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SPORTS PAGE 11

Leading local news coverage on the Peninsula


www.smdailyjournal.com

Thursday April 28, 2016 XVI, Edition 219

Pregnant woman shot, shooter remains at large


Pacifica police are searching for 25-year-old transient Ricardo Colindres; believed to be armed and dangerous
By Samantha Weigel
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

A pregnant woman and her unborn child


appear to be in stable condition after she
was shot in the head by her ex-boyfriend
outside a Pacifica apartment complex where
she worked Wednesday morning.
Police are now searching for Ricardo
Colindres, a 25-year-old transient, who is
believed to be armed and dangerous, accord-

Ricardo
Colindres

ing to Pacifica police


Capt. Joe Spanheimer.
Police were called
around 8:11 a.m. to the
senior housing complex
known as Casa Pacifica
on the 1000 block of
Terra Nova Boulevard
after witnesses reported
hearing a gunshot and a
victim
screaming,

according to police.
Officers found the eight-months pregnant
25-year-old woman suffering from a gunshot wound to the head and she was rushed
to the hospital.
Originally there had been word that they
were going to do an emergency C-section,
however, they decided against that because
she is in stable condition, Spanheimer
said Wednesday afternoon.
The victim had just arrived to the apart-

ment complex where she recently started


working when Colindres apparently
ambushed her. An argument is believed to
have ensued before he shot her in the back
of the head, Spanheimer said.
With Colindres still at large, Spanheimer
said the victim remains afraid for her life
and police are not releasing information
about her whereabouts.

See SHOOTING, Page 18

Nonprofit
formed to
save rink
Belmont Iceland closes Saturday,
supporters seeking to raise funds
By Samantha Weigel
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

As figure skaters and hockey players are scheduled to say


goodbye to Belmont Iceland Saturday when it closes its
doors after nearly 60 years of business, a group of local supporters have raised a substantial amount of money with the
hopes of preserving the rink.
Ice rinks have been a hot topic across San Mateo County
and beyond in recent months after parent company East Bay
Iceland announced it would close the Belmont rink and sell
the site due to maintenance costs, and the San Mateo City
Council was met by hundreds urging it to not accept a $3
million offer, along with a $1 million donation pledge to
the Police Activities League, from the owners of the
Bridgepointe Shopping Center to demolish its long-shut-

See RINK, Page 20


REUTERS

Clockwise from top left, Donald Trump and his fellow Republican presidential hopefuls John Kasich and Ted Cruz, along with
his recently announced running mate Carly Fiorina will speak at the GOP convention Friday and Saturday in Burlingame.

GOP ready to rally


Police prep for protests, supporters at Burlingame convention
By Austin Walsh
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

As Republicans set the stage for the


partys California convention this
weekend, local officials are prepping
for Burlingame to come into focus as
the center of the nations political universe, with Donald Trump at the axis.
Trump and his fellow conservative

presidential hopefuls
Inside
John Kasich and Ted
Trump goes
Cruz, along with his
presidential in
recently announced
speech; Cruz
running mate Carly
picks veep
Fiorina, have commit Trump plans
Thursday rally in ted to speak at the
Orange County event held in the Hyatt
See page 6 Regency hotel along
the Bayshore.

But as anticipation among local


Republicans to host the states most
significant gathering builds, so do
protest plans from opposition and
crowd control strategies for local law
enforcement.
Chuck McDougald, chair of the San
Mateo County Republican Party, said

See GOP, Page 18

Appeals court orders


Martins Beach trial
Right of public access at Half
Moon Bay property at issue
By Julia Cheever
BAY CITY NEWS SERVICE

A state appeals court in San Francisco


Wednesday ordered a trial in San Mateo
County Superior Court on whether there
is right of public access to the popular
Martins Beach near Half Moon Bay.
The beach is owned by Silicon Valley
entrepreneur Vinod Khosla and managed

Vinod Khosla

See BEACH, Page 20

FOR THE RECORD

Thursday April 28, 2016

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Thought for the Day


We have two lives ... the one we learn
with and the life we live with after that.
Bernard Malamud, American author

This Day in History

1996

A man armed with a semiautomatic


rie went on a rampage on the
Australian island of Tasmania, killing
35 people; Martin Bryant was captured by police after a 12-hour standoff
at a guest cottage.

In 1 7 5 8 , the fth president of the United States, James


Monroe, was born in Westmoreland County, Virginia.
In 1 7 8 8 , Maryland became the seventh state to ratify the
Constitution of the United States.
In 1 7 8 9 , there was a mutiny on the HMS Bounty as
rebelling crew members of the British ship, led by Fletcher
Christian, set the captain, William Bligh, and 18 others
adrift in a launch in the South Pacic. (Bligh and most of the
men with him reached Timor in 47 days.)
In 1 8 1 7 , the United States and Britain signed the RushBagot Treaty, which limited the number of naval vessels
allowed in the Great Lakes.
In 1 9 1 8 , Gavrilo Princip, the assassin of Archduke Franz
Ferdinand of Austria and the archdukes wife, Sophie, died in
prison of tuberculosis.
REUTERS
In 1 9 2 5 , the International Exposition of Modern Kohei Kono, of Japan, in action with Inthanon Sithchamuang, of Thailand, during the WBA super-flyweight title at the Ota City
Industrial and Decorative Arts, which gave rise to the term General Gymnasium in Tokyo.
Art Deco, began a six-month run in Paris.
In 1 9 4 5 , Italian dictator Benito Mussolini and his mistress, Clara Petacci, were executed by Italian partisans as
they attempted to ee the country.
California in the late 60s and early Municipal Utility District, as in much
Winner of rubber duck race
70s.
of the state, have eased with the wet
In 1 9 5 2 , war with Japan ofcially ended as a treaty signed
in San Francisco the year before took effect. Gen. Dwight D. can dine anywhere in the world
The message near a student apartment winter and stepped-up conservation
Eisenhower resigned as Supreme Allied commander in
HARVARD, Mass. A rotary club in complex stated Im alive and well and efforts.
Europe; he was succeeded by Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway.
The agency is asking residential cusa small Massachusetts town is gearing Im going to start killing again.
Police stepped up patrols and eventu- tomers to continue abiding by last
up for its annual rubber ducky race in
which the winners prize is a free dinner ally discovered it was done for an years 20 percent cutback, acknowlEnglish class project. Students were edging that the states historic drought
for two anywhere in the world.
The Boston Globe reports that the told to write a message in a public is not over. But by a unanimous vote of
the agencys board, the district will no
winner of Harvards Ducky Wucky forum and take a picture of it.
longer impose the fines upward of
River Race will receive free airfare, a
$1,000, starting Tuesday, the newspatwo-night stay at a hotel and the fancy Three Sumatran tiger
per reported.
dinner.
cubs step out at San Diego Zoo
Residential customers have been
The Ayer Rotary Club will kick off
SAN DIEGO Three endangered fined a total of nearly $597,000 since
the festivities on May 7, when a construction vehicle will dump thousands Sumatran tiger cubs have made their July. Many past violators are public
figures, including Oakland As execuof numbered ducks into the Nashua debut at San Diego Zoo Safari Park.
Visitors got their first glimpses tive Billy Beane, retired Golden State
River
to
float
downstream.
Actress Jessica
Former Tonight
Actress Penelope
Last years champion dined in Tuesday of Nelson, Cathy and Debbie Warriors center Adonal Foyle, and San
Alba is 35.
Show host Jay
Cruz is 42.
Venice,
Italy. Rotary member Jason as the 3-month-old cubs romped and Francisco Giants pitcher Matt Cain.
Leno is 66.
Kauppi says past winners have traveled munched on plants in their habitat.
Former Secretary of State James A. Baker III is 86. Actor as far as Paris, Tokyo and Australia.
The trio was born in late January to Wrong-way driver causes
Frank Vincent is 79. Actress-singer Ann-Margret is 75. Actor
Joanne, a Sumatran tiger thats a popu- crash, runs from L.A. freeway
Paul Guilfoyle is 67. Rock musician Chuck Leavell is 64. School projects graffiti
lar attraction at the zoo. Zookeepers
LOS ANGELES Los Angeles
say Joanne is a doting mother.
Actress Mary McDonnell is 63. Rock singer-musician Kim
sparks
fears
Zodiac
Killer
is
back
They say Nelson, the male, is the authorities are searching for a man who
Gordon (Sonic Youth) is 63. Actress Nancy Lee Grahn is 60.
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. A Florida largest and calmest of the three cubs. drove the wrong way on westbound
Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan is 56. Rapper Too Short is
50. Actress Simbi Khali is 45. Actress Bridget Moynahan is State University class project about His sister Cathy is the most vocal, and U.S. 101 and slammed into a big rig
and two cars before running from the
45. Actor Chris Young is 45. Rapper Big Gipp is 43. Actor drug cartels and serial killers took a Debbie is the most adventurous.
scene.
turn
when
students
scrawled
a
message
Jorge Garcia is 43. Actress Elisabeth Rohm is 43. Actor Nate
The California Highway Patrol says
on a sidewalk associated with the infa- East Bay water district will
Richert is 38. Actor Harry Shum Jr. is 34.
there were no serious injuries in the
mous Zodiac Killer.
stop fining water guzzlers
four-vehicle crash early Wednesday
The Tallahassee Democrat reported
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
OAKLAND A San Francisco Bay near Tarzana.
Wednesday that police started investiCHP Officer Patrick Kimball says the
gating after finding the message that Area water agency is removing drought
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square,
included the cipher associated with the fines for those who exceeded the dis- hit-and-run driver was described as a
to form four ordinary words.
man in his 20s with short blond hair
serial killer responsible for several tricts conservation quotas.
unsolved murders
in
northern
Supply shortages in the East Bay and a beard.
XOYPE

In other news ...

2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC


All Rights Reserved.

DAYLM

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LOCAL

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Twins charged with fraud


Therapists allegedly overbilled state victims services account
By Samantha Weigel
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

Twin sisters appeared in San Mateo


County Superior Court Wednesday to face
felony charges that they defrauded the
states victim compensation fund by overbilling for therapy sessions they never
gave to the victims of crimes.
Lorie and Marlie Palmer, 39-year-old
bilingual therapists who have a private
practice office in Menlo Park, each pleaded
not guilty to felony theft of public funds and
grand theft, said District Attorney Steve
Wagstaffe.
The Palmers allegedly overbilled nearly
$55, 000 to the California Victim
Compensation Program, which pays for the
victims of crimes to receive counseling
services. Wagstaffe said the sisters would
receive referrals from the San Mateo County
Victims Services, a department ran through
the District Attorneys Office.
An attorney representing the Palmers said
they had no comment on the case.
Investigators first caught on to the
alleged fraud last November when the parent
of a victim met with staff at the District

John Robert Bob McCue


John Robert Bob McCue died at his
home in San Mateo on April 23, 2016, with
his friend and longtime caregiver Larry
Reyes at his bedside.
He was 90 years old.
A World War II Army Air Corps veteran,
the longtime resident of San Mateo owned a
drywall contracting business for many
years. He had been a long-standing member
of the Olympic Club. He was the brother of
Mary Gamboni and the late Francis Mac
McCue and the late Carol Dees; he was uncle

Attorneys Office to fill


out a standard form. The
client, a mother of a sexual assault victim, complained that Marlie
Palmer kept canceling
their sessions and said
she had a strange feeling
about the therapist. The
allegedly
Lorie Palmer client
informed the county
employee that Marlie Palmer tried to charge
her $200 to help the family secure a special
U.S. visa that would have allowed them to
remain in the country since they were victims of a crime, Wagstaffe said.
When the client said that she didnt have
the money, Marlie Palmer then allegedly
said she would just submit a false claim to
the victims fund that she hosted therapy
with the woman. Marlie Palmer also
allegedly told the client not to say anything
and Wagstaffe said it was improper for her to
have made the offer in the first place.
It was then discovered that Marlie Palmer
allegedly billed for over 30 individual sessions although the client said the family
had only met with the therapist four or five
times. The revelation prompted investiga-

Obituary
to Tim Dees, Kerry Dees, Mike Dees, Joe
Gamboni and Christine Hughes.
Friends are respectfully invited to attend a
7 p.m. vigil service Monday, May 2, at
Crosby-N. Gray & Co. , 2 Park Road,
Burlingame, and the funeral mass 10:30
a. m. Tuesday, May 3, at St. Gregorys
Church, San Mateo. Interment with military
honors will be at Holy Cross Cemetery.
Memorials to RCPCharities.org preferred.
Online condolences at www. crosbyngray.com.

tors to look into the


womans billing history
and found another four
families had similarly
been
underserved,
Wagstaffe said.
In February of this
year, an auditor dug into
both of the sisters
Marlie Palmer billing history and
found Lorie Palmer had
also submitted fraudulent claims related to
five families, including overbilling for
group therapy sessions, Wagstaffe said.
In total, Lorie Palmer overbilled $27,648
between October 2014 through February
2016; and Marlie Palmer overbilled
$27,135 from August 2014 to September
2015, Wagstaffe said.
Lorie Palmer is a psychologist and Marlie
Palmer is a licensed marriage and family
therapist. If convicted of a felony, they
could lose their licenses, Wagstaffe said.
The twins made their first appearance in
court Wednesday and each posted $100,000
bail bonds. Lorie Palmer resides in Oakland
and Marlie Palmer lives in Menlo Park. A
preliminary hearing has been scheduled July
27, Wagstaffe said.

Thursday April 28, 2016

Police reports
Operating Thetan
A man saw Scientologists dressed as
police ofcers in a hallway on 37th
Avenue in San Mateo before 8:01 a.m.
Sunday, April 10.

SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO


Di s turbance. A loud mariachi band was
heard on Miller Avenue before 9:39 p.m.
Wednesday, April 20.
Sus pi ci o us ci rcums tances . A resident
was concerned because a woman in a wheelchair was watching her garage on Los
Flores Avenue before 9:29 p.m. Wednesday,
April 20.
Burg l ary . A black Audis window was broken and a purse and laptop were taken at
Safeway on Chestnut Drive before 9:26
p.m. Wednesday, April 20.
Traffi c hazard. A white Toyota Camry
was seen blocking the crosswalk near
Lerida Way and Poplar Avenue before 6:51
p.m. Wednesday, April 20.

HALF MOON BAY


Vandal i s m. A vehicles window and door
handle were broken before 7:58 p. m.
Thursday, April 21.
Arres t. A 46-year-old man was arrested
when he was found to be intoxicated and in
possession of marijuana and paraphernalia
before 7:26 p.m. Thursday, April 21.
Po s s es s i o n. An 18-year-old Half Moon
Bay man was cited and released when he was
found bicycling after dark with no lights,
and in possession of marijuana and a large
knife near Correas and Main streets before
10:15 p.m. Monday, April 18.

LOCAL

Thursday April 28, 2016

Man accused of
fleeing after killing pedestrian
in San Carlos pleads not guilty
A man accused of fleeing after killing a
man walking with his wife in San Carlos
when he swerved his truck into the couple
on Saturday night pleaded not guilty to
felony charges on Tuesday, prosecutors
said.
Randall Rubingh, 51, pleaded not guilty
to charges including vehicular manslaughter while intoxicated, fleeing a fatal crash
and driving while intoxicated, according to
the San Mateo County District Attorneys
Office. He remains in custody on $275,000
bail.
Christopher Ricci, 53, and his wife were
walking home from a friends house a few
blocks from their home in the 2100 block
of San Carlos Avenue at about 10:30 p.m.
when Ricci was hit.
Rubingh was driving his Ford F-150 truck
and allegedly swerved over the double yellow lines, across oncoming traffic lanes
and into Ricci.
Sheriffs deputies performed CPR on
Ricci, but he was pronounced dead at the
scene. His wife wasnt hurt.
The truck driver left the crash scene.

Local briefs
Sheriffs deputies and Belmont police
searched the area for it, eventually tracking
it down a half-hour later at a Safeway store
in Belmont, prosecutors said. Rubingh was
found there, allegedly stumbling around and
appearing drunk.
He performed poorly on field sobriety
tests and refused to take a chemical test,
telling police, Im going to be in more
trouble, prosecutors said.
Rubingh was arrested and booked into jail
while his truck was impounded. After his
not guilty plea Wednesday, Rubingh was
ordered to return to court on Friday, prosecutors said.

Driver killed in
Highway 1 crash identified
as man involved in S.F. politics
A man who died early Tuesday morning
when he crashed into a rock embankment
along state Highway 1 near Pacifica was
identified by the San Mateo County
Coroners Office as a 24-year-old Oakland
resident who was involved in San Francisco
politics.
Sergio Klor De Alva was driving north on

Highway 1 south of the


Tom Lantos Tunnels at
3:26 a.m. Tuesday when
he drifted to the right and
struck a rock embankment, according to the
California
Highway
Patrol.
The car went up the
wall and came back
Sergio
Klor De Alva down, and Klor De Alva
was partially ejected. He
was pronounced dead at the scene.
There were no other vehicles involved in
the crash and no passengers in Klor De
Alvas car, CHP officials said.
Friends and colleagues posted about their
grief at Klor De Alvas passing on social
media this week.
A graduate of University of California at
Santa Cruz, Klor De Alva was pursuing a
career in politics and had worked on campaigns for San Francisco supervisors Julie
Christiansen and Scott Wiener and was
working on a Board of Supervisors campaign for journalist Joel Engardio, according to his LinkedIn profile.
Engardio posted on Facebook Tuesday,
Our campaign and our community are
shocked and saddened by this loss.
Sergio gave us much hope and joy every

THE DAILY JOURNAL


day because he was such a wonderful person
to be around, he said.

Ex-San Francisco police officer


charged with obstructing rape probe
A former San Francisco police lieutenant
incriminated in a racist texting scandal was
charged Wednesday with obstructing the
rape investigation of a subordinate officer.
The San Francisco district attorneys
office charged Curtis Liu with a felony count
of lying to investigators and two misdemeanors charges of obstruction.
The bigoted messages involving Liu, the
second such texting scandal to shake the
department since 2014, come as a top Los
Angeles Sheriffs Department official apologized Wednesday for forwarding inappropriate and racially insensitive emails when
he served as the second-highest ranking
officer in the Burbank Police Department.
The latest bigoted San Francisco texts
came to light after a woman reported in
August that then-Officer Jason Lai raped
her. As part of the rape investigation, Lais
cellphone was seized and racist texts to Liu
and others were found.
Liu is accused of discussing the report
with Lai before investigators knew the officer was the suspect.

LOCAL/NATION

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Thursday April 28, 2016

Man arrested
for South City
fatal shooting
19-year-old spotted walking down
Stockton street with gun in possession
By Dan McMenamin
BAY CITY NEWS SERVICE

A new report indicates about 37 percent of students, for both reading and math, scored well enough to be considered likely
to possess the knowledge and skills to be academically prepared for college-level work.

Math scores slip and reading


flat for nations 12th-graders
By Jennifer C. Kerr
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON Its not a promising picture for the nations high


school seniors they are slipping in
math, not making strides in reading
and only about one-third are prepared
for the academic challenges of entrylevel college courses.
Scores released Wednesday from the
so-called Nations Report Card show
one-quarter of 12th-graders taking the
test performed proficiently or better in
math. Only 37 percent of the students
were proficient or above in reading.

The average math score on the test


last year was 152, down from 153 in
2013, the last time the test was given.
It marks the first drop in math in a
decade. For reading, scores were flat
over the same period of time, and down
five points from more than two
decades ago when the test was first
given to students in 1992.
Education Secretary John B. King
Jr. , says schools have undergone
some of the most significant changes
in decades as teachers retool their
classroom practices to adapt to new
and higher standards.
We know the results of those
changes will not be seen overnight, so

we need to be patient but not passive in continuing to pursue the


goal of preparing all students for success after high school, King said.
Since 2009, more than 40 states
have adopted the Common Core learning standards, which outline skills students should learn and know in math
and reading by the end of each grade.
They emphasize critical thinking,
with less of a focus on memorization.
Peggy Carr, acting commissioner of
the National Center for Education
Statistics, which administers the test,
said the report suggests a pattern in
scores for reading that needs a closer
look.

