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CHARLES LESTER
STATE PAGE 6

SPORTS PAGE 11

Leading local news coverage on the Peninsula


www.smdailyjournal.com

Thursday Feb. 11, 2016 XVI, Edition 153

Former employee sues SamTrans for sexual harassment


Allegations against San Mateo County Transit Districts director of human resources
By Samantha Weigel
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

A former San Mateo County Transit


District employee who alleges she endured
years of sexual harassment ranging from
being inappropriately videotaped to physically assaulted, is suing the public agency
and its current head of human resources she
claims was responsible.

Elizabeth Trudell, who resigned from her


position as a personnel specialist in
November after nearly 17 years with
SamTrans, filed the lawsuit in San Mateo
County Superior Court Tuesday.
Trudell alleges her boss, Director of
Human Resources William Carson, made
inappropriate sexual comments, gestures
and physical advances that became more
egregious as her employment continued.

According to the lawsuit, Carson claimed


his behavior was not unwanted.
The district oversees Caltrain, the bus
agency SamTrans and the San Mateo County
Transportation Authority. A district
spokesperson said they could not comment
on pending litigation and Carson did not
return a request for comment.
According to Laura Mazza, an attorney
representing Trudell, the former longtime

employee is devastated by the loss of her


career.
She relied on her job to support her family and planned to continue working with
the district until she ultimately retired, but
could no longer sustain the intolerable
working conditions created by [Carson],
who is shockingly the head of the Human

See SAMTRANS, Page 18

116-acre site plan OKd


Millbrae City Council approves development policy for train station area
By Austin Walsh
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

DAILY JOURNAL FILE PHOTO

Electrification is part of a larger Caltrain


modernization plan that will replace the diesel
system with a more modern electric system.

Electrification of
Caltrain getting a
boostfrom Obama
President asks Congress for
$125M to fund the project
By Keith Burbank and Sara Gaiser
BAY CITY NEWS SERVICE

President Barack Obama has asked


Congress for $125 million in the fiscal
2017 budget for the electrification of Caltrain,
U. S. Department of
Transportation officials
announced Wednesday.
U. S.
Secretary of
Transportation Anthony
Foxx said in a statement
that
projects
like
Caltrains electrification
Barack Obama transform communities by improving mobility and access to
jobs, education and other important opportunities for millions of residents.
The money would come through the
Federal Transit Administrations Capital
Investment Grant Program.
If Caltrain receives the money, it will
have a sizeable impact on the $430 million still needed to pay for electrification,
Caltrain spokeswoman Jayme Ackemann
said.
Caltrain will also get $73 million that
had been allocated in previous years, leaving a deficit of $232 million, Ackemann

See CALTRAIN, Page 18


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Following years of thorough


planning and months of extensive
deliberation, officials approved
the policy guidelines laying the
groundwork for future development in the 116-acre site near the
Millbrae rail station.
Yet despite the substantial
amount of the consideration that
has gone into shaping the document aiming to regulate construction in the area surrounding the
citys Bay Area Rapid Transit and
Caltrain station, the Millbrae
City Council narrowly passed the
station area plan Tuesday, Feb. 9,
by a slender margin of 3-2.
Councilmembers Wayne Lee and
Gina Papan dissented, due in part
to their concerns the Millbrae
Station Area Specific Plan was
COURTESY OF REPUBLIC URBAN PROPERTIES being
ushered through the
An artist rendering of the mixed-use project designed by Republic Urban near the Millbrae rail station. approval process too quickly, and

Officials approved the Millbrae Station Area Specific Plan, which will make way for development in the
116-acre site surrounding the intersection of Millbrae Avenue and El Camino Real.

See MILLBRAE Page 20

Belmont approves 73-unit housing project


Affordability crisis remains,
council negotiates tradeoffs
By Samantha Weigel
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

After hearing from numerous members of


the public about the Bay Areas housing crisis Tuesday night, the Belmont City
Council unanimously approved a proposal
to redevelop an aging business park into a
73-unit mixed-use residential apartment
complex.
Sares Regis Group has paved the way to
construct one of the largest housing developments the city has approved in years. The
local real estate firm plans to transform the
nearly 2-acre site at 490 El Camino Real
into two four-story buildings housing a

Artists rendering of the proposed 73-unit apartment complex on El Camino Real in Belmont.

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FOR THE RECORD

Thursday Feb. 11, 2016

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Thought for the Day


We had better live as we think, otherwise
we shall end up by thinking as we have lived.
Paul Bourget, French author

This Day in History

1812

Massachusetts Gov. Elbridge Gerry


signed a redistricting law favoring his
Democratic-Republican Party giving rise to the term gerrymandering.

In 6 6 0 B. C., tradition holds that Japan was founded as


Jimmu ascended the throne as the countrys rst emperor.
In 1 8 5 8 , a French girl, Bernadette Soubirous, reported the
rst of 18 visions of a lady dressed in white in a grotto near
Lourdes. (The Catholic Church later accepted that the
visions were of the Virgin Mary.)
In 1 8 6 2 , the Civil War Battle of Fort Donelson began in
Tennessee. (Union forces led by Brig. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant
captured the fort ve days later.)
In 1 9 2 9 , the Lateran Treaty was signed, with Italy recognizing the independence and sovereignty of Vatican City.
In 1 9 3 7 , a six-week-old sit-down strike against General
Motors ended, with the company agreeing to recognize the
United Automobile Workers Union.
In 1 9 4 5 , President Franklin D. Roosevelt, British Prime
Minister Winston Churchill and Soviet leader Josef Stalin
signed the Yalta Agreement, in which Stalin agreed to
REUTERS
declare war against Imperial Japan following Nazi People watch from a shopping complex as a wild elephant moves through a street parked with motorbikes and bicycles after
Germanys capitulation.
it was tranquilized in Siliguri, India.
In 1 9 6 3 , American author and poet Sylvia Plath was found
dead in her London at, a suicide; she was 30.
In 1 9 7 2 , McGraw-Hill Publishing Co. and Life magazine
canceled plans to publish what had turned out to be a fake Mayor shows
The zoo says in a statement the he heard a loud thud from his office,
autobiography of reclusive billionaire Howard Hughes.
male tiger became aggressive with the where several window panes shattered
15-year-old Baha minutes after a when the object hit the ground.
In 1 9 8 6 , Soviet dissident Natan Sharansky was released love to skateboarders,
physical introduction Wednesday
by the Soviet Union after nine years of captivity as part of lifts ban in Love Park
Local officials and scientists from
morning.
an East-West prisoner exchange.
the Indian Institute of Astrophysics
PHILADELPHIA Skateboarders in
Officials say staff monitoring the on Tuesday examined the 5-foot-wide
Philadelphia are feeling the love from
introduction
from outside the enclo- impact crater at the college near
Love Park now that the mayor has
Vellore city, but said they had yet to
temporarily lifted a ban on skating sure used a water hose and fire extindetermine whether the object was from
guishers
to
separate
the
animals.
Once
there until it closes for renovations.
the male tiger was secured, veterinari- outer space or possibly a passing airDemocratic Mayor Jim Kenney made
ans rushed to help Baha but she had plane or man-made satellite.
the announcement Wednesday during a
already died.
College officials said window panes
groundbreaking ceremony for the park
They say that since arriving at the of the building shattered with the
and welcome centers $20 million
zoo on December 2015, the 12-year- impact of the loud explosion. Several
facelift.
The park is a skateboarding haven. old Mohan had had visual contact with buses parked nearby were also damKenney urges skaters to take advan- Baha. Staff decided to physically aged and bits of glass from broken
windows were scattered in the buses.
tage of it until it closes Feb. 15. He introduce the tigers on Wednesday.
The hard, jagged object is dark blue
Baha
had
been
at
the
Sacramento
Actress Jennifer
tells skaters theyre part of the fabActor Burt
Former Florida
Aniston is 47.
ric of Love Park. He says granite Zoo since 2002 and had successfully and small enough to be held in a
Reynolds is 80.
Gov. Jeb Bush is
removed during the overhaul will be bred with three other partners, giving closed hand. The scientists used metal
63.
detectors to check the crater for the
birth to five offspring.
Actor Conrad Janis is 88. Fashion designer Mary Quant is used in skate parks across the city.
presence of metals and dug up the soil.
Skater Luke Darigan tells The
82. Actress Tina Louise is 78. Actor Sonny Landham is 75.
Indian
scientists
study
chunk
The object that police have recovPhiladelphia
Inquirer
hes
taking
time
Bandleader Sergio Mendes is 75. Actor Philip Anglim is 64.
ered from the site would have to underoff
work
to
make
the
most
of
the
that
fell
from
sky,
killed
man
Actress Catherine Hickland is 60. Rock musician David
go chemical analysis to confirm its
opportunity.
Uosikkinen (The Hooters) is 60. Actress Carey Lowell is 55.
NEW DELHI Scientists are ana- origin, said the dean of the institute,
Robert Indianas iconic LOVE
Singer Sheryl Crow is 54. Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin is statue will be moved across the street lyzing a small blue object that plum- Prof. G.C. Anupama. She said that
52. Actor Damian Lewis is 45. Actress Marisa Petroro is 44. to City Halls Dilworth Plaza during meted from the sky and killed a man in while it was rare for meteors to reach
southern India, after authorities said it the ground before burning up in the
Singer DAngelo is 42. Actor Brice Beckham is 40. Rock M- the yearlong renovation.
was a meteorite.
atmosphere, it happens.
C/vocalist Mike Shinoda (Linkin Park) is 39. Singer-actress
The object slammed into the ground
In February 2013, a meteor blazed
Female tiger killed by mating
Brandy is 37.
at an engineering college over the across southern Urals that scientists
partner at Sacramento Zoo
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
weekend, shattering a water cooler and said was the largest recorded strike in
by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
SACRAMENTO Sacramento Zoo sending splinters and shards flying. more than a century. More than 1,600
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
officials say a Sumatran female tiger Police say a bus driver standing near- people were injured by the shock
one letter to each square,
was killed by her mating partner after by was hit by the debris and died while wave and property damage was wideto form four ordinary words.
spread in the Siberian city of
the two felines were put in the same being taken to a hospital.
LAPNT
College principal G. Bhaskar said Chelyabinsk.
enclosure for breeding.

In other news ...

2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC


All Rights Reserved.

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LOCAL

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Thursday Feb. 11, 2016

Private hotel negotiations bring lawsuit


Group claims San Bruno officials arent transparent, city says suit is unwarranted
By Austin Walsh
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

Citing transparency concerns, a group of


frustrated San Bruno residents filed a lawsuit
seeking to shed more light on negotiations
potentially leading toward development of a
hotel in a piece of city property.
A group calling themselves the San Bruno
Committee for Economic Justice filed a lawsuit Wednesday, Feb. 11, in the San Mateo
County Superior Court seeking access to
documents detailing the value assessment of
the property near the intersection of
Interstate 380 and El Camino Real which
has been identified as the future home of the
Crossing Hotel.
The lawsuit alleges San Bruno officials
have not sufficiently been forthcoming
with documents which should be available
to the public regarding the management of
the property adjacent to Jacks Restaurant
and cites the rights of residents to know
more about the assessment process under
the California Public Records Act.
The lawsuit marks the latest round of public skepticism surrounding the project, as
residents have long been critical of negotiations between San Bruno officials and OTO

President lands in Bay


Area to attend fundraisers
President
Barack
Obama
arrived
Wednesday evening to the Bay Area, where
he will attend Democratic fundraiser events
before his scheduled departure Thursday
afternoon.
Air Force One touched down at 7:09 p.m.
at Moffett Federal Airfield in Mountain
View.
Obama, who is in the Bay Area for the first
time this year, spent the night in the San
Jose area.
On Thursday, he will attend a Democratic

Comment on
or share this story at
www.smdailyjournal.com
Developments, the South Carolina firm
selected to build the hotel.
Laurel Fish, spokeswoman for a labor
union party to the lawsuit, said she is uncertain whether the city is offering a sweetheart deal to OTO Development, but
believes the public should have the opportunity to find out more information regarding the development of city-owned property.
We think people have to know how much
their property is worth, said Fish.
San Bruno City Attorney Marc Zafferano
said the details of the assessment, and more,
will be available to the public in due time,
and that message has been clearly communicated to Fish and her group.
He called the legal action a rush to the
courthouse, and said officials were surprised to learn of the lawsuit, considering
the previous commitment to share the
details of negotiations eventually.
We are not sure why they had to go to

Local brief
National Committee event at the home of
former state Controller Steve Westly and
Anita Yu in Atherton and will also attend a
Democratic
Senatorial
Campaign
Committee event.
General admission tickets for the event in
Atherton have sold out. The public can still
purchase special guest, photo line guest and
premium seating tickets, which run between
$1,000 and $25,000 each.
His roughly 19-hour visit will end
Thursday afternoon when hes estimated to

court to release something we said we would


give them, said Zafferano.
He said officials are reluctant to release
details of any ongoing negotiations with
OTO Developments, as publicizing sensitive documents may weaken the citys position.
Zafferano said he was uncertain of when
the documents may be made public but,
assuming an agreement is ultimately
reached with OTO Developments, all pertinent details of negotiations will be made
public prior to the City Council voting on
any deal.
We understand their concerns, said
Zafferano. But we are, and will be, transparent before there is any decision made,
because that is what the law requires.
Allegations of unscrupulous dealings
have marred the history of the planned
hotel, stemming largely from officials considering to offer an estimated $4 million
worth of givebacks to lure OTO
Developments to build the hotel on land
which was purchased by the city for $1.4
million in 2012.
San Bruno officials have repeatedly said

Police reports
Driven mad
A woman reported that her car was
stolen and later called back to say she
remembered where she parked it on
Acacia Drive in Burlingame before 2:18
p.m. Monday, Feb. 1.

HALF MOON BAY


Publ i c i nto x i cati o n. A woman was too
drunk to care for herself on the 500 block of
California Avenue before 10:28 p. m.
Sunday, Feb. 7
Vandal i s m. Someone was seen breaking a
cars window and eeing on the 2300 block
of Oleander Way before 8:45 p.m. Saturday,
Feb. 6.
Sus pended l i cens e. A man was cited for
driving with a suspended license on Balboa
Avenue before 12:36 a.m. Saturday, Feb. 6.
Mul ti pl e o ffens es . During a routine trafc stop, two men were cited for possessing
unlawful paraphernalia and having an open
container of alcohol on Main Street before
12:48 a.m. Saturday, Feb 6.
Sus pended l i cens e. A man was cited for
driving with a suspended license on
Highway 1 before 3:15 p.m. Friday, Feb. 5.

SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO


Petty theft. A man went to a stores cooler,

See HOTEL, Page 20 grabbed a beer, drank it and left after getting
leave from Moffett Field for Los Angeles,
where he will tape an appearance on The
Ellen DeGeneres Show and attend DNC
events.
Obamas last visit to the Bay Area was in
October when he attended a fundraising concert at the Warfield Theater in San Francisco
featuring rapper Kanye West.

upset the stores clerk would not allow alcohol sales before the legal time allowed on
San Felipe Avenue before 7:05 a. m.
Saturday, Feb. 6.
Burg l ary . A man on a bike jumped over a
fence and tried to steal furniture from a business on Westborough Boulevard before 7:24
a.m. Saturday, Feb. 6.

LOCAL/STATE

Thursday Feb. 11, 2016

Around the state


Panel denies parole to Sirhan,
assassin of Robert F. Kennedy

THE DAILY JOURNAL

ONE HOT CAR

SAN DIEGO For the 15th time, officials denied parole


for Sirhan Sirhan, the assassin of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy,
after hearing Wednesday from another person who was shot
that night and called for Sirhans release.
The decision came after Sirhan answered questions from a
California parole panel during a hearing that lasted more
than three hours in a small, windowless conference room.
Commissioners concluded Sirhan did not show adequate
remorse or understand the enormity of his crime.

CHRIS STANYAN

A woman traveling on Highway 101 in San Mateo was forced to pull over Wednesday when her Porsche suddenly caught
fire around 9:30 a.m. A California Highway Patrol officer said the cause of the fire remains unknown and luckily no one was
injured when the car became fully engulfed near the Hillsdale Boulevard exit.

Chancellor: Cash-strapped UC Berkeley faces tough decisions


By Lisa Leff
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BERKELEY The University of


California at Berkeley is running a
$150 million deficit this year and
must undertake a top-to-bottom
review of expenses if it hopes to sustain its national standing as a premier
public institution, the schools chancellor warned Wednesday.
The university faces difficult decisions as it works to preserve its longterm financial footing, Chancellor
Nicholas Dirks said. Consolidating
academic departments, evaluating
spending on athletics, shedding staff

and admitting fewer


doctoral students
are some of the
changes that will
be considered, he
said.
We are fighting
to maintain our
excellence against
Nicholas Dirks those who might
equate public with
mediocrity, Dirks wrote in a letter to
the campus. What we are engaged in
here is a fundamental defense of the
concept of the public university, a
concept that we must reinvent in order
to preserve.

Inadequate state funding and other


factors have created a substantial and
growing structural deficit at UC
Berkeley, Dirks said. To address it,
the chancellor said he was initiating a
restructuring process aimed at cutting
costs, increasing revenue and preserving the strongest programs.
A budget review prepared by
Berkeley administrators blames the
deficit, which represents 6 percent of
the campus $2.7 billion operating
budget, on reduced state funding for
instruction
and
construction,
increased pension costs and five
years without in-state tuition increases.

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LOCAL/NATION

Thursday Feb. 11, 2016

Obama vows to press ahead on Clean Power Plan


By Michael Biescker and Sam Hananel
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON The administration of


President Barack Obama is vowing to press
ahead with efforts to curtail greenhouse gas
emissions after a divided Supreme Court put
his signature plan to address climate change
on hold until after legal challenges are
resolved.
Tuesdays surprising move by the court is
a blow to Obama and a victory for the coalition of 27 mostly Republican-led states and
industry opponents, who call the regulations an unprecedented power grab.
By issuing the temporary freeze, a 5-4
majority of the justices signaled that opponents made strong arguments against the
rules. The high courts four liberal justices
said they would have denied the request for
delay.
The administrations plan aims to stave
off the worst predicted impacts of climate
change by reducing carbon dioxide emissions at existing power plants by about
one-third by 2030.
White House spokesman Josh Earnest
said the administrations plan is based on a
strong legal and technical foundation, and
gives the states time to develop cost-effective plans to reduce emissions. He also said
the administration will continue to take
aggressive steps to make forward progress

to reduce carbon emissions.


A federal appeals court in Washington last
month refused to put the plan on hold. That
lower court is not likely to issue a ruling on
the legality of the plan until months after it
hears oral arguments begin on June 2.
Any decision will likely be appealed to
the Supreme Court, meaning resolution of
the legal fight is not likely to happen until
after Obama leaves office.
Compliance with the new rules isnt
required until 2022, but states must submit
their plans to the Environmental Protection
Administration by September or seek an
extension.
Many states opposing the plan depend on
economic activity tied to such fossil fuels as
coal, oil and gas. They argued that the plan
oversteps federal authority to restrict carbon emissions, and that electricity
providers would have to spend billions of
dollars to begin complying with a rule that
might end up being overturned.
Attorney General Patrick Morrisey of
REUTERS
West Virginia, whose coal-dependent state
Barack Obama looks up as he arrives to speak to supporters and volunteers at the Hoogland
is helping lead the legal fight, hailed the
Center for the Arts in Springfield, Ill.
courts decision.
We are thrilled that the Supreme Court
realized the rules immediate impact and
froze its implementation, protecting workers and saving countless dollars as our fight
against its legality continues, Morrisey
said.

Man shot by police during


bank robbery out of hospital
By Scott Morris
BAY CITY NEWS SERVICE

A Burlingame man shot by three South


San Francisco police officers after an
alleged bank robbery on Friday morning
was released from the hospital Wednesday, a
police lieutenant said.
Ronald Dinges, 56, was expected to be
booked into San Mateo County Jail
Wednesday afternoon on suspicion of armed
robbery, kidnapping, exhibiting a firearm
while resisting arrest, assault with a deadly
weapon and burglary, said South San
Francisco police Lt. Keith Wall.
Police responded to the robbery at the San
Mateo Credit Union at 150 El Camino Real
at 10:12 a.m. Friday.
When they arrived, they saw a man in a
dark jacket and black mask, later identified
as Dinges, fleeing to the back of the bank.
They chased him there and he pointed a
handgun at the officers, police said.
The officers ordered him to drop the gun,
but when he didnt, three officers shot him.
They were identified as Sgt. Ken Hancock, a
20-year veteran of the department, Officer
Robert Reinosa, an 11-year veteran, and
Officer John Bower, a 16-year veteran.
Dinges was taken to San Francisco

Hearing date set again for former


fire chief charged with grand theft
More than a year after the former chief of
the Central County Fire Department was
arrested for grand theft and tax evasion, a
sixth preliminary hearing date has been
scheduled for a judge to determine whether
theres enough evidence for his case to proceed to trial.
Mark Ladas is scheduled to return to court
April 25 for a lengthy hearing expected to
last a day and a half, said Chief Deputy
District Attorney Karen Guidotti.
In December 2014, Ladas, 51, pleaded not
guilty to 10 felony charges in a case prosecutors say was a sophisticated scheme
between the former fire chief and his wife
Peta, who remains at large. The duo allegedly netted thousands of dollars by using
fraudulent credit cards at a fake business controlled by the wife between January 2011
and June 2013.
The case has dragged on with both the
defense and prosecution requesting continuances of the preliminary hearings for a vari-

General Hospital, where he underwent surgery on Friday. He remained there recovering until Wednesday, when he was expected
to be booked into jail, Wall said.
The San Mateo County District Attorneys
Office had not yet received Dinges case for
review as of Wednesday morning, Deputy
District Attorney Karen Guidotti said.
The three officers were placed on paid
administrative leave while the shooting is
being investigated by the district attorneys
office, Wall said.
Hancock shot a different suspect less than
a year ago. He had responded to reports of a
man sitting with a shotgun near the corner
of Del Monte and Romney avenues the
morning of Aug. 30.
When officers arrived, they ordered the
man, identified as 55-year-old Mike
Gordon, to stay seated but he got up and
started walking toward the officers, pointing the shotgun at Hancock.
Hancock fired a single shot, hitting
Gordon in the side. He recovered from his
wounds and investigators found Gordon had
previously attempted suicide and was trying
to provoke police to kill him.
Gordon pleaded no contest to two felonies
in exchange for a referral to mental health
services.

Local brief
ety of reasons ranging
from unavailable witnesses to Ladas attorney
being sick.
Because of the complex
nature of the case and an
extensive amount of evidence a judge must
review, Guidotti said the
preliminary hearing is
Mark Ladas
expected to last much
longer than other cases typically requiring
about 30 minutes to an hour. In part,
Guidotti attributed the delay to having to
find a judge with a completely clear schedule
for nearly two days and the need to re-subpoena witnesses to testify.
His last preliminary hearing was scheduled for Feb. 2 but both sides agreed to postpone the meeting.
Ladas, who reportedly lives in
Hillsborough, remains out of custody on
$80,000 bail.

