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FRIENDS WITH BENEFITS IS OK

WEEKEND JOURNAL PAGE 18

TRADING BLAME

SPEAKER, OBAMA CANT MAKE DEBT DEAL NATION PAGE 10

SCHLECK IN THE LEAD


SPORTS PAGE 11

Weekend July 23-24, 2011 Vol XI, Edition 292

www.smdailyjournal.com

Burlingame weighs $76 parcel tax for schools


By Heather Murtagh
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

A $76 annual parcel tax could mean about $2.35 million over four years for Burlingame schools, which is why elected ofcials will consider putting the measure before voters this November. Burlingame has cut $1.2 million

from its budget over the last two years. Next years budget includes $870,000 less, which is after a lastminute community effort raised more than $400,000. On Thursday morning, the Board of Trustees will consider putting a $76 annual tax for four years on the November ballot, which would create about $589,000 yearly for the district, according to a staff report by Chief Business

Mark Intrieri

Official Robert Clark. Such a measure requires two-thirds support to pass. B o a r d President Mark Intrieri noted the Game On! campaign a community effort at

the end of the school year to avoid massive cuts allowed the district to maintain many programs in the upcoming year. We cant ask the community to fundraise like that again, he said, adding a parcel tax would allow for ongoing funds. As proposed, the tax would run from 2012 through 2016. It would be used to maintain programs and

employees while restoring funding for books and supplies, according to the resolution before the board. Before putting a measure on the ballot, the district surveyed the community with the help of Godbe Research. Godbe conducted 400 phone interviews from May 31 through June 7.

See TAX, Page 24

Terror in Norway
At least 87 killed in nations worst attack since WW II
By Nils Myklebost
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Library privacy protected with new legislation


By Bill Silverfarb
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

OSLO, Norway A Norwegian who dressed as a police ofcer to gun down summer campers killed at least 80 people at an island retreat, horried police said early Saturday. It took investigators several hours to begin the realize the full scope of the massacre, which followed an explosion in nearby Oslo that killed seven and that police say was set off by the same suspect. Police initially said about 10 were killed at the forested camp on the island of Utoya, but some survivors said they thought the toll was much higher. Police director Oystein Maeland told reporters early Saturday they had discovered many more victims. Its taken time to search the area. What we know now is that we can say that there are at least 80 killed at Utoya, Maeland said. It goes without saying that this gives dimensions to this incident that are exceptional. Maeland said the death toll could rise even more. He said others were

REUTERS

See NORWAY, Page 24

The aftermath of a blast on a street in Oslo July 22.A bomb ripped through Oslos central government district on Friday killing seven people,police said,and hours later a gunman opened re at a youth camp on a nearby island.

A new state law that takes effect Jan. 1 will add an extra layer of privacy for library users in the digital age. Californias library privacy laws were created before the advent of the Internet and, as a result, an individuals interaction with the library outside of circulation was not protected under state law until Gov. Jerry Brown signed Senate Bill 445 earlier this month. The bill was authored by state Sen. Joe Simitian, D-Palo Alto, but inspired by Librarylaw.com founder Mary Minow, who also manages the Stanford Copyright and Fair Use website. Minow proposed the legislation as part of Simitians There Oughta Be A Law contest. Minow, a Cupertino Joe Simitian resident and library law consultant, submitted her winning entry after attending one of Simitians town hall meetings. Until the bill takes effect, state law provides for limited privacy protection for registration and circulation records but is largely silent on privacy protection for the many online

See PRIVACY, Page 24

An adventure in paddling
By Heather Murtagh
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

With a breeze on the water, and a board overhead, an adventure in paddling began. Standing up on a board is an act often associated with surng. But not everyone is willing to paddle in the Pacic Ocean in hopes of catching a wave. That shouldnt keep

anyone from getting in the water or enjoying the unique environment offered in San Mateo County. Standup paddling offers a serene alternative and hopefully one in which the person standing only gets wet when planned. How a person is introduced to the sport is different. I dont like the gym, said Joel Lotilla, a South San Francisco resident who previously worked at

shops which offer equipment rentals. Instead, Lotilla prefers to be standing on the water. Balancing on a standup board is a great way to get on to the water. Living in San Mateo County has its perks with this sport. Rentals and water to paddle in are both readily available. The focus it takes to stay
SCOTT LENHART/DAILYJOURNAL

See PADDLING, Page 24

Joel Lotilla paddles at Parkside Aquatic Park in San Mateo.

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FOR THE RECORD


Snapshot Inside

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Quote of the Day


This case serves as a stark example of what occurs in so-called cyberspace. It has very real consequences The intrusion of ones prole is no different than intruding ones home.
Lawrence Brown, Sacramento Superior Court judge Prison time for stalking on Facebook, page 8

Apple considers Hulu bid


Computer giant competing against Google and Yahoo

See page 10

Local Weather Forecast


Saturday: Mostly cloudy in the morning then becoming sunny. Patchy fog in the morning. Highs in the 60s to mid 70s. Northwest winds around 5 mph increasing to west 10 to 20 mph in the afternoon. Saturday night, mostly clear in the evening then becoming mostly cloudy. Patchy fog after midnight. Lows in the mid 50s. Northwest winds 10 to 20 mph. Sunday: Mostly cloudy in the morning then becoming sunny. Patchy fog in the morning. Highs in the 60s to upper 70s. West winds 5 to 15 mph.

Building booming in Asia


Theme parks and casinos are sprouting up all over Far East
KORE CHAN/DAILY JOURNAL

See page 22

Members of the Redwood City Junior Fire Academy train Friday afternoon. Logan Fisher aims the fire hose to extinguish a fire.

Lotto
July 20 Super Lotto Plus
13 18 19 23 25 20
Mega number

This Day in History


Daily Four
1 2 3 7

Thought for the Day


There is nothing harder than the softness of indifference. Juan Montalvo, Ecuadorean essayist and political writer (1832-1889).

July 19 Mega Millions


2 9 10 16 35 40
Mega number

Daily three midday


8 3 0

Daily three evening


2 3 4

Fantasy Five
7 20 22 26 29

The Daily Derby race winners are No. 2 Lucky Star in rst place;No.6 Whirl Win in second place; and No. 11 Money Bags in third place.The race time was clocked at 1:446.01.

Bay Area/Obituaries. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6, 8 Nation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8, 17 Opinion. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Business . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11-16 Weekend Journal. . . . . . . . . . . . . 18-21 Travel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Calendar/Comics. . . . . . . . . . . . . 24-25 Classieds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26-31 Publisher Jerry Lee jerry@smdailyjournal.com Editor in Chief Jon Mays jon@smdailyjournal.com

Phone: . . . . . . . . . . . . (650) 344-5200 Fax: (650) 344-5290 To Advertise:. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ads@smdailyjournal.com Classieds: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ads@smdailyjournal.com Events: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . calendar@smdailyjournal.com News: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . news@smdailyjournal.com Delivery: . . . . . . . . . . . . . circulation@smdailyjournal.com Career: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . info@smdailyjournal.com 800 S. Claremont St., Ste. 210, San Mateo, Ca. 94402
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

A legend was born as Steve Brodie claimed to have made a daredevil plunge from the Brooklyn Bridge into New Yorks East River. (However, the exact circumstances of the jump are in dispute, with skeptics saying it never actually occurred.) In 1829, William Austin Burt received a patent for his typographer, a forerunner of the typewriter. In 1885, Ulysses S. Grant, the 18th president of the United States, died in Mount McGregor, N.Y., at age 63. In 1914, Austria-Hungary issued a list of demands to Serbia following the killing of Archduke Franz Ferdinand by a Serb assassin; the dispute led to World War I. In 1945, French Marshal Henri Petain (ahn-REE payTAN), who had headed the Vichy (vee-shee) government during World War II, went on trial, charged with treason. (He was convicted and condemned to death, but the sentence was commuted.) In 1951, Henri Petain died in prison. In 1952, Egyptian military ofcers led by Gamal Abdel Nasser launched a successful coup against King Farouk I. In 1967, a week of deadly race-related rioting that claimed 43 lives erupted in Detroit. In 1977, a jury in Washington, D.C., convicted 12 Hana (hah-NAH-fee) Muslims of charges stemming from the hostage siege at three buildings the previous March. In 1986, Britains Prince Andrew married Sarah Ferguson at Westminster Abbey in London. (The couple divorced in 1996.) In 1996, at the Atlanta Olympics, Kerri Strug made a heroic nal vault despite torn ligaments in her left ankle as the U.S. women gymnasts clinched their rst-ever Olympic team gold medal.

1886

Birthdays

Rock guitarist Slash is 46.

Monica Lewinsky is 38.

Actor Daniel Radcliffe is 22.

Concert pianist Leon Fleisher (FLY-shur) is 83. Supreme Court Justice Anthony M. Kennedy is 75. Actor Ronny Cox is 73. Radio personality Don Imus is 71. Singer-songwriter John Hall is 63. Actress Belinda Montgomery is 61. Rock musician Blair Thornton (Bachman Turner Overdrive) is 61. Actress Edie McClurg is 60. Actress-writer Lydia Cornell is 58. Actor Woody Harrelson is 50. Rock musician Martin Gore (Depeche Mode) is 50. Actor Eriq Lasalle is 49. Actor Philip Seymour Hoffman is 44. Rock musician Nick Menza is 43. Modelactress Stephanie Seymour is 43. Actress Charisma Carpenter is 41. Rhythm-and-blues singer Sam Watters is 41. Country singer Alison Krauss is 40. Rhythm-and-blues singer Dalvin DeGrate is 40. Rock musician Chad Gracey (Live) is 40. Actor-comedian Marlon Wayans is 39. Country singer Shannon Brown is 38. Actress Kathryn Hahn is 38. Retired MLB All-Star Nomar Garciaparra is 38. Former. Actress Stephanie March is 37. to make Forrest interact with three presidents. He meets John F. Kennedy (1917-1963), Lyndon Johnson (1908-1973) and Richard Nixon (1913-1994). *** A mint copy of Detective Comics (DC) issue #27 is worth $300,000. That issue has the rst appearance of Batman, titled The Bat-Man from May 1939. *** The westernmost county in the state of California is Humboldt County. *** The rst tangerines were shipped to Europe from Tangier, Morocco in 1841. The new kind of oranges were called tangerines, named after their country of origin. *** Vivian Leigh (1913-1967) worked for 125 days as the lead actress in the movie Gone With the Wind (1939). She earned $30,000 for her role. Clark Gable (1901-1960), a proven box-ofce draw, worked on the movie for 71 days and was paid $120,000. *** Stevie Wonder (born 1950) shares a birthday with his youngest son. Mandla Kadjaly Carl Stevland Morris was born in 2005 on May 13, 55 years to the day after his fathers birthday. Wonder has seven children. *** Answer: They were all born in Canada.
Know It All is by Kerry McArdle. It runs in the weekend and Wednesday editions of the Daily Journal. Questions? Comments? Email knowitall@smdailyjournal.com or call 344-5200 ext. 114.

APNWR
2011 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Sign Up for the IAFLOFCI (OFFICIAL) Jumble Facebook fan club

Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.

SRMUT

EEPELD

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

A:

(Answers Monday) Jumbles: BLUNT TAKEN BOLDLY SUMMER Answer: The construction project based on the plans drawn by Robert Mills was this MONUMENTAL

Yesterdays

Magic 8 Balls are lled with blue water. To keep the water from freezing during shipping, propylene glycol is added. *** Television sitcoms Maude (1972-1978) and The Jeffersons (1975-1985) were spinoffs of All in the Family (1971-1979). *** Actor Vincent Price (1911-1993) was an avid gourmet chef. He wrote a cookbook with his wife in 1965 titled A Treasury of Great Recipes. *** The novel Madame Bovary caused a sensation when it was rst published in 1857. In the novel, Madame Bovary is unhappy in her marriage so she commits adultery and suicide. The French government charged author Gustave Flaubert (1821-1880) with immorality for writing such a novel. He was acquitted. *** The earths sun is a dwarf star. Astronomers predict that the sun has enough fuel to last 5 billion years.

*** The average Australian man is seven pounds heavier than the average American man. Australian women weigh 16 pounds more than American women, on average. *** One third of adults in the United States has high blood pressure. *** A group of ferrets is called a business of ferrets. Female ferrets are called jills, males are hobs and babies are called kits. *** Do you know what the following celebrities have in common? Pamela Anderson (born 1967), Dan Akroyd (born 1952), Michael J, Fox (born 1961), John Candy (1950-1994) and Celine Dion (born 1968). See answer at end. *** Albert Einsteins (1879-1955) IQ is unknown. He never took an IQ test. *** There are four kinds of trout commonly found in Lake Tahoe. They are cutthroat, silver, brown and Mackinaw trout. *** Bazooka Joe has starred in over 700 different comics inside Bazooka Bubble Gum wrappers since 1953. *** Parrots and woodpeckers are zygodactyl. They have four toes on each foot with two facing forward and two pointing backwards. *** In the movie Forrest Gump (1994) actual footage and digital technology are combined

THE DAILY JOURNAL

LOCAL
By Richard Duboc
DAILY JOURNAL CORRESPONDENT

Weekend July 23-24, 2011

Police reports
Thief is quite the problem solver
A black Harley motorcycle was stolen from a third oor garage on the 1100 block of El Camino Real in San Bruno before 2:55 p.m. Saturday, July 2.

Walking tours explore nearby history


Every neighborhood in San Mateo County has a rich history: one just might have to go out and search to nd it. The San Mateo County Historical Society has partnered this year once again with local city historical societies to bring residents a series of historically themed walking tours leading up to the annual Victorian Days at the History Museum in downtown Redwood City Sunday, Aug. 21. Tours are being held every weekend from now until Aug. 13 with locations ranging from Colma to San Carlos. There is so much history throughout the county, said Carmen Blair, deputy director of the history museum. This has been a long standing tradition. The annual summer program marks the largest concerted effort between the historical society and other Peninsula historical societies to combine recourses for the singular purpose of educating those interested. Some tours have been offered in the years before, while others are brand new. In essence, each tour is like sightseeing for people who have lived in the community their entire lives. On Sunday, July 17, a group of around 20 largely Pacica-based residents gathered at the corner of Montecito Avenue and Beach Boulevard in the Sharp neighborhood of The candidate filing period is open for numerous seats in the county. Here are some updates: Colleen Sullivan, trustee for the San Mateo-Foster City Elementary School District, led to run for a second term. Earlier this week, board President Mark Hudak announced he will not seek a third term. Menlo Park resident Allen Weiner led to run in the Sequoia Union High School District. East Palo Alto resident Larry James Moody and Carrie Du Bois, San Carlos Elementary School trustee, previously led. There are three seats up for grabs with two incumbents Lorraine Rumley and Olivia doned church, built in 1910, was the rst Presbyterian Church built on the San Mateo County coast and acted as the center of the original community. The Pacica Historical Society was in the process of turning the church into a museum and event center which it hopes to complete by next summer but is still looking for funding, Crow said. Despite the less-than-ideal economic conditions, the Pacica Historical Society is also working to restore an old railroad car used in the Reaches the Beaches Ocean Shores Railroad which rst brought beachgoers from San Francisco to the growing beachfront neighborhood in the rst part of the last century. It was around this time local businessman J. Downey Harvey, president of the Ocean Shores Land Company, began feverishly developing property around the nearby train stop. Although there are few remnants of the old railroad line which helped build up the city of Pacifica, the roar of cars barreling down Highway 1, which currently sits on the previous site of the tracks, hints at the now silenced whistle of the train and shout of the conductor. The next walking tour is 1:30 p.m. Sunday in El Granada. For more information on this weekends event and the remainder of the walking tours, go to http://www.historysmc.org/walkingtours.html.

FOSTER CITY
Possession of alcohol by minor. A Foster City resident was cited and released for furnishing alcohol to a minor and contributing to the delinquency of a minor on Rock Harbor Lane before 12:19 a.m. Thursday, July 7.

RICHARD DUBOC/DAILY JOURNAL

SAN CARLOS
Fraud. A case of fraud occurred on the rst block of Bayview Drive before 1:14 p.m. Friday, July 8. Auto burglary. An auto burglary occurred on the 1100 block of Industrial Road before 9:26 p.m. Thursday, July 7. Petty theft. A case of petty theft occurred on the 600 block of Elm Street before 5:56 p.m. Thursday, July 7. Vandalism. A case of vandalism was reported on the 3100 block of Brittan Avenue before 10:39 a.m. Thursday, July 7. Fraud. A fraud was reported on the 1400 block of El Camino Real before 7:46 p.m. Monday, July 4. Petty theft. A petty theft was reported on the 1400 block of El Camino Real before 5:32 p.m. Monday, July 4.

Jerry Crow of the Pacica Historical Society leads a walking tour of the city last week.The tour is one of several with historical themes throughout the Peninsula leading up to Victorian Days at the History Museum in downtown Redwood City Sunday,Aug.21.
Pacica to embark on an hour-long tour that encompassed a mile-and-a-half loop; an easy walk for all ranges of physical tness. The tour began by looking up at the nearby McCloskey Castle, built by San Francisco attorney Henry Harrison McCloskey in 1908. Its kind of like a mini Hearst Castle, said Steve Brown, of the Pacifica Historical Society, who was on hand but did not lead the tour. It was Jerry Crow of the Pacica Historical Society who acted as the docent as the group wandered down Francisco Boulevard, what Crow pointed out used to be known as Old County Road, toward the Little Brown Church on Salada Avenue. The now-abanMartinez planning to run for re-election. Margi Power has led to run for a seat on the Hillsborough City Elementary School District. Board President Greg Dannis also led to run for a second term. Trustee Julie Borden was appointed in May to ll the vacancy left by the departure of Mary Huser from the board. Borden, who never intended to run for the seat, will ll the spot through the election. Michael Barber, vice president of the Burlingame Elementary School District Board of Trustees, led to run for another term. Board President Mark Intrieri has not led but previously expressed his intentions to run. Jennifer Minkey-Selvitella led to run for one of three four-year seats on the Foster City Council. Five others have pulled papers but not yet led.

REDWOOD CITY
Grand theft. Several copper pipes were stolen over the last few nights on Woodside Road before 1:20 a.m. Tuesday, July 12. Burglary. A laptop was taken from a residence on James Avenue before 5:28 p.m. Tuesday, July 12. Theft. Alcohol was stolen from a store at Woodside Plaza before 5:32 p.m. Tuesday, July 12. Hit and run-property damage. A hit-and-run accident occurred involving a dark green minivan driven by a male at the intersection of Broadway and Second Avenue before 6:19 p.m. Monday, July 11. Hit and run-property damage. A hit-and-run accident occurred involving a teal 1986 Toyota Corolla at the intersection of Fifth Avenue and Hoover Street before 6:11 p.m. Monday, July 11.

Local brief
Car drives into home, damages garage
A car drove into a home in Daly City Friday morning, damaging a garage door, according to re ofcials. The crash at 594 Gellert Blvd. was reported at 8:40 a.m., according to the North County Fire Authority. Two vehicles were found in the garage area of the single-family home when reghters arrived on the scene one that had been traveling on Gellert Bouelvard and one that had been parked in the residents driveway. There were no injuries, and damage to the home was limited to the garage door, re ofcials said.

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LOCAL
San Carlos Ave. in San Carlos, two blocks from El Camino bus service and the train station.

THE DAILY JOURNAL

REGIONAL GOVERNMENT
The San Mateo County Transit District Board of Directors and the Peninsula Corridor Joint Powers Board welcomed two new members at its July meetings. Redwood City Councilman Jeff Gee was sworn in as the newest SamTrans board member July 13, replacing former San Carlos Mayor Omar Ahmad who recently died of a heart attack. Gee represents South County cities on the board. Burlingame Vice Mayor Jerry Deal was sworn in July 7 as the newest member of the Joint Powers Board, which owns and operates Caltrain. Deal, who also replaces Ahmad, represents SamTrans on the JPB. Board member Adrienne Tissier, also a San Mateo County supervisor, was elected vice chair of the JPB at the same meeting, a position also held by Ahmad. The Transit District board meets the second Wednesday of each month at 2 p.m. at 1250

CITY GOVERNMENT
Putting cellphone towers up in Burlingame reached a snag for city staff last year when they realized no rules were in place about the process. On Thursday, the Burlingame Planning Commission will consider a citywide ordinance providing regulations for all wireless communications facilities, encourages the latest technology and stealth facilities; requires periodic reporting about legal compliance; requires consolidation of facilities; requires information regarding need and alternatives; and includes mandatory notication and her hearing requirements for facilities within 600 feet of residential areas. Additional rules will be set through a zoning ordinance. If approved applications for wireless facilities will be reviewed by the Planning Division and approved by the planning director if minor or the Planning Commission if major. Notications were recently sent out regard-

ing encroachment permits currently being considered. Mondays discussion will not impact those proceedings. Once the director of Public Works has made a decision about those applications the applicant or any resident can appeal the decision. The commission meets 7 p.m. Monday, July 25 at City Hall, 501 Primrose Road, Burlingame.

Local brief
Trial of boys charged with sex assault to begin
REDWOOD CITY The trial of four Redwood City middle school boys charged with sexually assaulting two girls during a class eld trip is set to begin. A judge is scheduled to start hearing arguments in the case on Monday. The boys students at John F. Kennedy Middle School are charged with lewd and lascivious acts on a person under the age of 14, sexual battery and false imprisonment. A fth boy from the school has also been charged, but prosecutors tell the San Mateo County Times he will be tried separately. Authorities say the boys, who are between 12 and 14, took two 12-year-old girls to a secluded area and assaulted them during a class eld trip to a Redwood City park in March. The boys have not been identied because they are juveniles.

EDUCATION
A $30 million bond measure could be going before Millbrae voters in November in an effort to continue facility upgrades not covered in a 2008 bond of the same size. On Monday night, the Millbrae Elementary School District Board of Trustees is expected to vote to put such a measure on the November ballot. A bond measure would allow the district to nish projects not covered with the rst bond such as a state-of-the-art cafeteria to accommodate all Taylor Middle School students. Such a measure would require a 55 percent passage rate. The board meets 7 p.m. Monday, July 25 at City Hall, 621 Magnolia Ave., Millbrae.

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THE DAILY JOURNAL

LOCAL / BAY AREA

Weekend July 23-24, 2011

Obituary
Andrew Thomas Agustinovich
Andrew Thomas Agustinovich, of Foresthill and Sacramento, died in Foresthill, Calif. on July 18, 2011. Son of Anthony T. Agustinovich (Novato), and the late Maryann C. Agustinovich. Brother of Vincent and Paul Agustinovich (New York and San Mateo). Also survived by Lena Nelson (aunt), Rick Nelson (uncle), Mira and Ivo Palihnich (cousins), Gerry Agustinovich (stepmother). A native of Millbrae, Andy was age 60. He had various positions within Caltrans, lastly in environmental management, retiring in 2009. He received a masters degree in political science from Cal State, Hayward and maintained an avid interest in politics and government throughout his life. His passion in such issues was unwaning, and his own argumentative nature combined with his knowledge of background facts made for a winning combination. In these matters, and many others, his opinions were forceful and he himself supremely charming. Andy had a passion for sports, especially baseball which he played at Capuchino High School where he entertained many. He was loyal to all he befriended. He will be dearly remembered by family and good friends: Matt Lockary, Frank Ortisi, Bob, Kurt, and Eric Hansen, Mike Tatum, Marlene Morrow, and many others. Friends and family are invited to attend a Memorial Mass 11 a.m. Wednesday, July 27 at St. Dunstan Catholic Church, 1133 Broadway in Millbrae. Inurnment service to follow at Holy Cross Catholic Cemetery in Colma.

Charges filed against suspects in Stowe beating


Police say Giovanni Ramirez,original suspect arrested,no longer a suspect
By Thomas Watkins
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LOS ANGELES The investigation into the near-fatal beating of a San Francisco Giants fan on opening day at Dodger Stadium took a surprising turn Friday when prosecutors charged two new suspects and the police chief acknowledged ofcers initially arrested the wrong man. The charges came nearly four months after the beating of Bryan Stow, a paramedic who suffered a brain injury and remains in serious condition. Another man, Giovanni Ramirez, was arrested in May but wasnt charged in the attack in a stadium parking lot. For months, police Chief Charlie Beck had steadfastly maintained his condence that Ramirez was the right suspect.

In policing, its just as important to exonerate the innocent as it is to implicate the guilty, Beck said Friday at a terse news conference. I want to tell the world that Giovanni Ramirez is no longer a suspect in this case. Prosecutors charged Louie Sanchez, 29, and Marvin Norwood, 30, both of Rialto, with one count each of mayhem, assault by means likely to produce great bodily injury, and battery with serious bodily injury, all felonies. Both were being held on $500,000 bail after being arrested Thursday. The complaint alleged both men personally inflicted great bodily injury on Stow. A message left at a number for the parents of Sanchez was not returned, and contact details for Norwoods family could not be found. Dorene Sanchez, believed to be the sister of Louie Sanchez, had

been arrested on suspicion of being an accessory after the fact then released. She was not charged. Beck did not provide details on the evidence against the two men but said more details would be released Monday. The Los Angeles Police Department never gave up on this case, District Attorney Steve Cooley said in a prepared statement. Earlier in the day, a law enforcement ofcial with knowledge of the case who spoke on condition of anonymity because the investigation was ongoing, said police have no forensic evidence against the latest suspects but they had made incriminating statements. The attack has captured national attention as the Los Angeles Police Department and the Dodgers sought to ease fears about violence at the storied stadium. Stow, 42, a resident of Santa Cruz drive-by shooting at the Nevin Community Center on Wednesday. Witnesses say the death of 20-yearold Daryl Russell was in view of children in the Iron Triangle neighborhood.

and the father of two children, remained hospitalized in San Francisco. His family said in a blog post Friday that he appeared to mouth his last name and might have tried to give a thumbs-up. On Monday, he underwent emergency surgery for uid buildup in his head. Doctors have kept him under heavy sedation since the attack to prevent seizures. Police released no details about the latest arrests in the case until the news conference. The delay came in sharp contrast to the fanfare surrounding the arrest of Ramirez on May 22. However, the investigation faltered after Ramirez provided almost a dozen statements from friends and family members saying he was nowhere near Dodger Stadium on the night of March 31. Ramirez also volunteered for and passed a polygraph test. Knowland Park. The Oakland Tribune reports that Friends of Knowland Park and the California Native Plant Society led the lawsuit Thursday in Alameda County Superior Court. The suit claims the City Council and zoo violated state environmental law by approving the development before a thorough environmental review was conducted. The groups say the park is home to animals and rare native plants that need to be protected.

