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FAILED EXPERIMENT?

KAEPERNICK
TAKING HEAT

SUPERSTAR
GABRIEL DIES

CONCERN GROWS THAT AFFORDABLE CARE ACT


MAY GO WITH TRUMP WIN
BUSINESS PAGE 10

SPORTS PAGE 11

DATEBOOK PAGE 17

Leading local news coverage on the Peninsula


www.smdailyjournal.com

Monday Aug. 29, 2016 XVII, Edition 10

Team devoted to people with mental illness


By Bill Silverfarb
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

To assist individuals with serious mental illness who have fallen


through the cracks, a Health
System team has been formed to
help improve their quality of life.
The Behavioral Health and

Recovery
Services Assisted
Outpatient Treatment (AOT) is
now operating and open to taking
referrals.
AOT is the local implementation of the Assisted Outpatient
Treatment Demonstration Project
Act of 2002, more commonly
referred to as Lauras Law. The San

Mateo
County
Board
of
Supervisors voted unanimously in
June 2015 to enact the law on a
one-year trial.
The team is being led by Terry
Wilcox-Rittgers, clinical services
manager
at
the
countys
Behavioral Health and Recovery
Services.

SERRA OPENER GOES SOUTH

The team just started accepting


referrals July 1, Wilcox-Rittgers
said.
The first week we didnt get any
calls, he said.
But since, the team has received
more than 40 calls and four individuals have been enrolled in the
program, he said.

Many of the other referrals,


although they did not meet Lauras
Law criteria, were linked to other
services in the county that may
benefit them, Wilcox-Rittgers
said.
Individuals considered for AOT

See TEAM, Page 20

San Mateo
cops to get
body cams
City Council agrees with civil grand
jury, implementation coming soon
By Samantha Weigel
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

TERRY BERNAL/DAILY JOURNAL

Serra slot receiver Shane Villaroman runs for a touchdown in his varsity debut but it was not enough as St.
Marys-Stockton hammered the Padres 63-35 in Saturdays opener at Brady Family Stadium. STORY PAGE 11

Grants available to
swap out fireplaces
Air quality district urges replacement
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF REPORT

More than $3 million in funds


are available for property owners
to swap out their old wood stoves
for cleaner alternatives.
The Bay Area Air Quality
Management Districts Wood
Smoke Reduction
Incentive
Program allows homeowners and
property owners to access funds to
ditch their old wood-burning fireplaces or stoves with heating
options that are better for the
environment.

On cold winter nights, wood


smoke from residential wood burning accounts for a significant portion of the Bay Areas fine-particle
pollution, according to the air
quality district.
To be eligible, applicants must
own a property that is a residential
unit and contains an operational
wood-burning stove or fireplace,
used for heating purposes.
Qualifying wood-burning devices
do not include those meant for

See WOOD, Page 20

Wearing San Mateos blue could


come with some new technological accessories after the City
Council gave a nod for the police
department to investigate a bodyworn camera program.
The
San
Mateo
Police
Department had preliminary discussions about the devices for
years, and is now proceeding after
a recent San Mateo County Civil
Grand Jury report recommended
agencies without such equipment
consider gearing up.
As part of its response to the
report, this month the San Mateo
City Council formally directed its

department to
begin developing
policies
and an implementation
plan.
Police
Capt.
Dave
Norris
said
while there are
Dave Norris a variety of factors that need
to be fleshed out from issues
concerning public privacy to personnel and hardware costs the
department is firmly supportive of
creating a timely program.
Because we live in a time right
now where incidents involving

See COPS, Page 19

School district eyes improvements


South San Francisco officials seek projects to fund with shared $1M
By Austin Walsh
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

South San Francisco school


officials are attempting to identify
projects to finance with $1 million shared by city officials designated for benefiting local residents.
Patrick Lucy, president of the
South San Francisco Unified
School District Board of Trustees,
suggested the funds could be used
to improve athletic fields on
school property with the intent of
eventually making the facilities
available for community use.
Trustees discussed the issue dur-

ing a meeting Thursday, Aug. 18,


and though no decision was made,
Lucy said he would like the money
to serve as many South San
Francisco residents as possible.
We are going to look at all the
possibilities and whatever decision we make will benefit the
schools and the community, he
said.
The South San Francisco City
Council agreed in March to share
with the local school district
money available through a development agreement offered by
Sares Regis as part of an approval
to build 272 apartments and condominiums downtown.

City and school officials met in


the wake of the councils decision
to discuss targets for the funds set
aside for projects improving the
quality of life in South San
Francisco.
Beyond athletic fields, officials
also considered using the money
to contribute toward paying for
after-school programs, installing
lighting outside campuses, renovating the pool at Orange Park and
a variety of other initiatives.
Superintendent
Shawnterra
Moore said via email she too was
committed to working with city

See DISTRICT, Page 20

FOR THE RECORD

Monday Aug. 29, 2016

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Thought for the Day


Whom the gods wish to destroy
they first call promising.
Cyril Connolly, British journalist-writer (1903-1974).

This Day in History


The Beatles concluded their fourth
American tour with their last public
concert, held at Candlestick Park in
San Francisco.
In 1 5 3 3 , the last Incan King of Peru, Atahualpa (ah-tuhWAHL-puh), was executed on orders of Spanish conqueror
Francisco Pizarro.
In 1 8 7 7 , the second president of The Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-Day Saints, Brigham Young, died in Salt
Lake City, Utah, at age 76.
In 1 9 1 0 , Korean Emperor Sunjong abdicated as the JapanKorea Annexation Treaty went into effect.
In 1 9 4 4 , 15,000 American troops of the 28th Infantry
Division marched down the Champs Elysees (shahms aylee-ZAY) in Paris as the French capital continued to celebrate its liberation from the Nazis.
In 1 9 5 8 , pop superstar Michael Jackson was born in Gary,
Indiana.
In 1 9 7 2 , swimmer Mark Spitz of the United States won the
third of his seven gold medals at the Munich Olympics, finishing first in the 200-meter freestyle.
In 1 9 9 6 , the Democratic National Convention in Chicago
nominated Al Gore for a second term as vice president.
In 2 0 0 5 , Hurricane Katrina hit the Gulf Coast near Buras,
Louisiana, bringing floods that devastated New Orleans.
More than 1,800 people in the region died.
Ten y ears ag o : President George W. Bush visited New
Orleans one year after Hurricane Katrina devastated the
region to offer comfort and hope to residents. Tropical
Storm Ernestos leading edge drenched Miami and the rest of
southern Florida.

1966

Birthdays

Singer Liam Payne


Actress Rebecca
Actress-singer Lea
is 23.
DeMornay is 57.
Michele is 30.
Actress Betty Lynn (TV: The Andy Griffith Show) is 90.
Movie director William Friedkin is 81. Sen. John McCain, RAriz., is 80. Actor Elliott Gould is 78. Movie director Joel
Schumacher is 77. TV personality Robin Leach is 75. Actress
Deborah Van Valkenburgh is 64. Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew
is 61. Dancer-choreographer Mark Morris is 60. Country
musician Dan Truman (Diamond Rio) is 60. Singer MeShell
NdegeOcello (n-DAY-gay-OH-chehl-oh) is 48. Rhythm-andblues singer Carl Martin (Shai) is 46. Actress Carla Gugino is
45. Rock musician Kyle Cook (Matchbox Twenty) is 41.
Actor John Hensley is 39.
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

FINSF
2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
All Rights Reserved.

NOIYR

RELENK

Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app

Unscramble these four Jumbles,


one letter to each square,
to form four ordinary words.

TOM JUNG/DAILY JOURNAL

The Japanese Garden in San Mateos Central Park concluded its 50th Anniversary celebration Saturday with a formal presentation to honor those who helped in its creation. Alan Hammer, its first gardener, was honored by Director of Parks and
Recreation Sheila Canzlan. From left to right are Japanese/English interpreter Beth Cary, Alan Hammer, Bob Hammer, Canzlan
and San Mateo Mayor Joe Goethals.

In other news ...


Man shot by FBI agent serving
search warrants in Compton
COMPTON, Calif. The FBI says
one of its agents fatally shot a man
during a confrontation while warrants
were served at a home in Los Angeles
County last week.
Agency
spokeswoman
Laura
Eimiller says the shooting happened
Thursday night when an FBI SWAT
team arrived at the residence in
Compton looking for a parolee-atlarge.
Eimiller says the agent fired his
weapon after a confrontation with a
man. She says he was treated at the
scene and then taken to a hospital,
where he was declared dead.
The FBI did not identify the man or
confirm whether he was the subject of
the warrants. However Eimiller said a
parolee had been arrested at the home
and was in custody.
The Los Angeles Times reported
Saturday that no agents were injured
and a gun was recovered. The shooting
is under investigation.

Teen shot, killed in parking


lot of Riverside church
RIVERSIDE, Calif. Police in
Riverside are investigating the killing
of a teenager who was shot in the parking lot of a church.
Investigators say the victim was
walking with friends around 1:15 a.m.

32

48

63

49

20
Powerball

Aug. 26 Mega Millions


10

IGNNNI
Now arrange the circled letters
to form the surprise answer, as
suggested by the above cartoon.

Saturdays

FULLERTON, Calif. Orange


County authorities say a firefighter
who was injured in a fall while battling
a blaze at a Fullerton condo complex is
expected to make a full recovery.
Fullerton Fire Department Battalion
Chief John Stokes says the male firefighter fell from a second-floor roof
onto an adjacent first-floor roof early
Sunday.
Stokes says the firefighter had various injuries and required stitches but
was stable and expected to fully recover.
City News Service says crews had the
fire out in about 30 minutes.
The blaze began in a units firstfloor kitchen and spread to living quarters upstairs.
The cause is under investigation.

11

31

41

44

14

20

25

37

44

45

Mega number

20

Daily Four
8

Daily three midday


3

27

Daily three evening


3

The Daily Derby race winners are Money Bags,


No. 11, in first place; Lucky Star, No. 2, in second
place; and Gorgeous George, No. 8, in third place.
The race time was clocked at 1:41.40.

(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles: FLEET
VAULT
FIASCO
TROPHY
Answer: To make the triple play, the defense needed
an ALL-OUT EFFORT

The San Mateo Daily Journal


1900 Alameda de las Pulgas, Suite 112, San Mateo, CA 94403
Publisher: Jerry Lee
Editor in Chief: Jon Mays
jerry@smdailyjournal.com
jon@smdailyjournal.com
smdailyjournal.com
twitter.com/smdailyjournal

Mussels disappearing from New


England waters, scientists say
PORTLAND, Maine New England
is running out of mussels.
The Gulf of Maines once strong
population of wild blue mussels is disappearing, scientists say. A study led
by marine ecologists at the University
of California at Irvine found the numbers along the gulf coastline have
declined by more than 60 percent over
the last 40 years.
Once covering as much as two-thirds
of the gulfs intertidal zone, mussels
now cover less than 15 percent.
It would be like losing a forest,
said biologist Cascade Sorte, who with
her colleagues at the university conducted the study and recently published
their findings in the Global Change
Biology journal.
The Gulf of Maine stretches from
Cape Cod to Canada and is a key
marine environment and important to
commercial fishing. Blue mussels are
used in seafood dishes and worth millions to the economy of some New
England states, but are also important
in moving bacteria and toxins out of
the water.
Its so disheartening to see it (the
loss) in our marine habitats. Were losing the habitats they create, she said.
Disheartening, and also sometimes a
smelly nuisance. Thousands of dead
mussels washed up last week on the
shores of Long Island, New York.

Local Weather Forecast

Fantasy Five

Mega number

Firefighter recovering after fall


while battling blaze

Lotto
Aug. 27 Powerball

Aug. 27 Super Lotto Plus

Print answer here:

Sunday when they were confronted by


the suspect and a fight broke out.
Police say the suspect pulled out a
handgun, opened fire and then ran off.
The Los Angeles Times reports officers found the victim with gunshot
wounds in the parking lot of Central
Community Christian Fellowship. He
was pronounced dead at a hospital.
The victims name wasnt immediately released but officials said he was
in his late teens.
Detectives have not released a suspect description.

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Mo nday : Mostly cloudy. Patchy fog in


the morning. Highs in the mid 60s. West
winds 5 to 10 mph increasing to 10 to 20
mph in the afternoon.
Mo nday ni g ht: Mostly cloudy. Patchy
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Tues day : Mostly cloudy in the morning
then becoming partly cloudy. Patchy fog and drizzle in the
morning. Highs in the mid 60s. Northwest winds 10 to 20
mph.
Tues day ni g ht: Partly cloudy in the evening then becoming cloudy. Patchy fog. Lows in the lower 50s.
Wednes day thro ug h Fri day : Mostly cloudy. Patchy fog.
Highs in the mid 60s. Lows in the lower 50s.
Fri day ni g ht and Saturday : Mostly cloudy.
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THE DAILY JOURNAL

LOCAL

Money makes it easier to be green


Burlingame environmental groups seeking sustainability projects to fund
By Austin Walsh
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

A recent award of green bills will help pay


for the greening of Burlingame.
The Citizens Environmental Council of
Burlingame received $16,000 for placing in
a state competition recognizing cities for
reducing their carbon footprint, and the
community organization is seeking suggestions for spending the money.
The environmental council will hold a
meeting next month designed to receive
suggestions from residents and local groups
interested in collaborating toward using a
portion of the money to improve the citys
sustainability.
Michael McCord, chair of the environmental council, said the organization is
open to hearing a wide variety of ideas
regarding potential uses of the funds awarded by the Cool California challenge.
We think the thing to do is open it up to
the community and see what kind of ideas
people have, he said.
Burlingame placed third in the competition organized by Energy Upgrade
California, which featured 22 cities tracking
and reporting various energy saving efforts
completed by residents and city officials.
The prize money was designated to finance a
sustainability initiative selected by the
city.
McCord said the $16,000 is likely inadequate to finance a large project, so organization members opted to seek partnership

opportunities with other community foundations to stretch the funds as far as possible.
We can do several projects up to a few
thousand dollars, he said. We would rather
do several smaller projects.
Helping install energy upgrades at the
home of a local nonprofit organization to
lower the buildings carbon footprint and
offer cost savings or helping plant a
drought-resistant garden at a Burlingame
church are a couple examples of the types of
projects the environmental council could
help finance, said McCord.
But ultimately, he said he hoped the community would come to the environmental
council with their own set of suggestions.
We are excited to consider some new
ideas and some new projects, he said.
The environmental council is a community organization dedicated to improving
Burlingames sustainability, hosting periodic public meetings and discussions
designed to implement a variety of green
initiatives, said McCord.
The organization has operated on a shoestring budget for years, and the money
awarded as a result of the challenge is the
largest influx of funds the environmental
council has ever received, McCord said.
He said it is refreshing for members of the
environmental council to be awarded
enough money to be able to invest it back
into the local community.
It changes our point of view, he said.
Plans exist to set aside a portion of the

money to address ongoing costs for the


environmental council, but much of it will
be paid out to worthy projects proposed by
the community, he said.
The biggest project currently funded by
the environmental council is a few thousand
dollars doled out in scholarships to graduates of Burlingame High School who have
done work in environmental sciences, said
McCord.
We intend to continue doing that, he
said, of the scholarship. We like doing
that.
Following the project proposal meeting
Saturday, Sept. 17, McCord said he expects
the environmental council will spend the
subsequent couple months considering their
pitches before likely allocating funds after
the new year.
But when possible, he said there is interest in offering the money to the community
immediately.
If we can start coming up with a budget
for some of these projects we like, well get
them underway as soon as possible, he
said.
Looking toward the discussion for use of
the funds, McCord said he hoped there would
be significant community interest in the
opportunity to use the money for creative
and sustainable projects.
We hope we get a few dozen people there
and a few interesting ideas, he said.
The Citizens Env ironmental Council of
Burlingame will meet 9:30 a.m., Saturday,
Sept. 17, in the Lane room of the library,
480 Primrose Road,

Monday Aug. 29, 2016

Police reports
Home sniffer
Someone hired for home repair went
into the residents bedroom and smelled
her undergarments on the 1300 block of
Broadway in Millbrae before 10:18
p.m. Monday, Aug. 22.

MILLBRAE
Po s s es s i o n. A San Francisco man was
cited for possession of a controlled substance and unlawful paraphernalia at the 900
block of El Camino Real before 8:14 p.m.
Wednesday, Aug. 24.
Mi s demeano r warrant. A transient was
arrested while under the influence and was
found to have a misdemeanor warrant out of
San Francisco at the 400 block of Broadway
before 1:40 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 24.
Mi s demeano r warrant. A person was
arrested after being found with three misdemeanor warrants at the 100 block of Aviador
Avenue before 1:09 p.m. Wednesday, Aug.
24.

BURLINGAME
Arres t. A Pacifica woman was arrested for
possession of controlled substances, unlawful paraphernalia and driving on a suspended
license at the 1800 block of El Camino Real
before 2:35 a.m. Wednesday, Aug. 24.

FOSTER CITY
Vi o l ati o n. A San Francisco resident was
cited for false display of vehicle registration
near West Parkway Lane and East Hillsdale
Boulevard before 22:43 p.m. Wednesday,
Aug. 24.

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Monday Aug. 29, 2016

We speak Medicare
Let us help you solve the puzzle

Part A
Hospital

Part D
Prescription
Drugs

Part B
Medical

Medigap
Supplemental
Policies

Part C
Medicare
Advantage

Extra Help
& Coordination
of Benets

HICAP is the only nonprot authorized by the U.S. Dept. of


Health & Human Services (HHS) Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services (CMS) to counsel beneciaries about
Medicare and their options.
Call to schedule a free appointment near you:

1-800-434-0222 or 650-627-9350

California Department of Aging administers the Health Insurance Counseling and Advocacy
Program (HICAP). State-registered HICAP counselors do not sell, recommend or endorse any
insurance plans, companies or insurance agents. This publication was supported by HICAP of
San Mateo County with nancial assistance, in whole or in part, through a grant from the
Administration of Community Living (ACL).

The Medicare Counseling Program

NATION/STATE/LOCAL

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Monday Aug. 29, 2016

Visitor misbehavior abounds as parks agency turns 100


By Matthew Brown
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

YELLOWSTONE
NATIONAL
PARK, Wyo. Tourist John
Gleason crept through the grass,
four small children close behind,
inching toward a bull elk with
antlers like small trees at the edge
of a meadow in Yellowstone
National Park.
Theyre going to give me a heart
attack, said Gleasons mother-inlaw, Barbara Henry, as the group
came within about a dozen yards of
the massive animal.

Local briefs
Sheriffs Office investigates
mishandled sexual
misconduct case
The San Mateo County Sheriffs
Office has started a formal administrative investigation into the
mishandling of an incident
involving a Millbrae teacher and
student.
According to sheriffs officials,
two reports of an alleged sexual
relationship between a teacher and
an underage female student were
reported last year and not investigated as expected.
Sheriffs officials said the investigation was reviewed once in
October 2015 and once in
February of this year, however,
they determined it was not conducted in a timely manner.
San Mateo County Sheriff
Carlos Bolanos said in a statement, Im disappointed the
investigation was not completed
in a timely manner and it does not
reflect the level of service we rou-

harassment and other visitor misbehavior, according to the records


obtained through a Freedom of
Information Act request.
In July alone, law enforcement
rangers handled more than 11,000
incidents at the 10 most visited
national parks.
In Yellowstone, rangers are
recording more wildlife violations, more people treading on
sensitive thermal areas and more
camping in off-limit areas. The
rule-breaking puts visitors in
harms way and can damage
resources and displace wildlife,

officials said.
Often the incidents go unaddressed, such as when Gleason and
the children approached the bull
elk with no park personnel
around. Gleason said he was
maybe too close but felt comfortable in the situation as an
experienced hunter whos spent
lots of time outdoors.
These transgressions add to
rangers growing workload that
includes traffic violations, searches for missing hikers and pets run-

The elks ears then pricked up,


and it eyed the children and
Washington state man before
leaping up a hillside. Other
tourists likewise ignoring rules
to keep 25 yards from wildlife
picked up the pursuit, snapping
pictures as they pressed forward
and forced the animal into headlong retreat.
Record visitor numbers at the
nations first national park have
transformed its annual summer
rush into a sometimes dangerous
frenzy, with selfie-taking tourists
routinely breaking park rules and

getting too close to Yellowstones


storied elk herds, grizzly bears,
wolves and bison.
Law
enforcement
records
obtained by The Associated Press
suggest such problems are on the
rise at the park, offering a stark
illustration of the pressures facing
some of Americas most treasured
lands as the National Park Service
marks its 100th anniversary.
From Tennessees Great Smoky
Mountains to the Grand Canyon of
Arizona, major parks are grappling with illegal camping, vandalism, theft of resources, wildlife

tinely provide residents of


Millbrae or the communities we
serve.

10,000th Syrian reaches US this week

Man with knife shot by CHP

Families headed to
California amid
threat accusations

A California Highway Patrol


officer shot a suspect who was
allegedly armed with a knife and
charging on Highway 101 in
Belmont early Sunday morning,
according to a CHP spokesman.
A pedestrian was reported on
both sides of Highway 101 at
Ralston Avenue a little after 2
a. m. , according to Officer Art
Montiel.
Arriving officers tried to take
the suspect into custody but he
allegedly resisted, prompting officers to use a Taser, which had no
effect, Montiel said.
The suspect produced a knife,
held it overhead and charged at the
officer, who opened fire.
The suspect suffered life-threatening injuries and was transported
to a hospital, according to
Montiel.
Only one officer was involved in
the shooting. No officers were
injured.

By Karin Laub
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

AMMAN, Jordan The U.S.


will reach its target this week of
taking in 10, 000 Syrian war
refugees in a year-old resettlement
program, the U.S. ambassador to
Jordan said Sunday, after meeting
families headed to California and
Virginia.
The resettlement program has
emerged as an issue in the U.S.
presidential campaign, with
Republican nominee Donald
Trump alleging displaced Syrians
pose a potential security threat.
Alice Wells, the U.S. ambassador to Jordan, said Sunday that
keeping Americans safe and taking in some of the worlds most

vulnerable people are not mutually


exclusive.
Refugees are the most thoroughly screened category of travelers to the United States, and
Syrian refugees are subject to even
greater scrutiny, she said.
Wells said the target of resettling 10,000 Syrian refugees in
the U.S. in the 2016 fiscal year
will be reached Monday, as several
hundred Syrians depart from
Jordan over 24 hours.
The Jouriyeh family, which
attended Sundays short ceremony,
is headed to San Diego,
California.
Nadim Fawzi Jouriyeh, 49, a former construction worker from the
war-ravaged Syrian city of Homs,
said he feels fear and joy, fear of
the unknown and our new lives,
but great joy for our childrens
lives and future.
Jouriyeh, who suffers from heart
problems, will be traveling with
his wife, Rajaa, 42, and their four
children. Their oldest son, 14-

See 100, Page 28

year-old Mohammed, said he is


eager to sign up for school in San
Diego and hopes to study medicine
one day.
The resettlement program focuses on the most vulnerable
refugees, including those who
were subjected to violence or torture or are sick.
Close to 5 million Syrians have
fled civil war since 2011. Most
struggle to survive in tough conditions in neighboring countries,
including Jordan, which hosts
close to 660,000 Syrian refugees.
Only a small percentage of
Syrian refugees have been resettled to third countries. Instead,
donor countries are trying to
invest more in job creation and
education for refugees in regional
host countries to encourage them
to stay there instead of moving
onward, including to Europe.
Wells said the U.S. has taken in
more refugees from around the
world over the years than all other
nations combined.

