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A NEW WIZARDING

ADVENTURE BEGINS
WEEKEND JOURNAL PAGE 19

STIFF RESISTANCE

COUGARS WILL
DEFEND TITLE

IRAQI FORCES ADVANCE INTO MOSUL UNDER FIRE, ONE


SOLDIER KILLED
WORLD PAGE 9

SPORTS PAGE 11

Leading local news coverage on the Peninsula


www.smdailyjournal.com

Weekend Nov. 19-20, 2016 XVII, Edition 81

Future of two downtown sites under scope


San Mateo-owned redevelopment property may become housing and parking
By Samantha Weigel
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

With the future of downtown San


Mateo in flux and an increasing
demand for affordable housing
options, the council and community will soon be tasked with
determining the best uses for two
city-owned properties long slated

for redevelopment.
The City Council meets Monday
night to consider numerous
important issues including housing redevelopment on city and privately owned parcels, how to pay
for flood protection improvements aimed at alleviating costly
insurance for homeowners in the
North Shoreview neighborhood,

enacting stricter requirements for


rental property owners to maintain their units, and updating its
vision for downtown.
One significant step will be for
the city to initiate its search for
proposals to redevelop the Worker
Resource Center and former
Kinkos sites along Fourth Avenue
near downtown.

The properties are some of the


citys last remaining remnants of
its former redevelopment agency,
which, in part, used tax funds for
affordable housing purposes
before Gov. Jerry Brown dissolved
them in 2012.
Redevelopment agencies were
a great tool to invest in communities and to invest in affordable

housing projects and, without that


tool, we struggled during very difficult economic years to not monetize whatever assets we had available. Holding on to [these properties] was a phenomenal accomplishment during challenging
years, said Mayor Joe Goethals.

See PROPERTY, Page 24

Immigration
fears arising
with election
Trump tough talk stirs anxiety across
the nation, regardless of legal status
By Sophia Tareen
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

DOROTHEA LANGE COLLECTION, THE OAKLAND MUSEUM OF CALIFORNIA. GIFT OF PAUL S. TAYLOR

Dorothea Lange photographs presented by local artist Ellen Chong to be shown in the Louise Lovett collection
exhibited next month. The series of private photographs document the friendship between the famous
photographer and Lovett, who was Chongs grandmother.

Exhibiting a personal piece of the past


Artist shares private Dorothea Lange photographs in upcoming museum show
By Austin Walsh
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

AUSTIN WALSH/DAILY JOURNAL

Ellen Chong in her studio at the Peninsula Museum of Art in Burlingame.

Family heirlooms are slated to


be the focus of an upcoming
Burlingame museum exhibit, as a
local artist will soon share with
the world private images of her
ancestors captured by one of the
nations most notable photographers.
Ellen Chong, a San Mateo resident and artist affiliated with the
Peninsula Museum of Art, will
present 20 exclusive images of her
grandmother Louise Lovett taken
by world-famous photographer
and former family friend Dorothea
Lange.

See LANGE, Page 18

CHICAGO Immigration hotlines are buzzing. Legal clinics are


seeing an influx of clients. Public
schools are fielding frantic questions from parents and students.
Since the election, Donald
Trumps tough talk on immigration has stirred anxiety nationwide among immigrants regardless
of legal status. They are turning to
lawyers,
schools,
advocacy
groups and congressional offices
for help.
Were operating with a lot of
unknowns, and a certain amount of

fear comes with


that,
said
V a n e s s a
Esparza-Lspez,
a
managing
attorney at the
Ch i cag o -b as ed
Na t i o n a l
Immigrant
Donald Trump Justice Center.
In Chicago, a
hotline run by the states largest
immigrant-rights group received
more than 330 calls in the week
after the election, compared with
the usual 100 or so. Denver school
officials sent a letter to parents in

See TRUMP, Page 24

Foster City developers


to pay for housing needs
Council considers commercial linkage fees
By Samantha Weigel
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

Developers looking to expand


in Foster City could soon be
requi red t o co n t ri b ut e t o ward
addressing the regional affordable housing crisis as the council considers fees to help offset
the impacts of new office, retail

and hotel space.