02-29-2016

STATE/NATION

Thursday Feb. 11, 2016

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Powerful California
coastal panel ousts
executive director
By Michael R. Blood
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

REUTERS FILE PHOTO

A protester stands with his hands on his head as a cloud of tear gas approaches after a grand jury returned no indictment
in the shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo, on Nov. 24, 2014. The U.S. Justice Department said Wednesday that it had
filed a civil rights lawsuit against Ferguson to enforce a police and court reform plan after the city said it wanted to amend
some aspects of a consent decree it reached with the federal agency.

Government sues Ferguson


after city tries to revise deal
By Jim Salter and Eric Tucker
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

FERGUSON, Mo. The federal government sued Ferguson on Wednesday,


one day after the City Council voted to
revise an agreement aimed at improving
the way police and courts treat poor people and minorities in the St. Louis suburb.
Attorney General Loretta Lynch said
Fergusons decision to reject the deal
left the Justice Department no choice
except to file a civil-rights lawsuit.
The residents of Ferguson have waited nearly a year for the city to adopt an
agreement that would protect their
rights and keep them safe. ... They have
waited decades for justice. They should
not be forced to wait any longer, Lynch
told a Washington news conference.
The Justice Department complaint
accuses Ferguson of routinely violating
residents rights and misusing law
enforcement to generate revenue a

practice the government alleged was


ongoing and pervasive.
Ferguson leaders
had a real opportunity here to step forward, and theyve
chosen to step backward, Lynch said.
Loretta Lynch
F e r g u s o n
spokesman
Jeff
Small declined to comment. Messages
left with Mayor James Knowles III were
not returned.
Ferguson has been under Justice
Department scrutiny since 18-year-old
Michael Brown, who was black and
unarmed, was fatally shot by white officer Darren Wilson 18 months ago. A
grand jury and the Justice Department
declined to prosecute Wilson, who
resigned in November 2014.
But a scathing Justice Department
report was critical of police and a prof-

it-driven municipal court system.


Following months of negotiations, an
agreement between the federal agency
and Ferguson was announced in
January.
A recent financial analysis determined
the agreement would cost the struggling
city nearly $4 million in the first year
alone. The council voted 6-0 Tuesday to
adopt the deal, but with seven amendments.
Hours before the lawsuit was
announced, Ferguson leaders said they
were willing to sit down with Justice
Department negotiators to draw up a
new agreement.
That seemed unlikely from the outset.
Within hours of the Tuesday vote, Vanita
Gupta, head of the Justice Departments
Civil Rights Division, said in a statement that the department would take
the necessary legal actions to ensure
Fergusons police and court practices
comply with the Constitution and federal laws.

LOS ANGELE The powerful agency that manages development on Californias coastline fired its executive
Wednesday after a lengthy and, at times,
emotionally charged meeting that veered
from accusations about the influence of
developers and lobbyists to discussions
on the mundane inner workings of government.
The California Coastal Commission
voted 7-5 to dismiss Executive Director
Charles Lester, who has held the post
Charles Lester since 2011.
The shake-up raises questions about
the direction of an agency often caught in the clash between
property rights and conservation. The panel has broad sway
over construction and environmental issues in coastal areas
that include some of the most coveted real estate in the U.S.
The decision to oust Lester came after hundreds of people
filled a meeting room in Morro Bay to capacity, with scores
more outside, in what amounted to a nearly unanimous show
of support for the embattled executive director and the commissions staff. Many waved signs saying More Lester
and Save Our Coast, and supporters chanted outside: We
want Lester.
Environmental activists suspect some commission members wanted to push out Lester to make way for management
that would be more favorable to development, while a business group has questioned the tactics of the agencys staff.
Before the vote, several commission members said that
talk of a coup or conspiracy to oust Lester was a groundless narrative pushed in the media by those eager to save
Lesters job.
Instead, they indicated that the proposal to dismiss him
was rooted in questions about Lesters job performance and
how he interacted with the commission and entities regulated by them. Some complained they had been left in the dark
on important matters, or had difficulty obtaining information.
It makes for easy drama to paint this as some plot by a
gang of blood-thirsty developers who see only one man in
their way of total destruction of the coast, said
Commissioner Mark Vargas.
The commission heard from dozens of witnesses, including members of its staff, all supporting Lesters work.

Around the state


Excise tax on medical
marijuana sales proposed in California
SACRAMENTO A state senator from Northern
California has introduced a bill that would impose a 15 percent tax on retail sales of medical marijuana.
Sen. Mike McGuire estimated that the excise tax he proposed Wednesday would bring the state over $100 million
annually.
The Healdsburg Democrats SB987 directs 30 percent of
the revenues collected to the new state agency charged with
enforcing the new medical marijuana licensing regulations
the Legislature approved last year.
The Bureau of Medical Marijuana Regulation would be
charged with distributing the funds as grants to help local
governments with the costs of enforcing the regulations.

John C. Schrup
President and CEO
United American Bank
Member FDIC

SAN MATEO, California


As the Peninsula sees signs of
continued economic recovery,
now is a great time to consider
purchasing or renancing a home.
Purchasing a new home is
thrilling, but it can be stressful at times. There are a lot of
considerations. The mortgage
professionals at United American Bank work hard to make the
process easy with attentive, personal service at every step. They
listen to all your concerns. Most
importantly, they take the time

to educate you on every aspect of


the process.
As a community bank, were
more than just your lender, were
your neighbor, said UAB President and CEO John Schrup. We
give you the care and attention
you deserve in this, the most signicant purchase of your life. Our
mortgage loan ofcers can answer
your questions, help you select
the best nancing for your needs,
prepare closing cost estimates,
calculate payment schedules, and
help determine your price range

for a home, Schrup added


Trust is important. Purchasing or renancing a home is the
biggest nancial decision most
people will ever make. Place your
trust in hometown hands that
are with you a t e v e ry s t e p .
UAB offers a wide variety of
terms and features and will take
the time to explain and tailor the
best way forward for you.
As a local, community bank
with local bank directors and
community leaders, we provide
nancing for homes and busi-

nesses. We help bring jobs to the


community. We work with our
clients to turn their dreams into
reality. More than anything, we
pride ourselves on the relationships we build with our clients,
said Schrup.
United American Bank
serves the community with
ofces in San Mateo, Redwood
City, and Half Moon Bay. Visit
unitedamericanbank.com for
more information.

Advertisement

NATION

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Thursday Feb. 11, 2016

Around the nation


Two deputies, suspect
dead in shopping area gunfire

REUTERS

Carly Fiorina, left, and Chris Christie have dropped out of the 2016 White House race.

Jumbled GOP field hopes for survival in S.C.


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLUMBIA, S.C. Hoping for


survival in the South, a muddled
field of Republican presidential
contenders descended Wednesday
on South Carolina, no closer to
clarity about who can stand
between Donald Trump and their
partys nomination.
Not
me,
Carly
Fiorina
announced, dropping out of the
campaign. A Chris Christie spokeswoman said his race was over, too.
But a sizeable field remained.
To the dismay of party leaders,
all signs point to a drawn-out battle for delegates following Trumps
resounding victory in New
Hampshire. Florida Sen. Marco
Rubio, under immense pressure to
prove himself after a devastating
fifth-place finish, was looking for
a fight that could last for months or
even spill into the first contested

GOP national
convention
since 1976.
We very easily could be
looking at May
or the convention,
Rubio
camDonald Trump paign manager
Terry Sullivan
told the Associated Press.
If Trump had Republicans on
edge, Democrats were feeling no
less queasy.
Rejected in New Hampshire,
Hillary Clinton sought redemption
in Nevada, where a more diverse
group of voters awaited her and
Bernie Sanders.
Sanders, a Vermont senator and
self-proclaimed democratic socialist, raised $5 million-plus in less
than a day after his New Hampshire
triumph. The contributions came

mostly
in
s m a l l - do l l a r
amounts, his
campaign said,
illustrating the
resources hell
have to fight
Clinton to a
bitter end.
Both Clinton
Marco Rubio
and Sanders
the first Jew to win a presidential
primary worked to undercut each
other among African-Americans
and Hispanics with less than two
weeks until the Democratic contests in Nevada and South Carolina.
Sanders met for breakfast in
Harlem with the Rev. Al Sharpton,
a civil rights activist. Clinton,
meanwhile, announced plans to
campaign with the mother of
Sandra Bland, whose death while in
police custody became a symbol of
racial tensions. And Clintons

campaign
deployed South
Carolina state
Rep.
Todd
Rutherford to
vouch for her
support
for
minorities.
Secret ary
Clinton
has
Ted Cruz
been involved
in South Carolina for the last 40
years, Rutherford said. Bernie
Sanders has talked about these
issues for the last 40 days.
Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, the conservative firebrand and victor in the
leadoff Iowa caucuses, returned to
the center of the fracas after largely
sitting out New Hampshire. He
drew contrasts with Trump as he
told a crowd of 500 in Myrtle
Beach that Texans and South
Carolinians are more alike than
not.

ABINGDON, Md. A gunman


fatally shot a sheriffs deputy
inside a crowded restaurant at
lunchtime Wednesday and killed
another deputy in a shootout nearby, authorities and witnesses said.
The suspect was killed in the
shootout not far from the shopping center where the restaurant
was situated, Harford County
Sheriff Jeffrey Gahler said.
Remarkably, no bystanders were
hurt.
Police havent released a motive
for the shooting, but the sheriff
said he believed the first deputy
who approached the gunman was
shot because he was wearing a uniform.
The shooter, 67-year-old David
Brian Evans, had warrants out for
his arrest in Harford County and
Orange County, Florida, where he
was accused of assaulting a police
officer.

Burger Kings next


conquest: Hot Dog King
NEW YORK Burger King is
looking for a new crown: Hot Dog
King.
The Miami-based chain says it
plans to put hot dogs on its menu
nationally for the first time starting Feb. 23. It may seem like a jarring addition for those who know
the chain for its Whoppers. But
Burger King says its ability to
flame-grill meat makes hot dogs a
natural fit on its menu.
This is probably the most
obvious product launch ever, said
Alex Macedo, president of Burger
King North America.

NATION/WORLD

Thursday Feb. 11, 2016

THE DAILY JOURNAL

South Korea to shut down joint


industrial park with North Korea
By Youkyung Lee
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SEOUL, South Korea South


Korea said Wednesday that it will
shut down a joint industrial park
with North Korea in response to
its recent rocket launch, accusing
the North of using hard currency
from the park to develop its
nuclear and missile programs.
The decision to end operations
at the industrial complex in the
North Korean border city of
Kaesong, the last major cooperation project between the rival
countries, comes after North Korea
on Sunday launched a long-range
rocket considered by other nations
to be a banned missile technology
test.
By closing the complex, South
Korean President Park Geun-hye
has done something her conservative predecessor resisted, even
after two attacks blamed on North
Korea killed 50 South Koreans in
2010. It is among the strongest
punitive measures available to her.
South
Korean
Unification
Minister Hong Yong-pyo said at a
news conference that the suspension of operations at the park
would stop the North from using
currency earned there to develop
nuclear and missile technology.
The park, which started producing goods in 2004, has provided
616 billion won ($560 million) of
cash to impoverished North Korea,
Hong said.
It appears that such funds have
not been used to pave the way to
peace as the international community had hoped, but rather to
upgrade its nuclear weapons and
long-range missiles, he said at
the televised briefing.
The Unification Ministry, which
is responsible for relations with
North Korea, said in a statement
that the government had decided
to completely shut down the
park. It notified North Korean
authorities of the decision and
asked them to help ensure the safe
return of South Korean citizens

REUTERS

A South Korean soldier stands guard at a checkpoint on the Grand Unification Bridge which leads to the
inter-Korean Kaesong Industrial Complex in North Korea.

Senate passes bill to hit North Korea with harsh sanctions


By Richard Lardner
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON Seeking to
derail North Koreas drive for
nuclear weapons, Republican and
Democratic senators set aside
their
partisan
differences
Wednesday to unanimously pass
legislation aimed at starving
Pyongyang of the money it needs
to build an atomic arsenal.
The Senate approved the sanctions bill 96-0 after lawmakers
repeatedly denounced Pyongyang
for flouting international law by
pursuing nuclear weapons.
from Kaesong.
There was no immediate reaction
to the move from North Korea.
The United States supported the
move by its close ally, and said it
was considering its own, unspecified unilateral measures to pun-

Sen. Bob Menendez, D-N.J.,


said for too long North Korea has
been dismissed as a strange country run by irrational leaders. Its
time to take North Korea seriously, Menendez said.
The Senate bill, authored by
Menendez and Sen. Cory Gardner,
R-Colo., targets North Koreas
ability to finance the development of miniaturized nuclear warheads and the long-range missiles required to deliver them. The
legislation also authorizes $50
million over the next five years
to transmit radio broadcasts into
North Korea, purchase communications equipment and support

humanitarian assistance programs.


The legislation comes in the
wake of Pyongyangs recent
satellite launch and technical
advances that U.S. intelligence
agencies said the reclusive Asian
nation is making in its nuclear
weapons program.
Gardner said the Obama administrations policy of strategic
patience with North Korea has
failed. The situation in the
Korea peninsula is at its most
unstable point since the
armistice, said Gardner, referring to the 1953 agreement to
end the Korean War.

ish Pyongyang for its recent


nuclear test and rocket launch,
even as the U.N. Security Council
deliberates imposing more multilateral sanctions.
South Koreas government will
provide financial compensation to

companies that operate at the


park, the Finance Ministry said.
South Korean businesses with
factories at the park reacted with a
mixture of disappointment and
anger. In a statement, the association of South Korean companies in

Kaesong denounced the governments decision as entirely


incomprehensible and unjust.
Lee Eun Haeng, chairman of
Ilsung Leports, which produces
fashion goods at the park, said the
companies had become victims
of a political situation.
For the companies and for their
suppliers to survive, the government should give enough compensation, Lee said by phone. There
are hundreds of thousands of South
Korean workers and families who
rely on the Kaesong park for their
living. They have become jobless
overnight.
Nonetheless, he said, he had no
choice but to accept the governments measures because they were
for the sake of national security.
Combining South Korean initiative, capital and technology with
the Norths cheap labor, the industrial park has been seen as a test
case for reunification between the
Koreas. Last year, 124 South
Korean companies hired 54,000
North Korean workers to produce
socks, wristwatches and other
goods worth around $500 million.
In addition to the business benefits, the park also allowed people
from both Koreas to interact with
each other and glimpse into lives
on the other side of the border.
Some South Korean snacks have
become popular among North
Korean workers.
South Koreas government and
companies invested more than 1
trillion won ($852 million) to
pave roads and erect buildings in
the park zone, which lies in a
guarded, gated complex on the outskirts of Kaesong, North Koreas
third-largest city.
South Korean companies in
Kaesong survived during past periods of tensions that led to the suspension of other inter-Korean
projects. A major interruption to
the parks operation came in 2013,
when North Korea pulled out its
workers for about five months in
protest of South Koreas joint military drills with the United States.

THE DAILY JOURNAL

NATION/WORLD

Thursday Feb. 11, 2016

U.S. struggles to craft


cease-fire in Syria war
By Matthew Lee and Bradley Klapper
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON As its struggles to craft a


cease-fire in Syrias civil war, the Obama
administration has become increasingly torn
between its loyalty to Turkey as a NATO ally
and to its longtime Arab partner, Saudi
Arabia, and the cold pragmatism of Russia.
The result has been a confusing mix of shifting priorities that have exposed a policy
toward Syria that few understand, and even
fewer see working.
As Secretary of State John Kerry heads to
Munich on Wednesday in search of compromises that could yield a truce and revive peace
talks that were suspended before they really
started, the administration is being pressed
REUTERS by all sides to clarify its strategy.
Victims of an attack by Boko Haram rest in damaged houses in Maiduguri, Borno state, Nigeria.
We will approach this meeting in Munich
with great hopes that this will be a telling
moment, said Kerry, whose peace push will
coincide with Defense Secretary Ash Carter
gathering in Brussels with NATO partners to
hash out military options.
Meanwhile, the offensive continues on
Syrias biggest city, Aleppo, a rebel territory
under bombardment by the Russian-backed
Syrian military, complicating the already difthey were not authorized to speak to
By Ismail Alfa
reporters.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The emergency management official said
MAIDUGURI, Nigeria Two female sui- 51 bodies were buried Wednesday in Dikwa,
cide bombers blew themselves up in a north- the scene of the carnage 85 kilometers (53
eastern Nigerian refugee camp, killing at miles) northeast of Maiduguri. Health workleast 58 people, health and rescue officials ers said five bodies were brought to the main By Sylvie Corbet
hospital in Maiduguri. PR Nigeria, an THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
said Wednesday.
A third woman bomber was arrested and agency that disseminates official news,
gave officials information about other Wednesday night quoted health and rescue
PARIS French lawmakers have
planned bombings that helped them officials putting the number of dead at 58. approved a divisive bill aimed at making it
increase security at the camp, said an offi- The officials said poor cellphone service possible to revoke the citizenship of peocial of the Borno State Emergency delayed news of the attack.
ple convicted on terrorism charges.
Boko Harams 6-year-old Islamic insurManagement Agency.
The bill, presented by Socialist Prime
Some 78 people are being treated for gency has killed 20,000 people, made 2.5 minister Manuel Valls in the wake of the
wounds from the twin explosions that million homeless and spread across Paris attacks last year, passed by 317-199
occurred Tuesday morning in a camp of some Nigerias borders.
Wednesday in parliaments lower house, the
In northern Cameroon, officials said two National Assembly.
50,000 people driven from their homes by
the Boko Haram Islamic uprising, according suicide bombers believed to have come from
The measure revealed deep division
to health workers in Maiduguri, the biggest Nigeria on Wednesday killed 10 people and among the ruling Socialists. Many on the
city in northeastern Nigeria and birthplace injured 40 attending a wake in a border vil- left expressed indignation at the move and
of Boko Haram. They spoke on condition of lage, including children. Attacks in Chad refused to vote for it. Justice minister
anonymity as did rescue officials who said and Niger also are blamed on Boko Haram.
Christian Taubira resigned last month in

Two bombers kill 58 in


Nigerian refugee camp

ficult task of convincing


President Bashar Assads
government to negotiate
honestly with the opposition.
Brett McGurk, the
Obama administrations
point-man for defeating
the Islamic State, said
Russias Aleppo offenJohn Kerry
sive was having the perverse effect of helping
the extremists by drawing local fighters
away from the battle against IS and to the war
against Syrias government.
What Russias doing is directly enabling
ISIL, McGurk told the House Foreign Affairs
Committee.
The panels top Democrat echoed some of
the frustration of his Republican colleagues
with the larger U.S. strategy.
It seems as if were only halfheartedly
going after ISIS, and halfheartedly helping
the (rebel) Free Syria Army and others on the
ground, said Rep. Eliot Engel, D-N.Y. He
urged a robust campaign, not a tentative
one, not one that seems like were dragging
ourselves in ... to destroy ISIS and get rid of
Assad.

French lawmakers approve


divisive bill on citizenship

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protest. The measure also divides the opposition conservatives.


Valls justified the need for the bill by the
terrorist threat. Because we are at war, we
must unite, he told journalists after the
vote. This is a great day for the Republic,
for unity, for France and for the fight against
terrorism.
The reform, which would alter the
Constitution, is still far from being definitively adopted. It also needs to be voted on
by the Senate and ultimately would require a
three-fifths majority vote from lawmakers
of both houses.
The government says the measure would
concern a very small number of people but
is of high symbolic value.

10

BUSINESS

Thursday Feb. 11, 2016

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Early rally in stocks mostly gone by closing


By Alex Veiga
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Dow
15,914.74
Nasdaq 4,283.59
S&P 500 1,851.86

-99.64
+14.83
-0.35

10-Yr Bond 1.71 -0.02


Oil (per barrel) 27.30
Gold
1,197.80

Big movers
Stocks that moved substantially or traded heavily Wednesday on the
New York Stock Exchange and the Nasdaq stock market:
NYSE
Time Warner Inc., down $3.14 to $60.07
Revenue for the owner of Warner Bros. studios and HBO and TBS networks
came up far short of expectations.
Walt Disney Co., down $3.47 to $88.85
Disneys fourth-quarter television profit slumped as ESPN struggles with
subscriber losses and higher costs for broadcast rights.
DTE Energy Co., down $1.06 to $85.79
The Detroit-based utility slumped after its fourth-quarter revenue
disappointed investors.
Martin Marietta Materials Inc., up $2.50 to $131.38
The building materials company continued to climb after it gave an
upbeat view of the construction industry in 2016.
Sealed Air Corp., up $3.20 to $43.63
The packaging company posted a larger-than-expected fourth-quarter
profit.
Assurant Inc., down $10.26 to $66.23
The insurers fourth-quarter profit fell short of analyst estimates.
Nasdaq
Akamai Technologies Inc., $8.39 to $47.96
The cloud services companys fourth-quarter profit and revenue
surpassed analyst projections.
Henry Schein Inc., up $9.13 to $156.75
The health care products maker rose after it reported strong fourthquarter results.

The Federal Reserves latest signals


on interest rates gave U.S. stocks a
lift for much of Wednesday, but the
rally didnt last.
A sell-off in the final minutes of
trading knocked the Dow Jones industrial average and the Standard &
Poors 500 index slightly into the
red. The slide extended a three-day
losing streak for the two indexes.
Only the Nasdaq cored deputies to
intimidate an FBI agent and do
everything but put handcuffs on her.
Baca later lied to federal prosecutors
and the FBI that he wasnt privy to
discussions about trying to derail the
investigation.
Baca was scheduled to plead guilty
later in the day to a single count of
lying to federal investigators. He
could face up to six months in prison
under the deal. He would be allowed to
withdraw his guilty plea if the judge
decided he deserves a longer sentence.
In that case prosecutors would proceed
to obtain an indictment.
This is not a day of celebration for
us, U.S. Attorney Eileen Decker said
during a news conference. It is a sad
day when a leader of a law enforcement
agency fails to honor his oath and

instead of upholding justice chooses


to obstruct it.
Baca, who ran the department for
more than 15 years and traveled the
world to speak about policing tactics,
had said he was out of touch with what
was going on and he denied knowing
about efforts to stifle the probe by
hiding an inmate who was an FBI
informant.
Baca avoided charges for years as
prosecutors moved up the ranks to
indict a number of officers and, eventually, his second-in-command.
In May, when former Undersheriff
Paul Tanaka and another high-ranking
member of the department were
charged with obstructing justice,
prosecutors declined to comment on
whether Baca was under investigation.
Tanaka is facing trial, but his codefendant, former Capt. Tom Carey,
pleaded guilty and agreed to testify in
related court proceedings. Its not
clear if that included providing grand
jury testimony against Baca.
In January 2014, Baca sidestepped
questions about whether he was worried he might be indicted but acknowledged that more of his employees may
face charges.
Im not afraid of reality. Im only
afraid of people who dont tell the
truth, Baca said at the time.

Seventeen members of the department have been convicted of federal


crimes, including beating inmates,
obstructing justice, bribery and conspiracy. The convictions stem from a
grand jury investigation that began in
2010 into allegations of abuse and
corruption at the downtown Mens
Central Jail.
Deputies tried to hide an FBI jail
informant from his handlers for weeks
in 2011 by shifting him from cell to
cell at various jails under different
names and altering jail computer
records. The FBI wanted the informant
to testify to a grand jury.
After Baca learned of the investigation, he met with Tanaka, Carey and a
lieutenant in September 2011 and told
them to approach Special Agent Leah
Marx, one of the inmates handlers,
according to court documents. The
next day officers, threatened to arrest
Marx for intervening in their jurisdiction.
David Bowdich, the FBIs Los
Angeles chief, said Baca had continuously denied playing a role in the corruption even as his rank-and-file
deputies faced prison time.
He had the opportunity to lead,
Bowdich said. He did not lead ...
Theres no excuse for the decisions
that were made.