Around the Bay Area


Cops form task force to deal with Richmond gang war
RICHMOND Authorities in Richmond have formed a task force to address a recent spate of violence that has left eight people dead this month. Richmond Police Chief Chris Magnus announced the task force Thursday, noting that the city has made signicant progress in reducing violence over the past ve years and doesnt want to backslide. The Contra Costa Times reports that the group will have members from the city police, district attorneys ofce and sheriffs department. It will investigate and intervene in the battle between north and central Richmond street factions, which police believe are responsible for most of the violence. The most recent killing was a

Environmental groups sue to halt Oakland Zoos expansion


OAKLAND Two conservation groups are suing to halt the Oakland Zoos plans to build a new veterinary hospital, animal exhibit and educational center on 54 acres in

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Weekend July 23-24, 2011

LOCAL / STATE
Two East Bay counties added more than 8,000 additional jobs. The gains, Levy said, largely reected growth in the tech industry and sectors that serve it, including a rise in construction jobs. At the same time, the Los Angeles-Long Beach metropolitan area lost 9,500 jobs, with big losses in higher education, professional schools and health care somewhat offset by gains in manufacturing. Riverside and San Bernardino counties lost 3,000 jobs. The Fresno area added 400 jobs, but only because of a surge in farm employment; without agricultural employment, the area lost 2,000 jobs. One area, in one sector, did very well, Levy said of the technology-led gains. The rest of California performed more like the nation as a whole in June, he said. The U.S. unemployment rate climbed slightly to 9.2 percent in June, adding a net of just 18,000 jobs nationwide. The unemployment rate for May was 9.1 percent. U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data released Friday showed the unemployment rate rose in June in 28 states, and declined in only eight. Seven states California, Florida, Michigan, Mississippi, Nevada, Rhode Island and South Carolina and the District of Columbia posted double-digit unemployment for the month. Economists were startled by the low job growth in June and some have cut their projections for July to 75,000 new jobs or fewer. The economy must generate about 125,000 new jobs each month to keep up with population growth and keep the unemployment rate from rising. California would have to add 12,000 to 15,000 jobs to keep up with the states recent population growth, Levy said. Also, the employment numbers show Californias jobless rate rose slightly even as employers added workers. The way the unemployment rate is calculated can cause considerable variability in the number from month to month, so economists typically give more credence to the payroll data.

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Technology drives June gains in state


By Adam Weintraub
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Around the state


Schwarzenegger son hurt in Malibu surf mishap
LOS ANGELES The youngest son of Arnold Schwarzenegger and Maria Shriver is recovering in a hospital after a body-boarding accident at a Malibu beach last weekend, a family statement said Friday. Christopher Schwarzenegger, 13, is a brave boy and is expected to make a full recovery, the statement said. The teen suffered a collapsed lung and broken bones. Shriver was composed when she alerted emergency workers in a phone call apparently from the beach about 12:20 p.m. Sunday. He cant move off the beach maybe like a broken ribs or something like that, Shriver tells a Los Angeles County Fire Department operator, according to a recording released by the department. Two of his siblings tweeted about their 13-yearold brother: Sister Katherine says hes a tough little guy and getting better, and brother Patrick says keep praying. The statement thanked paramedics, lifeguards, doctors and hospital staff who have cared for the injured teen.

SACRAMENTO California added tens of thousands of jobs in June, the state Employment Development Department reported Friday, but the economy continues to show a split personality, with strong gains in Silicon Valley and much weaker performance elsewhere. While the Golden State is still bouncing along with good months and bad months, June was a good month, said Steve Levy, senior economist at the Center for the Continuing Study of the California Economy in Palo Alto. However, he noted, the gains were largely in tech-focused areas, especially San Jose and the broader San Francisco Bay Area. This wasnt a general jobs recovery, this was very specic, Levy said. The state added 28,800 payroll jobs last month, with only two sectors of the economy showing job declines. The net job gains in just ve Bay Area counties totaled 12,600, about 44 percent of the total.

Redwood City Adelante Elementary School student Tyler Deal greeted visitors at the March 5 opening reception of Celebrate Art!, an exhibit of more than 40 pieces of student art modeled after multi-cultural Great Masters that will rotate through four Redwood City Wells Fargo bank stores and one in Woodside. He was joined by Wells Fargo Veterans Boulevard Store Manager Jack Bessette, Redwood City Education Foundation President Jo-Ann Sockolov and Judy Sleeth, executive director and founder of Art in Action. The nonprot Art in Action designed the sequential art curriculum to meet state and federal standards. The RCEF funds the program at schools requesting it through SMART Innovation grants. Artwork in the exhibit was created by students at Orion, Adelante, Clifford, Fair Oaks, Henry Ford and Roy Cloud elementary schools. The exhibit also will be on display at Redwood Citys Sequoia Station, Woodside Road, and 1900 Broadway store as well as at the Woodside store. *** On March 15, more than 300 sixth grade students from Bowditch Middle School graduated from the G.R.E.A.T. (Gang Resistance Education and Training) program. The G.R.E.A.T. is a hands-on interactive series of 13 lessons that explore many of the challenges facing pre-teen children in todays society. Through a combination of role-playing, course work and classroom participation; students learn how to identify with their communities and develop positive role models. They learn to deal with stress, violence, and anger. They practice techniques to deal with bullies, peer pressure, rumors, and learn decision-making mod-

els. The course also teaches vital life skills like refusal techniques and goal setting. In addition to the sixth grade curriculum, the police department also teaches an abbreviated program to all fourth grade students as well. *** Two Aragon High School seniors, Rashmi Jain and Peter Zhan, were chosen to be candidates in the prestigious United States Presidential Scholars Program. Each year, as many as 141 of the nations most distinguished students are honored by the White House Commission on Presidential Scholars and the U.S. Department of Education. Presidential Scholars are selected on the basis of their accomplishments in many areas, including academic and artistic success, leadership and involvement in school and in the community. Jain and Zhan will be competing for recognition as Presidential Scholars with some 3,000 seniors from throughout the country. Winners will be feted in June during National Recognition Week in Washington, D.C. *** For the second year, students from Notre Dame High School were invited to compete in TEAMS 2011 earlier this month. The annual TEAMS event (Tests of Engineering Aptitude, Mathematics, and Science) was held on the Stanford campus and was hosted by the Stanford Society of Women Engineers. The one-day competition, coordinated by the Junior Engineering Technical Society, challenged students to think critically and work cooperatively to solve real-world problems. This years competition theme was Smarter Energy. Cleaner Planet. Having been coached by Andrew Lee, chair of Notre Dame High Schools mathematics department, and Elizabeth Hegarty, chair of the science department, the students felt well equipped for the day. Aside from the rigors of the event, the students heard from members of the Stanford community. This years guest lecturer was Stanford Assistant Professor Thomas Jaramillo from the Chemical Engineering department. The JETS teams are still waiting for the overall results. Last year, NDB placed seventh out of 14 schools in their division.

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THE DAILY JOURNAL

Weekend July 23-24, 2011

Enjoy fun time with Mom, Dad or your favorite grown-up. The across clues are for kids and the down clues are for adults.

P Nuts
Kids Across 1. Buttery treat you might eat while watching a movie 3. A high-ying people-mover 4. Hes the head of the Catholic Church 6. You can teach this tropical bird to talk 8. The button that turns on your TV 9. Anytime before today 10. You turn one of these every time you read a book 11. The Public Broadcasting System that makes it possible for you to see Sesame Street (abbr.) 12. Pinocchio was a ______ 13. To stop a DVD for a moment (its a homonym for a kittens hands) 14. Most party hats are made of _____ 16. Your food sits on it at dinner 17. Creates art with a brush 3. Pastel-colored cartoon cat (2 wds) 5. Church bench 6. Delay to another day 7. Financially ourishing 8. Bargain-shoppers limitation: one ___ customer 10. Diverse island nation: ____ New Guinea 11. Trim ones trees (or a dried plum) 13. In Hollywood terms, its said to be the devils favored footwear 14. Breathe like a beagle 15. Itchy chicken follower

This Weeks Solution

Parents Down 1. Oysters precious product 2. Classic fun: Springy jumping stick

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Weekend July 23-24, 2011

STATE / NATION
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Prison time for stalking on Facebook


By Judy Lin
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Fire fee a solution for strapped states


SACRAMENTO The wildre season in California has been tame so far, but that isnt stopping lawmakers from trying to make sure the cash-strapped state has enough money to ght future res. They already have a solution: charge an annual reghting fee to people who live in or near forests. Neighboring states have been using similar fees for years. As more people move closer to forests and wildres become more costly, a fee may prove more attractive to legislators when the alternative is to cut programs elsewhere in the budget. Critics of the California fee call it unfair, saying rural residents already pay taxes to the state and should expect basic services in times of emergency. Supporters disagree, saying that people who live in re-prone areas should pay for their own protection. This bill recognizes that a portion of the costs borne by the state for wildland re prevention and protection services should be funded by the landowners in these areas, Gov. Jerry Brown said in his signing statement. The West has seen an explosion in the amount of acreage burned by wildres during the past decade. At the same time, costs have increased to ght res in the growing communities nestled in what once were remote areas. Nationwide, the equivalent of Californias population nearly 38 million people has moved into areas where forests border cities and suburbs over the last 20 years, said Mark Rey, who had oversight of the U.S. Forest Service during the George W. Bush administration. Rey said that vastly complicates the job of ghting wildres. The reghting fees have been helpful in Oregon, Rey said. I dont think Oregon otherwise would have the quality of reghting response it has today without those, he said. In California, a $150 annual reghting fee will be levied on rural homeowners. According to the state, more than 846,000 homes covered by the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection would be affected. The department is responsible for preventing and ghting wildres on 31 million rural acres. The vast area covers about one-third of mised when it appeared they would lose a vote to reject the reviewers changes in favor of the original lessons. Instead of a showdown vote on evolution, the panel agreed to approve the material and have Education Commissioner Robert Scott continue working on the lessons in question with publisher Holt McDougal. California, including much of the Sierra Nevada foothills and the coastal mountain ranges from Santa Barbara to the Oregon border. The federal government is primarily for reghting on another roughly 40 million acres, mostly at higher elevations. California expects to collect $50 million in the rst year the fee is imposed and ultimately $200 million a year, which would equal 20 percent of the annual budget of the Forestry and Fire Protection department. The fee and the revenue eclipse much smaller fees on far fewer owners in Idaho, Montana, Oregon and Washington. Owners of smaller parcels in Washington pay $18 a year, while most Oregon forest homeowners pay about $66 annually. The assessments date back decades, to the years when private timber companies rst taxed themselves to pay for re protection. While the dedicated reghting fee is a budgeting solution where its been implemented, ofcials in three Western states that have suffered major wildre damage this year or last Arizona, New Mexico and Colorado say they have no plans to impose one. I didnt want to get married in any other state or country besides the one that I live in, said Lassegue, a 41-year-old event planner. Lassegue and Reyes, a 32-year-old waiter, have been together more than eight years. They plan to arrive at the city clerks ofce at 7:30 a.m. for their wedding, then stick around and answer other couples questions about the process before heading off for a celebratory cruise on the Hudson River. More than 800 couples entered a lottery to get married in New York City on Sunday, the day New York becomes the sixth and largest U.S. state where same-sex couples can marry. All of them will be able to tie the knot, thanks to dozens of judges who are volunteering their time. City ofcials had estimated that about 2,500 couples might show up at city clerks ofces in the ve boroughs on Sunday.

SACRAMENTO A California man who trolled womens Facebook pages searching for clues that allowed him to take over their email accounts was sentenced Friday to more than four years in state prison after a judge rejected a plea for a lighter sentence and likened the man to a peeping Tom. Once he took over womens email accounts, George Bronk searched their folders for nude or semi-nude photographs or videos sent to their husbands or boyfriends and distributed the images to their contact list, prosecutors said. The emails went to families, friends and coworkers. Women in 17 states, the District of Columbia and England were victimized. This case serves as a stark example of what occurs in so-called cyberspace. It has very real consequences, Sacramento County Superior Court Judge Lawrence Brown said. The intrusion of ones prole is no different than intruding ones home. Bronk, 24, pleaded guilty in January to charges that included computer intrusion, false impersonation and possession of child pornography. Brown sentenced him to four years in state prison for the charges related to the Facebook and email offenses, and added eight more months for charges related to child pornography. Bronks attorney, Monica Lynch, said her client took responsibility for his actions and showed remorse. She had sought a sentence of one year in local jail with probation afterward, or two years in state prison with no probation.

Around the nation


Texas Education Board compromises on evolution materials
AUSTIN, Texas The Texas State Board of Education delivered a blow to social conservatives Friday, giving nal approval to supplemental high school science materials after a brief are-up over some lessons teaching the principles of evolution. The lessons in question included a lab comparison on chimpanzee and human skulls, the fossil record and cell complexity. A board-appointed reviewer had called the lessons errors and recommended changes, but a group of scientists objected on Friday, threatening to re-ignite a erce debate over teaching evolution in Texas public schools. The boards social conservatives compro-

Same-sex couples prepare for NYC weddings Sunday


NEW YORK As a board member of Marriage Equality New York, Rob Lassegue has been on the front lines of the battle for same-sex marriage. He will be near the front of the line with his partner, Manuel Reyes, when hundreds of gay couples get married in New York City on Sunday, the rst day that their marriages will be legal.

TO THE PERSON WHO DRIVES THE GREEN NISSAN ALTIMA AND KEEPS STEALING OUR NEWSPAPERS OUT OF OUR RACKS AS WELL AS OTHER NEWSPAPER RACKS:
You are committing a crime, for which you will be caught, ned and even jailed. ITS NOT WORTH IT

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THE DAILY JOURNAL

OPINION
the first place. So far as I can tell, the supervisors and county staff never raised concerns about the treasurys mismanagement, even though they were the appropriate level of government to do so. The idea that no one is accountable for what happened has been a feature of this crisis from the beginning. Shortly after Lehmans bankruptcy I attended a meeting hosted by the treasury. As you might imagine, many pointed questions were asked by organizations that had lost money. So many, in fact, that the then treasurer reminded attendees he was only a messenger. That caused one person to leap to his feet and ask But dont you manage the fund? How can you just be a messenger? The former treasurer hemmed and hawed his way through to an admission that, well, gee, he guessed he was more than just a messenger. When an elected official of the previous treasurers tenure makes such an outrageous statement, its a sure sign he doesnt understand what accountability means. Since leaders set the tone for an organization, its no wonder the treasury has sought throughout this unfolding drama to dodge accountability for its actions. But its even sadder to see disregard for good governance demonstrated by others within county government. Defendants counsel Gasner said, This is a lawsuit that ought to end as soon as it can. Hes right, it should: by the treasury, and the county, taking responsibility for their mistakes of commission and oversight and compensating the plaintiffs, who entrusted money needed to educate our children to experts who had a duty to know better.
Mark Olbert is a member of the San Carlos Elementary School District Board of Trustees. This piece represents his own point of view and not of the district, or any other school district.

Weekend July 23-24, 2011

Its called accountability


By Mark Olbert

recent Daily Journal article about the lawsuit between several school districts and the county showed that disregard for accountability is alive and well in San Mateo County. While I am a trustee for one of the districts bringing that suit, its as a private citizen that this most disturbs me, and causes me to share my perspective on the facts and issues. State law generally requires school districts to invest funds not needed to pay bills with their county treasurers office. Thats because the Legislature decided districts arent investment experts. The presumption was that a treasurys fulltime professionals would know what theyre doing. The contract between the county treasury and the public agencies whose money they managed declares that maximizing safety and liquidity are the first and second, respectively, goals for the fund. Earning a high rate of return comes after those two goals are met. Most people know Lehman Brothers bankruptcy cost the county $155 million. But few people know our treasury had invested four times as much in Lehman securities as any other county in the entire country. In fact, it invested more money in Lehman than the next eight counties combined. Shortly before the bankruptcy announcement more than 10 percent of the fund was invested in Lehman securities. More than 80 percent was invested in the financial services industry, a sector which subsequently collapsed. This bordered on the insane. It is an axiom in the investing world that you never concentrate a safe and liquid portfolio that way. Any college fresh-

Guest perspective
man finance major knows this. The only reason I can imagine for doing so is to boost yields. If thats what the Treasurers Office was doing and I believe it was then, in my opinion, they were violating the contract with their clients. The fact that Lehman securities paid well meant the financial markets saw Lehman as a poor bet. So did many financial journalists. Numerous articles written more than six months before Lehmans collapse highlighted just how risky it was becoming. Its eventual demise was hardly unheralded. A prudent and diligent fund manager, pledged to preserve safety above all else, should never have allowed a portfolio to become concentrated the way San Mateo Countys was. Worse than the treasurys mistakes, however, is the notion that merely because it isnt contractually overseen by the countys Board of Supervisors, the county can wash its hands of the situation. I expect my elected officials and the staff they employ to protect our public interests, regardless of whether there are contracts involved or not. The very first thing my board did when confronting this crisis was recognize we could have kept a closer eye on what the Treasurers Office was doing with our money, even though we have no control over investment policy. If a state legislator or an official from a neighboring jurisdiction proposes something that would harm San Mateo County, county officials have a duty to speak out against it, and try to stop it. Had the county exercised reasonable oversight of the treasury in the Lehman situation we would have avoided the specter of taxpayers paying for the treasurys mistakes by preventing the problem from occurring in

Letters to the editor


Clarification about the Burlingame post office
Editor, I am writing to clarify the July 20, 2011 article Burlingame Post Ofce Hits Market regarding the Burlingame post ofce. Although the article is mostly speculative, it could lead people to the wrong impression, beginning with the headline. This is factually incorrect; the Burlingame Main Post Ofce is not on the market. We hope to be in business in downtown Burlingame for a long time to come. What we are considering is the sale of a portion of the property surrounding the Burlingame Main Post Ofce; however that too is not yet on the market. Right now, the Postal Service Facilities Ofce is determining what the boundaries will be for the parcel of land that may come up for sale sometime in the future. In this time of change for the Postal Service, especially when many post ofces are being considered for closure nationwide, its important to keep the facts straight. Otherwise you run the risk of alarming people needlessly.

Rosemarie Fernandez District manager, San Francisco Postal District San Francisco

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s confusing as the political landscape appears now, actually there are only four major political forces at work toward the 2012 elections. Those identifying themselves as Tea Party members propose limiting government, balancing the federal budget, lowering taxes, ending redistribution from the wealthier to the poor and assigning a central position for God in the lives of Americans, even in courthouses and public schools, and asserting the right to bear arms and an unwillingness to compromise no matter what the short-term consequences. They are for local communities determining what values their schools will inculcate, and they want the virtue taught by Christianity and Judaism to play a central role. And they want it now! The real line in the sand for all conservatives is taxes. They are not to rise, for anyone, under any circumstances. Period. Certainly, over time, if Americas citizens believe the government has overstepped its bounds, they would prefer to shrink it gradually in a manner that neither disrupts society nor the economy, and allows tax rates to more gradually decline. But the Tea Partiers want it now! As I have predicted several times, the newly elected Tea Party members in Congress would be the bone-in-the-throat choking veteran Republicans who over the years have operated on the principal there needs to be some moderation and compromise in a representative national government when living together in a democratic community of interests. Even the three most inuential conservatives icons of the modern era, Barry Goldwater, Ronald Reagan and Bob Dole did work across the aisle. Reagan even raised taxes several times to accommodate to pressing scal problems for the nation. Barry Goldwater and Bob Doles Senate careers were lled with working with those from across the aisle to achieve valid American goals. On the other side of the political spectrum, those called liberals and progressives, in part disillusioned by the partial failure of their Utopian dreams following the Great Depression, are like deer in the headlights holding the defensive lines of their achievements and having no idea of how to respond to the emerging rights fundamentalism. As for the independents? While the Tea Party Right seems to want to blow up the national government immediately and start all over again, they are bewildered and bouncing around somewhere in between. Veteran conservatives realize it would be disaster at the polls to immediately pull the rug from under longtime established social programs. Certainly, they argue, one can be true to ones principles and understand that as much as one would like to move society in a counter direction, it may not happen overnight. Readers have been very heady in their letters to the editor concerning me when I wrote about the Tea Party victories at the polls in 2010, that when the swing voters come to realize the promised cuts meant them, buyers remorse would set in and it already has. The newly elected Republican governors who have made the most media splash in state cutting, those of Wisconsin, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, Maine and Florida have had their poll numbers drastically plunge. The governor of Floridas approval ratings are so low in the 20s there may be a recall effort, as is one already in the works for the governor of Wisconsin. What is the lesson to be learned? The most the most important dynamic in a voting democracy is the will of the people, as executed at the ballot box. Irrespective of what political ideology candidates believe and preach, What the ballot box hath given, the ballot box can taketh away. When social programs, education, police and re services are axed, when unions are gelded and medical services cut down, it reduces to the middle class versus the powerful and the self-serving. In our unique political philosophy of all people are created equal and one man (woman) one vote, the middle class has innitely more votes than the few at the top and the vote of the richest and/or the most powerful carries no more weight than that of the most economically deprived. Neither Republican candidates the electable, the freaks and the geeks, all who may tear each other apart in the primaries for the next 16 months, nor millions of dollars, reams of newsprint and hours of cable time dedicated to pulling the plug on Obama, nor billions of dollars of negative ads spent in the general elections will deter the middle class if it comes to believe it is being screwed. They may even hate Obama and the Democrats intensely but they will certainly not vote for the agenda of the Tea Party that cuts their accustomed security away from them so suddenly and so passionately. The moral? You just cant have all you want right now and still get elected.
Keith Kreitman has been a Foster City resident for 25 years. He is retired with degrees in political science and journalism and advanced studies in law. He is the host of Focus on the Arts on Peninsula TV, Channel 26. His column appears in the weekend edition.

We want it now! A

Correction Policy
The Daily Journal corrects its errors. If you question the accuracy of any article in the Daily Journal, please contact the editor at news@smdailyjournal.com or by phone at: 344-5200, ext. 107 Editorials represent the viewpoint of the Daily Journal editorial board and not any one individual.

10

Weekend July 23-24, 2011

BUSINESS

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Stocks end up for week


Dow 12,681.16 -0.34% 10-Yr Bond 2.9640% -0.0460 Nasdaq 2,858.83 +0.86% Oil (per barrel) 99.81 S&P 500 1,345.02 +0.09% Gold 1,603.40
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Wall Street
the broad market index higher. Consumer discretionary companies include retailers like Amazon Inc. and restaurant chains like McDonalds Corp. McDonalds rose 2 percent, the most of any stock in the Dow average, after its income and revenue came in higher than analysts were expecting due to strong sales in Europe. Technology stocks rose broadly after Advanced Micro Devices Inc. reported strong second-quarter earnings and said its new computer graphics chip was selling well. The Nasdaq composite index rose 24.40 points, or 0.9 percent, to 2,858.83. AMD jumped 19 percent. Flash memory card maker SanDisk Corp. rose 10 percent after its earnings rose sharply. Microsoft Corp. gained 1.6 percent after beating analysts income estimates. Oil services company Schlumberger Ltd. rose 3 percent after its prots increased on a pickup in drilling in North America. Traders kept close watch on negotiations in Washington over a deal to raise the nations debt ceiling ahead of an Aug. 2 deadline. The impasse has overshadowed an agreement in Europe Thursday to give Greece a second nancial lifeline and broaden the powers of a regional bailout fund.

A big earnings miss from Caterpillar Friday wasnt enough to derail a rally that pushed the stock market up 2 percent for the week. Caterpillar Inc. fell nearly 6 percent after the heavy equipment maker earned less than analysts were expecting last quarter, partly because of the earthquake and tsunami disaster in Japan. The company is seen as a bellwether for the global economy because it sells construction and mining machinery all over the world. The weaker results from Caterpillar and a continuing deadlock over raising the U.S. borrowing limit capped the stock markets gains. Overseas markets rose after European leaders reached a deal late Thursday aimed at containing the regions debt crisis. The Dow Jones industrial average fell 43.25 points, or 0.3 percent, to 12,681.16. Even with the decline, the Dow gained 1.6 percent for the week. It has nished three out of the last four weeks higher than where it started. The broader Standard & Poors 500 index gained 1.22, or 0.1 percent, to 1,345.02. It nished the week with a gain of 2.2 percent. Energy, technology and consumer discretionary companies were the only three of the 10 industries tracked by the S&P 500 that rose. That was still enough to push

Big movers
NEW YORK Stocks that moved substantially or traded heavily Friday on the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq Stock Market: NYSE Advanced Micro Devices Inc., up $1.25 at $7.75 The chip maker posted a second-quarter profit and said there were early signs of success for a new chip with graphics capabilities. Caterpillar Inc., down $6.45 at $105.15 The heavy equipment makers quarterly profit jumped 44 percent, but Wall Street had expected more growth. General Electric Co., down 12 cents at $19.04 The industrial and financial conglomerate said profit increased as its lending arm continued to recover from the recession. Schlumberger Ltd., up $2.85 at $93.81 The oil services company got a boost in the second quarter from a pickup in drilling in North America. Ruby Tuesday Inc., down $1.55 at $9.50 The restaurant chains profit forecast for 2012 fell short of analyst estimates. The company is spending more on advertising. McDonalds Corp., up $2.02 at $88.56 The worlds largest burger chain said quarterly net income rose 15 percent on rising sales around the world. Shares hit a record high. Nasdaq Coinstar Inc., down $4.40 at $54.23 The president of the companys Redbox DVD rental kiosks unit resigned, and its quarterly revenue forecast was short of expectations.