Officials will meet Monday to
discuss one of the higher linkage
fee rates in San Mateo County as
the city considers ways to support
lower-income earners struggling
to afford the areas high cost of
living.

See FEES, Page 18

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FOR THE RECORD

Weekend Nov. 19-20, 2016

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Thought for the Day


The facts are always less
than what really happened.
Nadine Gordimer, Nobel Prize-winning author

This Day in History

1969

Apollo 12 astronauts Charles Conrad


and Alan Bean made the second
manned landing on the moon.

In 1 7 9 4 , the United States and Britain signed Jays Treaty,


which resolved some issues left over from the
Revolutionary War.
In 1 8 3 1 , the 20th president of the United States, James
Gareld, was born in Orange Township, Ohio.
In 1 8 6 3 , President Abraham Lincoln dedicated a national
cemetery at the site of the Civil War battleeld of
Gettysburg in Pennsylvania.
In 1 9 1 5 , labor activist Joe Hill was executed by ring
squad in Utah for the murders of Salt Lake City grocer John
Morrison and his son, Arling.
In 1 9 1 9 , the Senate rejected the Treaty of Versailles by a
vote of 55 in favor, 39 against, short of the two-thirds
majority needed for ratication.
In 1 9 2 4 , movie producer Thomas H. Ince died after celebrating his 42nd birthday aboard the yacht of newspaper
publisher William Randolph Hearst. (The exact circumstances of Inces death remain a mystery.)
REUTERS
In 1 9 4 2 , during World War II, Russian forces launched their Huge waves crash on the San Esteban de Pravia seafront in the northern Spanish region of Asturias.
winter offensive against the Germans along the Don front.
Kordax. The baby was rescued and robotic body), Negative Man (he had a
In 1 9 5 9 , Ford Motor Co. announced it was halting producradioactive body) and Elasti-Girl (she
raised by a lighthouse keeper.
tion of the unpopular Edsel.
could grow and shrink). They were led
***
In 1 9 7 7 , Egyptian President Anwar Sadat became the rst
When radio reporter Billy Batson by The Chief, a genius paraplegic that
Arab leader to visit Israel.
shouted SHAZAM!, he became protected the innocent with his team
In 1 9 8 5 , President Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader
Captain Marvel, a superhero with the of crime fighters.
Mikhail S. Gorbachev met for the rst time as they began
powers of several Roman gods.
their summit in Geneva.
***
***
The Green Hornet debuted in a 1936 The Doom Patrol series ended very draradio series on WXYZ radio in Detroit. matically. The team was killed off in a
The radio program ran until 1952.
1968 comic book.
***
***
cientist Barry Allen was struck by The Atom, also known as the Mighty
Mite,
can
shrink
himself
and
his
lightning while working in his
Captain America was a patriotic superlab. He was splashed with chemi- clothing to microscopic size.
hero during World War II. His usual
***
cals that gave him super-speed. He
enemies were Nazis and Japanese
Psychologist
William
Moulton troops.
became The Flash.
Marston (1893-1947) created Wonder
***
***
Woman. He also invented an early
An ongoing question about who was
form of the lie detector polygraph test.
faster