Yellen: Persistent economic weakness could slow rate hikes


By Martin Crutsinger
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON Federal Reserve Chair


Janet Yellen cautioned Wednesday that
global weakness and falling financial markets could depress the U. S. economys
growth and slow the pace of Fed interest rate
hikes.
But Yellen made clear that the Fed wont
likely find it necessary to cut rates after
having raised them from record lows in
December. She did concede, though, that
negative rates, which central banks in
Japan and Europe have recently imposed,
are a tool the Fed has at least studied.
In her semiannual report to Congress,
Yellen offered no major surprises. And she

reiterated the Feds confidence that the U.S. economy was on track for
stronger growth and an
increase in too-low
inflation. At the same
time, she noted the
weaker economic figures
that have emerged since
Janet Yellen 2016 began and made
clear the Fed is nervous
about the risks from abroad.
Her concerns about the perils to U.S.
growth contrasted with the Feds statement
eight weeks ago, when it raised interest
rates for the first time in nearly a decade and
described economic risks as balanced.
In her testimony to the House Financial

Services Committee, Yellen also:


Expressed sympathy with committee
members who raised concerns about chronically higher-than-average unemployment
among black Americans. Members of an
activist group, the Fed Up coalition, attended the hearing wearing T-shirts emblazoned
with the messages What Recovery? and
Let Our Wages Grow. The group has been
urging the Fed to delay further rate hikes
until the job market improves further, especially for minority groups.
Sounded her concern about Chinas
weaker currency and economic outlook,
which are rattling markets. She also warned
that rising borrowing rates and a strong dollar could slow U.S. growth and hiring, a
reflection of the intensified turmoil that has

Govs will consider Google computer to be cars driver


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

DETROIT Computers that control


cars of the future can be considered
drivers just like humans, the federal
governments highway safety agency
has found.
The redefinition of driver by the
National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration is an important break
for Google, taking it a step closer to
its goal of self-driving cars without
steering wheels, pedals or human drivers.
But the company still has a long
journey ahead before its cars get on
the road in great numbers. While the
safety agency agreed with Googles

driver reinterpretation in a recent


letter, it didnt allow other concessions and said numerous federal rules
would have to be changed to permit
the cars.
NHTSA will interpret driver in the
context of Googles described motor
vehicle design as referring to the SDS
(self-driving system) and not to any of
the
vehicle
occupants,
Paul
Hemmersbaugh, NHTSAs chief counsel, wrote in the letter.
But the agency rejected many of
Googles claims that its cars met federal auto safety standards, including a
requirement for foot and hand brakes.
Google said the requirement wasnt
necessary because the electronic driver

can stop the cars. Yet the government


said regulations are clear and would
have to be changed to allow that.
In a number of instances, it may be
possible for Google to show that certain (federal) standards are unnecessary
for a particular vehicle design,
Hemmersbaugh wrote. To date, however, Google has not made such a
showing.
Google, a subsidiary of Alphabet
Inc., has suggested the cars could be
ready for the public in a few years.
After several years of caution, last
month federal regulators said they
wanted to help speed the technologys
widespread adoption if it proves to be
safe.

Teslas 4Q net loss doubles but shares up on outlook


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

DETROIT Tesla Motors posted


its 11th straight quarterly loss
Wednesday, and its results badly
missed Wall Streets forecasts. But the
electric car makers shares soared anyway on news that its lower-priced
Model 3 sedan is on schedule to be
released next year.
Palo Alto-based Tesla said it will
unveil the much-anticipated $35,000
car on March 31 and expects to start
production at the end of 2017.
CEO Elon Musk said hes not worried about competition from the all-

electric Chevrolet Bolt, which will


have a similar price tag and range and
will go on sale at one year before the
Model 3. He noted that Model S sedan
sales rose in 2015 even as luxury competitors like the Audi A7 and Lexus LS
fell. Tesla is approximately doubling
its cumulative sales every year. I think
thats pretty exciting and unusual,
Musk said on a conference call with
analysts and media.
Teslas shares had fallen in recent
days as investors worried that the
Model 3 would be delayed. Investors
also werent happy with the slow
ramp-up of Teslas new Model X SUV.

The company delivered only 206


SUVs in the fourth quarter and it curtailed production last month to work
out some quality issues.
But Tesla said Wednesday its accelerating Model X production and
expects to make 1,000 SUVs per week
by the second quarter.
Tesla shares rose 9 percent in afterhours trading to $157. They are down
40 percent this year through the close
of regular-session trading Wednesday.
Tesla lost $889 million, or $6.93
per share, for the full year. That compared to a loss of $294 million, or
$2.36 per share, in 2014.

gripped markets. Still, she said robust hiring at the end of 2015 and signs of stronger
pay growth could offset those drags.
Said the Fed still expects to raise rates
gradually but is not on any preset course.
The central bank will likely slow its pace of
rate increases if the economy were to disappoint, she said.
Cautioned that the sharp declines in
stock prices, rising rates for riskier borrowers and further strength in the dollar had created conditions that pose risks to growth.
These developments, if they prove persistent, could weigh on the outlook for economic activity and the labor market,
although declines in longer-term interest
rates and oil prices could provide some offset, she said.

Business briefs
Twitter tweaks its
timeline in pursuit of more users
SAN FRANCISCO Twitter is tweaking the way that
tweets appear in its users timelines in its latest attempt
to broaden the appeal of its messaging service.
The change announced Wednesday moves Twitter closer
to a formula that Facebook uses to determine the order of
posts appearing in its users news feeds.
Its a risky move for Twitter because it threatens to infuriate many of its 320 million users who like things the
way they are. But the company cant afford to stand pat
with its user growth slowing dramatically and its stock
price plummeting by more than 50 percent since cofounder Jack Dorsey returned as CEO last summer.
Investors initially applauded Twitter for shaking things
up: Its stock gained 58 cents, or 4 percent, to close at
$14.98. But it then shed 13 cents in extended trading after
the company released a fourth-quarter report that showed
its service didnt add any users during the final three
months of last year.

Jack Daniels Distillery


announces $140 million expansion
NASHVILLE, Tenn. The historic Jack Daniels
Distillery is planning a $140 million expansion project
to help meet global demand for prized Tennessee
Whiskey.
The investment announced by Gov. Bill Haslam on
Wednesday will be used to construct two new barrelhouses, expand the bottling facility and support the increasing number of visitors to the facility. Officials say more
than 275,000 tourists from around the world visited the
distillery in Lynchburg last year.
The Louisville, Kentucky-based Brown-Forman company owns the distillery. Company officials say the expansion will create 30 new jobs in Moore County.

LOCAL ROUNDUP: NOTRE DAME-BELMONT SOCCER TEAM ENDS GOALLESS DROUGHT >> PAGE 12

<<< Page 13, Snowboarders,


skiers will fly at Fenway Park
Thursday Feb. 11, 2016

Warriors enter break riding 11-game streak


By Bob Baum
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

PHOENIX Stephen Curry nearly had a


triple-double before sitting out the fourth
quarter, and the Golden State Warriors stormed
into the All-Star break on an 11-game winning streak with a 112-104 victory over the
free-falling Phoenix Suns on Wednesday
night.
Curry had 26 points, nine rebounds and nine

Steph Curry

assists for the defending


NBA champions. At 48-4,
the Warriors have the best
record through 52 games
in NBA history, one win
better than the 1995-96
Chicago Bulls and 196667 Philadelphia 76ers.
Those Bulls finished the
season with a leaguerecord 72 wins.

Warriors 112, Suns 104


Klay Thompson added 24 points for Golden
State.
Archie Goodwin scored 20 and Markieff
Morris 19 for the Suns, who have lost nine
straight and 24 of 26. Rookie guard Devin
Booker added 15 points and a career-best 10
assists.

points in the second and third quarters, but the


Suns cut it to 11 late in the third and 10 a couple of times in the fourth. The only time
Phoenix got within single digits in the second half was on Goodwins breakaway dunk
just before the final buzzer.
Phoenix stayed with the Warriors shot for
shot for a little while and was down only 2928 after one quarter.

See WARRIORS, Page 14

Golden State was up by as many as 22

Extra work pays off G

Soccer sisters

Carlmont scores three times after focusing on shooting

By Nathan Mollat
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

After a week that saw the


Carlmont boys soccer team lose to
division-leading Aragon and tie
last-place Half Moon Bay, Scots
coach Will Stambaugh used
Monday and Tuesday of this week
to work on his teams shooting.
It appeared the extra work paid
off as the Scots scored three quality
goals to hold off visiting Hillsdale
3-2 and stay in the race for the
Peninsula Athletic Leagues Bay
Division title.
[Tuesday] was a strikers clinic, Stambaugh said. Since our
draw against Half Moon Bay (last
Friday) our focus has been on
the final third (of the field).
That would be in the attack zone
and while the Scots still had a number of close misses, they did manage to put nine of their 15 shots on
frame.
I want them to pull the trigger,
Stambaugh said. These are varsity
players. They should have the
technical ability to put the ball
on frame. Weve been working on
that.
Early on, it appeared it might be
one of those games for Carlmont
(6-4-1 PAL Bay, 10-4-2 overall).
The Scots were dominating the
attack, but could not solve
Hillsdale
goalkeeper
Arturo
Gonzalez.
The Hillsdale defense, to its credit, was holding firm outside its
own penalty box, forcing the
Scots to take shots from distance.
The way Carlmont was dominating the possession, flow and
attack, it seemed inevitable the

NATHAN MOLLAT/DAILY JOURNAL

See SCOTS, Page 13

Carlmonts Maxim Storozhenko, right, makes a run down the sideline during the Scots 3-2 win over
Hillsdale. Storozhenko scored Carlmonts first goal.

rowing up, my younger brother


and I would play on the same
soccer team every other year. I
dont know if that was just a league rule
to have siblings play on the same team
whenever possible or if my parents
arranged it or what.
When we did play on the same team, it
always raised our level of play between
each other because we were so in tune
with how the other played.
Talia Missan and Sarah McLeod are neither sisters, nor are they related by
blood anyway. What the two senior cocaptains for the Menlo-Atherton girls
soccer team have is bond on the field usually only reserved for kin. But when you
have played with the same teammate literally your entire
life, you tend to
know what the other
is going to do on the
field.
Missan and
McLeod first met on
the soccer pitch
as kindergartners.
Since then, they
have been inseparable. The two have
played on the same
team every year
since then. All
through grammar school, elementary,
middle school and now high school. The
two have been joined at the hip.
Im a forward. Shes a midfielder. There
is a lot of passing between us, Missan
said. She already knows what kind of
runs Im going to make. We can just read
each others body language. We do have
that connection thats hard to have with
other players.
After playing in AYSO leagues their
first two years, both Missan and McLeod
were tagged as part of a core group of
players that formed a CYSO club team
while in second- or third-grade. Since
then, they have followed each other
wherever the other has gone.
My impression is, they both had a
drive to pursue (soccer at a high level),
said Andy Missan, Talias father. They

See LOUNGE, Page 14

The Eddie didnt go off after all


The Quiksilver In Memory of Eddie Aikau was called off after sufficient waves failed to materialize
By Caleb Jones
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

HALEIWA, Hawaii Legendary surfer


Eddie Aikau would have gone out. But
Wednesdays surf in Hawaii didnt stack up
to his namesake competitions big-wave
standards, and the event was called off hours
before it was supposed to happen.
Eddie would go is the mantra of the

The towering breakers were a no-show, and


as the sun came up over throngs of spectators
and dozens of elite surfers,The Eddie was called off.
Quiksilver surfing competition in memory
of Aikau, a Native Hawaiian surfer famous
for riding monster waves and saving hundreds of lives as Waimea Bays first official

lifeguard.
The event was last held in 2009, when
waves built to competition size for long
enough for the surfers to run their heats.

Conditions Wednesday on the North


Shore of Oahu had been forecast to meet the
competitions strict requirements for 40foot-high swells that last for hours. But the
towering breakers were a no-show, and as
the sun came up over throngs of spectators
and dozens of elite surfers, The Eddie was
called off.
The narrow road that snakes along Oahus

See EDDIE, Page 15

12

SPORTS

Thursday Feb. 11, 2016

Local sports roundup


Boys basketball

Sanchez and Nikhil Goel. Peay added his second goal in the
second half, with Mummery rounding out the scoring by
netting the Gators final two goals. Sandwiched between
Peay and Mummery was a strike from Connor Johnston.

Jefferson 75, Terra Nova 72


The Grizzlies wrapped up the No. 2 seed in the Peninsula
Athletic League North Division for the upcoming PAL tournament after beating the Tigers.
Jefferson (9-2 PAL North, 17-6 overall) got 27 points
from Damari Cual-Davis, who was one of three Grizzlies to
score in double figures. Rodney Lawrence added 16 and
David Benjamin had 14 for Jefferson.
Terra Nova (5-6, 11-11) was led by Jared Milch, who
scored a game-high 28 points. Austyn Paminiano added 16
in the loss.

Boys soccer
Crystal Springs 3, Harker 1
The fifth-place Gryphons knocked off the fourth-place
Eagles and moved to the .500 mark in West Bay Athletic
League play in the process.
Alex Berman scored twice for Crystal Springs (4-4-2
WBAL) and Brandon Chu netted the third.

Sacred Heart Prep 7, Priory 0


Trevor Peay and Will Mummery each scored twice to lead
the Gators to the lopsided win over the Panthers in a WBAL
matchup.
SHP (5-4-1 WBAL, 8-7-3 overall) scored three times in
the first half, from three different players: Peay, Daniel

San Mateo 2, Westmoor 1


Aaron Baca had a goal and an assist to help lead the
Bearcats to a PAL Ocean Division victory over the Rams.
Baca set up the first goal for San Mateo (6-4-2 PAL Ocean,
8-6-4 overall), which was scored by Alejandro Alvarez.
Baca then supplied the game winner with a goal scored on a
shot from near midfield.

Girls basketball
Crystal Springs 48, Shasta-Daly City 25
The Gryphons beat Shasta in a non-league game, clinching a spot in the Central Coast Section tournament in the
process.
Despite being winless in WBAL play, the Gryphons needed a .500 or better non-league record to grab a postseason
berth.
Mission accomplished.
Sharleen Garcia led the Gryphons with a game-high 20
points. Natalie Brewster finished with nine.

Girls soccer
St. Ignatius 5, Notre Dame-Belmont 1
The Tigers may have suffered their 10th consecutive loss
including nine straight in West Catholic League play
but for the first time in the new year, they scored a goal.
Ava Cholakian goal in the 75th minute snapped a 795minute goalless drought. Notre Dames last goal came in a
4-1 loss to La Reina-Thousand Oaks Dec. 19.

Boys basketball Tuesday


Sacred Heart Prep 70, Menlo School 57
The Gators outscored the Knights 19-8 in the fourth quar-

THE DAILY JOURNAL


ter to pull away for the WBAL win between rivals.
Mason Randall had a monster game for SHP (10-1 WBAL,
12-9 overall) scoring a game high 30 points. Justin
Harmon added 13 for the Gators.
Menlo (6-6, 8-14) was led by Jared Lucian, who finished
with 16 points.

Girls basketball Tuesday


Menlo School 56, Sacred Heart Prep 53
The Gators led the Knights 45-42 after three quarters, but
the Knights rallied to outscore the Gators 14-8 over the
final eight minutes to pull out the win.
Menlo (7-1 WBAL Foothill, 18-4 overall) was led by Sam
Erisman, who finished with 21 points. Hannah Paye
chipped in with 16, while Kenzie Duffner pulled down 14
rebounds.
Riley Hemm poured in 21 points for SHP (4-4, 16-5),
while Maata Makoni added 10 for the Gators.

Girls soccer Tuesday


Mercy-Burlingame 10, Mercy-SF 0
The Crusaders geared up for Thursdays showdown with
Crystal Springs by pummelling the Skippers in a WBAL
Skyline matchup.
Sarah Feller paced the onslaught with three goals and two
assists. Ronia Salamy added two goals, while Emily
Naughton picked up a pair of assists to go along with a goal
of her own.
Rounding out the scoring for Mercy-Burlingame (7-1-1
WBAL Skyline, 9-5-1 overall) were Kathleen Napier, Ixclli
Gallindo, who struck twice, and Alyssa Parodi.
Mercy-Burlingame will be at Crystal Springs at 3:30 p.m.
today with the WBALs Skyline Division title on the line.
Mercy-Burlingame won the first matchup 3-2.

SPORTS

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Thursday Feb. 11, 2016

13

Ski jumping the latest event to step to the plate at Fenway


By Jimmy Golen
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BOSTON Olympic silver medalist Devin


Logan pictures herself standing atop the 140foot ski jump that towers over Fenway Parks
Green Monster, hitting her jump and then coming to a stop right about where a batter would
stand.
Sliding into home plate, coming in safe,
hearing the crowd cheer like I just hit a grand
slam, she said Wednesday before practicing for
this weeks freestyle skiing and snowboarding
jumpfest at the home of the Boston Red Sox.
Its gonna be sick.
The ballpark that John Updike lauded as a
lyric little bandbox is totally tricked out
Dude! for Big Air at Fenway, with a concert
stage where third base would be, the Red Sox
batting cage converted to a room for waxing and
tuning skis, and of course a 14-story ramp right
in the middle of the snow-covered diamond.

More than 75 athletes from 25 countries will


compete in mens and womens snowboarding
and freeskiing Thursday and Friday nights, part
of an attempt to bring the sport down from the
mountain and into cities where more people can
enjoy it. There are about a handful of Big Air
events each year now on ramps made of scaffolding, the U.S. Ski and Snowboard
Association said.
Putting this stadium inside Fenway Park is a
bodacious, bodacious concept, said Calum
Clark, a vice president of the U.S. Ski and
Snowboard Association.
Its not too often that we get to ski in urban
environments, Olympic slopestyle gold
medalist Joss Christensen said, who signed his
name inside the Green Monster scoreboard and
checked out the visitors clubhouse when he
went to check out the site on Tuesday. Usually
we spend a lot of time up in the mountains, away
from cities. Its huge for us to be able to show
people what we do.

SCOTS
Continued from page 11
Scots would find the magic and, in the 18th minute, they did
just that. With the Hillsdale back line being pressured by
the Carlmont front, a Knights back pass deflected off a
defender and fell right at the feet of Carlmonts Maxim
Storozhenko just outside the penalty area. After a touch to
settle and push into space, he swung his right foot into the
ball from about 25 yards out and sent it toward the upper far
right corner. The shot hit the underside of the crossbar and
into the net to put the Scots up 1-0.
We came out a little sluggish, said Hillsdale coach
Chris Rodman.
Carlmont continued to apply pressure and seven minutes
later, doubled their lead. Brett Fitzpatrick intercepted a ball
near midfield and triggered the Scots counterattack. He carried the ball across the field before dropping a pass back to
Kian Karamdashti, who was about 25 yards from goal in the
middle of the field.
His strike was a mirror image of Storozhenkos goal, as
Karamdashtis shot found the far left corner.
Two shots, two goals and the goalkeeper had no chance at
stopping either one.
But suddenly, momentum flipped over to Hillsdale (1-6-4)
and they spent the final 15 minutes of the first half finally
applying offensive pressure against the Carlmont defense.
They seemed to take their foot off the gas, Stambaugh
said of his team.
The Knights confidence grew exponentially after they
scored their first goal four minutes after Carlmont took a 20 lead. Evan Snodgrass whipped a corner kick into the
Scots penalty box, where it bounced around as both teams
tried to get a clear kick away. Mario Arguello finally finished things for the Knights, using a flying side kick to
stab the ball into the back of the net and get them back in
the game.

Snowboarder Ty Walker said she had been to


Fenway for baseball games, including Derek
Jeters finale, a Goo Goo Dolls concert and
most recently the Boston College-Notre Dame
football game. She won a gold medal at a World
Cup Big Air in Istanbul in 2014 and remembers
hearing the crowd cheering all the way up at the
top of the ramp.
Theres going to be 20,000 people here,
said Walker, who grew up in Vermont. To think
of that in a place that so much has happened, to
hear people I know cheering me on is very special to me.
Wednesdays practice on a windless and
cloudy afternoon coincided with Truck Day at
Fenway, and a few dozen Red Sox fans stood
behind barriers outside the ballpark to watch the
teams equipment loaded for the trip to spring
training in Fort Myers, Florida. Its an odd tradition, but one that signals the impending
arrival of spring for those who have run out of
patience with the ice and snow.

In stoppage time, Hillsdale came within a post of tying


the score when Alex Lehr chipped a cross into the goal box
that hit the far left post and ricocheted all the way back
across the goal face before being cleared away by the Scots,
salvaging their 2-1 lead at halftime.
We had them on their heels, Rodman said. All season
long, weve been scrappy with the big boys. We didnt give
up when we went 2-nothing down.
The Knights maintained the momentum after the halftime
break, putting a scare into the Scots in the 41st minute
when Snodgrass made a long run down the left sideline
before slipping a cross to an unmarked Fagan Oisin in the
penalty box. Oisin settled the ball and got off a shot as the
defense closed on him and it took a tremendous kick save by
Carlmont goalkeeper Camron Dennler to maintain his
teams lead.
The Scots finally regained their composure and were

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Red Sox officials said they were relieved after


watching the first snowboarder hit the jump on
Wednesday afternoon. Organizers had been
working on the event for nine months, but they
couldnt be sure everything was going to work
until the athletes hit the ramp.
Big Air snowboarding will debut as an
Olympic sport in Pyeongchang, South Korea,
in 2018 part of an attempt by organizers to
tap into a younger demographic with the addition of X Games-style disciplines. Skiers and
snowboarders say they hope events like the one
at Fenway also help attract a new, bigger audience to their sport.
Putting them in the middle of a city instead of
away on a mountain somewhere cant hurt.
Its just one event. But its an event on a
150-foot scaffolding in the middle of Fenway
Park, said Gus Kenworthy, who took home a
slopestyle silver medal and a family of puppies
from the Sochi Olympics. So I think itll be
OK.

looking to get back their two-goal lead, but Gonzalez made


two spectacular saves in succession to keep the Knights in
the game.
Carlmont finally got some breathing room in the 63rd
minute when Leo McBride found the far right corner of the
net for a 3-1 lead. Once again it was Fitzpatrick making a
dangerous run and finding Christopher Gehlen with a perfect diagonal through ball. Gehlen found McBride at the top
of the penalty box and he finished Carlmonts third goal of
the game.
But Hillsdale kept pushing. The Knights pulled back one
goal with about two minutes to play when Arguello hit a
low, hard free kick into the penalty box that Snodgrass
deflected into the back of the net, but there would be no miracle comeback for the Knights.
A day late and a dollar short, Rodman said. Our record
doesnt indicate how weve played this season.