Apple considering Hulu bid


By Rachel Metz
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAN FRANCISCO Apple Inc. is in talks to potentially bid for video-streaming service Hulu, a person close to the situation said Friday. The person, who said Apple is among several companies interested in Hulu, spoke on condition of anonymity because they are not authorized to talk about the matter. In early July, search giant Google Inc. was said to be among about a dozen companies in talks to potentially buy Hulu. Yahoo Inc. is also believed to be interested. Hulu, which is owned by Disney, News Corp., Comcast Corp. and Providence Equity Partners, started presenting its nancial information to interested bidders late last month, after an unsolicited offer prompted its board to look for other offers. The online video service streams movies and TV shows from broadcasters ABC, Fox and NBC to computers and for a monthly fee to a number of Web-connected mobile devices such as smartphones and tablet computers. It expects its paid service, Hulu Plus, to have over a million subscribers by the end of the summer and its CEO, Jason Kilar, has said it is protable. For Apple, an acquisition of Hulu could bolster its iTunes store, which pro-

vides videos users can rent or buy, but does not currently stream content or offer a subscription streaming service. It could also help the Cupertino-based iPhone and iPad maker as it spars Steve Jobs with competitors such as online video pioneer Netix Inc., which offers both a DVD-by-mail and video streaming service, and Google Inc.s popular YouTube video streaming site, which streams free, ad-supported videos and rents movies from several major studios. Apple has plenty of available cash for making a deal. At the end of the last quarter, its horde of cash and securities totaled $76.2 billion. And Apple CEO Steve Jobs, who is currently on medical leave, already has a connection with one of Hulus owners: Hes The Walt Disney Co.s largest shareholder and a member of its board. However, if Apple or any other company were to buy Hulu, theres no guarantee it would be able to continue streaming content from the companys current owners. A buyer may have to reach a new deal in order to license the content. Forrester Research analyst James $65 million in cash and stock, but they and partner Divya Narendra wanted more. The brothers said last month they would not appeal their case to the Supreme Court. Facebook isnt commenting. A lawyer for the Winklevosses says a judgment had been expected.

McQuivey said key to any deal involving Hulu would be an agreement for the continued streaming of its current video content. And if, as many analysts expect, Apple is developing its own TV set, the addition of Hulu would put the company in an amazingly powerful position, he said. Hulu isnt interested in just exploring possible offers. Earlier this month Disney CEO Bob Iger told reporters that Hulus owners are committed to selling. He spoke on the sidelines of an annual gathering of top media executives hosted by investment bank Allen & Co. in Sun Valley, Idaho. Igers comments were reported by Bloomberg News and The Wall Street Journal. BGC Partners analyst Colin Gillis said it makes sense that Apple would take a meeting with Hulu, but since part of Hulus business is ad-supported its contrary to Apples current model of buying or renting videos. It makes more sense for Google or Yahoo Inc. to buy Hulu, he said. Theyre not the most logical buyers, Gillis said of Apple. Maybe peeling off a couple bills to keep it out of the hands of Google makes some sense. Still, as with any deal, he noted that whether or not it makes sense depends on the purchase price. Apples interest in Hulu was reported earlier by Bloomberg. panies such as Apple, Coca-Cola and McDonalds have put the quarter on track to set a new record for operating earnings. The corporate sectors in great shape, says Joseph LaVorgna, chief U.S. economist at Deutsche Bank. The economy is a little healthier than we thought it was. Aside from companies continuing stubbornness about hiring more workers, the early results are good news for investors and anyone worried that the debt-limit standoff in Washington or the nancial crisis in Europe could inict serious damage. Consumers willingness to spend on fast food, electronic gadgets and other items has helped fuel better-than-expected quarterly results.

Business briefs
Judge dismisses Winklevoss suit versus Facebook
NEW YORK A federal judge in Boston has dismissed a lawsuit against Facebook led by Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss, Harvard classmates of CEO Mark Zuckerberg. The Winklevoss twins claim that Zuckerberg stole the idea for Facebook from them got the full Hollywood treatment last year in the hit movie The Social Network. On Friday, Judge Douglas P. Woodlock from the U.S. District Court in Massachusetts dismissed the lawsuit the brothers led in 2007. In 2008, Facebook agreed to pay them

Corporate prots off to strong start for 2Q


NEW YORK So much for fears that U.S. companies might stall out in the economys soft patch. Corporate prots are coming in better than expected so far in second-quarter earnings season despite concerns about the potential for trouble ahead. Strong showings from blue-chip com-

READY TO RUMBLE: KHAN AND JUDAH SET TO BATTLE IN LAS VEGAS IN UNIFICATION BOUT >>> PAGE 14
Weekend, July 23-24, 2011

<< Another win for Bolt, 9.88 seconds, page 13 Johnson eager to make gymnastics return, page 16

Milwaukee bats get to Matt Cain, Giants lose


By Antonio Gonzalez
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAN FRANCISCO Jonathan Lucroy and Yuniesky Betancourt drove in two runs each, and the Milwaukee Brewers held on to beat the San Francisco Giants 4-2 on Friday night. Shaun Marcum (9-3) pitched seven solid innings to push the Brewers back into rst place in the

crowded NL Central standings. Pittsburgh and St. Louis are one game back. Lucroys two-run single highlighted a three-run secMatt Cain ond inning off Matt Cain (8-6) that gave the

Brewers a big lift with All-Star Ryan Braun getting the night off to rest his strained left calf. Francisco Rodriguez pitched a perfect eighth and John Axford held the Giants scoreless in the ninth for his 27th save. Milwaukee outfielder Nyjer Morgan spiced things up after making a catch against the wall in leftcenter field that robbed Nate Scheirholtz of extra bases in the sev-

enth. Morgan exchanged words with fans in the bleachers, pointed at some and crossed his hands in a taunting gesture. That only riled up the fans at AT&T Park more, in the bleachers and beyond. Morgan continued bobbing his head and pointing at the crowd, and he was booed relentlessly by fans walking into the dugout after the nal out. Not that it did much to spark San

Francisco. Aaron Rowands solo home run in the sixth and Pablo Sandovals RBI groundout in the rst were all the Giants could squeeze out of Marcum. The right-hander allowed four hits and two runs, striking out ve and walking none. Marcum settled down and retired 11 straight hitters after Andres

See GIANTS, Page 13

Yanks blast the As


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

REUTERS

NEW YORK Mark Teixeira hit a grand slam and Nick Swisher had a three-run drive in a nine-run third inning and the New York Yankees ambushed the Oakland Athletics early for a 17-7 victory in the searing heat Friday night. Swisher and Teixeira homered with two bases-loaded walks in between as the Mark Teixeira Yankees had their highest-scoring inning of the season it was also the most runs allowed by the As in an inning in 2011. The big inning followed a ve-run burst against Trevor Cahill (8-9) in the second and sent Oakland to its 11th straight loss against New York.

Derek Jeter drove in three runs and Swisher matched a career high with five RBIs for the Yankees. Backup catcher Francisco Cervelli reached base ve times with three hits and two walks. Jemile Weeks returned to Oaklands lineup after missing a game with a sore right foot and had a two-run single among his three hits. Cliff Pennington hit a two-run homer and drove in three runs against a listless Phil Hughes. But seven Oakland pitchers allowed nine walks in a 3-hour, 41-minute game. Hector Noesi (2-0) pitched 3 2-3 innings of four-hit ball. The Yankees needed only one inning to perk up after arriving home at 3:30 a.m. from a 4-4 trip played entirely on artificial turf. With temperatures in New York topping 100 degrees, the Yankees

See AS, Page 13

Diego Forlan of Uruguay will lead Los Celestes against Paraguay in the 2011 Copa America nal.

Battle of the guays Tour reaches time trial


Uruguay, Paraguay to play for Copa America title
By Stephen Wade
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Schleck in yellow as
By Greg Keller
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina One fact illustrates this bewildering Copa America: Paraguay enters Sundays final against Uruguay without a single victory in five games. Then there are the ops of Brazil and the Lionel Messi-led Argentina, a repeat of their disappointing exits in the 2010 World Cup when both also went out in the quarternals.

This leaves Uruguay the clear favorite, again showing that teamwork trumps star power in this country of only 3.5 million. Uruguay reached the World Cup seminals in South Africa a year ago before losing to the Netherlands. Uruguay plays in the final in Buenos Aires with 20 of the 23 players it took to the World Cup and coach Oscar Tabarez, affectionately known as Profesor or Maestro. This group knows each other by

heart, midelder Egidio Arevalo Rios said. We try to play when we can, and when we cant the important thing is that we keep our tactical shape and order. Uruguays attack has been steady, but not great. Liverpools Luis Suarez scored both goals in the 2-0 seminal victory against Peru, regularly fed passes by teammate Diego Forlan, the savvy Atletico de Madrid striker.

See COPA, Page 12

ALPE DHUEZ, France If Andy Schleck is to finally win the Tour de France, hes going to have to overcome one nal obstacle on his own. The two-time Tour runner-up Andy Schleck has acknowledged the advantage he gains from

racing alongside his older brother Frank. But the younger Schleck wont have that support in Saturdays crucial next-to-last stage, a time trial in which hell try to hold onto his lead over Cadel Evans. The Australian, also a two-time runner-up in cyclings premier race, is considered better at the solo race against the clock. Andy Schleck captured the yellow jersey Friday on the famed Alpe dHuez, setting up a riveting nish to the 2011 race with the time trial followed Sunday by the dash to the

See TOUR, Page 12

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12

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SPORTS

THE DAILY JOURNAL

NFL on hold,players study deal


By Howard Fendrich
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Sports brief
NFL executives meet to make plans for season
ATLANTA The NFL had hoped Fridays seminar for general managers and other team executives would be spent discussing a labor agreement ratied by both players and owners. Instead, with players declining to vote on a proposed deal on Thursday night, the executives could only make sketchy plans. The lockout continues. As far as I know, said Broncos chief of football operations John Elway. We were told theres a lockout still in place as far as the way we handle it, the way were supposed to handle it. No deal. No football at least not yet. Were still in the same place we were, Elway said. Executives from each team met for about four hours at an Atlanta airport hotel. The topic was the tentative 10-year agreement approved by owners on Thursday night. Owners want the players to approve their proposal, which would lead to the end of the lockout. But general managers were leaving Atlanta without knowing when they can begin negotiations with free agents. There also is no rm date for opening training camps.

WASHINGTON Sorry, football fans. The NFL is stuck in a holding pattern, with work still to be done to end the lockout. Heck, the players havent even scheduled a vote. People from both sides of the labor dispute planned to talk through the weekend although not face-to-face to try to resolve the differences that are preventing players from accepting the ownerapproved proposal that would put the league back in business. After the NFL Players Association decided not to vote Wednesday, Thursday or Friday, its now possible the group wont make any decision until next week. It all comes down to how long it takes to resolve the remaining issues. As it is, clubs wont open their facilities to players Saturday, when owners wanted to unlock the gates. Now its just waiting, Carolina Panthers general manager Marty Hurney said at an Atlanta hotel where team executives were briefed Friday on new rules for next season. Be exible, and wait and see

what happens. Owners ratified the tentative terms 31-0 the Oakland Raiders abstained on Thursday, provided players would give their OK, too, and re-establish their union within a certain timeframe. But players decided later Thursday not to hold a vote, saying they hadnt had a chance to see a nished product. By Friday, it was in hand. Player leadership is discussing the most recent written proposal with the NFL, which includes a settlement agreement, deal terms and the right process for addressing recertification, NFLPA president Kevin Mawae said in a statement released by the group. There will not be any further NFLPA statements today out of respect for the Kraft family while they mourn the loss of Myra Kraft. Commissioner Roger Goodell and NFLPA head DeMaurice Smith attended Fridays funeral in Newton, Mass., for the wife of New England Patriots owner Bob Kraft. Even when players decide theyre OK with a nal agreement, their approval process is more complicated than the owners was. The 32 team reps will have to recommend its last Copa America title in 1995 and lost in 99 to Brazil in the nal. Were really ready, red up to win the match that will crown us champions, midfielder Alvaro Gonzalez said. Paraguay nds itself having to defend its right to even be in the nal. It was outplayed by Venezuela in the seminal, but won 5-3 on penalties after a 0-0 draw after 120 minutes. Again the goalkeeper, in this case Justo Villar, was the difference. Even Venezuela President Hugo Chavez jumped into the fray, saying in a string of Twitter messages his team had been robbed of a goal. In fact, a disputed goal by Oswaldo Vizcarrondo was disallowed correctly with TV replays showing it was offside. Venezuela faces Peru in Saturdays third-place game. Win or lose, it will be Venezuelas best nish in the continental championship.

accepting the settlement. Then the 10 named plaintiffs in the players lawsuit against the league including Tom Brady, Peyton Manning and Drew Brees must officially inform the court of their approval. E v e n t u a l l y, all 1,900 playTom Brady ers would take a majority vote to approve returning the NFLPA to union status. When talks broke down in March, allowing the old collective bargaining agreement to expire, the players dissolved the union, turning the NFLPA into a trade association. Thats what allowed the players to sue the owners in federal court under antitrust law. Only after the NFLPA is again a union can it negotiate certain parts of a new CBA. Among those items that are of most concern to players: the leagues personal conduct policy; drug testing; benets, such as pension funds, the disability plan, and the 88 Plan, which provides money for Peru is a two-time champion. Some comments are saying that Paraguay reached the nal without having won, said Juan Angel Napout, president of the Paraguayan Football Association. I say we have reached the nal without losing. The match will be played at Monumental Stadium, the home of Buenos Aires club River Plate. A month ago, the stadium concession areas, toilets and thousands of seats were vandalized by hooligans following a match that relegated River Plate to Argentinas second division. After some initial concerns, the stadium appears ready. Paraguay is coping with injuries as it tries for its third Copa America title following victories in 1979 and 1953. Forward Roque Santa Cruz and winger Aureliano Torres will miss the final. Forward Nelson Haedo Valdez and midelder Edgar Barreto are likely to play despite nagging injuries.

care of former players with dementia or Alzheimers disease. The major economic framework for a 10-year deal was worked out a week ago. That included how the more than $9 billion in annual league revenues will be divided (about 53 percent to owners and 47 percent to players over the next decade; the old CBA resulted in nearly a 50-50 split); a per-club cap of about $120 million for salary and bonuses in 2011 and at least that in 2012 and 2013 plus about $22 million benets; a salary system to rein in spending on rst-round draft picks; and unrestricted free agency for most players after four seasons. One item in the document ratied by owners that Smith said caught players by surprise because it hadnt been discussed during negotiations between the league and players: a supplemental revenue-sharing plan for clubs. Goodell and the owners expressed hope Thursday night that their vote would lead to a speedy resolution to the NFLs rst work stoppage since 1987. They called it an equitable deal that improves player safety and allows the sport to prosper even more.

COPA
Continued from page 11
The rugged defense is another matter. Led by Lazio goalkeeper Fernando Muslera and defenders Diego Lugano and Sebastian Coates, Uruguay has yielded only three goals in ve matches. Muslera has been as good as any player in the tournament, and he was the difference with a diving save on Carlos Tevez in the penalty shootout against Argentina in the quarternals, which provided the 54 margin following a 1-1 draw in extra time. Unlike Paraguay, Uruguay is almost injury-free at it seeks a record-15th Copa America title. Argentina has 14 and Brazil, which won the last two nals and four of the last ve, has eight. Uruguay won

TOUR
Continued from page 11
Champs Elysees in Paris. The nal stage rarely affects the overall standings. Frenchman Pierre Rolland won the 19th stage, battling up the mountains 21 brutally steep bends to finish 14 seconds ahead of Olympic champion Samuel Sanchez and 23 seconds clear of three-time Tour champion Alberto Contador. Schleck, who lost the 2010 Tour by a mere 39 seconds to Contador, leads his brother Frank by 53 seconds, while Evans is third, 57 seconds behind. Schleck knocked Contador out of the running in Thursdays ascent of the Galibier pass, launching a daring solo attack from over 30 miles out that the Spaniard couldnt match.

Schleck, considered one of cyclings top climbers, protected his lead over Evans on the Alpe dHuez, the last of a three-day stretch of epic mountain stages in the Alps and one of the most famous climbs in cycling. Though Evans didnt gain any time Friday on the 26-year-old rider from Luxembourg, he still has a shot at beating both Schleck brothers in the 26.4-mile time trial around Grenoble. Time trialing, the individual race against the clock excelled at by specialists such as Swiss world champion Fabian Cancellara and U.S. rider David Zabriskie, has long been a weak point for Andy Schleck. Evans is a strong time trialist, but it will take a superlative performance to make up his 57-second decit and upset the Schlecks longheld dream of becoming the rst brothers to nish together on the winners podium in the Tours 108year history.

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SPORTS

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13

GIANTS
Continued from page 11
Torres leadoff double in the rst. Not until Aubrey Huffs two-out single in the fourth did a Giant reach base, and by then Milwaukee was well in control. The Brewers scored three runs in the second capped by Lucroys two-run single. Left elder Cody Ross throw home on the play beat Betancourt, but catcher Eli Whiteside was playing behind the plate and couldnt corral the ball, allowing Milwaukee to go ahead 3-1. Betancourt drove in his second run with a two-out single in the sixth that sneaked between the inelders and into left, scoring Rickie Weeks from third to give the Brewers a 4-1 lead. That was more than enough for a shorthanded Milwaukee team. Braun was given the day off as part of a plan to ease his return from a strained left calf that forced him to sit out more than a week before the All-Star game, which he also missed. He

had started the last two games in Arizona and the team arrived late in San Francisco, so manager Ron Roenicke gured it would be an ideal time to rest his slugger. Mark Kotsay was 0 for 4 in Brauns place. Rowand tried to bring the Giants back with a pinch-hit home run in the sixth. The solo shot was Rowands fourth career pinch-hit homer and second this season, trimming Milwaukees lead to 4-2. NOTES: Brewers backup OF Carlos Gomez will have surgery Monday to repair his broken left collar bone, Roenicke said. The team is hopeful Gomez will return this season. ... Brewers RHP Brandon Kintzler is scheduled to have a screw inserted in his forearm to help a stress fracture heal. His chances of returning this season are less likely. ... Giants C Buster Posey had the screws removed from his surgically repaired left ankle, manager Bruce Bochy said. Posey is out for the season after tearing three ligaments in his ankle and fracturing a bone in his lower leg in a home-plate collision with Floridas Scott Cousins on May 25. ... The Giants 48th straight sellout this season pushed the total to 2,005,900. 14-5 lead, slammed the rosin bag when Girardi came to remove him with one out and the bases loaded in the fth. The Yankees exerted considerable energy in scoring ve times in the second, using ve singles, a walk, a sacrice y and some hustle from Brett Gardner to go up 5-2. After Eduardo Nunez had an opposite eld single to right for the rst run, Gardner hit a slow chopper between rst and second that Weeks elded and tossed to Cahill. Gardner dived for the bag as Cahill lunged to touch the base and Gardner was called safe although replays indicated that Cahill touched the side of the base rst as another run scored. Jeter also went the other way for a two-run single for hit No. 3,011, passing Wade Boggs for 25th place. Curtis Granderson, starting in the No. 3 hole for the rst time, hit a sacrice y to make it 5-2. Cahill allowed the ve batters he faced in the third to reach including Swishers 11th homer before being pulled for Michael Wuertz, who fared no better.

REUTERS

Usain Bolt celebrates after winning the men's 100-meter event at the Diamond League meet.

Another dash for Bolt


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MONACO Usain Bolt overcame a tentative start to win the 100 meters in 9.88 seconds at the Monaco Diamond League meet Friday, beating a strong eld in a tuneup for next months world championships. The Jamaican improved his personal best this season by 0.03 seconds, but was well short of his world mark of 9.58 seconds. Nesta Carter of Jamaica was second in 9.90 and Michael Rodgers of the U.S. was third in 9.96. They were followed by Michael Frater of Jamaica (10.01) and European champion Christophe Lemaitre of France (10.03). Bolt got off to a poor start and battled all the way on a fast track and with a slight tail wind. The triple Olympic champion failed to beat the Herculis meet record of 9.82 after surging ahead in the last 20 meters. Nesta Carter, Michael Frater are very good starters, better starters than me, Bolt said. But the last 60 (meters) are the best part of my race, so I was never really worried. Overall it was good. Bolt, who competed for the rst time on the Stade Louis II track, is unbeaten this season and said winning races, even by small margins, is the most important thing ahead of the worlds.

For me its always key to keep winning, he said. And Im getting better. My last 60 meters have improved dramatically. I need to work on my reaction time, but Ive been doing great in training, so Im just focusing and I feel ready. The worlds start Aug. 27 in Daegu, South Korea. Bolts last race before the championships will be the 200 at Stockholm next week. Bolt was hampered by injuries last season. He has said that he wont lower his 100-meter world record this year and is concentrating on defending his sprint titles in Daegu. My aim this season is to run 9.7, maybe 9.6, he said. For me, this year its about building myself and go into the Olympic season t and ready. London is the key. In the mens 800, world record holder David Rudisha of Kenya improved the season-best time he set last month, winning in 1 minute, 42.61 seconds. Rudisha, who was hampered by tendinitis in his left foot earlier this season, stayed close to pacemaker Sammy Tangui in the rst lap before pulling away from the pack. Asbel Kiprop of Kenya produced a great effort in the nal stretch to close the gap, but had to settle for second with a personal best of 1:43.15.

AS
Continued from page 11
skipped batting practice Oakland was out there in the blazing sun and stiing humidity. While manager Joe Girardi said he remembers a teammate once putting lettuce on his head to cool off, players on both teams didnt appear to resort to such extreme measures with the thermometer at 100 for a 7:08 p.m. rst pitch. The Yankees posted in the clubhouse a list of suggestions for avoiding dehydration and promoting recovery for Saturdays 1:05 p.m. start. Looking for his rst win in the Bronx this season, Hughes struggled from the start. He walked two and gave up an RBI double to Scott Sizemore in the rst. Cliff Pennington had a run-scoring single in the second and a two-run homer in the fourth. Hughes, with a

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Weekend July 23-24, 2011

SPORTS

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Sports brief
Giants Posey has screws removed from left ankle
SAN FRANCISCO Giants catcher Buster Posey has cleared another hurdle in his long road to recovery, getting the screws removed from his surgically repaired left ankle. San Francisco manager Bruce Bochy says Posey is still weeks away from being able to put weight on the leg. Posey is pushing himself around in a makeshift scooter that supports his reconstructed ankle. The 2010 NL Rookie of the Year is out for the season. He tore three ligaments in his ankle and fractured a bone in his lower left leg in a home-plate collision with Floridas Scott Cousins on May 25. Posey will continue to receive treatment on his injuries in hopes of returning for spring training. San Francisco was opening a three-game series Friday against the Milwaukee Brewers.

Dykstra ordered to stand trial in auto theft case


LOS ANGELES Former New York Mets and Philadelphia Phillies outelder Lenny Dykstra has been ordered to stand trial on car theft and drug possession charges. A judge said Friday that the 48-year-old former baseball star will go to trial on 25 counts. If convicted, Dykstra faces up to 12 years in prison. He remains in jail. Prosecutors say Dykstra, his accountant and a friend leased three high-end cars from a Southern California dealership this year by providing phony information and claiming credit through a phony business. Police who arrested Dykstra at his Los Angeles home in April say they found cocaine, Ecstasy and synthetic human growth hormone. Dykstra also faces federal bankruptcy fraud charges.

REUTERS

WBA super lightweight champion Amir Khan, left, and IBF junior welterweight champion Zab Judah face off during the official weigh-in at the Mandalay Bay Events Center in Las Vegas. The boxers meet for a unification fight July 23.

Rookie Maya Moore among 10 first-time All-Stars


SAN ANTONIO Minnesota Lynx rookie Maya Moore and nine other rst-time WNBA All-Stars are giving a facelift to the leagues midseason showcase. Indiana Fever forward Tamika Catchings said Friday the WNBA needed the turnover of new stars in its 15th season. Catchings and Seattle Storm guard Sue Bird are both seventime All-Stars but will play with a record 10 newcomers in Saturdays game. Moore joins Chicagos Courtney Vandersloot, Tulsas Liz Cambage and San Antonios Danielle Adams as one of four All-Star rookies. Thats the most since 2006.

Khan and Judah ready to rumble


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LAS VEGAS Amir Khan often spars in camp with Manny Pacquiao, so hes used to tough ghts. Zab Judah plans to give him just that when they meet for real Saturday in a 140-pound unication ght. Khan and Judah both bring titles into the bout, which pits a veteran who has been in the ring against some big names against a ghter who seems to just be reaching his prime. It gures to be a crossroads ght for both boxers, though Khan is the one with a potentially brighter future. The British ghter said he took the ght because he only wants to ght the best. I think everyone knows Ive got a big task in front of me. Ive got Zab Judah,

Khan said. My goals are to take the best out there and the likes of Floyd Mayweather one day. At the moment, I want to take things a step at a time. To take on Mayweather, Khan sees himself moving up to 147 pounds and campaigning as a welterweight. For now, though, hes comfortable at 140, where he has defended his WBA title three times since winning it in December 2009 by beating Dmitriy Salita. The ght comes after a disappointing performance in Khans last bout when his ght against Paul McCloskey in England ended when the ring doctor waved it to a close with McCloskey cut after the sixth round. In his ght before that, though, Khan beat Marcos Maidana in a bout that boxing writers voted ght of the year.

In that ght, the former Olympic silver medalist answered questions about his chin that arose when he was stopped in 2008 in the rst round by Breidis Prescott in the only loss of his career. That ght was also at the Mandalay Bay hotel-casino, where he and Judah will square off. There are those who say Amir Khan cant take a punch, said Khan. That Im a bit chinny - Zab has been accused of that, as well. Thats why this is an exciting ght. Judah is the biggest name Khan has met and, at the age of 33, he comes into the scheduled 12-round bout with the IBF version of the title. Judah, who lost a decision to Mayweather ve years ago, has won ve straight ghts and says he has recommitted himself to a career that has now stretched over 15 years.