Superman
or
The
Flash

was
The Ant-Mans girlfriend was The
Actress-director
Talk show host
Actress Meg Ryan
***
solved in the 1970 DC Comic Book
Jodie Foster is 54.
Larry King is 83.
is 55.
Douglas Fairbanks Sr. (1883-1939) Wasp.
Former General Electric chief executive Jack Welch is 81. No. 198. In that issue, Superman and starred as the swashbuckling hero in
***
The Flash raced around the universe.
the 1920 silent film The Mark of
Talk show host Dick Cavett is 80. Broadcasting and sports Flash won.
Zorro. The same year, he married A n s w e r: Clark Kent, Supermans
mogul Ted Turner is 78. Singer Pete Moore (Smokey Robinson
***
and the Miracles) is 77. Former Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, is The Silver Surfer absorbs life-main- Hollywood sweetheart Mary Pickford alter-ego, work s as a reporter at the
Daily Planet. Peter Park er work s as a
77. Former Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy G. taining cosmic energy directly (1892-1979). The famous couple was
photographer for the Daily Bugle and
regarded
as
Hollywood
Royalty.
Thompson is 75. Fashion designer Calvin Klein is 74. through his silver skin. He does not
sells pictures of himself as Spiderman
***
Sportscaster Ahmad Rashad is 67. Actor Robert Beltran is 63. need to eat, breathe or sleep.
Filmmaker George Lucas (born 1944) to the paper. Britt Reid is the newspaActress Kathleen Quinlan is 62. Actress Glynnis OConnor is
***
wanted to remake the Flash Gordon per publisher of the Daily Sentinel by
61. Broadcast journalist Ann Curry is 60. Former NASA astro- Bodybuilder Lou Ferrigno (born 1952) movie serials from the 1930s into a day and crime fighter Green Hornet at
naut Eileen Collins is 60. Actress Allison Janney is 57. Rock stands 6 feet 5 inches tall and weighed feature length movie. The rights to the night.
musician Matt Sorum (Guns N Roses, Velvet Revolver) is 56. 300 pounds when he starred as the Hulk comic book character were not availon the television show The Incredible able, so he went on to make Star
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
Hulk (1978-1982).
by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
Wars (1977) which had many influKnow It All is by Kerry McArdle. It runs in
***
ences from Flash Gordon.
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
the weekend edition of the Daily Journal.
***
Aquaman was abandoned as a baby. He
one letter to each square,
Questions?
Comments?
Email
to form four ordinary words.
was born with blonde hair, which was The original Doom Patrol was made up knowitall(at)smdailyjournal.com or call 344believed to signify the Curse of of Robotman (a human brain in a 5200 ext. 128.
ALOTG

Birthdays

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All Rights Reserved.

PUNIT

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Local Weather Forecast

Fantasy Five

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Daily Four
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Daily three midday


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Daily three evening

Mega number

The Daily Derby race winners are Gorgeous


George, No. 8, in first place; Hot Shot, No. 3, in
second place; and Winning Spirit, No. 9, in third
place. The race time was clocked at 1:45.25.
The San Mateo Daily Journal
1900 Alameda de las Pulgas, Suite 112, San Mateo, CA 94403
Publisher: Jerry Lee
Editor in Chief: Jon Mays
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Saturday : Breezy...Rain. Highs in the


lower 60s. South winds 20 to 30 mph.
Gusts up to 50 mph in the morning.
Saturday ni g ht: Breezy. Rain in the
evening...Then rain likely after midnight.
Lows in the mid 50s. South winds 20 to 30
mph decreasing to 10 to 20 mph after midnight.
Sunday : Rain. Highs in the lower 60s. Southwest winds 10
to 15 mph.
Sunday ni g ht: Mostly cloudy. A chance of rain. Lows
around 50.
Mo nday : Partly cloudy. A slight chance of rain. Highs in
the lower 60s.
Mo nday ni g ht and Tues day : Partly cloudy. Lows in the
upper 40s. Highs in the lower 60s.
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As a public service, the Daily Journal prints obituaries of approximately 200 words or less with a photo one time on the date of the familys choosing. To submit obituaries, email
information along with a jpeg photo to news@smdailyjournal.com. Free obituaries are edited for style, clarity, length and grammar. If you would like to have an obituary printed
more than once, longer than 200 words or without editing, please submit an inquiry to our advertising department at ads@smdailyjournal.com.