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Thursday Feb. 11, 2016

SPORTS

THE DAILY JOURNAL

LOUNGE
Continued from page 11
also really wanted to be together, too.
So when Talia Missan heard of a tryout with a club team,
she brought along McLeod.
I found out about the club team we joined through
[Talia], McLeod said. We both look for opportunities
together. Especially trying out for the high school team as
freshmen. They took us as a package because we played so
well together.
While they always played for the same team, they didnt
go to the same school. But that didnt prevent them from
becoming close friends. Missan said the two would hang
out together on the road at showcases and tournaments.
Go to the mall and stuff, Missan said.
No matter how close people are, the only thing that matters on the soccer field is performance. If either Missan or
McLeod didnt have the talent, they would have been broken up long ago.
But that is far from the case. The two are wrapping up
four-year varsity careers and are enjoying one of their best
seasons since entering the high school ranks. McLeod has
seven goals and five assists, while Missan has four and
three, respectively. The Bears currently sit in second place
in the Peninsula Athletic Leagues Bay Division standings
and are all but a lock to advance to the Central Coast
Section tournament.
Were doing pretty good this year, McLeod said. Its
really nice, especially our senior year, to have a really
nice season.
But it also means their time together is coming to an
end. There are three regular season games left and at least
one CCS game. After that, Missan and McLeod will play
one more season of club ball together before the two head
off to college. Missan is already slated to play for the
Bowdin College team, while McLeod is hoping to walk on
at a bigger school.
I think its going to be really different. Next week is
our last (regular-season) games of our high school careers.

PHOTOS COURTESY OF ANDY MISSAN

Talia Missan, left, and Sarah McLeod have played soccer together nearly their entire lives. From their first year playing
together as kindergarteners through high school at Menlo-Atherton, where they are both wrapping up four-year varsity careers.
We still have another club season left, but we did talk
about how it will be sad to go to different schools and not
play together, Missan said. We already talked about
staying in touch during college and meeting back (at
home) on breaks and stuff.
I think well definitely stay connected.

After 13 years together, how could they not stay connected?


Nathan
Mollat
can
be
reached
by
email:
nathan@smdailyjournal.com, or by phone: 344-5200 ext. 117. You
can follow him on Twitter @CheckkThissOut.

WARRIORS

away, then a lot of shoving ensued. Goodwin


came out of the game for the remainder of the
first quarter.

Continued from page 11

Tip-ins

But the Warriors took off with a 16-0 second-quarter run. Curry sank a 28-foot 3-pointer, followed immediately by a 29-footer, and
Draymond Green made a pair of free throws to
put Golden State up 53-35 with 2:15 left in the
half. The Warriors led 57-43 at the break.
With the lead down to 91-81 with 9:43 to
play, Shaun Livingston completed a threepoint play and Thompson sank a 3 to put the
Warriors comfortably in control 97-81.

Warri o rs : Curry sank a 3-pointer for the


123rd consecutive game, four shy of Kyle
Korvers NBA record. ... Curry has seven
career triple-doubles, two this season. ...
Golden State comes out of the All-Star break
with six straight road games. ... The Warriors
have won six straight in the series.
Suns : Phoenix is 0-5 under interim coach
Earl Watson, all of them at home. ... Mirza
Teletovic filled Bookers car with Styrofoam
packing peanuts on Tuesday while the rookie
was inside the arena practicing for this weekends NBA 3-point contest.

Suns scuffle
Morris and Goodwin got into a heated
exchange on the bench during an early timeout. Television replays showed it started with
Morris vehemently saying something to
Goodwin. He appeared to slap Morris hand

Up next
Warri o rs : At Portland on Feb. 19.
Suns : Host Houston on Feb. 19.

SPORTS

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Sports brief
Man suspected of
shooting three after
basketball game arraigned
MUSKEGON HEIGHTS, Mich.
Authorities have jailed a 21-year-old
man suspected of shooting and
wounding three people outside a
western Michigan high school basketball game.
The Muskegon County prosecutors office said Wednesday that
Clarence McCaleb, of Grand Rapids,
was arraigned on assault and gun
charges after being treated for his

EDDIE
Continued from page 11
North Shore was backed up with traffic early in the day as fans rode bikes
or walked for miles to reach the
venue. Parking was nearly impossible to come by anywhere near the
beach.
The Quiksilver In Memory of Eddie
Aikau competition began in 1984,
six years after Aikau died trying to
save others. It has only been held
eight times.
Some of the best big-wave surfers
in the world were at Waimea Bay to
compete in the event, including
Eddies brother Clyde Aikau, who is
the oldest competitor at 66 years old
and the only person to compete in all
eight events.
Is Uncle Clyde ready to ride?
Absolutely, Aikau told The
Associated Press after he posed for
photos with excited fans.
He said he and his brother used to
ride Waimea Bay because of their passion for the sport.
It was just that love to ride, you
know, the biggest wave in the world,
and to ride it with friends that you
really love and you really have a lot of
confidence in that if you get in trouble, theyll help you out, he said.
He said the event isnt about fame
or money, its about honoring his
brothers legacy. He also added that
this will be his last year competing in
the Eddie.
As a lifeguard, Eddie Aikau is said to
have never had a fatality while on
duty. When the surf was too big for

own gunshot wound. Police say a


sheriffs deputy shot McCaleb after
McCaleb pointed his gun at him following Tuesdays attack outside
Muskegon Heights High School.
McCaleb is being held on two
bonds totaling $500,000. His
lawyer, Adam Masserang, didnt
immediately respond to a phone
message seeking comment.
Police allege that McCaleb shot
and wounded two females and a male
after the boys varsity game between
Muskegon Heights and a Grand
Rapids school.
Officers were in the parking lot
before the game because they had
been warned about possible trouble.
most in Waimea Bay and the crowds
cleared out, Aikau would grab his surfboard and take on the biggest waves
around.
Event spokeswoman and longtime
Aikau family friend Jodi Wilmott told
The Associated Press on Tuesday that
the surfers invited to the event
absolutely understand the prestige of
being invited, but that the competition is more about the aloha spirit
that Eddie lived his life with.
He really did share aloha wherever
he went, Wilmott said.
He was a guardian of the bay and
any other body of water he visited,
Wilmott said, and fittingly so as he
was a direct descendant of a Hawaiian
high priest named Hewahewa, who
was given the task of watching over
the Waimea Valley long before Aikau
arrived.
Ultimately, however, Aikau gave
his life to the ocean in a final attempt
to save others. The 31-year-old Aikau
was part of a team that was attempting
to trace the route of their Polynesian
ancestors from Hawaii to Tahiti
aboard the traditional Hokulea canoe
in 1978.
The vessel encountered rough seas
and capsized. Aikau took his surfboard and paddled away for help. He
was never seen again, though the rest
of the crew was eventually rescued.
Organizers will keep watching the
ocean in the coming weeks to see if
conditions will allow the competition to go ahead.
Many of the surfers in Hawaii
Wednesday will be travelling to
another big-wave competition,
Mavericks, which is expected to be
held on Friday in Half Moon Bay,
California.

WHATS ON TAP
THURSDAY
Girls' basketball
El Camino at South City, Sequoia at Carlmont,
Menlo-Atherton at Woodside, 6:15 p.m.
Boys' basketball
El Camino at South City, Sequoia at Carlmont,
Menlo-Atherton at Woodside, 7:45 p.m.; Mercy-SF
vs. Mercy-Burlingame at CSM, 6:30 p.m.
Girls' soccer
Harker at Menlo School, 2:45 p.m.; Castilleja at Sacred Heart Prep, San Mateo at El Camino, South
City at Oceana, Mills at Seqioia,Terra Nova at Westmoor, Menlo-Atherton at Hillsdale, Carlmont at
Capuchino, 3 p.m.; Mercy-Burlingame at Crystal
Springs, 3:30 p.m.;Woodside at Burlingame, Aragon
at Half Moon Bay, 4 p.m.
FRIDAY
Boys' basketball
Bellarmine at Serra, 7:30 p.m.; Hillsdale at Aragon,
San Mateo at Burlingame, Mills at Capuchino,Westmoor at Jefferson,Half Moon Bay at Terra Nova,7:45
p.m.
Girls' basketball
Castilleja at Menlo School, 6 p.m.;Westmoor at Jefferson, Half Moon Bay at Terra Nova, Hillsdale at
Aragon, San Mateo at Burlingame, Mills at Capuchino, 6:15 p.m.
Girls' soccer
Jefferson at Terra Nova, 7 p.m.
Boys' soccer
Priory at Menlo School, 2:45 p.m.; El Camino at San
Mateo, Westmoor at Mills, Half Moon Bay at Hillsdale, Sequoia at Aragon, 3 p.m.; King's Academy
at Crystal Springs, 3:30 p.m.; Capuchino at Terra
Nova, Woodside at Jefferson, Carlmont at South
City, Menlo-Atherton at Burlingame, 4 p.m.
SATURDAY
Girls' soccer
Notre Dame-Belmont at Presentation, 11 a.m.
Boys' soccer
Bellarmine at Serra, 11 a.m.
Girls' basketball
Valley Christian at Notre Dame-Belmont, 7:30 p.m.
Wrestling
PAL tournament at El Camino, 10 a.m.

NHL GLANCE
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
GP W
Florida
54 32
Detroit
54 28
Tampa Bay
53 29
Boston
53 28
Montreal
55 27
Ottawa
55 25
Buffalo
54 21
Toronto
52 19
Metropolitan Division
Washington
52 39
N.Y. Rangers
54 31
N.Y. Islanders 52 28
Pittsburgh
53 27
New Jersey
55 27
Carolina
54 24
Philadelphia
52 23
Columbus
55 21

L OT Pts
16 6 70
18 8 64
20 4 62
19 6 62
24 4 58
24 6 56
27 6 48
24 9 47

GF GA
155 123
137 135
142 130
157 147
151 146
158 173
125 150
125 149

9 4
18 5
18 6
19 7
21 7
21 9
20 9
28 6

174 118
156 137
149 132
139 138
124 129
130 144
124 142
140 173

82
67
62
61
61
57
55
48

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
GP W L OT Pts
Chicago
57 36 17 4 76
Dallas
54 34 15 5 73
St. Louis
56 30 17 9 69
Nashville
54 25 21 8 58
Colorado
56 27 25 4 58
Minnesota
53 23 20 10 56
Winnipeg
53 24 26 3 51
Pacific Division
Los Angeles
52 32 17 3 67
Sharks
52 28 20 4 60
Anaheim
52 26 19 7 59
Vancouver
54 22 20 12 56
Arizona
53 24 23 6 54
Calgary
52 24 25 3 51
Edmonton
55 21 29 5 47

GF GA
159 130
176 147
136 134
141 145
150 155
130 132
138 153
146 121
151 139
119 124
129 147
140 164
139 153
137 167

Wednesdays Games
Detroit 3, Ottawa 1
N.Y. Rangers 3, Pittsburgh 0
Vancouver 2, Arizona 1
Thursdays Games
Los Angeles at N.Y. Islanders, 4 p.m.
Buffalo at Philadelphia, 4 p.m.
Anaheim at Columbus, 4 p.m.
Colorado at Ottawa, 4:30 p.m.
Washington at Minnesota, 5 p.m.
Boston at Winnipeg, 5 p.m.
Dallas at Chicago, 5:30 p.m.
Toronto at Edmonton, 6 p.m.
Calgary at San Jose, 7:30 p.m.
Fridays Games
Montreal at Buffalo, 4 p.m.
Los Angeles at N.Y. Rangers, 4 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Carolina, 4 p.m.
Colorado at Detroit, 4:30 p.m.
Nashville at Tampa Bay, 4:30 p.m.
St. Louis at Florida, 4:30 p.m.
Calgary at Arizona, 6 p.m.

15

NBA GLANCE
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W
Toronto
35
Boston
32
New York
23
Brooklyn
14
Philadelphia
8
Southeast Division
Atlanta
31
Miami
29
Charlotte
27
Washington
23
Orlando
23
Central Division
Cleveland
38
Indiana
28
Chicago
27
Detroit
27
Milwaukee
21
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Southwest Division
San Antonio
45
Memphis
31
Dallas
29
Houston
27
New Orleans
20
Northwest Division
Oklahoma City
39
Utah
26
Portland
26
Denver
22
Minnesota
17
Pacific Division
Warriors
48
L.A. Clippers
35
Sacramento
22
Phoenix
14
L.A. Lakers
11

L
17
23
32
40
45

Pct
.673
.582
.418
.259
.151

GB

4 1/2
13 1/2
22
27 1/2

24
24
26
27
29

.564
.547
.509
.460
.442

1
3
5 1/2
6 1/2

14
25
25
27
32

.731
.528
.519
.500
.396

10 1/2
11
12
17 1/2

8
22
26
27
32

.849
.585
.527
.500
.385

14
17
18 1/2
24 1/2

14
26
27
32
37

.736
.500
.491
.407
.315

12 1/2
13
17 1/2
22 1/2

4
18
31
40
44

.923
.660
.415
.259
.200

13 1/2
26 1/2
35
38 1/2

Wednesdays Games
Charlotte 117, Indiana 95
Sacramento 114, Philadelphia 110
San Antonio 98, Orlando 96
Memphis 109, Brooklyn 90
Boston 139, L.A. Clippers 134, OT
Denver 103, Detroit 92
Atlanta 113, Chicago 90
Minnesota 117, Toronto 112
New Orleans 100, Utah 96
Cleveland 120, L.A. Lakers 111
Golden State 112, Phoenix 104
Houston at Portland, late
Thursdays Games
Washington at Milwaukee, 5 p.m.
New Orleans at Oklahoma City, 5 p.m.

TRANSACTIONS
BASEBALL
American League
DETROIT TIGERS Agreed to terms with OF J.D.
Martinez on a two-year contract.
TEXAS RANGERS Agreed to terms with 1B
Mitch Moreland on a one-year contract.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS Agreed to terms with 3B
Josh Donaldson on a two-year contract.
National League
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS Agreed to terms with
1B Brandon Belt on a one-year contract.
NFL
NEW YORK GIANTS Announced the retirement
of LB Jon Beason. Released OL Will Beatty and Geoff

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Thursday Feb. 11, 2016

650-583-5880

Schwartz.
NHL
BUFFALO SABRES Placed F Zemgus Girgensons on injured reserve. Called up F Justin Bailey
from Rochester (AHL).
EDMONTON OILERS Assigned G Anders Nilsson to Bakersfield (AHL). Recalled G Laurent Brossoit
from Bakersfield.
ST. LOUIS BLUES Activated F Jaden Schwartz
from injured reserve.
MLS
PHILADELPHIA UNION Signed F C.J. Sapong to
a three-year contract.
COLLEGE

INDIANA Named Mark Hagen defensive line


coach.
IOWA STATE Dismissed WR DVario Montgomery. Announced RB Joshua Thomas will
transfer to another school.
SYRACUSE Named Anthony Di Fino associate
athletics director for business development.
UTAH STATE Named Julius Brown cornerbacks
coach.
VANDERBILT Named Brandon Barak baseball
video coordinator, Brian Hiler baseballs director of
player development and John Mardirosian baseball
equipment manager.

16

Thursday Feb. 11, 2016

THE DAILY JOURNAL

THE DAILY JOURNAL

SUBURBAN LIVING

Thursday Feb. 11, 2016

17

Welcome to the new


agrihood: Homes
built around farms
By Dean Fosdick
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Gated communities with houses clustered


around golf courses, swimming pools, party
rooms and fitness centers are common in
many suburban areas. But homes built adjacent to functioning farms?
Welcome to agrihoods pastoral ventures with healthier foods as their focus.
This farm-to-table residential model has
been sprouting up everywhere from Atlanta
to Shanghai. It involves homes built within
strolling distance of small working farms,
where produce matures under the hungry gaze
of residents, where people can venture out
and pick greens for their salads.
Real estate developers are looking for the
next big thing to set them apart, said Ed
McMahon, senior resident fellow with the
Urban Land Institute in Washington. That
gives them a competitive advantage.
There are many variations of the agrihood,
McMahon said. Some developers rent
acreage to farmers, he said. Some set up
non-profit C.S.A. (community-supported
agriculture) programs. Some have the residents doing it (the growing) themselves.
Agrihoods frequently include farmers markets, inns and restaurants sited in communal
hubs where the edibles are processed or sold.
A lot of things are driving the trend,
McMahon said. Theres more interest in

fresh foods. Theres interest in good health.


Theres interest in local everything. Its also
about enjoying the many conveniences that
help you meet your neighbors.
Many purchasers are second-home buyers,
retirees or parents of young children,
McMahon said.
They tend to be what I call the barbell
generation, he said. The millennial generation that wants fresh everything, that wants
to know where their food is coming from.
Also the senior generation, the baby
Agrihoods involve homes built within strolling distance of small working farms, where produce
boomers. They dont want big yards to take
matures under the hungry gaze of residents, where people can venture out and pick greens
care of anymore.
for their salads.
Prices tend to be a lot cheaper for agriculture-centered dwellings than for homes fac- Atlanta when their second child arrived and than we bought our five-bedroom here. We
ing golf courses.
they wanted more space. About 70 percent of both work from home, and have room availAlong with their higher operating costs, the 1,000-plus-acre property is green space, able if needed for our aging parents.
many golf course developments face con- and their home abuts the barn.
And living close to the farm gives them a
cerns about water shortages; some are being
Im looking at it out my back window, more personal relationship with their food,
pushed toward becoming food-based opera- Clay Johnson said in a phone interview. he said. Our kids recognize the farmers and
tions, said Matthew Quint Redmond, Im watching some free-range chickens.
know who they are. The farm is operated like
owner of Agriburbia LLB, a Boulder,
Most of Serenbes landscape consists of a business, so you cant just hop the fence
Colorado-based business that designs, edible, medicinal or native plants, said and pull some vegetables. Thats stealing.
builds and operates farms.
spokeswoman Monica Olsen. We have But my son has asked for and been given a
The issue is making more calories out of blueberry bushes at all of the crosswalks, handful of cherry tomatoes for the walk
the water we have, Redmond said. Growing three on-site restaurants and a seasonal home, Johnson said.
things that are better for you. And fewer peo- farmers market. We just had our 10-year
When we had our second child, I didnt
ple are playing golf these days. Well be see- anniversary from when our first residents cook for several weeks because neighbors
ing a lot of golf course conversions in the moved in.
kept bringing over food, he said. Its not
next 10 to 15 years.
Johnson said moving to Serenbe made just a farm but it creates a sense of communiClay and Roz Johnson moved to a farm- financial sense for his family. We sold our ty just like a church does. We all meet at the
centered community called Serenbe near three-bedroom (house) in Atlanta for more farmers market on Saturdays.

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18

Thursday Feb. 11, 2016

BELMONT
Continued from page 1
range of one-, two- and three-bedroom units,
four live-work units, and a standalone 4,909square-foot commercial building. Currently,
the site is occupied by a 7-Eleven, bank
building, several smaller commercial tenants
and a large asphalt parking lot.
It is what I would characterize as one of
the most underutilized sites in Belmont. It is
currently a sea of parking, said Jeff Smith,
senior vice president of residential development with Sares Regis. Its a proposal that
beautifies El Camino while respecting the
Grand Boulevard Initiative, a high-quality
design meeting Belmonts housing needs
while providing smart growth and a sustainable community.
While the council was pleased to give
Sares Regis the green light, some expressed
disappointment below-market rate units
would not be offered within the development
and that those constructing the project
wouldnt be guaranteed prevailing wages.
Theres no understating how important
this project is to Belmont. Symbolically, it
can certainly be a sign that Belmont is willing to work creatively with developers to
find win-win solutions, said Councilman
Doug Kim, who sat on the Planning

SAMTRANS
Continued from page 1
Resources Department, Mazza wrote in an
email.
Aside from the sexual harassment claim,
Trudell alleges Carson insisted she be
skipped over for a promotion that would
have reduced his access to her and that she
ultimately resigned after suffering emotional distress. The complaint also alleges other

SUBURBAN LIVING

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Commission when the project was first initiated nearly two years ago. I am deeply disappointed that we cant provide some [affordable] units at this site. For all that we talk
about affordable housing, theres nothing
affordable about this.
Others, including members of the public,
emphasized creating any housing would help
alleviate the burdensome shortage the Bay
Area is experiencing after creating thousands
of new jobs with few new residences to follow.
Any and all new housing that we can build
is going to be necessary to take the pressure
off that kind of demand we have, said resident Andrea Gallagher. We need to drive
prices down.
But instead of constructing eight affordable units on site as originally offered, Sares
Regis agreed to pay $1.6 million in-lieu fees
to be set aside for city efforts related to
addressing the regions high cost of housing. Since Belmont has yet to adopt an
affordable housing fee, which many others
throughout the county are doing after the 21
Elements Nexus study, the council was
pleased the developer willingly offered the
additional funds.
Between this and one other project, the
city will, for the first time, have developer
fees specifically earmarked for affordable
housing purposes. Exactly what to do with
the little more than $2 million and any future
funds collected will be discussed as the coun-

cil begins its goal setting session Thursday,


Feb. 11.
I struggled with the [lack of inclusionary]
units, bird in the hand, versus money, two in
the bush. But I also agree this money can be
used for something and we should turn around
and use it soon, sand Vice Mayor Charles
Stone.
After hearing from numerous members of
the public and housing activist groups about
the need to contribute to solving the areas
affordability crisis by encouraging a variety
of new residential options, the council made
clear it will be a priority in the coming year.
Sares Regis will also contribute a range of
other fees, the most notable being $2 million set aside for park and open space
improvements, as well as sewer fees and
money allocated to schools. Smith said after
meeting with representatives from SchoolForce, a nonprofit supporting the BelmontRedwood Shores Elementary School District,
the real estate firm would continue to provide
financial support to help local students.
Smith also noted the development would
trigger a reassessment of the property value
from less than $10 million to nearly $55
million which would result in a substantial increase in taxes to the city and school
district.
But others wondered if the city was getting
all it could for agreeing to change the sites
zoning and allow for the denser housing
development.
Sares Regis did a great job trying to max-

imize their investors return on their project.


Tonight, will the council do as good a job
maximizing the benefits for its residents?
We dont have to say no to redevelopment,
but dont sell our town for cheap, said resident Tran Tran, noting Sares Regis stood to
gain a lot with the increased property value.
Just because Belmont is a small town, doesnt mean you arent savvy in negotiating
substantive community benefits for our residents.
Although Sares Regis noted it intends to
manage the property as a rental apartment
complex, it sought a vesting tentative map
allowing it to turn the 73 units into for-sale
condominiums one day.
Belmont is also in negotiations with Sares
Regis for the sale of the nearby Firehouse
Square property with the process dragging
on, as an agreement has apparently not yet
been met over whether affordable units
should be included on the property.
Ultimately, the council noted there may be
some tradeoffs associated with the project
near Davey Glen Drive, but it would be a substantial improvement to the current site and a
means for the city to contribute to addressing
the regional housing crisis.
We cant say no to everything. What we
have right now is a big asphalt lot its not
the best use of that piece of property. said
Mayor Eric Reed. This is a great development that will provide housing for 73 real
families, real people. And that is huge.

district employees, including Deputy CEO


Virginia Harrington, collaborated in
Carsons defense when Trudell finally made
a formal internal complaint in July.
According to the complaint, several district employees would send group emails
with jokes of a mildly sexual nature but
Carson would allegedly single Trudell out.
One notable incident occurred in November
2012 when Carson sent an attachment listing the calories a man would burn from
engaging in various sexual activities with a
woman. Included in the list was removing

her clothes without her consent, according to the complaint.