Judge nixes Dodgers plan


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DOVER, Del. A Delaware judge on Friday rejected the Los Angeles Dodgers proposed $150 million bankruptcy nancing plan, directing the team to instead negotiate a loan deal with Major League Baseball. Judge Kevin Gross said in an eightpage order that the team had failed to show that the terms of its secured nancing with hedge fund Highbridge Capital were fair, given the more favorable nancial terms in MLBs unsecured loan offer.

The Dodgers previously rejected MLBs offer and had refused to negotiate with the league, arguing that its financing proposal was simply an attempt by baseball commissioner Bud Selig to take control of the team and force a sale. While acknowledging an underlying feud between Selig and Dodgers owner Frank McCourt, Judge Gross said he was basing his decision on debtor-inpossession, or DIP, nancing on the narrowest grounds possible and leaving arguments over the teams management

for later. The court nds that the Baseball loan is not a vehicle for Baseball to control debtors, wrote Gross, who ordered the team to negotiate with MLB cooperatively and in good faith. Debtors and Baseball are entitled to the others full cooperation in nalizing and administering an unsecured loan facility, he said. Rob Manfred, MLBs executive vice president for labor relations and human resources, issued a statement praising the ruling.

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THE DAILY JOURNAL

SPORTS
A complaint led in Hennepin County District Court said Aaron Boogaard, 24, told police he gave his brother a single oxycodone the night before he found Derek Boogaard dead in their Minneapolis apartment May 13. Derek Boogaard, 28, died of what authorities ruled was a toxic mix of alcohol and drugs. The younger Boogaard was charged Friday with unlawful distribution of a controlled substance, a felony that also applies when narcotics are given away for free. He was also charged with interfering with the scene of a death for allegedly ushing the rest of his brothers drug stash a mix of oxycodone
SAT SUN

Weekend July 23-24, 2011

15

Boogaard brother charged in NHL players OD death


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MINNEAPOLIS NHL enforcer Derek Boogaard had been out of drug rehab for just one day before his younger brother gave him an unprescribed narcotic pain pill at the start of an of Derek Boogaard evening night-clubbing, drug-taking and heavy drinking that resulted in his death, prosecutors alleged Friday.

and related drugs down the toilet before police arrived, the complaint alleged. This is a very tragic situation, Hennepin County Attorney Mike Freeman told reporters. Most of us know someone whos had problems, troubles with alcohol or drugs. And most of us know that a person, the day they get out of treatment, shouldnt receive for any reason the drugs that put him in treatment in the rst place. An attorney for Aaron Boogaard said the entire family had suffered a tremendous loss. We will address the allegations in court rather than in the media, but
MON TUE WED THU FRI

note that Aaron was and remains devastated by his brothers death, attorney John W. Lundquist said in a statement Friday. Assuming Boogaard has no criminal record, the states sentencing guidelines would call for 21 months of probation and no prison time, said Chuck Laszewski, a spokesman for the county attorneys ofce. Freeman said Derek Boogaard got out of a New York rehab center just a day before he started using drugs again. He said Aaron Boogaards statements to police made it clear his brother did not take the pill to relieve pain, but to prepare for a big night out, and that Derek Boogaard had

the narcotics shipped home illegally from New York, without a prescription. Derek Boogaard, who was one of hockeys most feared enforcers and a fan favorite for the Minnesota Wild before joining the New York Rangers last summer, struggled with pain and addiction, his family acknowledged after his death. Its our understanding that Aaron kept his brothers non-prescribed illegal drugs and attempted to parcel them on some kind of limited basis, Freeman said. ... This was not the rst time he had been in treatment. He had been in treatment before.

Sports brief
Batista could be on the way out in Argentina
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina Sergio Batista could be on the way out as Argentinas soccer coach following the countrys quarterfinal loss in Copa America. Prominent Argentine soccer ofcial German Lerche said in an interview Friday that the countrys soccer federation will meet Monday. He said the meeting would center on the coach continuing, or not. Lerche called the Copa America a sporting failure for Argentina, which is the host for the South American championship that ends Sunday. Argentina was eliminated by Uruguay on penalty kicks.

23

24

25
OFF

26
@ Phils 4:05 p.m. CSN-BAY

27
@ Phils 4:05 p.m. CSN-BAY

28
@ Phils 4:05 p.m. CSN-BAY

29
@ Reds 4:10 p.m. CSN-BAY

NATIONAL LEAGUE
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division Philadelphia Atlanta New York Washington Florida Central Division Milwaukee Pittsburgh St.Louis Cincinnati Chicago Houston West Division San Francisco Arizona Colorado San Diego Los Angeles W 57 53 48 44 43 L 43 47 52 56 55 Pct .570 .535 .475 .440 .439 GB 4 9 13 13 W 54 51 52 48 40 33 L 47 46 47 51 60 66 Pct .535 .526 .525 .485 .400 .333 GB 1 1 5 13 1/2 20 W 62 59 50 48 47 L 36 41 49 50 53 Pct .633 .590 .505 .490 .470 GB 4 12 1/2 14 16

AMERICAN LEAGUE
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division Boston New York Tampa Bay Toronto Baltimore Central Division Detroit Cleveland Chicago Minnesota Kansas City West Division Texas Los Angeles Oakland Seattle W 60 58 52 50 39 W 53 51 48 46 41 W 57 54 43 43 L 37 39 46 50 57 L 46 47 51 53 58 L 43 46 56 56 Pct .619 .598 .531 .500 .406 Pct .535 .520 .485 .465 .414 Pct .570 .540 .434 .434 GB 2 8 1/2 11 1/2 20 1/2 GB 1 1/2 5 7 12 GB 3 13 1/2 13 1/2

vs. Brewers vs. Brewers 6:05 p.m. 1:05 p.m. CSN-BAY CSN-BAY

@ Yankees @ Yankees 10:05 a.m. 10:05 a.m. CSN-CAL CSN-CAL

vs.Rays 7:05 p.m. CSN-CAL

vs.Rays 7:05 p.m. CSN-CAL

vs.Rays 7:05 p.m. CSN-CAL

vs.Rays 12:35 p.m. MLB-TV

vs.Twins 7:05 p.m. CSN-CAL

7/23
@RSL 7 p.m CSN-CA

7/30
vs.D.C. 7:30 p.m. CSN-BA

8/6

8/13

8/20
@ Galaxy 7:30 p.m.

8/27
@ Toronto 4 p.m.

9/10
vs.Fire 7:30 p.m.

vs.Portland vs.Colorado 7:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m. CSN-CA

TOUR DE FRANCE
2011 Tour de France Stages-Winners July 11 Rest day in Le Lioran Cantal. July 12 Stage 10: AurillacCarmaux, at, 158 (98.2) (Andre Greipel,Germany;Voeckler) July 13 Stage 11: Blaye-les-Mines Lavaur, flat, 167.5 (104.1) (Cavendish; Voeckler) July 14 Stage 12: CugnauxLuz-Ardiden, high mountain,211 (131.1) (Samuel Sanchez, Spain; Voeckler) July 15 Stage 13: PauLourdes, high mountain, 152.5 (94.8) (Hushovd; Voeckler) July 16 Stage 14:Saint-GaudensPlateau de Beille, high mountain, 168.5 (104.7) (Jelle Vanendert, Belgium; Voeckler) July 17 Stage 15: LimouxMontpellier, at, 192.5 (119.6) (Cavendish; Voeckler) July 18 Rest day in the Drome region. July 19 Stage 16: Saint-Paul-TroisChateauxGap, medium mountain, 162.5 (101) (Hushovd; Voeckler) July 20 Stage 17: GapPinerolo, Italy, high mountain, 179 (111.2) (Boasson Hagen; Voeckler) July 21 Stage 18: PineroloGalibier Serre-Chevalier, high mountain, 200.5 (124.6) (Andy Schleck, Luxembourg; Voeckler) July 22 Stage 19: Modane Valfrejus Alpe-dHuez, high mountain, 109.5 (68.0) (Pierre Rolland, France; Schleck)

MLS STANDINGS
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Philadelphia New York Columbus Houston Kansas City D.C. New England Chicago Toronto FC W 8 6 7 5 5 5 4 2 3 L 4 5 6 6 6 6 9 6 10 T 7 11 7 9 8 8 7 12 9 Pts 31 29 28 24 23 23 19 18 18 GF 24 35 21 24 24 24 17 20 17 GA 16 28 20 23 25 30 27 25 37

Nowitzki to play for Germany at the Europeans


FRANKFURT, Germany Dirk Nowitzki says he will play for Germany at the upcoming European Championship when Olympic berths will be at stake. The Dallas Mavericks forward says the break after the NBA nals was brief, but hed like to help the young German team have success. The European Championship is Aug. 31-Sept. 18 in Lithuania. The two nalists qualify for the 2012 Olympics in London. Germany is in a group with France, Italy, Serbia, Latvia and Israel.

WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA Los Angeles 11 2 9 42 28 16 FC Dallas 11 5 5 38 27 19 Seattle 10 4 8 38 32 23 Real Salt Lake 8 3 6 30 23 12 Colorado 7 6 9 30 29 28 San Jose 5 6 9 24 24 23 Chivas USA 5 7 8 23 24 23 Portland 6 9 3 21 22 31 Vancouver 2 10 9 15 21 30 NOTE:Three points for victory, one point for tie. Wednesdays Games FC Dallas 1,Toronto FC 0 Colorado 4, New York 1 San Jose 2,Vancouver 2, tie Los Angeles 1, Columbus 0

Thursdays Games San Diego 5,Florida 3 St.Louis 6,N.Y.Mets 2 Atlanta 9,Colorado 6 Arizona 4,Milwaukee 0 Fridays Games Chicago Cubs 4,Houston 2 Philadelphia 3,San Diego 1 St.Louis 6,Pittsburgh 4 Atlanta 6,Cincinnati 4 N.Y.Mets 7,Florida 6 Colorado at Arizona,9:40 p.m. Washington at L.A.Dodgers,Late Milwaukee 4,San Francisco 2 Saturdays Games Houston (W.Rodriguez 6-6) at Chicago Cubs (R.Wells 1-3),10:05 a.m. Atlanta (D.Lowe 6-7) at Cincinnati (H.Bailey 4-4), 1:10 p.m. San Diego (Latos 5-10) at Philadelphia (K.Kendrick 5-4),1:10 p.m. St.Louis (J.Garcia 9-4) at Pittsburgh (Correia 11-7), 4:05 p.m.

Thursdays Games Toronto 7,Seattle 5 L.A.Angels 1,Texas 0 Tampa Bay 2,N.Y.Yankees 1 Detroit 6,Minnesota 2 Fridays Games Chicago White Sox 3,Cleveland 0 L.A.Angels 6,Baltimore 1 N.Y.Yankees 17,Oakland 7 Boston 7,Seattle 4 Texas 12,Toronto 2 Detroit 8,Minnesota 2 Kansas City 10,Tampa Bay 4 Saturdays Games Oakland (Harden 1-1) at N.Y. Yankees (A.J.Burnett 8-7),10:05 a.m. Detroit (Penny 7-6) at Minnesota (S.Baker 7-5), 1:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox (E.Jackson 6-7) at Cleveland (D.Huff 1-0),4:05 p.m. L.A. Angels (Pineiro 5-4) at Baltimore (Bergesen 1-6),4:05 p.m. Seattle (Beavan 1-1) at Boston (Beckett 8-3), 4:10 p.m. Tampa Bay (Niemann 4-4) at Kansas City (Francis 3-11),4:10 p.m.

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Weekend July 23-24, 2011

SPORTS
doubts none of it mattered any longer. That in itself was reward enough for the past year of training, getting back into shape and getting back into it because it was that feeling again, she said Friday. I feel like Shawn Johnson the competitor and the girl from Beijing. It was really exciting. Johnson returns to competition Saturday night for the rst time since winning four medals at the Beijing Olympics, including gold on the balance beam. She may only do two events, beam and uneven bars, at the qualier for next months U.S. championships, and is trying to keep expectations her own and everyone elses realistic. Still, every day brings her that much closer to next summers London Olympics, a goal she feared was out of reach not that long ago. This isnt my goal, its next year, Johnson said. If I constantly focused on being perfect at this competition or the next one, then you get too overwhelmed with the expectations of people watching. Whereas if you continue to tell yourself this is just the beginning, this is just the rst step, were working for next year not this year, that helps. Johnson needed time away from gymnastics after Beijing, where she also won silvers in the all-around, team competition and oor exercise. She won Dancing With the Stars, carried the Olympic torch before the Vancouver Games and crisscrossed the country making commercial appearances. Only 16 in Beijing, she talked about coming back for London. Would even drop by her old gym whenever she was home in Des Moines. But elite gymnastics leaves little room for anything else, and Johnson was having too much fun being a normal teenager. Until she blew out her knee. Johnson tore the ACL, MCL and meniscus in her left knee, as well as her hamstring, during a January

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Johnson eager to compete for 1st time since 2008


By Nancy Armour
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHICAGO Shawn Johnson was standing in the hotel lobby, waiting for a ride to training, when she felt a familiar rush of excitement and adrenaline. Just like that, the last three years faded away. The Shawn Johnson shredded knee, the thousands of agonizing hours in the gym, the

2010 ski trip to celebrate her 18th birthday. Her rst thoughts after the accident were of gymnastics, making her realize she wasnt done with the sport. When she left the doctors ofce, she headed straight to the gym, where she and longtime coach Liang Chow began plotting out her comeback. We do have limitations and thats the biggest test, for me and for her, to deal with that knee injury, Chow said. Were not talking about four years. Were talking months ahead. We have to be really smart and know shes achieving the maximum now.

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NATION
extraordinarily fair deal that totaled $2.6 trillion in spending cuts and $1.2 trillion in additional revenue. Strikingly, the two sides had agreed on two highly controversial changes, according to aides on both sides of the talks. One would John Boehner raise the age of eligibility of Medicare gradually from 65 to 67 for future beneciaries, while the other would slow the increase in cost-ofliving raises in Social Security checks. Given that accord, it seemed likely those agreements would be among many carrying over to the Barack Obama broader meeting Saturday morning and beyond. Barring action by Congress by an Aug. 2 deadline, the Treasury will be unable to pay all its bills. Ofcials say a default could destabilize the already weakened U.S. economy and send major ripple effects across the globe. Even by the recent standards of divided government, Boehners decision triggered an extraordinary evening in which rst the Democratic president and then the Republican speaker maneuvered for political position on an issue of enormous national import. By Tom McElroy
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Weekend July 23-24, 2011

17

Boehner breaks off talks


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Still no relief from heat


NEW YORK Americans withered under yet another day of searing sun Friday as a heat wave spread in earnest into the urban core of the Northeast, while warnings about excessive heat stretched from Kansas to Maine and the Carolinas. Temperatures hit 100 in New Yorks Central Park and in Newark and Teterboro, N.J. The National Weather Service said the smoldering humidity made those temperatures feel like 116, 114 and 110, respectively. Its enough to test the patience of a saint. Taking her morning walk with temperatures already soaring near 90, Sister Elizabeth Ann Hughes of St. Thomas Aquinas Roman Catholic Church in Philadelphia offered her simple strategy go out only when its relatively cool and stay in the air conditioning when its not. I walk in the shade and get out of the sun before 10 a.m., she said. In New York, people looking to beat the heat also were thwarted by warnings urging them to avoid some city waterways after a wastewater treatment plant disabled by re began spewing millions of gallons of raw sewage into the Hudson River. Ofcials cautioned against swimming and bathing at four beaches in the city boroughs of Staten Island and Brooklyn, especially for people with medical conditions. Beesham Nanan, 53, was drinking coffee in an air-conditioned fast-food restaurant before starting his shift as a limo driver. He often has to drive clients to their destinations and then wait in the car. He tries to park somewhere where he can turn the cars air conditioning on, but its risky. Youre not supposed to have the engine on in the city, Nanan said. Its a big ne. Across the country, emergency room visits were way up, according to public health ofcials, mainly because of people suffering from heat exhaustion and heat stroke. The weather is suspected of contributing to a number of deaths nationwide. At least six more fatalities were reported Thursday, including a Michigan restaurant cook who suffered a heart attack after being sent home from his job and a teenage boy who drowned while swimming at summer camp in the same state.

WASHINGTON House Speaker John Boehner abruptly broke off talks with President Barack Obama Friday night on a deal to make major cuts in federal spending and avert a threatened government default, sending already uncertain compromise efforts into instant crisis. Within minutes, an obviously peeved Obama virtually ordered congressional leaders to the White House Saturday morning for fresh negotiations on raising the nations debt limit. Weve got to get it done. It is not an option not to do it, he declared. For the rst time since talks began, he declined to offer assurances, when asked, that default would be avoided. Moments later, however, he said he was condent of that outcome. At a rebuttal news conference of his own a short while later in the Capitol, Boehner said, I want to be entirely clear, no one wants default on the full faith and credit of the United States government, and Im convinced that we will not. The two men offered sharply different accounts of the compromise efforts so far and who was at fault for the collapse. Ive been left at the altar now a couple of times, Obama said wryly. Its the president who walked away from his agreement, Boehner contended. The speaker said Obama wanted higher taxes and not enough spending cuts. The president countered that he had offered an

Obama ends ban on openly gay military service members


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON The ban on gays in the military has stood for nearly a century. In 60 days, after decades of discharges, lawsuits and lobbying, that will change. On Friday, President Barack Obama fullled a 2008 campaign pledge, formally ending the ban. After meeting with Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and Adm. Mike Mullen, the joint chiefs of staff chairman, the president certied to Congress that repealing the ban would not jeopardize the militarys ability to ght. As commander in chief, I have always been condent that our dedicated men and women in uniform would transition to a new policy in an orderly manner that preserves unit cohesion, recruitment, retention and military effectiveness, Obama said in a statement. Service members will no longer be forced to hide who they are in order to serve our country.

Fridays milestone was expected to be reached under the repeal law Congress passed in December. But homosexuality has been prohibited in the military since World War I, and for years recruits were screened and questioned about their sexual orientation. Then-President Bill Clinton relaxed the law a bit in 1993, saying the military could not ask if service members were gay. Gay service members could be discharged only if their sexual orientation became known. That became known as dont ask, dont tell. Obamas action means that effective Sept. 20, gay service members will be able to openly acknowledge their sexual orientation. And it opens the door for those discharged over the past 17 years under Clintons policy to reapply to the military and possibly serve again. Jeremy Johnson intends to do just that. The former sailor served for 10 years in the Navy before coming out to his commanding ofcer in 2007.

Suffering for his craft


Always Sunny creator/star packs on pounds for character SEE PAGE 20

Friendsmocks rom-coms
By Jake Coyle
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Simpler times are recalled


By Laura Lizzeri
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Burnt Mountain (Grand Central Publishing), by Anne Rivers Siddons: Burnt Mountain, the peak in Georgia, is among the southernmost in the ancient Appalachian range. It rises to grab the occasional dusting of snow in winter and swells with crowds of campers and hikers seeking refuge in summer. To those classic services, best-selling novelist Anne Rivers Siddons adds numerous romantic ones for the peak to perform. Her Burnt Mountain is the repository of childhood memories, the source of marital conict and revelation, and the setting for one characters unsettling breakdown. It is hard to imagine a real place hosting such intense pivot points in the lives of so many interrelated people, but the majestic peak largely holds its own. At Burnt Mountain, her central characters come of age, honeymoon, vacation, die and engage in a deeply mysterious scandal involving an Irish folklorist, a smarmy businessman and scores of young boys. Siddons is at her most effective rendering the Southern landscape and the regions languorous summers. Lots of iced tea and lemonade and even mint juleps are consumed on porches. Children play in the shade, women swoon from the heat, for sure, but more from frustration at not climbing the social register or not fast enough. And theres lots of swimming, in pools, in rivers and in lakes. Siddons masterfully portrays growing up in a small

Though self-consciously set in the bicoastal Hollywood axis of New York-Los Angeles, Friends With Benets more properly takes place amid the movie world of romantic comedies. It aims to ditch schmaltz and replace it with snap, the kind found in the classic rom-coms of Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn or Frank Capras It Happened One Night, a poster of which hangs above a busy bed in Friends With Benets. The more modern, saccharine conventions are mocked. Justin Timberlake, playing a magazine art director, parodies the manipulative music of tidy romances. Mila Kunis, as a New York corporate headhunter, goes so far as to, when passing a street poster of The Ugly Truth, curse Katherine Heigl. (Kate Hudson, Drew Barrymore and Matthew McConaughey can breathe sighs of relief; they are spared specic denunciation. But they know what theyve done.) Friends With Benets follows No Strings Attached (with Natalie Portman and Ashton Kutcher) as this years second comedy about friends who condently decide to weed out emotion from sex, only to nd that such calculation is impossible even for todays tech-savvy multitaskers. This lm, directed and co-written by Will Gluck (Easy A), is easily superior to its forerunner, but nevertheless disappoints by eventually falling prey to the very cliches it strives to upend. Friends With Benets opens in ne style, with dueling breakups (Emma Stone and Andy Samberg guest as the exes). Dylan (Timberlake) and Jamie (Kunis) then meet when Dylan travels from Los Angeles to New York for a job interview at GQ, arranged by Jamie. The magazine gets heavy promotion in the lm, even co-opting the old

See BOOK, Page 24

See BENEFITS, Page 21

Best bets
Redwood City Blues Festival
Redwood Citys Courthouse Square showcases some of the best blues musicians and artists of the Bay Area 6 p.m.-8 p.m. Friday and Saturday from 11 a.m.-8 p.m. This years festival introduces a Bar-B-Que Cook-off Competition, with more than a dozen groups competing for the best barbecue on the square. Proceeds directly benet the important programs of the Redwood City Police Activities League. For more information, go to www.palbluesfestival.com.

Tabloidexplores the wacky and tacky


By Christy Lemire
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Free concert in the park


Michael Francis conducts the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra in its annual free outdoor concert under the eucalyptus trees in beautiful Sigmund Stern Grove in San Francisco 2 p.m. Sunday. The orchestra performs Beethovens Overture to The Creatures of Prometheus, Beethovens Piano Concerto No. 5, Emperor, featuring pianist Sara Davis Buechner and Tchaikovskys Symphony No. 4. This free concert is presented in association with the Stern Grove Festival. No tickets are required.

Is Joyce McKinney a delusional, manipulative narcissist? Or just a clever, plucky charmer wholl do anything for true love? Errol Morris lets her tell her own story and lets us decide for ourselves in Tabloid. The master documentarian is having some fun here for the rst time in a while. Hes explored weighty topics with his most recent lms, 2008s Standard Operating Procedure (about the prisoner abuse at Abu Ghraib) and 2003s Oscar-winning The Fog of War (about Robert McNamara, the U.S. defense secretary during much of the Vietnam War). He employs the same straightforward interviewing style that has become his trademark, but in revisiting the late-70s saga of a former beauty queen and the abducted Mormon who reportedly became her sex slave, he elicits answers thatll make you giggle rather than gasp. Tabloid is a playful, voyeuristic guilty

Its got colorful characters who are all too willing to tell all and a tawdry,twisting story line that couldnt seem to get any weirder and then it does.
pleasure, an exploration of the wacky and tacky and our compulsive need to feed on such tales. Its got colorful characters who are all too willing to tell all and a tawdry, twisting story line that couldnt seem to get any weirder and then it does. While it lacks the substance and insight of Morris strongest work, its consistently a kick, and with the recent collapse of Britains News of the World, it couldnt be more relevant. Back in 1977, the British tabloids competed ercely over the story of McKinney, a perky blonde with a bright smile and a taste for the spotlight. As McKinney herself tells it today in her lively Southern drawl, she ew to England to find her Mormon missionary

See TABLOID, Page 21

THE DAILY JOURNAL


By Susan Cohn
DAILY JOURNAL SENIOR CORRESPONDENT

WEEKEND JOURNAL

Weekend July 23-24, 2011

19

TWELFTH NIGHT. The woods are lled with the language of Shakespeare as San Francisco-based Theatre in the Woods sets Twelfth Nights kingdom of Illyria within a gorgeous sun-dappled forest above Woodside. The audience follows the cast, hiking just over one mile round-trip along somewhat steep dirt paths in a spectacular ve-acre site of redwood, madrona, r and California bay trees. The scenes takes place in various glades and clearings where split log seating is provided. Approximate run time of the show (including hike) is two hours and 30 minutes. Directed by Stuart Bousel.

http://www.atmostheatre.com or call 415668-2879.

THE CAST RECOMMENDS


Bring a picnic lunch and eat on site before the performance, or check out these nearby restaurants on Kings Mountain Mountain Terrace, The Mountain House, Bella Vista and Alices Restaurant.

CAST MEMBERS
Reuben Alvear II (Antonio), Ashley Cowan (Viola), Aoife Lambe Davis (Fabian), Dimas Guardado Jr. (Sir Toby), William Leschber (Orsino), Charles Lewis III (Valentine), Carl Lucania (Malvolio), Karen Offereins (Olivia), Shane Rhoades (Curio/Priest), Chris Quintos (Maria), Jessica Jade Rudholm (Feste), Ross Travis (Andrew) and Nicholas Trengrove (Sebastian).

AN ASIDE
Director Stuart Bousel says, Twelfth Night is more dangerous than it looks from the outside. I have long maintained that Shakespeares comedies are darker than his tragedies and I think that is most true here, in Illyria, a world of pirates, thieves, drunks, liars, incompetents and pretenders, ruled by a pair of good-hearted but ineffectual aristocrats who have both become victims of their own romantic manias.

STAGE DIRECTIONS
Theatre in the Woods is located at 2170 Bear Gulch Road in Woodside, about two miles west off Skyline Boulevard. Bear Gulch Road is a paved but narrow and winding road and this should be factored into your travel time calculations. Parking is along Bear Gulch Road. Toilets are available only near the check-in table.

CLAIRE RICE

Theatre in the WoodsTwelfth Night runs in Woodside Saturday and Sunday afternoons through Sept.19.
uses Caesario as an intermediary to tell Olivia about his love for her. Olivia, believing Viola to be a man, falls in love with him and Viola, in turn, falls in love with Orsino, who also believes Viola is a man. *** ANOTHER TWELFTH NIGHT. On Aug. 5, inmates at San Quentin State Prison watch 13 of their peers perform Twelfth Night. The inmates, under the direction of Marin Shakespeare Companys Suraya Keating, have been studying the play, creating characters, learning lines, practicing songs and

OH, AND DID YOU KNOW?