Lawmakers blast Valeant for price gouging


By Matthew Perrone
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON

Lawmakers
accused Valeant Pharmaceuticals of
gouging patients to reward Wall Street
investors during a hearing Wednesday
scrutinizing the embattled drugmakers
pricing tactics.
The blistering criticisms from
Senate Republicans and Democrats

William
Ackman

came as Valeants
outgoing
CEO
William Ackman
expressed regrets
for the most egregious price increases and a billionaire
hedge fund investor
defended the companys business
model.
Valeants stock

price surged for years, fueled by a strategy of gobbling up smaller companies


and raising prices on niche drugs
bypassing the huge research and development investments typical of the
drug industry.
The company seemed to offer a
cheaper, more reliable business model
that made it a favorite with investors.
But the companys approach has
drawn scrutiny from federal prosecutors, Congress and its own investors.

A 19-year-old man sought in connection with a fatal


shooting in South San Francisco on Monday was arrested
early Wednesday morning in Stockton,
according to police.
Cristian Omar Cruz was arrested at
about 2:45 a.m. in the Seaport neighborhood of Stockton, where he was located
with the help of U.S. Drug Enforcement
Administration agents and U. S.
Marshals Service deputies.
Cruz was spotted walking down a street
and
was arrested without incident, police
Cristian Cruz
said. The firearm allegedly used in the
shooting was also recovered.
He was booked into jail on suspicion of the killing of 20year-old Nicholas Gomez in a shooting reported shortly
after 2:45 p.m. Monday at Orange Memorial Park in South
San Francisco.
Police said the incident was initially reported as an altercation involving a group in the 600 block of First Lane. As
officers responded, they received word that the group had
walked to the nearby park at West Orange Avenue and North
Canal Street.
At the park, the altercation escalated and Cruz allegedly
took out a handgun and shot Gomez and another man. Both
victims were taken to San Francisco General Hospital,
where Gomez died. The other victim was in stable condition
earlier this week, police said.
Police said Wednesday that the shooting is believed to
have stemmed from an ongoing personal dispute between
the three men and is not considered a drug- or gang-related
incident.
The shooting caused nearby schools and community centers to be placed on temporary lockdown.
Anyone with information about the case is encouraged to
call South San Francisco police at (650) 877-8900 or an
anonymous tip line at (650) 952-2244.

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NATION

Thursday April 28, 2016

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Trump goes presidential in speech; Cruz picks veep


By Julie Pace and Ken Thomas
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

REUTERS

Donald Trump delivers a foreign policy speech at the Mayflower Hotel in Washington, D.C.

Trump plans Thursday rally in Orange County


By Juliet Williams
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SACRAMENTO Donald
Trump is courting Golden State
voters who could put him over the
top in GOP convention delegates.
The presidential candidate will
kick off his California campaign
with a rally in Costa Mesa
Thursday night before he addresses the states Republican convention on Friday, his campaign
announced.
It just gives us an opportunity
to get into the state and say here
we are, said Trumps California
campaign manager Tim Clark.
We can draw volunteers as far

south as San Diego and as far


north as Los Angeles.
Clark said tickets have been
going fast since the event in
Orange County was announced
Wednesday but he did not have an
estimate of how many would be
available.
Fresh off a sweep of five
Northeastern primaries, Trump
hopes to lock up the nomination
with Californias June 7 primary.
The rare importance of the
states vote, which has the last
primary in the country, is signified this year by the attendance of
all three candidates at the weekend
convention in Burlingame, in the
San Francisco Bay Area. Joining

them is Texas Sen. Ted Cruzs


newly announced running mate,
Carly Fiorina, a former U. S.
Senate candidate in California.
Democratic Sen. Barbara Boxer
of California, who fended off a
challenge from Fiorina in 2010,
held a call with reporters
Wednesday in which she said that
all three Republican contenders
are out of step with California
voters.
She also jabbed Trumps comment a day earlier that Democratic
presidential front-runner Hillary
Clinton is playing the woman
card, noting that no woman has
yet come close to being the president.

WASHINGTON With the general election in his sights,


Republican Donald Trump delivered a sober foreign policy address
Wednesday aimed at easing fears
about his temperament and readiness to be commander in chief.
Rival Ted Cruz made a desperate
attempt to jolt the GOP race by
tapping Carly Fiorina as his running mate.
Both
moves
underscored
Trumps commanding position in
the GOP race. Though the businessman must keep winning primaries in order to clinch the nomination before this summers
national convention he needs
48 percent of delegates still up for
grabs he has breathing room to
start making overtures to general
election voters. All Cruz can do is
throw obstacles in his path.
Cruz announced Fiorina as his
vice presidential pick during a
rally in Indiana, a state he must
win next week in order to keep his
White House hopes alive. He cast
the unusual announcement as a
way to give voters confidence in
their choice if they vote for him.
You deserve to know exactly
where a candidate stands, he said.
Fiorina immediately went after
Trump and Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton, embracing
the aggressive role of a No. 2 on
the White House ticket. She cast
Trump and Clinton as a pair of liberals who would do little to shake
up Washington.
Theyre not going to challenge
the system they are the sys-

tem, Fiorina
said.
T r u m p
mocked Cruz at
a
rally
in
I n di a n a p o l i s
We d n e s d a y
night, saying,
Cruz cant win,
whats he doing
Ted Cruz
picking vice
presidents?
He is the
first presidential candidate in
the history of
this
country
whos mathematically eliminated
from
becoming
presCarly Fiorina
ident
who
chose a vice presidential candidate, Trump said.
Cruz and Ohio Gov. John Kasich
are trying to keep Trump from
securing the 1,237 delegates he
needs to clinch, thereby pushing
the Republican race toward a contested convention. But Trump
strengthened his standing this
week with a sweep of five
Northeast primaries, giving him
80 percent of the delegates he
needs.
Trump headed to Indiana
Wednesday as well, following his
address in Washington.
Before an audience of foreign
policy experts in Washington,
Trump outlined a doctrine that he
said would put American interests
first, leaving allies to fend for
themselves if they dont contribute financially to back up security agreements.

THE DAILY JOURNAL

STATE

Thursday April 28, 2016

Willie Williams, trailblazing


top cop for two cities, dies
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

REUTERS FILE PHOTO

A firefighter battling the King Fire watches as a backfire burns along Highway 50 last year.

Officials: 2016 fire season


expected to be less severe
By Dan Elliot
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

DENVER The upcoming wildfire season


across the U.S. isnt expected to be as bad as
last years infernos, when a record 15,800
square miles burned, the nations top wildland firefighting official said Wednesday.
But parts of the nation should expect a
rough season after a warm, dry winter or
because of long-term drought, U.S. Forest
Service Chief Tom Tidwell said.
Southern California, other parts of the
Southwest, Alaska and Montana are all vulnerable, he said.
So where we anticipate the severity of
the fire season will not be at the same level
as last year, we still expect to have some
areas that will be really active, Tidwell
said.
Tidwell discussed the fire outlook with the
Associated Press four days before the federal
government issues its wildfire outlook for
the summer season. He was in Denver for a
conference on forest health.
California is vulnerable because much of
the state remains in a drought, despite an El
Nino weather system that brought nearaverage snowfall to its northern mountains.

Wildfires have already broken out in Alaska


after a warm winter with below-average precipitation.
Slightly more than half the land scorched
by wildfires last year was in Alaska, according to the National Interagency Fire Center,
which coordinates firefighting nationwide.
Washington and Oregon accounted for 18
percent.
The Forest Service, the nations primary
firefighting agency, spent a record $1.72
billion on firefighting last year.
The overall bill for wildfires, including
prevention programs and the cost of putting
crews, equipment and aircraft on fire lines,
is consuming a growing share of the Forest
Service budget. That has forced cuts in
forestry research, campground and trail
maintenance and other areas, Tidwell said.
The Obama administration has been
pressing Congress to pay the cost of fighting the worst fires from natural disaster
funds, rather than the Forest Service budget.
Tidwell said the largest 1 or 2 percent of
wildfires account for about 30 percent of the
costs.
Congress has not agreed to the change,
but it did approve an additional $520 million for fighting fires this season, Tidwell
said.

ATLANTA Willie L. Williams, who was


the first black police chief in Philadelphia
and in Los Angeles, where he took over in
the wake of the Rodney King riots, has died.
He was 72.
His daughter-in-law Valerie Williams told
the Associated Press that he died Tuesday
evening at his home in Fayetteville,
Georgia. She said he had been diagnosed
with pancreatic cancer.
In Los Angeles, Williams was selected in
April 1992 to succeed police Chief Daryl
Gates, whose lengthy tenure had been shaken when four white officers were accused of
beating King, a black motorist. Gates was
still in charge when the officers were acquitted, resulting in a riot that left parts of the
city in ashes.
An outsider chosen over a field of insiders, Williams was given a mandate to restore
public confidence and department morale.
Critically, the following month voters
amended the city charter to remove civil
service protection for the chiefs job and

limit the position to a


five-year term, renewable
once by the Police
Commission, the departments board of civilian
overseers.
Williams term was
marked by the O. J.
Simpson murder case,
Willie Williams which spotlighted sloppy evidence handling and
racism in the department; resentment from
within the ranks; and an investigation into
whether he improperly accepted perks
including Las Vegas accommodations.
In 1997, the commission exercised its
new power and unanimously denied
Williams a second five-year contract. The
commission president said that Williams
had become a symbol of positive change but
had failed to become a respected leader.
Williams fought to remain chief but ultimately accepted a severance package and
left, saying the 1992 reform measure had
unintentionally allowed politics to intrude
into the departments management.

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NATION

Thursday April 28, 2016

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Hastert sentenced to
15-months in prison
By Michael Tarm
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHICAGO Dennis Hastert, the


Republican who for eight years
presided over the House and was
second in the line of succession to
the presidency, was sentenced
Wednesday to more than a year in
prison in the hush-money case that
revealed accusations he sexually
abused teenagers while coaching
high school wrestling.
The case makes the former speaker one of the highest-ranking
American politicians ever sentenced to prison. The visibly angry
judge repeatedly rebuked the 74year-old before issuing the 15month sentence, telling him that
his abuse devastated the lives of
victims and would probably make
it harder than ever for parents to
trust other adults with their children.
If Denny Hastert could do it,
anyone could do it, U.S. District
Judge Thomas M. Durkin said.
Nothing is more stunning than to
have the words serial child moles-

ter and speaker of the House in


the same sentence.
As he did for much of the hearing, Hastert sat unmoving in a
wheelchair, peering over the top of
his eyeglasses, his hands folded
before him.
Earlier this month, prosecutors
went into graphic detail about the
sex-abuse allegations,
even
describing how Hastert would sit in
a recliner in the locker room with a
direct view of the showers. The victims, prosecutors said, were boys
between 14 and 17. Hastert was in
his 20s and 30s.
When the judge asked if Hastert
wanted to make a statement,
Hastert pushed himself up, grabbed
a walker and moved slowly to a
podium.
I am deeply ashamed to be
standing here, he said, reading
from a statement. I know why I am
here ... I mistreated some of the
athletes that I coached.
He added: They looked up to me,
and I took advantage of them.
Hastert pleaded guilty last fall to
violating banking law as he sought

REUTERS

Former U.S. House Speaker Dennis Hastert arrives at the Dirksen Federal courthouse for his scheduled sentencing
hearing in Chicago, Ill.
to pay $3.5 million to someone
referred to in court papers only as
Individual A to keep the sex abuse
secret.
The judge devoted many of his
remarks to describing how Hastert
lied to FBI agents when they first
approached him about the massive

cash withdrawals. Hastert told


investigators that Individual A was
making a bogus claim of sex abuse
to extort him for money.
Accusing Individual A of extortion was unconscionable, Durkin
said. He was a victim (of abuse)
decades ago and you tried to make

him a victim again.


Prosecutors have described the
payments as something akin to an
out-of-court settlement. Individual
A wanted to bring in lawyers and
put the agreement in writing, but it
was Hastert, authorities said, who
refused to involve anyone else.

High court seems poised to overturn McDonnell conviction


By Sam Hananel
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

former Virginia Gov. Bob


McDonnells federal bribery conviction.

WASHINGTON The Supreme


Court could make it tougher for
the government to crack down on
public corruption, signaling
Wednesday that it may overturn

Justices across the ideological


spectrum expressed concerns during arguments in the case that
current laws give prosecutors too
much power to criminalize the

everyday things politicians do to


help constituents.
The case has broad implications for prosecutors who have
relied on federal bribery laws to
convict prominent political figures such as former Illinois Gov.
Rod Blagojevich and former
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Alabama Gov. Don Siegelman.


And it could impact the current
case against New Jersey Sen. Bob
Menendez, charged with accepting campaign contributions and
luxury trips from a wealthy donor
in exchange for performing
political favors.

McDonnell, who was in the


courtroom with his wife Maureen
to watch the arguments, was convicted in 2014 of accepting more
than $165,000 in gifts and loans
from a wealthy businessman in
exchange for promoting a dietary
supplement.

WORLD

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Thursday April 28, 2016

Protests as Venezuela embraces two-day workweek


By Hannah Dreier
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CARACAS, Venezuela Venezuelan


cities cleaned up from a night of looting and
fiery protests Wednesday as government
offices closed their doors for the rest of the
week in the face of a worsening energy crisis that is causing daily blackouts.
The socialist administration began
imposing a four-hour daily blackout around
the country this week to save power. Then
on Tuesday, President Nicolas Maduro
announced that millions of officials will
now work only Monday and Tuesday.
Angry residents in darkened towns around
the country took to the streets Tuesday
night, setting up flaming barricades and
raiding shops for bread and other scarce
food.
On Wednesday, hundreds of police fanned
out around the western city of Maracaibo
after a night of looting on darkened streets.
Venezuela is among the worlds most violent countries, and crime generally spikes
here when the lights go out.
The administration says the water level
behind the nations largest dam has fallen
to near its minimum operating level
because of a severe drought. Experts say

the heartless capital city.


As people become more desperate in outlying states, politicians in Caracas are
appealing for calm after scoring a small victory that will allow them to begin the effort
to recall Maduro.
Venezuelas electoral authority on
Tuesday delivered the petition sheets the
opposition needs to collect signatures for a
formal petition drive. Some in the opposition had believed that the government
would never hand those sheets over.
Opposition leaders held a rally to launch
the start of the recall drive Wednesday as
many institutional buildings downtown
remained closed.
Retired Environmental Ministry worker
Edgar Diera sat on the steps of the Justice
Ministry, making doomsday predictions to
people who showed up only to find the
doors locked.
REUTERS
A country needs its workers to show up,
Venezuelan opposition leader and Governor of Miranda state Henrique Capriles, center, greets he said, shaking a newspaper at a snarl of
supporters during a signature drive seeking a referendum to remove President Nicolas Maduro cars in front of a broken traffic light. This
in Caracas, Venezuela.
place is in ruins.
People working for the state, the counlack of planning and maintenance is also to lent protests. Some here complain that
the country is starting to resemble the trys largest employer, will be paid for the
blame.
Caracas i s b ei n g s p ared fro m t h e dystopian series The Hunger Games, in days theyre sent home. Some have been
rolling blackouts, and has not seen vio- which districts suffer for the benefit of using their Fridays off to wait in lines to
buy groceries and other goods.

Paris attacks suspect Abdeslam extradited, charged in France


By Lori Hinnant and Raphael Satter
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

PARIS The lone known surviving suspect in the Paris attacks was returned
Wednesday to the city where Islamic State
extremists unleashed a night of mayhem
and charged with a host of terrorism offenses, raising hopes that he may be able to
help French investigators trace the pathways of IS fighters thought to be hiding out
in Europe.
Salah Abdeslam was whisked in secretly

Qatars largest bank


investigating alleged data breach
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates Qatars
largest bank is investigating a security
breach that appears to have exposed sensitive personal data for what could be hundreds
of customers, including employees of international broadcaster Al-Jazeera and potentially senior government officials.
Qatar National Bank acknowledged in an
emailed statement Wednesday that it was
looking into an alleged data breach after a
file containing the purported account information began circulating online. The bank

Salah
Abdeslam

by helicopter after being


transferred from the
prison cell in Belgium
where he had been held
since his capture last
month. His lawyer,
Frank Berton, described
a muscular operation
that had caught even the
attorney by surprise,
causing him to rush to
join his client at Paris

Palace of Justice.

Around the world


did not say whether information in the files
was legitimate or if its network had been
breached, citing a policy of not commenting on reports shared on social media.
Four people identified in the files and
reached by the Associated Press confirmed
their personal information was authentic.
The files are not uniform, but in many
cases contain bank customers bank logins,
passwords, security questions and answers,
Qatari national identification numbers,
phone numbers and email addresses.

The 26-year-old faces preliminary


charges of participating in a terrorist organization, terrorist murders and attempted
murders, attempted terrorist murders of public officials, hostage-taking, and possessing weapons and explosives, French prosecutors said in a statement.
Berton said Abdeslam was being sent to
Fleury-Merogis, a massive, high-security
prison about 30 kilometers (19 miles)
south of Paris, where he will be held in isolation in a special camera-equipped cell
until his next hearing on May 20. French

Justice Minister Jean-Jacques Urvoas said


earlier that Abdeslam would be placed in
isolation, watched by guards specially
trained to deal with people reputed to be
dangerous.
The return of the last known survivor of
the team that carried out the Nov. 13 attacks
may help investigators untangle some of
the still-unresolved questions about the
assault, which claimed 130 lives at cafes, a
music hall and a sports stadium. The Islamic
State group claimed responsibility for the
carnage.

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BUSINESS

Thursday April 28, 2016

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Stocks rise, shaking off tech


slump, after Fed stands pat
By Marley Jay

DOW JONES INDUSTRIALS

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK U.S. stocks rose


Wednesday after the Federal
Reserve left its key interest rate
unchanged, as investors expected.
Energy companies climbed again
as the price of oil came close to a
six-month high. Technology
stocks were battered following
weak results from Apple and
Twitter.
Stocks opened mostly lower in
muted early trading, but they
moved higher after the Fed
released its decision on interest
rates. Bond yields fell and
investors bought high-dividend
phone and utility companies
instead. Thanks to the losses for
tech stocks, the Nasdaq composite
index fell for the fifth day in a row.
Investors didnt expect the Fed
to raise interest rates this month,
and theyre starting to think that
interest rates wont go up in June,
the Feds next meeting, either. But
David Kelly, chief global strategist JPMorgan Chase, said that

High: 18,084.66
Low: 17,920.26
Close: 18,041.55
Change: +51.23

OTHER INDEXES

might be a problem because the


Fed didnt make its intentions
clear on Wednesday.
Theres nothing in this to tell
us when the next rate hike is
going to be, Kelly said. He
thinks the market will react badly
if the Fed raises interest rates
without advising investors that
its coming.
What they cant do is just coast

S&P 500:
NYSE Index:
Nasdaq:
NYSE MKT:
Russell 2000:
Wilshire 5000:

2095.15
10,571.83
4863.14
2345.76
1154.15
21686.16

+3.45
+49.25
-25.14
+8.97
+3.42
+53.18

10-Yr Bond:
Oil (per barrel):
Gold :

1.86
45.27
1,246.70

+1.68

into the June meeting having not


given anybody any indication at
all, Kelly said.
The Dow Jones industrial average picked up 51.23 points, or 0.3
percent, to 18, 041. 55. The
Standard & Poors 500 index rose
3.45 points, or 0.2 percent, to
2,095.15. The Nasdaq composite
index dropped 25.14 points, or
0.5 percent, to 4,863.14.

Facebook reports stronger-than-expected 1Q


By Barbara Ortutay
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MENLO PARK Facebook


posted
stronger-than-expected
results for its first quarter, helped
by a growing number of users and
higher advertising revenue, especially on mobile devices.
The social media giant on
Wednesday reported earnings of
$1.51 billion, or 52 cents per
share, up from $512 million, or 18
cents per share, in the same period
a year earlier. Adjusted earnings
were 77 cents per share in the latest
quarter, well above the 62 cents

that analysts
polled
by
FactSet
were
expecting.
Revenue was
$5.38 billion,
up from $3.54
b i l l i o n .
Analysts had
forecast $5.26
Mark
Zuckerberg billion.
Facebook had
1.65 billion monthly users as of
March 31, an increase of 15 percent
from a year earlier. Of these, 1.51
billion signed on using mobile
devices at least once a month, an

increase of 21 percent. Separately,


Facebook also announced that it
will create a new class of non-voting stock, known as Class C capital stock, designated to let CEO
Mark Zuckerberg keep tight reins
on the company even as it issues
more shares to compensate
employees and investors.
COO Sheryl Sandberg said that a
big part of Facebooks success is
due to Marks leadership. The proposal, which must still be
approved by shareholders, is
intended to keep Zuckerberg in an
active leadership role at Facebook,
the company said.