NATION/STATE

Monday Aug. 29, 2016

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Scams loom as millions donated after Orlando


By Jeff Donn
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The more than 430 fundraisers


posted on the GoFundMe website
after the mass shooting at a gay
nightclub in Orlando have
exposed weaknesses inherent in
these popular do-it-yourself charity campaigns: waste, questionable
intentions and little oversight.
The fundraisers an average of
more than four for each of the 49
killed and 53 wounded include
travelers asking for cash, a practitioner of ancient healing, a personal safety instructor who sells
quick loaders for assault rifles, and

even convicted identity impostors.


There was a deluge, said Holly
Salmons, president of the Better
Business Bureau for Central
Florida. It was almost impossible for us or anyone else to be able
to vet.
The crowdfunding sites operate
outside traditional charitable circles and often beyond the reach of
government regulation. Appeals
can be created in minutes by
almost anyone and shared around
the world.
The
officially
sanctioned
Equality Florida campaign raised
more than $7 million via

GoFundMe, but another $1.3 million went to smaller appeals


mostly set up by people with little
or no charity experience.
The Associated Press examined
30 campaigns chosen from
throughout the lengthy list produced by a GoFundMe search for
Orlando shootings. Within a
month of the June 12 shootings,
they had raised more than
$265,000.
Half said donations would be
used for legitimate-sounding purposes: to cover funeral, medical
and other costs. Some campaign
organizers were relatives of the
dead or wounded. A high school

basketball coach raised $15,297


for the family of Akyra Murray, a
star player who had just graduated
before dying in the attack.
But most campaigns lacked key
details, such as exactly what the
donations would cover or even
who was asking for them. Only
nine of the 30 organizers agreed to
interviews.
One man wanted money for travel costs to Orlando to shoot independent news video. He hadnt
raised anything two months later.
Another organizer raised just $25
for travel money to hold a community healing ceremony inspired
by ancient shamanic rituals. She

dropped that plan in favor of sending painted rocks with an inspiring word of support.
Jackson Yauck of Victoria,
British Columbia, put up a lighthearted appeal to let the highest
donor burn a pair of skimpy goldcolored shorts he wore to gaypride events. He had created the
appeal on Jan. 1 on behalf of
other charities and when he tried
to switch it to benefit the Orlando
victims, GoFundMe froze his
account for at least a week, he
said. He agreed to transfer the
donations to Equality Florida, and

See SCAMS, Page 28

Dallas police squelch critics, questions about sniper attack


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

DALLAS The day after five


Dallas officers were killed by a
sniper, the citys police chief
described the men as guardians
of democracy, praising them for
protecting the freedom to protest
at a large demonstration against
police brutality.
President Barack Obama later

eulogized the slain officers, saying they died while defending


essential constitutional rights.
But nearly two months after the
shootings, Dallas police have
moved to silence critics and
squelch lingering questions about
the attack. Officers in riot gear
have been told to ticket protesters
who block or disrupt traffic, and
Police Chief David Brown has

refused to meet with demonstrators unless they agree to end their


marches through downtown,
which he says pose a threat.
Authorities have also refused to
release even the most basic information about the slayings, including any details about the weapons
used, the autopsy findings and ballistics tests that could establish
whether any officers were hit by

friendly fire. Police have indicated


that such information could be
withheld almost indefinitely.
In addition, the police departments most vocal, visible critic
has been arrested multiple times in
the last month on warrants that
include unpaid traffic tickets and
attempts to revoke his probation
from a 2009 felony. On Friday,
Dominique Alexander was ordered

to prison.
Why all of a sudden are we the
target? asked Damon Crenshaw,
vice president of the Next
Generation Action Network,
which organized the July 7
protest. Were not protesting
because were mad at them. Were
protesting because the problems
still exist and they wont talk to
us.

Women fight for right


to go topless in public
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LOS ANGELES A group of about 50


women and men are walking topless in the
oceanside Los Angeles neighborhood of
Venice to demand that females get the same
legal right as males to walk bare-chested in
public.
The protesters participated Sunday in the
neighborhoods annual Go Topless march,
one of several pro-topless marches planned
for around the nation. The march in Venice
was organized by gotopless.org, a group
that calls for equal rights to go topless for

women and men.


The marchers walked behind a giant
inflatable pink breast that had the phrase
equal topless rights written on it. One
marcher carried a sign that said: My Body
Is Not A Crime.
Were working toward freeing womens
nipples and obtaining equal gender topless
rights that are enforced worldwide,
Beatrice Charles, a GoTopless spokeswoman said.
The protesters were countered at the start
of the march by a group against allowing
women to go topless in public.

NATION

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Monday Aug. 29, 2016

Clinton invokes fathers memory to hit Trump


By Catherine Lucey
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WARREN, Mich. Hillary


Clinton has landed on a very personal counterpunch to what she
says is Donald Trumps checkered
business past: her dad.
As the Democratic presidential
nominee works to undercut
Trumps economic record and promote her plans for small businesses, she is invoking memories of
her late fathers Chicago drapery
business. Recalling Hugh Rodham
hard at work making and printing
curtains for hotels and office
buildings, Clinton argues that he
would have been stiffed in a deal
with the celebrity businessman.
He expected to be paid when he
showed up, Clinton said recently
during an event in Warren,
Michigan. He did the work. He
paid for the supplies and the labor
he often hired to help him on big
jobs. I cant imagine what would

have happened to my father and


his business if he had gotten a
contract from Trump.
Clinton hopes to remind voters
that despite her years in public life
that have left her a multimillionaire, she comes from a middleclass background and understands
the life of a small-business owner.
She also wants to contrast her
biography with that of Trump,
who was raised by a successful real
estate developer and has drawn
criticism for his treatment of
small businesses during his career.
Trump has promoted his business record as a key qualification
for the White House. But Trump
casinos failed on several occasions. When the Taj Mahal casino
in Atlantic City, New Jersey went
bankrupt in the early 1990s, some
contractors who worked on the
property went under because
Trumps company didnt pay what
they were owed, according to
interviews with the Associated

Press.
In a statement
to
the AP,
Clinton said her
fathers business gave her a
sense
of
res p o n s i b i l i ty, adding that
Hillary Clinton she was living
proof that a
successful small business is at the
core of the basic bargain in
America, that if you work hard and
do your part, you can make your
own dreams and those of your children a reality.
Clinton has been pitching her
plans to support small businesses
and to make it easier to start a
company. On a conference call
with small-business owners last
week, she proposed a new tax
deduction for small businesses and
offered federal incentives to
encourage state and local governments to streamline regulations.

While Clinton has spoken of her


father throughout the campaign,
the recent recollections have been
more detailed and intimate. Clinton
tends to speak sparingly about her
family while campaigning and
when she does, it is typically to
make a broader point. She has referenced her grandfathers work in a
factory in Scranton, Pennsylvania,
and her mothers troubled childhood. Clinton has also spoken of
her granddaughter as an example of
the future generation she is fighting for.
Mo Elleithee, who worked for
Clintons 2008 presidential bid,
said that reminiscing about her
familys business could put
Clinton in a different light with
voters. Elleithee, now executive
director of the Institute of Politics
and Public Service at Georgetown
University, noted that shes
never done a very good job of
talking about herself.
A Scranton native, Clintons

Trump stand-ins struggle to


speak for, defend nominee
By Laurie Kellman
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON Donald Trump isnt


making it easy for top supporters and advisers, from his running mate on down, to
defend him or explain some campaign positions.
Across the Sunday news shows, a parade
of Trump stand-ins, led by vice presidential
nominee Mike Pence, couldnt say whether
Trump was sticking with or changing a central promise to boot the roughly 11 million
people living in the U.S. illegally, with the
help of a deportation force. And they didnt bother defending his initial response
Saturday to the killing of a mother as she
walked her baby on a Chicago street.
Questioned on whether its a problem that
the GOP presidential nominee has left key
details on immigration policy unclear so
late in the election, Republican National
Committee Chairman Reince Priebus
demurred: I just dont speak for Donald
Trump.
It was a striking look at Trumps leadership of a team he had said would help drive
him to victory in the Nov. 8 election.
The very purpose of surrogates is to speak
for and back up their presidential nominee.
But Team Trump has struggled to do so even
as they stayed tightly together on the
details they know: Trump will issue more
details on the immigration plan soon, the
policy will be humane and despite his clear
wavering, hes been consistent on the
issue. Any discussion of inconsistencies or
potentially unpresidential tweeting, Pence
and others suggested, reflected media focus
on the wrong issue.
The right issue, they said, was whether
Democrat Hillary Clinton crossed ethical
lines during her tenure as secretary of state
by talking with people outside the government who had contributed to her familys
philanthropy foundation. Priebus counterpart at the Democratic National Committee,
Donna Brazile, said theres no evidence of
that. Clinton on Sunday was raising campaign money in the Hamptons, a vacation

spot for the wealthy on


Long Island.
Asked whether the
deportation force proposal Trump laid out in
November is still in
place, Pence replied:
Well, what you heard
him describe there, in his
plainspoken,
Donald Trump usual
American way, was a
mechanism, not a policy.
Added Trumps campaign manager,
Kellyanne Conway: The softening is more
approach than policy, adding that on
immigration, Trump wants to find a fair
and humane way.
He is not talking about a deportation
force, she observed.
The Indiana governor, Conway and other
surrogates said the main tenets of Trumps
immigration plan still will include building
a wall along the southern U.S. border and
making Mexico pay for it, no path to legalization or citizenship for people here illegally and stronger border enforcement.
Pence also did not answer whether the campaign believes, as Trump has said, that children born to people who are in the U.S. illegally are not U.S. citizens. That, he said,
is a subject for the future.
Native-born children of immigrants, even
those living illegally in the U.S., have
been automatically considered American
citizens since the adoption of the 14th
Amendment in 1868.
Trump has focused lately on deporting
people who are in the U.S. illegally and
who have committed crimes. But who Trump
considers a criminal remained unclear
Sunday.
Those are the things that Donald Trump
is going to answer, Priebus said.
Other Trump stand-ins, including New
Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, spoke similarly.
Recent polls indicate Clinton is ahead in
some of the most competitive and pivotal
states. The first presidential debate is set for
Sept. 26.

Expires 9/30/16

father moved to Chicago after


graduating from college. There he
worked as a traveling salesman
before enlisting in the Navy during World War II, Clinton writes in
Living History. When he
returned from the war, he set up a
drapery fabric business in
Chicago, called Rodrik Fabrics,
and later started a print plant on
the citys north side.
Rodham largely worked alone,
but Clinton writes that she and her
brothers helped when they were
old enough. The business did well
enough for Rodham to buy a house
in the leafy suburb of Park Ridge,
where he and wife, Dorothy, raised
Clinton and her two brothers.
By all accounts, Rodham was a
stern man, but he is also credited
with instilling his daughters
powerful work ethic and encouraging her ambition. Clintons childhood friend Betsy Ebeling said
Rodham could be gruff but he
could be very loving.

WORLD

Monday Aug. 29, 2016

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Turkish president vows to destroy terrorists


Turkey has sent tanks across the Syrian border following weeks of deadly attacks
By Dusan Stojanovic
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ISTANBUL Turkeys president vowed on Sunday to destroy


terrorists after months of deadly
attacks throughout the country
and reiterated his claim that a child
suicide bomber was responsible
for last weekends explosion that
claimed at least 54 lives in the
southeast.
Speaking at a rally in Gaziantep
where the suicide bombing took
place at a Kurdish wedding,
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan
said the terrorists are being
picked up one by one by
Turkeys security forces.
They will all be cleansed out
like a cancer cell, he told a roaring crowd of his supporters. We
will nd them and punish them.
Last week, Erdogan said a 12- to

1 4 -y ear-o l d
child was the
suicide bomber,
but
Prime
Minister Binali
Yildirim said
later that the
bomber
was
still unidentiRecep Tayyip ed and investigations conErdogan
tinued.
On
Sunday, Erdogan reiterated the
claim without saying whether its
a result of the investigation.
Terror has used a 14-year-old
child as a suicide bomber and shed
blood, killed people, he said. In
this attack, our 54 citizens,
including 34 children, died.
Authorities have blamed the
Islamic State group for the
Gaziantep attack, but neither IS
nor any other militant groups

have claimed responsibility.


Erdogan repeated that the countrys parliament will decide
whether to reintroduce a death
penalty in the wake of a failed
coup on July 15 that claimed at
least 270 lives. That has triggered
an outcry by rights groups in
Turkey and the West.
My nation wants the death
penalty, he said. That is the
decision of the Grand National
Assembly of Turkey.
Turkey has sent tanks across the
Syrian border following weeks of
deadly attacks by the Kurdistan
Workers Party, or the PKK, and
IS. The move aims to both ght IS
and halt the advance of Syrian
Kurdish groups.
On Sunday, two separate blasts
in the Turkeys Kurdish-dominated
southeast killed one Turkish soldier and wounded eight others, and

Kurdish militants launched a rocket-propelled grenade at a civilian


airport, ofcials and the state-run
news agency said.
One soldier was killed and three
were wounded after a roadside
bomb was triggered remotely by
rebels linked to the PKK in the
Hakkari province, the state-run
Anadolu Agency said. In the ensuing reght that included army
helicopters, 10 militants were
killed, the private Dogan news
agency said. The report couldnt
be independently veried.
In another attack, ve civilian
village guards were wounded in
Siirt province after their van hit
an improvised explosive device
on a road, Anadolu said, blaming
PKK for the blast.
Earlier, Kurdish rebels, apparently targeting a police checkpoint at Diyarbakir Airport, red a

grenade that exploded near the airports VIP passenger entrance,


shattering windows, the local
governors ofce said. No injuries
were reported. Passengers were
taken to safety after the attack and
ights resumed after a brief pause
during the police investigation.
Violence between the PKK and
security forces resumed last year,
after the collapse of a two-year
peace process in July. Since then,
more than 600 Turkish security personnel and thousands of PKK militants have been killed, according to
Anadolu. Rights groups say hundreds of civilians have also been
killed in the clashes.
On Friday, a Kurdish suicide
bomber rammed an explosivesladen truck into a checkpoint near
a police station in the southeast,
killing at least 11 Turkish police
ofcers and wounding 78.

Grief erupts in Italy as nation


honors and buries quake dead
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ASCOLI PICENO, Italy Mourners in


Italy prayed, hugged, wept and even
applauded as coffins carrying victims of the
countrys devastating earthquake passed by
at a state funeral Saturday, grieving as one
nation after three desperate days of trying to
save as many people as possible.
In the central town of Ascoli Piceno, they
gathered to bid farewell to 35 of the 291
people confirmed dead so far after the quake
that struck a swath of countryside early
Wednesday at the foothills of the central
Apennine mountains.
The caskets of 35 people had been
brought to a community gym one of the
few structures in the area still intact and
large enough to hold hundreds of mourners.
The local bishop, Giovanni DErcole, celebrated Mass beneath a crucifix he had
retrieved from one of the damaged churches
in the picturesque area of medieval stone
towns and hamlets.
Emotions that had been dammed up for
days broke in a crescendo of grief. One
young man wept over a little girls white
coffin. Another woman gently stroked
another small casket. Many mourners were
recovering from injuries themselves, some
wrapped in bandages. Everywhere people
knelt at coffins, tears running down their
cheeks, their arms around loved ones.
It is a great tragedy. There are no words to
describe it, said Gina Razzetti, a resident at
the funeral. Each one of us has our pain
inside. We are thinking about the families
who lost relatives, who lost their homes,
who lost everything.
As all of Italy observed a day of national
mourning, with flags at half-staff, Bishop
DErcole urged residents to rebuild their
communities.
Dont be afraid to cry out your suffering
I have seen a lot of this but please do
not lose courage, DErcole said in his hom-

Around the world


Rebels set permanent cease-fire
under Colombia peace deal
HAVANA The commander of
Colombias biggest rebel movement said
Sunday its fighters will permanently cease
hostilities with the government beginning
with the first minute of Monday, as a result
of their peace accord ending one of the
worlds longest-running conflicts.
Rodrigo Londono, leader of the
Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia,
made the announcement in Havana, where
the two sides negotiated for four years

ily. Only together can we rebuild our houses and our churches. Together, above all, we
will be able to restore life to our communities.
President Sergio Mattarella and Premier
Matteo Renzi joined grieving family members, stopping to speak to some of them.
When the caskets were brought out of the
gym, the mourners applauded, a traditional
Italian way of honoring people who die in
tragedy.
The bishop recalled the heartbreaking
story of 9-year-old Giulia Rinaldo, whose
embrace apparently allowed her younger
sister Giorgia to survive.
He said 15 hours after the quake struck
Wednesday, he returned to the church in
Pescara Del Tronto to recover its crucifix.
Close by, firefighters were using their
hands to dig out the two sisters.
The older one, Giulia, was sprawled over
the smaller one, Giorgia. Giulia, dead,
Giorgia, alive. They were in an embrace,
DErcole said.
Giulia was among those buried Saturday,
while her younger sister had her fourth
birthday at a hospital, trying to recover
from the traumatizing ordeal.
The melancholy grabs on to your heart.
You feel a sense of weakness, of depression, said Fiore Ciotto, a resident of
Ascoli Piceno who attended the funeral. An
event like this weakens you physically and
mentally.
Across the area, a cool retreat for those
seeking to escape Italys hot summers,
many of the dead were children and elderly
people, some of them visiting grandparents
before school resumed.
The magnitude 6.2 quake struck at 3:36
a.m. Wednesday and was felt across a broad
swath of central Italy, killing at least 291
people and injuring nearly 400. Nobody has
been found alive in the ruins since
Wednesday, and hopes have nearly vanished
of finding any more survivors.
before announcing the peace deal
Wednesday.
Never again will parents be burying their
sons and daughters killed in the war, said
Londono, who also known as Timoshenko.
All rivalries and grudges will remain in the
past.
Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos
announced on Friday that his military would
cease attacks on the FARC beginning
Monday.
Colombia is expected to hold a national
referendum Oct. 2 to give voters the chance
to approve the deal for ending a half-century of political violence that has claimed
more than 220,000 lives and driven more
than 5 million people from their homes.

OPINION

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Monday Aug. 29, 2016

The Wisnom family


and San Mateo history

Letters to the editor


Reasonable renter protection
Editor,
The Burlingame City Council has
gone where the far more enlightened
San Mateo City Council has decided
not to go. They have gone on record
as opposing the resolution that the
citizens have placed on the ballot for
November regarding installing a rent
stabilization board and establishing
just cause for eviction as well as reasonable compensation for moving
expenses for those asked to leave
through no fault of their own- hardly
radical desires on the part of the
renter protection folks.
What they are attempting to install
are reasonable protections for renters
as opposed to having a monopoly of
power in the hands of landlords as is
presently the case. When has it ever
been considered a positive condition
in this country to have monopolies
as the norm and a balance of interests
as less desirable? The American experience has shown us to be far more
fair-minded than that. The situation
that exists on the Peninsula with
housing and populations in such an
imbalance can in no way be built out
of existence. The needs for some semblance of housing security for present
residents or renters should be uppermost in the minds of those placed in
charge of our decision-making, not
the untrammeled monopoly that continues under our present situation. An
even-handed response to the citizen
process that weve seen in the measures placed on Novembers ballot
should be far more respected.
Cornering the market in blueberries
is quite different from monopolizing
the market in human habitation with
all that it involves.
Mike Caggiano
San Mateo

Please dont lie for Trump


Editor,
In Joe OConnors letter
Conservative views in the Aug. 16
edition of the Daily Journal, he
attempts to rewrite history and put
words in Donald Trumps mouth. It
was perfectly clear to the average person, that when Trump said, I dont
know, maybe the Second Amendment
people could do something, the
National Rie Association was never
mentioned by Trump in this comment. He was referring to some form
of violence against Hillary Clinton.
The phrase Second Amendment
people is referring to American citizens who mistakenly believe they
have the right to carry their guns on
them, anytime and anywhere. So,
when Trump refers to people who
carry their guns with them all the
time, its easy to infer that he means
that maybe these people can do some-

Jerry Lee, Publisher


Jon Mays, Editor in Chief
Nathan Mollat, Sports Editor
Erik Oeverndiek, Copy Editor/Page Designer
Nicola Zeuzem, Production Manager
Kerry McArdle, Marketing & Events
REPORTERS:
Terry Bernal, Bill Silverfarb, Austin Walsh, Samantha
Weigel

thing with their guns. Even the Secret


Service stated that they are aware of
Trumps comments.
So, please dont try to spin what
Trump said or put words in his mouth
thats just lying for Trump.
Michael Oberg
San Mateo

Twisting Trumps words


Editor,
An irate letter writersaw Trumps
speech and he was clearly referring
to the organizations political power
and funding not anything even
remotely connected to violence
(Conservative views letter to the
editor in the Aug. 16 edition of the
Daily Journal).
My goodness, how much of a Trump
apologist do you have to be to misunderstand his words: Hillary wants to
abolish, essentially abolish the
Second Amendment. If she gets to
pick her judges, nothing you can do,
folks. Although the Second
Amendment people, maybe there is. I
dont know, adding, But that would
be a horrible day.
Besides blatantly lying about
Hillarys plan for the Second
Amendment, the last sentence should
remove any doubt about what Trump
really meant. He certainly didnt
mean it would bea horrible day
ifhis opponentwere prevented from
picking SCOTUS judges because she
didnt win. Even Trump seemed to
admit it would be a horrible day if
another politician were gunned down,
or did he just add that to sound more
reasonable? Every Southerner, black
and white, knows exactly what Trump
was suggesting when he said the
Second Amendment people know
what to do if Clinton is elected.
Trumps methods line up with the historic pattern of white hate groups
who wait for politicians to use code
words to call them to arms.
Just recently, a federal court overturned North Carolinas voter-suppression law. Trump knows that
justmade itharder for him to win this
swing state. No surprise he would
sink low enough to tap the repressed
hatred of angry white voters.
But I am surprised that someone
feels so obligated todefend a sinking
Trump that he tries to misinterpret
what he actually said, with entirely
illogical linguistic acrobatics.