Like many of Shakespeares comedies, Twelfth Night revolves around mistaken identity. The leading character, Viola, is shipwrecked on the shores of Illyria, having lost contact with her twin brother, Sebastian, whom she mistakenly believes to be dead. Masquerading as a young page under the name Caesario, Viola enters the service of Orsino, who is in love with Olivia and who

TICKETS
Performances take place Saturdays and Sundays at 1 p.m. through Sept. 19. Limited to 60 audience members at each performance. $25 General Admission. $20 seniors, students and children (ages 10 and up are encouraged to attend). For information and tickets visit

dance moves, and preparing for the performance for the past 10 months. The script, adapted by Marin Shakespeares managing and artistic directors Lesley and Robert Currier, is set in the 1960s and features music from the Beatles, Rolling Stones and others. The Marin Shakespeare Company, which performs at Dominican Universitys Forest Meadows Amphitheatre each summer, added the Shakespeare program at San Quentin to their array of education programs eight years ago. *** CELEBRATE GOOD TIMES. Teatro ZinZanni hosts an evening of art, music, dance and peace and love with Cabaret Lunatiques Celebrate Haight-Ashbury on Saturday, Aug. 6 at the gorgeous Spiegeltent on Pier 29. As the sixth installment in a series of nine late-night cabarets each focusing on a distinctive San Francisco neighborhood, Celebrate Haight-Ashbury lets your inner bohemian run free in celebration of a community that defined America in the 60s. Celebrate Haight-Ashbury showcases magician Brandon Rabe, accomplished six-ball juggler Thomas John, aerialists Cameron McHenry and Marina Luna, all-women clown troupe Circus Finelli, contortionist Nancy Kate Siefker and music from the band Aaron Glass and Friends. Burlesque artist La Chica Boom serves as both host and performer. Evenings scheduled for the remainder of the year highlight SOMA, On the Waterfront and The Hills. Doors to the lobby open at 11:15 p.m. Admission is $35 for premium and $25 general admission. (415) 438-2668 or http://cabaretlunatique.org. *** UNVEILED. Five Muslim women living in western cultures in a post-9/11 world serve tea and uncover what lies beneath the veil in this one-woman show. Author and actress Rohina Malik tells stories about Love, Islam, Culture, Language, Racism and Life. Tickets $10-25. Sept. 8-17. Brava Theater, 2781 24th St. (at York Street), San Francisco. (415) 647-2822 or www.brava.org.

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20

Weekend July 23-24, 2011

WEEKEND JOURNAL

THE DAILY JOURNAL

McElhenney lives large for Always Sunny


By Lynn Elber
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LOS ANGELES Its Always Sunny in Philadelphia star Rob McElhenney got fat on purpose and to make a few weighty points. He wanted to esh out the idiocy and vanity of his sitcoms character, Mac. He wanted to satirize the glam appearance of TV actors, no matter how mundane the part theyre playing. And, as a bonus, he threw in mockery of societys obsession with looks. What he didnt intend with his 50pound weight gain for the upcoming season is to make fun of obesity, McElhenney said. Online observers and some fans have expressed concern that Sunny is taking cheap shots at the overweight, which McElhenney called upsetting. Its never been the intention of the show to be mean-spirited. The characters are mean-spirited. The show is satire, he said. No kidding. One hallmark Sunny episode saw Mac and Dennis (Glenn Howerton) attend opposite sides of an abortion rally to pick up women. Another episode had them explore using wheelchairs as a way to get sympathy and women. McElhenney, 34, creator of the sitcom that returns to FX on Sept. 15, was willing to share how he packed on the pounds (and now is shedding them). First he detailed how inspiration struck. Watching what he described diplomatically as a very popular show, he noticed that two of its stars looked articially younger from one season to the next. More channel ipping brought him to a rerun of

Always Sunny in Philadelphiacreator and co-star Rob McElhenny put on 50 pounds for the upcoming season by doubling his daily number of calories and lifting weights.
Friends and a reminder of how the cast grew better-looking from year to year. Nicer teeth, hair, wardrobe and bodies might work for a show like Friends. But with Sunny, the way the characters abuse themselves, they wouldnt wind up looking better, they would wind up looking way worse, he said. about the reboot of his beloved animated characters and offer a peek at the new season, which is set to premiere in October. In their new incarnation, the two perennial teens still wearing their AC/DC and Metallica shirts riff on music videos, YouTube submissions and MTV shows such as Jersey Shore and Teen Cribs. Theyre also watching UFC ghts, Judge says.

That notion is unthinkable in the network TV world, which seeks out attractive people and makes them as likable as possible. But it ts nicely with the Sunny comedy ethos: making its characters head-smackingly obnoxious and strictly nonaspirational as, in part, a slap at the network model. Other actors have plumped up for roles that couldnt be played thin, including Renie Zellweger, twice, for Bridget Joness Diary and its sequel, and Robert De Niro for his Oscar-winning turn in Raging Bull. McElhenney tried to get his fellow co-stars, including his reallife wife Kaitlin Olson, Charlie Day and Howerton, to join him in his self-prescribed metamorphosis. They declined. Danny DeVito got an automatic pass because hes never pandered to Hollywood expectations. Alone, the 5-foot-9, 162-pound McElhenney set off on the path to a bigger future. It made sense for his character, who regularly makes noise about putting on body-builder mass while all he does is abuse his body with food and alcohol, he said. He more than doubled his daily food intake to about 5,000 calories, trying to keep it relatively healthy by eating lean protein, brown rice and vegetables. It was more about the volume of calories rather than just eating crappy food, McElhenney said. Regular check-ups ensured he wasnt pushing his cholesterol or blood pressure up. He added weightlifting to ensure somewhat even distribution of bulk rather than just ending up a skinny guy with a big gut although his belly reached fairly impressive

proportions. He didnt shy away from going public, at one point running into Jon Hamm of Mad Men. He looked at me and said, Dude, wow, McElhenney recalled. It took him ve months to gain the weight, which he retained for more than two months of lming. When that ended about a month ago, he went on the food wagon and has lost nearly half of the 50 pounds so far. Visitors to Comic-Con in San Diego can check out his progress at Sundays Its Always Sunny in Philadelphia panel session. For the record, wife Olson said its irritating to see his rapid weight loss but she loved the bold creative move. I was so proud of him. Thats a lot of work. He was miserably full every day for months, she said in an e-mail. Plus, have you seen his butt? It looks way better with a little girth. McElhenney gave himself and his character a complete makeover, letting his hair go long and greasy and adding a Paul Bunyan-esque beard for effect. Thats been part of the experience thats pretty fantastic, embracing the lack of vanity, he said, which is especially anarchic in appearance-centric Los Angeles. If any detractors choose to target him or the show for alleged fat-bashing, McElhenney suggests they direct their efforts elsewhere. You pick up a magazine, turn on the TV, go to a movie and you see people not representative of what people look like. ... If a defamation league is going after someone, go after the people who put these images in and say this is an ideal, he said. 3-D, then his dinosaur adventure Jurassic Park might be a candidate for the three-dimensional treatment. He also said his shark tale Jaws was a possibility. The lmmaker spoke in an interview before a presentation at the fan convention Comic-Con in San Diego, where he was showing off footage from The Adventures of Tintin, his collaboration with The Lord of the Rings creator Peter Jackson.

Comic-Con briefs

Beavis and Butthead set to return to MTV in fall


SAN DIEGO Nearly two decades after their heyday, Beavis and Butthead are coming back. Creator Mike Judge says the ever adolescent, trash-talking duo will return to MTV in the fall. Judge came to Comic-Con to talk

Spielberg:Jurassic Park, Jaws could go 3-D


SAN DIEGO Steven Spielberg gures theres only one or two of his old movies that he might consider converting to 3-D. And the ones hes thinking about have large, hungry creatures at their center. Spielberg said Friday that if conversions could be done well enough that the result looked like a movie shot in

THE DAILY JOURNAL

WEEKEND JOURNAL
an. With Friends With Benets and Easy A, his style has come into clear relief. His hyper, R-rated dialogue runs at nearly a His Girl Friday pace and is stuffed with postmodern pop culture references. Here, a motherdaughter trip is compared to a Nora Ephron movie, and Harry Potter fandom is equated with homosexuality. Snowboarder Shaun White, in a misstep, makes a cameo (playing angry, against type), and John Mayer is jokingly referred to as the Sheryl Crow of our generation. Gluck (who shares screenplay credit with Keith Merryman and David Newman) is clearly whip smart and he likes his lms that way. This all to the good, but much of Friends With Benets comes off as too showy in its cleverness. Punch lines (some of which land very well) are too happy with themselves. Easy A was framed as a live webcast with ashbacks and Friends With Benets, too, exudes an ease with technology. Jamie and Dylans pact is made not on a Bible, but on a Bible app. Flash mobs make numerous appearances. In a crafty twist, the closing credits run retied in neat bows, we fret with her. And when everything inevitably does start to work out, we are as relieved as she is. But that satisfaction is shallow. There are just too many snags along the way in Burnt Mountain, including problems as fundamental as time lapsing unevenly for different characters. In the same period that Thayer attends college, marries and lackadaisically takes a job, another character also earns a graduate degree, has two children, wins acclaim in his career and separates from his wife. Siddons, who has adroitly illustrated Southern race politics in the past, also slips into anachronisms so uncomfortable they are nearly fatal. Theres a trip for our wealthy heroine to a dangerous back-alley abortion clinic, even though its roughly 1990 and abortions have been widely available in Atlanta for many years. The mid1990s civic scene in Atlanta lacks black residents of any economic means, and Asian visitors are mocked for pronouncing the word barbecue as bobby-coo. Burnt Mountain thankfully doesnt attempt to traverse the sociopolitical mineeld that was the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta. But the novel might have worked better set earlier, in a time were now willing to believe was simpler.

Weekend July 23-24, 2011

21

BENEFITS
Continued from page 18
Rockefeller Center address of the Associated Press, leaving at least one critic to gasp in mock insult. (Its not like Conde Nasts actual digs are shabby, I snorted.) Jamie sells Dylan on transplanting to New York, and the two quickly work up a friendship and great, rapid-fire banter. Each having soured on relationships, they opt for a purely sexual affair. As every audience member knows, their journey from cynicism to genuine romance follows. Its, of course, an old plot and one tried out in movies and sitcoms (including one referenced here, Seinfeld), but Gluck expends a great deal of energy in imbuing the comedy with smarts and emotional realism. Much of the lm unfolds more organically than the wide majority of romantic comedies. This is the third lm for Gluck, a TV veter-

Friends with Benets


Director:Will Gluck Cast: Mila Kunis,Justin Timberlake Rated: R Grade:

like iPad text, with hands sliding and icking names. This is not screwball confusion amid modern technology, but smooth, effortless mastery of it. Dylan purchases Jamie a plane ticket on his phone in a moment. Winking jokes are made about cell phone coverage. The problem of being too smart and too suave is there in the cast, too. In Emma Stone, whose star was made in Easy A, Gluck had a perfect, Hepburn-like lead for his dialogue, delivered with droll deadpan. Timberlake and

Kunis are terric comic actors, but neither, certainly, is droll. Each is exceptionally handsome and lively. They look great in bed together and have comic timing to spare. But their dynamic comes off less as chemistry (which suggests some dramatic friction) than as mirror reections of each other. Woody Harrelson (as a gay guys guy), Patricia Clarkson (as Jamies ighty mother) and Richard Jenkins (lending a dose of seriousness as Dylans aging father) lead a strong supporting cast. The funniest satire of romantic comedies comes in a movie within the movie: a mock Hollywood, cliche-ridden lm called I Love You, I Love New York, with Jason Segel and Rashida Jones. With soaring music, Segel delivers a line for which we can only guess at the sappy metaphor: Looks like New York is all out of blueberries. If only Friends With Benets had given in as completely to mockery as I Love You, I Love New York.

BOOK
Continued from page 18
town outside Atlanta, much like her hometown. The terrain is rich with grand old houses lovingly restored; theres a begrudging nod to Gone With the Wind, which the young people call GWTW; and the race and class divides are so vast that every key character is white, Protestant and wealthy. The lone Jews heritage automatically grants him outsider status and seems to imply his nancial success. Even as they age, Siddons characters focus on their sensations and needs and aspirations, but that single-mindedness coaxes readers to side with her central character. Anyone who appreciates the instant gratication of romance novels Burnt Mountain seems designed for a few days of beach reading will be quickly taken in by the quiet and beautiful tomboy, whose father dies young and whose vengeful mother never outgrows her tendency to belittle her daughter. When Thayer Wentworth gures out young that lifes nastiest snarls may not all be loosened and smoothed and

TABLOID
Continued from page 18
boyfriend and persuade him to come back to the United States and marry her. Once she was arrested, what she describes as a romantic retreat made headlines as a sordid tale of kidnapping and bondage in a remote country cottage. While one publication sat down with her and let her share her side of what happened, the other went digging for dirt and found the real source of income that allowed McKinney to travel so expensively and don so many disguises. Morris speaks to reporters, photographers, even the private pilot who ew McKinney to England and still has fond memories of what a sexy little recracker she was. Eventually, her seemingly innocent claims of simply being an incurable romantic throw off the vibe of creepy, clingy desperation. Her penchant for changing her looks, her story and her mind seem more pathetic than intriguing. Still, Morris spirited pacing and the jaunty score from John Kusiak help maintain a tone thats part mocking,

Tabloid
Director:Errol Morris Cast: Joyce McKinney Rated: R Grade:

part suspenseful. McKinney would probably be just as famous for being famous if shed engaged in her misadventures today. The fame would just come quicker, hit harder and last a shorter time until she could parlay it into a reality show or a jewelry line on some second-tier home shopping channel. Shes actually still thrusting herself into the limelight. Feeling as if Morris wronged her with Tabloid, shes reportedly been showing up at screenings of the lm, heckling and laughing loudly and making a spectacle of herself afterward. Maybe shell appear live at a theater near you. Youll recognize her instantly: Shell be the one in the disguise.

Houses of Prayer

Houses of Prayer

Buddhist
SAN MATEO BUDDHIST TEMPLE
Jodo ShinshuBuddhist (Pure Land Buddhism) 2 So. Claremont St. San Mateo

Congregational
THE CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH OF SAN MATEO - UCC 225 Tilton Ave. & San Mateo Dr. (650) 343-3694 Worship and Church School Every Sunday at 10:30 AM Coffee Hour at 11:45 AM Nursery Care Available www.ccsm-ucc.org

Methodist
CRYSTAL SPRINGS UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Sunday Worship 10:00 AM
Sunday School Childcare Drama Choir Handbells Praise Band Sunday October 24, 2010 CSUMC will be starting a new Samoan language ministry which starts at 12:00pm. It will be led by Tapuai Louis Vaili Certied Lay Speaker. Everyone is welcome to join us! 2145 Bunker Hill Drive San Mateo (650)345-2381 www.csumc.org

Non-Denominational REDWOOD CHURCH


Our mission...
To know Christ and make him known.

901 Madison Ave., Redwood City

(650)366-1223
Sunday services:
9:00AM & 10:45AM www.redwoodchurch.org

(650) 342-2541
Sunday English Service & Dharma School - 9:30 AM Reverend Ryuta Furumoto www.sanmateobuddhisttemple.org

Church of Christ
CHURCH OF CHRIST 525 South Bayshore Blvd. San Mateo (650) 343-4997 Bible School 9:45 AM Services 11:00 AM and 2:00 PM Wednesday Bible Study 7:00 PM Minister J.S. Oxendine
www.church-of-christ.org/cocsm

Non-Denominational Lutheran

HOPE EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH


600 W. 42nd Ave., San Mateo
Pastor Eric Ackerman
Worship Service Sunday School 10:00 AM 11:00 AM

Church of the Highlands


A community of caring Christians

Synagogues PENINSULA TEMPLE BETH EL


1700 Alameda de las Pulgas San Mateo at Hwy 92 (650) 341-7701
Friday Shabbat Services 6:30 pm Except the last Friday of the Month 7:30 pm We offer Tot Shabbat, Family Services, Adult Education and Innovative Education Programs for Pre-K thru 12th Grade Join Us! Serving the Peninsula for over 50 years A member of the Union for Reform Judaism Visit our website www.ptbe.org

Congregational Baptist
PILGRIM BAPTIST CHURCH Dr. Larry Wayne Ellis, Pastor (650) 343-5415 217 North Grant Street, San Mateo Sunday Worship Services at 8 & 11 am Sunday School at 9:30 am Website: www.pilgrimbcsm.org LISTEN TO OUR RADIO BROADCAST! (KFAX 1100 on the AM Dial) Every Sunday at 5:30 PM

Buddhist

Child care provided in the nursery.

LOTUS BUDDHIST CIRCLE


(Rissho Kosei-kai of SF)
851 N. San Mateo Dr., Suite D San Mateo

FOSTER CITY ISLAND UNITED CHURCH


Foster City's only three-denomination Church Methodist, Presbyterian (U.S.A.), and United Church of Christ 1130 Balclutha Drive (at Comet) Worship/Child Care/Sunday School at 10am

Hope Lutheran Preschool admits students of any race, color and national or ethnic origin.
License No. 410500322.

Call (650)349-0100
HopeLutheranSanMateo.org

1900 Monterey Drive (corner Sneath Lane) San Bruno (650)873-4095 Adult Worship Services: Friday: 7:30 pm (singles) Saturday: 7:00 pm Sun 7, 8:30, 10, & 11:30 am, 5 pm Youth Worship Service: For high school & young college Sunday at 10:00 am Sunday School For adults & children of all ages Sunday at 10:00 am Donald Sheley, Founding Pastor Leighton Sheley, Senior Pastor

650.200.3755
English Service: 4th Sunday at 10 AM Study: Tuesday at 7 PM www.lotusbuddhistcircle.com

All are Welcome! Call (650) 349-3544

22

Weekend July 23-24, 2011

TRAVEL

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Partisan dispute will partially shut down FAA


By Joan Lowy
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Construction on a Hello Kitty theme park in China began this month.Building of theme parks and casinos are booming all over Asia.

Asia booming with casino, theme park construction


By Kelvin Chan
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

HONG KONG A rush of theme park construction across Asia that will result in new homes for Mickey Mouse, the Monkey King and Hello Kitty is also providing a nancial lifeline for the worlds elite group of entertainment designers. New theme parks, resorts and casinos are scheduled to open from Singapore to Seoul over the next several years as property developers and entertainment companies aim to draw Asias rapidly growing middle classes. Theyre betting there will be a big market for family amusement rides, live shows and the chance to pose for a picture with Snow White. The projects represent the next big growth area for skilled and experienced designers and creators as the North American market has become saturated and opportunities to design big new resorts have dried up. America has slowed down and Asia has kicked into higher gear. Especially China and Macau are really busy, said Gary Goddard, a veteran architectural designer who drew up the masterplan for the Galaxy Macau, a $1.9 billion casino resort that opened in the southern Chinese city in May. Goddard and many of his competitors are based in Southern California but theyve been doing a lot more traveling to Asia lately to work on projects and meet potential clients. Many arent strangers to the region, having worked in Japan on an earlier generation of parks and developments. Now the focus is shifting to China. Theme parks in the U.S. struggled last year with modest attendance gains as the economy eked out a muted recovery from recession. Six Flags Entertainment Corp., which runs 19 parks in North America, led for bankruptcy protection in 2009 because of heavy debt. The situation is similar in Europe, where operators are mostly renovating or buying smaller rivals. One of the few new parks planned in coming years is being built on Spains Mediterranean coast, where ofcials are teaming with U.S. lm company Paramount. The recession has also scuppered grand plans for amusement parks in the Middle East, where the vast Dubailand complex has been put on hold. Not so in Asia. Disneys long-awaited $3.7 billion park is scheduled to open in Shanghai in 2016. The Pasadena-based Hettema Group is designing a Hello Kitty park set to open southwest of Shanghai in 2014. Burbank-based Thinkwell Group is working on a Monkey Kingdom park near Beijing based on the classical Chinese epic novel also scheduled for 2014. Outside China, Southeast Asias rst Universal Studios theme park opened last year in Singapore, part of a $4.4 billion resort that also includes the city-states rst casino. Another Universal Studios is slated to open in 2014 in Seoul, South Korea that will be bigger than the companys four existing parks. Asias rst

Legoland is scheduled to open in southern Malaysia in 2013. A $2 billion, ve-star hotel and amusement park slated to open in southern Vietnam in 2014 has lured Joe Jackson, father of the late king of pop Michael Jackson, as one of its investors. The growth of the middle class in Asia is phenomenal and will drive huge investments in theme parks in the coming decade, said consultancy Aecom in its annual report on theme park development. Phil Hettema, president of The Hettema Group, said hes in talks probably every week about additional projects upcoming in China. Theres a growing market there. Theres a huge class of people looking for family entertainment, he said. Asian theme park attendance is forecast to grow to 290 million in 2012 from 249 million in 2007, while spending in that period will rise from $6.4 billion to $8.4 billion, according to PricewaterhouseCoopers. Its not just theme parks that need skilled designers. In Macau, the only place in China where casinos are legal, the Galaxy is the rst of what is expected to be several new hybrid casino-resorts aimed at turning the city into a tourist and cultural destination and reducing its reliance on gambling revenues. Goddard said he was tapped by a rival casino company for its expansion project three days after Galaxy opened. His design featured multiple rooftop nials reminiscent of Thai palaces as part of a theme evoking a mystical Asian kingdom. In Galaxys lobby, a fountain turns into a giant roulette wheel before a giant diamond rises out of the top. Its a metaphor for wishing casino goers eternal luck and prosperity, said designer Jeremy Railton. Railtons company, Entertainment Design Corp., also created the Dancing Cranes show at Singapores Sentosa Resort, which features two giant animatronic birds with video screens on their chests in a mating dance. Legions of newly afuent Chinese making more trips around the country is one big factor driving Chinas resort building boom, said Christian Aaen, a principal at consultancy Entertainment+Cultural Advisors. Theres also a large pool of young people who are looking for new things to do and are starved for entertainment, he said. Meanwhile, Chinas government is also trying to promote tourism as part of a push to boost domestic consumption. Regional governments have been partnering with private companies to build property developments anchored by theme parks that also include hotels, shops, restaurants or other services, said Aaen. But there are no guarantees of an easy ride. Hong Kongs Disneyland has never turned a prot since it opened in 2005 despite being popular with mainland Chinese visitors. The park is the smallest Disney property, which many blame for its poor performance. Asia also has its share of abandoned amusement parks, many of which suffered because of lack of investment.

WASHINGTON Efforts to avert a shutdown of the Federal Aviation Administration failed Friday amid a disagreement over a $16.5 million cut in subsidies to 13 rural communities, ensuring that at midnight nearly 4,000 people will be temporarily out of work and federal airline ticket taxes will be suspended. Lawmakers were unable to resolve a partisan dispute over an extension of the agencys operating authority, which was to expire at midnight Friday. The subsidy cut was included by Republicans in a House bill extending operating authority for the FAA, which has a $16 billion budget. Senate Democrats refused to accept the House bill with the cuts, and Republican senators refused to accept a Democratic bill without it. Lawmakers then adjourned for the weekend. But underlying the dispute on rural air service subsidies was a standoff between the GOP-controlled House and the Democratic-controlled Senate over a provision in long-term funding legislation for the FAA that would make it more difcult for airline and railroad workers to unionize. Obama administration ofcials have said the shutdown will not affect air safety. Air trafc controllers will remain on the job. But airlines will lose the authority to collect about $200 million a week in ticket taxes that go into a trust fund that pays for FAA programs.

FAA employees whose jobs are paid for with trust fund money will be furloughed, including nearly 1,000 workers at the agencys headquarters in Washington, 647 workers at FAAs technology and research center in Atlantic City, N.J., and 124 workers at the agencys training center in Oklahoma City. These are real people with families who do not deserve to be put out of work during these tough economic times, FAA Administrator Randy Babbitt said in a statement. Airline passengers could see a big savings on their airfares, but the situation is complicated. Federal taxes on a $300 round-trip airfare are about $61, but about half that are airport and security fees that will continue to be collected, according to the Air Transport Association. Airlines, alerted earlier this week that FAA authority could expire, have been making adjustments to their computer systems and websites so that at midnight, taxes will no longer be added to airfares, the association said. One airline, U.S. Airways, was already raising its fares. Other airlines may try to reap a windfall prot from the tax holiday. Passengers who bought their tickets before the shutdown, but who travel during the shutdown, may wind up due a refund, Treasury Department spokeswoman Sandra Salstrom said. Thats because its not clear whether the government can keep taxes for travel that takes place during a period when the government doesnt have authority to collect taxes, she said. Likewise, its not clear if passengers who buy tickets after midnight with no taxes included will wind up owing taxes if their travel takes place after FAAs operating authority is restored, she said. The IRS will probably issue guidance later to clarify the situation, Salstrom said.

August 7, 2011
Coyote Point San Mateo

TdP is the perennial highlight of


the Bay Area ride calendar, offering a variety of routes to suit everyone from kids (1 to 3 miles) and rsttime riders (20 miles) to series cyclists (31/56/63 mile options).
TdPreparation begins today!

