i ng of no smoki ng si gns i n pro-
hi bi t ed areas and al l ow l andl ords t o
est abl i sh desi gnat ed smoki ng areas at
l east 30 feet from any door, wi ndow or
vent .
The ordi nance, i f passed, i s effect i ve
30 days aft er t he fi nal approval but t he
ban i n exi st i ng faci l i t i es wont begi n
unt i l 14 mont hs l at er.
Groom sai d t he onl y opposi t i on shes
heard i s from t he San Mat eo Count y
Associ at i on of Real t ors whi ch di sl i kes
t hat condomi ni um owners woul d al so be
regul at ed.
I responded agai n by sayi ng t hat t hi s
i s real l y a heal t h i ssue and I dont t hi nk
i t woul d be equi t abl e t o say t heres a di f-
ference bet ween rent ers and owners.
Everyone i s i n danger wi t h t hei r heal t h
from secondhand smoke, Groom sai d.
Heal t h cost s i n San Mat eo Count y are
anot her reason propel l i ng t he proposed
ordi nance. Bet ween 2006 and 2010,
t here were 47, 066 smoki ng-rel at ed hos-
pi t al i zat i on i n San Mat eo Count y,
accordi ng t o t he Offi ce of St at ewi de
Heal t h Pl anni ng and Devel opment . The
cost was $566, 797, 878 wi t h more t han
$20. 7 mi l l i on of i t spent at t he San
Mat eo Medi cal Cent er, Groom not ed i n
her board report .
At t he same board meet i ng, supervi sors
wi l l al so consi der changi ng t he smoki ng
defi ni t i ons i n t he exi st i ng code t o
i ncl ude el ect roni c devi ces.
In t hei r recommendat i on t o t he board,
Groom and Ti ssi er ci t ed a recent sci ent i f-
i c st udy t hat confi rmed el ect roni c smok-
i ng devi ces emi t ni cot i ne i n t he rel eased
vapor and a Worl d Medi cal Associ at i on
det ermi nat i on t hat nei t her t hei r val ue
as t herapeut i c ai ds for smoki ng cessat i on
nor t hei r safet y as ci garet t e repl acement s
i s est abl i shed.
Wi t h t he count y havi ng al ready est ab-
l i shed smoki ng cont rol s l i ke banni ng i t
wi t hi n 30 feet of count y-owned or coun-
t y-l eased bui l di ngs, t he supervi sors sai d
al l owi ng t he devi ces i s a st ep back.
Usi ng t hem i n smoke-free l ocat i ons
t hreat ens t o reverse t he progress and
may i ncrease t he soci al accept abi l i t y
and appeal of smoki ng, t hey wrot e i n
t he board report .
If t he board passes t he changes, t he
count y wont be al one. Nort h Dakot a,
New Jersey and Ut ah prohi bi t e-ci ga-
ret t es i n 100 percent of smoke-free areas
and ni ne ot hers, not i ncl udi ng
Cal i forni a, ban t hem i n speci fi c areas.
Si xt een Cal i forni a j uri sdi ct i ons have
prohi bi t i ons on e-ci garet t es i ncl udi ng
Sant a Cl ara, Mari n and Cont ra Cost a
count i es i n t he Bay Area.
The Board of Superv i sors meet s 9 a. m.
Tuesday, Oct . 21 i n Board Chambers, 400
Gov ernment Cent er, Redwood Ci t y.
michelle@smdailyjournal.com
(650) 344-5200 ext. 102
Continued from page 1
E-CIGS
ble, safer and a draw to the largely Latino area.
The long-desired plan to improve Middlefield Road
became a reality after county voters passed the Measure A
half-cent sales tax.
The journey to spruce up the key business district has
included numerous workshops and meetings to nail down
possible designs and address concerns from residents and
businesses about how construction may impact the area.
More than 2, 100 people participated in the outreach and
1, 300 responded to a survey on the plan.
The choice between designs with three lanes of traffic
and four lanes was a tough decision and resulted in a split
decision by the North Fair Oaks Council earlier this year.
The three-lane design allows for wider sidewalks and bike
lanes. Parallel parking rather than the existing diagonal
space will also help accommodate the new sidewalks but
cuts down on 30 percent of the available space. The county
hopes to find an off-street lot or even build a garage to
make up the difference.
The county Public Works Department is currently work-
ing to find consultants for a traffic study and it along with
the Planning Department is also coordinating recommen-
dations parking and signalization. A report on the busi-
ness sustainability plan is expected before the North Fair
Oaks Council by years end.
If the Board of Supervisors approves the design, the
expected timeline calls for final design and construction
happening between this November and 2019.
The Board of Supervisors meets 9 a. m. Tuesday, Oct. 21
in Board Chambers, 400 Government Center, Redwood
City.