LOCAL

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Record holiday travel expected


By Keith Burbank
BAY CITY NEWS SERVICE

Thanksgiving weekend travel at Bay Area


airports is expected to be busier than last
year and among Californians holiday weekend travel will be the busiest in the last nine
years, airport and AAA officials said.
A record number of Californians will travel more than 50 miles over the
Thanksgiving holiday, with area airports
expecting passenger traffic to increase anywhere from 5.7 to 15 percent.
More than 5.8 million Californians will
be on the roads, in the air or on boats and
trains to visit family and friends, according
to AAA officials. Thats an increase of 3.1
percent from last year. People are feeling
very confident about the economy, AAA

spokeswoman Cynthia Harris said. They


have more discretionary income to afford a
trip.
Median household income across the U.S.
rose 5.2 percent last year compared with
2014, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
Thats the first annual increase since 2007.
Employment has been growing nationwide. In the Bay Area, unemployment in
more than one county is below 4 percent.
Officials with San Francisco International
Airport are expecting passenger traffic to
increase 5.7 percent this year compared
with last year as an expected 6.5 million
people pass through airline gates between
today and Jan 2.
Passenger traffic at San Jose Mineta
International Airport is expected to increase
as much as 15 percent this Thanksgiving

weekend. At Oakland International Airport,


passenger traffic is expected to rise by 10
percent over the Thanksgiving holiday, airport spokeswoman Keonnis Taylor said.
The Sunday after Thanksgiving is expected to be the busiest day this weekend for
travel at airports in Oakland and San
Francisco. San Jose airport officials said
Thanksgiving travel will be the busiest on
Wednesday, the Sunday after Thanksgiving
and the following day.
The expected surge in travel across
California on the upcoming holiday has
Amtrak officials planning to add seats and
expand schedules for people traveling in the
state.
Crews will be adding seats on Capitol
Corridor, Pacific Surfliner and San Joaquin
routes.

San Mateo-Foster City board to ask for school tax


DAILY JOURNAL STAFF REPORT

Voters within the San Mateo-Foster City


Elementary School District boundaries will
be asked to vote on an extension of a $209
parcel tax in an all-mail ballot March 28,
the Board of Trustees unanimously decided
Thursday night.
A survey conducted earlier this fall showed
76 percent of likely local voters would
favor renewing the districts $209 parcel
tax, according to a Thursday, Sept. 29, presentation by pollster Brian Godbe to the district Board of Trustees.
The tax is necessary to fund a variety of
essential educational services which could

be put on the chopping block should the


extension not receive adequate support,
according to district officials.
The tax amount has been paid by property
owners in San Mateo and Foster City since
2010. The beneficiaries of the estimated $7
million in annual revenue will continue to
be science, technology, engineering and
math instruction as well as art, drama and
music programs along with school
libraries. The funding was set to expire in
June 2017 and the mail-in ballot measure
would be extended for another nine years.
It is critical to continue to support educational programs for every elementary and

Important Notice
The NAACP - San Mateo Branch will be holding
elections this month for the two year term starting
January 1, 2017. Anyone interested in running for
ofce should contact the Branch Election Chair,
Gretchen Warner (650-678-6615) at your earliest.
The branch positions are: President, 1st VP, 2nd VP,
Treasurer and Secretary.

890 Santa Cruz Avenue, Menlo Park, CA 94025

middle school in both San Mateo and Foster


City communities, Dr. Joan Rosas, the districts superintendent, said in a prepared
statement. If approved, funding from the
measure will help attract and retain quality
teachers by maintaining quality core academic programs.
Measure X, a school facilities bond, was
passed by district voters in the fall 2015
election to build new classrooms and school
facilities necessary to accommodate enrollment growth. A portion of that revenue was
set aside to purchase the Charter Square
shopping center for a new fourth elementary
school in Foster City.

Weekend Nov. 19-20, 2016

Police reports
It was a key issue
Someone tried to get a new key to their
room, but the front desk refused at
Comfort Suites on East Grand Avenue in
South San Francisco before 7:08 p.m.
Thursday, Nov. 10.

SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO


Di s turbance. An intoxicated man refused
to pay his cab fare at Deluxe Inn on El
Camino Real before 11:55 p.m. Thursday,
Nov. 10.
Di s turbance. A woman started yelling at
someone for having their dog off its leash
and threatened to shoot the owner with a gun
at Paradise Valley Park on Hillsdale
Boulevard before 5:40 p.m. Thursday, Nov.
10.
Di s turbance. A man was seen threatening
to slash workers throats after claiming
something on the ground damaged his tires
at Zarc International on South Linden
Avenue before 3:21 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 10.

SAN MATEO
Theft. A man on a bicycle cut down a sign in
front of a business and took it on South El
Dorado Street before 8:45 p.m. Monday,
Nov. 14.
Sus pi ci o us ci rcums tances . A donation
box was vandalized on Bridgepointe Parkway
before 12:21 p.m. Monday, Nov. 14.
Di s t urb an c e . Someone was throwing
rocks at a window on North Claremont Street
before 9:02 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 12.
Sus pi ci o us ci rcums tances . A man was
throwing rocks and groceries on South El
Camino Real before 1:51 p.m. Friday, Nov.
11.

Weekend Nov. 19-20, 2016

Obituaries
Rita Mary Khachaturian
Rita
Mary
Khachaturian,
of
Hillsborough, died at her home Nov. 4,
2016.
Wife of Henry Khachaturian; mother of
Daphne (and Bruce) Kavich, Natasha (and
Ahmed) Khachaturian Azzam, and the late
Gerald and Mark Gutknecht; grandmother of
Samantha Kavich, Charlie Kavich, Henry
Azzam and Jasmin Azzam; also survived by
brothers and sisters.
A beautiful and elegant woman, Rita
enjoyed a long career as an interior designer; with her flair and sense of style she could
make any space beautiful, especially her
own home, where she loved being a great
wife, taking care of her family and raising
her four children.
The family will receive friends at a visitation from 3 p.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday, Dec.
10, at the Crosby-N. Gray & Co. Funeral
Home, 2 Park Road, Burlingame. A graveside service will be 2 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 11,
at Cypress Lawn Memorial Park, 1370 El
Camino Real, Colma, followed by a
Celebration of Life at the Four Seasons
Hotel (Veranda Ballroom), 217 Stevenson
St., San Francisco.
In lieu of flowers, memorials to Mission
Hospice are suggested. Visit crosbyngray. com for a complete obituary and
online condolences.
As a public serv ice, the Daily Journal
prints obituaries of approx imately 200
words or less with a photo one time on a
space av ailable basis. To submit obituaries,
email information along with a jpeg photo
to news@smdaily journal.com.

LOCAL
One dead in Moss Beach plane crash
Federal Aviation Administration officials
said a plane from the Sacramento Executive
Airport crashed into a home Friday morning
in unincorporated San Mateo County killing
one person and injuring another.
The crash of a small white single-engine
Cessna 172 with two people on board was
reported at 11:18 a.m. in the 1000 block of
Park Avenue in the community of Moss
Beach, according to preliminary information
from FAA and fire officials.
The injured person was flown to a hospital.
The plane crashed just north of the Half Moon
Bay Airport, sheriffs spokesman Detective
Salvador Zuno said.
FAA spokesman Allen Kenitzer said that
the FAA has received no reports that anyone
on the ground was injured.
The FAA and the National Transportation
Safety Board will be investigating the crash,
Kenitzer said.

Building under renovation catches fire


A commercial building that was under renovation caught fire with damage to the roof and
attic at 151 W. 20th Ave., in San Mateo
Thursday night, according to San Mateo fire
officials.
At about 8:03 p.m., firefighters responded
to a report of smoke coming from the roof of
a single-story commercial business. A second
alarm was called and the fire was put out in 40
minutes. There were no reported injuries and
the building was not occupied at the time of
the fire, according to fire officials.
Smoke was visible on State Route 92 and in
downtown San Mateo. Damage is estimated to
be approximately $100,000, according to
fire officials.