TdP sponsors are ready to help with a bike tune-up, a new tire or two, or a fancy new jersey. Please visit:

Info at: www.supportparks.org 650 - 321-1638

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Weekend July 23-24, 2011

23

24

Weekend July 23-24, 2011

LOCAL/WORLD

THE DAILY JOURNAL


his breathing from the top of the rock, she said. She said it was impossible to say how many minutes passed while she was waiting for him to stop. At a hotel in the village of Sundvollen, where survivors of the shooting were taken, 21-year-old Dana Berzingi wore pants stained with blood. He said the fake police ofcer ordered people to come closer, then pulled weapons and ammunition from a bag and started shooting. Several victims had pretended as if they were dead to survive, Berzingi said. But after shooting the victims with one gun, the gunman shot them again in the head with a shotgun, he said. I lost several friends, said Berzingi, who used the cell phone of one of those friends to call police. The blast in Oslo, Norways capital and the city where the Nobel Peace Prize is awarded, left a square covered in twisted metal, shattered glass and documents expelled from surrounding buildings. Most of the windows in the 20-oor high-rise where Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg and his administration work were shattered. Other buildings damaged house government ofces and the headquarters of some of Norways leading newspapers. passed out of the state Senate and will offer more privacy to patrons of private booksellers. Senate Bill 602 prevents the disclosure of information about readers from booksellers without a warrant in a criminal case or a court order in a civil case. It also requires booksellers to report the number and type of requests they receive to track government demands for reader information. Minow, a library law consultant specializing in copyright, privacy and free speech, also supports SB 602. She is also inspired by Simitians willingness to push her idea. It shows you that one person can start something that can make a difference, Minow said.
Bill Silverfarb can be reached by email: silverfarb@smdailyjournal.com or by phone: (650) 344-5200 ext. 106.

Calendar
SATURDAY, JULY 23 Blood Drive. 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 975 Sneath Lane, San Bruno. Individuals who are at least 17 years of age (16 with parental permission), meet height and weight requirements (at least 110 pounds based on height) are are in generally good physical health may be eligible to donate blood. For more information and to schedule an appointment call 1-800-733-2767. Foreclosure Prevention and Mortgage Relief Seminar. 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. San Francisco Airport Marriott, 1800 Old Bayshore Highway, Burlingame. Presented by the Fespir Organization. Registration is required. Free. For more information and to register go to 23july2011.eventbrite.com. Resource Area for Teaching Back to School Event. 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. San Mateo County Ofce of Education, 101 Twin Dolphin Drive, Redwood City. Anybody who works with children is encouraged to visit, join and shop. Free Child Safety Seat Check. 10 a.m. to Noon. Beethoven Lot 2 at College of San Mateo, 1700 West Hillsdale Blvd., San Mateo. Hosted by Assemblyman Jerry Hill. Free. For more information call 349-1900. Filoli Orchard Tours. 10 a.m. to noon. Filoli Gardens, 86 Canada Road, Woodside. Visitors may not hike without a Docent. Hike not recommended for children under 5. Advance registration required. $15 for adults. $12 for seniors. $5 for children with student ID. For more information or for tickets go to loli.org. The PAL Blues, Arts and BBQ Festival. 11 a.m.-8 p.m. Courthouse Square, 2200 Broadway, Redwood City. This event features blues musicians from the Bay Area and beyond including Johnny Rawls, Alabama Mike, Mark Hummel, Rusty Zinn, Ron Hacker and many more. Free. For more information contact hopeinsite@gmail.com. Common Ground Garden Supply and Education Centers Edible Landscaping Tour. 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Common Ground, 559 College Avenue, Palo Alto. This is an inspirational selfguided tour through ten beautiful suburban gardens with organic edible landscapes. $35. For more information and to register call 493-6072. Free Summer Tasting Fair. 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. New Leaf Community Markets. 150 San Mateo Road, Half Moon Bay. Enjoy free samples from every department, including body care, and enter a free drawing for a BBQ grill. Free. For more information, email patti@bondmarcom.com. Ninth Annual Victorian Tea. 11:30 a.m. Plymire-Schwarz House, 519 Grand Ave., South San Francisco. An elegant, fun event to dress up in your teatime nery and celebrate with friends. Tickets $25 each. For more information and to make reservations call 589-5597. Dorian Michael & Kenny Blackwell live in concert. 2 p.m. Fireplace Room, Redwood City Library, 1044 Middleeld Road. Redwood City. Join us for a live performance of duo Kenny Blackwell mandolinist of the famed Laurel Canyon Ramblers, and guitarist Dorian Michael. For more information contact rkutler@redwoodcity.org An Evening of Wine with Roses. 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. 86 Caada Road, Woodside. Sample superb California wines and listen to Celtic violin music in Filolis Garden. For more information or to purchase tickets call 364-8300 ext. 508. Art on the Square. Noon to 8 p.m. Courthouse Square, 2200 Broadway, Redwood City. The event will take place during the PAL Blues Festival. Free. For more information go to RedwoodCityEvents.com. Kimberlye Gold. 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. The Wine Bar, HMB, Capistrano Road #22, Half Moon Bay. Join us for some rocking original from Kimberlye Gold. $5. For more information call 726-0770. Stanford Jazz Festival Presents John Calloway and the Latin Collective. 8 p.m. Campbell Recital Hall 541 Lasuen Mall, Stanford. Tickets are $32 general admission, $20 students. For more information email stephanie@urbanmusicpresents.com. Redwood Symphony Presents: Summer Pops Concert with Bella Sorella. 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. Caada College Main Theatre, 4200 Farm Hill Blvd., Redwood City. $20 online and for seniors, $25 at the door, free for children 17 and under with a paying adult. For more information or to buy tickets go to redwoodsymphony.org. After Burner Blues Meltdown Featuring HipShake. 8 p.m. Club Fox, 2209 Broadway, Redwood City. Ages 21 and up. Free admission from 8 p.m. to 8:30 p.m., $5 after 8:30. For more information go to clubfoxrwc.com. SUNDAY, JULY 24 Foreclosure Prevention and Mortgage Relief Seminar. 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. San Francisco Airport Marriott, 1800 Old Bayshore Highway, Burlingame. Registration is required. Free. For more information and to register go to 23july2011.eventbrite.com. Music in the Park, 1 p.m. to 3 p.m., Washington Park, 850 Burlingame Ave. (behind Recreation Center), Burlingame. Music by California Cowboys Country. Free. For more information call 558-7300. Summer Concert Series. 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Belmont Parks & Recreation Department, 30 Twin Pines Lane, Belmont. Highwater Blues (Danceable Blues and R & B). For more information call 592-3068. Victorian Days Walking Tours. 1:30 p.m. Ocean Shore Railroad Station, 10151 Cabrillo Highway, El Granada. Free. For more information call 7264416. Mike Kostowsyj at The Wine Bar. 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. The Wine Bar, 270 Capistrano Road #22. For more information go to thewinebarhmb.com. MONDAY, JULY 25 Lecture: Ways to Maintain Your Brain. 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. San Mateo Senior Center, 2645 Alameda de las Pulgas, San Mateo. Learn about the latest research on how to keep your brain sharp later in life. Free. For more information or to register call 522-7490. 49ers Head Coach at SVdP Store Grand Opening. 6 p.m. 1600 El Camino Real, San Bruno. San Francisco 49ers head coach Jim Harbaugh will be at the grand opening of the St. Vincent de Paul thrift store in San Bruno. For more information call 373-0522. Jazz on Main: The Mads Tolling Quartet. 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Main Street, Redwood City. Free. For more information go to redwoodcity.org. TUESDAY, JULY 26 Food Addicts in Recovery Anonymous. 9:30 a.m. to 11 a.m. Sequoia Wellness Center, 749 Brewster Ave., Redwood City. A free 12-step recovery program for anyone suffering from food obsession, overeating, undereating or bulimia. Free. For more information go to foodaddicts.org. Wild Things, Inc. 2 p.m. Menlo Park Library, 800 Alma St., Menlo Park. A wildlife show to accompany Menlo Park Librarys Summer Reading program. Free. For more information go to menloparklibrary.org. Millbrae Library Open House Event and Jazz Meets Motown Music Program. 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Millbrae Library, 1 Library Ave., Millbrae. Free. For more information email smcopr@plsinfo.org. Dancing on the Square: Country Western. 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Courthouse Square, 2200 Broadway, Redwood City. Free. For more information go to redwoodcity.org. 11 Professional Steps to Find Peace and Joy in Your Life Workshop. 6:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. Hampton Inn, 2700 Junipero Serra Blvd., Daly City. Reservation required due to limited seating. For more information or to register email aubre11@aol.com. Sustainable Gardening Lecture Series. 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. San Mateo Garden Center, 605 Parkside Way, San Mateo. Gardening instructor Deva Luna explains alternatives to lawns which reduces water and maintenance costs and do not contribute to global warming. For more information call 599-1498. For more events visit smdailyjournal.com, click Calendar.

NORWAY
Continued from page 1
severely injured, but police didnt know how many were hurt. A suspect in the shootings and the Oslo explosion was arrested. Though police did not release his name, Norwegian national broadcaster NRK identied him as 32-yearold Anders Behring Breivik and said police searched his Oslo apartment overnight. NRK and other Norwegian media posted pictures of the blond, blue-eyed Norwegian. A police ofcial said the suspect appears to have acted alone in both attacks, and that it seems like that this is not linked to any international terrorist organizations at all. The ofcial spoke on condition of anonymity because that information had not been ofcially released by Norways police. It seems its not Islamic-terror related, the ofcial said. This seems like a madmans work. The ofcial said the attack is probably more Norways Oklahoma City than it is Norways World Trade Center. Domestic terrorists carried out the 1995 attack on a

federal building in Oklahoma City, while foreign terrorists were responsible for the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks. The ofcial added, however, its still just hours since the incident happened. And the investigation is going on with all available resources. The attacks formed the deadliest day of terror in Western Europe since the 2004 Madrid train bombings, when shrapnellled bombs exploded, killing 191 people and wounding about 1,800. The motive was unknown, but both attacks were in areas connected to the ruling Labor Party government. The youth camp, about 20 miles (35 kilometers) northwest of Oslo, is organized by the partys youth wing, and the prime minister had been scheduled to speak there Saturday. A 15-year-old camper named Elise said she heard gunshots, but then saw a police ofcer and thought she was safe. Then he started shooting people right before her eyes. I saw many dead people, said Elise, whose father, Vidar Myhre, didnt want her to disclose her last name. He rst shot people on the island. Afterward he started shooting people in the water. Elise said she hid behind the same rock that the killer was standing on. I could hear against potential stalkers, Simitian said. The erosion of privacy is very incremental, Simitian said. People make choices that affect their privacy without even realizing it. Since people often use the library to research sensitive and personal topics, their privacy should not be compromised, Simitian said. Until the beginning of 2012, all emails, text messages or any other digital correspondence at the library is considered a part of the public record. That fact could potentially allow anyone to access the correspondence through a public records request, possibly exposing heaps of private and sensitive information to the general public. Another bill currently making its way through the Assembly will also add a layer of privacy protection for people who purchase books using the Internet. The Reader Privacy Act recently sure to pop up quickly. Dont look down while on the water; instead focus on whats ahead. And, although it seems goofy, the paddle is bent for a reason to help steer. San Mateo was featuring sun but lots of wind on the adventure day, requiring a deeper dig when using the paddle to move back to shore. Once on it was a nice way to cruise around the water after a day at the ofce. While many activities seem to require lots of planning and a day off of work, paddling could be a quick activity after work. Aquan Sports, located in San Carlos, offers rentals three days a week at Parkside Aquatics Park, 1097 Seal Court in San Mateo from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. on weekends and 1 p.m. to 8 p.m. Wednesdays weather permitting. Rentals are normally about $30 per hour or $50 for the day. On Wednesday restored funding for books and supplies, according to the survey. Ultimately, Godbe Research suggested a measure not more than $67 per year for four years. Burlingame voters have historically been supportive of ballot measures. In 2010, voters approved Measure B, a $180 annual parcel tax for 10 years. The measure combined two previously approved parcel taxes totaling the same amount, both of which ended this year. It generates about $1.4 million for the district annually. Measure A, a $48.3 million bond measure, was passed in 2007. Purchasing the now-vacant Hoover Elementary School at 2220 Summit Drive for $4.85 million was one of the larger purchases from the measure. At the same meeting, the board will

PRIVACY
Continued from page 1
interactions a user has through public libraries, including items such a emails or text messages, online courses, computer research and online records of items checked out. Before the Internet, library requests were typically all oral or hand-written, Minow said. Nowadays, however, librarians more frequently interact with their patrons electronically. Some things should be kept condential, Minow said. The law should help maintain a persons medical privacy, for example, if inquiries are made to the library for certain conditions, Minow said. The new privacy protection could also protect

PADDLING
Continued from page 1
balanced works the core while paddling creates an upper body workout. Add the wind a readily available natural challenge this summer and the outdoor physical activity becomes extra difcult. Lotilla, who has a long history of kayaking, learned to standup paddle when a shop at which he worked began renting the boards. Now its an enjoyable workout that can be completed in the calmer water of the Bay or the temperamental western waves of the Pacic Ocean. Lotilla offered a quick lesson before heading out into the water at Parkside Aquatic Park in San Mateo. Getting up on the board is similar to surng. Make

evenings, however, theres an open paddle from 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. For $25, a person can rent various kayaks or boards to try, said sales associate Jay Tuttle. If someone gets out there and feels uncomfortable, they can come in and try something else, he said. The staff all has a keen interest in water sports and is on hand to offer support and direction to rst timers. Those who like the challenge of balancing on calmer waters may want to try using the board for surng. Or, a growing trend it to practice yoga on the boards that are a bit wider than the average surfboard.

Heather Murtagh can be reached by email: heather@smdailyjournal.com or by phone: (650) 344-5200 ext. 105.

TAX
Continued from page 1
An $85 annual measure generated 70 percent support, which increased as the annual amount went down. Asking for $58, for example, resulted in 75 percent support. Those polled were also questioned about duration, with 67 percent supporting eight years and 73 percent supporting four years. Voters were more likely to support a measure if it maintained hands-on science classes and labs; maintained math and science programs; attracted and retained teachers; prevented teacher layoffs; maintained smaller class sizes along with art and music programs; and

consider options for the design of Hoover. Hoover is slated to reopen in 2014. With construction, design and state approval estimated to take nearly two years, the board needs to make an overall design decision soon. On Thursday, the board will be presented with three options ranging from $6.87 million to $10.8 million. All plans call for renovation of most of the site while the most expensive would include construction of a new building with ve classrooms and a day care room. The board meets 7:30 a.m. Thursday, July 28 at the District Ofce, 1825 Trousdale Drive, Burlingame.
Heather Murtagh can be reached by email: heather@smdailyjournal.com or by phone: (650) 344-5200 ext. 105.

THE DAILY JOURNAL

COMICS/GAMES
CROSSwORD PUZZLE

Weekend July 23-24, 2011

25

DOGS OF C-kENNEL

FRAZZ

PEARLS BEFORE SwINE

GET FUZZY

ACROSS 1 Embers, finally 4 Gridiron stats 7 Manner 11 Slugger Gehrig 12 Wool on clay sheep 13 Emerald Isle 14 Claims 16 Space lead-in 17 Annapolis frosh 18 Lumber flaw 19 Dolly, e.g. 20 Chevron shape 21 Stopped slumbering 24 Kerouac novel (2 wds.) 27 Collide with 28 Great bargains 30 Rather you me 32 Move like lava 34 Pore over 36 Mary of Sons and Lovers 37 Eucalyptus diners 39 Oohed and 41 Library abbr.

42 43 45 48 49 52 53 54 55 56 57

Elev. Work a muscle Booster rocket Slammer Childish At liberty Anatomical passage Hair goop Ohio college town Not allow Skirt bottom

DOwN 1 Jungfrau or Eiger 2 First course 3 Fling 4 Number of Fates 5 Telegraph signal 6 Airline to Stockholm 7 Most surly 8 Sandwich cookie 9 Gossip 10 U2 producer 12 Gauzy trap 15 Quick look

18 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 29 31 33 35 38 40 42 43 44 46 47 48 49 50 51

Cask Travel document Comic-strip bark Pathway Typee sequel Toodle-oos No way! (hyph.) Steakhouse order River in Asia Beatty of films Ripple Stiletto Smoked salmon Nefertitis god Safe harbor Taxi rider Mortgage, e.g. Almost, in verse Helm position NYC airport Crane arm Actress Hagen Freddy Kruegers street

FRIDAYS PUZZLE SOLVED

KenKen is a registered trademark of Nextoy, LLC. 2011 KenKen Puzzle LLC. All rights reserved. Dist. by Universal Uclick for UFS, Inc. www.kenken.com

7-23-11 2011, United Features Syndicate

PREVIOUS SUDOkU ANSwERS

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.

Want More Fun and Games?


Jumble Page 2 La Times Crossword Puzzle Classifieds Drabble & Over the Hedge Comics Classifieds kids Across/Parents Down Puzzle Family Resource Guide

SATURDAY, JULY 23, 2011 Certain desires that you have harbored and that you always felt were impossible to fulfill might actually become realities in the next year. As circumstances change, so will opportunities to get some things youve always wanted. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Because you are likely to be in the right place at the right time, you will get an opportunity to fulfill an important ambitious objective. It will be just what you were looking for. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- Even though you arent likely to be seeking the spotlight or any special attention, when it comes to being popular, you will easily

outpoll others for that special honor. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -- It wont be by accident that you end up being the conduit for developments that could have very special, beneficial effects upon you and your family. Youll have done something great to earn the love. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -- There will be good justification for you to have optimistic expectations when it comes to important one-on-one dealings in negotiating some kind of agreement. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -- Focus your efforts on ways to accomplish an important goal or job, and you will make it a fait accompli. Positive thinking will help you do so more easily. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- Personal interests

can be substantially enhanced through surrogates or delegates who support what you are trying to do. Get as many like-minded pals as you can to help. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -- A friend who has been looking for a means to reciprocate some very nice things youve done for him or her is likely to find a way to square the accounts. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -- A huge personal desire that isnt apt to be of a material nature might be realized through the help of some very thoughtful friends. Graciously accept what they do for you. ARIES (March 21-April 19) -- Someone who is in a position to give your career a boost has been watching you very closely and likes what he or she sees. In turn, you might like what comes of this.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -- There isnt a chance that you will find any obstructions on the path you take. This is because Lady Luck is walking in front of you, picking up anything that would make you stumble. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -- Larger than normal benefits might be coming your way from a joint endeavor in which you are asked to participate. The only stipulation is you must keep it on the QT, very hush-hush. CANCER (June 21-July 22) -- Negotiations are taking place right now on a project that someone has just started, and in which you are likely to be asked to participate. It could be that lucky break youve been hoping for. COPYRIGHT 2011 United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

26

Weekend July 23-24, 2011

THE DAILY JOURNAL

110 Employment

110 Employment

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

107 Musical Instruction


Music Lessons Sales Repairs Rentals

110 Employment
CAREGIVERS Were currently looking for experienced eldercare aides-CNAs, HHAs & Live-ins with excellent references to join our team! Good pay and excellent benefits! Drivers preferred. Call Claudia at (650) 556-9906
www.homesweethomecare.com
HOME CARE AIDES Multiple shifts to meet your needs. Great pay & benefits, Sign-on bonus, 1yr exp required. Matched Caregivers (650)839-2273, (408)280-7039 or (888)340-2273

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 800 S. Claremont St #210, San Mateo CA 94402.

Bronstein Music
363 Grand Ave. So. San Francisco

(650)588-2502 bronsteinmusic.com 110 Employment


ARTICULATE CLOSERSBroadway Sales campagin needs you! Great Environment! Part Time, Day & Eve. Call (650) 375-0113

106 Tutoring

TUTORING
Spanish, French, Italian
110 Employment 110 Employment

CAREGIVERS
2 years experience required. Immediate Placement on all assignments

Certificated Local Teacher All Ages!

(650)573-9718

CALL (650)777-9000
110 Employment 110 Employment

SALES -

Putnam Auto Group Buick Pontiac GMC


$50,000 Average Expectation a must 5 Men or Women for Career Sales Position Car Allowance Paid insurance w/life & dental 401k plan Five day work week
Top Performers earn $100k Plus!! Bilingual a plus Paid training included Call Mr. Olson 1-866-788-6267 HOUSEKEEPERS NEEDED Great Full and Part-time jobs available in homes on Peninsula and in SF Call T&CR (415)567-0956 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. Fax resume (650)344-5290 email info@smdailyjournal.com SERVERS & KITCHEN HELP. Full time or part time, dinner hours. Working permit required. (415)517-8628

DELIVERY DRIVER SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO ROUTE


Wanted: Independent Contractor to provide delivery of the Daily Journal six days per week, Monday thru Saturday, early morning. Experience with newspaper delivery required. Must have valid license and appropriate insurance coverage to provide this service in order to be eligible. Papers are available for pickup in San Mateo at 3:00 a.m. or San Francisco earlier. Please apply in person Monday-Friday only, 10am to 4pm at The Daily Journal, 800 S. Claremont St #210, San Mateo.
110 Employment 110 Employment 110 Employment 110 Employment

110 Employment

110 Employment

ASURION CORPORATION has a need for multiple Business Analysts at its location in San Mateo, California. Individual will be responsible for driving and supporting the customization and implementation of new and existing products, services and functionality for the AMA product suite. Requirements: Bachelors degree in Business, Computer Sciences or related field (equivalent foreign degree accepted). Four years experience in one or more of the following areas (or combination thereof): telecommunications industry; insurance/claims industry; or relevant IT Discipline. Expert understanding of SDLC processes required with at least two years working on IT projects in an analyst role. Must also demonstrate strong quantitative and analytical skills with a demonstrated ability to structure analysis and use the analysis to help identify root causes versus underlying symptoms and make solid recommendations for improvement. Please email resumes to Karen.scarpelli@asurion.com

ROP

your PATHWAY to SUCCESS! Career Training

Visit our website: www.smcoe.k12.ca.us/rop


CLASSES OFFERED IN DALY CITY and BURLINGAME

CLASSES START AUGUST 22, 2011


Class offerings:

DALY CITY (699 Serramonte Blvd.) - Daytime Business Office Careers Computerized Accounting and QuickBooks Insurance Billing and Coding Medical Administrative Assistant BURLINGAME (1800 Rollins Road) - Daytime Auto Body Repair and Renishing Computerized Accounting and QuickBooks Dental Assisting Insurance Billing and Coding Medical Administrative Assistant

THE DAILY JOURNAL


115 Volunteers Needed 203 Public Notices
AUTO AUCTION The following repossessed vehicles are being sold by Meriwest Credit Union---2009 Nissan Xterra #502102, 2007 Nissan Altima #485164, 2008 Ford Fusion #247995, 2008 Ford Ranger #A45818, 2008 Chrysler 300 #187379. The following repossessed vehicles are being sold by SafeAmerica Credit Union-2004 Mercedes Benz C230 #550428.The following vehicles are being sold by The United States Bankruptcy Court- 2003 Volvo S40 #004048. The following vehicle is being sold by The San Francisco Public Administrator-2003 Ford Explorer #C18086. Plus over 100 late model Sport Utilities, Pick Ups, Mini Vans, and luxury cars ---INDOORS---Charity donations sold. Sealed bids will be taken from 8am-8pm on 07/25/2011 and 8am - 5pm on 7/26/2011. Sale held at Forrest Faulknor & Sons Auction Company, 175 Sylvester Road, South San Francisco. For more information please visit our web site at www.ffsons.com.

Weekend July 23-24, 2011


203 Public Notices
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #245513 The following person is doing business as: Auto Dealers Storage, 702 Marshall Street, Redwood City, CA 94063 is hereby registered by the following owner: 255 12th St. and Kissling, LLC, CA. The business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on /s/ George Eshoo / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 06/28/2011. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 07/02/11, 07/09/11, 07/16/11, 07/23/11). FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #245571 The following person is doing business as: Direct Auto Sales, One N. Amphlett Blvd., Unit #A, San Mateo, CA 94401 is hereby registered by the following owner: Mauricio Peloia, Jr., 615 John Muir Dr., #D407, San Francisco, CA 94132. The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on /s/ Mauricio Peloia, Jr. / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 07/01/2011. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 07/02/11, 07/09/11, 07/16/11, 07/23/11).

27

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Host an Ayusa Exchange Student for a semester or a school year!


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Over the Hedge

Over the Hedge

Over the Hedge

127 Elderly Care FAMILY RESOURCE GUIDE


The San Mateo Daily Journals twice-a-week resource guide for children and families.

Every Tuesday & Weekend


Look for it in todays paper to find information on family resources in the local area, including childcare.

170 Opportunities

INVESTORS NEEDED!
Patented technology for rotisserie machines utilizing simultaneous cooking of the internal and external parts of meat without the effects of radiation. Our technology, 3xinfra will revolutionize the cooking process for food. It is a state-of-the-art technology that is designed for healthy and delicious cooking, and is very eco-conscious. For more info, visit our website at www.bialameris.com or search 3xinfra on You Tube to learn more about the product and healthy benefits of our cooking process.

CASE# CIV 506769 ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SAN MATEO, 400 COUNTY CENTER RD, REDWOOD CITY CA 94063 PETITION OF Ariadna Lopez Flores TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner, Alberto Flores Leal filed a petition with this court for a decree changing name as follows: Present name: Ariadna Lopez Flores Proposed name: Ariadna Flores Lopez THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. A HEARING on the petition shall be held on August 18, 2011 at 9 a.m., Dept. PJ, Room 2E, at 400 County Center, Redwood City, CA 94063. A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation: Daily Journal Filed: 06/30/2011 /s/ Beth Freeman / Judge of the Superior Court Dated: 06/30/2011 (Published 07/02/11, 07/09/11, 07/16/11, 07/23/11)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #245345 The following person is doing business as: Diamond in the Rough Baseball, 519 Marine View Ave., #J, BELMONT, CA 94002 is hereby registered by the following owner: Silvio Rocha, 231 Villa Terrace, Apt. #1, San Mateo, CA 94401 The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on 07/01/11. /s/ Silvio Rocha/ This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 06/16/2011. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 07/09/11, 07/16/11, 07/23/11, 07/30/11).

203 Public Notices


FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #245621 The following person is doing business as: J & S Graphics & Printing Co., 400 Forbes Blvd. #4, SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94080 is hereby registered by the following owner: Silax Chan, 37 Carmel Ave., Daly City, CA 94015. The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on 06/16/2011. /s/ Silax Chan/ This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 07/03/2011. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 07/16/11, 07/23/11, 07/30/11, 08/06/11).