Jorg Aadahl
San Mateo

Secretary Clintons emails


Editor,
We have been told repeatedly that
there was nothing classied in
Secretary Clintons emails. Why,
then, is her testimony to the FBI

BUSINESS STAFF:
Charles Gould
Paul Moisio
Andrea Sanchez-Lopez Joel Snyder
Brenda West
INTERNS, CORRESPONDENTS, CONTRACTORS:
Robert Armstrong
Jim Clifford
Caroline Denney
William Epstein
Dan Heller
Tom Jung
Jeanita Lyman
Brigitte Parman
Nick Rose
Andrew Scheiner
Emily Shen
Kelly Song
Gary Whitman
Cindy Zhang

Susan E. Cohn, Senior Correspondent: Events

Letters to the Editor


Should be no longer than 250 words.
Perspective Columns
Should be no longer than 600 words.
Illegibly handwritten letters and anonymous letters
will not be accepted.
Please include a city of residence and phone
number where we can reach you.

heavily redacted? According to the


FBI, it was because of the classied
nature of the content. This is very
confusing the emails were not
classied, but the testimony about
these unclassied documents is classied?

Keith De Filippis
San Jose

Thank you to the


Foster City Fire Department
Editor,
This is to expressour gratitude to
the Foster City Fire Department for
their quick response, expertise and
professionalism with regard to the
Aug. 24, 2016 re on Chess Drive
(Two-alarm re damages Foster City
ofce complex in the Aug. 2 edition
of the Daily Journal). Thank you to
the Foster City Fire Department.

Susan Foley
Sonia Melgoza
Foster City
The letter writers are tenants of
1169 Chess Driv e.

Americas political problem


Editor,
Its easy to see what we do wrong in
this country in terms of government.
We elect Republican presidents who
give tax cuts, especially to the
wealthy. Then they make up for those
cuts by borrowing the money from
China. So when they leave ofce, the
people who are most economically
active, which is the middle class,
have to pay back that debt. Because if
youre rich, then youve made it,
nowhere else to go. If youre poor,
then youre without funds and are not
going anywhere either. But, if youre
in the middle, you neither lack nor are
fullled. It is this group that fuels
economic growth.
Republican presidents only give
benets to 10 percent of the country.
Most of us covet the University of
California system and public colleges. Well, we pay for them through
our taxes. If not enough taxes are collected, then the costs have to be
passed on to the students. So one can
believe this myth: the Democrats
take your hard-earned money and give
it away to people who dont work or
contribute. Or you can believe the
truth: the Republicans are having the
rich pay less in taxes than most of
the middle class, leavingthe bills for
us to pay. Everything that makes this
country so wonderful to live in started
with FDR and his New Deal.
Without that, we can begin the slide
back into feudalism.

Patrick Field
Palo Alto

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he story of the Wisnoms is intertwined with San


Mateo history. Appropriately, current members and
their ancestors will be honored by the San Mateo
County Historical Association History Makers Dinner
Sept. 21.
In 1868, Robert Wisnom, an Irish carpenter, came to San
Mateo where he helped build John Parrotts Baywood
Estate. The mansion itself stood a half block west of the
present San Mateo main library.
Then, the little village of San Mateo had no street lights
nor paved streets. There was no sewer system. The newly
launched San Francisco-San Jose Railroad, provided transportation north and south while stagecoaches moved people to the coast and back. The entire community was built
around the railroad depot. But Wisnom liked what he saw. In
1869, he purchased his rst
piece of real estate between
Third and Fourth avenues on
B Street. He also started his
own business. He lived in a
large Victorian boarding
house on 36-38 N.
Claremont St., a portion of
which still exists today.
***
In 1872, Wisnom traveled
to Ireland to nd a wife
because women were in
short supply in San Mateo.
He married Sarah Whitehead
on Dec. 31, 1872, and the
next day they sailed to
California. Soon after, the
young couple bought property on the west side of
Claremont St., just north of First Avenue, and constructed a
house for $1,700. It was a two-story house with six rooms
where their rst baby was born.
The family then built a new house at 149 Second Ave.
Robert had formed a contracting and lumber business with
James R. Doyle. They set up their rst yard on Second
Avenue and B Street, now the site of the Vault 164 restaurant (formerly National Bank). Next door, Wisnom built a
barn and stable on the site of the present day Hotel St.
Matthew. By the end of the decade, the lumber yard was the
only one of its kind on the mid-Peninsula.
By 1874, everyone in the village was calling Wisnom
Big Bob. He and Sarah became members of the
Congregational Church. Wisnom built a 34-foot-by-150foot wine house on what is Brewer Avenue in Hillsborough
today. With this, he became recognized as San Mateos best
known builder. At about this time he built Union Hall near
the railroad tracks which he later rebuilt into Wisnom Hall,
the central gathering place for the San Mateo community
until it was destroyed by re in 1883. It also served as a
court and public meetings were held there before there was a
city hall. In 1875, he received his greatest job offer yet
to build the James Byrnes House, a mansion for $6,000. A
portion of the house still stands at 703-717 First Ave.
Byrnes would become a state senator.
Wisnom also built Victorian homes for blacksmiths
William and Dennis Brown. The latter still stands at 5
Delaware St. Commercial buildings constructed by Robert
and later by his family included the original Levy Brothers
store on B Street and the Hotel St. Matthew on the site of
Wisnoms old barn and stable. The block bounded by
Baldwin Avenue, B Street, First Avenue and Ellsworth
Avenue was also developed by the family.
As a leading citizen, Wisnom helped start the Bank of
San Mateo. He served as vice president until it was taken
over by A.P. Giannini. Wisnom was then chosen as one of
the ve original councilmembers of the edging city.
***
Roberts and Sarahs last home was a large white
Victorian which encompassed an entire block on Second
Avenue between San Mateo Drive and Ellsworth Avenue.
When he retired in 1904, each of his seven children
received equal shares in the Wisnom Company, which by
decree had to remain in the family. No outsider could ever
own any of its stock. Each son received an adequate amount
of money to establish a business in San Mateo. John, the
eldest, assumed charge of the familys lumber company at
South Delaware Street and First Avenue. Robert J., opened a
hardware store with brother William at Second and
Ellsworth avenues (Site of the Baywatch restaurant).
Wisnoms also became a Dodge car dealership while Levy
Brothers sold Buicks. The store provided dynamite for the
new roads needed in the city. Robert J. was also a founding
member of the San Mateo Rotary Club in 1924. Samuel
became a home builder in San Mateo Park, Burlingame and
Hillsborough. Two stand in Hillsborough today, 200 West
Inez Ave. and 923 Hayne Road. David, the youngest,
worked for the National Bank. His son, David Jr. later managed the bank which eventually merged with Crocker Bank.
***
Twenty-seven descendants of Robert Wisnom will attend
the dinner Sept. 21 including great-grandchildren: Janet
Wisnom Smith, Suzi Wisnom Nelson, David Wisnom III,
Philip Irwin; John, William, Richard and Ronald Elfving.
Sue Lempert is the former may or of San Mateo. Her column
runs ev ery Monday. She can be reached at sue@smdaily journal.com.

10

BUSINESS

Monday Aug. 29, 2016

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Concern grows that Obamacare


will go down as failed experiment
By Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON With the


hourglass running out for his
administration, President Barack
Obamas health care law is struggling in many parts of the country. Double-digit premium increases and exits by big-name insurers
have caused some to wonder
whether Obamacare will go
down as a failed experiment.
If Democrat Hillary Clinton
wins the White House, expect her
to mount a rescue effort. But how
much Clinton could do depends on
finding willing partners in
Congress and among Republican
governors, a real political challenge.
There are turbulent waters,
said Kathleen Sebelius, Obamas
first secretary of Health and
Human Services. But do I see this
as a death knell? No.
Next years health insurance
sign-up season starts a week
before the Nov. 8 election, and the
previews have been brutal.
Premiums are expected to go up
sharply in many insurance marketplaces, which offer subsidized
private coverage to people lacking access to job-based plans.
At the same time, retrenchment
by insurers that have lost hundreds
of millions of dollars means that
more areas will become one-insurer markets, losing the benefits of
competition. The consulting firm

Avalere Health projects that seven


states will only have one insurer
in each of their marketplace
regions next year.
Administration officials say
insurers set prices too low in a bid
to gain market share, and the correction is leading to sticker
shock. Insurers blame the problems on sicker-than-expected customers, disappointing enrollment
and a premium stabilization system that failed to work as advertised. They also say some people
are gaming the system, taking
advantage of guaranteed coverage
to get medical care only when they
are sick.
Not all state markets are in trouble. What is more important, most
of the 11 million people covered
through HealthCare.gov and its
state-run counterparts will be
cushioned from premium increases
by government subsidies that rise
with the cost.
But many customers may have
to switch to less comprehensive
plans to keep their monthly premiums down. And millions of people who buy individual policies
outside the government marketplaces get no financial help. They
will have to pay the full increases
or go without coverage and risk
fines. (People with employer coverage and Medicare are largely
unaffected.)
Tennessees insurance commissioner said recently that the individual health insurance market in

her state is
very near coll a p s e .
Premiums for
the
biggest
insurer
are
expected
to
increase by an
average of 62
Barack Obama percent. Two
co mp et i t o rs
will post average increases of 46
percent and 44 percent.
But because the spigot of federal
subsidies remains wide open, an
implosion of health insurance
markets around the country seems
unlikely. More than 8 out of 10
HealthCare. gov customers get
subsidies covering about 70 percent of their total premiums.
Instead, the damage is likely to be
gradual. Rising premiums deter
healthy people from signing up,
leaving an insurance pool thats
more expensive to cover each succeeding year.
My real concern is 2018, said
Caroline Pearson, a senior vice
president with Avalere. If there is
no improvement in enrollment,
we could see big sections of the
country without any plans participating.
If Republican Donald Trump
wins the White House, hed start
dismantling the Affordable Care
Act. But Clinton would come with
a long list of proposed fixes, from
rearranging benefits to introducing a government-sponsored
public option as an alternative

to private insurers. Not all her


ideas would require congressional
action.
She is going to find it important to continue to expand health
care, said Joel Ario, a former
Obama administration official
whos now with the consulting
firm Mannatt Health.
People in the Clinton camp say
she recognizes that as president
shed have to get Obamas law
working better, and is taking
nothing off the table.
A look at some major ideas and
their prospects:

PUBLIC OPTION
Clintons
primary
rival,
Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders,
advocated Medicare for all and
that pushed Clinton to a fuller
embrace of government-run insurance. But Democrats could not get
a public option through Congress
even when they had undisputed
control. Whichever party wins the
Senate in November, the balance
is expected to be close and
Republicans are favored to retain
control of the House.
While a new national insurance
program seems a long shot,
Obamas law allows states to
experiment. I think the public
option is more likely to be tested
at a state level, Sebelius said.

SWEETENING SUBSIDIES
Clinton has proposed more generous subsidies and tax credits for

health care, which might also


entice more people to sign up. But
shed have a tough time selling
Republicans. It may be doable in
the bargaining around budget and
tax bills, but Democrats would be
pressed to give up some of the
health laws requirements, including a premiums formula that tends
to favor older people over young
adults.

INCREMENTAL CHANGES
Whether its fixing a family
glitch that can prevent dependents from getting subsidized coverage, requiring insurers to cover
more routine services outside the
annual deductible, or reworking
the premium stabilization program for insurers, incremental
changes seem to offer a president
Clinton her easiest path.

MEDICAID EXPANSION
Expect a Clinton White House
to tirelessly court the 19 states
that have yet to expand Medicaid
for low-income people.
Shed ask Congress to provide
the same three full years of federal
financing that early-adopting
states got under the health law.
GOP governors would demand
more flexibility with program
rules.
Im just hoping that reality
begins to sink in when she is
inaugurated, Sebelius said. If the
law is not going to go away, then
lets make it work.

Airbnb cites its enforcement as crackdown bill awaits Cuomo


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ALBANY, N. Y. New York


Gov. Andrew Cuomo must soon
decide whether to authorize hefty
fines for many people who offer to
rent out their New York City apartments on Airbnb.
Meanwhile, the online booking
service said its policing its website to remove commercial opera-

tors in the city, addressing a chief


complaint of critics who say it
promotes illegal hotels and effectively takes scarce apartments out
of circulation.
Airbnb, with 45,000 city listings and another 13,000 across
the state, counters that it typically
enables New Yorkers to make
about $5,000 a year to help pay
their own rising rents, while offer-

ing interesting and sometimes


more affordable alternatives to the
New York Citys nearly 60 million
annual visitors.
Hosts set these prices, but I
think most people find that its a
better deal than staying at a
hotel, said Josh Meltzer, head of
public policy for Airbnb, which
recorded 1.3 million city guests
over the past year.

Peter Ward, president of the New


York Hotel and Motel Trades
Council, said Airbnb has been
breaking laws with impunity for
years, depleting affordable housing stock and threatening middleclass union hotel jobs that are
the backbone of New Yorks
tourism economy.
New York Citys 696 hotels
employed 50,000 people last year

about 30,000 of them were


union members according to
state, union and municipal authorities. Average occupancy in
Manhattan was 88.4 percent with
average daily rooms costing
$290.
Its already illegal to rent most
city apartments for less than 30
days when the owner or tenant is
not there.

NINERS GET NO LOVE: NARY A MENTION OF 49ERS AS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS BREAKS DOWN THE 2016 NFC SEASON >> PAGE 12

<<< Page 13, Endwell ends well;


N.Y. team wins LL World Series
Monday Aug. 29, 2016

Notre Dame-Belmont takes 2nd at Spikefest


By Terry Bernal
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

Notre Dame-Belmont head coach Jen


Agresti was still steaming about the Tigers
loss to Mitty in the Spikefest I championship match Saturday when her assistant
coach Anne Ulrich Luchetti pointed out some
keen history.
While NDB has reached great volleyball
heights in recent years most recently capturing the Division IV state championship
last season the volleyball powerhouse, in
13 years, had never advanced to the championship match at the 32-team regular-season

kickoff at Milpitas High


School.
While getting swept
25-10, 25-19 in the
championship match by
Mitty, the second-place
finish marks the best ever
at Spikefest by NDB.
I think this shows
were going to be able to
Katie Smoot
do a lot as a team if we put
in the time and effort, NDB senior outside
hitter Katie Smoot said.
Smoot showed she has no intention of
slowing down just because she secured a full

ride to University of Arizona next season.


The 6-foot crusher turned in a superb allaround performance through the Tigers five
matches Saturday, totaling 63 kills, 21 digs,
five solo blocks and five aces.
Katie was not happy after the [loss in the
championship match], Agresti said. But
watching her throughout the day when she
makes up her mind shes going to put the ball
away, she just trail-blazes.
For Mitty, reaching Saturdays championship match was something of a cakewalk.
The reigning West Catholic Athletic League
and state Division II champs dropped just one
set on the day in a matchup with Sacred Heart

Prep. Otherwise, the Monarchs swept


through Lincoln-San Jose, Bishop ODowdOakland and Presentation-San Jose before
their showdown with NDB.
For the Tigers, however, their two matches
leading into the championship round were
both grueling three-set victories, including
the final game of pool play in which it
appeared, at a point, NDB had been defeated.
Facing St. Ignatius-SF, the Tigers dropped
the first set and saw St. Ignatius earn a match
point at 24-23 in Game 2. During the ensuing
rally, St. Ignatius was on the attack but made

See NDB, Page 14

Giants 13, Braves 4

Panik time as
Giant offense
clubs Atlanta
By Michael Wagaman
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

racked up 575 yards of total offense.


If we play defense like that all season
well be 0-10 this year, Serra head coach
Patrick Walsh said. So weve got to find out
spirit there.
According to Walsh, the Padres spirit got
sapped when Sitaleki Nunn was forced to
depart to the locker room following the big
return.

SAN FRANCISCO The Giants combined


some unexpected power at the plate with a
gritty outing from Madison Bumgarner to
beat the Braves and finally get a much-needed
series win a rarity for manager Bruce
Bochys ballclub since the All-Star break.
With a little more than a month left in the
season, even hitting four home runs, including a pair by Joe Panik,
paled in comparison to
taking two of three from
Atlanta.
There havent been
many of them in the second half, but things look
like theyre starting to
turn around for us,
Bumgarner said after
Joe Panik
pitching seven innings in
San Franciscos 13-4 victory Sunday. Weve
been playing pretty good but a lot of things
havent gone our way. Thats a good win for
us, to win that series.
The Giants had won only one series since
the break. In the process, a 6 1/2-game lead
in the NL West turned into a two-game deficit
heading into Sunday.
San Francisco is still two games back of
the first-place Los Angeles Dodgers, but the
outlook sure is a lot brighter after the Giants
completed their first series win at home since
early July.
Its great to take any series, Bochy said.
Hopefully, we can come back and carry this
the rest of the way.
Panik hit a solo homer in the second and
added a two-run shot in the fourth. The second baseman also reached on an infield single in the sixth and had a sacrifice fly in the
seventh to match his career high of four
RBIs.

See SERRA, Page 14

See GIANTS, Page 13

TERRY BERNAL/DAILY JOURNAL

Serra receiver Patrick Nunn, right, cant hold on to a diving try on a pass attempt from brother Sitaleki Nunn in the Padres 63-35 loss to
St. Marys-Stockton in Saturdays Central Coast Section football opener at Brady Family Stadium.

Opening day gets


away from Serra
By Terry Bernal
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

One explosive play to open the second


half looked like the swing of momentum the
Serra Padres needed Saturday against powerhouse St. Marys-Stockton.
After a back-and-forth first half, Sitaleki
Nunn took the second-half kickoff 93 yards
for a touchdown to swing the Padres into the
lead. But the exciting return proved more

harmful than the temporary advantage it provided on the scoreboard as the gallop caused
Sitaleki Nunn to depart with leg cramps.
Less than three minutes later, a relentless
St. Marys offense took the lead back and
dominated the second half to claim a 63-35
victory over Serra in Saturdays opener at
Brady Family Stadium.
Without linebacker TC Lavulo, who sat out
the opener with a hamstring injury, Serra
was hapless to stop St. Marys as the Rams

Kap steadfast in anthem protest Study: Playing a sport while


By Janie McCauley
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SANTA CLARA Defiant, and determined


to be a conduit for U.S. change, Colin
Kaepernick plans to sit through the national anthem for as long as he feels is appropriate and until he sees significant progress
in America specifically when it comes to
race relations.
He knows he could be cut by San
Francisco for this stand. Criticized, ostracized, and hell go it all alone if need be.

Colin
Kaepernick

The quarterback realizes he might be treated


poorly in some road
cities, and hes ready for
that, too, saying hes not
overly concerned about
his safety, but if something happens thats
only proving my point.
Im going to continue
to stand with the people

concussed prolongs recovery


By Lindsey Tanner
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHICAGO Continuing to play despite


a concussion doubles recovery time for teen
athletes and leads to worse short-term mental function than in those immediately
removed from action, a study found.
Its billed as the first to compare recovery
See 49ERS, Page 16 outcomes for athletes removed from a game or

practice compared with those who arent. The


study was small, involving 69 teens treated at
a University of Pittsburgh Medical Center
concussion clinic, but the results bolster evidence supporting the growing number of
return-to-play laws and policies nationwide
The study was published Monday in the
journal Pediatrics.

See STUDY, Page 16

12

SPORTS

Monday Aug. 29, 2016

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Few contenders, more pretenders in NFC


By Rob Maaddi
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The last four teams to play for the NFC


championship have the same goal: Super
Bowl or bust.
Carolina, Arizona, Seattle and Green Bay are
still the class of a conference that has far more
pretenders than contenders. Its a smart bet one
of the four teams will be in Houston playing
for the Vince Lombardi Trophy in February.
Reigning NFL MVP Cam Newton led the
Panthers to a 17-1 record before Von Miller and
the Broncos stifled them in the Super Bowl.
Carolina returns the bulk of its roster except
All-Pro cornerback Josh Norman, now in
Washington. The offense should be even better
because star receiver Kelvin Benjamin is back
after a knee injury forced him to miss last season.
Given the talent we have on the offensive
side, its about every guy maximizing their
role, Newton said. We dont want to look
back and say we didnt maximize our opportunity with all these talents.
The last eight teams to lose the Super Bowl
have won at least 10 games the next season.
But no team has reached the title game a year
after losing since the 1993 Bills.
You can never be satisfied, Panthers coach
Ron Rivera said. We didnt win the Super
Bowl. So that right there is enough for us to
stay motivated and keep moving toward our
goal.
The Cardinals were 13-3 last year and are 3414 under Bruce Arians. A blowout loss at
Carolina in the NFC title game was a bitter end
to a fine season. Carson Palmer is coming off
his best season, but threw four interceptions
against the Panthers. Palmer turns 37 in
December, so theres urgency to win now.

JEREMY BREVARD/USA TODAY SPORTS

The Carolina Panthers return a majority of the roster, including NFL MVP Cam Newton, that
carried the franchise to the Super Bowl last season.
Seattle also was knocked out of the playoffs
by the Panthers. The Seahawks might have
even more depth than they did when they
almost won consecutive Super Bowls in 201314.
Running back Thomas Rawls Marshawn
Lynchs replacement and tight end Jimmy
Graham are back from significant injuries that
ended their 2015 seasons early. Russell
Wilson led the NFL in passer rating and is still
improving.
We know what it takes to win a lot of
games, Wilson said.
Aaron Rodgers and the Packers are looking
to rebound after Minnesota ended their fouryear reign in the NFC North. Star receiver

Jordy Nelson is back after missing the season


with a knee injury. Running back Eddie Lacy
slimmed down. Even Rodgers altered his diet
after minor knee surgery in the offseason.
If everyone around him stays healthy,
Rodgers should return to MVP form. He had
3,821 yards passing, 31 touchdowns and eight
interceptions in a down year for him in
2015.
The Vikings round out the top 5 in the NFC.
But they need much more production from
Teddy Bridgewater to have a chance to win the
conference. Bridgewater finished in the bottom third of the NFL in most quarterback categories last season.
Minnesotas offense still relies on Adrian

College football Down Under attracts 61,000 fans in Sydney


By Dennis Passa
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SYDNEY The beer ran out in some sections of the Olympic stadium, but most of
the 61,247 spectators at Saturdays U.S. college football opener in Sydney between
California and Hawaii appeared to be enjoying their American gridiron experience.
The favored Pac 12 conferences
California Golden Bears from Berkeley

across the Bay from San Francisco were 5131 winners. It was a midday start so that the
game could be televised back to the U.S. in
prime time on Friday night, and was played
under sunny skies and with light winds.
Tailgate parties werent a big part of the
day there arent a lot of ground-level parking lots close to the 83,500-seat stadium
but fans feasted on two-foot-long hotdogs
and copious amounts of French fries and
nachos. Asian and middle Eastern food from

nearby catering kiosks also featured, reflecting the multicultural makeup of the neighborhoods around the former Olympic
precinct of Homebush in western Sydney.
The concession stands, however, appeared
to be unprepared for the crowds. Stadium
officials said 70,000 cups of beer were sold,
but one spectator tweeted he waited in line
for an hour, while another said the reason

See SYDNEY, Page 15

Peterson, who led the league with 1,485 yards


rushing last season. If the 31-year-old
Peterson slows down, the Vikings could be in
trouble.
Whoever wins the NFC East could be an
underdog in the playoffs, though a home game
comes with winning the division.
The Redskins finished first thanks to a
breakout year from Kirk Cousins. They added
Norman in free agency to bolster a poor
defense. But no team has repeated in the division since the Eagles won four in a row from
2001-04.
The Giants have a new coach, Ben McAdoo,
and revamped defense. They re-signed Jason
Pierre-Paul and added defensive end Olivier
Vernon, defensive tackle Damon Harrison,
cornerback Janoris Jenkins and linebacker
Kennan Robinson.
With Eli Manning and Odell Beckham Jr.
leading the way on offense, New York could
end its four-year playoff drought.
McAdoo is one of four new coaches in the
NFC. The Eagles hired Doug Pederson to
replace Chip Kelly, who took over in San
Francisco. Tampa Bay hired Dirk Koetter.
Tony Romos back injury means Dallas
might start the season with rookie Dak
Prescott at quarterback. If so, it tempers the
excitement surrounding running back Ezekiel
Elliott, the No. 4 overall pick.
Matthew Stafford and the Lions have to
adjust to life without Calvin Johnson.
Megatron retired in the offseason.
Drew Brees is playing for a new contract 37
at age, so the Saints could be a surprise team.
The Falcons aim for consistency after losing
eight of 11 following a 5-0 start. The Rams try
to bring a winner to town in the NFLs return to
Los Angeles. The Bears will go as far as Jay
Cutler takes them, usually nowhere.