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Local briefs
Man armed with table leg robs store
Police arrested a man suspected of robbing
a San Bruno store while armed with a table leg
on Wednesday.
Marcel Criner, 49, of Pittsburg, was arrested on suspicion of robbery, possession of
narcotics and on outstanding warrants, police
said.
Officers with the San Bruno Police
Department responded Wednesday at 11:04
a.m. to the Tanforan Mall on a report a man
armed with some type of bat had stolen items
from a store.
The suspect, later identified as Criner, was
arrested at the scene, police said.
Police said Criner had taken items from the
store within the mall and threatened employees with a table leg as he fled.

Residential burglary in Hillsborough


Hillsborough police are investigating a
residential burglary that took place Thursday
on the 2100 block of Forest View Avenue.
Between 8:30 a.m. and 2:55 p.m., it is
believed someone entered through an
unlocked side garage door and forced open a
door into the home.
The Hillsborough Police Department is
seeking additional witnesses in this case. If
you noticed any suspicious people or vehicles in this area during the time frame of the
crime call (650) 375-7470.
Man gets three years for doughnut shop
robbery
A San Francisco man was sentenced to
three years in prison for his part in stealing an ATM and beating a Burlingame

doughnut shop worker.


Denis Velasquez, 21, received the sentence
Friday as part of a deal where he pleaded no
contest to felony robbery in exchange for
prosecutors dropping charges of assault and
grand theft, said District Attorney Steve
Wagstaffe. Velasquez was also ordered to pay
the victim $10,733, Wagstaffe said.
Velasquezs two accomplices in the May 2,
2016, crime remain unidentified. Around 5
a.m. on a Monday morning, the trio entered
the Royal Donut Shop on Burlingame Avenue
and asked the store clerk for a special kind of
doughnut. When the victim had his back
turned, Velasquez displayed what was ultimately determined to be a toy replica gun and
pushed the victim toward the back of the
shop, according to prosecutors.
A struggle ensued and Velasquez dropped the
weapon but grabbed a dough hook and metal
scoop which he then used to hit the victim in
the head. During the struggle, the accomplices grabbed the shops ATM and the three
fled, according to prosecutors.
A few weeks later on May 23, Velasquez was
caught in possession of the ATM by Daly
City police, according to prosecutors.

Thats no snow: Sea of foam


cascades from airport hangar
Much of the foam that spewed out of a
Northern California airport hangar and flooded a city street appears to be gone.
Television news footage late Friday afternoon showed little of the foam from Mineta
San Jose International Airport that was several feet deep in spots and had taken up a city
block earlier in the day.
The bobbing sea of white foam covered cars
and blocked businesses as it cascaded onto a
nearby street.

LOCAL/NATION

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Weekend Nov. 19-20, 2016

Murder details illuminated


Suspect knew victim, worked with
accomplice to kill Foster City man
By Samantha Weigel
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

Employers added 161,000 jobs nationwide in October, enough to reduce the unemployment rate over time.
The rate slipped to 4.9 percent from 5 percent in September.

In employment growth, blue states


outpaced red states in the past year
By Christopher S. Rugaber
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON States that


voted for Hillary Clinton in last
weeks presidential election
reported stronger job growth in
the previous year than states that
supported Donald Trump, according to data released by the Labor
Department Friday.
Large cities in states where voters were more likely to support
Trump also lagged in job growth, a
separate analysis by Jed Kolko,
chief economist at Indeed, a job
search website, also found. The
figures add credence to the idea that

economic concerns contributed to


Trumps unexpected victory.
Eleven U. S. states reported
healthy job gains in October, and
the unemployment rate fell in
seven, the Labor Department said
Friday. Thirty-four states reported
little change in employment from
the previous month.
The healthiest gains in the past
year were in so-called blue
states: Job growth was 3.5 percent
in Washington state, the biggest
gain nationwide. Oregon reported
the next largest gain, at 3.3 percent. Other healthy increases were
in Colorado, California and
Nevada.