210 Lost & Found


LOST - 2 silver rings and silver watch, May 7th in Burlingame between Park Rd. & Walgreens, Sentimental value. Call Gen @ (650)344-8790 LOST - DUFFEL bag. Dark red on wheels filled with workout clothes. De Anza Blvd. San Mateo April 14. Generous reward! 650-345-1700 LOST: Center cap from wheel of Cadillac. Around Christmas time. Chrome with multi-colored Cadillac emblem in center. Small hole near edge for locking device. Belmont or San Carlos area. Joel 650-592-1111.

298 Collectibles
POSTER - framed photo of President Wilson and Chinese Junk $25 cash, (650)755-8238 VASE - with tray, grey with red flowers, perfect condition, $25., (650)345-1111

299 Computers
HP PRINTER Deskjet 970c color printer. Excellent condition. Software & accessories included. $30. 650-574-3865

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #245603 The following person is doing business as: NPN Automotive, 1825 S. Grant St., #620, SAN MATEO, CA 94402 is hereby registered by the following owner: National Payment Network Inc., CA. The business is conducted by a Corpopation. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on 06/24/11. /s/ Sanj Goyle/ This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 07/06/2011. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 07/09/11, 07/16/11, 07/23/11, 07/30/11).

302 Antiques
1912 COFFEE Percolator Urn. perfect condition includes electric cord $85. (415)565-6719 ANTIQUE STOOL - Rust color cushion with lions feet, antique, $50.obo, (650)525-1410 ASSORTED ANTIQUE GLASSWARE, (different shapes and sizes) Sets $10-30 obo, (650)343-4461 CHINA CABINET - Vintage, 6 foot, solid mahogany. $300/obo. (650)867-0379 JACKET LADIES Tan color with fur collar $25. (650)308-6381 LARGE SELECTION of Opera records vinyl 78's 2 to 4 per album $8 to $20 ea. obo, (650)343-4461

Investor inquiries:
sales@bialameris.com or please call Bert, 650.892.0639, Ted, 408. 712.6435 Romi, 925.960.3121

Now is the time to get on the ground floor of this cooking revolution.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #245490 The following person is doing business as: Polka Dot Macaroni, 93 Edwards Lane, Atherton, CA 94027 is hereby registered by the following owner: Nacole Barth-Ellis, same address. The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on N/A. /s/ Nacole Barth-Ellis / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 06/27/2011. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 07/02/11, 07/09/11, 07/16/11, 07/23/11).

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #245682 The following person is doing business as: No. 9 Foot Spa, 9A El Camino Real, Millbrae, CA 94030 is hereby registered by the following owner: Li Qun Yang, 525 N. El Camino Real #302, San Mateo, CA 94401. The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on /s/Li Qun Yang/ This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 07/11/2011. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 07/16/11, 07/23/11, 07/30/11, 08/06/11).

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #245729 The following person is doing business as: Patrick Company, 23 Dockside Dr., DALY CITY, CA, 94014 is hereby registered by the following owner: Baiji Lu, same address. The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on 07/05/2011. /s/ Baiji Lu / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 07/13/2011. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 07/16/11, 07/23/11, 07/30/11, 08/06/11).

296 Appliances
AIR CONDITIONER- GE 10K BTU side mount window unit 141/2 in. wide 201/2 in. high excellent cond. SOLD! CHANDELIER (650)878-9542 NEW 4 lights $30.

CHOPPERS (4) with instructions $7/all. (650)368-3037 ELECTRIC HEATER - Oil filled electric heater, 1500 watts, $30., (650)504-3621 GEORGE FOREMAN Grill hardly used $20. (650)692-3260

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #245399 The following person is doing business as: Chews Green, 240 N. Bayshore Blvd. Apt. 207, SAN MATEO, CA 94401 is hereby registered by the following owner: Cindy Fung, same address. The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on /s/ Cindy Fung / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 06/22/2011. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 07/16/11, 07/23/11, 07/30/11, 08/06/11).

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #245795 The following person is doing business as: Nothing Bundt Cakes, 864 Laurel st, SAN CARLOS, CA 94070 is hereby registered by the following owner: CRCK, INC, CA. The business is conducted by a Corporation. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on /s/Carol Basch/ This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 07/19/2011. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 07/22/11, 07/29/11, 08/05/11, 08/12/11).

HOOVER PORTABLE VACUUM CLEANER with attachments, good condition, $35., San Mateo, (650)341-5347 MAYTAG DRYER: electric $100 SOLD! MAYTAG WASHER: full electronic controls. $100. SOLD! MONOGRAM GE 30" microwave exhaust fan $75, SOLD! with

303 Electronics
21 INCH TV Monitor with DVD $45. Call 650-308-6381 46 MITSUBISHI Projector TV, great condition. $400. (650)261-1541. COLOR TV - Apex digital, 13, perfect condition, manual, remote, $55., (650)867-2720 DEWALT HEAVY duty work site radio charger in box $100. (650)756-7878 FLIP CAMCORDER $50. (650)583-2767 PANASONIC TV 21 inch $25., (650)6378244 TV 25 inch color with remote $25. Sony 12 inch color TV, $10 Excellent condition. (650)520-0619 TV SET Philips 21 inch with remote $40., (650)692-3260 VINTAGE SEARS 8465 aluminum photo tripod + bag. Sturdy! $25 See: http://tinyurl.com/3v9oxrk 650-204-0587

RADIATOR HEATER, oil filled, electric, 1500 watts $25. (650)504-3621 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #245528 The following person is doing business as: Green Shoots Distribution, 405 Victory Ave #G, SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94080 is hereby registered by the following owner: Green Shoots Distribution, CA. The business is conducted by a Corporation. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on /s/Christopher Ziener/ This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 06/29/2011. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 07/23/11, 07/30/11, 08/06/11, 08/13/11). RCA VACUUM tube manual '42 $25. SOLD! SHOP VACUUM rigid brand 3.5 horse power 9 gal wet/dry $40. (650)591-2393 SMART SERIES 13" Magnavox TV with remote, works perfectly, only $26, 650595-3933 SUNBEAM TOASTER -Automatic, excellent condition, $30., (415)346-6038 VACUUM CLEANER excellent condition $40. (650)878-9542 VACUUM CLEANER Oreck-cannister type $40., (650)637-8244

110 Employment

110 Employment

110 Employment

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #245853 The following person is doing business as: I.C. Solutions, 400 E. Hillsdale Blvd. #308, SAN MATEO, CA 94403 is hereby registered by the following owner:Ingrid Carclina Penaranda Siwr, same address. The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on /s/Ingrid Penaranda/ This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 07/22/2011. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 07/23/11, 07/30/11, 08/06/11, 08/13/11).

297 Bicycles
BICYCLE - Sundancer Jr., 26, $75. obo (650)676-0732 GIRL'S BIKE HUFFY Purple 6-speed good cond. $35 - Angela (650)269-3712 YAKAMA 3 Bike Car Trailer w/straps 2" hitch $45., (650)843-0773

304 Furniture
2 END Tables solid maple '60's era $40/both. (650)670-7545 4 DRAWER COLE FILE CABINET -27 Deep, Letter Size dark beige, $99., (650)364-0902 42" ROUND Oak Table (with 12") leaf. Clean/Great Cond. $40. 650-766-9553. 62" X 32" Oak (Dark Stain) Coffee Table w/ 24" Sq. side Table, Leaded Beveled Glass top/Like New - $90. 650-766-9553 ARMOIRE CABINET (415)375-1617 $90., Call

298 Collectibles
1982 PRINT "A Tune Off The Top Of My Head" See: http://tinyurl.com/4y38xld 650-204-0587 $75 49ER REPORT issues '85-'87 $35/all, (650)592-2648 ARMY SHIRT, long sleeves, with pockets. XL $15 each (408)249-3858 BAY MEADOWS UMBRELLA - Colorful, large-size, can fit two people underneath. $15 (650)867-2720 BAY MEADOWS bag & umbrella $15.each, (650)345-1111 COLORIZED TERRITORIAL Quarters uncirculated with Holder $15/all, (408)249-3858 GAYLORD PERRY 8x10 signed photo $10 (650)692-3260 GLASSES 6 sets redskins, good condition never used $12./all. (650)345-1111 JACK TASHNER signed ball $25. Richard (650)834-4926 JOE MONTANA retirement book signed authenticated $39. (650)692-3260 MERCHANT MARINE, framed forecastle card, signed by Captain Angrick '70. 13 x 17 inches $35 cash. (650)755-8238

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #245845 The following person is doing business as: Sushi Kuu, 1001 Alameda de las Pulgas, BELMONT, CA 94002 is hereby registered by the following owner: Kuu, Inc., CA. The business is conducted by a Corporation. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on N/A /s/Hui Zhao/ This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 07/21/2011. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 07/23/11, 07/30/11, 08/06/11, 08/13/11).

BANQUET DINING chairs $29/all. (650)692-3260

padded

BASSET LOVE Seat Hide-a-Bed, Beige, Good Cond. Only $30! 650-766-9553 BEDROOM SET - (Childerns) 5 & 6 drawer dressers, wall mirror, 2 twin bed frames. $350/all, (617) 640-8651(cell) BREAKFAST NOOK DINETTE TABLEsolid oak, 55 X 54, $49., (650)583-8069 CHANDELIER WITH 5 lights/ candelabre base with glass shades $20. (650)504-3621 COFFEE TABLE - brown, perfect condition, nice design, with storage, $50., (650)345-1111 DINING ROOM SET - table, four chairs, lighted hutch, $500. all, (650)296-3189 DINING SET glass table with rod iron & 4 blue chairs $100/all 650-520-7921/650-245-3661 DISPLAY CASE wood & glass 31 x 19 inches $30. (650)873-4030 DRAFTING TABLE 30 x 42' with side tray. excellent cond $75. (650)949-2134

STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT of USE of FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #M-240441 The following person has abandoned the use of the fictitious business name: EC Auto, 1000 S. Claremont St., SAN MATEO, CA 94402. The fictitious business name referred to above was filed in County on 08/16/2010. The business was conducted by: Chun Huen Wong, 213 San Miguel Ave., San Mateo, CA 94403 /s/ Chun Huen Wong/ This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk-Recorder of San Mateo County on 06/24/2011. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 07/16/11, 07/23/11, 07/30/11, 08/06/11).

28

Weekend July 23-24, 2011


304 Furniture 304 Furniture
MIRROR/MEDICINE CABINET 26" $10 (650)342-7933 MIRROR/MEDICINE CABINET 16" X 30" $20 (650)342-7933 16" X

THE DAILY JOURNAL


306 Housewares
PERSIAN TEA set for 8. Including spoon, candy dish, and tray. Gold Plated. $90. (650) 867-2720 SOLID TEAK floor model 16 wine rack with turntable $60. (650)592-7483 SOUP TUREEN -white ceramic with flowers. Italian. 3 quart capacity. Has accompanying plate. Asking $30., (650)364-5319 STANDUP B.B.Q grill lamp 5ft tall. Never used. $75 obo, (650)343-4461

308 Tools
ENGINE ANALYZER & TIMING LITE Sears Penske USA, for older cars, like new, $60., (650)344-8549 leave msg. JOINTER - 6 inches, BAND SAW - 12 inches, $125. each, (415)218-8161 JOINTER PLANER Delta 6 inch 43 inch table on stand with wheels $99 415-333-8540 METAL POWER Saw needs belt $50. (650)274-7381 PRESSURE WASHER 2500 PSI, good condition, $350., (650)926-9841 RADIAL ARM SAW -10 inches old style heavy duty Black & Decker $99., Bruce (650)464-6493 SPEEDAIR AIR COMPRESSOR - 4 gallon stack tank air compressor $100., (650)591-4710 TABLE SAW 10 inch needs blade $50. (650)274-7381 TABLE SAW 10", very good condition $85. (650) 787-8219

310 Misc. For Sale


CANDLE HOLDER with angel design, tall, gold, includes candle. Purchased for $100, now $30. (650)345-1111 DANIELLE STEELE newer books - 1 hardback $3., one paperback $1., (650)341-1861 DOOM (3) computer games $15/each 2 total, (650)367-8949 DUFFEL BAGS - 1 Large Duffel Bag ,1 Xtra Lg. Duffel w Wheels, 1 Leather week-ender Satchel, All 3 at $75., (650)871-7211 ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER Smith Corona $60 650-878-9542 ELECTRONIC TYPEWRITER good condition $50., (650)878-9542 ELVIS PRESLEY $20(650)692-3260 poster book

315 Wanted to Buy GO GREEN! We Buy GOLD You Get The $ Green $
Millbrae Jewelers Est. 1957 400 Broadway - Millbrae

DRESSER WITH matching bunk/twin bed frames, includes comforters, no mattresses, $75/all, obo, 650-728-5831

bevel

END TABLE marble top with drawer with matching table $70/all. (650)520-0619 END TABLE solid marble white top with drawer $55. (650)308-6381 ENTERTAINMENT CENTER - Oak wood, great condition, glass doors, fits large TV, 2 drawers, shelves , $100/obo. (650)261-9681 FOAM INCLINER for twin bed $40 650-692-1942 FOLDING PICNIC TABLE - 8 x 30 and 7 folding, padded chairs, $100., (650)364-0902 FREE 3 pine bookcases. Nude, ready for stain or paint. 6'1" x 3' Excellent condition. SOLD! FUTON - full size excellent condition $95. Eddie 650-218-1118. HAND MADE portable jewelry display case wood and see through lid $45. 25 x 20 x 4 inches. 650-592-2648 HOSPITAL BED, new $1,100/OBO. Call 650-595-1931 LIVING ROOM chairs Matching pair high end quality $99/both, (650)593-8880 LOUNGE CHAIRS - 2 new, with cover & plastic carring case & headrest, $35. each, (650)592-7483 MATCHED PAIR, brass/carved wood lamps with matching shades, perfect, only $12.50 each, 650-595-3933 MATTRESS TOPPER chrome full size $15., (650)368-3037 MIRROR/MEDICINE CAB. 3 dr. bevel glass 30X30" $35 (650)342-7933 SOFA- BROWN, Beautiful, New $250 650-207-0897

ROCKING CHAIR - Traditional, full size Rocking chair. Excellent condition $100., (650)504-3621 SOFA (LIVING room) Large, beige. You pick up $45 obo 650-692-1942 STEREO CABINET walnut with 3 black shelves 16 x 22 x 42. $35 SM 650-341-5347 STORAGE TABLE light brown lots of storage good condition $45. (650)867-2720 TV STAND with shelves $20. SOLD!

650-697-2685

307 Jewelry & Clothing


49ER'S JACKET (650)871-7200 Adult size $50.

316 Clothes
49 SWEATSHIRT with hood size 8 extra large $100 obo. (650)346-9992 AUTHENTIC MEXICAN SOMBRERO, $40., (650)364-0902 BLACK LEATHER MOTORCYCLE JACKET - Size M, $60.obo, (650)2901960 BLACK LEATHER tap shoes 9M great condition $99. (650)558-1975 BLACK LEATHER tap shoes 9M great condition $99. (650)558-1975 BOOTS - purple leather, size 8, ankle length, $50.obo, (650)592-9141 DENIM JACKETS Ladies (2) Small/Medium, like new, $15/each, (650)577-0604

LADIES BRACELET, Murano glass. Various shades of red and blue $100 Daly City, no return calls. (650)991-2353 LADIES GOLD Lame' elbow lengthgloves sz 7.5 $15 New. (650)868-0436

GAME "BEAT THE EXPERTS" never used $8., (408)249-3858 GEORGE FOREMAN Grill good condition $15. 650-592-3327 GM CODE reader '82-'95 $20 650-583-5208 HAIR BLOWERS (2) - One Conair, one Andis Hang Up Turbo, $15. both, (650)525-1410 KITCHEN HOOD - Black, under mount, 3 diff. fan speeds, $95., (650)315-4465 MEN'S ASHTON and Hayes leather briefcase new. Burgundy color. $95 obo, (650)343-4461 METAL CABINET - 4 drawers, beige 16.5 inches W x 27 3/4 H x 27 inches D SOLD NEW LIVING Yoga Tape for Beginners $8. 650-578-8306 NORITAKE CHINA -Segovia Pattern. 4 each of dinner , salad and bread plates. like new. $35., (650)364-5319 PACHIRA PLANT 3ft. H. (Money plant) with decorative Pot $30. (650)592-2648 PERSIAN KLIN CARPET - 66x39, pink and burgandy, good condition, $90., (650)867-2720 SF GREETING Cards (300 w/envelopes) factory sealed $20/all. (650)207-2712 SLUMBER REST blue heated throw, electric, remote, $15., (650)525-1410 SPORTS BOOKS, Full of Facts, All Sports, Beautiful Collection 5 Volumes, $25. 650 871-7211 SUITCASE - Atlantic. 27 " expandable. rolling wheels. Navy. Like new. $ 45., (650)364-5319 TEA CHEST from Bombay store $35 perfect condition 650-867-2720 TRIPOD SEARS 8465 aluminum photo tripod plus bag $25. 650-204-0587 VIDEO CENTER 38 inches H 21 inches W still in box $45., (408)249-3858 WHITE MARBLE piece - all natural stone, polished face, smooth edges, 21 x 41 x 3/4 thick, $75., (650)347-5104

308 Tools
BATTERY CHARGER 40 amp needs work $15. (650)274-7381 CHAIN HOIST 2 ton $50. (650)274-7381 CHAIN HOIST- 1/2 ton $20. 3-ton $50 both new/unused, SOLD! CIRCULAR SAW, Craftsman-brand, 10, 4 long x 20 wide. Comes w/ stand - $70. (650)678-1018 CLASSIC CRAFTSMAN jig saw, cast iron base needs work $85 best offer. 650-703-9644 CLICKER TORQUE Wrench, 20 - 150 pounds, new with lifetime warranty and case, $39, 650-595-3933 CRAFTSMEN 16" scroll saw, good cond. $85. (650)591-4710 DRAFTING BOARD with machine magnetic face. Excellent Condition. Made in Paris SOLD!

306 Housewares
"PRINCESS HOUSE decorator urn "Vase" cream with blue flower 13 inch H $25., (650)868-0436 6 PANELS of burgundy and beige striped drapes. Like new. $50 obo, SOLD! CANDLEHOLDER - Gold, angel on it, tall, purchased from Brueners, originally $100., selling for $25.,(650)867-2720 DINNERWARE - 30 piece set white, like new condition, SOLD! DRIVE MEDICAL design locking elevated toilet seat. New. $45. (650)343-4461 LAMPS - 2 southwestern style lamps with engraved deer. $85 both, obo, (650)343-4461 OLD SEWING MACHINE IN CABINET Manufacturer White, 80 yrs. old, operable, SOLD!

309 Office Equipment


CALCULATOR - (2) heavy duty, tape Casio & Sharp, $30/ea, (650)344-8549 OFFICE LAMP new $7. (650)345-1111

310 Misc. For Sale


(15) GEORGE Magazines all intact $50/all OBO. (650)574-3229, Foster City 10 PLANTS (assorted) for $3.00 each, (650)349-6059 13 PIECE paint and pad set for home use $25., (650)589-2893 2 MATCHING blankets - full/queen size, solid cream color, vellux, hyproallergenic, great condition, $38., (650)347-5104 4 IN 1 stero unit. CD player broken. $20 650-834-4926 5 NEEDLEPOINT sets still in package $10/each, (650)592-2648 7 UNDERBED STORAGE BINS - Vinyl with metal frame, 42 X 18 X 6, zipper closure, $10. ea., (650)364-0902 9 CARRY-ON bags (assorted) - extra large, good condition, $10. each obo, (650)349-6059 ANGEL WITH lights 12 inches High $12. (650)368-3037 ART BOOKS hard Cover, full color (10) Norman Rockwell and others $10 each 650-364-7777 ARTIFICIAL FICUS Tree 6 ft. life like, full branches. in basket $55. (650)269-3712 BARBARA TAYLOR Bradford hardback books. 4 at $3.00 each or all for $10.00. Call (650)341-1861 BARBIE BEACH vacation & Barbie princess bride computer games $15 each, (650)367-8949 BATMAN AND James Bond Hard cover and paperback 10 inch x 12 inch $7.50 each 650-364-7777 BBQ SMOKER BBQ Grill, LP Coleman, Alaskan Cookin Machine, cost $140 sell $75. 650-344-8549 BBQ SMOKER, w/propane tank, wheels, shelf, sears model $86 650-344-8549 BEADS - Glass beads for jewelry making, $75. all, (650)676-0732 BEAUTIFUL VINTAGE PICTURE - colorful hot air balloons, 25 x 19 enclosed in glass wooden frame, very good condition, Burl., $11.SOLD! BOOK "LIFETIME" (408)249-3858 WW1 $12.,

FINO FINO
A Place For Fine Hats Sharon Heights
325 Sharon Heights Drive Menlo Park

650-854-8030
GENUINE OAKELY Sunglasses, M frame and Plutonite lenses with drawstring bag, $65 650-595-3933 JACKET (LARGE) Pants (small) black Velvet good cond. $25/all (650)589-2893 LADIES DOWN jacket light yellow with dark brown lining $35. (650)868-0436 LADIES JACKET size 3x 70% wool 30% nylon never worn $50 650-592-2648 LADIES ROYAL blue rain coat with zippered flannel plaid liner size 12 RWC $15. (650)868-0436 LADIES SHOES- size 5, $10., (650)756-6778 LANE BRYANT assorted clothing. Sizes 2x-3x. 22-23, $10-$20. ea., brand new with tags. (650)290-1960 MANS SUEDE-LIKE jacket, New, XXLg. $25. 650 871-7211 MEN'S SHOES (650)756-6778 Brown.

610 Crossword Puzzle

610 Crossword Puzzle

610 Crossword Puzzle

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle


Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis
ACROSS 1 __ Cup: Canadian football trophy 5 Theyre waved 15 Sound detected with a stethoscope 16 Much of it is shipped via the Strait of Hormuz 17 What injured parties may try to get 18 Critical period 19 Gumshoe 20 Walked 21 It will be fair weather: for the sky __: Matthew 22 Gallery event 24 Like some candle scents 26 Bach, e.g. 27 Reasonable 28 Dave Matthews Band label 31 Lander at Orly 32 Library supporter? 34 Little Caesar gangster 35 They extract oxygen from water 36 With 40-Across, nocturnal noisemaker 37 Help! predecessor 39 Viking language 40 See 36-Across 41 Fleshy-leaved plant 42 Blackmailer 43 Part of NBA: Abbr. 44 Bridge units 45 Unalaska denizen 48 See 49 Govt.s Laboratory of Hygiene, now 50 Ancient rock engraving 53 Gershon of film 54 City near Randolph Air Force Base 55 Sea of __, shallowest in the world 56 Colorful 57 Pool member DOWN 1 Ninotchka star 2 Pans opposite 3 Outlet type 4 Itch 5 .000001 meters 6 Mall map symbol 7 Showy trinket 8 Place to retire 9 Title spelled out in Art. 2 of the U.S. Constitution 10 Surfer girls 11 Restless 12 Film __ 13 Olive branch site 14 Winter scene staple 20 Comparison word 23 1930 tariff act co-sponsor 24 Philadelphia suburb 25 Pens contents 27 Unravel 28 Overhaul 29 Got ready to trap 30 Occasional stinger 32 Nomadic grazers 33 Time to attack 35 Stylists stock 38 Warning to an overindulgent bar customer 39 Bank robbers aid 42 Break 90, say 43 Acoustic 44 Green stroke 45 Lhasa __ 46 Spring 47 1928 destroyer of the village of Mascali 48 Physics unit 51 Sporty cars 52 __ cit. 53 __ order

- New, size 10, $10.,

MEN'S SUIT almost new $25. 650-573-6981 MENS SLACKS - 8 pairs, $50., Size 36/32, (408)420-5646 NEW BROWN LEATHER JACKET- XL $25., 650-364-0902

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

311 Musical Instruments


2 ORGANS, antique tramp, $500 for both. (650)342-4537 BALDWIN C-630 ORGAN. Very clean $30., (650)872-6767 FREE UPRIGHT piano Hallet Davis & Co. SOLD KIDS GUITAR for 6 years and Up $40, call (650)375-1550 PALATINO CLARINET with case, like new, $100. (650)591-4710 PIANO VINTAGE - Upright, Davis & Sons, just tuned, $600., (650)678-9007 SPANISH GUITAR 6 strings good condition $80. Call (650)375-1550. VIOLIN FOR beginner comes with music stand asking $79.00 (650) 222 2588

317 Building Materials

15% OFF
MOSS ROCK BOULDERS
Expires 8/31/11

BOOK NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC NATIONAL AIR MUSEUMS $15 (480)249-3858 BOXES MOVING storage or office assorted sizes 50 cents /each (50 total) 650-347-8061 BROTHER'S ELECTRIC TYPEWRITEr in excellent condition. $45 obo, (650)343-4461

Building and Landscaping Supplies | Natural Stone Retaining Walls | Rock, Sand and Gravel | Pavers Delivery Services

312 Pets & Animals


BIRD CAGE 14x14x8 ecellent condition $25 Daly City, (650)755-9833 COCKATIELS FOR SALE Lutino $80, Perla $45, and Pay $40 Spanish: (650) 712-1746 English: (650) 868-3660 DOG CAGE/GORILLA folding large dog cage good condition, 2 door with tray, $75.,(650)355-8949

Redwood City Concrete & Building Materials 330 Blomquist Street 650.482.4100 MF: 7:00am 4:00pm

xwordeditor@aol.com

07/23/11

BRUGMANSIA TREE large growth and in pot, $50., (650)871-7200 CAESAR STONE - Polished gray, smooth cut edges, 26x36x3/4, great piece, $65., (650)347-5104

Limited to stock on hand. No refunds or returns. Price good at the Graniterock Redwood City Concrete and Building Materials branch, only. Expires 8/31/11.