During a work anniversary for a former
Human Resources director in 2012, Trudell
said she stood up to read a note aloud and
unbeknownst to her, a former employee
relations officer Jeff Renteria was videotaping her while focusing in solely on her
chest, according to the suit.
Trudell claims she became aware of the
video when Carson called her into his office
a short time later, showed her the video and
stated I told him to keep your head out of
it, according to the complaint.
According to the lawsuit, other incidents
include Carson asking if she was wearing a
new bra, making sexual advances after
showing her a photo of a woman eating a
popsicle and calling her into his office to
show her a photo of a naked black man with
a large penis and asking her what do you
think about that?
One of the most egregious incidents
occurred in early March 2015, shortly after
Carson became acting director of Human
Resources, when he called Trudell into his
office and repeatedly squeezed her upper
thigh, according to the suit.
Trudell claims she was fearful of losing
her job so she did not report the allegations
for years.
Eventually, she received two strange reprimands from her direct supervisor she
believed were attributed to Carson, according to the suit.
After referencing she felt she had been
retaliated against when told to move her
desk, a former employee relations officer
who was friends with Carson interviewed
her in June. After being asked if she felt
harassed by anyone, Trudell stated yes and
agreed to file a formal complaint, according
to the suit.
About a month later, she met with Deputy
CEO Harrington to submit a complaint of
harassment. Shortly after, Trudells physi-

cian recommended she be put on administrative leave as she had a pinched nerve that
worsened with stress, according to the suit.
In September, Trudell met with Lynn
Lieber, an investigator hired by SamTrans
to look into her complaint. Lieber brought
a stack of emails Carson had provided to her
that allegedly showed Trudell had also sent
emails of a sexual nature. Trudell contended the emails were almost all from 2004 and
were sent to a group of people in the office,
not Carson individually. When asked how
Carson knew to print the emails when the
allegations were supposed to only be disclosed to him during the interview so as to
elicit the most truthful response, Lieber
admitted she told Harrington in advance,
according to the suit.
The complaint alleges Harrington contacted Carson and had him pull any emails
Trudell sent showing his conduct was wanted. Carson also allegedly claimed Trudell
would eat fruit in a sexual way in front of
him, according to the suit.
Eventually, Harrington and Lieber told
Trudell that Carsons conduct was not
unwelcome and found no harassment had
occurred. Having been on medical leave,
Trudell decided she could not return to a
workplace where she felt unsafe and
resigned Nov. 5, 2015, according to the
suit.
According to SamTrans, Carson has
worked for the agency for 22 years and both
he and Harrington remain employed at the
district.
Our client alleges a pattern of sexual
harassment in the workplace by Mr. Carson
over the course of many years which was
extremely distressing, Mazza wrote in the
email. Rather than correcting the harassment being perpetrated by its director of
HR, SamTrans instead told Ms. Trudell that
her claims could not be substantiated and
left Ms. Trudell with no choice but to resign
or continue working with her harasser.

CALTRAIN

Caltrain will be able to run 114 cars per day


rather than 92 and reduce emissions by up to
97 percent by 2040.
Besides the funding hurdle, the project is
also facing a legal challenge. The town of
Atherton and two advocacy groups filed a
lawsuit claiming that the environmental
impact report for the project was inadequate.
The plaintiffs said the report didnt adequately address the impacts of traffic, station configuration, electricity demand and
tree removal.
Ackemann said the lawsuit is in mediation.
Caltrains ridership was at 58,200 boardings a day in November, according to the
Federal Transit Administration. With the
new system, boardings may exceed 100,000
per day by 2040.
The total cost of the project is $1.76 billion, FTA officials said.

Continued from page 1


said. Last year, the Bay Area Air Quality
Management District allocated $20 million
to the project, saying it will substantially
improve air quality for residents of the
Peninsula train corridor.
Electrification is part of a larger Caltrain
modernization program that will replace the
diesel system with a more modern electric
system, according to the Department of
Transportation. The project will replace
both train cars and infrastructure.
Electrification will allow Caltrain to
increase the number of passengers it carries
and improve service, Department of
Transportation officials said.
A report by the air quality district said

SUBURBAN LIVING

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Thursday Feb. 11, 2016

19

New nursery decor with style


By Kim Cook

Ampersand on a whimsical bedding collection stitched with


rainbows and geometrics, in
retro color combos like pink,
blue,
red
and
turquoise.
(www.landofnod.com)

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Baby, its a brand new year.


And when it comes to creating
the perfect sleep space for little
ones, there are more fun options
than ever.
Styles range from haute to
homespun, vintage to vanguard.
A look at some of the best:

PREP SCHOOL
Crisp stripes and a palette of
whites, navy, reds, greens, yellows and oranges create a preppy
vibe.
Almost any color pops with
navy, says Gick, and it works
for both boys and girls rooms.
Pottery Barn Kids Harper bedding collection pairs white with
chevrons, dots or stripes in
bright hues. Monogrammed wall
art ties it all together.

BLURRING THE LINES


Traditional parameters like
gender-specific motifs and colors, and room-specific furnishings, are giving way to a more
free-spirited
approach.
Designers are deploying to the
nursery dressers, credenzas, art,
lighting, mirrors and seating
more typically found in grownup rooms like the master, dining
or living room.
Joanna Gick and Jennifer
ODowd, interior designers in
Scottsdale, Arizona, like to use
vintage dressers, toys and books
as nursery inspiration. Arts a
big element, too.
Gallery walls seem to be a hot
trend, Gick says. The fun thing
about them is theyre totally customizable to the childs interests, and easy to swap out as they
grow. We like to use mixed media
prints as well as wood and
metal sculptures to create a
really interesting gallery.
(www.jandjdesigngroup.com)

BABY GLAM
Parents-to-be should view the
babys room as a place to let
their own imaginations fly, says
Naomi Alon, owner of the Irvine,
California-based Little Crown
Interiors.
I encourage my clients to
think about the nursery as their
inner childs fantasy space, she
says. This is the one room in
their home where they can get
away with neon pink wallpaper
or an over-the-top chandelier.
The nursery is just as much about
the parents as it is about the
baby, and making it a place

NEUTRAL TERRITORY

Antique (or antique-looking) furniture, quilts and afghans can give you babys room homespun charm.
where mom and dad feel comfortable is key.
In one of Alons favorite projects, a nursery in Newport Beach,
California, she used pink and
gold damask wallpaper, a baroque
mirror, organza furniture skirts
and a big fluffy rug to create a
glamorous, girly confection.
(www.littlecrowninteriors.com )
Los Angeles duo Emily Current
and Meritt Elliot designed gold,
arrow-shaped lamps and finials,
and gold-woven storage bins for
their new Pottery Barn Kids collection. A bold, black-and-white
diamond pattern graces a quilt.
(www.potterybarnkids.com)
RH Baby & Childs new collection features upholstered cribs
resembling wing chairs; conversion kits allow them to be turned
into beds down the road. Theres
a big selection of chandeliers,
too. (www.rhbabyandchild.com)

GRANNY CHIC
Antique (or antique-looking)

furniture, quilts and afghans give


babys room homespun charm.
Connecticut-based designer
Eileen Blanchard crafts sweet pillows, bedding and soft toys
using chenille and fabrics with
vintage childrens prints and
winsome
cottage
florals.
( www. e t s y . c o m / s h o p / s c a r lettscozycottage)
Artist
Emily
Isabellas
Homestead organic fabric collection features an array of animals,
scenery and farm folk. (www.emilyisabella.com)

MOD MODERN
As in the rest of the home,
decor in the nursery is revisiting
the past. Midcentury and 70sand 80s-era cribs and other furniture bring in style elements
that can match the homes aesthetic.
Room
&
Board,
DwellStudio and AllModern have
great options.
Gick and ODowd did a feature
wall in a boys room that featured

a big, 70s-style geometric


design, and balanced it with a
similarly bold rug.
Garnet Hills got butterfly
chairs from Argentina with canvases embroidered with boho
crewelwork designs. (www. garnethill.com) And Zulily has some
pretty boho crib bedding with
paisley and elephant prints.
(www.zulily.com)
Land of Nods managing director, Michelle Kohanzo, thinks
the 1980s in particular fit the
vibe of kids rooms now.
Theres no better decade for
kids decor, she says. The trend
is all about bold, playful color
and pattern its over-the-top
and just plain silly.
Theres nostalgic appeal for
mom and dad, too. This is exactly how I remember my own room
growing up! Kohanzo says.
Look for acrylic wall cubes,
and banana and flamingo nightlights in hot neon hues.
Land of Nod partnered with
Kansas
City-based
studio

Even parents-to-be who know


their babys gender may prefer a
neutral nursery. Beyond yellow,
gender-neutral decor includes
gray, greige and cream along
with muted, chalky pastels.
Julia Rothmans wallpaper patterns are a good example: Handdrawn birds and clouds move
across the wall in soft, daydreamy
hues.
(www.hyggeandwest.com)

TINY TRAVELER
Introduce baby to the big wide
world and the skies above with
printed bedding and accessories
to spark imagination.
Rifle Paper Co.s Safari wallpaper puts zebras, gazelles,
ostriches and elephants in metallic gold on a hunter-green background great for boys or girls.
(www.riflepaperco.com)
RH Baby & Child has dramatic
murals of constellations, maps
and jet planes. Minted also has
art to spark a childs flight of
fancy. (www.minted.com )
Put the sky overhead with one
of Gale Fitzsimmons photo
murals on the ceiling: Puffy
white clouds bound across an
azure vista, perfect for daydreaming. Or naptime. (www.muralsyourway.com)

20

DATEBOOK

Thursday Feb. 11, 2016

MILLBRAE
Continued from page 1

owned by the rail agency more than


300 units of housing, roughly 47,000
Comment on
square feet of retail space, more than
or share this story at
www.smdailyjournal.com 160,000 square feet of office space and

more could be done to benefit


Millbrae residents who stand to have
see their citys gateway built out
through the development of new
homes as well as retail and office
space.
Residents had expressed a desire for
officials to form a unified front before
approving the document which establishes policy for development of
mixed-use projects near the intersection of Millbrae Avenue and El
Camino Real.
Mayor Anne Oliva noted the
remaining dissension among the
council as the policy went to a vote,
and said the difference of opinion
stemmed from a unanimous desire of
councilmembers to make the right
decision for the future of the city.
We are divided because we want to
the best for everybody, she said.
Even Papan, who has been the most
outspoken critic of the document
since joining the council in the fall,
said she believes the plan has been
vastly improved through the feedback
of the council.
I think we have come a really long
way, she said.
Considering that progress, Papan
said she still felt there was further
room for improvement, which is why
she could not vote in favor of it moving forward.
I will be voting no because I think
we can make this better, she said,
just as the proposal went up for
approval.
The last two council meetings fea-

turing discussion of the Millbrae


Station Area Specific Plan lasted
roughly five hours each, pushing
deliberations early into the following
morning and ultimately resulting in
postponed decisions.
Vice Mayor Reuben Holober said at
the end of the last meeting he felt as if
the document was adequately prepared
for approval, but favored delaying a
final vote in part due to the late hour.
One of the lingering sticking
points during a previous discussion
by council was how the new homes
and jobs slated to be built in the 116acre site could cause enrollment
growth in the Millbrae Elementary
School District.
To address those concerns, city officials amended the plan to require
developers proposing projects in the
boundary of the station area to discuss
with school officials offsetting costs
the district could incur through a
growing student population.
Vahn Phayprasert, superintendent
of the Millbrae Elementary School
District, said the adjustment adequately addressed the concerns of the
school community, and expressed his
support for the plan moving forward.
No projects have been formally submitted, as developers have been
required to wait for the council to
approve the specific plan before officially presenting project designs, but
at least two properties have been identified as potential construction sites.
Republic Urban has been hired by
BART to build on a piece of land

potentially a hotel near the station.


An affordable housing development
offering 55 units to Millbrae veterans
who served in the armed forces has
also been proposed in a separate project by Republic Urban.
Vincent Muzzi has expressed interest in redeveloping his 150 Serra Ave.
property into nearly 500 residential
units, 267,000 square feet of offices
and 30,000 square feet of retail space.
As the council approved the plan,
Holober noted the consent from officials only pertained to guidelines for
development, and not any specific
project.
Many of the issues raised regarding
potential impact on infrastructure and
local schools can be addressed when
specific development projects are submitted, said Holober, and the station
area plan only serves as a framework
for those discussions.
Lee though said he believed the plan
remained too vague, and did not go far
enough to ensure the best interest of
Millbrae would be served through
redevelopment of the area which acts
as the gateway to the citys commercial district from Highway 101.
But ultimately those concerns were
not compelling enough to convince
the rest of the council to further delay
approval, as a majority felt it was due
time to move ahead with the process.
Councilwoman Ann Schneider said
she believed approving the specific
plan would help jump-start the future
of the citys growth.
I have really high hopes we can
bring some excitement and fresh energy into Millbrae, she said.

HOTEL

to giving the public access to the


information they deserve, but so far we
havent seen that.
Last month, Fish and others
expressed concerns regarding the commitment of OTO Development to staying in San Bruno once the hotel is constructed, should it come to fruition,
citing the companys track record for
selling its assets to global venture
capital firm Blackstone Group.
She said OTO Developments history
of grouping and selling its properties
to another company gave rise to concerns her group has regarding the
nature of negotiations.
By disclosing the assessment documents and allowing the public insight
into the value of the land being considered for development, Fish said she
believes city officials could strengthen their bargaining power in negotiations with the developer, as residents
would look to hold both parties
accountable.
I think the city has a real opportunity to stand up to OTO, to this com-

pany that is from out of town and that


hasnt indicated it will be invested in
the community, and get a good deal for
the working families in San Bruno,
said Fish. I think there is a real
opportunity for the council to stand up
to this developer and take courageous
action on the project, and it is still an
open question as to whether we will see
that happen.
Fish said she does not believe officials are being adequately transparent
by keeping the assessment details private, and said she hopes officials show
a willingness to allow residents an
opportunity to view documents she
believes should be public.
The public cares what happens on
this project, and it cares the outcome is
good for San Bruno long term, she
said. They are concerned that they are
taken seriously, and the council acts
on their concerns.
For his part, Zafferano said he is
hopeful the court will dismiss the case
and allow the documents to be released
once negotiations are completed.

Continued from page 3


the potential agreement with the
developer is still in negotiations,
which is why some documents requested by residents have stayed private,
but they remain committed to building
a hotel at the site.
The lawsuit cites interactions
between Fish wishing to see copies of
the most recent value assessment of
the 1.5-acre site that sits vacant near
The Shops at Tanforan, and Zafferano
justifying the citys right to keep
those documents under wraps.
Fish said after granting city officials
multiple opportunities to disclose the
documents, her group was left no
choice but to file a lawsuit.
Its unfortunate it came to the point
of having to take legal action, she
said. We hoped the city would release
the results of the appraisal and be open

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Calendar
THURSDAY, FEB. 11
Lifetree Cafe: The Witch Next Door.
9:15 a.m. Bethany Lutheran Church,
1095 Cloud Ave., Menlo Park. An
hourlong conversation discussing
the appeal of Wicca. For more information call 854-5897.
ESL Conversation Club. 10 a.m.
Belmont Library, 1110 Alameda de
las Pulgas, Belmont. Drop in to this
relaxed conversation club to help
improve your English. For more information contact belmont@smcl.org.
San Mateo Asian Seniors Club. 10
a.m. 725 Monte Diablo Ave., San
Mateo. Annual membership is $20
and seniors older than 50 are eligible. For more information call 3498534.
Redwood Citys Senior Affairs
Commission meeting. 1 p.m.
Veterans Memorial Senior Center,
1455 Madison Ave., Redwood City.
For more information call 780-7250.
Mystery Book Club. 1110 Alameda
de las Pulgas, Belmont. Enjoy lively
discussion and light refreshments.
For more information email belmont@smcl.org.
Senior Valentines Dance. 3 p.m. to
5 p.m. Burlingame Recreation Center,
850 Burlingame Ave., Burlingame.
Adults over 55 are invited to participate in a Valentines Dance. There will
be a DJ, dance lessons, snacks and
refreshments. Free. For more information and to RSVP call 558-7300.
Crafts with the A Team Presents
Tween Valentines Day Craft
Afternoon. 3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. San
Mateo Public Library, 55 W. Third Ave.,
San Mateo. Free. For more information call 522-7838.
Valentines Day Dinner and Dance.
5 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. Little House, 800
Middle Ave., Menlo Park. Fine dining,
dancing, live music. Singles welcome.
$12. RSVP in advance by visiting
squareup.com/store/peninsula-volunteers-inc.
The Cartoon Art Museum visits the
South San Francisco Public
Library. 6 p.m. SSF Main Public
Library, 840 W. Orange Ave., South
San Francisco. Join us for an evening
with Andrew Farrago, curator of the
Cartoon Art Museum. For more information, email valle@plsinfo.org.
Midpen Open House and Studio
Tour. 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. 900 San
Antonio Road, Palo Alto. Learn the
basics about public access TV channels and how you can use this community resource. For more information call 494-8686.
Pub Style Trivia. 6:30 p.m. 1110
Alameda de las Pulgas, Belmont. Beer
and wine tasting and trivia at the
Belmont Library. Test your useless
knowledge of pop culture, geekdom,
random school facts and more. Beer,
wine and pub snacks will be served.
For ages 21 and over. For more information email belmont@smcl.org.
The Art of a Healthy Meal
Decision. 7 p.m. 1044 Middlefield
Road, Redwood City. Nourish yourself
using the best of Ayurveda and conventional nutrition strategies. For
more information email rkutler@redwoodcity.org.
Burlingame Renters Meeting. 7
p.m. to 9 p.m. Burlingame Library,
upper level meeting room near
Fiction section. Please join other
Burlingame renters in our work to
stabilize rents and stop unjust evictions. For more information, email
cindy@rentersrightsnow.com.
U.S. Drag. 8 p.m. 2120 Broadway,
Redwood City. This black comedy
by Gina Gionfriddo follows two
young women in Manhattan who
are trying to figure out life after college. For more information go to
dragonproductions.net.
FRIDAY, FEB. 12
The Cost of War. 7:30 a.m. 6650
Golf Course Drive, Burlingame.
Author Brian Oldham will present
on his new book. Breakfast is
included. Admission is $15. For
more information call 515-5891.
Coloring and Coffee for Adults. 10
a.m. Belmont Library, 1110 Alameda
de las Pulgas, Belmont. Color a page
or two and enjoy some refreshments and adult conversation.
Coloring sheets and materials will
be provided, but feel free to bring
your own supplies. For more information contact belmont@smcl.org.
Valentines Day Party. 10:30 a.m.
to 1 p.m. San Bruno Senior Center,
1555 Crystal Springs Road. For more
information and to purchase tickets
call 616-7150.
For the Love of Chocolate. 1 p.m.
to 7 p.m. New Leaf Community
Classroom. Come celebrate chocolate. Offering tastings. For more
information email patti@bondmarcom.com.
U.S. Drag. 8 p.m. 2120 Broadway,

Redwood City. This black comedy


by Gina Gionfriddo follows two
young women in Manhattan who
are trying to figure out life after college. For more information go to
dragonproductions.net.
Company by Coastal Repertory
Theatre. 8 p.m. 1167 Main St., Half
Moon Bay. The award-winning
Coastal Repertory Theatre presents
the romantic comedy Company in
time for Valentines Day. For tickets
or more information visit coastalrep.com or call 569-3266.
SATURDAY, FEB. 13
What You Need to Know About
Divorce. 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
Peninsula Jewish Community
Center (Conference Room B), 800
Foster City Blvd., Foster City. This
workshop is designed to help people take the first step of untying the
knot. With the guidance of trained
professionals, workshop participants gain a greater understanding
of legal, financial, family and personal aspects of divorce. Free. For
more information contact 3443168.
E-waste Recycling Fundraiser.
9:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. South San
Francisco High School Parking Lot,
400 B St., South San Francisco. For
more information email ssfhsclass2016@gmail.com.
55th Annual Camellia Show and
Plant Sale. 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
1400 Roosevelt Ave., Redwood City.
See over 1,000 camellia blooms. Buy
rare and unusual camellias at the
plant sale. For more information call
235-5111.
Used Books and Media Sale. 9:30
a.m. to 4 p.m. Cubberley
Community
Center,
4000
Middlefield Road, Palo Alto. Friends
of the Palo Alto Library is holding its
monthly sale of 50,000 gently used
books and media. Bargain Room
open 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m., Main Sale
Room open 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. and
Childrens Room open 10 a.m. to 4
p.m. Bargain Room is 50 percent off
or $5/bag. For more information
visit fopal.org.
Interior design tours of Ronald
McDonald House. 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
510 Sand Hill Road, Palo Alto. For
more information go to rmhstanford.ejoinme.org/DesignTour. Tours
available until Feb. 28.
AARP San Bruno Chapter 2895
Meeting. 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. 1555
Crystal Springs Road, San Bruno. For
more information call 201-9137.
Brain Attack: What You Need to
K now. 11 a.m. Menlo Park City
Council Chambers, 701 Laurel St.,
Menlo Park. For more information
call 330-2501.
Soul Food and Black History
Month Cultural Fun (24th Annual
Daly City Black History Month
Celebration). Noon to 3:30 p.m.
Cafe Doelger, Westlake Park, 101
Lake Merced Blvd., Daly City. Free
event, but nominal cost for food.
The theme is Hallowed Grounds
Sites of African-American Memory.
Join us for an afternoon of music,
poetry, dance and food. For more
information call 991-8001.
Book signing at Barnes and
Noble. Noon to 4 p.m. 11 W.
Hillsdale Blvd., San Mateo. Meet
Rachel E. Carter, Elise Kova and
Laura Thalassa.
Portola Art Gallery presents Alan
McGees Rodin en Blanc Opening
Reception. 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Portola
Art Gallery, 75 Arbor Road, Menlo
Park. Photographer Alan McGee
focuses on Rodins lesser-known
white works. Through Feb. 1 to Feb.
29. For more information visit portolaartgallery.com.
Valentines Day Card Creation. 2
p.m. to 4 p.m. San Mateo Public
Library, 55 W. Third Ave., San Mateo.
Free. For more information call 5227838.
Black History Month Film Series. 2
p.m. South San Francisco Main
Public Library, 840 W. Orange Ave.,
South San Francisco. 42, directed by
Brian Helgeland. For more information email valle@plsinfo.org
Green Day Show Concert. 4 p.m. to
6 p.m. School of Rock, 711 S. B St., San
Mateo. Free. For more information
call 347-3474.
Kingfish Comedy Show. 7 p.m.
Kingfish Restaurant, 201 S. B St., San
Mateo. Over 18 only. Show stars Larry
Bubbles Brown, Chad Opitz, Bryant
Hicks and Nicole Calasich. For tickets
visit kingfishcomedy.eventbrite.com.
U.S. Drag. 8 p.m. 2120 Broadway,
Redwood City. This black comedy by
Gina Gionfriddo follows two young
women in Manhattan who are trying
to figure out life after college. For
more information go to dragonproductions.net.
For more events visit
smdailyjournal.com, click Calendar.