Yahoo reshuffles board in truce with rebellious shareholder


By Michael Liedtke
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAN FRANCISCO Yahoo has


reached a truce with an activist
investor threatening to oust CEO
Marissa Mayer and the rest of its
board, removing a major distraction as the company evaluates bids
to buy its Internet operations.
announced
agreement
The
Wednesday will give the rebellious

shareholder, Starboard Value, four


seats on Yahoos board. The company is diluting Starboards voting
power, though, by expanding its
board from nine to 13 directors for
the next two months.
The board will be pared to 11
directors within two months under
the agreement. Yahoo will pay
Starboard up to $2 million as a
reimbursement for legal fees and
other expenses the New York hedge

fund incurred while preparing to its


attempt to overthrow Yahoos
board.
Although Starboard wont be
able to exert control over the
process, it will have a seat at the
negotiating table as Yahoo talks to
suitors interested in snapping up
its email, advertising tools and
other digital services, including
widely read sports and finance sections.

The Federal Reserve noted that


economic growth in the U.S. has
slowed down over the last month,
but the job market is getting
stronger. While the Fed also said
the global economy slowed, its
statement suggests it is becoming
less concerned about the effects of
the slowing global economy on
the U.S.
Bond prices were rising before

McDonalds tests McNugget


recipe without preservatives
NEW YORK McDonalds is
testing Chicken McNuggets with
no artificial preservatives as it
works to revive its U.S. business.
The worlds biggest hamburger
chain says it began testing the
new recipe in about 140 stores in
Oregon and Washington in March.
Its the latest move by
McDonalds to step up the quality
of its food as it works to stage a
turnaround of its business, which
has lost customers in recent years.
The company has conceded that it
failed to keep up with changing
tastes and that it is looking at
improving core menu items. Last
week, it also said it is testing a
version of its Big Mac that comes
with bigger patties.

Unfair labor practices


complaint filed against VW
NASHVILLE, Tenn. The
National Labor Relations Board is
bringing an unfair labor practices
complaint against Volkswagen for
the German automakers refusal to
bargain with the United Auto
Workers union at its lone U.S.
assembly plant in Tennessee.

the Feds announcement and


moved even higher after its statement was released. Higher prices
mean lower yields, and the yield
on the 10-year U.S. Treasury note
fell to 1.86 percent from 1.93 percent. Lower bond yields made
telecommunications and utility
stocks more appealing to
investors
seeking
income.
Verizon Communications gained
$1.25, or 2.5 percent, to $51.69.
NRG Energy added 43 cents, or 3
percent, to $14.98.
The price of crude oil started
with big gains, turned lower, and
then bounced back. It wound up at
its highest price since early
December. Benchmark U.S. crude
oil rose $1.29, or 2.9 percent, to
close at $45.33 a barrel in New
York. Brent crude, the international standard, added $1.44, or 3.1
percent, to $47. 18 a barrel in
London.
Among
energy
stocks,
Anadarko Petroleum added $2.42,
or 4. 6 percent, to $54. 78 and
Diamond Offshore Drilling gained
98 cents, or 4. 1 percent, to
$24.63.

Business briefs
The UAW was elected to represent workers specializing in the
maintenance and repair of robots
and machinery at the Chattanooga
factory on a 108-44 vote in
December.
But Volkswagen declined to
engage in contract talks with the
UAW while challenging an NLRB
decision to allow the small group
of workers to vote on unionization.

FBI says it wont disclose how


it accessed locked iPhone
WASHINGTON The FBI said
Wednesday that it will not publicly disclose the method that
allowed it to access a locked
iPhone used by one of the San
Bernardino attackers, saying it
lacks enough technical information about the software vulnerability that was exploited.
The decision resolves one of the
thorniest questions that has confronted the federal government
since it revealed last month, with
minimal details, that an unidentified third party had come forward
with a successful method for opening the phone.

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LOCAL ROUNDUP: TERRA NOVA BASEBALL TOPS CARLMONT TO PULL INTO FIRST-PLACE TIE WITH SCOTS IN PAL BAY >> PAGE 13

<<< Page 12, Giants outslug Padres


to finish off three-game sweep
Thursday April 28, 2016

Sequoia softball gets revenge, moves into first place


By Nathan Mollat
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

When the Sequoia softball team faced San


Mateo in the Peninsula Athletic League
Ocean Division opener March 22, it was
also the Cherokees first game of the season.
Because coach Mike Davis was hired the
week before Christmas break, he did not
have time to put together much of a preseason schedule.
In that game, the Bearcats scored four runs

in the bottom of the seventh inning to walk


off with a 6-5 win.
The Cherokees could not wait for the
rematch.
That lit the fire, Davis said. As San
Mateo started to win and win and win, we
said, That should be us.
The rematch finally came Wednesday in
Redwood City and Sequoia proved a lot has
changed since that March meeting. The
Cherokees scored in six of the seven
innings and kept the Bearcats offense in relative check as they posted an 8-5 victory.

Not only did it give the Cherokees the


revenge for which they were looking, but it
gave the Bearcats their first league loss and
moved Sequoia a half game ahead of San
Mateo, who still has a game in hand.
Coming off that first (San Mateo) game,
the girls have worked their butts off, Davis
said. This (win) was a team effort.
Sequoia (7-1 PAL Ocean, 9-4 overall)
failed to score in the second inning. In the
third, fourth and fifth innings, the
Cherokees scored two runs apiece. Those
were bookended by single runs in the first

Warriors ground Rockets


Golden State wins the series 4-1, advances to second round of playoffs

and sixth innings.


The Cherokees needed to keep scoring
because San Mateo (6-1, 15-6) refused to
give in. The Bearcats scored single runs in
the first, fourth and fifth, and put up a twospot in the sixth.
Emily McAdams, a junior who has been
pitching for a little over a year, picked up
the win for Sequoia, but it wasnt easy. The
Bearcats had scoring opportunities in every
inning and with one big hit here or there and

See SEQUOIA, Page 16

When pitchers
deal, time flies

OAKLAND Klay Thompson scored 27


points with seven 3-pointers and the
Golden State Warriors rolled into the second
round of the playoffs without injured superstar Stephen Curry, thoroughly embarrassing the Houston Rockets 114-81 on
Wednesday night in Game 5.
Draymond Green added 15 points, nine
rebounds and eight assists for the Warriors,
who will face the winner of the ClippersTrail Blazers series. Portland leads 3-2.
Without their MVP, Currys fellow Splash
Brother set the tone from the opening tip.
Thompson became the first player in NBA
history to make at least seven 3s in consecutive playoff games, while Shaun
Livingston scored 16 points for his third
double-digit performance in three games
while starting in Currys place this series.
Curry, in a brown sport coat on the bench
while nursing his sprained right knee,
emphatically bobbed his head, clapped and
bowed to Thompson during starter introductions. He even worked the officials during a
timeout, and gestured with hand signals to
celebrate big plays.
James Harden scored 25 of Houstons 37
first-half points on the way to 35 points, but
the Rockets had no chance with a one-man
show against the deep defending champions.
So much for Jason Terrys guarantee there
would be a Game 6 back in Houston.
Thompson hit a way-back, Curry-like 3
from 31 feet at the top of the arc with 5:37
left in the third. He shot 7 of 11 from long
range, 10 for 14 overall.
Curry could only grin, cheer and enjoy
every second of seeing his team do so well
without him.
The NBAs leading scorer is sidelined for
at least two weeks with a sprained MCL that
happened when he slipped awkwardly on the
final play of the first half of Sundays Game
4 and his legs split apart. The Warriors
learned Monday they would have to push
forward without him for the near future and

KELLEY L. COX/USA TODAY SPORTS

ow quick was the Woodside baseball teams 3-0 win over Aragon
Tuesday afternoon? Traffic hadnt
even had time to clear out. But thats
what happens when a baseball game lasts
an hour and 21 minutes, thanks to some
quick pitching.
Woodsides Jamie Kruger and Aragons
Jordan Tong wasted little time in getting
through the game.
While you wont find
a bigger dichotomy
between two starting
pitchers, the combination of being
around the plate and
aggressive hitters led
to a total of 147
pitches being thrown
between the two.
Kruger is a fouryear varsity player
who burst on the
scene as a freshman and threw a no-hitter
as recently as a week and a half ago. A
tall, lanky right hander, Kruger has good
velocity and consistently kept the ball
down and forced the Dons to pound the
ball into the ground. Twelve of the 21
outs Kruger recorded came on ground
balls. He finished with just 79 pitches in
a complete game, throwing a total of five
pitches in the second inning and six in
the third.
Tong also threw a complete game and is
the antithesis of Kruger. Tong is 5-8, 155
pounds and does not even approach 80
mph on the radar gun.
Try 75, Aragon manager Lenny Souza
said.
But Tong is a classic pitcher. He mixed
his speeds, had tremendous movement
and kept the Woodside batters off balance
for a majority of the game. Tong threw
only 68 pitches and 11 of his 21 outs
came on the ground as well. The Wildcats
did touch him for nine hits, with three
straight in the fourth inning being his
undoing. Tong had innings of eight
pitches twice.
***

See WARRIORS, Page 14

Golden States Klay Thompson looks to make a pass during the Warriors Game 5 win over
Houston, which clinched the series 4-1.

See LOUNGE, Page 16

By Janie McCauley
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

M-A dominating boys volleyball as well


By Terry Bernal
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

TERRY BERNAL/SAN MATEO DAILY JOURNAL

Menlo-Athetons Bryan Kang makles a pass


during the Bears three-set sweep of Mills.

Menlo-Atherton has long been synonymous with outstanding volleyball. The


Bears performance on the court this spring
has continued that tradition.
The difference, of course, is the M-A team
currently dominating the Peninsula Athletic
League volleyball ranks is a boys team.
This year marks the inaugural season of
PAL boys volleyball, after two previous
seasons when a handful of teams includ-

ing M-A, Aragon and Mills played as


unaffiliated teams that would play predominantly at tournaments.
Former M-A girls volleyball coach Ron
Whitmill returned to the school this season
to head the boys team, taking over for
Justine Record, who helmed the team last
year.
Weve been pushing for this for two or
three years, Whitmill said. I know theres
been other schools pushing for is as well.
In his time with the Lady Bears, Whitmill
helmed two Central Coast Section champi-

onship teams in three years until departing


prior to the 2015 season to take the headcoaching job at Valley Christian. In
Whitmills return to M-A, hes got the
boys team on a similar trajectory.
Wednesday, the M-A boys locked up the
PALs first ever CCS qualifier by clinching
the PAL Central Division title with a threegame sweep at Mills.
With seven teams playing in the PAL this
year, and possibly more to be added in future

See VOLLEYBALL, Page 14

12

SPORTS

Thursday April 28, 2016

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Sequoias Pruhsmeier tames wind, Capuchino


By Terry Bernal
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

The San Bruno wind was wreaking havoc


on everyone at the Capuchino baseball diamond Wednesday everyone, that is,
except for Sequoia starting pitcher Kyle
Pruhsmeier.
With Division-I scouts in attendance to
watch the sophomore right-hander throw,
Pruhsmeier did not disappoint, starring
both sides of the ball in a critical 6-3 win
over Capuchino.
Pruhsmeier went the distance, allowing
four hits while striking out eight against
four walks and a hit batsman. And while the
wind was busy whipping fly popups around,
and gusting dirt in to players eyes, it
seemed to be an ally to Pruhsmeiers dominant fastball.
When I threw ... the wind just kind of
picked it up and hit the zone for me,
Pruhsmeier said. So, that was a good help.
With the win, Sequoia (6-5 in PAL Bay,
18-6 overall) now has its postseason life
in its own hands. Cherokees manager
Corey Uhalde has taken his team to the
playoffs in five of his six previous seasons at the helm. And barring an outright
collapse through their three remaining
regular-season games, Uhalde is in line for
playoff appearance No. 6.
Entering play Wednesday in a three-team
race along with Cap and Hillsdale for
the final two guaranteed playoff berths out
of the Peninsula Athletic League Bay
Division, Sequoia moves into outright control of fourth place. Hillsdale, in losing 5-0

TERRY BERNAL/DAILY JOURNAL

Kyle Pruhsmeier squares up an RBI single in


the second inning of Sequoias 6-3 win
Wednesday at Capuchino.
to Menlo-Atherton, is in fifth place, with
Cap falling to sixth.
Us and Cap are two of those teams going
for those two spots, Uhalde said. So its
good to go out and get one of those wins
head-to-head. Its like a two-game swing.

ting average.
He squares up more balls than probably
anybody else in our lineup, Uhalde said.
Hes just a good baseball player.
Then, with a little help from the wind,
Caps wheels came off. With two outs,
Sequoia designated hitter Chris Cook lifted
a high fly ball to left that was misplayed by
the Mustangs left fielder, allowing courtesy runner Nick DeMarco to score the goahead run from first base.
Sequoia cashed in on the second life with
back-to-back singles by Tino Pohahau and
Matt Smith to extend the lead to 3-1.
We gave them that extra at-bat, Wilson
said. We threw more pitches than we needed to throw and gave them extra at-bats. And
they were able to capitalize.
Then the Cap infield committed two errors
on one play, allowing Tino Pohahau to
score to make it 4-1. The Cherokees added a
run in the fifth on an RBI single by Kasi
Pohahau, upping the lead to 5-1.
Sequoias fifth-inning insurance run could
have been much more if not for the center
field defense of Cap senior Joe Katout.
With the Mustangs anticipating the
game-changing winds with similar weather
the previous day at practice, the outfielders
took plenty of fly balls to acclimate.
Katout proved a quick learner. He made two
dazzling plays in the game. The first came
in the third inning, laying out with an allout sprint inward to take a hit away from
Matt Casey.
Then in the fifth inning, he streaked into

The outlook is not nearly as promising


for Cap.
Were battling for that last spot,
Mustangs manager Matt Wilson said. We
have to win out and hope for some help. ...
If we would have been able to pick up this
win today it would have been huge. We just
didnt have it today.
It took Pruhsmeier an inning to settle in.
Cap generated a run on three hits in the first
inning, with cleanup hitter Jake Uriarte
shooting an RBI single to give the
Mustangs a 1-0 edge. But Pruhsmeier settled
in, battling through bouts of wildness while
yielding just one other hit in the game on a
wind-aided two-run double by Matt
OMahony in the fifth.
[Pruhsmeier] is a great pitcher, Wilson
said. It doesnt help when we gave them
six runs. ... I personally think Sequoia is
one of the best teams in this league. But we
definitely had a chance to beat them. We
gave it to them.
Cap starting pitcher Aiden Yarwood was
flawless through three innings, setting
down the first nine batters he faced. But the
second time through the lineup proved the
difference in the game.
Sequoia sent nine batters to the plate in
the fourth inning, helped by three Mustangs
errors in the frame. Yawood issued a walk to
leadoff hitter Max Michelini to start the
rally. Then after Michelini stole second,
Pruhsmeier scorched an RBI single to left
field to tie it.
Pruhsmeier was 2 for 3 in the game. He
paced the Cherokees and ranks third in
the PAL Bay Division with a .449 bat-

See SEQUOIA, Page 14

Giants sweep San Diego in slugfest


Giants 13, Padres 9

By Rick Eymer
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAN FRANCISCO Brandon Belt is giving


himself credit for a home run in the first inning,
even though the wind held up his shot for a sacrifice fly. He had a good day regardless.
Belt was a homer short of the cycle and drove
in five runs, Hunter Pence had two RBIs on three
hits and the San Francisco Giants completed a
three-game sweep by beating the San Diego
Padres 13-9 on Wednesday.
In my mind, that first one was a home run,
Belt said. So in my mind, I hit for the cycle.
Belt likes to kid around before a lot of games
that its a good day for a cycle.
A lot of guys did good things, Giants man-

ager Bruce Bochy said.


Both teams offenses
woke up. Give our guys
credit for not chasing. It
got contagious today.
Jeff Samardzija (3-1)
went 5 2/3 innings and
snapped a tie with a two-run
single for the Giants, who
Brandon Belt won their fifth in six
games.
It was fun to watch and fun to be a part of
it, Samardzija said. Beltie is swinging it
and so on down the line. You see their
approach one through eight and they never

free passes but overall I didnt command my


fastball today.
Wil Myers hit a three-run homer and extended
his hitting streak to 12 games to match a career
high. Matt Kemp homered and drove in two runs
for the Padres, who lost their fifth straight.
Kemp had 10 RBIs in his first five games but
just three over his previous 15.
Adam Rosales also hit one out, Jemile Weeks
tripled in a run and Brett Wallace had a run-scoring double. Alexei Ramirez added a pair of hits.
The teams combined for three homers, four
triples, three doubles and 15 singles.
Cashner, who also drove in a run, turned in his
shortest outing since a two-inning stint at the
Washington Nationals on July 5, 2013, and the
Padres lost for the 12th time in their past 14
games in San Francisco.

try to do too much.


Joe Panik, Brandon Crawford, Trevor Brown
and Gregor Blanco also had RBIs for the Giants,
who reached a season high in runs. Pence and
Matt Duffy each had three hits.
We did a lot of things well at the plate,
Duffy said. Sacrifice flies and a lot of two-out
hits.
Samardzija won despite allowing a seasonhigh five runs on five hits. He walked two and
struck out a season-best seven.
Padres starter Andrew Cashner (1-2) couldnt
get out of the third inning, giving up six runs
three earned on four hits over 2 2/3 innings.
He walked four and struck out a pair.
I wasnt locating the ball very well,
Cashner said. Any time your team puts up nine
runs you have to be more efficient. Too many

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SPORTS

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Local sports roundup

and No. 6 seeds on their way to the championship match.

Baseball

Boys tennis Tuesday

Terra Nova 1, Carlmont 0

Menlo 7, Harker 0

One run was enough for the Tigers as they


beat the Scots in a showdown for first place
in the Peninsula Athletic League Bay
Division standings.
Willie Brazil, who stroked a one-out double in the third innings, came in to score on
a wild pitch for the games only run. Terra
Novas Jared Milch made sure that run stood
up as the senior pitcher limited the Scots to
just two hits while throwing a complete
game.
With the win, Terra Nova (8-2 PAL Bay)
takes a one-game lead over Carlmont (7-3),
with the two to rematch Friday in Pacifica.

Sacred Heart Prep 7, Burlingame 3


The Gators got RBIs from five different
players to beat the Panthers.
Schafer Kraemer and John McGrory each
drove in a pair of runs, while Andrew
Daschbach, Sean Clark and Eric DeBrine
each drove in a run apiece for SHP (7-5 PAL
Bay).
Kaleb Keelean and DJ Capps each had two
hits and an RBI for Burlingame (4-7).

Boys tennis
PAL championships
The PAL singles and doubles finals are set
for Thursday at Burlingame beginning at
3:45 p.m.
In the singles championship match, No.
1 seed Drew Davison of Half Moon Bay will
face Thomas Reznik of Carlmont, the No. 3
seed. Davison advanced to the finals after
winning matches without dropping a set.
Reznik also went 3-0 and was even more
dominant, dropping only seven games.
The third-place match pits Woodsides Hal
Tuttle (No. 4 seed) against No. 2 seed Reed
Fratt of Menlo-Atherton.
In the doubles final, M-As Jack Jensen
and Timmy Berthier, the No. 3 seed, will
take on unseeded Alex Kastelein and Levi
Vigdorchik of Woodside, who beat the No. 4

The Knights didnt drop a set in their


sweep of Harker to clinch their 20th
straight West Bay Athletic League title. No.
1 Sid Chari paced the singles with a 6-3, 63 victory. At No. 1 doubles, Carlmonts
Lane Leschly and Gabriel Morgan rolled to a
6-1, 6-1 win.

M-A earns two all-PAL first-team nods


The all-PAL tennis teams were announced
Tuesday with Menlo-Atherton grabbing two
first-team Bay Division nods. Junior Casey
Morris and senior Reed Fratt earned the honors for the Bears. Rounding out the Bay
Division first team is Carlmont sophomore
Thomas Reznik; Aragon senior Landers
Ngirchemat; Woodside senior Hal Tuttle;
Burlingame sophomore Cale Goodman;
Hillsdale sophomore Lucas Rosenberg; Half
Moon Bay junior Drew Davison; and San
Mateo senior Phalgun Krishna.
In the Ocean Division, Mills and
Capuchino earned two first-team honors
apiece. For the Vikings, senior Kevin
Reyes and junior Vincent Yang earned the
honors; junior Oscar Villatoro and sophomore Shawn Shukman drew first-team honors for the Mustangs. Rounding out the
Ocean Division first team is Sequoia senior
Matthew Freshwaters; Westmoor freshman
Eduard Myasyanki; and South City senior
Anthony Barron.