315 Wanted to Buy

315 Wanted to Buy

CORRIGATED DRAINAGE pipe perforated, 4 in. X 100 ft., Good as new $35., Redwood City, (650)367-8146 WHEELBARROW - like new, $40., (650)364-0902 WHITE STORM/SCREEN door. Size is 35 1/4" x 79 1/4". Asking $75.00. Call (650)341-1861

318 Sports Equipment


"EVERLAST FOR HER" Machine to help lose weight $40., (650)368-3037 13 ASSORTED GOLF CLUBS- Good Quality $3.50 each. Call (650) 349-6059. 2 GOLF CLUBS - Ladies, right handed, putter & driver $5/each (650)755-8238 BASKETBALL RIM, net & backboard $35/all 650-345-7132 Leave message. CLASSIC PING IRONS complete set, excellent condition, number 3 to sandwedge, $100.SOLD!. HALEX ELECTRONIC Dart board, with darts, great cond. $35. (650)591-4710

By Barry C. Silk (c)2011 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

07/23/11

MORRELL TODD Richards 75 Snowboard (Good Condition) with Burton Boots (size 6 1/2) - $50. 650-766-9553

THE DAILY JOURNAL


318 Sports Equipment
SPEEDO OPTIMUS Training Fins size 10-11. Perfect for your training. $25 call jeff 650-208-5758

Weekend July 23-24, 2011


379 Open Houses 510 Commercial for Rent 620 Automobiles
TOYOTA COROLLA 93 WAGON 243K miles, no accidents, $2700. firm, (650)483-1723 XLT FORD Ranger 02 126k miles. One owner NEW 15x8 wheels, radial tires, 5 speed, new clutch. Best offer.SOLD!

29

670 Auto Service HILLSDALE CAR CARE


WE FIX CARS Ready to help

670 Auto Parts


CARGO COVER, (black) for Acura MDX $75. 415-516-7060 CHEVY TRANSMISSION 4L60E Semi used $800. (650)921-1033 EXPLORER 02 Ford 20 inch wheel & Tire $99/all 650-669-0049 FORD 73 Maverick/Mercury GT Comet, Drive Train 302 V8, C4 Auto Trans. Complete, needs assembly, includes radiator and drive line, call for details, $1250., (650)726-9733. HEAVY DUTY jack stand for camper or SUV $15. (650)949-2134 TRUCK RADIATOR - fits older Ford, never used, $100., (650)504-3621

322 Garage Sales REDWOOD CITY 1135 Fay st. July 23 & July 24 & July 30 & July 31 Sat. & Sun. 8am-3pm Furniture Sorting and Camping Equipment, Household Items, and more

OPEN HOUSE LISTINGS


List your Open House in the Daily Journal. Reach over 82,500 potential home buyers & renters a day, from South San Francisco to Palo Alto. in your local newspaper. Call (650)344-5200

WAREHOUSE/ OFFICE AVAILABLE


Belmont/San Carlos
440 sq. ft. to 5,000 sq. ft. Starting from $664/mo. Units include rollup doors, 3 phase power, water, space heater, restrooms Great access to Hwy 101
WILLIAMS BUSINESS PARK 299 OLD COUNTY ROAD, UNIT 13 SAN CARLOS, CA 94070

call (650) 345-0101


254 E. Hillsdale Blvd. San Mateo Corner of Saratoga Ave.

625 Classic Cars


DATSUN 72 - 240Z with Chevy 350, automatic, custom, $5800 or trade. (650)588-9196 FORD 36 SEDAN Chevy 350 Automatic new brakes and new tires. $21K obo.(650)583-5956 MERCURY 67 Cougar XR7 - runs better than new. Needs Body Paint $7,500 (408)596-1112 NISSAN 87 Centura - Two door manua, stick shift, 150K miles. Clean title, good body, $1250., (415)505-3908 PLYMOUTH 72 CUDA - Runs and drives good, needs body, interior and paint, $12k obo, serious inquiries only. (650)873-8623

MB GARAGE, INC.
Repair Restore Sales
Mercedes-Benz Specialists

2165 Palm Ave. San Mateo

(650)349-2744
MERCEDES BENZ REPAIR Diagnosis, Repair, Maintenance. All MBZ Models Elliott Dan Mercedes Master Certified technician 555 O'Neil Avenue, Belmont 650-593-1300

672 Auto Stereos

380 Real Estate Services

CALL (650) 631-1151


www.williamsbusinesspark.com

MONNEY CAR AUDIO


We Sell, Install and Repair All Brands of Car Stereos
iPod & iPhone Wired to Any Car for Music Quieter Car Ride Sound Proof Your Car 31 Years Experience

THE THRIFT SHOP

BAG SALE!
July 16, 23, 30 - 10am-3pm Fill a Bag for $5 (No tax)
Episcopal Church 1 South El Camino Real San Mateo 94401

620 Automobiles Dont lose money on a trade-in or consignment! Sell your vehicle in the Daily Journals Auto Classifieds. 440 Apartments
BELMONT - prime, quiet location, view, 1 bedroom $1350, 2 bedrooms $1650. New carpets, new granite counters, dishwasher, balcony, covered carports, storage, pool, no pets. (650)344-8418 or (650591-4046 REDWOOD CITY- 1 bedroom close to downtown, $995.mo plus $600 deposit, (650)361-1200 CHRYSLER 06 300 Sedan, 28k mi., sun roof, excellent condition. $18k. (650)590-1194 FORD 93 250 flat bed, diesel, 100-gallon gas tanks, completely rebuilt, $2800. 650-481-5296 HONDA 10 ACCORD LX - 4 door sedan, low miles, $19K, (650)573-6981

630 Trucks & SUVs


FORD 05 350 Super Duty, 4x4 Crewcab, fully loaded, 125K miles, $23,500., (650)281-4750 or (650)492-0184 TOYOTA 95 PICKUP - 122K miles, runs well, SOLD!

QUALITY COACHWORKS

(650)344-0921

635 Vans
NISSAN 01 Quest - GLE, leather seats, sun roof, TV/DVR equipment. Looks new, $15,500. (650)219-6008

& Paint Expert Body and Paint Personalized Service


411 Woodside Road, Redwood City 650-280-3119

Autobody

GARAGE SALES ESTATE SALES


Make money, make room!

2001 Middlefield Road Redwood City (650)299-9991

Just $3 per day. Reach 82,500 drivers from South SF to Palo Alto
Call (650)344-5200 ads@smdailyjournal.com

640 Motorcycles/Scooters
BMW 03 F650 GS, $3899 OBO. Call 650-995-0003 HARLEY DAVIDSON 83 Shovelhead special construction, 1340 ccs, Awesome!, $5,950/obo. Rob (415)602-4535.

List your upcoming garage sale, moving sale, estate sale, yard sale, rummage sale, clearance sale, or whatever sale you have... in the Daily Journal. Reach over 82,500 readers from South San Francisco to Palo Alto. in your local newspaper. Call (650)344-5200

SAN CARLOS AUTO SERVICE & TUNE UP


A Full Service Auto Repair Facility

645 Boats
MOTOR - Evinrude for boat, 25 HP, $1000., SOLD! PROSPORT 97 - 17 ft. CC 80 Yamaha Pacific, loaded, like new, $9,500 or trade, (650)583-7946.

760 El Camino Real San Carlos (650)593-8085

SUMS AUTO REPAIR


Mobile Garage Transmission & Engine Rebuilding We Come to You! Bay Area (415)368-5969

680 Autos Wanted Dont lose money on a trade-in or consignment! Sell your vehicle in the Daily Journals Auto Classifieds. Just $3 per day.

655 Trailers
PROWLER 01 Toy carrier, 25 ft., fully self contained, $5k OBO, Trade (650)589-8765 will deliver

335 Rugs
WOOL AREA RUG - Multi-green colors, 5 X 7, $65. obo, (650)290-1960

MERCEDES 05 C-230 66k mi. Sliver, 1 owner, excellent condition, $14,000 obo (650)799-1033 MERCEDES 06 C230 - 6 cylinder, navy blue, 60K miles, 2 year warranty, $18,000, (650)455-7461 MERCEDES 06 C230 - 6 cylinder, navy blue, 60K miles, 2 year warranty, $18,000, (650)455-7461 MERCEDES BENZ 04 E320 - Excellent condition, leather interior, navigation, 77K mi., $14,900 obo, (650)574-1198 PLYMOUTH 87 Reliant, Immaculate in/out, Runs Great, Garaged. MUST SEE. Jim $3,250 (510) 489-8687

335 Garden Equipment


(2) GALVANIZED planter with boxed liners 94 x 10 x 9 $20/all, (415)346-6038 (30) BAMBOO poles 6 to 8 Ft $15/all, (415)346-6038 CRAFTSMAN GAS 4 cycle rototiller. $85.00 SOLD FLOWER POTS many size (50 pieces) $15/all, (415)346-6038 PLANTS ASSORTED $5/each obo (10 total), (650)218-8852 POTTED PLANTS (7) $5/each 650-207-0897 TABLE - for plant, $25., perfect condition, (650)345-1111

670 Auto Service

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

California Auto

670 Auto Parts


2 SNOW/CABLE chains good condition fits 13-15 inch rims $10/both San Bruno 650-588-1946

Upholstry
Auto Tops Boats All Furniture Antiques - Classic Cars 20 years of Service Call Omar for quotes

Reach 82,500 drivers from South SF to Palo Alto


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

880 AUTO WORKS


Dealership Quality Affordable Prices Complete Auto Service Foreign & Domestic Autos 880 El Camino Real San Carlos 650-598-9288 www.880autoworks.com CAMPER/TRAILER/TRUCK OUTSIDE backup mirror 8 diameter fixture. $30. 650-588-1946

Room For Rent


Travel Inn, San Carlos

$49 daily + tax $294-$322 weekly + tax


Clean Quiet Convenient Cable TV, WiFi & Private Bathroom Microwave and Refrigerator 950 El Camino Real San Carlos

SUTTON AUTO SALES Cash for Cars


Call 650-595-DEAL (3325) Or Stop By Our Lot 1659 El Camino Real San Carols

650-592-7947
1803 El Camino Real, San Carlos
Autoupholsterysancarlos.com

DONATE YOUR CAR Tax Deduction, We do the Paperwork, Free Pickup, Running or Not - in most cases. Help yourself and the Polly Klaas Foundation. Call (800)380-5257. Wanted 62-75 Chevrolets Novas, running or not Parts collection etc. So clean out that garage Give me a call Joe 650 342-2483

(650) 593-3136
Mention Daily Journal

Cleaning Cabinetry Contractors Cleaning

De Martini Construction
General Contractor Doors Windows Bathrooms Remodels Custom Carpentry Fences Decks Licensed & Insured CSLB #962715

MENAS Cleaning Services (650)704-2496


Great Service at a Reasonable Price

RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL Cleaning


16+ Years in Business

Cabinetry

Carpet Windows Move in/out


LICENSED & INSURED
Professional | Reliable | Trustworthy

Cell (650) 307-3948 Fax (650) 692-0802

Concrete

30

Weekend July 23-24, 2011


Hauling

THE DAILY JOURNAL


Moving ARMANDOS MOVING
Specializing in: Homes, Apts., Storages Professional, friendly, careful. Peninsulas Personal Mover Commercial/Residential
Fully Lic. & Bonded CAL -T190632

Construction

Hardwood Floors

Hardwood Floors

Hardwood Floors

Call Armando (650) 630-0424

BELMONT CONSTRUCTION
Residential & Commercial Carpentry & Plumbing Remodeling & New Construction Kitchen, Bath, Structural Repairs Additions, Decks, Stairs, Railings Lic#836489, Ins. & Bonded All work guaranteed Call now for a free estimate

KO-AM
HARDWOOD FLOORING
Hardwood & Laminate Installation & Repair Refinish High Quality @ Low Prices Call 24/7 for Free Estimate

Painting

GOLDEN WEST PAINTING


Since 1975 Commercial & Residential Excellent References Free Estimates (415)722-9281
Lic #321586

800-300-3218 408-979-9665
Construction Electricians
Lic. #794899

650-766-1244
Kevin@belmontconstructionca.com

CAL-STAR CONSTRUCTION
License Number: 799142

CF ELECTRIC
Commercial Industrial Remodeling Additions Charles Frederick Lic #857652 Email: cfelectric@sbcglobal.net Free Estimates

Hauling

(650) 580-2566
What we do: New Construction Additions Kitchen/Bath remodeling Electric & plumbing Painting: exterior/exterior Earthquake retrotting Siding Decks & Stairs Carpentry Windows Concrete work We have payment plans

(650)274-6178 www.cfelectric.co

HONEST PROFESSIONAL PAINTING Very Affordable Prices Excelent References Free Writen Estmates Lic. 957975 Top Quality Painting (650) 200-0655

E A J ELECTRIC
Residential/Commercial

JON LA MOTTE

PAINTING
Interior & Exterior Pressure Washing Free Estimates

650-302-0728
Lic # 840752 Gardening

(650)368-8861
Lic #514269

Decks & Fences

NORTH FENCE CO.


Lic #733213

J.B. GARDENING SERVICE


Maintenance, New Lawns, Sprinkler Systems, Clean Ups, Fences, Tree Trimming, Concrete work, Brick Work, Pavers, and Retaining Walls. Free Estimates

MTP
LOW RATE HAULING
Same Day Service Available Any household junk/misc. items, garage clean-up, leftover items from garage sales, backyard clean-up We recycle! Free estimates! Painting/Waterproofing Drywall Repair/Tape/Texture Power Washing-Decks, Fences No Job Too Big or Small
Lic.# 896174

Specializing in:

Redwood Fences Decks Retaining Walls

Call Mike the Painter

Phone: (650) 345-6583 Cell: (650) 400- 5604

(650)271-1320 Tile

AM/PM HAULING
JOSES COMPLETE GARDENING
and Landscaping Full Service Includes: Also Tree Trimming Free Estimates (650)315-4011
Haul Any Kind of Junk Residential & Commercial Free Estimates! We recycle almost everything! Go Green!

(650)518-1187
HVAC

650-756 0694
WWW N O R T H F E N C E C O .COM

CUBIAS TILE
Marble, Stone & porcelain Kitchens, bathrooms, floors, fireplaces, entryways, decks, tile repair, grout repair Free Estimates Lic.# 955492

Call Joe (650)722-3925

General Contractor

TED ROSS
Fences Decks Balconies Boat Docks
25 years experience
Bonded & Insured. Lic #600778

Handy Help

B BROS HAULING
Free Estimates
Junk & Debris Removal

Mario Cubias (650)784-3079

ALL HOME REPAIRS


Carpentry, Cabinets, Moulding, Painting, Drywall Repair, Dry Rot, Minor Plumbing & Electrcal & More! Contractors Lic# 931633/Insured

Joe Byrne 650-271-0956 Ofce 650-588-8208


Furnaces Water Heater Air Condition

(415)990-6441

(650)619-5943
BOB HAULING
SAME DAY SERVICE Free estimates Reasonable rates No job too large or small

MARSH FENCE & DECK CO.


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

FREE CARBON MONOXIDE FREE DISPOSABLE FILTERS FREE INSPECTIONS


FOR MONTHS OF JULY, AUG & SEPT.

CALL DAVE (650)302-0379


HOUSE REPAIR & REMODELING HANDYMAN Plumbing, Electrical, Carpentry, Kitchen & Bath Rem, Floor Tile, Wood Fences, Painting Work. Free Estimates

Kitchens

Window Washing

(650)995-3064

KEANE KITCHENS
1091 Industrial Road Suite 185 - San Carlos
info@keanekitchens.com 10% Off and guaranteed completion for the holidays.

Francisco Ramirez

MORALES
HANDYMAN
Fences Decks Arbors Retaining Walls Concrete Work French Drains Concrete Walls Any damaged wood repair Powerwash Driveways Patios Sidewalk Stairs Hauling $25. Hr./Min. 2 hrs.

(650)504-4199

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

Call now 650-631-0330

RDS HOME REPAIRS


Quality, Dependable Handyman Service
General Home Repairs Improvements Routine Maintenance

Landscaping

(650)573-9734
www.rdshomerepairs.com

Free Estimates 20 Years Experience

(650)921-3341
NORTH FENCE CO. - Specializing in: Redwood Fences, Decks & Retaining Walls. www.northfenceco.com (650)756-0694. Lic.#733213

SENIOR HANDYMAN
Specializing in Any Size Projects

Painting Electrical Carpentry Dry Rot


40 Yrs. Experience Retired Licensed Contractor

(650)201-6854
Electricians

ALL ELECTRICAL SERVICE

SMALL JOBS PREFERRED

650-322-9288
for all your electrical needs
ELECTRIC SERVICE GROUP

Steves Handyman Service Prompt, Tidy, Friendly Stephen Pizzi

(650)533-3737
Lic.#888484 Insured & Bonded

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

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Weekend July 23-24, 2011

31

Attorneys

Divorce

Food SIXTEEN MILE HOUSE


Millbraes Finest Dining Restaurant

Health & Medical

Legal Services LEGAL DOCUMENTS


Affordable non-attorney document preparation service Registered & Bonded Divorces, Living Trusts, Corporations, Notary Public

Real Estate Loans


REAL ESTATE LOANS
We Fund Bank Turndowns!
Direct Private Lender Homes Mixed-Use Commercial Based primarily on equity FICO Credit Score Not a Factor PURCHASE, REFINANCE, INVESTOR, & REO FINANCING Investors welcome Loan servicing since 1979

* BANKRUPTCY *
Huge credit card debt? Job loss? Foreclosure? Medical bills?

Come Sing Karaoke Sat. Night 9 pm-12 am


Closed Mondays! www.sixteenmilehouse.net

HAPPY FEET MASSAGE


2608 S. El Camino Real & 25th Ave., San Mateo

YOU HAVE OPTIONS


Call for a free consultation (650)363-2600 This law firm is a debt relief agency

DIVORCE CENTERS OF CALIFORNIA


Low-cost non-attorney service for Uncontested Divorce. Caring and experienced staff will prepare and le your forms at the court.
Registered and Bonded Se habla Espaol.

448 Broadway (650)697-6118

(650)638-9399
$30.00/Hr Foot Massage $50.00/Hr Full Body Massage

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

AUTO ACCIDENT?
Know your rights.
Free consultation Serving the entire Bay Area Law Offices of Timothy J. Kodani Since 1985

SUNDAY CHAMPAGNE

BRUNCH

Crowne Plaza
1221 Chess Dr., Hwy. 92 at Foster City Blvd. Exit Foster City

REVIV
MEDICAL SPA
www.revivmedspa.com 31 S. El Camino Real Millbrae

Marketing

650-348-7191
Wachter Investments, Inc. Real Estate Broker #746683 Nationwide Mortgage Licensing System ID #348268 CA Dept. of Real Estate

1-800-LAW-WISE (1-800-529-9473)

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

(650)570-5700

www.800LawWise.com Beauty

650.347.2500
The Bay Areas very best Since 1972 www.divorcecenters.com We are not a law rm. We can only provide self help services at your specic direction.

(650)697-3339
THAI TIME Restaurant & Bar
Join us for our Daily Lunch Specials
1240 El Camino Real San Carlos (650)596-8400

KAYS HEALTH & BEAUTY


Facials, Waxing, Fitness Body Fat Reduction Pure Organic Facial $48. 1 Hillcrest Blvd, Millbrae (650)697-6868

Food

CAFE GRILLADES
Breakfast Lunch Dinner 2009 1st Place Winner Best Crepes

STOP SMOKING IN ONE HOUR Hypnosis Makes it Easy Guaranteed Call now for an appointment or consultation 888-659-7766

Massage Therapy

ASIAN MASSAGE
$48 per Hour
New Customers Only Open 7 days, 10 am -10 pm 633 Veterans Blvd., #C Redwood City

Real Estate Services

THE AMERICAN BULL BAR & GRILL


14 large screen HD TVs Full Bar & Restaurant

ZIP REALTY
Representing buyers and sellers! Call or Email Larry, RE Professional

TOENAIL FUNGUS?
FREE Consultation for Laser Treatment

Let the beautiful you be reborn at PerfectMe by Laser


A fantastic body contouring spa featuring treatments with Zerona, VelaShape II and VASERShape. Sessions range from $100$150 with our exclusive membership! To find out more and make an appointment call (650)375-8884

851 Cherry Ave., #16 San Bruno (650)589-3778


www.cafegrillades.com

www.theamericanbull.com
1819 El Camino, in Burlingame Plaza

(650)347-0761
Dr. Richard Woo, DPM 400 S. El Camino Real San Mateo

(650)556-9888

(650)773-3050
Lapanozzo@gmail.com
Lic #01407651

(650)652-4908
THE SWINGIN DOOR PUB
Happy Hour Mon.-Fri. 4-6 pm 1/2 Price Food Specials Premium Imported Beers only $3.00 106 East 25th Ave. San Mateo (650)522-9800 www.TheSwinginDoor.com

GODFATHERS Burger Lounge


Gourmet American meets the European elegance ....have you experienced it yet? Reservations & take out

MASSAGE
119 Park Blvd. Millbrae -- El Camino Open 10 am-9:30 pm Daily

Seniors

(650)871-8083
Hairstylist
SUNFLOWER MASSAGE
Grand Opening! $10. Off 1-Hour Session!

(650) 637-9257
1500 El Camino Real Belmont, CA 94002

Burlingame Villa & Mills Estate Villa


- Assisted Living - Dementia Care - Respite, Hospice - Post-Op/Vacation Care 1733 California Drive Burlingame

GOT BEER? We Do!


Join us for Happy Hour $3. Pints M-F, 4-6 pm

Fitness

SUPERCUTS
Every Time
1250 El Camino Real -- Belmont 945 El Camino Real -South San Francisco 15 24th Avenue -- San Mateo 1222 Broadway -- Burlingame

1482 Laurel St. San Carlos


(Behind Trader Joes) Open 7 Days/Week, 10am-10pm

BURLINGAME perfectmebylaser.com

DOJO USA
World Training Center
Martial Arts & Tae Bo Training

(650)508-8758

Cellular
VERIZON CAR charger, still in sealed factory package, $10, 650-595-3933

Steelhead Brewing Co. 333 California Dr. Burlingame (650)344-6050


www.steelheadbrewery.com

(650)692-0600
Needlework
Lic.#4105088251/ 415600633

www.dojousa.net
731 Kains Ave, San Bruno

(650)589-9148

Insurance

LUV2 STITCH.COM
Needlepoint! Fiesta Shopping Center
747 Bermuda Dr., San Mateo

Travel

Computer
APPLE STYLEWRITER printer only $20, 650-595-3933 MACINTOSH COMPUTER complete with monitor, works perfectly, only $99, 650-595-3933

GULLIVERS RESTAURANT
Early Bird Special Prime Rib Complete Dinner Mon-Thu
1699 Old Bayshore Blvd. Burlingame

Furniture

Bedroom Express
Where Dreams Begin
2833 El Camino Real San Mateo - (650)458-8881 184 El Camino Real So. S. Francisco -(650)583-2221 www.bedroomexpress.com

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

(650)571-9999
Pet Services

(650)692-6060 HOUSE OF BAGELS SAN MATEO


OPEN EVERYDAY 6:30AM-3PM Bagels,Santa Cruz Coffee, Sandwiches, Wifi, Kids Corner Easy Parking

Dental Services
A BETTER BETTER DENTIST A Better Smile New Clients Welcome

BOOMERANG PET EXPRESS


All natural, byproduct free pet foods! Home Delivery
www.boomerangpetexpress.com

Health & Medical

GOUGH INSURANCE & FINANCIAL SERVICES


www.goughinsurance.com

Dr. Nanjapa DDS (650) 477-6920


Center for Dental Medicine Bradley L. Parker DDS
750 Kains Avenue, San Bruno 650-588-4255
www.sanbrunocosmeticdentist.com ------------------

680 E. 3rd Ave & Delaware

(650)548-1100

BAY AREA LASER THERAPY


GOT PAIN? GET LASER! CALL NOW FOR 1 FREE TREATMENT

(650)989-8983

(650)342-7744
CA insurance lic. 0561021

JACKS RESTAURANT
Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner 1050 Admiral Ct., #A San Bruno

(650)212-1000 (415)730-5795
Blurry Vision? Eye Infections? Cataracts? For all your eyecare needs.

Jewelers

Call Now To Get Your Free Initial Implant Consultation

(650)589-2222
JacksRestaurants.com NOW OPEN!

MAYERS JEWELERS
We Buy Gold! Bring your old gold in and redesign to something new or cash it in!
Watch Battery Replacement $9.00 Most Watches. Must present ad.

Video

Video

PENINSULA OPHTHALMOLOGY GROUP

General Dentistry for Adults & Children


DR. ANNA P. LIVIZ, DDS
324 N. San Mateo Drive, #2 San Mateo 94401

Burlingame Farmers Market


Rich Mans QualityPoor Mans Prices

1720 El Camino Real #225 Burlingame 94010

(650) 697-3200

1236 Broadway Ave., Burl.


burlingamefarmersmarket.com

EXAMINATIONS & TREATMENT

(650)242-1011 SHANGHAI CLUB


Chinese Restraunt & Lounge We Serve Dim Sum

(650)343-5555
---------------------------------------------------

$65.Exam/Cleaning
(Reg. $189.)

of Diseases and Disorders of the Eye Dr. Andrew C Soss O.D., F.A.A.O. 1159 Broadway Burlingame (650)579-7774

Jewelry & Watch Repair 2323 Broadway Redwood City

(650)364-4030
Video Video Video

$65. Exam/FMX
(Reg. $228.)
New Patients without Insurance

1107 Howard Ave. Burlingame

(650)342-9888
shanghaiclunsfo.com

GREEN ISLAND HEALTH CENTER


Asian Massage & Bodywork Salon Open 7 Days a Week 10am - 9pm Grand Opening $10 off 1 Hour Session

390 El Camino Real Suite U, Belmont. X St Davy Glen Rd

(650)508-1168

32

WE B BUY
Weekend July 23-24, 2011

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Coins

Dental Gold

Jewelry

Watches

Platinum

Diamonds

Any Condition!
Expert Fine Watch & Jewelry Repair

$50
OFF ANY
ROLEX SERVICE OR REPAIR
MUST PRESENT COUPON. EXPIRES 7/31/11
Not affiliated with any watch company.
Only Authentic ROLEX Factory Parts Are Used

Deal With Experts Quick Service Unequal Customer Care Estate Appraisals Batteries

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