COMICS/GAMES

THE DAILY JOURNAL

DILBERT

Thursday Feb. 11, 2016

21

CROSSWORD PUZZLE

HOLY MOLE

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE

ACROSS
1 Peggy
4 Shrinks reply (2 wds.)
8 Tickled pink
12 Caught ya!
13 Field crop
14 Hoarfrost
15 Overprotected
17 Mr. Greenspan
18 Least outgoing
19 Car model
21 Riders cry
23 Translucent mineral
24 Good, to Pedro
27 Cold-shoulder
29 Ms. Hagen of lms
30 E. Coyote
32 Strong wind
36 Citi Field team
38 Bronze coin
40 Roam about
41 Salad veggie
43 Lodges
45 Neutral or rst
47 Invoice stamp

GET FUZZY

49
51
55
56
58
59
60
61
62
63

British peers
Sales pitches
Cartoon bear
Energized (2 wds.)
Not working
Helm position
Rocket trajectory
Look curiously
Marmalade chunk
Drop line

DOWN
1 Marsupial pockets
2 Klutzs cry (hyph.)
3 Facile
4 Rink event (2 wds.)
5 voce
6 Before, to Blake
7 Goals
8 Teachers chore
9 Delicate hue
10 Freezer maker
11 Bears lair
16 In stitches
20 Down Under bird

22
24
25
26
28
31
33
34
35
37
39
42
44
45
46
48
50
52
53
54
55
57

Numb, as a foot
Kind of steer?
Sporty truck
Do lunch
She broods a lot
Ugh!
Have at
Flee hastily
Newspaper execs
More creepy
Fell head over heels?
WWW address
Gareld pooch
Hollow rock
Silent ier
It quakes a lot
Box lightly
Wax-coated cheese
Entice
Humane org.
Kennel sound
Yale athlete

2-11-16

PREVIOUS
SUDOKU
ANSWERS

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2016


AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Stick to your game
plan. Giving in to temptation will not end well. Strive
to reach the personal and professional goals that
will help you excel.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) You will get ahead,
make nancial gains and nd your niche if you are
diligent in your pursuit of happiness and satisfaction.
Romance will ease stress and improve your life.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) Observation will help
you recognize what will and wont work. Be fastidious
in the way you approach your job in order to avoid the
wrath of someone waiting for you to screw up.

KenKen is a registered trademark of Nextoy, LLC. 2016 KenKen Puzzle LLC. All rights reserved.
Dist. by Universal Uclick for UFS, Inc. www.kenken.com

WEDNESDAYS PUZZLE SOLVED

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.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) What you do out


of kindness and respect will result in all sorts of
rewards. Your actions will make others take notice
and put you in the running for a special position.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Dont jump in to
something too quickly. What sounds feasible at
first will turn out to be a fiasco. Bide your time
and consider the practicality of whatever you
want to pursue.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Surprise everyone by
making an unusual change to the way you look or
live. Its time to shake things up a bit and to do things
the way you want to do them.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Youll feel anxious if you
give in to someone you disagree with. Dont be

2-11-16
Want More Fun
and Games?
Jumble Page 2 La Times Crossword Puzzle Classieds
Tundra & Over the Hedge Comics Classieds
Boggle Puzzle Everyday in DateBook

afraid to say no or walk away from an argument that


is impossible to win.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Avoid bullies and
fast talkers. Explore your ideas and invest in the
possibilities that make you the most excited. Be true
to yourself and spend time with like-minded people.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Trust in your abilities
and make the changes that will bring you a high
return. Back away from situations that are limiting.
Dont be afraid to make a move.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Speak up, share your
ideas and concerns and make things happen. You can
make a difference if you put your plans in motion.
Love freely and unconditionally.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Stop before

you go too far. There will be a fine line between too


little and too much. Moderation in all your dealings
will be the key to success.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Your instincts will
lead you to something or someone that will change
your life. An open mind will encourage others to share
their aspirations. You can make a difference.
COPYRIGHT 2016 United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

22

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Thursday Feb. 11, 2016

104 Training
TERMS & CONDITIONS
The San Mateo Daily Journal Classifieds will not be responsible for more
than one incorrect insertion, and its liability shall be limited to the price of one
insertion. No allowance will be made for
errors not materially affecting the value
of the ad. All error claims must be submitted within 30 days. For full advertising conditions, please ask for a Rate
Card.

110 Employment

CAREGIVERS
2 years experience
required.
Immediate placement
on all assignments.

Call
(650)777-9000

110 Employment

NEWSPAPER
DRIVERS
WANTED
Newsstand + Vending
Machine
Delivery routes available
in the San Francisco Area
No collections required
Early AM routes 7 days
per week
2 1/2 - 3 hours daily
$500.00 per week
Must have own vehicle
Valid drivers license and
insurance
Call: 831-359-8373

HOME CARE AIDES


Multiple shifts to meet your needs. Great
pay & benefits, Sign-on bonus, 1yr exp
required.
Matched Caregivers (650)839-2273,
(408)280-7039 or (888)340-2273
HOUSE CLEANERS NEEDED
$12.25 per hour. Company Car.
Call Molly Maid at (650)837-9788.
1700 S. Amphlett, #218, San Mateo.

JEWELER/
SETTERS
Setting + repair + Polish
Top Pay + ben +
bonus
650-367-6500
FX: 367-6400

jobs@jewelryexchange.com

110 Employment

110 Employment

NEWSPAPER INTERNS
JOURNALISM

The Daily Journal is looking for interns to do entry level reporting, research, updates of our ongoing features and interviews. Photo interns also welcome.
We expect a commitment of four to
eight hours a week for at least four
months. The internship is unpaid, but
intelligent, aggressive and talented interns have progressed in time into
paid correspondents and full-time reporters.
College students or recent graduates
are encouraged to apply. Newspaper
experience is preferred but not necessarily required.
Please send a cover letter describing
your interest in newspapers, a resume
and three recent clips. Before you apply, you should familiarize yourself
with our publication. Our Web site:
www.smdailyjournal.com.
Send your information via e-mail to
news@smdailyjournal.com or by regular mail to 1900 Alameda de las Pulgas #112, San Mateo CA 94403

SALES - Telemarketing and Inside Sales


Representative needed to sell newspaper print and web advertising and event
marketing solutions. To apply, pleasecall
650-344-5200 and send resume to
info@smdailyjournal.com
SALES/MARKETING
INTERNSHIPS
The San Mateo Daily Journal is looking
for ambitious interns who are eager to
jump into the business arena with both
feet and hands. Learn the ins and outs
of the newspaper and media industries.
This position will provide valuable
experience for your bright future.
Email resume
info@smdailyjournal.com

STATION FOR RENT:

Are you the right fit to complete


our recent remodel? Looking for
self-motivated, career oriented
person to own their business in
this very charming unique hair
salon. contact me at:

124 Caregivers

EXPERIENCED
CAREGIVER

Assistance with daily activities including transportation to and from, grocery shopping, light meal
prep, laundry services,
light housekeeping. Availble for AM/PM hours.
CPR/First Aid certified.
References upon request

Maria Lucia
(650)741-8126
170 Opportunities
LIMO BUSINESS, On Time Limo Shuttle. Includes 2 Town Cars, customer and
client lists. $60,000. (650)342-6342

1colorologist@gmail.com

NOW HIRING:

SYSTEMS ANALYSTS (Ref:101)


Infovity, Inc. Detail job description
at www.infovity.com. Job Site: San Mateo, CA. Exp: 5 years. Edn: Bachelors
degree in Comp Sci/Electronics Eng.
Send resume to jobs@infovity.com, referencing job title & ref number stated
above.

t Banquet Servers On Call


t Cocktail Servers t Floor Care Janitor
t Room Attendant t Laundry Attendant
t Line Cook t Night Auditor

203 Public Notices

CASE# CIV 536760


ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR
CHANGE OF NAME
SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA,
COUNTY OF SAN MATEO,
400 COUNTY CENTER RD,
REDWOOD CITY CA 94063
PETITION OF
Alexis Jordan Epperson
TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS:
Petitioner:
filed a petition with this court for a decree
changing name as follows:
Present name: Alexis Jordan Epperson
Proposed Name: Alexis Jordan Riccardi
THE COURT ORDERS that all persons
interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated
below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be
granted. Any person objecting to the
name changes described above must file
a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court
days before the matter is scheduled to
be heard and must appear at the hearing
to show cause why the petition should
not be granted. If no written objection is
timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. A HEARING on
the petition shall be held on 03/01/16 at 9
a.m., Dept. PJ, Room 2D, at 400 County
Center, Redwood City, CA 94063. A
copy of this Order to Show Cause shall
be published at least once each week for
four successive weeks prior to the date
set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation:
San Mateo Daily Journal
Filed: 01/26/2016
/s/ Susan Irene Etezadi /
Judge of the Superior Court
Dated: 01/22/2016
(Published 01/28/2016, 02/04/2016,
02/11/2016, 02/18/2016)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT 267824
The following person is doing business
as: Boardwalk Chrysler Dodge Jeep
Ram, 1 Bair Island Road, REDWOOD
CITY, CA 94063. Registered Owner: J K
Commerce, Inc., CA. The business is
conducted by a Corporation. The registrant commenced to transact business
under the FBN on 1/4/16
/s/Jamie Kopf, Jr./
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 1/19/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
01/21/16, 01/28/16, 02/04/16, 02/11/16)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT 267778
The following person is doing business
as: 1) Safti First 2) GPX 3)Safti 4) Terminator 5) Safti and Security, 100 N. Hill Dr
#12, BRISBANE, CA 94005. Registered
Owner: OKeefes Inc, CA. The business
is conducted by a Corporation. The registrant commenced to transact business
under the FBN on Mar 6, 2014
/s/William OKeefe/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 1/12/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
01/21/16, 01/28/16, 02/04/16, 02/11/16)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT 267575
The following person is doing business
as: Fox Pro Teams, 778 El Camino Real,
SAN CARLOS, CA 94070. Registered
Owner: Naomi Jeanne Fox, 2478 Lichen
Dr, CITURS HEIGHTS, CA 95621. The
business is conducted by an Individual.
The registrant commenced to transact
business under the FBN on N/A
/s/Naomi Fox/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 12/22/2015. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
01/21/16, 01/28/16, 02/04/16, 02/11/16)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT 267841
The following person is doing business
as: Harrys Hofbrau, Redwood City, 1909
El Camino Real, REDWOOD CITY, CA
94063. Registered Owner: J&H Kramer,
Inc., CA. The business is conducted by a
Corporation. The registrant commenced
to transact business under the FBN on
06/1955
/s/Larry Kramer/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 1/19/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
01/21/16, 01/28/16, 02/04/16, 02/11/16)

AM & PM Shifts Available


Employee Benets Package

Call Michelle D. (650) 295-6141


1221 Chess Drive Foster City 94010

DRIVERS
WANTED

203 Public Notices

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT 267839
The following person is doing business
as: Forecheck Gameware, 537 Ventura
Ave., SAN MATEO, CA 94403. Registered Owner: Howard Lehr, same address. The business is conducted by an
Individual. The registrant commenced to
transact business under the FBN on N/A
/s/Howard Lehr/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 01/19/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
01/21/16, 01/28/16, 02/04/16, 02/11/16)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT 267835
The following person is doing business
as: 1) San Carlos Airport Association 2)
San Carlos Airport & Pilots Association,
360 Bowsprit Dr, REDWOOD CITY, CA
94065. Registered Owner: San Carlos
Airport Pilots Association, Chapter of
California Aviation Council, CA. The
business is conducted by a Corporation.
The registrant commenced to transact
business under the FBN on N/A
/s/Carol Ford/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 01/19/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
01/21/16, 01/28/16, 02/04/16, 02/11/16)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT 267641
The following person is doing business
as: Expression Hair Design, 189 Southgate Ave, DALY CITY, CA 94015. Registered Owner: 1) Andy Tan 2) Biyi Liu,
1558 19th Ave, SAN FRANCISCO, CA
94122. The business is conducted by a
General Partnership. The registrant commenced to transact business under the
FBN on
/s/Andy Tan/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 12/30/2015. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
01/21/16, 01/28/16, 02/04/16, 02/11/16)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT 267700
The following person is doing business
as: Bay City Barbering, 104 Lerida Ave,
MILLBRAE, CA 94030. Registered Owner: C. Adan Griego, same address. The
business is conducted by an Individual.
The registrant commenced to transact
business under the FBN on N/A
/s/C. Adan Griego/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 01/06/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
01/21/16, 01/28/16, 02/04/16, 02/11/16)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT 267821
The following person is doing business
as: Zs Tires & Wheels, 3233 Middlefield
Rd., MENLO PARK, CA 94025. Registered Owner: Zohrab Krikor Andonian,
970 Stoney Ct, MILLBRAE, CA 94030.
The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrant commenced to transact business under the FBN on
/s/Zohrab Krikor Andonian/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 01/15/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
01/21/16, 01/28/16, 02/04/16, 02/11/16)

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insurance.
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Pay dependent on route size.
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(650) 458-2200
www.homebridgeca.org
1660 S. Amphlett Blvd. 115 San Mateo, CA 94402

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Thursday Feb. 11, 2016

203 Public Notices

203 Public Notices

203 Public Notices

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT 267639
The following person is doing business
as: 1) Bay Area Robotics and Hobbies 2)
TSF, 282 Harbor Way Unit D, SOUTH
SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94080. Registered Owner: Albert Benjamin Margolis,
100 Santa Barbara Place, SAN BRUNO,
CA 94066. The business is conducted by
an Individual. The registrant commenced
to transact business under the FBN on
N/A
/s/Albert Benjamin Margolis/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 12/30/15. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
01/28/16, 02/04/16, 02/11/16, 02/18/16)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT 267992
The following person is doing business
as: 1) Golden Bear Media 2) Graphic Design Mastery, 1001 Bayhill Drive, Suite
200, SAN BRUNO, CA 94066. Registered Owner: Brian Klackle, 114 Mountain Rd, SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO, CA
94080. The business is conducted by an
Individual. The registrant commenced to
transact business under the FBN on Nov
19, 2014
/s/Brian Klackle/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 02/02/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
02/04/16, 02/11/16, 02/18/16, 02/25/16)

NOTICE OF PETITION TO
ADMINISTER ESTATE OF
Estella Mavis Knox
Case Number: 126597
To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may
otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both, of Estella Mavis Knox. A
Petition for Probate has been filed by Anthony Dean Jones in the Superior Court
of California, County of San Mateo. The
Petition for Probate requests that Anthony Dean Jones be appointed as personal
representative to administer the estate of
the decedent.
The petition requests the decedents will
and codicils, if any, be admitted to probate. The will and any codicils are available for examiniation in the file kept by the
court.
The petition requests authority to administer the estate under the Independent
Administration of Estates Act. (This authority will allow the personal representative to take many actions without obtaining court approval. Before taking certain
very important actions, however, the personal representative will be required to
give notice to interested persons unless
they have waived notice or consented to
the proposed action.) The independent
administration authority will be granted
unless an interested person files an objection to the petition and shows good
cause why the court should not grant the
authority.
A hearing on the petition will be held in
this court as follows: MAR 18, 2016 at
9:00 a.m., Department 28, Superior
Court of California, County of San Mateo,
400 County Center, Redwood City, CA
94063.
If you object to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing
and state your objections or file written
objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person
or by your attorney.
If you are a creditor or a contingent creditor of the decedent, you must file your
claim with the court and mail a copy to
the personal representative appointed by
the court within the later of either (1) four
months from the date of first issuance of
letters to a general personal representative, as defined in section 58(b) of the
Calilfornia Probate Code, or (2) 60 days
from the date of mailing or personal delivery to you of a notice under sectioin
9052 of the Callifornia Probate
Code.Other California statutes and legal
authority may affect your rights as a
creditor. You may want to consult with an
attorney knowledgable in California law.
You may examine the file kept by the
court. If you are a person interested in
the estate, you may file with the court a
Request for Special Notice (form DE154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition
or account as provided in Probate Code
section 1250. A Request for Special Notice form is available from the court clerk.
Petitioner:
Anthony Dean Jones
34319 Aiken Ct.
FREMONT, CA 94555
(408) 398-4004
FILED: 02/04/2015
Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal
on 02/11/16, 02/18/16, 02/25/16

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT 267926
The following person is doing business
as: M.D. Lovell Investments, 1734 Echo
Ave., SAN MATEO, CA 94401. Registered Owner: Michael Darrin Lovell,
same address. The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrant commenced to transact business under the
FBN on N/A
/s/Michael Darrin Lovell/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 01/27/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
01/28/16, 02/04/16, 02/11/16, 02/18/16)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT 267930
The following person is doing business
as: El Pariente Mariscos, 233 San Luis
Ave #4, SAN BRUNO, CA 94066. Registered Owner: Baltasar Lobato, same address. The business is conducted by an
Individual. The registrant commenced to
transact business under the FBN on N/A
/s/Baltasar Lobato/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 01/27/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
01/28/16, 02/04/16, 02/11/16, 02/18/16)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT 267925
The following person is doing business
as: insights4you, 809 Laurel St. #153,
SAN CARLOS, CA 94070. Registered
Owner: Abu Hasan Nur, 728 Elm ST
#203, SAN CARLOS, CA 94070. The
business is conducted by an Individual.
The registrant commenced to transact
business under the FBN on
/s/Abu Hasan Nur/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 01/27/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
01/28/16, 02/04/16, 02/11/16, 02/18/16)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT 267740
The following person is doing business
as: LaCheff, 2828 Tramanto Dr, SAN
CARLOS, CA 94070. Registered Owner:
FYNDER LL, CA. The business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company.
The registrant commenced to transact
business under the FBN on N/A
/s/Sabera Kazi/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 01/08/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
02/04/16, 02/11/16, 02/18/16, 02/25/16)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT 267997
The following person is doing business
as: El Camaron De Sinaloa, 1310 Old
Bayshore, BURLINGAME, CA 94010.
Registered Owner: 1) Arturo Quintero
Castaneda, 1436 El Camino Real #4,
BURLINGAME, CA 94010 2) Gerardo
Quintero Castaneda, 1400 Floribunda
#206, BURLINGAME, CA 94010. The
business is conducted by a General Partnership. The registrant commenced to
transact business under the FBN on
/s/Arturo Quintero/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 02/02/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
02/04/16, 02/11/16, 02/18/16, 02/25/16)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT 267937
The following person is doing business
as: Bizzarros Auctions, 1640 Hopkins
Ave, REDWOOD CITY, CA 94062. Registered Owner: 1) Frank Bizzarro 2) Liza
Bizzarro, same address. The business is
conducted by a Married Couple. The registrant commenced to transact business
under the FBN on 04 1984
/s/Liza Bizzarro/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 01/27/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
02/04/16, 02/11/16, 02/18/16, 02/25/16)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT 267993
The following person is doing business
as: New Generation Vintage, 607 Oregon Ave, SAN MATEO, CA 94402. Registered Owner: New Generation Vintage,
same address. The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrant commenced to transact business under the
FBN on 02/01/2016
/s/Lisa Sayed/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 02/02/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
02/04/16, 02/11/16, 02/18/16, 02/25/16)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT 267776
The following person is doing business
as: 1) Advantage Logistics Consulting 2)
Advanlog Consulting 3) Advanlog, 941
Maple ST, SAN MATEO, CA 94402.
Registered Owner: Marvin Castillo, same
address. The business is conducted by
an Individual. The registrant commenced
to transact business under the FBN on
/s/Marvin Castillo/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 01/12/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
02/11/16, 02/18/16, 02/25/16, 03/03/16)
STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF
THE USE OF A FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT #259902
Name of the person abandoning the use
of the Fictitious Business Name: Allied
Health Group. Name of Business: Local
Staff, LLC. Date of original filing:
03/06/2014. Address of Principal Place
of Business: 1150 Bayhill Drive, Suite
200, SAN BRUNO, CA 94066. Registrant(s): Local Staff, LLC.,CA. The business was conducted by a Limited Liability Companyl.
/s/Susan E. Ball/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk-Recorder of San Mateo
County on 01/06/16. (Published in the
San Mateo Daily Journal, 01/21/2016,
01/28/2016, 02/04/2015, 02/11/2016).

STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF
THE USE OF A FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT M-255949
Name of the person abandoning the use
of the Fictitious Business Name: PriceSimms Serramonte, LLC. Name of Business: Nissan Serramonte. Date of original filing: 05/20/15. Address of Principal
Place of Business: 1500A Collins Ave,
COLMA, CA 94014. Registrant(s): PriceSimms Serramonte, LLC. CA. The business was conducted by a Limited Liability Company.
/s/Adam Simms/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk-Recorder of San Mateo
County on 12/23/15. (Published in the
San Mateo Daily Journal, 01/21/2016,
01/28/2016, 02/04/2015, 02/11/2016).

Tundra

Tundra

Tundra

Over the Hedge

Over the Hedge

Over the Hedge

23

203 Public Notices

210 Lost & Found

297 Bicycles

STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF
THE USE OF A FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT M-255949
Name of the person abandoning the use
of the Fictitious Business Name: PriceSimms Serramonte, LLC. Name of Business: Hyundai Serramonte. Date of original filing: 05/20/15. Address of Principal
Place of Business: 1500A Collins Ave,
COLMA, CA 94014. Registrant(s): PriceSimms Serramonte, LLC., CA. The business was conducted by a Limited Liability Company.
/s/Adam Simms/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk-Recorder of San Mateo
County on 12/23/16. (Published in the
San Mateo Daily Journal, 01/21/2016,
01/28/2016, 02/04/2015, 02/11/2016).

LOST CAT Our Felicity, weighs 7 lbs,


she has a white nose, mouth, chin, all
four legs, chest stomach, around her
neck. Black mask/ears, back, tail. Nice
REWARD.
Please
email
us
at
joandbill@msn.com or call 650-5768745. She drinks water out of her paws.

MAGNA-GLACIERPOINT 26" 15 speed.


Hardly used . Bluish purple color .$ 59.00
San Mateo 650-255-3514.

STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF
THE USE OF A FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT M-263027
Name of the person abandoning the use
of the Fictitious Business Name: Brian
Klackle. Name of Business: 1) Golden
Bear Media 2) Graphic Design Mastery.
Date of original filing: Nov 19, 2014. Address of Principal Place of Business: 55
W 5th Ave #12D, SAN MATEO, CA
94402. Registrant(s): Brian Klackle,
same address. The business was conducted by an Individual.
/s/Brian Klackle/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk-Recorder of San Mateo
County on 02/02/16. (Published in the
San Mateo Daily Journal, 02/04/2016,
02/11/2016, 02/18/2015, 02/25/2016).

QUALITY BOOKS used and rare. World


& US History and classic American novels. $5 each obo (650)345-5502

STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF
THE USE OF A FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT 262383
Name of the person abandoning the use
of the Fictitious Business Name: Sonja
Kristiansen. Name of Business: Strike
Video. Date of original filing: 09/25/14.
Address of Principal Place of Business:
1560 Grand Ave, PACIFICA, CA 94044.
Registrant(s): Sonja Kristiansen, 950
Battery St, 4th Flr, SAN FRANCISCO,
CA 94111. The business was conducted
by a Corporation.
/s/Sonja Kristiansen/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk-Recorder of San Mateo
County on 01/14/16. (Published in the
San Mateo Daily Journal, 02/11/2016,
02/18/2016, 02/25/2015, 03/03/2016).

LOST SMALL gray and green Parrot.


Redwood Shores. (650)207-2303.