Baseball Tuesday
Half Moon Bay 5, South City 2
Cougars starting pitcher Alex Smith
allowed just two unearned runs on two hits
for a complete-game victory over the
Warriors, improving his record to 5-2.
Trailing 1-0 in the third, HMB (4-5 in PAL
Ocean, 10-11 overall) rallied for two runs in
the fourth and three more in the fifth. The
Cougars scattered six hits, with Max
Jenkins producing an RBI double. With the
loss, South City (4-7, 6-15) falls to seventh

place in the eight-team PAL Ocean.

Menlo 5, Mills 0
The Knights (8-4 in PAL Ocean, 15-6
overall) got five shutout innings from starting pitcher Chandler Yu, who secured the
win to improve his record to 7-1. At the
plate, David Farnham and RJ Babiera each
tallied RBI singles before Carson Gampell
hit his second home run of the season. Griff
McGarry and Rylan Pade rounded out the
scoring, each delivering two-out RBI singles.

Softball Tuesday
Carlmont 10, Hillsdale 0
The Scots erupted for nine runs in the
fourth inning to mercy-rule the Lady
Knights. Jacey Phipps had a three-run double and Cam Kondo followed with her fourth
home run of the season. In the circle, Abby
Lan fired a four-inning shutout, allowing
two hits while striking out three. With the
win, the sophomores record improves to
13-2. With the win, Carlmont moves into a
second-place tie with Hillsdale in the PAL
Bay Division standings.

Girls lacrosse Tuesday


Sacred Heart Prep 15, Menlo-Atherton 9
The Gators (5-0 in PAL Bay, 11-5 overall)
overcame a 6-5 halftime deficit with a fourgoal run to start the second half. Sacred
Heart Preps Libby Muir led all scorers with
five goals and added two assists; Emma
Johnson and Juliana Clark added four goals
apiece for SHP. M-A (3-3, 7-8) was paced by
Grace Tullys four goals.

Badminton Tuesday
Carlmont 12, South City 3
The Scots cruised to a big win on the
strength of their doubles play, with both
their boys and girls teams sweeping. Ryan
Liao and Alex Jin prevailing in the most
closely contested boys doubles game with
a 21-13, 22-20 victory. For the girls,
Carlmonts Shile Zhang and Pauline Sy
went to three sets to defeat Krystal Salas and
Melissa Chow 25-23, 19-21, 21-13.

Thursday April 28, 2016

13

Tigers 9, As 4

Tigers top As
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

DETROIT Justin Verlander pitched


impressively into the seventh inning, J.D.
and Victor Martinez both homered and the
Detroit Tigers beat the Oakland Athletics 94 on Wednesday night.
Detroit manager Brad Ausmus shuffled his
lineup before the game, moving J. D.
Martinez from fifth to second in the batting
order as he switched spots with Justin
Upton. The moves paid off when J. D.
Martinez hit a three-run homer in the second
inning. Victor Martinez added a three-run
shot of his own in the sixth.
Verlander (2-2) allowed three runs and five
hits in 6 1/3 innings, his third straight
quality start since allowing seven runs
against Pittsburgh on April 11.
Sonny Gray (3-2) lasted only two innings
in the shortest start of his big league career.
He allowed four runs, two hits and four
walks, throwing 65 pitches.
Detroit had lost seven of its previous
nine, scoring more than three runs only
once in the prior seven games. Ausmus was
hoping something would click if he adjusted the lineup, and Detroit broke through
with four runs in the second.
Nick Castellanos led off with a triple and
scored on a one-out grounder by Anthony
Gose. With his pitch count already mounting, Gray allowed J.D. Martinezs homer to
right-center field, which made it 4-0.
Khris Davis hit a long solo homer in the
fourth for Oakland. His drive cleared Al
Kalines No. 6 on the brick wall beyond the
bullpen in left-center and would have traveled 449 feet unimpeded, according to
MLBs Statcast
J.D. Martinez drove in another run in the
fourth with a sacrifice fly, and Victor
Martinezs homer made it 8-1.
Verlander struck out six and walked two.

14

SPORTS

Thursday April 28, 2016

WARRIORS
Continued from page 11
likely most of the second round.
A day after Steve Kerr was voted NBA Coach
of the Year, his Golden State team took the
first step toward a repeat title by following up
that record 73-win season by so confidently
handling Houston.
Thompson started things off with a quick 3pointer, igniting the yellow-clad, Strength
in Numbers sellout crowd at Oracle Arena.
Green also hit from long range and Houston
called a quick timeout.
Harden scored 14 early points on 6-of-7
shooting, but the rest of the Rockets were 0
for 16 before Patrick Beverleys follow shot
with 11:26 left in the second quarter following
Michael Beasleys shanked alley-oop dunk
try.
From the moment Curry went down, the
Warriors took their game up a notch with a
spectacular second half in Game 4, finishing
the 121-94 victory with a playoff-record 21 3pointers and 38 assists on 46 field goals.
They spoke in the past couple of days about
continuing that momentum, and in the aftermath of Currys injury and Clippers stars Chris

Paul and Blake Griffin going down, Kerr


reminded his team these moments can be fleeting.
Who the hell knows whats going to happen from one game to the next? Its really
sad, he said.
Terry guaranteed a Game 5 win, telling the
Houston Chronicle, Thats going to be a
long flight for them to come back to
Houston. Amused, Golden State just shrugged
it off.
Dwight Howard capped his awful series with
eight points on 3-for-13 shooting and 21
rebounds.
Perhaps his most memorable moment
Wednesday came when he and Green
exchanged words late in the first half, drawing
double technicals.

Tip-ins
In the six quarters after Curry went down
Sunday, Golden State outscored Houston 179119. ... The Warriors are 4-2 without Curry
this season. ... They have lost only two home
games total in the postseason dating to the
start of last years run. ... Run TMC Golden
State star Mitch Richmond was in attendance
and will be inducted into the Bay Area Sports
Hall of Fame next month. Of his accomplishments, whats missing? I always wanted to be
a male model, he quipped.

VOLLEYBALL
Continued from page 11
seasons, the boys league looks like it is
here to stay.
We were able to prove to the school that
this was a growing thing and it is sustainable, Whitmill said.
M-A saw a massive turnout for boys volleyball tryouts this season. The number was
upwards of 40, according to Whitmill. He
paired that down to 15 varsity players and
was able to fill out a junior-varsity roster as
well.
But harvesting talent is still a work in
progress. Whitmill said only two players
on the current Bears roster had volleyball
experience prior to playing at M-A. The
excitement generated by a successful girls
program certainly helped the cause though.
Its a lot of teaching, Whitmill said. I
think a lot of them werent familiar with it.
Its not a first-tier sport for boys, so
theyre not exposed to it. Theyre learning.
Whitmill has a couple aces up his sleeve
though. One of the Bears three team captains is sophomore Schuyler Knapp,
younger brother of Daily Journal Girls'
Volleyball Player of the Year Kirby Knapp.
But the ringer of the squad is senior outside
hitter Edward Falefa, who absolutely dominated the court in Wednesdays win at Mills.
Mills doesnt have the star power. But the
12-player team does have good team unity,
and hasnt had one player quit since the outset of the season, according to first-year
head coach Rick Hanson.
Hanson is the longtime boys basketball
coach at Mills, and took charge of the boys
volleyball program despite not having any
previous volleyball coaching experience.
He has quite an extensive high school

SEQUOIA
Continued from page 12
the right-center gap and made a diving play,
while colliding with right fielder Max
Stines, to take extra bases away from Mike
Michelini.
I saw as I got closer to the ball that I had
a chance to catch it, Katout said. I kind of
called him off a little late which is why we
ran into each other. But I knew I had a
chance and that my speed could get me to
the ball.
The Cap offense, however, could not

THE DAILY JOURNAL


coaching resume, however, having also
worked as an assistant coach with golf,
track, softball and football.
[Boys volleyball] is a sport, I think,
that is going to grow and catch on because
its a fun sport to play and its a fun sport to
practice, Hanson said.
While Hanson doesnt have a ringer on
the court per se, he was able to enlist assistant coach Eva Ung, a former player at
Lowell-SF.
And one of the Vikings best players is
team captain Herag Ariskatessian, who was
anticipated as being one of Mills best basketball players this year but missed the season due to a knee injury. He was cleared to
play volleyball a week before the start of
the season.
Falefa has put M-A on a different level
though. The high-flying senior is a secondgeneration volleyballer; his father Ruebena
was a professional volleyball player in
their native Samoa.
Falefa moved to the United States in 2004
and discovered volleyball his freshman year
at M-A. And it has helped connect him to
the greater student body community.
An ESL student through his sophomore
year, Falefa didnt know any of his classmates prior to joining the volleyball team.
He actually met Schuyler Knapp at an open
gym, and Knapp was so impressed he asked
Falefa to try out for the upstart M-A team.
Falefas talent earned him a spot of the
team immediately. But the language barrier
still made it a tough transition for him.
It was so hard for me because I didnt
know any of them and I didnt speak
English well, Falefa said.
Now, Falefa speaks English swimmingly.
Not that his volleyball talent doesnt speak
volumes already.
Hes by far the best player in the
league, Whitmill said. What you saw
[Wednesday] was him going at half speed.
solve Pruhsmeier. The big right-hander dug
himself a hole in the bottom of the fifth
inning, issuing three walks prior to
OMahoneys two-run double. But he
reestablished his mechanics and was able to
finish the game, throwing 103 pitches.
With Kasi Pohahau behind the plate,
Sequoia relied on a sophomore battery
Wednesday. Not that youd know it by the
way the tandem has handled the varsity
game. Pruhsmeiers record improves to 4-0.
Having him and Kasi back there . . .
theyre both sophomores as a pitchercatcher, Uhalde said. Theyre very
advanced baseball players and its a pleasure
to work with both of them. And I think
theyre destined for very big careers.

SPORTS

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Warriors grant the


Lakers permission
to interview Walton
By Janie McCauley
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

OAKLAND The Los Angeles


Lakers received permission from
the Warriors to interview top
assistant Luke Walton for their
coaching vacancy.
Golden State
coach
Steve
Kerr
said
We d n e s d a y
before Game 5
of the playoffs
against Houston
that Lakers genLuke Walton eral manager
Mitch Kupchak
contacted Warriors GM Bob
Myers, who said Walton could
interview once the first-round
series is done. The Warriors held a
3-1 advantage in the best-of-seven
series going into Wednesday.
Mitch has called Bob and weve
told Mitch hes perfectly welcome
to talk to Luke as soon as this
series is over and we have a little
break, Kerr said.
The 36-year-old Walton, who
won two championships during
his nine seasons playing for the
Lakers, guided defending champi-

on Golden State to a record 24-0


start this season while filling in
for Kerr when the coach was on a
leave of absence following complications from two back surgeries. Overall, Walton was 39-4
while Kerr was out, and he finished
eighth in Coach of the Year voting.
It is impressive for an assistant
coach. I think he should have been
higher, Golden State power forward Draymond Green said.
Walton has not wanted to
become a distraction during
Golden States quest for a second
straight title when it comes to
speaking about his own coaching
future. For months, he has been
considered a strong candidate to be
in the Lakers plans if they made a
change.
Los Angeles fired Byron Scott
on Sunday night.
Scott coached the two worst seasons in the 16-time NBA champion franchises history, going 38126. In Kobe Bryants disappointing farewell season, the Lakers
finished with the NBAs secondworst record at 17-65 this season,
losing four more games than in
their previous franchise-worst season in 2014-15.

WHATS ON TAP
THURSDAY
Softball
Notre Dame-Belmont at St. Francis, Aragon at Capuchino, Half Moon Bay at Hillsdale, Woodside at
Mills, Carlmont at Burlingame, South City at MenloAtherton, 4 p.m.
Baseball
Mills at Menlo School, Woodside at Aragon, Kings
Academy at El Camino, South City at Half Moon Bay,
Menlo-Atherton at Hillsdale, Crystal Springs at
Pinewood, San Mateo at Jefferson, Westmoor at
Harker, 4 p.m.
Boys lacrosse
Menlo-Atherton at Menlo School, Woodside at Sacred Heart Prep, 4 p.m.; Sequoia at Burlingame,
Aragon at Carlmont, 7 p.m.
Badminton
Sequoia at Westmoor, Mills at Aragon, South City at
San Mateo, Carlmont at Burlingame, Menlo-Atherton at Woodside, Jefferson at Capuchino,Terra Nova
at Crystal Springs, Hillsdale at El Camino, 4 p.m.
Boys lacrosse
St. Francis at Serra, 5 p.m.
Swimming
Bellarmine at Serra, Presentation/MercyBurlingame/Notre Dame-Belmont at Serra, 3 p.m.;
Aragon at Hillsdale, Menlo-Atherton at Burlingame,
Sequoia at Carlmont,Woodside at San Mateo,Terra
Nova at El Camino, Capuchino at Jefferson, Half
Moon Bay at Westmoor, Mills at South City, 3:30 p.m.
Track and field
Westmoor at Menlo-Atherton,Terra Nova at Aragon,
Sequoia at Mills, Carlmont at San Mateo, Woodside
at Capuchino, Hillsdale at Burlingame, 3 p.m.
Boys volleyball
San Mateo at Mills, 6 p.m.; Serra at Valley Christian,
6:30 p.m.

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Pct
.600
.571
.476
.435
.400

GB

1/2
2 1/2
3 1/2
4

CENTRAL DIVISION
Chicago
16
Kansas City
12
Cleveland
10
Detroit
10
Minnesota
7

6
9
9
10
15

.727
.571
.526
.500
.318

3 1/2
4 1/2
5
9

WEST DIVISION
Texas
Seattle
Angels
As
Houston

10
10
11
11
15

.545
.524
.500
.500
.318

1/2
1
1
5

12
11
11
11
7

W
14
13
11
9
4

L
6
7
10
11
17

Pct
.700
.650
.524
.450
.190

GB

1
3 1/2
5
10 1/2

CENTRAL DIVISION
Chicago
15
Pittsburgh
13
St. Louis
12
Cincinnati
9
Milwaukee
8

5
9
9
13
12

.750
.619
.571
.409
.400

3
3 1/2
7
7

WEST DIVISION
Los Angeles
Giants
Arizona
Colorado
San Diego

10
11
12
12
15

.545
.522
.478
.429
.318

1/2
1 1/2
2 1/2
5

Washington
New York
Philadelphia
Miami
Atlanta

12
12
11
9
7

Wednesdays Games
San Francisco 13, San Diego 9
Philadelphia 3, Washington 0
Boston 9, Atlanta 4
N.Y. Mets 5, Cincinnati 2
Milwaukee at Chicago Cubs, 8:05 p.m.
Pittsburgh 9, Colorado 8, 12 innings
St. Louis 11, Arizona 4
Miami 2, L.A. Dodgers 0
Thursdays Games
Brewers (Jngmnn 0-3) at Cubs (Arrta 4-0), 11:20 a.m.
Bucs (Nicasio 2-2) at Rox (Chatwood 2-2), 12:10 p.m.
Phils (Nola 1-2) at Nats (Roark 2-2), 1:05 p.m.
Atlanta (Chcin 0-1) at Boston (Bchhlz 0-2), 4:10 p.m.
Cards (Wacha 2-0) at Dbacks (DLRosa 2-3), 6:40 p.m.
Miami (Frnndz 1-2) at Dodgers (Mada 3-0), 7:10 p.m.

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pera from Buffalo (IL). Optioned LHP/RHP Pat Venditte to Buffalo. National League
ATLANTA BRAVES Recalled RHP John Gant
from Gwinnett (IL). Optioned RHP Ryan Weber to
Gwinnett.
COLORADO ROCKIES Placed LHP Jorge De La
Rosa on the 15-day DL. Recalled RHP Eddie Butler
from Albuquerque (PCL).
WASHINGTON NATIONALS Placed RHP Matt
Belisle on the 15-day DL. Recalled LHP Sammy Solis
from Syracuse (IL)
NASCAR
NASCAR Suspended Nick Sandler, crew chief
for Ricky Stenhouse Jr., from Sundays race at Talladega Superspeedway and fined him $20,000 for
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BASEBALL
American League
CHICAGO WHITE SOX Optioned RHP Miguel
Gonzalez to Charlotte (IL). Recalled RHP Daniel
Webb from Charlotte.
CLEVELAND INDIANS Optioned RHP Cody Anderson to Columbus (IL). Recalled LHP Kyle Crockett
from Columbus.
DETROIT TIGERS Optioned OF Tyler Collins to
Toledo (IL). Activated RHP Francisco Rodriguez from
the family medical emergency list.
OAKLAND ATHLETICS Selected the contract
of C/OF Matt McBride from Nashville (PCL). Optioned RHP Andrew Triggs to Nashville.Transferred
LHP Felix Doubront from the 15- to the 60-day DL.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS Recalled RHP Ryan Te-

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EAST DIVISION

EAST DIVISION

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Serra vs. Sacred Heart Cathedral at USF, 3:30 p.m.;
Capuchino at Sequoia, Carlmont at Terra Nova, Sacred Heart Prep at Burlingame, 4 p.m.

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Wednesdays Games
Chicago White Sox 4, Toronto 0
Baltimore 3, Tampa Bay 1
Boston 9, Atlanta 4
Detroit 9, Oakland 4
Texas 3, N.Y. Yankees 2
Cleveland 6, Minnesota 5
Angels 4, Kansas City 2
Houston 7, Seattle 4
Thursdays Games
As (Bassitt 0-1) at Tigers (Sanchez 2-2), 10:10 a.m.
CWS (Danks 0-3) at Baltimore (Wilson 1-0), 4:05 p.m.
Atlanta (Chcin 0-1) at Boston (Bchhlz 0-2), 4:10 p.m.

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placed him on probation for the rest of the season.


SOCCER
Major League Soccer
MLS Suspended Houston MF Alex Monteiro de
Lima and San Jose D Andres Imperiale one game
each and fined them for fouls that endangered the
safety of an opponent during games on April 23
and April 24. Fined Columbus F Kei Kamara for instigating and Seattle D Brad Evans for using
offensive, insulting and abusive language towards
an official in games on April 23. Fined San Jose MF
Anibal Godoy for violating league policy regarding hands to the face, head or neck in a game on
April 24. All fines were undisclosed.

16

SPORTS

Thursday April 28, 2016

SEQUOIA
Continued from page 11
the final score might have been different.
But McAdams and the Cherokees defense
did their best to limit any damage.
We got one of the top pitchers in our
division, Davis said. I had to calm her
down. She wanted [to win] so badly.
San Mateo also went with its ace in Jodie
Lewis who also happens to be Davis
niece.
Shes a thrower. Shes just inconsistent
enough that she can get you, Davis said.
But unlike the Bearcats, the Cherokees
took advantage of their opportunities. They
scored two unearned runs with two outs in

LOUNGE
Continued from page 11
In 1993, James Caan starred as a football
coach in the movie, The Program, which was
about an out-of-control college football program.
Life is imitating art in the great Northwest if
the allegations coming from a report on the
Bellevue High School football program are
true. The school is accused of rampant program
violations that run the gamut: from using and
paying players to attend a diploma mill

THE DAILY JOURNAL

the third, had back-to-back walks leading


off the fourth come around the score, and put
together another two-out, two-run rally in
the fifth.
Im a big believer in players hits and
team hits and they need to know when we
need a team hit, Davis said. I tell the girls
I want quality at-bats. I just need them to get
a hit at the right time.
San Mateo took a 1-0 lead in the top of
the first inning and it could have been so
much more. With one out, Kendall Richards
reached on an error, Raisa Magro walked and
Monet Scheller legged out an infield hit to
load the bases. Paige Stoveland followed
with an RBI groundout to drive in Richards,
but McAdams got a strikeout to end the
inning.
The Cherokees came right back to tie the
score in the bottom of the inning.