Continued from page 1
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32 Monday Oct. 20, 2014 THE DAILY JOURNAL
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Disclaimer: Due to Federal Law, some exclusions may apply
Bulged Disc
Herniated Disc
Sciatica
Pinched Nerves
Stenosis
Whiplash
Neck Pain
Dr.Thomas Ferrigno, D.C.
Member,DCOA Disc Centers of America
laYearsExperience
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Campbell (855)240-3472 SanMateo
(855)257-3472 PaloAlto (855)322-3472
www.BayAreaBackPai n. com
Sciatica and Herniated Discs
May be to Blame for Pain
in Your Back and Neck
LOCAL CLINIC OFFERS FREE CONSULTATION TO THOSE SUFFERING FROM BACK AND NECK PAIN
Did you know that 30 million Americans suffer
from back and neck pain every day? Sciatica
and herniated discs are often misunderstood.
They can cause pain and numbness in the
back, neck, legs, and feet. This pain affects
everything that you do, from work to play, and
ultimately your quality of life. We are here to tell
you that there is hope. We have the technology
and experience to help you nd relief from
sciatica and back pain. At Bay Area Disc Cen-
ters, we have helped thousands of pain suffer-
ers just like you. We offer only the most
advanced non-surgical treatments.
Are pain pills effective, long-term solutions
when dealing with Sciatica and Back Pain?
ABSOLUTELY NOT!
Until now, people have masked their pain by
frequently taking prescription pain pills. This
type of pain relief is temporary. Often these
treatments lead to even more health problems
or worse yet addiction. Many people inno-
cently fall into abusing prescription pain pills
while initially using them to alleviate real,
constant pain.
Is Surgery the Answer?
It is true that surgery may be the answer for
certain types of back injuries. When consider-
ing your options, ask yourself this question If
there is a solution to back
pain that doesnt require surgery, is it worth
exploring?
The Solution: TDCTM Therapy
TDC Therapy Traction Decompression Com-
bined Therapy is a proven treatment exclusive
to Disc Centers of America doctors for the relief
of neck and lower back pain. By utilizing trac-
tion thats isolated to the spinal segment
involved, the purpose is to create spinal decom-
pression as a result to specic traction. TDC
Therapy offers a signicant success rate and
patients have experienced dramatic pain relief
and healing. This nonsurgical solution is
changing the way doctors treat severe disc
conditions. TDC Therapy is a unique and inno-
vative approach for the relief of neck and lower
back syndromes, including:
herniated or bulging discs
egenerative disc disease
Fosterior facet syndroue
Spinal Stenosis
Sciatica
TDCTherapyis nonsurgical and noninvasive.It
is a gentle form of traction and disc decompres-
sion. The treatment is not only safe, but also
comfortable and relaxing. The goal is symptom-
atic relief and structural correction.
How Does TDCTM Therapy Work?
TDC Therapy can isolate a specic vertebra
and distract the vertebrae surrounding an
injured disc 5 to 7 millimeters. TDC Therapy
treatment isolates the specic vertebrae that
are causing the pain. The 25to30minute treat-
ment provides static, intermittent, and cycling
forces on structures that may be causing back
pain. Negative pressure promotes the diffusion
of water, oxygen, and nutrients into the verte-
bral disc area, thereby rehydrating the degen-
erated disc. Repeated pressure differential
promotes retraction of a herniated nucleus
pulposus. The TDC Therapy treatment works to
reduce pressure on the vertebral joints,
promote retraction of herniated discs, and
promote selfhealing and rehabilitation of dam-
aged discs, thereby relieving neck or lower
back pain.
Why Bay Area Disc Centers
Dr.ThomasFerrignoD.Candhisteamhavevaste
xperience in treating patients suffering from
severe disc disease. Dr. Ferrigno has
performed over 25,000 decompression treat-
ments and is currently only 1 of 2 doctors in
the state of California who is Nationally Certi-
ed in Spinal Decompression Therapy. Dr.
Ferrigno is also part of the Disc Centers of
America Team who are a national group of
doctors that have gone through extensive
training that follow the protocols set up by
The International Medical Advisory Board on
Spinal Decompression, and
follow the protocols set forward by Dr.
Noruan Shealy the honorary Chairuan,
foruer harvard professor, and probably the
most published doctor in the world on spinal
decompression therapy.
Get Your Life Back, Today!
If you suffer from sciatica, severe back or
neck pain,you can nd relief! If you are serious
about getting your life back and eliminating
your back and neck pain, my staff and I are
serious about helping you and proving how our
technology and experience can help. We are
extending this offer to the rst 30 callers. These
spaces ll up quickly, so call today to reserve
your spot.
CONSIDE THESE FACTS BEFORE SURGERY
acksurgery caocost $50,000 to $100,000 or ore
8ecovery cao be very paioIuI aod cao take ooths or years
8urgery ay or ay oot reIieve your paio
epeodeoce oo prescriptioo drugs ay occur aIter surgery
Missed work cao aouot to $1000s io Iost wages
utcoes ay be uocertaio, aod surgery is oot reversibIe

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