Beach volleyball
Jennings and Ross win in Long Beach
LONG BEACH Kerri Walsh Jennings and
April Ross rebounded from Olympic bronze
to win the Long Beach Grand Slam Sunday.
The top-seeded Americans beat Spains
Liliana Fernandez and Elsa Baquerizo 21-16,
21-16 in the ASICS World Series of Beach
Volleyballs regular-season finale.
Brazils Evandro Goncalves and Pedro
Solberg won the mens title, topping
Americans Phil Dalhausser and Nick Lucena.

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SPORTS

THE DAILY JOURNAL

N.Y. captures Little League crown


By Travis Johnson
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SOUTH WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. As


Ryan Harlost stepped to the mound on
Sunday, he took it all in.
Chants of U-S-A, U-S-A! droned over
his left shoulder as he dipped it to deliver
a warm-up pitch. South Korean arms and
flags waved furiously to his right. Little
kids who asked for his autograph earlier
in the week used makeshift sleds to slide
down the hill toward most of the 22,000plus fans who packed Lamade Stadium.
The Endwell, New York, pitcher admitted it made him uneasy. He sure didnt
show it.
Harlost led New York to the Little
League World Series title, striking out
eight and limiting South Korea to five
hits in six innings in a 2-1 victory. He
scored the deciding run on a passed ball
in the fourth inning.
I was a little nervous at first in front
of a lot of people but its just another
game and I felt confident going in,
Harlost said.
But it was more than just another
game.
Endwell snapped a five-year championship drought for U.S. teams on Little
Leagues biggest stage and gave New
York its first title since 1964.
Huntington Beach, California, won in
2011 and Mid Island from Staten Island
won New Yorks last World Series cham-

GIANTS
Continued from page 11
It was the first multihomer game of
his career.
It was a combination of getting
some good counts where I can be
aggressive and just not missing those
spots, Panik said.
Denard Span and Eduardo Nunez also
homered for the Giants. Brandon
Crawford had three hits and Jarrett
Parker drove in three runs.
Three of San Franciscos four homers
came off Braves starter Aaron Blair (06), who allowed five runs over four
innings.
When I kept the ball down they were
effective pitches, and when I got hurt
they were up and flat, Blair said.
Bumgarner (13-8) allowed three runs
over seven uneven innings. He struck
out five and walked two.
San Franciscos four-time All-Star

Monday Aug. 29, 2016

13

As 7, Cardinals 4

Triggs gets 1st W as


As power past Cards
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

EVAN HABEEB/USA TODAY SPORTS

Mid-Atlantic Region players celebrate after beating the Asia-Pacific Region 2-1 in
the championship game of the Little League World Series.
pionship.
Conner Rush had the New York teams
only RBI to give Endwell a lead it wouldnt relinquish in the bottom of the
fourth. Harlost (2-0) scored the deciding
run on a passed ball a batter later.
I was just thinking get it in play any
way you can, Rush said. Once that happens, you never know what can happen.
For a while, it didnt look like New
York hitters would be able to hit anything.
Junho Jeong (1-2) gave up two runs on
four hits and struck out nine for South

Korea (4-2). He was unflappable for most


of the afternoon, working the outside of
the plate masterfully for 3 1/3 innings of
no-hit ball before Jude Abbadessa broke
through in the fourth.
Waking to the plate as Endwell fans
along the first base side bellowed
Juuude! Abbadessa broke up the
rightys no-hit bid with a single to center. Harlost followed with a liner to the
same spot and Rush plated the go-ahead
run with a hit that fell in behind the
shortstop. Harlost raced home to give
New York a 2-0 lead one batter later.

pitched in and out of


trouble most of the
day but punctuated
his afternoon with
an emphatic fist
pump after striking
out pinch-hitter Jace
Peterson to end the
seventh.
It seemed like it
Madison
was ball one to
Bumgarner
every
hitter,
Bumgarner said. My command was
good, just not the first pitch of the atbat it seemed like.
Freddie Freeman and Gordon
Beckham homered for Atlanta. Ender
Inciarte doubled, tripled and scored
twice, but the last-place Braves have
lost 13 of 18.
Nunez, who had three hits, homered
as part of an eight-run seventh, when
the Giants tripled three times and sent
14 batters to the plate.

runs and four triples in one game since


at least 1900. The last major league
team to do it was the New York Yankees
against Texas on May 6, 1998. Three
triples came in one inning, the first
time in San Francisco history that the
Giants have done that.

Making history
The Giants had not had four home

Trainers room
1B Brandon Belt was in the lineup
after being a late scratch Saturday
because of a stiff neck. ... OF Hunter
Pence missed his third consecutive
game with tightness in his right hamstring. ... Giants reliever Derek Law
was placed on the 15-day disabled list
with a strained right elbow. ... Parker
was called up from Triple-A Sacramento
before the game.

ST. LOUIS First Stephen Vogt delivered the lineup card to


the umpires. Then he connected for a three-run home run that
helped the As beat the St. Louis Cardinals 7-4 Sunday.
Khris Davis also homered, his 34th, in support of rookie
Andrew Triggs rst win. Triggs (1-1)
allowed three runs on four hits, walked
none and struck out eight in six innings.
The Athletics have won four of their past
ve games and before each of the wins,
Vogt has handled the duties of taking out
the lineup card.
Whatever works, said Vogt, who went
to the pregame meeting in his catchers
Andrew Triggs gear. Youve got to keep it rolling.
Triggs, who was called up from Triple-A
Nashville for the eighth time earlier this month, said about 15
family and friends made the trip from his hometown in
Nashville to watch the game played with the temperature 92
degrees at rst pitch.
Once you get through those rst couple of innings with
that heat, youre maxed out in sweat so theres not much more
you can do, Triggs said. A wins a win but its sweeter
because I had a pretty big crew here.
Hes getting rewarded with a beer shower, Athletics manager Bob Melvin said. To pitch as well as he has and work himself into the rotation, its very rewarding to get him a win.
Jaime Garcia (10-10) gave up a three-run homer to Vogt with
in the third and a two-run shot to Davis, his 34th, with in the
rst. Garcia has allowed seven homers in his past three starts
after giving up six in his rst 13 starts. Both homers against
the Athletics came with two out.

MLB brief
Donaldson hits three HRs as Jays beat Twins
Josh Donaldson had his first career three-homer game,
Troy Tulowitzki also went deep and the Toronto Blue Jays
beat the Twins 9-6 Sunday to complete a three-game sweep.
Donaldson hit a solo homer off Kyle Gibson in the second, then delivered a go-ahead, two-run blast off Pat Light
(0-1) in the seventh.
Dozens of fans tossed hats onto the field to celebrate the
home run hat trick after Donaldson, the AL MVP in 2015,
hit a solo shot off Alex Wimmers in the eighth.
Groundskeepers and even the Blue Jays mascot helped clear
the hats away.
It was Donaldsons fourth multi-homer game this season
and the 10th of his career.

Up next
RHP Johnny Cueto (14-4) faces
Arizona for the fourth time this season
Tuesday at AT&T Park. Cueto has two
wins and a 3.86 ERA in his previous
three games against the Diamondbacks.

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14

SPORTS

Monday Aug. 29, 2016

Football

SERRA

Menlo School 42, Lincoln-SF 13

Continued from page 11

Local roundup
Menlo running back Charlie Ferguson opened his senior
season with a bang, rushing for a game-high 216 yards to lead
the Knights past Lincoln Saturday at Menlo School.
Ferguson carried the ball 17 times and scored two tourndowns. He also had a big showing on special teams, finishing
the day with 335 multi-purpose yards.
Menlo and Lincoln went into the halftime locker room tied 77, but the Knights scored 21 unanswered points in the third quarter. Both teams finished the day with 300 total offensive yards on
the nose. Lincoln junior running back Josiah Calvo-Martinez
also had a big day, totaling a career-high 204 rushing yards.

San Benito 30, Sacred Heart Prep 12


The Gators dropped their first opening game since 2006,
falling Saturday at home to the San Benito Haybalers.
Senior quarterback Thomas Wine was 11-of-23 passing for
183 yards and one touchdown, a 39-yard strike to Dominic
Cacchione in the first quarter to get the Gators on the board.
Cacchione finsihed the day with six recpetions for 116 yards.
Running back Garrett Gavello 12 rushes for 42 yards
added SHPs other score in the third quarter.
The last team to defeat SHP on opening day was El Camino
on Sept. 1, 2006 by a score of 20-19.

Boys water polo


Peeters earns honors at Wilcox Tournament
San Mateo dropped a pair of games Saturday to wrap up play
in the Wilcox Tournament, but a spectacular showing by senior wing Nick Peeters in the early game cinched his selection
on the all-tournament team.
The Bearcats fell 19-10 to Lynbrook in the first of two
games Saturday with Peeters totaling seven goals and four
assists. Ethan Wolf added two goals for San Mateo, while
Bruno Basilieri and Sterling Finn had one score apiece.
In Saturdays nightcap, a 14-6 loss to Santa Clara, Peeters
added two more goals while Wolf scored a team-high three. Joe
Borges rounded out the scoring with one goal.

While on the field, Sitaleki Nunn was


a force, totaling 325 all-purpose yards.
But St. Marys junior running back
Dusty Frampton was equally as impressive in his first opening-day start, rushing for 277 yards on 21 carries and six
touchdowns, including scoring runs of
78 and 60 yards in the second half.
He ran like Adrian Peterson, Walsh
said. He had a great day today.
The start was just the second of
Framptons varsity career. While he
notched two four-touchdown games last
season and totaled 710 yards, he only
got one start in the first round of the
playoffs when the Rams rushing leader
from 2015, Brandon Zaunbrecher, went
down with an ankle injury.
Frampton ran for a season-high 143
yards in that playoff win against StaggStockton. But Saturdays performance
was nearly twice as impressive.
Im excited, Frampton said. This
is by far my best game ever.
The Padres had plenty of highlights
in the first half, including leading for
much of it. Under center, Sitaleki Nunn
was his typically dynamic self, proving
the ever-creative centerpiece of the
spread option offense.
After St. Marys jumped out to a quick
lead less than two minutes into the
game on six-place, 80-yard drive
with Frampton carrying the ball on five
of the six plays, including a 3-yard
touchdown run the Padres answered

THE DAILY JOURNAL


right back with a score by getting
shifty at the quarterback position.
Sitaleki Nunn tabbed a first-down run
for 8 yards, then a first-down throw for
17 yards. But then Serra pulled a
switcheroo at the St. Marys 20-yard
line by quickly subbing in junior quarterback Jack Dameilo. Lining up
Sitaleki Nunn at wide out, Dameilo
found the reigning West Catholic
Athletic League Player of the Year on a
fly pattern over the middle for a touchdown strike, giving Serra a 7-6 lead.
The lead seesawed with Serra reupping to 14-13 with 9:19 remaining
in the half on a 44-yard breakaway
touchdown run by junior Isiah
Kendrick. Then the Padres flashed some
special-teams trickery as well to come
up with the ball on the ensuing kickoff.
Sitaleki Nunns younger brother, junior Patrick Nunn, recovered a lobbing
onside kick towards the sideline that
crossed the 10-yard clearance at the 50yard line by mere inches, giving the
Padres a momentum swing with possession at midfield.
Sitaleki Nunn then engineered an 11play drive with pass completions of 20,
24 and 4 yards along with runs of 4, 5
and a pair of 1-yard gainers inside the
St. Marys 5-yard line before junior slot
Shane Villaroman took an end-around
pitch for a 1-yard score, giving the
Padres a 21-13 lead.
But Serra couldnt hold off St. Marys
before the half as the Rams scored twice
inside the final two minutes of the half.
Theyre a good team, Serra outside
linebacker Ryan Matoso said. Theyre
big and theyre physical. We knew
exactly what was going to happen. We
just couldnt make tackles.

Frampton had his biggest run of the


half on a 25-yard sweep to push St.
Marys past midfield. Six plays later he
walked into the end zone for his second
score of the afternoon, closing Serras
lead to 21-19.
But the Rams werent through, forcing a quick possession change on a
three-and-out to get the ball back at
their own 41 with 41 seconds remaining in the half. Quarterback Jack
Dunniway then led his offense downfield for a swift score, exacting completions of 12, 20 and 8 yards before moving the ball to the 2-yard line a quarterback keeper.
Serra was tagged with a facemask
penalty on the play, moving the ball to
the 1. The extra yard gave St. Marys the
chance to run a wildcat draw with Marcus
Aponte scoring out of the shotgun with
no time remaining on the first-half
clock to give the Rams a 26-21 lead.
We couldnt run the clock out in the
first half, Walsh said. That was the
difference.
Sitaleki Nunn was noticeably in discomfort following the game. Walsh,
however, said he should be available to
play Friday night when the Padres travel to De La Salle-Concord.
Dameilo also departed late in the
game with an apparent injury to his
non-throwing shoulder. The junior was
9-of-12 passing for 66 yards, one
touchdown and one interception.
Sophomore quarterback Luke Bottari
saw some late snaps, going 0 for 2 with
an interception in his varsity debut.
Its a young team, Sitaleki Nunn
said. We need that next-man-up mentality. It didnt show today but it will
definitely show next week.

I think she is going to be a stud.

Carlmont wins red division

NDB senior outside hitter Tammy


Byrne finished the day with 36 kills, 46
digs and five aces. Junior libero Kat Ho
produced 35 digs and four aces.

Carlmont settled for 17th place at


Spikefest, posting a 4-1 record. The
Scots didnt lose a set after dropping
their opener 29-27, 25-17 to Sacred
Heart Prep.
The Scots went on to defeat LincolnSan Jose 25-13, 25-11; Notre DameSan Jose 25-21, 25-17; Lynbrook 2520, 25-22; and then took the red division championship match against
Homestead 25-19, 25-17.
Scots junior outside hitter Maya
McClellan opened the day with a double-double against SHP, totaling 15
assists and 12 digs. She went on to add
eight kills against Notre Dame-SJ and
seven kills against Homestead.
Carlmont was the top finisher from
the Peninsula Athletic League.
Burlingame and Woodside each posted
2-3 records.

Womens volleyball
Miller opens sophomore season strong for Caada
Former Carlmont standout Sabrina Miller totaled 22 kills
over two matches to help the Caada Colts to two wins in
their first two matches of the year.
The Colts scored straight-sets wins over Modesto and Allen
Hancock. Setter Vanessa DAmico, a transfer sophomore from
Menlo College, racked up 57 assists in the two matches.

Menlo College salvages two matches at Chicago tourney


The Menlo College womens volleyball team got off to a
rough start at the SXU/TCC Crossover Tournament in Chicago
last Friday, dropping its first two matches. With a win over Saint
Ambrose 25-18, 25-10, 25-18 and a four-set win over Judson
25-14, 24-26, 25-20, 25-14, the Oaks were able to break even
in the tourney and improve their overall season record to 3-3.

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Continued from page 11
Christian, Agresti turned to Katie
Smoots younger sister, Krissy Smoot,
to set Game 3.
I have my gut reactions and didnt
like what I was seeing and made a
change, Agresti said. And Krissy did
great.
Big sis had rave reviews about Krissy
Smoots performance as well, especially since the sophomore is in her first
year playing the position, transitioning from outside hitter at the junior-varsity level last season.
She is looking really good, Katie
Smoot said. I think Im probably just
biased. For her just learning how to set,

SHP wins bronze division


Sacred Heart Prep got an impromptu
rivalry showdown with neighboring
Menlo School in the Spikefest bronze
division championship game. SHP
claimed the victory in straight sets 2520, 25-22 to take ninth place in the
tourney.
The Gators fell to the bronze division
with a three-set loss to tournamentchampion Mitty earlier in the day. SHP
opened with a 29-27, 25-17 win over
Carlmont, then took down Los Gatos
and Harker in straight sets before finishing with the win over Menlo.

SPORTS

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Monday Aug. 29, 2016

15

Fowler plays his way off U.S. Ryder Cup team


By Doug Ferguson
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

FARMINGDALE, N.Y. Rickie


Fowler lost the lead, the tournament
and a guaranteed spot on the Ryder
Cup team.
Right when it looked as though
Zach Johnson had played his way
off the U.S. team, Fowler squandered a chance to earn the eighth and
final automatic spot when he shot
39 on the back nine at The
Barclays, capped off by two bogeys
and a double bogey over his last
four holes.
Very disappointing, Fowler
said. Just made a couple bad
swings at the wrong time.
Sunday was the final day for

SYDNEY
Continued from page 11
there were so many empty seats is
that most of the fans were in a
queue somewhere.
Many of the Aussie fans were
barracking more for the underdog Hawaiians than the more-fancied Cal side.
Really, they were cheering for
us more? asked Hawaiis first-year
coach Nick Rolovich. He even
admitted to noticing some traditional stadium features like the
Kiss Cam, supplemented often by
Karaoke Cam and Dance Cam
the highlight of the last feature
was a young boy with a Cal Bears tshirt busting some Michael
Jackson-like moves on the giant
stadium scoreboard.
A local marching band provided
halftime entertainment, supplemented by 30 members of the
Hawaii marching band. Among the
glitches was the person who sang
the Star Spangled Banner mistakenly replacing one word for anoth-

Johnson made his fourth Ryder Cup


team, while Dustin Johnson is
playing for the third time and
Mickelson qualified on his own for
the 11th time, an American record.
Europes automatic nine spots
were decided a week ago, and already
there are five Ryder Cup rookies in
Masters champion Danny Willett,
Andy
Sullivan,
Matthew
Fitzpatrick, Rafa Cabrera Bello and
Chris Wood.
European captain Darren Clarke
makes his three picks Tuesday.
Martin Kaymer and Lee Westwood
are likely to be two of the picks,
and Thomas Pieters of Belgium
made a strong case to be a pick
when he won in Denmark on
Sunday.

Americans
to
earn automatic
spots on the
team that will try
to win the Ryder
Cup back from
Europe on Sept.
30 to Oct. 2 at
Hazeltine
at
Minnesota.
Rickie Fowler
Five of the
spots were already clinched going
into The Barclays U.S. Open
champion Dustin Johnson, Jordan
Spieth, Phil Mickelson, PGA champion Jimmy Walker and Ryder Cup
rookie Brooks Koepka.
Patrick Reed moved from No. 8
to No. 4 with his one-shot victory
at Bethpage Black. Brandt

Snedeker and Zach Johnson kept


their spots.
Johnson tied for 48th, leaving
himself vulnerable for being
knocked out of the top eight when
Fowler had a two-shot lead early in
the final round. Fowler only needed
to finish alone in third to overtake
Johnson, and he was two shots
ahead of third place with four holes
to go.
Thats when it all went wrong.
Im just trying to win the tournament, Fowler said when asked if he
knew where he stood. If I win, then
it takes care of both things.
Obviously, once Patrick got a little
bit of a cushion, I still wanted to get
the best finish I can.
It will hurt, Fowler said. But

its only going to make it better for


next week. Ill be in a good spot.
Davis Love III still has four captains picks over the next three
weeks. He will make three of them
after the BMW Championship on
Sept. 12, and the final pick after the
Tour Championship, which ends
the Sunday before Ryder Cup week.
Bubba Watson closed with a 66
and tied for 13th to move into ninth
place, ahead of J.B. Holmes, Fowler
and Matt Kuchar, who won the
bronze medal at the Olympics.
That gives the Americans two of
this years major champions and
only one rookie.
Spieth, Reed, Walker and
Snedeker will be playing on their
second Ryder Cup team. Zach

er during the American anthem.


And one of the referees made a notso-flattering remark about someone on the sidelines, but forgot his
stadium microphone was turned
on.
The star of the show on the field
was California quarterback Davis
Webb, who made quite an impression in his first game as a graduate
transfer from Texas Tech.
Told he had 441 yards passing
38 for 54, with no interceptions
Webb said dryly: Yeah, it was OK,
Im just glad we got the victory.
Hawaii threw a few blitzes at us and
our offensive line played well.
Hawaii was without three key
players for unspecified disciplinary reasons. A Rainbow Warriors
spokesman said just before the
game began that safety Daniel
Lewis Jr., linebacker Jerrol GarciaWilliams and tight end Metuisela
Unga were not with the team
Saturday.
Cal coach Sonny Dykes said it
was a good starting point for his
team.
There is still plenty of work to
be done, but overall we played a
very good game and never let them

get back into it, Dykes said.