McAdams, Sequoias leadoff hitter, was hit


by a pitch, went around to third on a Kiley
Lubeck sacrifice bunt and scored on Allison
Amayas sacrifice fly to left.
The Cherokees took the lead for good in
the third. With one out, Lubeck and Amaya
had back-to-back singles and both moved
up on a passed ball. Following a flyout to
center, Lewis appeared to get out of the
inning when she got Danielle Amaya to hit
a grounder to second base that went
through the second basemans legs to plate
a pair of unearned runs for a 3-1 lead.
San Mateo got one run back in the fourth
when pinch hitter Jada Walker drilled an RBI
double to the fence in right field to drive in
Mirella Osuna, who had reached on an error.
Sequoia extended its lead in the bottom of
the inning when Nicole Bourque and Megan
Brotherton led off with back-to-back walks.

They both scored when McAdams crushed a


drive down the left-field line for a two-run
double that saw her thrown out trying to
stretch it to a triple.
Stoveland picked up her second RBI of the
day for San Mateo in the top of the fifth, but
the Cherokees responded again with two
runs in the bottom of the frame on a two-run
double from Brotherton.
The Bearcats scored twice in the sixth on
RBIs from Magro and Scheller, but the
Cherokees got one of the runs back in the
bottom of the inning on a Danielle Amaya
RBI single.
After we lost that first game (to San
Mateo), the main thing we got out of it was
the fact we could compete with the undefeated team, Davis said. This is just a positive
victory for the school and the team.

school to keep them eligible, to boosters paying the coach and making loans to athletes
families, to school administrators hindering
the investigation.
According to an article by the Seattle PostIntelligencer, the Washington Interscholastic
Activities Association conducted a six-month
independent investigation into a Bellevue
football program that has won 11 state championships since 2001.
Its claim to fame is ending De La Salles
151-game winning streak in 2004.
The findings are so all-encompassing and
blatant that they are comical. According to the
investigation, the teams booster club was
paying the head coach upwards of $60,000

when any salary over $500 is to be cleared


by the administration. False addresses were
used by dozen of players to gain entrance to
the school and when athletes were failing
classes at the high school, they were transferred to a school that one player reported
referred to as day care for football players.
Classes that were failed at the regular high
school were suddenly passed with flying colors
at the alternative school which was a forprofit institution, whose tuition for the players
were paid for, in many cases, by boosters.
The report also found that the school administration was very reluctant in aiding the
investigation and were accused of destroying
documents and that the coach was essentially

complicit in all of this.

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Serra High School will host a symposium
on the current concussion safety measures and
prevention in sports from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m.
May 5. For more information, email
carol.ong@asm.ca.gov.

Nathan Mollat can be reached by email:


nathan@smdailyjournal.com, or by phone: 3445200 ext. 117. You can follow him on Twitter
@CheckkThissOut.

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SUBURBAN LIVING

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Thursday April 28, 2016

17

Garden art can bring


drama and design to
your outdoor spaces
By Kim Cook
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

If you came across any of Barbara Sandersons work in a


garden, you might think youd stepped into Alices
Wonderland. The Seattle-based glass blower crafts flowers,
arbors, lights and fountains for natural settings, aiming to
create a magical, otherworldly tableau.
I love to add another dimension to what already exists,
she says.
Art created for the outdoors can bring drama and design to
a garden or patio. Sheila Jeffrey, a landscape designer from
Collingwood, Ontario, suggests thinking of outdoor space
as you would a room, with a floor, walls and ceiling.
As with interior art, consider the overall theme or feel of
the space when youre choosing outdoor accents, she says.
Walls or fences are often overlooked and are a great place
for an interesting focal point.
For wall art, consider vintage objects, such as picture
frames, mirrors, cast iron grates, architectural elements or
antique signs as outdoor wall art.
Arrange groupings of small vessels like planted terra
cotta pots, buckets or paint cans. Put themed vignettes on
shelves.
Vintage 60s metal wall sculptures are a favorite of
mine, says Jeffrey, and you can often find them at yard
sales. Clear-coat them with a good exterior-grade
polyurethane before displaying.
Sandersons inspiration for making outdoor pieces comes
from fond memories of visiting her grandfathers English
garden as a teenager.
I spent some time gazing into his pond, appreciating
the soothing sound that water makes in a garden setting,

Art created for the outdoors can bring drama and design to a garden or patio.

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18

Thursday April 28, 2016

GOP
Continued from page 1
he expects the convention to be the largest
held locally, as an unprecedented amount of
supporters and protesters have already
announced their intent to participate in the
weekends festivities.
This is the most exciting convention
weve ever had, said McDougald, who has
been a part of hosting four similar events in
Burlingame previously.
But unlike years prior, organizers have not
struggled to rally support, as tickets to the
event sold out within hours of Trump
announcing his attention to attend, and the
countys Republican party has been overwhelmed with requests to volunteer in the
coordination effort.
McDougald said he is hopeful the party is
able to parlay the onslaught of focus into
building momentum for a Republican candidate in a state that has traditionally supported the opposing party.
With the convention coming up and the
candidates coming in, we are getting a lot of

SHOOTING
Continued from page 1
The incident prompted several schools to
be locked down while police searched for the
suspect.
Terra Nova High School, Ingrid B. Lacy
Middle School and Ortega Elementary
School were affected before the lockdown
was lifted later in the morning.
Colindres was last seen in a 2003 silver
Toyota Camry with California license plate
number 6CGN644. He is described as a
Hispanic man about 5 feet 5 inches tall,
weighing approximately 125 pounds, with
brown hair and brown eyes.
Spanheimer said police may have had

SUBURBAN LIVING
attention, but that comes with an awful lot of
responsibility, he said. We have got to put
a Republican in the White House, and weve
worked hard for that. I think we will succeed,
but we have got a lot more work to do.
Beyond political aspirations, McDougald
said the party remains focused on ensuring
the weekends events go off without a hitch,
despite the protests planned to take place
outside the hotel during the convention.
And though thousands have expressed
interest on social media to rally against
Trump during his noon address Friday, April
29, McDougald said he is certain law enforcement is up for the task of maintaining order.
Crowd control is what it boils down to,
he said. I have the highest confidence in the
police and sheriff and the people that will be
handling that.
Burlingame Mayor Ann Keighran said her
paramount concern was for the safety of all
those who attended the event.
All I want is for this to be a safe environment for everyone and that everything goes
smoothly, she said.
Burlingame police Lt. Jay Kiely said
local law enforcement agencies are coordinating efforts to allow protesters to exercise their freedom of speech, without
some prior contact with the alleged shooter
who is known to frequent the north San
Mateo County area. But he could not confirm whether the shooter or the victim were
ever residents of Pacifica.
Although the victim and alleged shooter
had a prior relationship, Spanheimer warned
the public to remain cautious and immediately report any information.
I believe it was isolated, but there is
always concern because he is still on the
loose and is believed to be armed and dangerous, Spanheimer said.
Anyone with information about Colindres
whereabouts or Wednesdays incident is
urged to contact Pacifica police at (650)
738-7314 or call 911.
Bay City News Serv ice contributed to this
report.

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Comment on
or share this story at
www.smdailyjournal.com
breaking any laws.
Given the great cooperation law enforcement has on the Peninsula, it helps us ensure
that the protests go off peaceably, and the
convention is able to operate unencumbered, he said.
Members of the Burlingame Police
Department as well as other neighboring
cities, county Sheriffs Office and Office of
Emergency Services, California Highway
Patrol and the Central County Fire
Department are expected to be present at the
event, said Kiely, but he is uncertain how
many law enforcement officials will be needed.
He said analysts are working to project the
amount of total attendees, supporters, protesters and onlookers, to grant law enforcement a reasonable expectation regarding the
size and scope of the crowd.
Such a national event is uncommon in
Burlingame, said Kiely, but he remains certain local law enforcement is up for the task

ART
Continued from page 17
Sanderson recalls. I returned home determined to create a water feature for myself.
That was the beginning of my focus on garden artwork.
She forms glass into colorful, plump little birds that can be placed in a found nest,
or in one of Sandersons spun-glass nests.
Pitcher plants in vibrant hues of gold and
carmine, mounted on copper rods, catch the
rain.
There are Seussian fiddlehead ferns and
mushrooms, as well as colorful glacicles
rigged with lights to line a path or poolside.
And for a pond or birdbath, Sanderson has
created the bee preserver, a glass ball
studded with glass nubs so that bees have
something on which to rest when theyre
drinking. (www.glassgardensnw.com)
Margie Grace, a landscape designer in
Santa Monica, often incorporates salvaged
elements like driftwood, branches and
stones into her projects. They can be used
to make mosaics and interesting screens.
She used an old metal bed as a planter, with
flowers as the pillows and quilt. Her

of peacefully managing the convention.


It is out of the norm, however, given all
the resources we have and the level of cooperation we have in this county, it makes it
easier to prepare, he said.
Beyond maintaining peace and order at the
event, Kiely said there are no plans in place
to shut down streets or impede traffic along
the Bayshore, though that order is subject to
change depending on how many people
attend the event.
Kiely said the primary concern of law
enforcement remains ensuring any potential
clashes between opposing parties are
resolved peacefully and orderly.
We just encourage any participant in the
protests to do so lawfully, he said.
McDougald also noted he expected traffic
congestion near the area throughout the
weekend, which should be considered by
those planning to attend.
And though it is reasonable to expect all
sorts of excitement surrounding the event,
McDougald said he expects the nature of the
conventions festivities to be standard procedure, despite the notable guests.
There wont be any chaos inside the
hotel, he said. It will be politics and the
convention as usual.
fondness for functional art led her to create
a canalito, a canal made from stones that
carries away storm water, while winding artfully around trees and beds.
Art can evoke the very nature of a place,
she says, pointing out a kinetic sculpture in
a hill-top garden that mimics the pelicans
soaring off a nearby bluff. (www.gracedesignassociates.com)
If your balcony or backyard has no view,
consider one of Gizaun Arts wooden wall
panels. The Portland, Oregon-based studio
uses all-weather, ultraviolet, translucent
inks to apply photo images of flowers and
landscapes onto red cedar boards, ready for
hanging. Designs include sunflowers,
lighthouses and landscapes. (www.gizaunart.com)
Wind and Weather stocks some backlit,
punched art crafted from recycled metal drum
lids in Bali. Choose from a zodiac, sun and
moon, or several whimsical designs like
cats on a moonlit fence, or a train chugging
through a wintry night. (www. windandweather.com)
For a small terrace, the Trigg geometric
container, designed by Moe Takemura for
Umbra, might be just the thing. The sleek,
diamond-shaped ceramic or concrete-resin
vessels perch inside a slim brass frame.
They could hold herbs, succulents or extra
keys. (www.allmodern.com)

SUBURBAN LIVING

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Thursday April 28, 2016

19

Tropical houseplants need a little coddling


By Lee Reich
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A winter trip to the Isle of


Enchantment, Puerto Rico, left
me feeling sorry for many of my
houseplants back home.
The effects of steam-bath conditions there were dramatic. Crownof-thorn plants billowed out into
full-bodied shrubs, lush with
leaves throughout. Philodendrons
clambered high into trees,
embracing and completely hiding
the trunks.
What a contrast dracaenas in the
tropics make with houseplant
dracaenas. Up north (Im in New
York State), dracaenas are reduced
to little more than a few bare
stems capped by tufts of leaves.
The dracaenas that greeted me
from planter boxes bordering an
outdoor cafe in San Juan were
heavily branched specimens
clothed with leaves all along their
stems.
In Puerto Rico, weeping figs
soared to majestic proportions,
humidity coaxing threadlike, aerial roots to drip from the branches
and take root in the ground.
Except for where these roots were
cut away to allow passage beneath
the limbs, they fused to become
part of rippling gray trunks.
And talk about contrasts: My
own weeping fig tree is 7 inches
tall, a majestic tree in miniature, a
bonsai.

BACK TO NORTHERN REALITY


Two weeks back north returned

Tropical plants are more at home and happier in springtime because theres more moisture in the air than during
the winter.
me to my temperate-climate sensibilities. Yes, we do need our weeping figs and dracaenas up here.
Even if they dont strut their stuff
with the splendor that they do in
the tropics, their greenery is most
welcome.
The plants mentioned above are
not really all that unhappy up
here. After all, the tropical plants
that are usually grown as northern
houseplants have been selected
for this purpose over the years
because of their abilities to put on
a decent show despite
less-than-ideal growing
temperatures,

light and humidity.

TROPICAL PLANTS
CAN BE HAPPY UP NORTH
These plants just need a little
coddling. Probably the most
important thing they need when
confined in a pot is the right
amount of water in their potting
soil.
This begins with the right potting soil; a mix thats too dense is
going to stay waterlogged all the

time, while a mix with too much


extra perlite or sand is going to
dry out too quickly.
Dont just dig up garden soil to
use straight-up for growing houseplants. Purchase or make your own
potting mix. A good homemade
mix might have equal parts garden
soil, perlite, compost and peat
moss or coir.
Once you have the right potting
soil, water not according to a
schedule but according to when
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year, with increasing sunlight


stirring plants into increased
activity, water more frequently.
Poke your finger in the soil, check
the weight of pots, and look at
plants to gauge when water is
needed. An inexpensive soil moisture meter whose metal probe you
push down into the potting soil is
another way to know whether or
not watering is needed.
You might also want to add some
fertilizer to the water, because
plants become hungrier this time
of year.
Tropical plants are more at
home and happier in springtime
because theres more moisture in
the air than during the winter.
Turning down the thermostat
increases the relative humidity, as
does putting pebbles and keeping them wet in the saucers
beneath the flowerpots. Water
should not come up above the bottom of the pot, but just cover the
pebbles, replenished as needed.
Clustering plants together creates
an oasis that looks tropical and
envelops leaves in a cloud of
humidity of their own making.
What tropical houseplants love
best, though, is a summer vacation. Once warm weather settles in
reliably, move them outdoors.
Although its hard to appreciate
on cool gray days of early spring,
summers throughout most of the
country vie with the tropics for
heat and humidity.

20

DATEBOOK

Thursday April 28, 2016

RINK
Continued from page 1
tered ice rink.
This week, the Silicon Valley Ice
Skating Association was formed as a
nonprofit and is accumulating a hefty
amount of donations to try and purchase the Belmont rink on Old County
Road.
At Tuesdays Belmont City Council
meeting, association founder Sarah
Feldman announced the group was $2
million short of their goal to make a
viable counteroffer on the property
thats under a contract to be sold to an
anonymous buyer.
While not willing to disclose exactly how much the group was hoping to
raise, Feldman said theyve received
several, large individual donations of
$500,000 and $1 million.
Its been incredible. Weve seen
support come from all over Silicon
Valley and were very optimistic that
we can save the rink, Feldman said.
With recreation closing all across the
Peninsula, its more important now
than ever to really have the community come together to save this ice rink.
An ice rink is more than just a gym or
soccer field, it really brings together
individuals of all ages, from cradle to
grave, who can enjoy it.
Now, theyre hoping city officials
will come forward to contribute and
to inspire more private donations,
Feldman said. She also requested the
City Council place the item on a
future agenda so they can publicly

BEACH
Continued from page 1
by two companies he created. He
bought it in 2008 and beginning in
2009 sought to close it to the public
by locking a gate to the only access
road and installing No Trespassing
signs.
A citizens group, Friends of Martins
Beach, alleged in a Superior Court lawsuit that actions by the previous owners, the Deeney family, beginning in
the early 1900s created a dedication, or
right, of public access to the beach.
In a 52-page ruling, a three-judge
panel of the Court of Appeal said that
the group had alleged adequate facts to
allow a trial on that claim.
We conclude Friends has alleged
facts sufficient to state a common law
dedication claim, Justice Therese
Stewart wrote for the court.
The Deeney familys previous
actions included posting a billboard on
nearby Highway 1 welcoming the public with open arms, building a park-

discuss the matter.


But it may not be an easy feat as representatives with East Bay Iceland
have stated theyre already under contract with a buyer and cannot disclose
additional information due to a confidentiality clause.
Although about four or five people
have inquired about making an offer on
the property, East Bay Iceland General
Manager Jay Wescott said its not an
option and squelched rumors that other
negotiations are underway.
We are under contract, its confidential and we are not allowed to take any
backup offers, Wescott said, adding
hes sympathetic with those who are
grieving. We understand the passion
and the emotion, we get all that. Its
been hard, its been hard on our
employees, hard on our coaches, hard
on our customers.
Wescott said the sale is expected to
be finalized in June and this Saturday
will be the final opportunity for the
public to skate at the rink before it
shuts down.
When it announced the closure in
January, East Bay Iceland cited maintenance costs of nearly $1 million and
the propertys elderly owners looking
to sell. The site is nearly 60 years old
and now the company maintains just a
single rink in Dublin, Wescott said.
Theyve also contacted rinks around
the Bay Area and tried to keep their
employees and customers apprised of
other options on where they can go to
skate, he added.
People felt like it was a second
home and I understand that, and our
staff was tremendous, Wescott said.
So theres no question this is a diffi-

cult thing to see go away, so we get


that, we understand that.
Feldman said the Silicon Valley Ice
Skating Association is hopeful that
the communitys interest could serve
as a reason for East Bay Iceland to consider other offers on the property.
With other recreational amenities
from ice rinks to the longstanding
Malibu Grand Prix gone, Feldman said
now is the time to fight to preserve
whats left. She noted the newly created association has also attracted supporters of the Bridgepointe ice rink
and that there is a movement by the
community and acknowledged efforts
by officials from various cities to create a new, regional rink.
That kind of an effort takes a long
time and particularly, finding the land,
thats one of the most difficult aspects
of it and weve got a solid operational facility and we are working on
that rather than the idea that there is
another rink out there in the future,
Feldman said. The San Mateo City
Council ruling [on Bridgepointe] really does show that ice skating is an
important aspect to our community.
Im really hopeful with the growth of
our effort and the financial support
weve received, that well be able to
save Belmont Iceland.

ing lot, restrooms and a convenience


store for visitors; and at times charging a parking fee.
A trial would determine whether
those actions in fact created a right of
access.
Gary Redenbacher, a lawyer for the
group, said, Its a huge win for the
public. Its the next step in gaining
access.
The case is one of two lawsuits originating in San Mateo County Superior
Court concerning access to the beach.
In the second case, filed by an organization called the Surfrider Foundation,
Superior Court Judge Barbara Mallach
ruled that the closure of the beach
amounted legally to a coastal development, and that Khosla could not change
public access without obtaining a
development
permit
from the
California Coastal Commission.
Khoslas companies are now appealing that ruling to the Court of Appeal.
The filing of briefs has not been completed and a hearing on the case has not
yet been scheduled.
Redenbacher said he did not know
how soon a trial will be held on the
Friends of Martins Beach lawsuit.

The appeals court overturned a conclusion in which Superior Court Judge


Gerald Buchwald said the Deeney families actions did not create a right of
public access.
But in a second part of Wednesdays
decision, the appeals court ruled
against Friends of Martins Beach and
in favor of Khoslas companies on
another issue.
The court said the group could not
base a claim to public access on an
1879 provision of the California
Constitution that guarantees a public
right of way to navigable waters along
the California case.
The panel said that in the case of
Martins Beach, the constitutional provision was preempted by the 1851
Treaty of Guadelupe Hidalgo with
Mexico, which guarantees preservation of property rights granted by
Mexico before 1851.
Redenbacher said he plans to appeal
that part of the decision to the
California Supreme Court.
Dori Yob, a lawyer for Khoslas companies, said in a statement that they
view this decision as a win for Khosla
and for all coastal property owners.

The final public sk ate at Belmont


Iceland runs 11 a. m. to 5 p. m.
Saturday, April 30. Visit www.facebook . com/Sav eBelmontIceland or
e
m
a
i
l
sav ebelmonticeland@gmail. com for
more information about the Silicon
Valley Ice Sk ating Association.

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Calendar
THURSDAY, APRIL 28
Age Well Drive Smart Seminar. 9
a.m. to noon. Magnolia Senior Center,
601 Grand Ave., Half Moon Bay. RSVP
required. To RSVP or for more information call 363-4572.

a.m. 757 San Mateo Ave., San Bruno.


Featuring an omelet bar, pancakes,
French toast, bacon, juice, coffee and
more. $10 per person, $6 for each
child under 10. Proceeds are used to
support local veterans.

Is the Devil Real? 9:15 a.m. 1095


Cloud Ave., Menlo Park. Lifetree Caf
Menlo Park hosts an hourlong conversation discussing the reality of the
devil. For more information call 8545897.