Books
16 BOOKS on History of WWII Excellent
condition. $95 all obo, (650)345-5502
NICHOLAS SPARKS Hardback Books
2 @ $3.00 each - (650)341-1861

STEPHEN KING Hardback Books


2 @ $3.00 each - (650)341-1861

JOE MONTANA front page, SF Chronicle, Super Bowl XVI Win issue, $10, 650591-9769 San Carlos

RENO SILVER LEGACY Casino four


rare memorabilia items, casino key, two
coins, small charm. $95. (650)676-0974

SIT AND Stand Stroll $95 My Cell 650537-1095. Will email pictures upon request.

SANDY SCOTT Etching. Artists proof.


"Opening Day at Cattail Marsh". Retriever holding pheasant. $99. 650-654-9252.

295 Art

SCHILLER HIPPIE poster, linen, Sparta


graphics 1968. Mint condition. $600.00.
(650)701-0276

BOB TALBOT Marine Lithograph (Signed Framed 24x31 Like New. $99.
(650)572-8895

296 Appliances
AIR CONDITIONER 10000 BTU w/remote. Slider model fits all windows. LG
brand $199 runs like new. (650)2350898
CHEFMATE TOASTER oven, brand
new, bakes, broils, toasts, adjustable
temperature. $25 OBO. (650)580-4763
CHEST TYPE freezer 4x2x3 approx 16
cubic ft $50 obo can deliver $25.
(650)591-6842

ELECTRIC FIREPLACE on wheels in


walnut casing made by the Amish exl.
cond. $99. 650-592-2648

FOUND: RING Silver color ring found


on 1/7/2014 in Burlingame. Parking Lot
M (next to Dethrone). Brand inscribed.
Gary @ (650)347-2301

ELEGANT ELECTRIC Fireplace on


wheels in white casing can see flames,
like new. $99 (650)771-6324

FOUND: WEDDING BAND Tuesday


September 8th Near Whole Foods, Hillsdale. Pls call to identify. 415.860.1940

HOOVER FLOOR vacuum cleaner


(heavy duty) good condition $20.
(650)756-9516

LOST PRESCRIPTION glasses (2


pairs). REWARD! 1 pair dark tinted bifocals, green flames in black case with red
zero & red arrow. 2nd pair clear lenses
bifocals. Green frames. Lost at Lucky
Chances Casino in Colma or Chilis in
San Bruno. (650)245-9061

GEOFFREY BEENE Jacket, unused, unworn, tags , pink, small, sleeveless, zippers, paid $88, $15, (650) 578-9208

GRACO DOUBLE Stroll $90 My Cell


650-537-1095. Will email pictures upon
request.

210 Lost & Found

LOST - Womans diamond ring. Lost


12/18. Broadway, Redwood City.
REWARD! (650)339-2410

CHERISHED TEDDIES Figurines. Over


90 figurines, 1992-1999 (mostly '93-'95).
Mint in Boxes. $99. (408) 506-7691

LENNOX RED Rose, Unused, hand


painted, porcelain, authenticity papers,
$12.00. (650) 578 9208.

FOUND: LADIES watch outside Safeway Millbrae 11/10/14 call Matt,


(415)378-3634

LOST - MY COLLAPSIBLE music stand,


clip lights, and music in black bags were
taken from my car in Foster City and may
have been thrown out by disappointed
thieves. Please call (650)704-3595

1940 VINTAGE telephone bench maple


antiques collectibles $75 (650)755-9833

294 Baby Stuff

CIRRUS STEAM mop model SM212B 4


new extra cleaning pads,user manual.
$45. 650-5885487

LOST - Apple Ipad, Sunday 5.3 on Caltrain #426, between Burlingame and
Redwood City, south bound. REWARD.
(415)830-0012

298 Collectibles
1920'S AQUA Glass Beaded Flapper
Purse (drawstring bag) & Faux Pearl
Flapper Collar. $50. 650-762-6048

ICE MAKER brand new $90. (415)2653395


JACK LALANE juicer $25 or best offer.
650-593-0893.
RIVAL 11/2 quart ice cream maker
(New) $20.(650)756-9516.

STAR WARS C-3PO mint pair, green tint


(Japan), gold (U.S.) 4 action figures.
$89 650-518-6614
STAR Wars Hong Kong exclusive, mint
Pote Snitkin 4 green card action figure.
$20 650-518-6614
STAR WARS Lando Calrissian 4 orange card action figure, autographed by
Billy Dee Williams. $50 Steve 650-5186614

299 Computers
MONITOR FOR computer. Kogi - 15".
Model L5QX. $25. (650)592-5864.
RECORDABLE CD-R 74, Sealed, Unopened, original packaging, Samsung, 12X,
(650) 578 9208

300 Toys
3-STORY BARBIE Dollhouse with spiral
staircase and elevator. $60. (650)5588142
AMERICAN GIRL 18 doll, Jessica,
blond/blue. new in box, $65 (505)-2281480 local.
LARGE STUFFED ANIMALS - $4 each
Great for Christmas & Kids (650) 9523500
PUZZLES 300-1000 ps perf condition 26
for $2.00 ea. 650-583-4058
STAR WARS one 4 orange card action figure, Momaw Nadon (Hammerhead). $8 Steve 650-518-6614

SHARK FLOOR steamer,exc condition


$45 (650) 756-9516.

STAR WARS one 4 orange card action figure, Luke Skywalker (Ceremonial) $10 Steve 650-518-6614

UPRIGHT VACUUM Cleaner, $10. Call


Ed, (415)298-0645 South San Francisco

STAR WARS SDCC Stormtrooper


Commander $29 OBO Dan,
650-303-3568 lv msg

297 Bicycles

302 Antiques

2 BIKES for kids $60. Will email pictures


upon request (650) 537-1095

ANTIQUE ITALIAN lamp 18 high, $70


(650)387-4002

ADULT BIKES 1 regular and 2 with balloon tires $30 Each (650) 347-2356

BEAUTIFUL AND UNIQUE Victorian


Side Sewing Table, All original. Rosewood. Carved. EXCELLENT CONDITION! $350. (650)815-8999.

LEGAL NOTICES

Fictitious Business Name Statements,


Trustee Sale Notice, Name Change, Probate,
Notice of Adoption, Divorce Summons,
Notice of Public Sales and More.
Published in the Daily Journal for San Mateo County.

Fax your request to: 650-344-5290


Email them to: ads@smdailyjournal.com

MAHOGANY ANTIQUE Secretary desk,


72 x 40 , 3 drawers, Display case, bevelled glass, $700. (650)766-3024
OLD COFFEE grinder with glass jar.
$40. (650)596-0513
OLD VINTAGE Wooden Sea Captains
Tool Chest 35 x 16 x 16, $65
(650)591-3313
PAIR OF beautiful candalabras . Marble
and brass. $90. (650)697-7862

303 Electronics
46 MITSUBISHI Projector TV, great
condition. $400. (650)261-1541.

24

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Thursday Feb. 11, 2016


303 Electronics

303 Electronics
BLAUPUNKT AM/FM/CD Radio and Receiver with Detachable Face asking
$100. (650)593-4490
COMPLETE COLOR photo developer
Besler Enlarger, Color Head, trays, photo
tools $50/ 650-921-1996
ELECTRONIC TYPEWRITER good
condition $50., (650)878-9542
FIRST ALERT CO600 Carbon Monoxide
Plug-In Alarm. Simple to use, New in
pkg. $18 (650) 952-3500

304 Furniture

304 Furniture

304 Furniture

308 Tools

VINTAGE ZENITH radio, model L516b


$75. (650)421-5469

COMPUTER SWIVEL CHAIR. Padded


Leather. $80. (650) 455-3409

LOVE SEAT, Upholstered pale yellow


floral $99. (650)574-4021

WOOD - wall Unit - 30" long x 6' tall x


17.5" deep. $90. (650)631-9311

VINTAGE ZENITH radio, model yrb-791 1948, $ 70. (650)421-5469

COUCH Designer gray, beige, white.


Excellent condition. $99. 650-573-6895

WOOD BOOKCASE unit - good condition $65. (650)504-6058

304 Furniture

CUSTOM MADE wood sewing storage


cabinet perfect condition $75. (650)4831222

LOVESEAT Designer gray, beige,


white. Excellent condition. $89. 650-5736895

DEWALT DRILL/FLASHLIGHT Set $99


My Cell 650-537-1095. Will email pictures upon request.

4 DRAWER black file cabinet. 52" high.


27" deep. Good condition. $95 (650)5954617
ANTIQUE DINING table for six people
with chairs $99. (650)580-6324

GARMIN NUVI260 GPS Navigator, bean


bag dash mount, charging cable, car
charger $25 (650) 952-3500

ANTIQUE MAHOGONY double bed with


adjustable steelframe $225.00. OBO.
(650)592-4529

JVC EVERIO Camcorder, new in box


user guide accessories. $75/best offer.
(650)520-7045

ANTIQUE MOHAGANY Bookcase. Four


feet tall. $75. (415) 282-0966.

LEFT-HAND ERGONOMIC keyboard


with 'A-shape' key layout Num pad, $20
(650)204-0587
MOTOROLA BRAVO MB 520 (android
4.1 upgrade) smart phone 35$ 8GB SD
card Belmont (650)595-8855
ONKYO AV Receiver HT-R570 .Digital
Surround, HDMI, Dolby, Sirius Ready,
Cinema Filter.$95/ Offer 650-591-2393
OPTIMUS H36 ST5800 Tower Speaker
36x10x11 $30. (650)580-6324
ORIGINAL AM/FM 1967/68 Honda Radio for $50. (650)593-4490
PIONEER HOUSE Speakers, pair. 15
inch 3-way, black with screens. Work
great. $99.(650)243-8198
SONY DHG-HDD250 DVR and programable remote.
Record OTA. Clock set issues $99 650595-8855

BEIGE CARPET. 12 1/2'x11 1/2'. Good


condition. Good for bedroom.$95.
(650)595-4617
BEIGE SOFA $99. Excellent Condition
(650) 315-2319
BRASS / METAL ETAGERE 6.5 ft tall.
Rugs, Pictures, Mirrors. Four shelf. $200.
(650) 343-0631

MAPLE COFFEE table. Excellent Condition $75.00 (650)593-1780

DESK CHAIR, swivel, rolling, good cond.


$10. (650)560-9008

MAPLE LAMP table with tiffany shade


$95.00 (650)593-1780

DINETTE TABLE with Chrome Legs: 36"


x58" (with one leaf 11 1/2") - $50.
(650)341-5347

NEW TWIN Mattress set plus frame


$30.00 (650) 347-2356

DINING ROOM table Good Condition


$90.00 or best offer ( 650)-780-0193
DRESSER 4 drawers like new height 36"
width 14 $75. will send picture.
(954)907-0100
DRESSER 5 drawer , like new. light color with brown top. $75. (650)560-9008
DRUM TABLE - brown, perfect condition, nice design, with storage, $45.,
(650)345-1111
END TABLES Woven bamboo, offwhite. $89. 650-573-6895. (650)573-689

NIGHT TABLE, 2 drawers, $20. Will


send pictures. (954)907-0100
OAK BOOKCASE, 30"x30" x12". $25.
(650)726-6429
OAK SIX SHELF Book Case 6FT 4FT
$55 (650)458-8280
OAK WINE CABINET, beautiful, glass
front, 18 x 25 x 48 5 shelves, grooved
for bottles. 25-bottle capacity. $299.
(360)624-1898
OUTDOOR WOOD SCREEN - new $80
obo Retail $130 (650)873-8167
PAPASAN CHAIRS (2) -with cushions
$45. each set, (650)347-8061

PULLEYS- FOUR 2-1/8 to 7 1/4" --all for


$16. 650 341-8342

WOOD WALL unit, 7 upper and lower


cabinets, 90" wide x 72" high. FREE .
(650)347-6875

SHOPSMITH MARK V 50th Anniversary


most
attachments.
$1,500/OBO.
(650)504-0585

WOODEN MINI bar with 2 bar stools


$75. (415)265-3395

VINTAGE CRAFTSMAN Jig Saw. Circa


1947. $60. (650)245-7517

306 Housewares

WILLIAMS #1191 CHROME 2 1/16"


Combination "SuperRrench". Mint. $89.
650-218-7059.

BED SPREAD (queen size), flower design, never used. $22. Pls call
650-345-9036
CHRISTMAS TREE China, Fairfield
Peace on Earth. Complete Set of 12 (48
pieces) $75. 650-493-5026
COMPLETE SET OF CHINA - Windsor
Garden, Noritake. Four place-settings,
20-pieces in original box, never used.
$250 per box
(3 boxes available).
(650)342-5630

WILLIAMS #40251, 4 PC. Tool Set


(Hose Remover, Cotter Puller, Awl, Scraper). Mint. $29. 650-218-7059.
WIZARD STAINED Glass Grinder, extra
bit, good condition, shield included,
$50. Jack @348-6310

310 Misc. For Sale


"MOTHER-IN-LAW TONGUES" plants,
3 in 5-gal cans. $10.00 each. 650/5937408.

ESPRESSO TABLE 30 square, 40 tall,


$95 (650)375-8021

BROWN WOODEN bookshelf H 3'4"X W


3'6"X D 10" with 3 shelves $25.00 call
650-592-2648

FUTON COUCH into double bed, linens


D41"xW60"xH34" 415-509-8000 $99

RATTAN SIX Drawer Brown Dresser;


Glass top and Mirror attachment;
5 ft long. $200. (650) 871-5524.

GLASS TOP dining table w/ 6 chairs


$75. (415)265-3395

RECLINING SWIVEL chair almost new


$99 650-766-4858

IKEA POANG chair, exc. $25. Will send


picture. (954)907-0100

ROCKING CHAIR fine light, oak condition with pads, $85/OBO. 650 369 9762

TABLECLOTH, UNUSED in original box,


Royal Blue and white 47x47, great gift,
$10.00, (650) 578-9208.

IKEA WOOD table, 36 like new. Can


send picture $50. (954)907-0100

TABLE, HD. 2'x4'. pair of folding legs at


each end. Laminate top. Perfect.
$60.(650)591-4141

TABLECLOTH. 84 round hand crocheted and embroidered tablecloth with 12


napkins. $65. San Bruno. 650-794-0839.

TABLE, like new, black with glass top


insert, 40 x 30 x 16. $40.(650)560-9008

308 Tools

TEAK CABINET 28"x32", used for stereo equipment $25. (650)726-6429

ALUMINUM LADDERS 40ft, $99 for two,


Call (650)481-5296

LIONEL CHRISTMAS Boxcars 2005,


2006, 2007 New OB $90 lot 650-3687537

TEAK-VENEER COMPUTER desk with


single drawer and stacked shelves. $30
obo. 650-465-2344

BOSTITCH 16 gage Finish nailer Model


SB 664FN $99 (650)359-9269

LIONEL CHRISTMAS Holiday expansion Set. New OB $99 650-368-7537

CRAFTMAN RADIAL SAW, with cabinet


stand, $200 Cash Only, (650)851-1045

LIONEL ENGINE #221 Rio Grande diesel, runs good ex-condition


$90.
(650)867-7433

CHAIR Designer gray, beige, white.


Excellent condition. $59. 650-573-6895
CHAIRS - Two oversized saucer (moon)
chairs. Black. $30 each. (650)5925864.
CHAIRS 2 Blue Good Condition $50
OBO (650)345-5644
CHILDS TABLE (Fisher Price) and Two
Chairs. Like New. $35. (650) 574-7743.

VINTAGE G.E. radio, model c-430-a


$60. (650)421-5469

COFFEE TABLE Woven bamboo with


glass top. $99. 650-573-6895

VINTAGE G.E. radio, model c-442c $60.


(650)421-5469

COFFEE TABLE @ end table Very nice


condition $80. 650 697 7862

VINTAGE G.E. radio, model c1470 $60.


(650)421-5469

COMPUTER DESK $25 , drawer for keyboard, 40" x 19.5" (619)417-0465

ILOVE SEAT, exc $75. Will send picture. (954)907-0100


INFINITY FLOOR speakers H 38" x W
11 1/2" x D 10" good $50. (650)756-9516
LAWN CHAIRS (4) White, plastic, $8.
each, (415)346-6038
LAZY BOY Recliner. Fine condition. Maroon. $60. (650) 271-4539.
LIGHT OAK Cabinet, 6 ft tall, 3 ft wide, 2
ft deep, door at the bottom. $150.
(650) 871-5524.

TWIN MATTRESS with 3 drawers wood


frame, exc condition $85. Daly City (650)
756-9516.
VINTAGE LARGE Marble Coffee Table,
round. $75.(650)458-8280

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle

WALNUT CHEST, small (4 drawer with


upper bookcase $50. (650)726-6429

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

WHITE WICKER Shelf unit, adjustable.


Excellent condition. 5 ft by 2 ft. $50.
(650)315-6184

DOWN
1 Complainers
2 People person

HEAVY DUTY Mattock/Pick, Less Handle $5. (650)368-0748

BROWN RECLINER, $75 Excellent Condition. (650) 315-2319

SONY PROJECTION TV 48" with remote good condition $99 (650)345-1111

ACROSS
1 Quibble
4 Like the NCAA
basketball threepoint line
9 Phantoms
place?
14 Toothpaste tube
letters
15 Chevy SUV
16 Honeydew, for
one
17 Drop the original
strategy
19 Printing
heavyweight
20 Aspersion
21 Nickname for
Basketball Hall of
Famer Maravich
23 Eulers forte
25 Commencement
opening?
26 Online reminders
28 Dilapidated digs
33 Attribute to, as
blame
34 Fish order
35 What __ care?
36 One always
looking up
40 Zeta follower
41 Soccer
followers?
42 Causes of many
Alaskan road
accidents
43 High-end
neckwear
46 Declines to raise
47 Bards bedtime
48 Machu Picchu
denizen
49 Shield bearers
55 Leave out
58 Hot
59 Novel surprise ...
and a hint to
whats hidden in
17-, 21-, 36- and
49-Across
61 Cardinal, e.g.
62 Friend Like Me
singer in
Aladdin
63 Author Talese
64 Fire sign
65 Gladiators
milieu
66 Olive shaped like
a stick

WOOD FURNITURE- one end table and


coffee table. In good condition. $30
OBO. (760)996-0767.

3 She beat out


Madeline Kahn,
with whom she
shared the
screen, for Best
Supporting
Actress
4 Org. that
publishes weekly
player rankings
5 Lauren et al.
6 Tazo choice
7 Long spans
8 Collectors target
9 Filled, folded fare
10 Sneeze cause
11 Ultimatum word
12 Jcama or ginger
13 Actress
Hathaway
18 Stumper?
22 Rowing crew,
perhaps
24 St. formed from
the Southwest
Territory
26 Duel tools
27 The
Untouchables
gangster
28 Hotel
reservations
29 View from Lake
Geneva
30 Chihuahua Ciao!

31 Oater group
32 Locations
34 Sour fruit
37 Acid type
38 Bowies bride
39 __ Mule: vodka
cocktail in a
copper mug
44 Hot whistler
45 Plains homes
46 Tart container
49 Cosby of Inside
Edition

50 Place for a pupil


51 Pledge
52 Rolex Player of
the Yearawarding org.
53 The Sopranos
actor Robert
54 Gelato holder
56 Words to Holmes
57 Texters toodleoo
60 Dim sum
beverage

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

PRE-LIT 7 ft Christmas tree. Three sections, easy to assemble. $50. 650 349
2963.
SOLID TEAK floor model 16 wine rack
with turntable $60. (650)592-7483

CRAFTSMAN 3/4 horse power 3,450


RPM $60 (650)347-5373
CRAFTSMAN 9" Radial Arm Saw with 6"
dado set. No stand. $55 (650)341-6402
CRAFTSMAN JIGSAW 3.9 amp. with
variable speeds $65 (650)359-9269
CRAFTSMAN RADIAL Arm Saw Stand.
In box. $30. (650)245-7517

8 TRACKS, billy Joel, Zeppelin, Eagles


,Commodores, more.40 @ $4 each , call
650-393-9908
ELECTRICAL CORD for Clothes
Dryer. New, $7.00. Call 650-345-9036
GAME "BEAT THE EXPERTS" never
used $8., (408)249-3858
HARLEY DAVIDSON black phone, perfect condition, $65., (650) 867-2720
INCUBATOR, $99, (650)678-5133

LIONEL WESTERN Union Pass car and


dining car. New OB $99 650-368-7537
RMT CHRISTMAS Diesel train and Caboose. Rare. New OB $99 650-368-7537
SAMSONITE 26" tan hard-sided suit
case, lt. wt., wheels, used once/like new.
$60. 650-328-6709
STAR TREK VCR tape Colombia House,
Complete set 79 episodes $50
(650)355-2167
TASCO LUMINOVA Telescope.with tripod stand, And extra Lenses. Good condition.$90. call 650-591-2393
ULTRASONIC JEWELRY Cleaning Machine Cleans jewelry, eyeglasses, dentures, keys. Concentrate included. $30
OBO. (650)580-4763
VASE WITH flowers 2 piece good for the
Holidays, $25., (650) 867-2720
VINTAGE WHITE Punch Bowl/Serving
Bowl Set with 10 cups plus one extra
$30. (650)873-8167

311 Musical Instruments


BALDWIN GRAND PIANO, 6 foot, excellent condition, $8,500/obo. Call
(510)784-2598
GULBRANSEN BABY GRAND PIANO Appraised @ $5450., want $1800 obo,
(650)343-4461
HAILUN PIANO for sale, brand new, excellent condition. $6,000. (650)308-5296
HAMMOND B-3 Organ and 122 Leslie
Speaker. Excellent condition. $8,500. private owner, (650)349-1172
MONARCH UPRIGHT player piano $99
(650) 583-4549
UPRIGHT PIANO. In tune. Fair condition. $300 OBO (650) 533-4886.
WURLITZER PIANO, console, 40 high,
light brown, good condition. $490.
(650)593-7001
YAMAHA PIANO, Upright, Model M-305,
$750. Call (650)572-2337

312 Pets & Animals


xwordeditor@aol.com

02/11/16

AIRLINE CARRIER for cats, pur. from


Southwest Airlines, $25, 2 available. Call
(505-228-1480) local.
BAMBOO BIRD Cage - very intricate design - 21"x15"x16". $50 (650)341-6402

CAROLINA PUPS
American Dingo Boys,
Excellent Hiking Buddy,
Guardian. $1299
707-642-7332
http:/www.ccdogs.com

ONE KENNEL Cab ll one Pet Taxi animal carriers 26x16. Excellent cond. $60..
650-593-2066
PARROT CAGE, Steel, Large - approx
4 ft by 4 ft, Excellent condition $300 best
offer. (650)245-4084
PET CARRIER, brown ,Very good condition, $15.00 medium zize leave txt or call
650 773-7201

315 Wanted to Buy

WE BUY

Gold, Silver, Platinum


Always True & Honest values

Millbrae Jewelers
Est. 1957

By Steve Marron and C.C. Burnikel


2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

02/11/16

400 Broadway - Millbrae

650-697-2685

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Thursday Feb. 11, 2016

316 Clothes

318 Sports Equipment

345 Medical Equipment

BRAND NEW mans dress pants w/ tags


size 42X30, $19, 650-595-3933

ATOMIC SKI bag -- 215 cm. Lightly


used, great condition. $15. (650) 5730556.

BATH CHAIR LIFT. Peterman battery


operated bath chair lift. Stainless steel
frame. Accepts up to 350lbs. Easily inserted I/O tub.$250 OBO.
(650) 739-6489.