Zardesto miss U.S. World Cup


qualifiers after MLS injury

Coach Rolovich also did his bit


to enliven the contest for the new
fan base. After losing the coin toss
and Cal decided to receive, Hawaii
tried an on-side kick that the Bears
were able to recover at midfield. It
was quite the way to start the new
college season.
I wanted to make sure Australian
fans got to see an onside kick, and
in my first game, too. Rolovich
said, smiling. But seriously, I
hope it sends a message that we are
going to play aggressively and
wont back down.
The Hawaii entourage went
straight from the stadium to the
airport to get a scheduled 9 p.m.
flight back to Honolulu. Cals
charter left Sunday afternoon for
its 14-hour flight back across the
Pacific to San Francisco.
Things wont get any easier for
Hawaii when the Rainbow Warriors
play Michigan at the Big House
next weekend in Ann Arbor. Cal
has a bye week before taking on
another
Mountain
West
Conference opponent, San Diego
State, on Sept. 10 in San Diego.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHICAGO Midfielder Gyasi


Zardes will miss the United States
upcoming World Cup qualifiers after
he was injured during a Major League
Soccer game.
Already without forward Clint
Dempsey as he undergoes evaluations for an irregular heartbeat, the
Americans wont have Zardes for
their final two games of the CONCACAF semifinals.
Coach Jurgen Klinsmann is mostly sticking with the squad that finished fourth in the Centennial Copa
America this summer.
They deserve to come back and
confirm what they did in the tournament, he said.
Forward Jordan Morris, 21, was
added to the 26-man roster announced
Sunday after he wasnt picked for the
Copa team. Another young forward,
20-year-old Rubio Rubin, was also
brought in to get a look in practice.
Klinsmann plans to bring only 23
players on the road when the

Americans face
St. Vincent and
the Grenadines
on Friday.
The U.S. then
hosts Trinidad
and Tobago in
J ack s o n v i l l e,
Florida, on Sept.
6.
Gyasi Zardes
M i df i e l de r
Jermaine Jones is rehabbing from a
knee injury but is on the roster with
the hope that he can play.
The Americans currently are second
behind Trinidad and Tobago in Group
C. The top two teams advance to the
six-nation CONCACAF finals, from
which three automatically make the
field for the 2018 World Cup in
Russia.
If the U.S. wins Friday and Trinidad
beats Guatemala that day, the
Americans move on with one match
to go. Michael Bradley (yellow card
accumulation) and Michael Orozco
(red card from Copa third-place game)
are suspended for the first game.

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Leading local news coverage on the Peninsula

16

SPORTS

Monday Aug. 29, 2016

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Toronto
Boston
Baltimore
New York
Tampa Bay

W
74
72
71
67
55

L
56
58
59
62
74

Pct
.569
.554
.546
.519
.426

W
75
67
66
60
48

L
55
63
64
70
83

Pct
.577
.515
.508
.462
.366

GB

8
9
15
27 1/2

GB

2
3
6 1/2
18 1/2

Washington
Miami
New York
Philadelphia
Atlanta

47
61
61
74
74

.636
.527
.523
.431
.426

14
14 1/2
26 1/2
27

57
59
68
75
76

.562
.546
.477
.423
.420

2
11
18
18 1/2

CENTRAL DIVISION
Cleveland
73
Detroit
69
Kansas City
68
Chicago
63
Minnesota
49

56
61
62
66
81

.566
.531
.523
.488
.377

4 1/2
5 1/2
10
24 1/2

CENTRAL DIVISION
Chicago
82
St. Louis
68
Pittsburgh
67
Milwaukee
56
Cincinnati
55

WEST DIVISION
Texas
Seattle
Houston
As
Los Angeles

54
62
62
73
74

.588
.523
.523
.438
.431

8 1/2
8 1/2
19 1/2
20 1/2

WEST DIVISION
Los Angeles
Giants
Colorado
San Diego
Arizona

77
68
68
57
56

73
71
62
55
55

Saturdays Games
N.Y.Yankees 13, Baltimore 5
Toronto 8, Minnesota 7
Boston 8, Kansas City 3
Chicago White Sox 9, Seattle 3
Houston 6,Tampa Bay 2
Angels 3, Detroit 2
Oakland 3, St. Louis 2
Texas 7, Cleveland 0
Sundays Games
Baltimore 5, N.Y.Yankees 0
Toronto 9, Minnesota 6
Angels 5, Detroit 0
Chicago White Sox 4, Seattle 1
Tampa Bay 10, Houston 4
Oakland 7, St. Louis 4
Texas 2, Cleveland 1
Kansas City 10, Boston 4
Mondays Games
Toronto (Estrada 7-6) at Os (Miley 8-10), 4:05 p.m.
ChiSox (Shields 5-16) at Detroit (Boyd 5-2), 4:10 p.m.
Twins (Santiago 10-8) at Tribe (Bauer 9-6), 4:10 p.m.
Rays (Andriese 6-5) at Boston (Porcello 17-3),4:10 p.m.
Ms (Iwakuma 14-9) at Texas (Darvish 4-3), 5:05 p.m.
As (Manaea 5-8) at Houston (Musgrove 1-2),5:10 p.m.
NYY (Pineda 6-10) at Kansas City (Gee 5-7), 5:15 p.m.
Reds (Straily 10-6) at Angels (Shoemaker 8-13),7:05 p.m.

Saturdays Games
Colorado 9, Washington 4, 11 innings
L.A. Dodgers 3, Chicago Cubs 2
N.Y. Mets 12, Philadelphia 1
Pittsburgh 9, Milwaukee 6
San Diego 1, Miami 0
Oakland 3, St. Louis 2
Cincinnati 13, Arizona 0
Atlanta 3, San Francisco 1
Sundays Games
Philadelphia 5, N.Y. Mets 1
San Diego 3, Miami 1
Colorado 5, Washington 3
Pittsburgh 3, Milwaukee 1
Oakland 7, St. Louis 4
San Francisco 13, Atlanta 4
Arizona 11, Cincinnati 2
L.A. Dodgers 1, Chicago Cubs 0
Mondays Games
Nats (Roark 13-7) at Phils (Thompson 1-3), 4:05 p.m.
Fish (Fernandez 13-7) at NYM (Montero 0-0),4:10 p.m.
St. L (Martinez 12-7) at Brews (Davies 10-6), 4:20 p.m.
Bucs (Brault 0-1) at Cubs (Arrieta 16-5), 5:05 p.m.
L.A. (Maeda 13-7) at Rox (Gray 8-6), 5:40 p.m.

STUDY

those who were immediately sidelined.


Sidelined players reported symptoms immediately, including dizziness, headaches, mental fogginess
and fatigue, and were diagnosed
with concussions by trainers or
team physicians. The others, who
continued playing for 19 minutes
on average, delayed reporting
symptoms and were diagnosed later.
Those who continued to play had
worse scores on mental function
tests performed eight days after the
concussion and 30 days after the
concussion.
Medical
records

Continued from page 11

Keeping score
The study involved athletes aged
15 on average from several sports,
including football, soccer, ice
hockey and basketball who had
concussions during a game or practice. Half continued to play and
took 44 days on average to recover
from symptoms, versus 22 days in

NFL PRESEASON

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST DIVISION

EAST DIVISION

THE DAILY JOURNAL

AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct
New England 3 0 0 1.000
Miami
2 1 0 .667
Buffalo
1 2 0 .333
N.Y. Jets
1 2 0 .333

PF
76
58
55
55

PA
61
57
40
56

South
Houston
Tennessee
Indianapolis
Jacksonville

W
3
2
1
1

L
0
1
2
2

T
0
0
0
0

Pct
1.000
.667
.333
.333

PF
74
70
60
60

PA
46
50
70
65

W
3
1
1
0

L
0
2
2
3

T
0
0
0
0

Pct
1.000
.333
.333
.000

PF
71
44
67
37

PA
46
61
57
71

W
2
1
1
1

L
1
2
2
2

T
0
0
0
0

Pct
.667
.333
.333
.333

PF
63
39
59
57

PA
40
53
45
57

PF
67
60
31
82

PA
32
57
68
69

North
Baltimore
Pittsburgh
Cincinnati
Cleveland
West
Denver
San Diego
Kansas City
Raiders

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct
Philadelphia 3 0 0 1.000
Washington
2 1 0 .667
N.Y. Giants
1 2 0 .333
Dallas
1 2 0 .333
South
Tampa Bay
Atlanta
Carolina
New Orleans

W
2
2
1
0

L
1
1
2
3

T
0
0
0
0

Pct
.667
.667
.333
.000

PF
66
53
62
45

PA
51
47
57
77

W
3
3
1
0

L
0
0
2
3

T
0
0
0
0

Pct
1.000
1.000
.333
.000

PF
58
58
53
29

PA
37
33
77
68

W
2
2
1
0

L
1
1
2
3

T
0
0
0
0

Pct
.667
.667
.333
.000

PF
58
55
54
37

PA
61
51
69
84

North
Minnesota
Green Bay
Detroit
Chicago
West
Los Angeles
Seattle
49ers
Arizona

Sundays Games
Minnesota 23, San Diego 10
Houston 34, Arizona 24
Jacksonville 26, Cincinnati 21

showed mental function had been


similar in all players before their
concussions.

Risky returns
Return-to-play policies are widespread, especially in youth athletics, and they typically recommend
sidelining players after a suspected
concussion
until
symptoms
resolve. One of the main reasons is
to prevent a rare condition called
second-impact syndrome potentially fatal brain swelling or bleeding that can occur when a player
still recovering from a concussion

49ERS
Continued from page 11
that are being oppressed,
Kaepernick said Sunday at his
locker. To me this is something
that has to change. When theres
significant change and I feel like
that flag represents what its supposed to represent, this country is
representing people the way that
its supposed to, Ill stand.
Two days after he refused to
stand for the The Star Spangled
Banner before the 49ers preseason loss to the Packers,
Kaepernick insists whatever the
consequences, he will know I did
whats right. He said he hasnt
heard from the NFL or anyone else
about his actions and it wont
matter if he does.
No ones tried to quiet me and,
to be honest, its not something
Im going to be quiet about, he
said. Im going to speak the truth
when Im asked about it. This isnt
for look. This isnt for publicity
or anything like that. This is for
people that dont have the voice.
And this is for people that are
being oppressed and need to have
equal opportunities to be successful. To provide for families and not
live in poor circumstances.
Letting his hair go au natural and
sprinting between drills as usual,
Kaepernick took the field Sunday
gets hit again in the head.
The study results show that a prolonged recovery is another important risk from returning to play too
soon one that no one had really
calculated until now, said Dr. Allen
Sills, a Vanderbilt University neurosurgeon. He was not involved in
the research.

Not reported
About 300, 000 sports-related
concussions occur each year
nationwide among all ages. In
high school athletics, they occur
at a rate of almost 3 per 10,000

with the 49ers as his stance drew


chatter across NFL camps.
He explained his viewpoints to
teammates in the morning, some
agreeing with his message but not
necessarily his method. Some said
they know he has offended his
countrymen, others didnt even
know what he had done.
Every guy on this team is entitled to their opinion. Were all
grown men, linebacker NaVorro
Bowman said.
I agree with what he did, but not
in the way he did it, wideout
Torrey Smith said. Thats not for
me. He has that right. Soldiers
have died for his right to do exactly what he did. ... I know hes
taken a lot of heat for it. He understands that when you do something like that it does offend a lot
of people.
Both Bowman and Smith are
African American.
Kaepernick criticized presidential candidates Donald Trump
(openly racist) and Hillary
Clinton; called out police brutality against minorities; and pushed
for accountability of public officials.
You can become a cop in six
months and dont have to have the
same amount of training as a cosmetologist, Kaepernick said.
Thats insane. Someone thats
holding a curling iron has more
education and more training than
people that have a gun and are
going out on the street to protect
us.
games or practices.
Evidence suggests up to 50 percent of concussions in teen sports
arent reported. Athletes are sometimes not aware theyve experienced a concussion, or they suspect
a head injury but continue playing
because they dont want to let their
teammates down, said University
of Arkansas concussion researcher
R.J. Elbin, the studys lead author.
The results give us more ammunition to persuade young athletes
to heed the return-to-play advice,
Elbin said.

DATEBOOK

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Monday Aug. 29, 2016

17

Dont Breathe scores, ousts Suicide Squad at box office


By Lindsey Bahr
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LOS ANGELES The horror


movie Dont Breathe has reason
to let out a big sigh of relief.
Audiences turned out in droves for
the late summer thriller, which
brought in $26.1 million, according to studio estimates released
Sunday.
Thats more than double the
early predictions for how the scary
pic would perform and far above
the modest production budget,
which was reportedly less than
$10 million. Stage 6 Films produced and Sonys Screen Gems
oversaw distribution.
Dont Breathe is about a group
of Detroit teens who chose the
wrong house to rob that of a

blind, vengeful veteran. It stars


Jane Levy and Dylan Minnette and
was directed by Fede Alvarez, who
is known for the Evil Dead
remake.
Sony Pictures Marketing Chief
Josh Greenstein noted how rare it
was for a film in this genre to have
resonated so deeply with critics.
The current Rotten Tomatoes score
is a very fresh 87 percent. It also
continues Sonys summer of seeing successes with original films
that cost very little to make.
This marks a string of very
profitable hits for Sony with
very modest budgets. The
Shallows, Sausage Party and
now Dont Breathe were all
incredibly profitable because
they were made for modest budgets and did incredibly well at the

Hamster the Hun

Ken WHITE

Recently, responding to a readers question about the best pet for


young kids (spoiler alert: my
answer was none, suggesting
instead that maturing children be
allowed to assume greater responsibility as one of the family pets
caregivers) I wrote: Small does
not mean simple. Hamsters are
fragile, short-lived (ready to
explain death?), nocturnal critters
who want to sleep when your child
is awake. Theyre also notorious
biters.
This apparently upset members
of the Hamster Anti-Disparagement

box office, Greenstein said.


Its also the latest horror success for Hollywood this summer,
which has seen films like Lights
Out, The Conjuring 2, and The
Purge: Election Year thrive while
their bigger budget, spectacledriven counterparts flailed.
As it turns out horror is the
least scary genre this summer,
especially to the bean counters in
Hollywood,
said
Paul
Dergarabedian, the senior media
analyst for box office tracker
comScore. (They) can almost
always be counted on to make
money.
Horror films, Dergarabedian
said, perform very well on home
video too.
Dont Breathe effectively
unseated Suicide Squad from its

League whove swamped me with


phone calls in support of their
diminutive companions. OK,
swamped might be an exaggeration. I received two calls from the
same irate individual. Nonetheless,
I do appreciate her passion and
acknowledge Ive indeed met hamsters I found sweet, silly and a
great deal of fun. Their antics are
enjoyable, and they are denitely
cute. However, perhaps more carefully worded, I stick to my original
point.
Hamsters were rst noticed by
modern researchers in the mid-19th
century, discovered in the Syrian

three week run atop the box office.


This weekend, the comic book
film Suicide Squad grossed
$12. 1 million, bringing its
domestic total to $282.9 million.
Laikas Kubo and the Two
Strings took third place in its
second weekend in theaters with
$7.9 million. The $60 million
film has now earned $24.8 million
domestically.
Sausage Party, meanwhile,
continued to have a ball at the box
office, earning $7.7 million for a
fourth place finish and an $80 million domestic total.
The poorly reviewed Jason
Statham-led sequel Mechanic:
Resurrection, meanwhile, placed
fifth in its opening weekend with
$7. 5 million, according to
Lionsgate.

Desert. Noting how inbreeding


emphasizes negative genetic traits
(check out European royalty!) its a
bit frightening and, in terms of
my experience with bity hamsters,
likely illustrative to learn that
the millions of hamsters born over
the decades are all descendants of
one pair of wild caught hamsters,
themselves brother and sister.
Nocturnal and solitary by nature,
hamsters are best housed one to an
enclosure. Therere many commercial products available for housing
and husbandry, but purchase mindful of the fact that these animals
are both constant chewers and

Juan Gabriel, Mexican superstar singer, has died


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MEXICO CITY Juan Gabriel, a


superstar Mexican songwriter and
singer who was an icon in the Latin
music world, died Sunday at his home
in California at age 66, his publicist
said.
Juan Gabriel was Mexicos leading
singer-songwriter and top-selling
artist. His ballads about love and
heartbreak and bouncy mariachi tunes
became hymns throughout Latin
America and Spain and with Spanish
speakers in the United States.
He brought many adoring fans to
tears as they sang along when he
crooned his songs about love and
heartbreak, including his top hits,

Hasta
Que
Te
Conoci (Until I
Met
You)
and
Amor
Eterno
(Eternal Love).
His hit Querida
(Dear)
topped
Mexicos charts for
a whole year.
A flamboyant perJuan Gabriel
former,
Juan
Gabriel, whose real name was Alberto
Aguilera Valadez, liked to wear jackets
covered in sequins or dress in shiny
silk outfits in hot pink, turquoise blue
or canary yellow, and he was known
for tossing his head before dancing or
jumping around the stage.
He has passed on to become part of

eternity and has left us his legacy


through Juan Gabriel, the character
created by him for all the music that
has been sung and performed all around
the world, his press office said in a
statement.
It gave no details on his death.
Publicist Arturo de la Mora told The
Associated Press that he died at 11:30
a.m. in his home. He said the family
would provide a statement later.
Juan Gabriel performed to packed
auditoriums, including New Yorks
Madison Square Garden and the Kodak
Theater in Los Angeles. His last concert was Friday night at the Forum in
Inglewood, California. He was scheduled to perform Sunday in El Paso,
Texas.

Top 10 movies
1.Dont Breathe, $26.1 million.
2.Suicide Squad, $12.1 million.
3.Kubo and the Two Strings,
$7.9 million.
4.Sausage Party, $7.7 million.
5.Mechanic: Resurrection,$7.5
million.
6.Petes Dragon, $7.3 million.
7.War Dogs, $7.3 million.
8.Bad Moms, $5.8 million.
9.Jason Bourne, $5.2 million.
10.Ben-Hur, $4.5 million.
Among specialty releases, the
Barack and Michelle Obama first
date movie Southside With You
launched in 813 theaters to an
estimated $3.1 million.
great escape artists.
The best tip I can offer for avoiding bites: make sure the animal is
fully awake before trying to pick
up. With ngers a few safe inches
away from a sleeping hammy, rustle the substrate bedding until the
animal is awake and then scoop up
with an open palm.
P.S.: Well leave the fact that
hamsters often eat their young to
another column, after the League
has forgiven me.
Ken White is the president of the
Peninsula Humane Society &
SPCA.

18

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Monday Aug. 29, 2016

PULITZER PRIZE WINNER AT LIBRARY


TOM JUNG/DAILY JOURNAL

Richard Rhodes, Pulitzer Prize winner and


author of "John James Audubon:The Making of an American," spoke on the life of the
famous naturalist and painter during a special presentation at the Main San Mateo
Public Library on Aug. 23.The presentation
was part of a series of special library programs commemorating the 10th
anniversary of the opening of the new San
Mateo Main Library on Third Avenue. Here,
Rhodes discusses the making of Audubon's
iconic "Plate 1: Wild Turkey," the first of
Audubon's paintings to be published in The
Birds of America.

COMMISSION CELEBRATES

25 YEARS
Lisa Mancini, director of
Aging and Adult Services; Health System
Chief Louise Rogers;
Susan Castoria, president of the San Mateo
County Commission on
Disabilities and Commission liaison Craig
McCulloh helped celebrate the commissions
25th anniversary Friday,
Aug. 26 at Poplar Creek
Grill in San Mateo. The
celebratory luncheon
was attended by several
officials including U.S.
Rep. Anna Eshoo, D-Palo
Alto, who spearheaded
its creation while serving on the Board of
Supervisors.

Frank and Evelyn George


Frank and Ev el y n Geo rg e
celebrated their 73rd wedding
anniversary Aug. 15, 2016. The
longtime San Mateo residents
were married in 1943.

baby girl at Sequoia Hospital in


Redwood City Aug. 13, 2016.
Eri c and Eri ka Bai l ey , of
Menlo Park, gave birth to a baby
boy at Sequoia Hospital in
Redwood City Aug. 14, 2016.
Jude and Mari a De Vi l l a, of
Union City, gave birth to a baby
girl at Sequoia Hospital in
Redwood City Aug. 15, 2016.

Birth announcements:
Ehab Si am and Bahareh
Iranmanes h, of Woodside, gave
birth to a baby girl at Sequoia
Hospital in Redwood City Aug. 9,
2016.
Chuan Li u and Xue Cao , of
Fremont, gave birth to a baby
boy at Sequoia Hospital in
Redwood City Aug. 12, 2016.
Ry an and Jami Bri g ht, of
Redwood City, gave birth to a

Marc and Emi l i e Sny der, of


Burlingame, gave birth to a baby
boy at Sequoia Hospital in
Redwood City Aug. 16, 2016.
Ray mo nd and Ti ffany
Wo ng , of Newark, gave birth to a
baby boy at Sequoia Hospital in
Redwood City Aug. 18, 2016.
Ry an Ang el l and Anas tas ha
Steel e, of Redwood City, gave
birth to a baby girl at Sequoia
Hospital in Redwood City Aug.
18, 2016.

LOCAL/NATION

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Monday Aug. 29, 2016

19

Hillsborough package thief sought


BAY CITY NEWS

Police are asking for help identifying a Hispanic male suspected


of stealing a package Sunday afternoon
from
a
home
in
Hillsborough.
The theft took place at 1:47
p. m. in the 500 block of
Remillard Drive, police said.
A neighbor told officers that a

heavy-set Hispanic male wearing


a baggy white T-shirt walked
away from a home with a package.
An investigation revealed that a
burglary took place when officers
found someone had forced open a
side door to the home, according
to police.
The suspect got into an older
model black Honda with another

person who was driving. The


Honda was last seen speeding east
on Remillard Drive toward
Ralston Avenue, police said.
Officers who responded to the
home searched for the suspects and
did not find them.
Officers believe that the suspect
is the same person who knocked
on the front door of a home earlier
in the day in the 1300 block of

San Raymundo Road.


The person asked the homeowner whether they saw his dog,
according to police. When the
homeowner said no, the person
turned and walked down the driveway.
The homeowner thought the situation was suspicious and took a
photo of the person.
The person is wearing a white T-

shirt, red pants, and a red hat.


Anyone who saw the person or
the Honda or any suspicious people or vehicles in the same area
this afternoon is asked to call
(650) 375-7470.
Also, police are asking anyone
who has a video surveillance system to review it and share any
footage that might help officers
with the investigation.

Two Chicago men charged in shooting of NBA star Wades cousin


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHICAGO Two brothers who


were on parole for prior criminal
activity have been charged with
first-degree murder in the shooting
death of the cousin of NBA star
Dwyane Wade, Chicago police
announced Sunday.
Darwin Sorrells Jr., 26, and
Derren Sorrells, 22, also were
charged with attempted murder in
Fridays shooting. They appeared
in court Sunday and were ordered
held without bail.
Nykea Aldridge, a 32-year-old
mother of four, was pushing her
baby in a stroller near a school
where shed planned to register her
children when she was shot in the

COPS
Continued from page 1
the police are subject to a rapid
magnification by the media, this
is the right time for us to move
forward and be as transparent as
possible and as accountable as
possible to our community, and
our public. And for those reasons,
really from the top to the bottom
of our organization we are excited
and enthusiastic about moving to
body-worn video, Norris said.
Staff plans to return to the City
Council with a proposal by the
grand jurys late November timeline, and have a program up and
running in fall of 2017.
Yet there remains a litany of
details to consider, experts with
whom to consult, best practices to

head and arm. She wasnt the


intended target, Cmdr. Brendan
Deenihan said at a news conference
Sunday, but rather a driver who had
just dropped off passengers in the
neighborhood.
There is video of the incident,
Deenihan said, but no weapon was
recovered and police dont know
where the weapon is.
Chicago has been in the throes of
a major uptick in gun violence this
year, largely centered in a few South
and West Side neighborhoods, after
years of seeing declines. This July
alone, there were 65 homicides
the most for that month since
2006.
Superintendent Eddie Johnson
said the suspects are an example of

the citys problem with repeat


offenders, which he has spoken
about frequently in recent months.
Darwin Sorrells was sentenced to
six years in prison in January 2013
on a gun charge and was released
early on parole. Derren Sorrells is a
known gang member who is also
on parole for motor vehicle theft
and escape, police spokesman
Anthony Guglielmi said, adding he
has six felony arrests on his record.
They dont care who they shoot
and they dont fear the consequences, Johnson said, noting as
he has in the past that about 1,400
people are driving 85 percent of the
citys gun violence. He added that
the city has gotten very good at
predicting who will be the perpetra-

tors and the victims of gun violence.