Free Shred and E-Scrap Recycling


Event. 9 a.m. to noon. Menlo Park
Corporation Yard, 333 Burgess Drive,
Menlo Park. Residents are encouraged to take advantage of the free
Community Shred and Electronic
Scrap (E-Scrap) Recycling events held
annually by RethinkWaste and
Recology San Mateo County on
behalf of their participating communities. For more information email
cleonhardt@rethinkwaste.org or call
802-3509.

ESL Conversation Club. 10 a.m. to 11


a.m. Belmont Library, 1110 Alameda
de las Pulgas, Belmont. Drop into this
relaxed setting to practice speaking
and reading English. For more information email belmont@smcl.org.
Treating
and
Preventing
Depression, Anxiety and Isolation.
Noon to 1 p.m. 1044 Middlefield
Road, Redwood City. Participants will
learn what they can do to take charge
and better manage excessive worry,
stress and persistent feelings of sadness and fatigue that may be interfering with quality of life. For more information
email
rkutler@redwoodcity.org.
Commission
on
Disabilities,
General Meeting. 3 p.m. Health
System, 225 37th Ave., San Mateo. The
CEO of SamTrans will answer questions about Redi-Wheels, SamTrans
and paratransit services.
Women and Stroke. 3 p.m. to 4 p.m.
Little House, 800 Middle Ave., Menlo
Park. For more information go to
www.PacificStrokeAssociation.org.
Peninsula Girls Chorus Auditions. 5
p.m. to 7 p.m. 1223 Howard Ave.,
Burlingame. Auditions are for singers
from South San Francisco to
Mountain View. For entry to PGC in
September 2016. PGC is open to all
girls, ages 6-18 who love to sing. For
more information call 347-2351.
Community Poetry Celebration. 7
p.m. Belmont Library, 1110 Alameda
de las Pulgas, Belmont. A celebration
of National Poetry Month will feature
a prize ceremony for the Poetry
Contest winners, an all-ages poetry
recital and the attendance of the
Belmont Poet Laureate. For more
information
email
belmont@smcl.org.
Waterwise
Irrigation
and
Landscaping. 7 p.m. and 8:30 p.m.
480 Primrose Road, San Mateo.
Master Gardener Julie Montanari will
explain how to change a conventional irrigation system into one that
saves water and money, and shell
offers tips on selecting water-wise
plants, rain water storage and graywater. Go to cecburlingame.org to
learn more.
FRIDAY, APRIL 29
Infidelity: Why Did This Happen?
And What Now? 7:30 a.m. Crystal
Springs Golf Course, 6650 Golf Course
Drive, Burlingame. $15 with breakfast
included. Sponsored by the San
Mateo Sunrise Rotary Club. For more
information call 515-5891.
Talk to a Pharmacist. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Twin Pines Senior and Community
Center, 20 Twin Pines Lane, Belmont.
The San Mateo County Pharmacists
Assn. will be on-site at the Senior
Showcase Fair to answer your questions about medications. Free. For
more information call 344-5200.
Senior Showcase Information Fair.
9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Twin Pines Senior and
Community Center, 20 Twin Pines
Lane, Belmont. Meet over 35 seniorrelated services at this second annual
free community event. Call 344-5200
for more.
Coloring and Coffee for Adults. 10
a.m. to noon. Belmont Library, 1110
Alameda de las Pulgas, Belmont.
Color a page or two and enjoy some
refreshments and conversation.
Coloring sheets and colored pencils
will be provided. For more information email belmont@smcl.org.
Asian Pacific American Film
Festival. 6:30 p.m. 1700 W. Hillsdale
Blvd., San Mateo. College of San
Mateo Ethnic Studies Department is
hosting their Seventh Annual Asian
Pacific American Film Festival. Come
for three film screenings and live performances. Call 574-6614 for more
information.
Tenth Anniversary Celebration.
6:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. 1110 Alameda de
las Pulgas, Belmont. The evening will
include: cake and champagne, guided library tours, a screening of The
Making of the Belmont Library film,
and 3-D printing demonstrations. For
more
information
email
belmont@smcl.org.
Keith Andrew and Darryl Walker in
Concert. 8:30 p.m. 863 Main St.,
Redwood City. Andrew is a Bay Area
guitarist and Walker is a national
recording artist. Tickets start at $22.
For more information call 679-8184.
SATURDAY, APRIL 30
San Bruno American Legion Post
No. 409 Breakfast. 8:30 a.m. to 11

Craft Fair and Flea Market. 9 a.m. to


3 p.m. 1300 Fifth Ave., Belmont. Join
the Good Sheperd Episcopal Church
to pick up gifts for spring events and
holidays. For more information email
admin@goodsheperdbelmont.org.
Celebrate Earth Day. 10 a.m. to 2
p.m. Burton Park, 1070 Cedar St., San
Carlos. Celebrate San Carlos Earth
Day with a fun and informative event
featuring vendors and organizations.
Musical entertainment for the family
to enjoy by Octopretzel, performing
live on stage. Enter a raffle to win ecofriendly prizes and enjoy edibles from
a variety of food trucks. For more
information email adrenne@sustainablesanmateo.org.
Walk with a Doc. 10 a.m. to 11 a.m.
Bedwell Bayfront Park, Menlo Park.
Come out and enjoy a stroll with
physician volunteers and chat about
health and wellness topics along the
way. All ages and fitness levels welcome. Free. Walkers receive complimentary bottled water and a healthy
snack. Every Saturday through Oct. 15
(excluding May 28, July 2 and Sept. 3).
Visit smcma.org/walkwithadoc for
more info and to sign up.
Spring Open Studio. 10 a.m. to 5
p.m. 16 Coalmine View, Portola Valley.
Celebrating Lees 400th kiln firing.
Come observe his textured and functional ware, strongly influenced by
his participation in ceramic workshops and symposiums in Asia. For
more
information
visit
www.LeeMiddleman.com.
Postal Hiring Workshop. 10:30 a.m.
1630 S. Delaware St., San Mateo. The
San Mateo post office will be hosting
a how-to workshop to help job applicants navigate the U.S. Postal Service
online application process. For more
information call (415) 550-5710.
Foster Family Fair. 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Central Park Recreation Center, 50 E.
Fifth Ave., San Mateo. Find out information about what it takes to
become a licensed foster family. For
more
information
contact
stephanie.mattero@star-vista.org.
Zero Waste Lifestyle. 11 a.m. to
Noon. 150 San Mateo Road, Half
Moon Bay. Come for a discussion
about ideas and inspiration to reduce
your ecological footprint. For more
information email patti@bondmarcom.com.
Family Fun Day Carnival. 11 a.m. to
4 p.m. 751 Alameda de las Pulgas. The
playground, lawns and verandas of
the Congregational Church of
Belmont will be transformed into a
playland. The fundraiser will feature
carnival games and activities. For
more information call 593-4547.
Bunanza: A Rabbit Adoption
Extravaganza. 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. 1450
Rollins Road, Burlingame. The
PHS/SPCAs Center for Compassions
second floor will be transformed into
a wonderland filled with adorable
bunnies and rabbits looking for forever homes. Adoption fees 50 percent off. For more information call
340-7022.
Asian Pacific American Film
Festival. 1 p.m. and 7 p.m. 1700 W.
Hillsdale Blvd., San Mateo. College of
San
Mateo
Ethnic
Studies
Department is hosting their Seventh
Annual Asian Pacific American Film
Festival. Come for three film screenings and live performances. For more
information call 574-6614.
Author Talk. 2 p.m. 306 Walnut Ave.,
South San Francisco. Author JoAnn
Semones will discuss her novel Hard
Luck Coast. For more information
email valle@plsinfo.org.
Making Sauerkraut. 2 p.m. to 3 p.m.
150 San Mateo Road, Half Moon Bay.
In this hands-on cooking class, kids
ages 4-12 will learn about the benefits of sauerkraut and have fun making a tasty batch. Kids will take home
a jar of the kraut they made and the
recipe. For more information email
patti@bondmarcom.com.
Neck Wallet Fundraiser. 2 p.m. to 5
p.m. 266 Lorton Ave., Burlingame.
Donate $10 to help local low-income
seniors and receive a free neck wallet.
For more information call 504-7578.
For more events visit
smdailyjournal.com, click Calendar.

COMICS/GAMES

THE DAILY JOURNAL

DILBERT

Thursday April 28, 2016

21

CROSSWORD PUZZLE

HOLY MOLE

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE

ACROSS
1 Monsieurs daughter
6 Length x width
10 Reveries
12 Sullies
14 With hands on hips
15 Outback dweller
16 Gathers owers
18 Fishtail
19 Come in second
21 Bulrush or cattail
23 Brewery tank
24 Extinct bird
26 Oil holder
29 Glom
31 Caesars 506
33 Between ports
35 Read em and !
36 Accomplished
37 Male elephant
38 Mex. miss
40 Actress Vardalos
42 Aunt or bro.
43 Bachelor party
45 Conduit

GET FUZZY

47
50
52
54
58
59
60
61

Tempe coll.
Quiet
Autumn apple
Drawings
Raisin center
African desert
Novelist Ferber
Twig junctures

DOWN
1 Rx monitor
2 Annoy
3 Aloha token
4 Bedside xtures
5 Logo
6 Kept in stitches
7 Home tel.
8 Cushy
9 Opera melody
11 wester
12 Rice wine
13 Ply a needle
17 Yens
19 Rustic roads
20 Furry swimmer

22
23
25
27
28
30
32
34
39
41
44
46
47
48
49
51
53
55
56
57

Grayish
Pledge
Spooky, maybe
Seize the throne
Brawl
Decides on
Mean Amin
Once and for
Parthenon goddess
Tarzans moniker
Car
Baking potato
Pound sound
You bet!
Secondhand
Towel word
FICA number
Traipse about
Before
Eur. airline

4-28-16

PREVIOUS
SUDOKU
ANSWERS

THURSDAY, APRIL 28, 2016


TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Youve got the edge.
Your ability to foresee trends and make quick, sound
decisions will make you the go-to person. Interviews
and meetings look promising.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Dont let anyone entice
you down a path that leads to bad habits, unhealthy
pastimes or unsavory inuences. Discipline and
activities that lead to greater self-awareness will help
you overcome temptation.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) If you look at the bright
side of any situation, you will nd it much easier to
convince others to join in. Use your knowledge and

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.

expertise to bring about positive change.


LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Take the initiative to make
things happen. Personal changes will enhance your
appearance and give you the strength and courage to
improve your life and important relationships.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Participation will be in
your best interest. Attending functions that allow you
to show off your intelligence and skills will put you in a
good position and draw interesting proposals.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Emotional issues are best
thought through before you make a move. Concentrate
on how you can benet. You cant change others, but
you can change yourself.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You can gather
valuable information by attending a function that

4-28-16
Want More Fun
and Games?
Jumble Page 2 La Times Crossword Puzzle Classieds
Tundra & Over the Hedge Comics Classieds
Boggle Puzzle Everyday in DateBook

addresses some of your concerns. If you make creative


suggestions, you will have an opportunity to team up
with someone interesting.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Personal change
will lead to good fortune. Consider the people you have
dealt with in the past and revise your list of friends. Cut
out the middleman and do your own thing.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Youve got
everything going for you, so dont let someone ruin
your plans. Walk away from anyone who shows
signs of procrastination or unpredictability. Speak
up and take action.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) If you look over
personal papers and investments, you will find that
you have more assets than you realize. Invest in

your skills and ideas in order to set your long-term


plans in motion.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Refuse to let anyone
take you for granted or limit what you can do. Get
involved in groups or events that you believe make a
difference. Make your time and effort count.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) Professional concerns
will stir up emotions. Its time to invest in your skills,
knowledge and expertise, as well as to put your
nances in order. Money is heading your way.
COPYRIGHT 2016 United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

22

Thursday April 28, 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.

THEDAILYJOURNAL

107 Musical Instruction


Music Lessons
Sales Repairs Rentals

Bronstein Music
363 Grand Ave, So. San Francisco

(650)588-2502
bronsteinmusic.com
110 Employment

ANSwERING SERvICE
San Carlos answering service is
looking for Dispatchers and Phone
Operators for Night Shifts. A/S experience a must. 650-773-8014

110 Employment

110 Employment

110 Employment

CAREGIvERS

HOUSE CLEANERS NEEDED


Up to $15 per hour. Company Car.
Call Molly Maid at (650)837-9788.
1700 S. Amphlett, #218, San Mateo.

NEwSPAPER INTERNS
JOURNALISM

2 years experience
required.

KYLE'S SERvICE Is looking for a small


engine mechanic $10-$15 an hour,
depending on Experience. Call Kyle
(650)260-2085. 823 Arguelllo St. RWC.

The Daily Journal is looking for interns to do entry level reporting, research, updates of our ongoing features and interviews. Photo interns also welcome.

Immediate placement
on all assignments.

MARKLOGIC CORP in San Carlos, CA


seeks Application Analyst; fax resume to
(650) 655-2310 quoting job #AA016

Call
(650)777-9000

MULTIPLE POSITIONS. San Mateo,


CA. DIRECTOR OF ENGINEERING: MS
in CS or rltd + 1 yr exp in job offered or
rltd. Design software system architecture. VICE PRESIDENT OF RESEARCH: BS in Info Security, Info Sys or
rltd (or 2 yrs of exp in job offered or rltd
in lieu of BS) + 3 yrs exp in job offered or
rltd. Lead research for data security software. MOBILE TEAM LEAD: MS in CS,
CE or rltd + 6 mos exp in job offered or
rltd. Lead dev. of desktop & mobilebased
biz
apps
built
on
OS
technologies. Remotium, Inc.,
hr@remotium.com.

CRYSTAL CLEANING
CENTER
San Mateo, CA

Customer Service
Are you..Dependable, friendly,
detail oriented,
willing to learn new skills?

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

Do you have.Good communication skills, a desire for steady


employment and employment
benefits?

110 Employment
RETAIL -

JEwELERY SALES +
DIAMOND SALES +
STORE MANAGER
Entry up to $13.
Dia Exp up to 20
Mgr. $DOE$ (Please include
salary history)
Benefits-Bonus-No Nights

650-367-6500
FX: 367-6400
jobs@jewelryexchange.com
SALES/MARKETING
INTERNSHIPS
The San Mateo Daily Journal is looking
for ambitious interns who are eager to
jump into the business arena with both
feet and hands. Learn the ins and outs
of the newspaper and media industries.
This position will provide valuable
experience for your bright future.
Email resume
info@smdailyjournal.com

Prep Cook

Please call for an


Appointment: 650-342-6978

Full/Part Time, AM & PM

Kitchen Utility/
Dishwasher

DISPATCH Local dump truck company looking for


full-time Dispatcher with experience.
Computer and clerical abilities. Good
benefits. send resume by email to
gregstrucking@sbcglobal.net or fax to
650-343-9276.

Full time, Evening shift


Please apply in person:
201 Chadbourne Ave.
Millbrae

DUMP TRUCK DRIvER, SM, good pay,


benefits. (650)343-5946 M-F, 8-5.

Caregivers, come grow with us!


No Experience Required
Paid Training Provided
FT/PT excellent FT benefits
Evenings/weekends/vehicle/driving required
($250.00 Sign-on Bonus)
Dont wait come in TODAY Ask for Carol

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

TELEMARKETERS wANTED. Read our


script
for
new
key
tag
products. (650)679-3766.

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

(650) 458-2200
www.homebridgeca.org
1660 S. Amphlett Blvd. #115 in San Mateo

NOW HIRING:
t Banquet Captain t Banquet Server On Call
t Cocktail Server
t Hotel Cleaner t Line Cook PM
AM & PM Shifts Available
Employee Benefits Package

Call Michelle D. (650) 295-6141


1221 Chess Drive Foster City 94010
Love to Drive? Love Seniors? Be a bus driver for seniors!
Class A Commercial Driver with a clean driving record
needed to help seniors enjoy outings, scenic drives, and
get to appointments.
Full Time Porters needed to ensure residents and
families enjoy a clean, comfortable, positive overall
experience from first visit to move-in to lifelong care.
Experience in floor care, changing lightbulbs, dusting,
paint touchup. Afternoon/evenings.
Kensington Place Redwood City is a new community
serving those with Alzheimer's and other types of dementia. All team members must be friendly, flexible team
players, able to learn, and love working with seniors and
extended families with stable work history and good
communication skills with English fluency.
Compensation based on experience. Kensington Place
also offers a full range of benefits including medical,
dental, vision, disability, life insurance, and a generous
paid time off program. Email JobRC@KensingtonSL.com,
fax 650-649-1726, or visit 2800 El Camino Real,
Redwood City for an application.

DRIvERS
wANTED
San Mateo Daily Journal
Newspaper Delivery Routes to businesses and newsracks,
and some apartment buildings. (No residential houses.)
CURRENT CONTRACT OPENINGS FOR:

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Thursday April 28, 2016

THEDAILYJOURNAL
203 Public Notices

203 Public Notices

203 Public Notices

CASE# CIv 538023


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
Erin Aliaga
TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS:
Petitioner: Erin Aliaga filed a petition with
this court for a decree changing name
as follows:
Present name: Hayden Agosto Alliaga
Proposed Name: Agosto Hayden Aliaga
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 May 17, 2016 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: 04/04/2016
/s/ John L. Grandsaert /
Judge of the Superior Court
Dated: 04/04/2016
(Published 04/07/16, 04/14/16,
04/21/16, 04/28/16)

CASE# CIv 538119


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
Xiao Zhang & Shu Lin Pang
TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS:
Petitioner: Xiao Zhang & Shu Lin Pang
filed a petition with this court for a decree
changing name as follows:
Present name: Leo Haosen Zhang
Proposed Name: Leo Kei Zhang
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 May 24, 2016 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: 04/11/2016
/s/ Robert D. Foiles /
Judge of the Superior Court
Dated: 04/11/2016
(Published 04/14/16, 04/21/16,
04/28/16, 05/05/16)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #268766
The following person is doing business
as: Free and Friendly Foods, 1870 Monterey Dr, SAN BRUNO, CA 94066. Registered Owner: 1) Kathlena Rails, 2) Karlton Shelby, same address. The business
is conducted by Copartners. The registrant commenced to transact business
under the FBN on
/s/Kathlena Rails/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 03/29/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
04/07/16, 04/14/16, 04/21/16, 04/28/16)

PLEASE TAKE notice that Millbrae


Station Self Storage located at 210
Adrian Rd. Millbrae CA 94030 intends
to hold an auction of the goods stored
in self-service storage units by the following persons:
Kathy Iannotti, Josh Ryan, Adam Jibreel, Kristopher Anglin, Kareem Rhodes and Bryant Evans.
The sale will occur at the storage facility: Millbrae Station Self Storage on
or after 05/12/2016 at 11:00am. The
description of the contents are household goods, sporting equipment, kitchen cookware, furniture, doll house,
musical equipment etc. . All property
is being stored at the above self-storage facility. This sale or units may be
withdrawn at any time without notice.
Certain terms and conditions apply.
CASH ONLY. See manager for details. This ad will run 04/28/2016,
05/05/2016.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #268816
The following person is doing business
as: California Gardening and, 917 E.
Santa Inez Ave, SAN MATEO, CA
94401. Registered Owner: Jose Avino
Chavez, same address. The business is
conducted by an Individual. The registrant commenced to transact business
under the FBN on NA
/s/Jose Avino Chavez/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 04/05/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
04/07/16, 04/14/16, 04/21/16, 04/28/16)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #268538
The following person is doing business
as: Steak n Shake, 362 E. Market
Street, DALY CITY, CA 94014. Registered Owner: Cowlick, Inc., CA. The
business is conducted by a Corporation.
The registrant commenced to transact
business under the FBN on
/s/Daniel G. Leder/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 03/10/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
04/07/16, 04/14/16, 04/21/16, 04/28/16)