BRAND NEW quarts S-shock sports


watch, in pack $19 650-595-3933
FAUX FUR Coat Woman's brown multi
color
in
excellent
condition
3/4
length $50 650-692-8012

DELUXE OVER the door chin up bar; excellent shape; $10; 650-591-9769 San
Carlos
G.I. ammo can, medium, good cond. $8.
Call (650) 591-4553, days only.

BATH TRANSFER bench, back rest and


side arm, suction cups for the floor.
$75/obo. (650)757-0149

GOLF BALLS-15 dozen. All Brands: Titeslist, Taylor Made, Callaway. $5 per
dozen. (650)345-3840.

COMMODE TOILET Seat with arms &


bucket; never used; $30.00 cash only.
(650)755-8238

MANS DRESS shirts 18.5X34/35, 100%


cotton, (3) $5 each 650-595-3933

GOLF CLUBS, 2 sets of $30 & $60.


(415)265-3395

FOLDING
WHEELCHAIR
(650)867-6042

MANS SUIT, perfect condition. Jacket


size 42, pants 32/32. Only $35. Call
650-345-9036

IN-GROUND BASKETBALL hoop, fiberglass backboard, adjustable height, $80


obo 650-364-1270

NOVA WALKER with storage box &


seat; never used; already assembled;
$70.00 cash only. (650)755-8238

MANS TAN pants size 42X30, 100% cotton, exel, $9, 650-595-3933

LADIES MCGREGOR Golf Clubs


Right handed with covers and pull cart
$150 o.b.o. (650)344-3104

QUICKIE WHEELCHAIR - Removable


arms for transferring standard size.
$350.00. (650) 345-3017

LADIES BOOTS size 8 , 3 pairs different


styles , $20/ pair. call 650-592-2648
LEATHER JACKET, New Black Italian
style, size M Ladies $45 (650) 875-1708

MANS TAN pants size 42X30, 100%


silk, perfect, $15, 650-595-3933
MEN'S VINTAGE Pendleton,100% virgin
wool, red tartan plaid, large,like
new,$25,650-591-9769, San Carlos
PARIS HILTON purse white & silver unused, about 12" long x 9" high $23. 650592-2648
SUNGLASSSES UNISEX TOMS Lobamba S007 w/ Tortoise Frames. Polarized lenses 100% UVA/UVB NEW
$65.(650)591-6596
VELVET DRAPE, 100% cotton, new
beautiful burgundy 82"X52" W/6"hems:
$45 (415)585-3622
VINTAGE 1970S Grecian made dress,
size 6-8, $35 (650)873-8167

317 Building Materials


32 PAVING/EDGING bricks, 12 x 5x1
Brown, smooth surface, good clean condition. $32. (650)588-1946 San Bruno
CULTURED MARBLE 2 tone BR vanity
counter top. New toe skin/ scribe. 29 x
19 $300 (408)744-1041
EXTERIOR BRASS lanterns 20" 2 NEW,
both $30. (650)574-4439
INTERIOR DOORS, 8, Free. Call 5737381.
SHUTTERS 2 wooden shutters 32x72
like new $50.00 ea.call 650 368-7891
WHITE DOUBLE pane window for $29
or Best offer. Call Halim @ (650) 6785133.

POWER PLUS Exercise Machine


(650)368-3037

$99

SET OF Used Golf Clubs with Cart for


$50. (650)593-4490
SOCCER BALLS - $8.00 each (like new)
4 available. (650)341-5347
TREADMILL BY PRO-FORM. (Hardly
Used). 10% incline, 2.5 HP motor, 300lb
weight capacity. $329 (650)598-9804
TWO SETS of 10lb barbell weights @
$10 each set. (650)593-0893
VINTAGE ENGLISH ladies ice skates up to size 7-8, $40., (650)873-8167
VINTAGE GOLF Set for $75 My Cell
650-537-1095. Will email pictures upon
request.
WET SUIT - medium size, $95., call for
info (650)851-0878
WOMEN'S LADY Cougar gold iron set
set - $25. (650)348-6955

$70.

Garage Sales

GARAGE SALES
ESTATE SALES
Make money, make room!

List your upcoming garage


sale, moving sale, estate
sale, yard sale, rummage
sale, clearance sale, or
whatever sale you have...
in the Daily Journal.
Reach over 76,500 readers
from South San Francisco
to Palo Alto.
in your local newspaper.
Call (650)344-5200

WOMEN'S NORDICA ski boots, size 8


1/2. $50 650-592-2047

335 Rugs

ADULT DIAPERS, disposable, 10 bags,


20 diapers per bag, $10 each. (650)3420935

Appliance Repair

Cleaning

Concrete

TOP NOTCH

ANGIES CLEANING &


POWERWASHING

AAA CONCRETE DESIGN

Move in/out; Post Construction;


Commercial & Residential;
Carpet Cleaning; Powerwashing

(707) 567-1545

www.MyErrandServicesCA.com

650.918.0354

AA SMOG

Complete Repair & Service


$29.75 plus certificate fee

List your Open House


in the Daily Journal.

869 California Drive .


Burlingame

Reach over 76,500


potential home buyers &
renters a day,
from South San Francisco
to Palo Alto.
in your local newspaper.

Dont lose money


on a trade-in or
consignment!

Call (650)344-5200

380 Real Estate Services


HOMES & PROPERTIES
The San Mateo Daily Journals
weekly Real Estate Section.

Look for it
every Friday and Weekend
to find information on fine homes
and properties throughout
the local area.

440 Apartments
APT FOR RENT. One bedroom, kitchen,
bathroom, no pets, one car port. Belmont. $2100 per month. Call (650) 4920625.

(most cars)

(650) 340-0492

625 Classic Cars


FORD 63 thunderbird Hardtop, 390 engine, Leather Interior. Will consider
$5,400. /OBO (650)364-1374

630 Trucks & SUVs


DODGE 01 DURANGO, V-8 SUV, 1
owner, dark blue, CLEAN! $5,000/obo.
Call (650)492-1298

640 Motorcycles/Scooters

Sell your vehicle in the


Daily Journals
Auto Classifieds.
Just $42!
Well run it
til you sell it!
Reach 76,500 drivers
from South SF to
Palo Alto
Call (650)344-5200
ads@smdailyjournal.com

CHEVY HHR 08 - Grey, spunky car


loaded, even seat warmers, $9,500.
(408)807-6529.

HIP HOUSING
Non-Profit Home Sharing Program
San Mateo County
(650)348-6660

HONDA 95 Civic, white 4 dr 220,000


miles on it, but still runs great. Just need
rear struts and good to go. Interior and
exterior are still in good condition. Manual transmission. Service and oil change
regularly. Service records are available.
Asking $900 cash, or best offer.
650.440.1341

620 Automobiles

TOYOTA 03 Corolla S, white on black, 5


speed, Only
104K miles, $5,700.
(650)342-6342

470 Rooms

FORD 98 Mustang. GT Convertible.


Summer fun car. Green, Tan, Leather interior, Excellent Condition. 128,000
Miles. $3700. (650) 440-4697.

345 Medical Equipment

620 Automobiles

OPEN HOUSE
LISTINGS

CHEVY 10 HHR . 68K. EXCELLENT


CONDITION. $8888. (650)274-8284.

CARPET RUNNER, new, 30 inches,


bound on both sides, burgundy color, 30
lineal feet, $290. Call (650)579-0933.

In Home TV Repair
Services
All TV Brands

379 Open Houses

25

625 Classic Cars


1955 CHEVY BEL AIR 2 door, Standard
Transmission V8 Motor, non-op $14,800
obo. (650)952-4036.

BMW 03 F650 GS, $3899 OBO. Call


650-995-0003
DAINESE BOOTS Zipper & Velcro Closure, Cushioned Ankle, Excellent Condition Unisex EU40 $55 (650)357-7484
MOTORCYCLE SADDLEBAGS, with
mounting hardware and other parts $35.
Call (650)670-2888

670 Auto Service


MENLO ATHERTON
AUTO REPAIR
WE SMOG ALL CARS
1279 El Camino Real

Menlo Park

650 -273-5120

www.MenloAthertonAutoRepair

670 Auto Parts


BRIDGESTONE TURANZA RFT (Run
Flat) 205/55/16 EL 42 All Season Like
New $100. (650)483-1222
BRIDGESTONE TURANZA RFT (Run
Flat) 205/55/16 EL42 used 70% left $80.
(650)483-1222
NEW CONTINENTAL Temporary tire
mounted on 5 lug rim Size T125/70/R1798M $100. (650)483-1222
SHOP MANUALS for GM Suv's
Year 2002 all for $40 (650)948-0912

680 Autos Wanted

DODGE
99 Van, Good Condition,
$4,200 OBO (650)481-5296

86 CHEVY CORVETTE. Automatic.


93,000 miles. Sports Package.$6,800
obo. (650) 952-4036.

Wanted 62-75 Chevrolets


Novas, running or not
Parts collection etc.
So clean out that garage
Give me a call
Joe 650 342-2483

Concrete

Construction

Construction

Dental Services

Decks & Fences

MILLBRAE SMILE CENTER

MARSH FENCE
& DECK CO.

Stamps Color Driveways


Patios Masonry Block walls
Landscaping

Quality Workmanship,
Free Estimates

(650)533-0187
Lic# 947476

Carpets

Construction
OSULLIVAN
CONSTRUCTION
New Construction
Remodeling
Kitchen/Bathrooms
Decks/Fences
(650)589-0372
Licensed and Insured
Lic. #589596

Dental Services

COMPLETE IMPLANT
Dentistry Under One Roof
Same day treatment
Evening & Saturday appts available
Peninsula Dental Implant Center
1201 St Francisco Way, San Carlos
650.232.7650

Dental Services

I - SMILE

Implant & Orthodontict Center


1702 Miramonte Ave. Suite B
Mountain View

Exceptional.
Reliable. Inovative
650-282-5555

Valerie de Leon, DDS


Implant, Cosmetic and
Family Dentistry
Spanish and Tagalog Spoken

(650)697-9000

15 El Camino Real,
MILLBRAE, CA

State License #377047


Licensed Insured Bonded
Fences - Gates - Decks
Stairs - Retaining Walls
10-year guarantee
Quality work w/reasonable prices
Call for free estimate
(650)571-1500

26

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Thursday Feb. 11, 2016

Drywall

DRYWALL

PATCH N TEXTURE MATCH

*WALL/CEILINGS *WATER DAMAGE


*QUAKE & STRESS CRACKS
*ACOUSTIC REMOVAL - ABS FREE
SM. JOBS ONLY

650-248-4205
Electricians

Handy Help
CAPRIS REMODELING
Kitchen, Bathroom,
Additions, Water Heaters
Residential Plumbing
Electrical, Decks
Windows, Doors
Call (650) 771-1911
Free Estimates
License #080853

CONTRERAS HANDYMAN
SERVICES

ALL ELECTRICAL
SERVICE

Fences Tree Trimming


Decks Concrete Work
Kitchen and Bathroom
remodeling

for all your electrical needs

(650)288-9225
(650)350-9968

650-322-9288

Free Estimates

Specializing in any size project

CALL NOW FOR


WINTER LAWN
MAINTENANCE

Retired Licensed Contractor

Flooring
SPECIALS
AS LOW AS $2.50/sf.

Mention this ad for


Free Delivery
See website for more info.

kaprizhardwoodfloors.com

650-560-8119
Housecleaning

$40 & UP
HAUL

Since 1988/Licensed & Insured


Monthly Specials
Fast, Dependable Service

Free Estimates
A+ BBB Rating

(650)341-7482
CHAINEY HAULING

SENIOR HANDYMAN

Gardening

Call Robert
STERLING GARDENS
650-703-3831
Lic #751832

AAA RATED!

INDEPENDENT
HAULERS

contrerashandy12@yahoo.com

ELECTRIC SERVICE GROUP

Drought Tolerant Planting


Drip Systems, Rock Gardens
Pressure Washing,
and lots more!

Hauling

Painting Electrical
Carpentry Dry Rot
40 Yrs. Experience

650-201-6854
THE VILLAGE
CONTRACTOR
Licensed General and
Painting Contractor

Remodels Carpentry
Drywall Tile Painting
Lic#979435

(650)701-6072

Junk & Debris Clean Up

Furniture / Appliance / Disposal


Tree / Bush / Dirt / Concrete Demo

Starting at $40 & Up


www.chaineyhauling.com
Free Estimates
(650)207-6592

CHEAP
HAULING!

Landscaping

* Tree Service * Fence


* Deck * Pavers
* Pruning & Removal
* New Lawn * Irrigation
* All Concrete * Ret. Wall
* Sprinkler System
* Stamp Concrete
* Yard Clean-Up,
Haul & Maintenance

Windows

Free Estimate

650.353.6554
Lic. #973081

SEASONAL LAWN

MAINTENANCE
Drought Tolerant Planting
Drip Systems, Rock Gardens
Pressure Washing,
and lots more!

Roofing

REED
ROOFERS

Serving the entire Bay Area


Residential & Commercial

Painting

CRAIGS PAINTING

GUTTER

Serving the Peninsula

*Interior & Exterior


*Resonable Rates* Insured
*Residential & Commercial

License #931457

Call for Free Estimate

(650) 591-8291

Free Estimates

CLEANING

(650) 553-9653
Lic#857741

JON LA MOTTE

PENINSULA
CLEANING

PAINTING

Interior & Exterior


Quality Work, Reasonable
Rates, Free Estimates

RESIDENTIAL AND COMMERICAL

BONDED
FREE ESTIMATES

(650)368-8861

1-800-344-7771

Lic #514269

NICK MEJIA PAINTING

A+ Member BBB Since 1975


Large & Small Jobs
Residential & Commercial
Classic Brushwork, Matching, Staining, Varnishing, Cabinet Finishing
Wall Effects, Murals, More!

(415)971-8763
Lic. #479564

Stucco

STUCCO

*PATCH N TEXTURE

SUNNY BAY PAINTING CO.

Residential Commercial
Interior Exterior
Water Damage, Fences,
Decks, Stain Work
Free Estimates
CA Lic 982576
(415)828-9484

Plumbing

$89 TO CLEAN

ANY CLOGGED DRAINS!


(with proper access)

Installation of: Water Heaters *


Faucets * Toilets * Sinks * Gas *
Water & Sewer Lines.
Trenchless Replacement.

(408) 679 - 9771

BELMONT PLUMBING
Landscaping

NOW IS THE TIME


TO DO YOUR
LANDSCAPING!
CALL KEN (650) 465-5627
LIC #749570

ROLANDO'S
LANDSCAPING
Tree Cutting, Gutter Service
Yard Clean-up and Maintenance
Quotes for Hauling to the Dump
Call (650)315-7397

Tile
CUBIAS TILE
LIC.# 955492 & GRANITE DESIGNING
Kitchen
Marble
Bathroom
Natural Stone
Floors
Porcelain
Fireplace
Custom
Entryway
Granite Work
Resealers
Fabrication &
Ceramic Tile
Installation
CALL(650)784-3079
cubiasmario609@yahoo.com

NATE LANDSCAPING

Light moving!
Haul Debris!
650-583-6700

Gutter Cleaning

Plumbing

Complete Local Plumbing Svc


Water Heaters, Drain Clearing
Faucets, Sinks, Bathtubs
Showers, Toilets, Gas Repair
Bonded & Insured
Lic #836489 C-36

650-766-1244

*MATCHING
*FULL HOUSE RESTUCCO
SMALL JOBS ONLY
LIC/BD/INS

650-468-8428
Tree Service

NECK OF THE WOODS


Tree Service
Certified Arborist
WC 1714
Eddie Farquharson
Owner-Operator-Climber
State Lic. 638340
650 366-9801

TheNeckOfTheWoods.com

Hillside Tree

Service

LOCALLY OWNED
Family Owned Since 2000
Trimming
Large

MEYER
PLUMBING
SUPPLY

Toilets, Sinks, Vanities,


Faucets, Water heaters,
Whirlpools and more!
Wholesale Pricing &
Closeout Specials.
2030 S Delaware St
San Mateo

650-350-1960

Pruning

Shaping

Removal
Grinding

Stump

Free
Estimates
Mention

The Daily Journal


to get 10% off
for new customers
Call Luis (650) 704-9635

Notices
NOTICE TO READERS:
California law requires that contractors
taking jobs that total $500 or more (labor
or materials) be licensed by the Contractors State License Board. State law also
requires that contractors include their license number in their advertising. You
can check the status of your licensed
contractor at www.cslb.ca.gov or 800321-CSLB. Unlicensed contractors taking
jobs that total less than $500 must state
in their advertisements that they are not
licensed by the Contractors State License Board.

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Thursday Feb. 11, 2016

Dental Services

Fitness

Health & Medical

Massage Therapy

RUSSO DENTAL CARE

LOSE WEIGHT

SKIN TASTIC
MEDICAL LASER

BEST ASIAN
BODY MASSAGE
$39.99/hr
Call (650) 787-9969

Dental Implants
Free Consultation& Panoramic
Digital Survey
1101 El Camino RL ,San Bruno

In Just 10 Weeks !
with the ultimate body shaping course
contact us today.

(650)583-2273

(650) 490-4414

www.russodentalcare.com

www. SanBrunoMartialArts.com

Food

Furniture

BRUNCH EVERY

CALIFORNIA

SUNDAY

STOOLS*BAR*DINETTES

Houlihans

Tons of Furniture to match


your lifestyle

Omelette Station, Carving Station


$24.95 / adult $9.95 /Child
& Holiday Inn SFO Airport
275 So Airport blvd.
South San Francisco

CROWNE PLAZA
Foster City-San Mateo
The Clubhouse Bistro
Wedding, Event &
Meeting Facilities

(650) 295-6123

1221 Chess Drive Foster City


Hwy 92 at Foster City Blvd. Exit

GET HAPPY!
Happy Hour 4-6 M-F
Steelhead Brewing Co.
333 California Dr.
Burlingame
(650)344-6050
www.steelheadbrewery.com

NOTHING BUNDTCAKES
Make Life Sweeter
*864 Laurel Street, San Carlos

650.592.1600

(650)591-3900

Peninsula Showroom:
930 El Camino Real, San Carlos
Ask us about our
FREE DELIVERY

Health & Medical

BACK, LEG PAIN OR


NUMBNESS?

Non-Surgical
Spinal Decompression
Dr. Thomas Ferrigno D.C.
650-231-4754
177 Bovet Rd. #150 San Mateo
BayAreaBackPain.com

DENTAL
IMPLANTS

Save $500 on
Implant Abutment &
Crown Package.

PANCHO VILLA
TAQUERIA

Because Flavor Still Matters


365 B Street
San Mateo

A touch of Europe

1308 Burlingame Ave


Burlingame
650 344-1006
www.burlingamecakery.com
Find us on Facebook

SLEEP APNEA
We can treat it
without CPAP!
Call for a free
sleep apnea screening

650-583-5880
Millbrae Dental

LIFE INSURANCE

www.barrettinsuranceservices.net

Eric L. Barrett,

CLU, RHU, REBC, CLTC, LUTCF


President
Barrett Insurance Services
(650)513-5690
CA. Insurance License #0737226

LEGAL

DOCUMENTS PLUS

Facials Waxing Fitness


Body Fat Reduction

381 El Camino Real


Millbrae

(650)697-6868

Employment Services
Information Workshops
Feb 3 W Feb 10 W Feb 17

Free parking behind bldg

9:00am12:00pm

Music

1777 Borel Place, Suite


#500, San Mateo, CA
94402

(650)557-2286

363 Grand Ave, So. San Francisco

(650)588-2502

bronsteinmusic.com
Real Estate Loans

REFINANCE HARD MONEY


AT LOWER RATE
DIRECT PRIVATE LENDER
ALL CREDIT ACCEPTED
Since 1979
650-348-7191

Real Estate Broker


CA BRE#746683
NMLS #348288

legaldocumentsplus.com

Seniors

"I am not an attorney. I can only


provide self help services at your
specific direction."

GROW

Register today by
calling 650.581.0058

PENINSULA SENIOR
CARE SERVICES
WE ARE HERE TO HELP!
CARE GIVING
PRESCRIPTION PICK-UP
LAUNDRY
DR. APPOINTMENTS
GROCERIES
ERRANDS
CALL DIANA (650) 218-1419 FOR
HOURLY RATES
NO CONTRACT NECESSARY!

WACHTER INVESTMENTS, INC.

Registered & Bonded

YOUR SMALL BUSINESS


Get free help from
The Growth Coach
Go to
www.buildandbalance.com

ARE YOU 55 OR
OLDER AND
LOOKING FOR
WORK?

39 N. San Mateo Dr. #1,


San Mateo

(650)574-2087

Marketing

KAY'S HEALTH
& BEAUTY

Relaxing & Healing


Massage

REAL ESTATE
LOANS

Legal Services

EYE EXAMINATIONS

1159 Broadway
Burlingame
Dr. Andrew Soss
OD, FAAO
www.Dr-AndrewSoss.net

1838 El Camino #103,


Burlingame

Bronstein Music

AFFORDABLE

Jeri Blatt, LDA #11

579-7774

Free Parking Behind Building


Mon-Fri, 10am-9pm
Wknds-Holidays Call Ahead

Music Lessons
Sales Repairs Rentals

Insurance

Call Millbrae Dental


for details
650-583-5880

www.sfpanchovillia.com

THE CAKERY

1838 El Camino Rl#130


Burlingame. 650 542-7055
www.skintasticmedicalspa.com

Non-Attorney document
preparation: Divorce,
Pre-Nup, Adoption, Living Trust,
Conservatorship, Probate,
Notary Public. Response to
Lawsuits: Credit Card
Issues, Breach of Contract

*140 So. El Camino Real, Millbrae

650.552.9625

Cosmetic Spa Cool Sculpting


Laser&Cosmetic Dermatology

Seniors

AFFORDABLE
24-hour Assisted Living Care
located in Burlingame
Mills Estate Villa
Burlingame Villa
Short Term Stays
Dementia & Alzheimers Care
Hospice Care
(650)692-0600
Lic.#4105088251/
415600633

Sign up for the free newsletter

Tax Preparation

JIE'S
INCOME TAX
QUALITY &

FAST
TAX RETURNS
STARTING AT

$50

1710 S. Amphlett Blvd.# 350


San Mateo 94402

Office - 650.492.1273
Cell - 650.274.0968

MORE THAN JUST A TAX RETURN


CALL FOR YOUR FREE MEETING
Visit: Belmonttax.com for details

650.654.7775
JEFFREY ANTON
540 Ralston Ave. Belmont, Ca 94002

Travel
FIGONE TRAVEL
GROUP
(650) 595-7750

www.cruisemarketplace.com
Cruises Land & Family vacations
Personalized & Experienced
Family Owned & Operated
Since 1939
1495 Laurel St. SAN CARLOS
CST#100209-10

For Lovers. Of Dessert.


Make this the sweetest Valentines Day ever.

Millbrae-Burlingame
251!T/!Fm!Dbnjop!Sfbm!!!!)761*!663.:736

San Carlos

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ADVERTISE
YOUR SERVICE
in the
HOME & GARDEN SECTION
Offer your services to 76,500 readers a day, from
Palo Alto to South San Francisco
and all points between!

Call (650)344-5200
ads@smdailyjournal.com

27

28

Thursday Feb. 11, 2016

THE DAILY JOURNAL

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