Dozens of people gathered at a
Chicago church Sunday for a prayer
service to remember Aldridge. Her
parents, sister, nieces and nephews
wept as they spoke about the
woman they said was a gifted writer
and fighter of the family.
Wade, whose charitable organization, Wades World Foundation,
does community outreach in the
Chicago area, signed with the
Chicago Bulls in July after 13 years
with the Miami Heat. He and his
mother, pastor Jolinda Wade, participated Thursday via satellite in a
town hall meeting in Chicago on
gun violence hosted by ESPN.
Wade has reacted to his cousins

shooting only online, tweeting


Friday: My cousin was killed
today in Chicago. Another act of
senseless gun violence. 4 kids lost
their mom for NO REASON. Unreal.
(hash)EnoughIsEnough.
Wade also tweeted Saturday morning: The city of Chicago is hurting. We need more help& more
hands on deck. Not for me and my
family but for the future of our
world. The YOUTH! adding in a
following tweet, These young kids
are
screaming
for
help!!!
(hash)EnoughIsEnough.
It is not the first time Wades family in Chicago has been affected by
gun violence. His nephew, Darin
Johnson, was shot twice in the leg
in 2012 but recovered.

review and policies to develop in


the coming months, Norris said.
Currently,
Foster
City,
Belmont, Hillsborough, Menlo
Park and Atherton have deployed
body-worn cameras. Norris said
San Mateo will be consulting with
local agencies, national experts
and investigating what type of
program will be uniquely appropriate for the city.
We want to make sure everyone
from the officers who are turning
on these cameras to the administrators who are managing the liability of this, that everyone
has some universal accord as best
we can with what the best policy
is going to be, Norris said. So
were taking in experiences of different agencies, we want to know
whats working and whats not.
Developing sound policy will
be
key,
he
emphasized.
Considerations will include when

the cameras would be turned on,


what to do about maintaining the
privacy of passersby or unrelated
license plates caught on camera,
whether its appropriate to record
confidential victims and how long
the department should keep
recordings.
Norris noted the data would be
stored by the department, not a
private vendor, but regulations
about who should have access need
to be determined. And of course,
theyll have to decide what type of
equipment to purchase.
With about 117 sworn police
officers and best practices currently suggesting each have their own
camera assigned to them, Norris
said they will likely consider
between 100 and 130 apparatus.
Costs vary greatly based on the
camera and Norris said he wasnt
yet able to provide a cost estimate. He noted policy decisions

will also influence the expense of


the program. For example, the
more data stored or the number of
public records act requests the
department receives, could heavily influence the associated personnel costs, Norris said.
Part of the reason the department postponed acting on implementing a program was to wait and
see the results of larger cities
implementing body-worn cameras, such as in San Francisco and
San Jose. There may also be state
or even federal regulations, if not
mandates, in the coming years
requiring police to consider such
programs, he noted.
City personnel from various
departments, such as police,
information technology and the
attorneys office, will be weighing in on how San Mateo frames
its program in the coming
months. Emphasizing nothing is

set in stone, Norris added they


would likely try a pilot program in
advance of a full-scale implementation next year.
With national incidents highlighting racial as well as social
tensions between various communities and law enforcement, Norris
said San Mateo is prepared to
implement a program that could
benefit the public and officers
alike.
Throughout our department we
are in support of implementing
body-worn video, Norris said.
We think it will not only serve as
a benefit to us, we are looking forward to the opportunity for our
officers to have a tool that holds
the people we come into contact
with accountable to their actions,
holds our officers accountable to
their actions, and provides a documentation resource of the great
job our officers do every day.

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20

LOCAL

Monday Aug. 29, 2016

TEAM
Continued from page 1
are people living with a serious mental
illness without psychiatric treatment
and recovery support.
Without proper treatment, people
with mental illness experience
increased symptoms that can lead to
increased hospitalizations or incarceration, according to countys Health
System.
The law authorizes the courts to order
outpatient treatment for individuals
with mental illness.
Most individuals will never make it to
court, Wilcox-Rittgers said, and those
that do, about 95 percent, then agree to
participate.
To be eligible, individuals must be 18
years or older and a resident of San
Mateo County with an untreated serious
mental illness that causes them to be
unlikely to survive safely in the community
without
supervision.
Additionally, the persons mental
health must have either resulted in a

DISTRICT
Continued from page 1
officials in finding the best use for the
money.
We will always to look for ways to
collaborate with the city and all of our
other partners, she said. We look forward to providing this additional benefit for our community.
Lucy said he believed the school board
would likely address the issue again in
coming months.
South San Francisco, like many other
local cities, faces a shortage of available playing fields, said Lucy in justification for his belief that the money
would be well spent toward building new
open spaces.
I dont think any city in the state of

WOOD
Continued from page 1
cooking purposes, according to the district.
Awards will range from $750 up to a
maximum of $12,000 per property and
may not exceed the actual total project
cost.
Funding is provided on a reimbursement basis to applicants who are issued
a notice to proceed from the district.
But applicants who have had any
work related to their project performed
before the air district issues a notice to
proceed are not eligible.
Property owners who decommission a

psychiatric hospitalization or incarceration two or more times in the past three


years or resulted in threats or acts of violent behavior toward themselves or
someone else in the past four years.
Referrals can be made by:
Immediate family members who are
adults;
Adults who reside with the individual;
Director of a hospital, facility or
other organization treating the person;
Mental health providers treating the
person; and
Probation, parole or police officer.
Supervisor Don Horsley pushed for
the passage of Lauras Law last year after
the San Mateo County Civil Grand Jury
issued a report urging its passage.
Research indicates that treatment
results in decreased emergency room
admissions, arrests and harm. Im proud
our county and our Health System now
has this extra tool to provide resources
to those who need help, even to those
who dont necessarily know they do,
Horsley wrote in a statement.
The AOT team, upon receiving a referral, will determine if the person meets
the criteria for the program and if so,

will begin engaging the client in


accepting services voluntarily.
If that does not occur, the team will
make a referral to the San Mateo County
Superior Court which in some cases may
order the person to enter treatment
involuntarily. For individuals who do
not meet the AOT guidelines, the team
will help connect them to other services.
Implementing the law cost $1.3 million in fiscal year 2015-16.
At full implementation, Behavioral
Health and Recovery Services estimates
at least 100 adults living with mental
illness in the county could benefit
whether the services are court ordered or
voluntarily accepted.
Lauras Law is named after Laura
Wilcox, a Nevada County mental health
worker murdered by a psychiatric
patient.
AOT services include outreach,
assessment, intensive case management, psychiatric interventions, community supports, housing assistance
and around the clock response.

California has enough, said Lucy. We


could always use more fields.
The dearth of playing surfaces is compounded by the loss of one district field
while renovating Buri Buri Elementary
School, said Lucy, furthering the need
for more facilities for games played by
local community soccer and softball
teams, as well as other organizations.
Lucy said he suspected the $1 million
would likely be an insufficient amount
to finance a field construction or renovation, necessitating more collaboration by school and city officials.
The school districts share of funding was from a $3.2 million community benefits packaged agreed to between
city officials and Sares Regis representatives for a massive residential development to be built near the intersection of Airport Boulevard and Miller
Avenue.
At the time of the agreement to offer

the funds to the local school district,


city officials said they hoped the deal
would foster improved relations with
education officials.
The two sides have differed over discussions regarding surplus school property which city officials had identified
as a potential site to build workforce
housing. School officials were lukewarm to the proposal and the plan was
put on the back burner, while the agencies separately pursued similar initiatives.
As the community benefits project
moves ahead, school officials will continue to examine opportunities to pursue with the shared funds, said Lucy.
We will have some good discussions
on it, look at all the possibilities and
work together, he said. Whatever decision we make will benefit the community and the schools, so there is that teamwork going on.

wood-burning stove or fireplace are eligible for a $750 grant. If replaced with a
natural gas or propane-fueled device, the
grant jumps to $1,000.
A $3,500 grant is available to those
who replace a wood-burning stove or
fireplace with an electric heat pump.
Low-income assistance grants are
also available up to $8,500.
Anyone whose sole source of heat is a
wood-burning device must use an
Environmental Protection Agency-certified or pellet-fueled device registered
with the district to qualify for an exemption from any future burn bans starting
Nov. 1.
Starting this fall, wood-burning
stoves will also be forbidden in newly
constructed homes built in the Bay Area
under rules adopted last year by the air

quality district.
The rules adopted last year also require
that home sellers with a wood-burning
stove or fireplace to disclose the health
risks wood smoke poses to prospective
buyers.
Individuals can also be cited for
exceeding visible emissions limits.
If a home produces a profuse amount
of smoke that lasts more than three minutes, a citation can also be issued.
The Bay Area Air Quality Management
District is the regional agency responsible for protecting air quality in the
nine-county Bay Area.
The board also issued a resolution
last year directing staff to reconvene
in five years with a proposal to ban all
wood burning on winter Spare the
Air days.

To make a referral, call (650) 3726125 or email AOT@smcgov.org.

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Calendar
MONDAY, AUG. 29
TV studio production workshop:
Midpen Media. 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. 900
San Antonio Road, Palo Alto. Learn all
the different positions that go into
making a high definition TV show.
For more information call 494-8686
ext. 11.
VOICES Rush. 7 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Belmont Library, 1110 Alameda de
Las Pulgas, Belmont. Interviewing
teens who wish to join VOICES and
are interested in doing service projects throughout the school year. For
more
information
email
belmont@smcl.org.
Monday Night Play Space: Kim
Cromwells Abelia. 7:30 p.m.Abelia
is a one-woman play, by a writer with
a compelling and lyrical new voice,
about a woman from the back hills of
Kentucky who, having grown up
believing in miracles and the power
of love, refuses to stop believing in
them when faced with a life-threatening illness. Admission is free. For
more
information
contact
jesse@dragonproduc tions.net.
TUESDAY, AUG. 30
DREAM Center Grand Opening.
11p.m. to 3 p.m. and 5 p.m. to 7 p.m.
Caada College, 4200 Farm Hill Blvd.,
Redwood City. Designed for all students with an emphasis on AB540
and DACA resources, the space is a
safe place for students to study, hang
out and simply be. For more information contact ouyangc@smccd.edu.
WEDNESDAY, AUG. 31
San Mateo Professional Alliance
Networking Lunch. Noon to 1 p.m.
Kingfish Restaurant, 201 S. B St., San
Mateo. Meet new business connections. For more information call 4306500.
Bay Area SunShares workshop.
5:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. Brisbane City
Hall, Community Meeting Room, 50
Park Place, Brisbane. Bay Area
SunShares is a communitywide clean
energy program that expands access
to solar energy and zero-emission
vehicles for Bay Area residents
via discounts and free workshops.
For more information visit bayareasunshares.org.
TV studio production workshop:
Midpen Media. 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. 900
San Antonio Road, Palo Alto. Learn all
the different positions that go into
making a high definition TV show.
For more information call 494-8686
ext. 11.
Homeopathic Remedies for PostSurgery and Post-Injury. 6 p.m. to 7
p.m. 150 San Mateo Road, Half Moon
Bay. Learn safe ways to stimulate
your bodys own healing response
and speed up recovery using timehonored natural medicines. $5. For
more information email patti@bondmarcom.com.
Ghost Hunting 101 with Jim
Martin. 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. Millbrae
Library, 1 Library Ave., Millbrae. Jim
Martin will share with us the basics of
paranormal investigation. For more
information call 697-7607x236.
The
Main
Gallerys
16th
Anniversary. 1018 Main Street,
Redwood City. The show will run until
Sept. 25th and will have an opening
night on Sept. 10th from 6 p.m. to 9
p.m. Artists have put together a show
to include both current and former
members featuring work in different
media such as photography, mixed
media, collage, and more. For more
information, call 678-9503.
THURSDAY, SEPT. 1
Free Mobile Spay/Neuter Clinic. 8
a.m. to 9 a.m. 1150 El Camino Real,
San Bruno. Pet owners with limited
financial means can bring their pets
and help eliminate the possibility of
accidental litters. For more information call 340-7022.
Photographer Robert Buelteman
speaks on the Peninsulas environment. 7 p.m. San Mateo County
History Museum, 2200 Broadway,
Redwood City. A selection of
Bueltemans work is on display currently at the museum. For more information call 299-0104.
Movies on the Square featuring
The Martian. 7:45 p.m. 2200
Broadway, Redwood City. Experience
Redwood Citys high-definition surround sound 25-foot outdoor theater. Movies are shown in high definition Blu-Ray and Surround Sound
when available. For more information go to redwoodcity.org/movies.
FRIDAY, SEPT. 2
Recovery Happens. 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
400 County Center, Hall of Justice,
Redwood City. Open until Sept. 29,
2016. Monday through Friday.
Exhibition by the San Mateo County
Health Systems Behavioral Health &
Recovery Services. The theme is, Our
Families, Our Stories, Our Recovery!
For more information, call 587-8967.
San Mateo County History
Museums Free First Fridays. 10
a.m. to 4 p.m. 2200 Broadway,
Redwood City. Free admission all day.
At 11 a.m., preschool children can

learn about farms, make windsocks,


and hear a story. At 2 p.m., museum
docents will lead adult tours. For
more
information
contact
mitch@historysmc.org.
Adult Chess. 10 a.m. to noon. 610
Elm St., San Carlos. Chess board and
pieces will be provided. Free and
open to the public. For more information call 591-0341 ext. 237.
Tai Chi. 10:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. 610
Elm St., San Carlos. Free and open to
the public. For more information call
591-0341 ext. 237.
Bilingual How to Use Google
Series: Google Drive Part 1. 1 p.m.
Community Learning Center, 520
Tamarack Lane, South San Francisco.
For more information call 829-3860.
Music on the Square featuring
Pride & Joy. 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. 2200
Broadway, Redwood City. Come to
the Square for free live concerts each
week. For more information go to
redwoodcity.org/musiconthesquare.
Java and jazz night. 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Hillsdale Shooping Center, outdoor
patio near Starbucks, 60 31st Ave.,
San Mateo. Fridays and Saturdays.
Sept. 2 to Oct. 1. Sip coffee drinks,
gather with friends after shopping,
dining or a long work week and settle in to a different vibe each night.
For more information email karenquiter@att.net.
Pacifica Spindrift Players Mary
Poppins. 8 p.m. 1050 Crespi Drive,
Pacifica. The jack-of-all trades, Bert,
introduces audiences to England in
1910 and the troubled Banks family.
Young Jane and Michael have sent
many a nanny packing before Mary
Poppins arrives on their doorstep.
Nominated for seven Tony Awards in
2007. Ticket prices are $30 for adults
and $25.00 for seniors & students. For
more information call 359-8002.
SATURDAY, SEPT. 3
46th Annual Millbrae Art & Wine
Festival: Last Blast of Summer. 10
a.m. to 5 p.m. Broadway Avenue
between Victoria and Meadow Glen,
Millbrae. Featuring live music, 250
professional artists, festive food and
drink, Classically Cool Car Show, zipline, carnival rides and more. Free
admission and free roundtrip shuttle
service from Millbrae BART/Caltrain
station. Also on Sept. 4. For more
information call 697-7324 or visit
miramarevents.com.
53rd Annual Kings Mountain Art
Fair. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Kings Mountain
Firehouse and Community Center,
13889 Skyline Blvd., Woodside. Free
admission. Breakfast begins at 8 a.m.
For
more
information
visit
kingsmountainartfair.com.
Overeaters Anonymous. 10:15 a.m.
to noon. 610 Elm St., San Carlos. Free
and open to the public. For more
information call 591-0341 ext. 237.
STEAM for Kids. 10:30 a.m. 840 W.
Orange Ave., South San Francisco.
Examine natural items such as shells,
rocks, leaves, and sticks under a magnifying glass. For children one to five
years old. For more information email
valle@plsinfo.org.
Belmont Greek Festival. Noon to 10
p.m. Holy Cross Church, 900 Alameda
de las Pulgas, Belmont. Enjoy delicious Greek meals and desserts, live
bands and other fun activities. Free
admission between 12 and 2 PM on
Saturday and Monday. $1 off admission
coupon
on
www.goholycross.org/festival. For
more information email cecanellos@aol.com.
Grown-up Game Day. 2 p.m. South
San Francisco Main Library, 840 West
Orange Ave., South San Francisco. For
more
information,
contact
valle@plsinfo.org.
Building Club. 2 p.m. South San
Francisco Main Library, 840 W.
Orange Ave., South San Francisco. For
more information email valle@plsinfo.org.
Adopt a Pet. Noon to 2 p.m. 60 31st
Ave., San Mateo. Looking for a new
best friend? The Peninsula Humane
Society is bringing animals from out
of their kennels and on the road, so
you can adopt adorable pets at
Hillsdale Shopping Center. For more
information call 571-1029.
English Teachers Write Common
Core How-To. 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Floreys
Bookstore, 2120 Palmetto Ave.,
Pacifica. The book demonstrates how
teachers can increase classroom
rigor and prepare students for the
shift to Common Core mandates
without sacrificing the study of literature. Books will be available for purchasing and signing. For more information
contact
elizabethold84@gmail.com.
Donation-Based
Yoga
for
Democrats. 4 p.m. to 5:15 p.m. 1601
El Camino Real, Belmont. Practice
yoga and support Democrats.
For more events visit
smdailyjournal.com, click Calendar.

COMICS/GAMES

THE DAILY JOURNAL

DILBERT

Monday Aug. 29, 2016

21

CROSSWORD PUZZLE

HOLY MOLE

PEARLs BEFORE SWINE

ACROSS
1 Risque
5 Ebenezers outburst
8 Links org.
11 Fridge stick
12 Columbus home
14 Ad committee
15 Cobra eaters
17 Pay dirt
18 Liszt opus
19 Endorsed
21 Decorate anew
23 Tall stalk
24 all she wrote!
27 Wet weather
29 Moving vehicle
30 Get wrong
34 In spite of
37 Pea holder
38 Certain hemline
39 Yea and nay
41 Summer cooler
43 Tinsel time
45 Deep voices
47 Face coverings

GET FUZZY

50 Checkout ID
51 Fake lake
54 Meadow
55 Penn or Connery
56 Como usted?
57 Teeth-chattering sound
58 ER personnel
59 Enlist again (hyph.)
DOWN
1 PC acronym
2 Medicinal plant
3 Small change
4 Frozen treat
5 Made catcalls
6 Happy sighs
7 Scurries
8 Call
9 Impaled
10 Scored well
13 Nile god
16 Works by Keats
20 Polite chap
22 Roots
24 Water-power org.

25 Sci-fi computer
26 Formic acid producer
28 Hearth residue
30 Beauty pack
31 NYC dwelling
32 Little piggie
33 Magazine execs
35 Med. plans
36 Fuel carriers
39 Turn sharply
40 Cromwell
41 The Chase
42 Muppet grouch
44 Bakery fixtures
45 Future tulip
46 Tea-leaves reader
48 Mislay
49 In (as found)
52 Kyoto honorific
53 Jay Zs genre

8-29-16

Previous
Sudoku
answers

MONDAY, AUGUST 29, 2016


VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Someone elses
demands should not get in the way of your progress.
Distance yourself from anyone trying to put pressure
on you. Follow your heart and let your imagination
inspire you.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) You need to take control
of your life. Diplomacy coupled with a stern demeanor
will capture attention and help you get what you want.
An opportunity will come via a former colleague.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Favors will be granted
and options will be given to you. Dont let your
emotions or a stubborn attitude stand in your way. If

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

weekends 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.

you are proactive, success will follow.


SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Watch your step
and dont say something that may be twisted or held
against you. Moderation and keeping the peace should
be your priorities if you want to avoid headaches.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Do your own thing.
Explore your inner self. Live, learn and experience
life. Dont feel compelled to help someone who is
pressuring you into doing something questionable.
Follow your intuition.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Show interest in
the ones you love and discuss emotional concerns
or hardships that others face. Your attentiveness
will be appreciated and will ensure that you get the
same in return.

8-29-16
Want More Fun
and Games?
Jumble Page 2 La Times Crossword Puzzle Classifieds
Tundra & Over the Hedge Comics Classifieds
Boggle Puzzle Everyday in DateBook

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Visualize what you


want and prepare to turn a project that interests you
into something great. Dont let someones selfish
attitude cause you to miss out on something thats
important to you.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) Tackle a competitive
challenge and see matters through to the end. Your
strength, courage and endurance will outmatch anyone
who tries to mess with you. Do your own negotiating.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Plan a trip or set up a
meeting that helps you take the next step toward a
brighter future. Networking functions will lead to an
interesting proposal. Romance is highlighted.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Dont believe a smooth
talker. Stick close to the people you know you can

trust. Personal improvements will be your best bet.


Dont settle for less when you can have more.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Recognize and employ
your ability to manipulate situations to meet your
needs. You have more going for you than you realize.
Add a little spice to your love life.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Emotions will mount if
information is withheld. Get to the bottom of a situation
before it has time to escalate. Your desire and devotion
will lead you to success.
COPYRIGHT 2016 United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

22

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Monday Aug. 29, 2016

104 Training

110 Employment

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.

CRYSTAL CLEANING
CENTER
San Mateo, CA

110 Employment

2 years experience
required.

Please call for an


Appointment: 650-342-6978

CAREGIVERS HIRING
San Carlos (650)596-3489

HOUSE CLEANERS NEEDED


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

GOT JOBS?
The Daily Journals readership covers a wide
range of qualifications for all types of positions.

DUMP TRUCK DRIVER, SM, good pay,


benefits. Must have a Class A or B
License. (650)343-5946 M-F, 8-5.
HOME CARE AIDES
Multiple shifts to meet your needs. Great
pay & benefits, Sign-on bonus, 1yr exp
required. Starting at $15 per hour.
Matched Caregivers (650)839-2273,
(408)280-7039 or (888)340-2273
SALES - Telemarketing and Inside Sales
Representative needed to sell newspaper print and web advertising and event
marketing solutions. To apply, please call
650-344-5200 and send resume to
info@smdailyjournal.com

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

DRIVERS
WANTED

The best career seekers


read the Daily Journal.
We will help you recruit qualified, talented
individuals to join your company or organization.

Are you..Dependable, friendly,


detail oriented,
willing to learn new skills?

CAREGIVERS

Call
(650)777-9000

Immediate need for Full Time/Part Time


Home Care Providers
$250 Sign on Bonus*
Paid Training & Benets
Must have valid DL and reliable transportation
Call or stop by TODAY!