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

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #268820
The following person is doing business
as: L and D Bistro and Catering, 110 Old
County Road #110, BRISBANE, CA
94005. Registered Owner: Leonel
Jaimes Sanchez, 1916 Capital Ave #3,
EAST PALO ALTO, CA 94303. The business is conducted by an Individual. The
registrant commenced to transact business under the FBN on N/A
/s/Leonel Jaimes Sanchez/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 04/06/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
04/07/16, 04/14/16, 04/21/16, 04/28/16)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #268648
The following person is doing business
as: 1) Fusion Productions, 2) Leo Delta,
3723 Haven Ave, Suite 125, MENLO
PARK, CA 94025. Registered Owner:
Jorge A. Madero, 101 Willow St, REDWOOD CITY, CA 94063. The business is
conducted by an Individual. The registrant commenced to transact business
under the FBN on
/s/Jorge A. Madero/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 03/18/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
04/07/16, 04/14/16, 04/21/16, 04/28/16)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #268759
The following person is doing business
as: Risa Latina, 101 Willow St., REDWOOD CITY, CA 94063. Registered
Owner: Lila Vasquez, same address.
The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrant commenced to transact business under the FBN on NA
/s/Lila Vasquez/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 03/29/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
04/07/16, 04/14/16, 04/21/16, 04/28/16)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #268824
The following person is doing business
as: Towne Place Suites Foster City - San
Mateo, 1299 Chess Drive, FOSTER
CITY, CA 94404. Registered Owner:
Fullwel International Group, CA. The
business is conducted by a Corporation.
The registrant commenced to transact
business under the FBN on N/A.
/s/Solomon Tsai/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 04/06/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
04/14/16, 04/21/16, 04/28/16, 05/05/16)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #268627
The following person is doing business
as: 1) Cougar Concrete Drilling Solutions
2) Cougar Drilling, 145 Roosevelt Avenue Apt. 49, REDWOOD CITY, CA
94061. Registered Owner: Crispin Mendoza, same address. The business is
conducted by an Individual. The registrant commenced to transact business
under the FBN on 03/17/16.
/s/Crispin Mendoza/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 03/17/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
04/14/16, 04/21/16, 04/28/16, 05/05/16)

Tundra

Tundra

Tundra

Over the Hedge

Over the Hedge

Over the Hedge

23

203 Public Notices

203 Public Notices

203 Public Notices

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #268730
The following person is doing business
as: Bay Area Pro Shop, 4330 Olympic
Ave, SAN MATEO, CA 94403. Registered Owner: Joshua Tajiri, 2603 Sierra
Village Ct., SAN JOSE, CA 95132. The
business is conducted by an Individual.
The registrant commenced to transact
business under the FBN on
/s/Joshua Tajiri/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 03/28/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
04/14/16, 04/21/16, 04/28/16, 05/05/16)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #268884
The following person is doing business
as: Interrupting Zebra, 602 31st Ave,
SAN MATEO, CA, 94403. Registered
Owner: Tracy Jeenhi Park, same address. The business is conducted by an
Individual. The registrant commenced to
transact business under the FBN on N/A
/s/Tracy Jeenhi Park/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 04/13/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
04/14/16, 04/21/16, 04/28/16, 05/05/16)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #269021
The following person is doing business
as: Bay Builders Home Repair, 426 Second Lane #A, SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94080. Registered Owner:Alberto Sigala, same address. The business is
conducted by an Individual. The registrant commenced to transact business
under the FBN on N/A
/s/Alberto Sigala/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 04/20/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
04/28/16, 05/05/16, 05/12/16, 05/19/16)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #268731
The following person is doing business
as: Bay Area Pro Shop, 4625 Coast
Hwy, PACIFICA, CA 94044. Registered
Owner: Joshua Tajiri, 2603 Sierra Village
Ct., SAN JOSE, CA 95132. The business
is conducted by an Individual. The registrant commenced to transact business
under the FBN on
/s/Joshua Tajiri/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 03/28/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
04/14/16, 04/21/16, 04/28/16, 05/05/16)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #268890
The following person is doing business
as: Belmont Chiropractic Center, 2100
Carlmont Drive, Suite 31, Belmont, CA
94002. Registered Owner: Kendra Blundell, 145 Ansel Lane, Portola Valley, CA
94028. The business is conducted by an
Individual. The registrant commenced to
transact business under the FBN on 427-11
/s/Kendra Blundell/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 04/13/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
04/14/16, 04/21/16, 04/28/16, 05/05/16)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #268973
The following person is doing business
as: Bay Area Refacing, 45 E 40th Ave
#1, SAN MATEO, CA 94403. Registered
Owner(s): John Savala, same address.
The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrant commenced to transact business under the FBN on
/s/John D Savala/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 04/19/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
04/21/16, 04/28/16, 05/05/16, 05/12/16)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #269065
The following person is doing business
as: Mon Cheris ABCs, 274 West 40th
Avenue, SAN MATEO, CA 94403. Registered Owner: Cheri Pearson, same address. The business is conducted by an
Individual. The registrant commenced to
transact business under the FBN on N/A
/s/Cheri Pearson/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 04/26/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
04/28/16, 05/05/16, 05/12/16, 05/19/16)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #269073
The following person is doing business
as: Basic Water Systems, 57 Homer Ln,
MENLO PARK, CA 94025. Registered
Owner: Geoff Van Maastricht, same address. The business is conducted by an
Individual. The registrant commenced to
transact business under the FBN on
1/29/2016
/s/Geoff Van Maastricht/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 04/26/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
04/28/16, 05/05/16, 05/12/16, 05/19/16)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #269054
The following person is doing business
as: Helping Hands First Aid & CPR, 630
Masonic Way #G, BELMONT, CA 94002.
Registered Owner: Hani Abiyounes,
same address. The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrant commenced to transact business under the
FBN on April 25, 2016
/s/Hani Abiyounes/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 04/25/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
04/28/16, 05/05/16, 05/12/16, 05/19/16)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #268866
The following person is doing business
as: Menlo Art & Frame, 865 Santa Cruz
Ave, MENLO PARK, CA, 94025. Registered Owner: Marcy Magatelli, 445 Oak
Grove Ave. #4, MENLO PARK, CA,
94025. The business is conducted by an
Individual. The registrant commenced to
transact business under the FBN on
/s/Marcy Magatelli/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 04/11/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
04/28/16, 05/05/16, 05/12/16, 05/19/16)

24

Thursday April 28, 2016

THEDAILYJOURNAL

203 Public Notices

296 Appliances

303 Electronics

304 Furniture

308 Tools

310 Misc. For Sale

STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF
THE USE OF A FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT 268195
Name of the person abandoning the use
of the Fictitious Business Name: Erich
Wilson. Name of Business: In Pro Per
Legal Document Specialists. Date of
original filing: 2/18/15. Address of Principal Place of Business: 203 E. Bellvue
Ave, SAN MATEO, CA 94401. Registrant(s): Erich Wilson, same address.
The business was conducted by an Individual.
/s/Erich Wilson/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk-Recorder of San Mateo
County on 03/21/16. (Published in the
San Mateo Daily Journal, 04/21/2016,
04/28/2016, 05/05/2016, 05/12/2016).

RIvAL 11/2 quart ice cream maker


(New) $20.(650)756-9516.

46 MITSUBISHI Projector TV, great


condition. $400. (650)261-1541.

INFINITY FLOOR speakers H 38" x W


11 1/2" x D 10" good $50. (650)756-9516

ALUMINUM LADDERS 40ft, $99 for two,


Call (650)481-5296

SHARK FLOOR steamer,exc condition


$45 (650) 756-9516.

BLAUPUNKT AM/FM/CD Radio and Receiver with Detachable Face asking


$100. (650)593-4490

LAwN CHAIRS (4) White, plastic, $8.


each, (415)346-6038

BOSTITCH 16 gage Finish nailer Model


SB 664FN $99 (650)359-9269

ULTRASONIC JEwELRY Cleaning Machine Cleans jewelry, eyeglasses, dentures, keys. Concentrate included. $30
OBO. (650)580-4763

LIGHT OAK Cabinet, 6 ft tall, 3 ft wide, 2


ft deep, door at the bottom. $150.
(650) 871-5524.

CRAFTMAN RADIAL SAw, with cabinet


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

TOASTER OvEN, Black & Decker, 4Slice, 1200W, Toast, Bake, Broil;
TRO480BS - $12 (650) 952-3500
UPRIGHT vACUUM Cleaner, $10. Call
Ed, (415)298-0645 South San Francisco

297 Bicycles
2 BIKES for kids $60. Will email pictures
upon request (650) 537-1095
ADULT BIKES 1 regular and 2 with balloon tires $30 Each (650) 347-2356
MAGNA-GLACIERPOINT 26" 15 speed.
Hardly used . Bluish purple color .$ 59.00
San Mateo 650-255-3514.

210 Lost & Found


FOUND: LADIES watch outside Safeway Millbrae 11/10/14 call Matt,
(415)378-3634
FOUND: RING Silver color ring found
on 1/7/2014 in Burlingame. Parking Lot
M (next to Dethrone). Brand inscribed.
Gary @ (650)347-2301
FOUND: wEDDING BAND Tuesday
September 8th Near Whole Foods, Hillsdale. Pls call to identify. 415.860.1940
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
LOST - Womans diamond ring. Lost
12/18. Broadway, Redwood City.
REWARD! (650)339-2410
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.
LOST SMALL gray and green Parrot.
Redwood Shores. (650)207-2303.

Books

298 Collectibles
1920'S AQUA Glass Beaded Flapper
Purse (drawstring bag) & Faux Pearl
Flapper Collar. $50. 650-762-6048
1940 vINTAGE telephone bench maple
antiques collectibles $75 (650)755-9833
ARIzONA HIGHwAY Collectibles, 564
monthly magazines 1944 - 1991. In Arizona monthly binders best offer.
(650)368-6379
CIGAR BAND, 100 years old $99
(415)867-6444
GEOFFREY BEENE Jacket, unused, unworn, tags , pink, small, sleeveless, zippers, paid $88, $15, (650) 578-9208
LENNOx RED Rose, Unused, hand
painted, porcelain, authenticity papers,
$12.00. (650) 578 9208.
RENO SILvER LEGACY Casino four
rare memorabilia items, casino key, two
coins, small charm. $95. (650)676-0974
SANDY SCOTT Etching. Artists proof.
"Opening Day at Cattail Marsh". Retriever holding pheasant. $99. 650-654-9252.
SCHILLER HIPPIE poster, linen, Sparta
graphics 1968. Mint condition. $600.00.
(650)701-0276

16 BOOKS on History of WWII Excellent


condition. $95 all obo, (650)345-5502

STAR wARS C-3PO mint pair, green tint


(Japan), gold (U.S.) 4 action figures.
$89 650-518-6614

JACK REACHER adventure novels by


lee child great read entire collection. $40
obo (650)591-6842

STAR Wars Hong Kong exclusive, mint


Pote Snitkin 4 green card action figure.
$20 650-518-6614

NICHOLAS SPARKS Hardback Books


2 @ $3.00 each - (650)341-1861
QUALITY BOOKS used and rare. World
& US History and classic American novels. $5 each obo (650)345-5502
STEPHEN KING Hardback Books
2 @ $3.00 each - (650)341-1861

294 Baby Stuff

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

295 Art
AwARD
wINNING
(415)867-6444

Painting

$99.

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
BLACK & Decker Car Vac, Gd. Condition $8 650-952-3500
CHEFMATE TOASTER oven, brand
new, bakes, broils, toasts, adjustable
temperature. $25 OBO. (650)580-4763

NIGHT TABLE, 2 drawers, $20. Will


send pictures. (954)907-0100

CRAFTSMAN RADIAL Arm Saw Stand.


In box. $30. (650)245-7517
DEwALT DRILL/FLASHLIGHT Set $99
My Cell 650-537-1095. Will email pictures upon request.

HAMMOND B-3 Organ and 122 Leslie


Speaker. Excellent condition. $8,500. private owner, (650)349-1172

OUTDOOR wOOD SCREEN - new $80


obo Retail $130 (650)873-8167

OxYGEN ACENTYLENE Heavy Duty


Complete
Welding
Set
$325.00
(650)873-6304

MONARCH UPRIGHT player piano $99


(650) 583-4549

NEw AC/DC adapter, output DC 4.5v,


$5, 650-595-3933

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

ONKYO Av Receiver HT-R570 .Digital


Surround, HDMI, Dolby, Sirius Ready,
Cinema Filter.$95/ Offer 650-591-2393

QUEEN SIzE Sofa bed and love seat,


dark brown
and
beige.
$99
for
both obo 650-279-4948

SHOPSMITH MARK V 50th Anniversary


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

OPTIMUS H36 ST5800 Tower Speaker


36x10x11 $30. (650)580-6324

RECLINER CHAIR blue tweed clean


good $75 Call 650 583-3515

vINTAGE CRAFTSMAN Jig Saw. Circa


1947. $60. (650)245-7517

ORIGINAL AM/FM 1967/68 Honda Radio for $50. (650)593-4490

RECLINING SwIvEL chair almost new


$99 650-766-4858

PIONEER HOUSE Speakers, pair. 15


inch 3-way, black with screens. Work
great. $99.(650)243-8198

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

wILLIAMS #1191 CHROME 2 1/16"


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

MULTITESTER KIT, 20.000 OHMS/volt


DC. never used in box $20.00
650-9924544

SONY DHG-HDD250 DVR and programable remote.


Record OTA. Clock set issues $99 650595-8855

OAK SIX SHELF Book Case 6FT 4FT


$55 (650)458-8280

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


TEAK-vENEER COMPUTER desk with
single drawer and stacked shelves. $30
obo. 650-465-2344

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

vINTAGE LARGE Marble Coffee Table,


round. $75.(650)458-8280

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


$60. (650)421-5469

wALNUT CHEST, small (4 drawer with


upper bookcase $50. (650)726-6429

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


(650)421-5469

wHITE wICKER Shelf unit, adjustable.


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

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


(650)421-5469
vINTAGE zENITH radio, model L516b
$75. (650)421-5469

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


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

wILLIAMS #40251, 4 PC. Tool Set


(Hose Remover, Cotter Puller, Awl, Scraper). Mint. $29. 650-218-7059.

309 Office Equipment


NEAT RECEIPTS Mobile Scanner new
in box $79, call 650-324-8416

310 Misc. For Sale


"MOTHER-IN-LAw TONGUES" plants,
3 in 5-gal cans. $10.00 each. 650/5937408.
8 TRACKS, billy Joel, Zeppelin, Eagles
,Commodores, more.40 @ $4 each , call
650-393-9908
GAME "BEAT THE ExPERTS" never
used $8., (408)249-3858

306 Housewares

299 Computers

ANTIQUE MAHOGONY double bed with


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

BED SPREAD (queen size), flower design, never used. $22. Pls call
650-345-9036

ANTIQUE MOHAGANY Bookcase. Four


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

CHRISTMAS TREE China, Fairfield


Peace on Earth. Complete Set of 12 (48
pieces) $75. 650-493-5026

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


$90.
(650)867-7433
LIONEL wESTERN Union Pass car and
dining car. New OB $99 650-368-7537

RECORDABLE CD-R 74, Sealed, Unopened, original packaging, Samsung, 12X,


(650) 578 9208

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


condition. Good for bedroom.$95.
(650)595-4617

300 Toys

BEIGE SOFA $99. Excellent Condition


(650) 315-2319

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

3-STORY BARBIE Dollhouse with spiral


staircase and elevator. $60. (650)5588142

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

DECORATIvE LAMP & 8"x8" mirror, exc


cond $30 (650)756-9516.Daly City.

BROwN wOODEN bookshelf H 3'4"X W


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

PLASTIC DUAL-LID Underbed Storage


Container with wheels, 31"x15"x5-1/2",
$7 (650) 952-3500.

CHAIR Designer gray, beige, white.


Excellent condition. $59. 650-573-6895

PRE-LIT 7 ft Christmas tree. Three sections, easy to assemble. $50. 650 349
2963.

PUzzLES 300-1000 ps perf condition 26


for $2.00 ea. 650-583-4058

CHAIRS - Two oversized saucer (moon)


chairs. Black. $30 each. (650)5925864.

STAR wARS one 4 orange card action figure, Momaw Nadon (Hammerhead). $8 Steve 650-518-6614

CHAIRS 2 Blue Good Condition $50


OBO (650)345-5644

TABLECLOTH. 84 round hand crocheted and embroidered tablecloth with 12


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

CHILDS TABLE (Fisher Price) and Two


Chairs. Like New. **SOLD**

TULIP CHAMPAGNE glasses, perfect


condition, 11 for $15.00 (650)348-2306

STAR wARS one 4 orange card action figure, Luke Skywalker (Ceremonial) $10 Steve 650-518-6614
STAR wARS SDCC Stormtrooper
Commander $29 OBO Dan,
650-303-3568 lv msg

302 Antiques

BEAUTIFUL AND UNIQUE Victorian


Side Sewing Table, All original. Rosewood. Carved. ExCELLENT CONDITION! $350. (650)815-8999.
MAHOGANY ANTIQUE Secretary desk,
72 x 40 , 3 drawers, Display case, bevelled glass, $700. (650)766-3024
OLD vINTAGE Wooden Sea Captains
Tool Chest 35 x 16 x 16, $65
(650)591-3313

GULBRANSEN BABY GRAND PIANO Appraised @ $5450., want $1800 obo,


(650)343-4461

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

MOTOROLA BRAvO MB 520 (android


4.1 upgrade) smart phone 35$ 8GB SD
card Belmont (650)595-8855

ANTIQUE DINING table for six people


with chairs $99. (650)580-6324

LARGE STUFFED ANIMALS - $3 each


Great for Kids (650) 952-3500

311 Musical Instruments


BALDwIN GRAND PIANO, 6 foot, excellent condition, $8,500/obo. Call
(510)784-2598

HAILUN PIANO for sale, brand new, excellent condition. $6,000. (650)308-5296

DYNAGLOPRO
HEATER.
Phone: 650-591-8062

STAR wARS Lando Calrissian 4 orange card action figure, autographed by


Billy Dee Williams. $50 Steve 650-5186614

AMERICAN GIRL 18 doll, Jessica,


blond/blue. new in box, $65 (505)-2281480 local.

vINTAGE wHITE Punch Bowl/Serving


Bowl Set with 10 cups plus one extra
$30. (650)873-8167

$40.00

OAK BOOKCASE, 30"x30" x12". $25.


(650)726-6429

304 Furniture

ELECTRIC FIREPLACE on wheels in


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

JACK LALANE juicer $25 or best offer.


650-593-0893.

LEFT-HAND ERGONOMIC keyboard


with 'A-shape' key layout Num pad, $20
(650)204-0587

NEw TwIN Mattress set plus frame


$30.00 (650) 347-2356

CRAFTSMAN JIGSAw 3.9 amp. with


variable speeds $65 (650)359-9269

wOODEN MINI bar with 2 bar stools


$75. (415)265-3395

ANTIQUE ITALIAN lamp 18 high, $70


(650)387-4002

ICE MAKER brand new $90. (415)2653395

FIRST ALERT CO600 Carbon Monoxide


Plug-In Alarm. Simple to use, New in
pkg. $18 (650) 952-3500

LOvESEAT Designer gray, beige,


white. Excellent condition. $89. 650-5736895

CRAFTSMAN 9" Radial Arm Saw with 6"


dado set. No stand. $55 (650)341-6402

wOOD FURNITURE- one end table and


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

CIRRUS STEAM mop model SM212B 4


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

ELEGANT ELECTRIC Fireplace on


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

DECK STEREO receiver with deck CD


player with 2 spkrs. Exc/co. $45.
(650)992-4544

LOvE SEAT, Upholstered pale yellow


floral $99. (650)574-4021

vINTAGE zENITH radio, model yrb-791 1948, $ 70. (650)421-5469

MONITOR FOR computer. Kogi - 15".


Model L5QX. $25. (650)592-5864.

GRACO DOUBLE Stroll $90 My Cell


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

COMPLETE COLOR photo developer


Besler Enlarger, Color Head, trays, photo
tools $50/ 650-921-1996

COAT/HAT STAND, solid wood, for your


mountain cabin/house. $50. (650)5207045
COFFEE TABLE Woven bamboo with
glass top. $99. 650-573-6895
COMPUTER DESK $25 , drawer for keyboard, 40" x 19.5" (619)417-0465
COMPUTER SwIvEL CHAIR. Padded
Leather. $80. (650) 455-3409
COUCH Designer gray, beige, white.
Excellent condition. $99. 650-573-6895
CUSTOM MADE wood sewing storage
cabinet perfect condition $75. (650)4831222
DINETTE TABLE 35"x60" with 3 adjust
leafs $ 30 (650)756-9516.
DINETTE TABLE with Chrome Legs: 36"
x58" (with one leaf 11 1/2") - $50.
(650)341-5347
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
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
ENTERTAINMENT CENTER in roller4'wx5'h glass door, shelf /drawers
ex/co $45. (650)992-4544
ESPRESSO TABLE 30 square, 40 tall,
$95 (650)375-8021
FOLDING TABLES (2), 500# capacity.
24"x48 Laminate top. $99. (650)5914141
GLASS TOP dining table w/ 6 chairs
$75. (415)265-3395
IKEA POANG chair, exc. $25. Will send
picture. (954)907-0100
IKEA wOOD table, 36 like new. Can
send picture $50. (954)907-0100
ILOvE SEAT, exc $50. Will send
ture. (954)907-0100

pic-

SOLID TEAK floor model 16 wine rack


with turntable $60. (650)592-7483

HARLEY DAvIDSON black phone, perfect condition, $65., (650) 867-2720


INCUBATOR, $99, (650)678-5133
LIONEL CHRISTMAS Boxcars 2005,
2006, 2007 New OB $90 lot 650-3687537
LIONEL CHRISTMAS Holiday expansion Set. New OB $99 650-368-7537

MISSION HIGH School (S.F. ) June


1928 year book. Good condition, no autographs. $20.00. 650-588-0842.
MISSION HIGH School (S.F.) leather
belt w/ metal buckle, late 1930's. $10.
650-588-0842.
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

UPRIGHT PIANO. In tune. Fair condition. $300 OBO (650) 533-4886.


YAMAHA PIANO, Upright, Model M-305,
$750. Call (650)572-2337

312 Pets & Animals


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
ONE KENNEL Cab ll one Pet Taxi animal carriers 26x16. Excellent cond. $60..
650-593-2066
OPEN HOUSE to see FRENCH BULLDOG puppies in San Mateo Every weekend $2,500 and up. Call or Text
(650)274-2241.
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

316 Clothes
100% wOOL brown dress pants, 42X30
$8 650-595-3933
DAINESE BOOTS Zipper & Velcro Closure, Cushioned Ankle, Excellent Condition Unisex EU40 $55 (650)357-7484

FAUx FUR Coat Woman's brown multi


color
in
excellent
condition
3/4
length $50 650-692-8012
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
MEN'S SKI boots size 10, $75.
(650)520-1338
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
PERRY ELLIS tan cotton pants 42X30,
$9 650-595-3933
PRADA DAYPACK / Purse, Sturdy black
nylon canvas, like new, made in Italy,
$35 (650)591-6596

TASCO LUMINOvA Telescope.with tripod stand, And extra Lenses. Good condition.$90. call 650-591-2393

vELvET DRAPE, 100% cotton, new


beautiful burgundy 82"X52" W/6"hems:
$45 (415)585-3622

vASE wITH flowers 2 piece good for the


Holidays, $25., (650) 867-2720

vINTAGE 1970S Grecian made dress,


size 6-8, $35 (650)873-8167

Thursday April 28, 2016

THEDAILYJOURNAL
317 Building Materials

318 Sports Equipment

32 PAvING/EDGING bricks, 12 x 5x1


Brown, smooth surface, good clean condition. $32. (650)588-1946 San Bruno

vINTAGE GOLF Set for $75 My Cell


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

BRAND NEw IPAY Decking Wood.


$3500. (650) 344-1548.

wET SUIT - medium size, $95., call for


info (650)851-0878

CULTURED MARBLE 2 tone BR vanity


counter top. New toe skin/ scribe. 29 x
19 $300 (408)744-1041

wOMEN'S LADY Cougar gold iron set


set - $25. (650)348-6955

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.

318 Sports Equipment


GOLF BALLS Like New, $10 dozen
(415)867-6444
GOLF CLUBS, 2 sets of $30 & $60.
(415)265-3395
LADIES MCGREGOR Golf Clubs
Right handed with covers and pull cart
$150 o.b.o. (650)344-3104
MEN'S ROSSIGNOL Skis.
good condition, 650-341-0282.

$95.00,

MENS NORDICA ski boots for sale, size


10, $60.00, 650-341-0282.
NEw 8" tactical knife, one hand open
$19 650-595-3933
POwER PLUS Exercise Machine
(650)368-3037

$99

REBOUNDER - with dvd and support


bar, carry bag $45. (650)868-8902
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

wOMEN'S NORDICA ski boots, size 8


1/2. $50 650-592-2047

345 Medical Equipment


ADULT DIAPERS, disposable, 10 bags,
20 diapers per bag, $10 each. (650)3420935
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.

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

380 Real Estate Services

620 Automobiles

670 Auto Service

HOMES & PROPERTIES

GOT AN OLDER
CAR, BOAT, OR Rv?

MENLO ATHERTON
AUTO REPAIR
WE SMOG ALL CARS

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.

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

620 Automobiles

BATH TRANSFER bench, back rest and


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

379 Open Houses

2007 BMw x-5, One Owner, Excel. Condition Sports package 3rd row seats
$21,995 obo Call (650)520-4650

COMMODE TOILET Seat with arms &


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

OPEN HOUSE
LISTINGS

FOLDING
wHEELCHAIR
(650)867-6042

Dont lose money


on a trade-in or
consignment!

List your Open House


in the Daily Journal.

FREE CLEAN Electric Bed, head raises.


No matress, you haul. Redwood City.
650 207-6568
NOvA wALKER with storage box &
seat; never used; already assembled;
$70.00 cash only. (650)755-8238

Reach over 76,500


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

QUICKIE wHEELCHAIR - Removable


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

Call (650)344-5200

Sell your vehicle in the


Daily Journals
Auto Classifieds.
Just $45
well run it
til you sell it!
Reach 76,500 drivers
from South SF to
Palo Alto
Call (650)344-5200
ads@smdailyjournal.com

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

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle


Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

ACROSS
1 Detergent with
Oxi Booster
4 DVD precursor
7 Scout, to Tonto
12 Face the Nation
group
15 My moms
gonna kill me!
17 Uncle relative?
18 Golden Globe,
e.g.
19 Nail care target
21 Congressional
period
22 Vocal quartet
member
23 Use WhatsApp,
say
24 Junior nav. officer
25 Long time follower
27 Manipulator
29 Cut
31 Roll of dough
32 Popular weekend
destination for
many Northern
Californians
33 Deceitful
37 Remove
39 Drop (out)
41 Russian lettuce?
42 Fog machine
substance
44 Average
46 Ballerinas hairdo
47 Prohibit
48 Offensive to
some, for short
49 Rescue squad
initials
50 ___ Fridays
53 Speak harshly
55 Fine by me
57 Salon piece
59 Swallowed ones
pride
62 Chinese cooking
staple
64 __ were the
days
65 Not working
66 Lone Survivor
military group
67 Speak, old-style
68 Not strict
69 One of two in
Pompeii
DOWN
1 Paradise Lost,
e.g.
2 Marinara brand

3 Singer whose
last name is Pig
Latin for a slang
word for money
4 Workshop gadget
5 Derby or boater
6 Huge success
7 Toyota Center
team
8 Laudatory verses
9 Tighten, as laces
10 Kept quiet
11 Paradises
13 Really bad
14 Activity for some
ex-presidents
16 Good buys
20 Get rid of
23 Appears
unexpectedly,
and a hint to this
puzzles circles
25 Knocked out
26 Tootsie actress
28 Co-producer of
the art rock
album High Life
30 Little, in Marseille
34 London locale
thats a music
industry eponym
35 Americas Got
Talent judge
Heidi

36 Deep desires
38 Lust, e.g.
40 Weigh station
unit
43 Praises
45 Pick out of a
crowd
50 Spanish
appetizers
51 Actress
Scacchi
52 Birthplace of the
violin

54 Peninsular capital
56 Icy Hot target
58 Supermodel
Sastre
59 Longtime
teammate of
Derek
60 Nobel Peace
Center locale
61 From Green Bay
to St. Paul
63 Often rolled-over
item

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

xwordeditor@aol.com

By C.C. Burnikel
2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

04/28/16

04/28/16

Do the humane thing.


Donate it to the
Humane Society.
Call 1- 800-943-8412

1279 El Camino Real

Menlo Park

650 -273-5120
www.MenloAthertonAutoRepair

625 Classic Cars


470 Rooms

1993 CHEvY Station Wagon, 1 owner


64,000 miles $3,900 (650)342-0852.

$70.

25

1955 CHEvY BEL AIR 2 door, Standard


Transmission V8 Motor, non-op $22,000
obo. (650)952-4036.
1969 CHEvY CORvETTE 350 V/8
4speed Flared Fenders-Retro Mod
$22,500 obo Call (650)369-8013
86 CHEvY CORvETTE. Automatic.
93,000 miles. Sports Package.$6,800
obo. (650) 952-4036.
88 BMw 635 CSI Silver Coupe 2dr.
$5,000. 135,000 miles. (650)347-3418.
CHEvY 65 Impala 2DR Coupe. 113K
miles. 4 BL Carb. $8,500.
(415) 412-1292.
FORD 63 thunderbird Hardtop, 390 engine, Leather Interior. Will consider
$4,500 /OBO (650)364-1374
FORD 64 Falcon. 4DR Sedan. 6 cyl.
auto/trans $3,500.00. (650) 570-5780.

630 Trucks & SUvs


CHEvROLET 2014 express 2500 cargo
van 31,000 miles excellent cond.
$24,000 or trade class B or smaller
camper (650)591-8062
DODGE 01 DURANGO, V-8 SUV, 1
owner, dark blue, CLEAN! $3,500/obo.
Call (650)492-1298
MAzDA 04 Tribute, Limited, 175K miles,
$4,400. (650)342-6342

640 Motorcycles/Scooters
BMw 03 F650 GS, $3899 OBO. Call
650-995-0003

CHEvY 10 HHR . 68K. EXCELLENT


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

NEw M/C tire Metzeler Z6 120/70ZR-18


$50 650-595-3933

CHEvY HHR 08 - Grey, spunky car


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

670 Auto Service

DODGE
99 Van, Good Condition,
$5,500, childs play three, call
(650)481-5296
FORD 98 Mustang. GT Convertible.
Summer fun car. Green, Tan, Leather interior, Excellent Condition. 128,000
Miles. $3700. (650) 440-4697.
MERCURY 09 Marquis. 4 Door 11,000
miles. White. Like new. $16,000.
(650) 726-9610.

AA SMOG
Complete Repair & Service
$29.75 plus certificate fee
(most cars)

869 California Drive .


Burlingame

(650) 340-0492

670 Auto Parts


BRIDGESTONE TURANzA RFT (Run
Flat) 205/55/16 EL42 used 70% left $80.
(650)483-1222
BRIDGESTONE TURANzA RFT (Run
Flat) 205/55/16 EL 42 All Season Like
New $100. (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


wanted 62-75 Chevrolets
Novas, running or not
Parts collection etc.
So clean out that garage
Give me a call
Joe 650 342-2483

26

Thursday April 28, 2016

Cabinetry

THEDAILYJOURNAL

Concrete

Construction

Gardening

Hauling

Landscaping

J.B GARDENING

AAA RATED!

NATE LANDSCAPING

Maintenance New Lawns


Clean Ups Sprinklers
Fences Tree Trim
Concrete & Brick Work
Driveway Pavers
Retaining Walls

(650)400-5604
LAwN MAINTENANCE
Drought Tolerant Planting
Drip Systems, Rock Gardens
Pressure Washing,
and lots more!
Call Robert
STERLING GARDENS
650-703-3831
Lic #751832

Construction

Housecleaning

CALEDONIAN
MASONRY INC

Cleaning

CONSUELOS HOUSE
CLEANING

BBQ Season Coming!


We can design your
outdoor living
experience.
*BBQs *Pizza Ovens
*Patios *Flagstone
*Concrete/Foundation

Bi-Weekly/Once a Month,
Moving In & Out
28 yrs. in Business

LEMUS CONSTRUCTION
(650)271-3955
Dry-rot & Termite Repair

Free Estimates, 15% off First visit

(650)219-4066
Lic#1211534

Deck Repair & New Construction


Staircase Repair & New Construction

Siding Installation
Bathroom Remodel & Painting
Free Estimates Fully Insured
Lic. #913461

PENINSULA
CLEANING

INDEPENDENT
HAULERS

$40 & UP
HAUL
Since 1988/Licensed & Insured
Monthly Specials
Fast, Dependable Service

Free Estimates

* Tree Service * Fence


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

Free Estimate

650.353.6554
Lic. #973081

A+ BBB Rating

(650)341-7482

SEASONAL LAWN

MAINTENANCE
CHAINEY HAULING
Junk & Debris Clean Up
Furniture / Appliance / Disposal
Tree / Bush / Dirt / Concrete Demo

Starting at $40 & Up


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

Drought Tolerant Planting


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

RESIDENTIAL AND COMMERICAL

Call For Free Estimate:


Decks & Fences

(650) 525-9154

MARSH FENCE
& DECK CO.
State License #377047
Licensed Insured Bonded
Fences - Gates - Decks
Stairs - Retaining Walls
10-year guarantee
Quality work w/reasonable prices
Call for free estimate
(650)571-1500

Electricians

1-800-344-7771

Painting

JON LA MOTTE

PAINTING

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

ALL ELECTRICAL
SERvICE

CONTRERAS HANDYMAN
SERvICES

for all your electrical needs

Fences Tree Trimming


Decks Concrete Work
Kitchen and Bathroom
remodeling

650-322-9288

Concrete

bondEd
FREE ESTIMATES

Interior & Exterior


Quality Work, Reasonable
Rates, Free Estimates

(650)368-8861
Lic #514269

MICHAELS
PAINTING
Serving the Peninsula
since 1989

(650) 574-0203
lic#628633

Free Estimates

ELECTRIC SERVICE GROUP

AAA CONCRETE DESIGN


Stamps Color Driveways
Patios Masonry Block walls
Landscaping

Quality Workmanship,
Free Estimates

(650)533-0187

(650)288-9225
(650)350-9968
contrerashandy12@yahoo.com

INSIDE OUT
ELECTRIC, INC
Residential/Commercial Service
Electrical Panel Upgrades
Remodels / New Construction
Trusted Owner Operated
since 2002.
Lic #808182

(650)515-1123

Lic# 947476

NICK MEJIA PAINTING

SENIOR HANDYMAN
Specializing in any size project

Painting Electrical
Carpentry Dry Rot
40 Yrs. Experience

Retired Licensed Contractor

650-201-6854

Have you been


featured in our
newspaper?
smdailyjournal.com
now offering live links
to your website!

THE vILLAGE
CONTRACTOR
Licensed General and
Painting Contractor
Int/Ext Painting Carpentry
Sheetrock, Tile, Stucco & Remodels
Lic#979435
CALL FOR GREAT RATES!

(650)701-6072

Improve access to your web site and SEO.


For a price quote, please email
info@smdailyjournal.com along with a
link to the story you would be
interested in enhancing.
Leading local news coverage on the Peninsula

Large & Small Jobs


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

(415)971-8763
Lic. #479564

vICTOR FENCES
& HOUSE PAINTING
-Interior
-Exterior
-Residential -Commercial
Power washing - Driverways,
sidewalks, gutters
(650) 296-8088 | (209) 915-1570

Hardwood Floors

T&A
Hardwood
Floors
WE BEAT ANY PRICE

If your business or organization has been


featured in the pages of the Daily Journal,
we now offer you the capability to have
linking from the story directly to your site.

A+ Member BBB Since 1975

Installed Refinished
Pergo
Laminate
OLD FLOORS MADE
LIKE NEW
FREE ESTIMATES
Call John Ngo
415-350-2788

Hauling

CHEAP
HAULING!
Light moving!
Haul Debris!
650-583-6700

Plumbing
BELMONT 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

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

Thursday April 28, 2016

THEDAILYJOURNAL

Plumbing

Roofing

MEYER
PLUMBING
SUPPLY

Tree Service

Hillside Tree

Service

Toilets, Sinks, Vanities,


Faucets, Water heaters,
Whirlpools and more!
Wholesale Pricing &
Closeout Specials.

LOCALLY OWNED
Family Owned Since 2000
Trimming

2030 S Delaware St
San Mateo

Pruning

Shaping

650-350-1960

Large

Removal
Grinding

Stump

Roofing

Free
Estimates

REED
ROOFERS
License #931457

(650) 591-8291

Cypress Lawn
1370 El Camino Real
Colma
(650)755-0580
www.cypresslawn.com
Computer

COMPUTER
PROBLEMS?
Viruses, lost data, hardware or
software issues? Contact Geeks
On Site! 24/7 Service. Friendly
Repair Experts. Macs and PCs
Call for FREE diagnosis.
1-800-715-9068

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.

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

window washing

WINDOW
WASHING

The Daily Journal


to get 10% off
for new customers

Call for Free Estimate

LASTING
IMPRESSIONS
ARE OUR FIRST
PRIORITY

windows

Mention

Serving the entire Bay Area


Residential & Commercial

Cemetery

Tile

27

Call Luis (650) 704-9635

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

I - SMILE
Implant & Orthodontict Center
1702 Miramonte Ave. Suite B
Mountain View

Exceptional.
Reliable. Inovative
650-282-5555

MILLBRAE SMILE CENTER

valerie de Leon, DDS


Implant, Cosmetic and
Family Dentistry
Spanish and Tagalog Spoken

(650)697-9000
15 El Camino Real,
MILLBRAE, CA

Dental Services

THE CAKERY
A touch of Europe

RUSSO DENTAL CARE


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

1308 Burlingame Ave


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

Fitness

www.russodentalcare.com

LEARN TO
BELLY DANCE!
Fun,fast way to get in shape
New classes starting in San Mateo

(650) 483- 4046

PANCHO vILLA
TAQUERIA
Because Flavor Still Matters
365 B Street
San Mateo
(650) 343-4123
www.smpanchovilla.com

SKIN TASTIC
MEDICAL LASER
Cosmetic Spa Cool Sculpting
Laser&Cosmetic Dermatology
1838 El Camino Rl#130
Burlingame. 650 542-7055
www.skintasticmedicalspa.com

(650)583-2273
Food

Health & Medical

www.alisabellydance.com

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

(650) 490-4414
www. SanBrunoMartialArts.com

Furniture

CALIFORNIA
STOOLS*BAR*DINETTES

(650)591-3900

Tons of Furniture to match


your lifestyle

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

DENTAL
IMPLANTS
Save $500 on
Implant Abutment &
Crown Package.
Call Millbrae Dental
for details
650-583-5880

EYE ExAMINATIONS

579-7774
1159 Broadway
Burlingame
Dr. Andrew Soss
OD, FAAO
www.Dr-AndrewSoss.net

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

650-583-5880
Millbrae Dental

Marketing

GROw
YOUR SMALL BUSINESS
Get free help from
The Growth Coach
Go to
www.buildandbalance.com
Sign up for the free newsletter

Massage Therapy
BEST ASIAN
BODY MASSAGE
$39.99/hr
Call (650) 787-9969
Free Parking Behind Building
Mon-Fri, 10am-9pm
Wknds-Holidays Call Ahead

1838 El Camino #103,


Burlingame

Insurance
Real Estate Loans

AFFORDABLE
LIFE INSURANCE

Eric L. Barrett,
CLU, RHU, REBC, CLTC, LUTCF
President
Barrett Insurance Services
(650)513-5690
CA. Insurance License #0737226

REAL ESTATE
LOANS
REFINANCE HARD MONEY
AT LOWER RATE
DIRECT PRIvATE LENDER
ALL CREDIT ACCEPTED
Since 1979
wACHTER INvESTMENTS, INC.

TURNING 65 this year?


Medicare Supplement Insurance
Low cost-guaranteed coverage

650-348-7191
Real Estate Broker
CA BRE#746683
NMLS #348288

Collins Insurance
650-701-9700

Real Estate Services

www.collinscoversyou.com

*SALES * LEASING
* PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
Sales: 1.49% commission
Property Management: 4% fee
Personalized service

Legal Services

LEGAL
DOCUMENTS PLUS
Non-Attorney document
preparation: Divorce,
Pre-Nup, Adoption, Living Trust,
Conservatorship, Probate,
Notary Public. Response to
Lawsuits: Credit Card
Issues, Breach of Contract
Jeri Blatt, LDA #11
Registered & Bonded

(650)574-2087
legaldocumentsplus.com
"I am not an attorney. I can only
provide self help services at your
specific direction."

Peninsula Prime Realty


650-591-0119
info@peninsulaprimerealty.com

Travel

FIGONE TRAvEL
GROUP
(650) 595-7750
www.cruisemarketplace.com
Cruises Land & Family vacations
Personalized & Experienced
Family Owned & Operated
Since 1939
1495 Laurel St. SAN CARLOS
CST#100209-10

28

Thursday April 28, 2016

THE DAILY JOURNAL

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