Newspaper Delivery Routes to businesses and newsracks,


and some apartment buildings. (No residential houses.)

For the best value and the best results,


recruit from the Daily Journal...

Early mornings, six days per week, Monday through Saturday.


2 to 4 hour routes. Must have own vehicle, valid license and
insurance.

Contact us for a free consultation

Pick up papers between 3:30 a.m. and 4:30 a.m.


Pay dependent on route size.

SAN CARLOS
RESTAURANT
AM Dishwasher
Required,
Wednesdays thru
Sundays
Contact Chef
(650) 592-7258 or
(541) 848-0038

ATTENTION CAREGIVERS!

San Mateo Daily Journal

Call (650) 344-5200 or


Email: ads@smdailyjournal.com

110 Employment

Customer Service

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


employment and employment
benefits?

Immediate placement
on all assignments.

110 Employment

Dont wait, call or stop by TODAY! Ask for Carol

(650) 458-2200

Call 650-344-5200
or email resume to info@smdailyjournal.com

www.homebridgeca.org
1660 S. Amphlett Blvd. #115 in San Mateo

Exciting Opportunities at

will be offering a wide variety of marketing


solutions including print advertising, inserts,
graphic design, niche publications, online
advertising, event marketing, social media and
whatever else we come up with if as the
industry continues its evolution and our paper
continues its upward trajectory.

San Mateo Daily Journal


The future of local news content is actually
right here in the present, as it has been for
centuries The local community newspaper.
We ignore the naysayers and shun the
"experts" when it comes to the "demise" of the
newspaper industry.
The leading local daily news resource for the
SF Peninsula seeks an entreprenuerial
Advertising Account Exec to sell advertising
and marketing solutions to local businesses.
We are looking for a special person to join our
team for an immediate opening.
You must be community-minded, actionoriented, customer-focused, and without fail, a
self starter. You will be responsible for sales
and account management activities associated
with either a territory or vertical category. You

Experience with print advertising and online


marketing a plus. But we will consider a
candidate with little or no sales experience as
long as you have these traits:
- Hunger for success
- Ability to adapt to change
- Prociency with computers and comfort
with numbers
- General business acumen and common
sense marketing abilities
Join us, if you check off on these qualities and
also believe in the future of newspapers.
Please email your resume to
ads@smdailyjournal.com
A cover letter with your views on the newspaper
industry would also be helpful.

Leading local news coverage on the Peninsula

Applicants who are committed to Quality and


Excellence welcome to apply.
Candy Maker Training Program

Seasonal Quality Assurance Inspector

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Requirements for all positions include:


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Wrap Machine Operator


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All are Union positions. If interested, please call Eugenia or Ava at


(650) 827-3210 between 8:30 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. EOE

THE DAILY JOURNAL


110 Employment
NEWSPAPER INTERNS
JOURNALISM

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

RESTAURANT -

FULL TIME
Restaurant jobs.
NO nights NO weekends!
Apply now:
Visit http://www.aramark.com -> careers
-> search jobs. Click "Location:" Select
US-CA-San Bruno
Cooks, Prep, Utility, Sous Chef and
more! Email: benbrunohiring@gmail.com
RIGGER HELPER, full time, benefits,
will train. Clean DMV. Lifting 50
pounds. 415-798-0021
TECHNICAL LEAD
Development Architect
Personalis, Inc. has an opening in Menlo
Park, CA. Technical Lead Development
Architect: design, develop & maintain
platforms & products. Submit resume
(principals only) to: laila.king@personalis.com & include recruitment source &
job title in subject line. EOE

203 Public Notices


FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #270343
The following person is doing business
as: South San Francisco Smog Station,
418 Victory Ave, SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94080. Registered Owners:
1) Phad Pum, 2162 25th Ave, San Francisco, CA 94116; 2) Ryo Takahashi,
2825 Ortegaa Ave, San Francisco, CA
94122. The business is conducted by a
General Partnership. The registrant commenced to transact business under the
FBN on N/A
/s/ Phad Rickey Pum/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 8/12/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
8/15/16, 8/22/16, 8/29/16, 9/5/16

Monday Aug. 29, 2016


203 Public Notices

210 Lost & Found

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #270428
The following person is doing business
as: Sanchez Flooring Installation, 110 N
Grant St., #7, SAN MATEO, CA 94401.
Registered Owners: 1) Jose David Sanchez, 2) Ana A. Ramos, same address.
The business is conducted by a Married
Couple. The registrant commenced to
transact business under the FBN on
8/18/16.
/s/Jose David Sanchez/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 8/18/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
8/22/16, 8/29/16, 9/5/16, 9/12/16

LOST - I, Nasim Issa Mazahreh, lost my


Jordanian passport in San Mateo. If
found, please call
(650)743-0017

NOTICE OF PETITION TO
ADMINISTER ESTATE OF
Kenneth Albert Waylonis
Case Number: 16PRO00227
To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may
otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both, of Kenneth Albert Waylonis.
A Petition for Probate has been filed by
Ralph J. Waylonis in the Superior Court
of California, County of San Mateo. The
Petition for Probate requests that Ralph
J. Waylonis be appointed as personal
representative to administer the estate of
the decedent. The petition requests authority to administer the estate under the
Independent Administration of Estates
Act. (This authority will allow the personal representative to take many actions
without obtaining court approval. Before
taking certain very important actions,
however, the personal representative will
be required to give notice to interested
persons unless they have waived notice
or consented to the proposed action.)
The independent administration authority
will be granted unless an interested person files an objection to the petition and
shows good cause why the court should
not grant the authority.
A hearing on the petition will be held in
this court as follows: SEP 13, 2016 at
9:00 a.m., Department 28, Superior
Court of California, County of San Mateo,
400 County Center, Redwood City, CA
94063.
If you object to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing
and state your objections or file written
objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person
or by your attorney.
If you are a creditor or a contingent creditor of the decedent, you must file your
claim with the court and mail a copy to
the personal representative appointed by
the court within the later of either (1) four
months from the date of first issuance of
letters to a general personal representative, as defined in section 58(b) of the
Calilfornia Probate Code, or (2) 60 days
from the date of mailing or personal delivery to you of a notice under sectioin
9052 of the Callifornia Probate
Code.Other California statutes and legal
authority may affect your rights as a
creditor. You may want to consult with an
attorney knowledgable in California law.
You may examine the file kept by the
court. If you are a person interested in
the estate, you may file with the court a
Request for Special Notice (form DE154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition
or account as provided in Probate Code
section 1250. A Request for Special Notice form is available from the court clerk.
Petitioner:
Ralph J. Waylonis
519 Lakeview Way
EMERALD HILLS, CA 94062
650-454-5809
FILED: 8/19/16
Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal
on 8/23/16, 8/29/16, 8/30/16.

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

Tundra

Tundra

Tundra

Over the Hedge

Over the Hedge

Over the Hedge

23

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
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


3 IN 1 Crib $99 (convertible to Day Bed,
Headboard for Full Size bed) (650)3482306
BASSINET $45 (Musical, Rocks, vibrates, has 4 wheels, includes sheets &
mattress) (650)348-2306
FISHER-PRICE HEALTHY Care booster
seat - $5 (650)592-5864.

298 Collectibles

303 Electronics

304 Furniture

COCA COLA "Xmas" Bottle(employees


had to work Xmas)-bottle dated Dec
25,1923; $10; 591-9769 San Carlos

46 MITSUBISHI Projector TV, great


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

CHAIR WITH rollers, Sturdy chair, blue


seat, black rollers, $10.00 (650) 578
9208

295 Art

COLLECTORS - Royal Doulton Mini Toby Jugs - Tinies, Swizzle Sticks, and
Matchbooks. Please call for details
(650)741-9060 San Bruno

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

LENNOX RED Rose, Unused, hand


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

296 Appliances

MILLER LITE Neon sign , work good


$59 call 650-218-6528

3.7 CUBIC ft mini fridge $99 Mint Condition (Used only 6 weeks kitchen remodel)
(650)348-2306

RENO SILVER LEGACY Casino four


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

AIR CONDITIONER 10000 BTU w/remote. Slider model fits all windows. LG
brand $199 runs like new. (650)2350898
AIR CONDITIONER, Portable, 14,000
BTU,
Commercial
Cool
model
CPN14XC9, almost like new! All accessories plus remote included.
20 x 16-5/8 x 33-1/2 $345.
(650)345-1835
CHEFMATE TOASTER oven, brand
new, bakes, broils, toasts, adjustable
temperature. $25 OBO. (650)580-4763
CIRRUS STEAM mop model SM212B 4
new extra cleaning pads,user manual.
$45. 650-5885487
COLEMAN LXE Roadtrip Grill Red Brand New! (still in box) $100
(650)918-9847

SCHILLER HIPPIE poster, linen, Sparta


graphics 1968. Mint condition. $600.00.
(650)701-0276
STAR WARS C-3PO mint pair, green tint
(Japan), gold (U.S.) 4 action figures.
$24 650-518-6614
STAR WARS Hong Kong exclusive, mint
Pote Snitkin 4 green card action figure.
$15 650-518-6614
STAR WARS Lando Calrissian 4 orange card action figure, autographed by
Billy Dee Williams. $38 Steve 650-5186614

300 Toys
3-STORY BARBIE Dollhouse with spiral
staircase and elevator. $60. (650)5588142

60 GIG Ipod, Does not work.


Battery/hard drive not working. $25.
(650)208-5758
BAZOOKA SPEAKER Bass tube 20
longx10 wide round never used in box
$75. (650)992-4544

COAT/HAT STAND, solid wood, for your


mountain cabin/house. $50. (650)5207045

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


$100. (650)593-4490

COFFEE TABLE Woven bamboo with


glass top. $99. 650-573-6895

COMPLETE COLOR photo developer


Besler Enlarger, Color Head, trays, photo
tools $50/ 650-921-1996
IPHONE 5 Morphie Juice Pack with
charger, Originally $100, now $85.
(650)766-2679
LEFT-HAND ERGONOMIC keyboard
with 'A-shape' key layout Num pad, $20
(650)204-0587
MOTOROLA BRAVO MB 520 (android
4.1 upgrade) smart phone 35$ 8GB SD
card Belmont (650)595-8855
NEW AC/DC adapter, output DC 4.5v,
$5, 650-595-3933
ONKYO AV Receiver HT-R570 .Digital
Surround, HDMI, Dolby, Sirius Ready,
Cinema Filter.$95/ Offer 650-591-2393
OPTIMUS H36 ST5800 Tower Speaker
36x10x11 $30. (650)580-6324
ORIGINAL AM/FM 1967/68 Honda Radio for $50. (650)593-4490

ELEGANT ELECTRIC Fireplace on


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

STAR WARS one 4 orange card action figure, Luke Skywalker (Ceremonial) $6 Steve 650-518-6614

PIONEER HOUSE Speakers, pair. 15


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

MICROWAVE OVEN, Sanyo


1100
watts, 1.1 cu.ft. $40. (415) 231-4825, Daly City

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

SAMSUNG DVD-VR357 Tunerless DVD


Recorder and VCR Combo. $85.
(650)796-4028

REFRIGERATOR WHITE Full sized 2


door Whirlpool Perfect condition .$98.
650 583-9901 650 678-0221

STAR WARS SDCC Stormtrooper


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

SONY DHG-HDD250 DVR and programable remote.


Record OTA. Clock set issues $99 650595-8855

TOASTER OVEN, Black & Decker, 4Slice, 1200W, Toast, Bake, Broil;
TRO480BS - $12 (650) 952-3500

302 Antiques

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

UPRIGHT VACUUM Cleaner, $10. Call


Ed, (415)298-0645 South San Francisco

297 Bicycles

ANTIQUE BUFFET Cabinet, with 2 large


drawers w/skeleton key, needs refinishing. $700/obo.. ANTIQUE CHINA cabinet, with doors and legs, dark wood..
$500/obo. (650)952-5049

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


$60. (650)421-5469
VINTAGE G.E. radio, model c-442c $60.
(650)421-5469

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

ANTIQUE ITALIAN lamp 18 high, $70


(650)387-4002

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


(650)421-5469

298 Collectibles

BEAUTIFUL AND UNIQUE Victorian


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

VINTAGE ZENITH radio, model L516b


$75. (650)421-5469

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

MAHOGANY ANTIQUE Secretary desk,


72 x 40 , 3 drawers, Display case, bevelled glass, $700. (650)766-3024

1940'S WELCH'S Grape Juice Woodendove tailed-box, 18"x12"x10", $10,


(650)591-9769 San Carlos

OLD VINTAGE Wooden Sea Captains


Tool Chest 35 x 16 x 16, $65
(650)591-3313

1940'S WOODEN Cutty Sark Scotch


Whisky box, 17"x9"x11", $5, (650)5919769 San Carlos

STORE FRONT display cabinet, From


1930, marble base. 72 long x 40 tallx
21 deep. Asking $500. (650)341-1306

1940'S WOODEN Del Monte Prunes


box, 15x"x10"6", $5, (650)591-9769, San
Carlos

STORE FRONT display cabinet, From


1930, marble base. 72 long x 40 tallx
21 deep. Asking $500. (650)341-1306

CHAIRS 2 Blue Good Condition $50


OBO (650)345-5644

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

304 Furniture
2 TWIN MAPLE bed frames, Cannon
Ball construction **SOLD **
3-TIER
WIRE
shelves,
light
weight, wood top for writing $25.00 (650)
578 9208)
ANTIQUE DINING table for six people
with chairs $99. (650)580-6324

COMPUTER SWIVEL CHAIR. Padded


Leather. $80. (650) 455-3409
COMPUTER TABLE, adjustable height,
chrome legs, 29x48 like new $30 (650)
697-8481
COUCH Designer gray, beige, white.
Excellent condition. $99. 650-573-6895

COUCH, CREAM IKEA, great condition,


$89, light-weight, compact, sturdy loveseat (415)775-0141
CUSTOM MADE wood sewing storage
cabinet perfect condition $75. (650)4831222
DINETTE TABLE with Chrome Legs: 36"
x58" (with one leaf 11 1/2") - $50.
(650)341-5347
DINETTE TABLE, 3 adjustable leaf.$30.
(650) 756-9516.Daly City.
DINING ROOM table Good Condition
$90.00 or best offer ( 650)-780-0193

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 for $50.
Good shape, blonde, about 5' high.
(650)726-4102

ESPRESSO TABLE 30 square, 40 tall,


$95 (650)375-8021
FREE DINING set, includes table, seats
14, bureau, hutch. MUST PICK UP
650-438-8974.
INFINITY FLOOR speakers H 38" x W
11 1/2" x D 10" good $50. (650)756-9516

KITCHEN TABLE with 4 chairs, Blonde


wood, Farm Style. Apartment sized.
Good condition. $25. (650)359-0213
LAWN CHAIRS (4) White, plastic, $8.
each, (415)346-6038
LEATHER SOFA, black, excellent condition. $100 obo. (650)878-5533
LOVE SEAT, Upholstered pale yellow
floral $99. (650)574-4021

LOVESEAT Designer gray, beige,


white. Excellent condition. $89. 650-5736895
MOVING SALE: Furniture: Glass Dining
room table, 6 chairs. Enertainment Center. Bedroom Set. Two wood cabinets.
Marble Entry table. Glass breakfast table. (650) 283-6997.

ANTIQUE MAHOGANY Bookcase. Four


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

NEW TWIN Mattress set plus frame


$30.00 (650) 347-2356

ANTIQUE MAHOGANY double bed with


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

NICE WOOD table 36"L x19"W x20"H


$30.(415)231-4825.Daly City

BEIGE SOFA $99. Excellent Condition


(650) 315-2319
BROWN WOODEN bookshelf H 3'4"X W
3'6"X D 10" with 3 shelves $25.00 call
650-592-2648
CHAIR Designer gray, beige, white.
Excellent condition. $59. 650-573-6895

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


(650)726-6429

OAK SIX SHELF Book Case 6FT 4FT


$55 (650)458-8280
OUTDOOR WOOD SCREEN - new $80
obo Retail $130 (650)873-8167

PAPASAN CHAIRS (2) -with cushions


$45. each set, (650)347-8061

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

24

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Monday Aug. 29, 2016

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle

redwood,

308 Tools
$20.

QUEEN SIZE Sofa bed and love seat,


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

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis


ACROSS
1 Illusions in a
stage act,
collectively
6 Muslim leaders
11 Place for a
massage
14 Twist
15 French
Revolution
radical
16 Put a strain on
17 *Cost of shares
on the exchange
19 Tip jar
denomination
20 Miffed
21 Gizmos
23 __ buco: veal
dish
26 Director Lee
28 Students
workplace
29 Guttural Psst!
30 Wedding vows
32 Condemn
34 Most rational
36 Nobel Peace
Prize city
38 Jack-in-the-box
sound
40 Drips in the ICU
41 *U.S./USSR
conflict
43 Give it a go
44 Witness
45 Yankee slugger,
to fans
46 Area of expertise
48 Sound from Leo
50 Twist, as waterdamaged
floorboards
52 Sharpen
53 World Cup
soccer org.
55 __-hoo!
56 1946 N.L. RBI
leader Slaughter
57 Part of a chess
match when
most of the
pieces are off the
board
60 __ the mornin!
62 Sch. run by
Mormons
63 United stand ...
and what the first
part of the
answers to
starred clues
literally can have
68 Track transaction
69 Wabbit-hunting
Fudd
70 Fragrant wood

304 Furniture
PICNIC
TABLE,
(650)365-5718

31 U-turn from NNE 49 Bailed-out


71 Pigs home
33 Rita with an
insurance co.
72 Officials who
Oscar,
Emmy,
51
Copter
blades
have their
Tony and
54 Whac-__: arcade
faculties
Grammy
game
73 Hit hard, biblically
35 Like Al Capone
57 Diminishes
37 Ridicule
58 Russian denial
DOWN
satirically
59 Actress Stone of
1 Leo is its logo
Birdman
2 Californias Santa 39 Combustible
funeral
piles
61
Low-ranking
GIs
__ River
42
Under
a
quarter64
Guys
3 Long-jawed fish
tank, say
65 Prefix with meter
4 Annoying
66 __ King Cole
5 Egyptian queen, 47 Geometry
proposition
67 Italian three
familiarly
6 Loom on the
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:
horizon
7 St. Patricks mo.
8 Very dry
9 Sprayed in
defense
10 Longshoreman
11 *Element in an
executive
compensation
package
12 Window glass
13 Lumberjacks
tools
18 Double agent
22 Prefix with metric
and bar
23 Desert retreat
24 Norelco product
25 *Drive to do the
responsible thing
27 *So long
08/29/16
xwordeditor@aol.com

ELECTRIC
TYPEWRITER
$30.00
Good condition
(650)367-1508

RECLINING SWIVEL & high-back chair


(Hampton) exc condition $30 (650) 7569516 Daly City.

NEAT RECEIPTS Mobile Scanner new


in box $79, call 650-324-8416

RECLINING SWIVEL chair almost new


$99 650-766-4858
ROCKING CHAIR fine light, oak condition with pads, $85/OBO. 650 369 9762
ROCKING CHAIRS solid wood, great
shape asking 30 dollars each. Call
(650)574-4582 Lily
RUMMY ROYAL poker table top $30.00
(650)573-5269
SHELF RUBBER maid
contract joe 650-573-5269

new $20.00

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

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
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

VINTAGE LARGE Marble Coffee Table,


round. $75.(650)458-8280

LIONEL WESTERN Union Pass car and


dining car. New OB $99 650-368-7537

WALNUT CHEST, small (4 drawer with


upper bookcase $50. (650)726-6429

PLAYBOY,SPORTS
ILLUSTRATED,
TIME. 1960s to current date.
Reasonable offers accepted.
(650) 366-3494.

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


17.5" deep. $90. (650)631-9311
WOOD FURNITURE- one end table and
coffee table. In good condition. $30
OBO. (760)996-0767.

306 Housewares
CHRISTMAS TREE China, Fairfield
Peace on Earth. Complete Set of 12 (48
pieces) $75. 650-493-5026
COMPLETE SET OF CHINA - Windsor
Garden, Noritake. Four place-settings,
20-pieces in original box, never used.
$250 per box
(3 boxes available).
(650)342-5630
GARBAGE CANS: brute 44 gal. Excellent condition $15. 650 504-6057
MAKEUP/SHAVING MIRROR - mounts
on wall. BRAND NEW-original box. 5x
magnification. Tri-fold arm. $10 654-9252
PLASTIC DUAL-LID Underbed Storage
Container with wheels, 31"x15"x5-1/2",
$7 (650) 952-3500.
PRE-LIT 7 ft Christmas tree. Three sections, easy to assemble. $50. 650 349
2963.
SOLID TEAK floor model 16 wine rack
with turntable $60. (650)592-7483

308 Tools
ALUMINUM LADDERS 40ft, $99 for two,
Call (650)481-5296

PREMIUM MOVING blankets good condition $10.00 each (650 ) 504 -6057
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
SILK SAREE 6 yards new nice color.for
$35 only. C all(650)515-2605 for more information.
TASCO LUMINOVA Telescope.with tripod stand, And extra Lenses. Good condition.$90. call 650-591-2393
ULTRASONIC JEWELRY Cleaning Machine Cleans jewelry, eyeglasses, dentures, keys. Concentrate included. $30
OBO. (650)580-4763
VASE WITH flowers 2 piece good for the
Holidays, $25., (650) 867-2720
VINTAGE WHITE Punch Bowl/Serving
Bowl Set with 10 cups plus one extra
$30. (650)873-8167
WAGON WHEEL Wooden, original from
Colorado farm. 34x34
Very good
aged condition $200 San Bruno
(650)588-1946

311 Musical Instruments


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

CRAFTSMAN 9" Radial Arm Saw with 6"


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

CABLE NELSON Cherrywood spinet.


Excellent condition. $600. Call after noon
(650) 591-6331.

CRAFTSMAN JIG Saw - 1/4 HP. Variable speed. Extra blades. Saw edge
guide. $25 650-654-9252

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


(650)343-4461

CRAFTSMAN JIGSAW 3.9 amp. with


variable speeds $65 (650)359-9269

HAMMOND B-3 Organ and 122 Leslie


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

CRAFTSMAN RADIAL Arm Saw Stand.


In box. $30. (650)245-7517
CRAFTSMAN RADIAL SAW, with cabinet stand, $200 Cash Only, (650)8511045
CRAFTSMEN 3 saw blades $20. new.
(650)573-5269
DELTA CABINET SAW with overrun table. $1,500/obo. ((650)342-6993
DYNAGLOPRO
HEATER.
Phone: 650-591-8062

$40.00

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


PAINTING TOOLS - hooks, stirrups 110
ropes, poles, 20 plank, 440 Graco Spary
Machine, $500, Asking (650)-483-8048
POWERMATIC TABLE SAW, heavy duty, excellent condition, perfect for contractor or carpenter. $750 or best offer.
Call anytime, (650)713-6272
ROUTER TABLE ryobi $ 99. like new
650-573-5269
ROUTER TABLE ryobi $ 99. like new
650-573-5269
SHOPSMITH MARK V 50th Anniversary
most
attachments.
$1,500/OBO.
(650)504-0585
TWO WHEEL dolly used $20.00 contact
joe at 650-573-5269
VINTAGE CRAFTSMAN Jig Saw. Circa
1947. $60. (650)245-7517
VINTAGE SHOPSMITH and BAND
SAW, good shape. $1,000/obo. Call
(650)342-6993

08/29/16

309 Office Equipment

RECLINER CHAIR blue tweed clean


good $75 Call 650 583-3515

BOSTITCH 16 gage Finish nailer Model


SB 664FN $99 (650)359-9269

By Jerry Edelstein
2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

WILLIAMS #40251, 4 PC. Tool Set


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

WILLIAMS #40251, 4 PC. Tool Set


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

HARMONICA.
HOHNER Pocket Pal.
Key of C. Original box. Never used.
$10. (650)588-0842
KIMBALL MODEL 4243 + BENCH.
Beautiful Walnut. 42 inches tall. Burlingame asking $450 OBO. 650-344-6565.
MONARCH UPRIGHT player piano $99
(650) 583-4549
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
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
BLACK DOUBLE breasted suit size 38
excellent condition $25 650-322-9598
BOY SCOUT canvas belt with Boy Scout
Buckle. Vintage. Fair condition. $5.
(650)588-0842

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Monday Aug. 29, 2016

316 Clothes

345 Medical Equipment

620 Automobiles

FAUX FUR Coat Woman's brown multi


color
in
excellent
condition
3/4
length $50 650-692-8012

NOVA WALKER with storage box &


seat; never used; already assembled;
$70.00 cash only. 415-298-4545

FORD CARGO VAN 98, one owner.


Good condition. 105k miles $6.300.
(415)722-9762

FREE SIZE 38 tan gabardine navy officers uniform great condition Perfect for
that costume party.322-9598

ROSCOE MEDICAL shower/bath transfer bench. Like new. $70 cash. (650)3924841

LADIES BOOTS size 8 , 3 pairs different


styles , $20/ pair. call 650-592-2648

Garage Sales

LEATHER JACKET, New Black Italian


style, size M Ladies $45 (650) 875-1708
MEN'S ASICS Kayano used very good
condition size 10.5 new $159 ONLY $15
650 520-7045
MEN'S NIKE shoe in like new condition
Grey color size 11. $35. 650 520-7045
MEN'S SKI boots size 10, $75.
(650)520-1338
NEW JOCKEY Men's Classic Crew
white tshirts (L) 3pk $15/each (5 available) 650.952.3466
NEW WITH tags Wool or cotton Men's
pullover
sweaters
(XL)
$15/each
(650)952-3466
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
VELVET DRAPE, 100% cotton, new
beautiful burgundy 82"X52" W/6"hems:
$45 (415)585-3622

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...
Reach over 83,450 readers
from South San Francisco
to Palo Alto.
in your local newspaper.

Call (650)344-5200

VINTAGE 1970S Grecian made dress,


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

317 Building Materials

379 Open Houses

CULTURED MARBLE 2 tone BR vanity


counter top. New toe skin/ scribe. 29 x
19 $300 (408)744-1041
INTERIOR DOORS, 8, Free. Call 5737381.

OPEN HOUSE
LISTINGS

SHUTTERS 2 wooden shutters 32x72


like new $50.00 ea.call 650 368-7891

List your Open House


in the Daily Journal.

WHITE DOUBLE pane window for $29


or Best offer. Call Halim @ (650) 6785133.

Reach over 83,450


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

318 Sports Equipment


15 SF Giants Posters -- Barry Bonds,
Jeff Kent, JT Snow. 6' x 2.5' Unused. $4
each. $35 all. (650)588-1946 San Bruno
ADIDAS ENGLISH Olympics sports bag
(very good condition) - $25, (650)3418342

Call (650)344-5200

CHILDS KICK sgooter by razor wiyh helmet $25 obo (650)591-6842

470 Rooms

IGLOO BLUE 38-Quart Wheelie Cool


Cooler/Ice Chest $14 650-952-3500

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

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,

620 Automobiles

MEN'S ROSSIGNOL Skis.


good condition, 650-341-0282.

$95.00,

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

NEW 8" tactical knife, one hand open


$19 650-595-3933
POWER PLUS Exercise Machine
(650)368-3037

$99

SET OF Used Golf Clubs with Cart for


$50. (650)593-4490
SOCCER BALLS - $8.00 each (like new)
4 available. (650)341-5347
TENNIS PRINCE Pro rackets (2) with
cover - $40. ea. (650)341-8342
TREADMILL BY PRO-FORM. (Hardly
Used). 10% incline, 2.5 HP motor, 300lb
weight capacity. $329 (650)598-9804
VINTAGE ENGLISH ladies ice skates up to size 7-8, $40., (650)873-8167
VINTAGE NASH Cruisers Mens/ Womens Roller Skates Blue indoor/outdoor sz
6-8. $60 B/O. (650)574-4439
WET SUIT - medium size, $95., call for
info (650)851-0878
WOMEN'S LADY Cougar gold iron set
set - $25. (650)348-6955
WOMEN'S NORDICA ski boots, size 8
1/2. $50 650-592-2047
YAMAHA ROOF RACK, 58 inches $75.
(650)458-3255

345 Medical Equipment


4- PRONGED walking cane, adjustable
height. Never used. $20 cash. (650)3924841
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.

2012 MAZDA CX-7 SUV Excellent


condition One owner Fully loaded Low
miles $19,950 obo (650)520-4650

Dont lose money


on a trade-in or
consignment!
Sell your vehicle in the
Daily Journals
Auto Classifieds.
Just $45
Well run it
til you sell it!

Cabinetry

Lic. #706952

Driveways - Walkways - Pool Decks Patios - Stairs - Exposed Aggregate Masonry - Retaining Walls - Drainage
Foundation Slabs

Do the humane thing.


Donate it to the
Humane Society.
Call 1- 800-943-8412
4

Free Estimates

(650) 271 - 1442 Mike

cylinder,

MERCEDES BENZ 02 SL500, both


tops, 50K miles, brilliant silver, Cherry
condition! Always garaged. $19,500.
(650)726-8623
VOLVO 03 XC70, awd, clean, 179K
miles, 4,500 (650)302-5523

625 Classic Cars

Contractors

1955 CHEVY BEL AIR 2 door, Standard


Transmission V8 Motor, non-op $22,000
obo. (650)952-4036.
86 CHEVY CORVETTE. Automatic.
93,000 miles. Sports Package.$6,800
obo. (650) 952-4036.
CHEVY 65 Impala 2DR Coupe. 113K
miles. 4 BL Carb. $8,500.
(415) 412-1292.

Decks & Fences

FORD 63 thunderbird Hardtop, 390 engine, Leather Interior. Will consider


$4,500 /OBO (650)364-1374

Construction

FORD 64 Falcon. 4DR Sedan. 6 cyl.


auto/trans $3,500.00. (650) 570-5780.

CALEDONIAN
MASONRY INC

640 Motorcycles/Scooters

BBQ Season Coming!

89 GOLD WING. 1500 CC. 39K miles.


Call Joe 650-578-8357

We can design your


outdoor living
experience.

BMW 03 F650 GS, $3899 OBO. Call


650-995-0003
MOTORCYCLE SADDLEBAGS, with
mounting hardware and other parts $35.
Call (650)670-2888

*BBQs *Pizza Ovens


*Patios *Flagstone
*Concrete/Foundation

645 Boats

Call For Free Estimate:

16 FT SEA RAY. I/B. $1,200. Needs Upholstery. Call 650-898-5732.


2003 P-15 West Wight Potter sailboat,
excellend
condition.
$7,200.
Call
(650)347-2559

Cleaning

ALL ELECTRICAL
SERVICE

650-322-9288

(650) 340-0492

for all your electrical needs

LUXURATI AUTO REPAIR

ELECTRIC SERVICE GROUP

Smog Check
Repair Services
Collision and Body Work

Gardening

(650) 340-0026

COMPLETE
GARDENING
SERVICES

Burlingame & San Mateo Locations


SEE OUR AD FOR DISCOUNTS!

MENLO ATHERTON
AUTO REPAIR
WE SMOG ALL CARS

General Clean Up
and Irrigation Systems

Call Jose:

(650) 315-4011

1279 El Camino Real

Concrete

650 -273-5120

AAA CONCRETE DESIGN

Menlo Park

www.MenloAthertonAutoRepair

Stamps Color Driveways


Patios Masonry Block walls
Landscaping

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

BRIDGESTONE TURANZA RFT (Run


Flat) 205/55/16 EL42 used 70% left $80.
(650)483-1222

ELECTRIC WHEELCHAIR, great shape,


only 5 years old, $500 or best offer. Call
anytime, (650)713-6272

DODGE
99 Van, Good Condition,
$5,500, childs play three, call
(650)481-5296

Texturing, Water Damage, new,


etc.
Small Jobs Only.
Licensed/Bonded.

(most cars)

869 California Drive .


Burlingame

Lic# 947476

CHEVY HHR 08 - Grey, spunky car


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

- DRYWALL -

Patching, Smoothing,

Electricians

BRIDGESTONE TURANZA RFT (Run


Flat) 205/55/16 EL 42 All Season Like
New $100. (650)483-1222

BEDSIDE COMMODE like new $15


650.952.3466

Drywall

AA SMOG

Complete Repair & Service


$29.75 plus certificate fee

Reach 83,450 drivers


from South SF to
Palo Alto

CHEVY 10 HHR . 68K. EXCELLENT


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

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

- (650)468-8428 -

Quality Workmanship,
Free Estimates

CADILLAC 99 DeVille Concours,


98,500 miles, $3,500 or best offer.
(650)270-6637

(650) 525-9154

MARSH FENCE
& DECK CO.

670 Auto Service

670 Auto Parts

CADILLAC 02 Deville, 8 cylinder, perfect condition, like new, cashmere outside white inside 4787 miles $13,000.
(415)850-2370

Construction

CHETNER CONCRETE

GOT AN OLDER
CAR, BOAT, OR RV?

HONDA 11 ACCORD,
$10,900. (650)302-5523

Concrete

25

CORVETTE STINGRAY BODY 69


Excellent Condition $18,000. No Trades.
Serious only.(650)481-5296
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

(650)533-0187

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

Deck Repair & New Construction


Staircase Repair & New Construction

Siding Installation
Bathroom Remodel & Painting

Drought Tolerant Planting


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

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

Free Estimates Fully Insured


Lic. #913461

ADVERTISE
YOUR SERVICE
in the
HOME & GARDEN SECTION
Offer your services to 83,450 readers a day, from
Palo Alto to South San Francisco
and all points between!

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

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

Free Estimates, 15% off First Visit

(650)219-4066
Lic#1211534

PENINSULA
CLEANING

RESIDENTIAL AND COMMERICAL

BONDED
FREE ESTIMATES

1-800-344-7771

26

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Monday Aug. 29, 2016

Housecleaning

Hauling

Hauling

Landscaping

Plumbing

Tree Service

EMERALD GREEN
PROJECT MAIDS

INDEPENDENT
HAULERS

AAA RATED!

JONS HAULING

SEASONAL LAWN

MEYER
PLUMBING
SUPPLY

Hillside Tree

The Bay Area's


"True Eco-Friendly Services"
t-JDFOTFEt#POEFEt*OTVSFE
t3FTJEFOUJBMt$PNNFSJDBM
Call or book online:
www.egpmaids.com
650-206-0520

Free estimates

Gutters

$40 & UP
HAUL

Serving the peninsula since 1976

FREE ESTIMATES

Junk and debris removal, yard/int


clearing, furniture, appliance hauling
www.jonshauling.com

(650)393-4233

Since 1988/Licensed & Insured


Monthly Specials
Fast, Dependable Service

Free Estimates

650-350-1960

CHAINEY HAULING

Painting

CORDERO PAINTING

Starting at $40 & Up


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

Commercial & Residential


Exterior & Interior
Free Estimates
(650) 348-7164; (650) 372-8361
corderopainting94401@gmail.com
Lic# 35740 Insured

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

Fences Tree Trimming


Decks Concrete Work
Kitchen and Bathroom
remodeling
Free Estimates

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

contrerashandy12@yahoo.com

SENIOR HANDYMAN

Specializing in any size project

Painting Electrical
Carpentry Dry Rot
40 Yrs. Experience

Retired Licensed Contractor

JON LA MOTTE

PAINTING

Landscaping

NATE LANDSCAPING
* 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

Interior & Exterior


Quality Work, Reasonable
Rates, Free Estimates

REED
ROOFERS

Serving the entire Bay Area


Residential & Commercial
License #931457

Call for Free Estimate

(650) 591-8291

LOCALLY OWNED
Family Owned Since 2000
Trimming

Pruning

Shaping
Large

Removal
Grinding

Stump

Free
Estimates
Mention

The Daily Journal


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

WINDOW
WASHING

Lic #514269

MICHAELS
PAINTING

Serving the Peninsula


since 1989

(650) 574-0203
lic#628633

Notices

MK PAINTING

Interior / Exterior
Residential / Commerical
Insured / Bonded
Free Estimates
Lic #974682

(650)630-1835

THE VILLAGE
CONTRACTOR

A+ Member BBB Since 1975

(650)701-6072

Roofing

Service

(650)368-8861

650-201-6854

Licensed General and


Painting Contractor
Int/Ext Painting Carpentry
Sheetrock, Tile, Stucco & Remodels
Lic#979435
CALL FOR GREAT RATES!

Toilets, Sinks, Vanities,


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

(650)341-7482

Furniture / Appliance / Disposal


Tree / Bush / Dirt / Concrete Demo

CONTRERAS HANDYMAN
SERVICES

Drought Tolerant Planting


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

A+ BBB Rating

Junk & Debris Clean Up

Handy Help

MAINTENANCE

NICK MEJIA PAINTING


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

(415)971-8763
Lic. #479564

Stucco

- STUCCO -

Windows, Doors, Patched,


Cracks Repaired, etc.
Waterproofing.
Small Jobs Only.
Lisence/Bonded
- (650)248-4205 -

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

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Caregiver

CAREGIVER
SERVICES

Monday Aug. 29, 2016

Dental Services

Furniture

Health & Medical

I - SMILE

STOOLS*BAR*DINETTES

CALIFORNIA

SLEEP APNEA
We can treat it
without CPAP!

Implant & Orthodontict Center


1702 Miramonte Ave. Suite B
Mountain View

(650)591-3900

Assist with cooking, cleaning, dressing, etc..


Bilingual, Spanish/English.
For more info please call
(650)771-6226
Maria Hernandez

Exceptional.
Reliable. Innovative
650-282-5555

Peninsula Showroom:
930 El Camino Real, San Carlos

Cemetery

RUSSO DENTAL CARE

Health & Medical

LASTING
IMPRESSIONS
ARE OUR FIRST
PRIORITY
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

Dental Services

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

(650)583-2273

www.russodentalcare.com

Food

PANCHO VILLA
TAQUERIA

Because Flavor Still Matters


365 B Street
San Mateo
(650) 343-4123
www.smpanchovilla.com

RED HOT CHILLI PEPPER

The most authentic SoutheastAsian/Indo-Chinese cuisine in the Bay


Area, served family style!
Our dynamic menu offers
plenty of options to carnivorous,
vegetarian or vegan diners!
1125 San Carlos Ave, San Carlos

650-453-3055

COMPLETE IMPLANT
Dentistry Under One Roof

THE CAKERY

Same day treatment

1308 Burlingame Ave


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

Evening & Saturday appts available


Peninsula Dental Implant Center
1201 St Francisco Way, San Carlos
650.232.7650

A touch of Europe

Tons of Furniture to match


your lifestyle
Ask us about our
FREE DELIVERY

DENTAL
IMPLANTS

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

Call for a free


sleep apnea screening

650-583-5880
Millbrae Dental

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

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

GROW

YOUR SMALL BUSINESS


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

Real Estate Loans


Insurance

AFFORDABLE

LONG TERM CARE


INSURANCE

Eric L. Barrett,

CLU, RHU, REBC, CLTC, LUTCF


President
Barrett Insurance Services
ericlawrencebarrett@gmail.com
(650)619-0370
CA. Insurance License #0737226

EYE EXAMINATIONS

579-7774

Marketing

TURNING 65 this year?


Medicare Supplement Insurance
Low cost-guaranteed coverage

REFINANCE
HARD MONEY
AT LOWER RATE
DIRECT PRIVATE LENDER
ALL CREDIT ACCEPTED
Since 1979

WACHTER

INVESTMENTS, INC.

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

Collins Insurance
650-701-9700
www.collinscoversyou.com

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."

Real Estate Services


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

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

27

28

NEWS

Monday Aug. 29, 2016

SCAMS
Continued from page 6
GoFundMe let the appeal go forward.
Yauck said he knew all but one
of his 11 donors personally and
didnt feel a need to tell them of
the switch. It was just for fun. If
you look at the bigger picture, we
raised $600 off a pair of underwear, he said.
Several businesses asked for
contributions. One appeal raised
$1,375 from 14 donors within two
months to keep open a hair salon
run by partners killed in the
attack. A counseling center raised
$150 to subsidize services to victims but closed its campaign when
it found grant money elsewhere.
GoFundMe helps make refunds

100
Continued from page 5
ning off-leash in parks intended to
be refuges of untrammeled nature
Its more like going to a carnival . If you look at the cumulative
impacts, the trends are not good,
said Susan Clark, a Yale
University professor of wildlife
ecology who has been conducting
research in the Yellowstone area
for 48 years. The basic question
is, What is the appropriate relationship with humans and nature?
We as a society have not been
clear about what that ought to be,
and so its really, really messy and
nasty.
Recent events at Yellowstone
grabbed national headlines:

THE DAILY JOURNAL

when contributions go unused.


Weapons-accessory dealer Craig
Berberich, of Bradenton, Florida,
proposed holding public classes
on personal safety. He posted a
link to his business at the bottom
of his appeal. He said he wasnt
trying to promote my business.
Then he added: I hope we didnt
give the impression that we were a
charity.
He said he was shutting down
his appeal. It remained online
over a month later but with
only $100 in donations. Among
his store products: a high-speed
loader for assault weapons.
Efe Atalay, of Clermond,
Florida, raised $1,145 from 81
donors to buy security wands for
nightclub entrances, but didnt
say which clubs and spoke vaguely of lobbying politicians to
require such security measures. He
didnt respond to emails sent to

his GoFundMe address.


Florida charities law generally
requires no filings by crowdfunding campaigns meant for particular victims or their families or in
support of other established charities. That accounts for the vast
majority of appeals. Other states
apply a patchwork of laws.
Yet, crowdfunding campaigns
can distribute aid more quickly
than large bureaucratic funds. And
they have less overhead than traditional charities, with only 8 percent of donations on GoFundMe
going to the website and credit
card fees.
Bobby Whithorne, a GoFundMe
spokesman, said the websites
staffers were vetting the Orlando
campaigns before releasing funds,
and only a small fraction of a percent of past appeals involved outright fraud.
GoFundMe froze funds from

entertainment company manager


David Luchsingers campaign
when donations piled up quickly.
Luchsinger said he was asked for
more details of his plans to
replace the ruined equipment of
one of his deejays who was working at the club during the attack.
Luchsinger set an initial goal of
$5,000, and raised $8,742 in one
month.
Asked about the websites vetting process, he replied, Was it
so strenuous that you couldnt fake
it? No, you could definitely fake
it.
Despite his good intentions,
things got mixed up. He didnt
realize someone else had launched
a GoFundMe appeal for his deejay,
who got his name removed from
the second appeal. Two companies
eventually replaced the equipment
for free, so the deejay kept some
of the donations to replace his

lost salary and shared the rest with


other club deejays, Luchsinger
said.
Several big funds have joined
forces in an official centralized
campaign that raised more than
$23 million, including the $7 million from Equality Floridas
GoFundMe campaign.
The donations to the central
fund are generally tax-deductible,
since they go to registered charities. Donations to a crowdfunding
site are typically not taxdeductible, unless the organizer is
a tax-exempt charity.
The bigger charities unlike
many crowdfunding campaigns
give timetables for distributing
aid, and detail recipients and how
decisions are made. Ken Feinberg,
administrator for the centralized
fund, has already held two town
hall meetings with survivors and
family members of the victims.

A Canadian tourist who put a


bison calf in his SUV hoping to
save it, ending with wildlife workers euthanizing the animal when
they could not reunite it with its
herd.
Three visitors from Asia cited
on separate occasions for illegally collecting water from the parks
thermal features.
A Washington state man killed
after leaving a designated boardwalk and falling into a near-boiling hot spring.
The flouting of park rules stems
from disbelief among visitors that
they will get hurt, said
Yellowstone Superintendent Dan
Wenk. I cant tell you how many
times I have to talk to people and
say, Step back. Theres a dangerous animal, and they look at me
like I have three heads, he said.
Inconsistent record keeping,

including a recent switch to a new


criminal offenses reporting system, makes it difficult to identify
trends that apply uniformly across
the major parks.
But the records reviewed by the
AP reveal the scope of visitor misbehavior is huge. In Yellowstone,
administrators
and
outside
observers including Clark say the
parks problems have become
more acute. That threatens its mission to manage its lands and
wildlife unimpaired for future
generations.
Beyond incidents that lead to
citations are many more that result
in warnings. More than 52,000
warnings were issued in 2015, up
almost 20 percent from the year
before.
Washington state resident Lisa
Morrows son was among the children Gleason led toward the elk.

Despite safety advisories and


numerous examples of visitors
getting gored by bison, mauled by
bears and chased by elk Morrow
declared herself unafraid of the
parks wildlife. She said she was
eager to see a grizzly up close.
I want to see one right there,
Morrow said, pointing to a spot
just feet away. Id throw it a cookie.
The top 10 parks by visitation
collectively hosted almost 44
million people last year, according to National Park Service figures.
Thats a 26 percent increase
from a decade earlier, or more than
9. 1 million new visitors combined at Great Smoky Mountains,
Yellowstone, Grand Canyon,
Yosemite and the other national
parks on the list.
Yellowstone boasts the most

large,
dangerous carnivores
among those parks, but each has
its risks. In Rocky Mountain
National Park, its elk that
become more aggressive during
mating season. In Yosemite, its
towering waterfalls where visitors
insist on swimming near the edge.
In the Grand Canyon, its squirrels
habituated to humans and sometimes quick to bite an outstretched
hand. Wenk said the rise in popularity of social media complicates
keeping visitors safe.
You take a picture of yourself
standing 10 feet in front of a
bison, and all of a sudden a few
hundred people see it, and its
reposted at the same time were
telling everybody wildlife is dangerous, Wenk said. They get
incongruous messages and then it
happens. They get too close, and
the bison charges.

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