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There were exceptions to the


trend: Florida, which supported
Trump, saw hiring rise 3.1 percent
in the 12 months ending in
October, the third-highest total.
But the smallest increases were
in so-called red states that voted
for the Republican candidate. Job
growth was just 0.7 percent in
Pennsylvania, 0.9 percent in Ohio
and 1 percent in Wisconsin
three Midwestern states that handed 48 electoral votes to Trump.
And two states lost jobs in the
past year: Wyoming and North
Dakota, which have been hit by
falling oil and coal prices. They
both voted for Trump.

Details emerged Friday about


what
drove
two
Southern
California men to allegedly conspire to murder an elderly Foster
City resident in a case that seemingly sat cold for nearly five years.
David Mitchell, 33, and Willie
Venable, 66, appeared in San
Mateo County Superior Court
Friday to face charges for the 2011
murder of Klaus Gachter. Although
they were scheduled to enter a plea,
their defense attorneys requested
the case be continued and they are
scheduled to return to court Dec.
10, according to prosecutors.
Mitchell, who has been residing
in Fontana, previously lived in
Foster City and knew the victim as
Gachter and his mother were
friends, said District Attorney
Steve Wagstaffe. At the behest of
Mitchell, Venable murdered the
elderly man for purposes of financial gain. Financial incentives
appear to be the motive for both
suspects, according to prosecutors.
Gachter, a successful international businessman, was 71 years
old when his house cleaner found
him dead Dec. 16, 2011, in his
Foster City home on the 600
block of Waterbury Lane. The vic-

tim had apparently been in


the midst of
cooking himself a steak dinner
when
Venable used a
knife to stab
and beat him to
Klaus Gachter d e a t h ,
Wagstaffe said.
A critical piece of evidence
tying the men to the murder was
DNA found on a key that had been
left in the door lock to Gachters
home, he said.
Venable, a San Bernardino resident, did not know the victim but
knew Mitchell from living in
Southern California, Wagstaffe
said.
Nearly five years after the mysterious murder, Foster City police
gave scant details after announcing the suspects were arrested in
San Bernardino County Nov. 1.
The two are facing charges of
murder with a special circumstance
of financial gain, and use of a deadly weapon. The charges could carry
the death penalty or life in prison
without
parole,
although
Wagstaffe said his office is not yet
ready to make a determination.
They are being represented by
the Private Defender Program and
remain in custody without bail.

Weekend Nov. 19-20, 2016

LOCAL/STATE

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Democratic congressman wins close race in California


By Jonathan J. Cooper
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SACRAMENTO Democratic U.S. Rep.


Ami Bera won his bid for a third term to represent a Sacramento, California-area district
that national Republican leaders had targeted.
Bera faced a tough challenge from
Republican Scott Jones, the Sacramento
County sheriff who raised his profile by

criticizing President Barack Obamas immigration policies.


Election results updated Friday showed
Bera widening his lead to more than 2 percentage points in Californias 7th district,
which has been one of the most closely
matched in the nation in each election since
the boundaries were drawn in 2012.
Bera has eked out a narrow victory each
time.
Its been my honor to serve this community, first as a doctor and for these past four

years as a member of Congress, Bera said


in a statement.
Jones said in a statement that its now
nearly impossible for him to come from
behind and he conceded to Bera.
Although there were difficult aspects of
the race, I do not regret running and am
extremely proud of the campaign that we
ran, Jones said.
Beras father was sentenced to a year in
prison in August for illegally funneling
nearly $270,000 to his sons campaigns.

Gun nut gets one year in jail


A man caught wearing tactical vest
and carrying 10 knifes who was later
found with over 20 firearms and nearly
5,000 rounds of ammunition at his
home, will be released from jail in the
coming months after being sentenced
to just one year behind bars, according
to prosecutors.
David Allen Elkins, a 53-year-old
Redwood City resident, was sentenced
Friday to one year in jail and another
year of supervised probation after
being convicted in September of two
felonies for possessing weapons,
according to prosecutors.
Elkins claimed to be a gun nut and
said he was looking for threats when
police approached him during a traffic
stop Dec. 31, 2015. Elkins was wearing a tactical vest with numerous inactive switches and wires strapped to it,
was found with an unregistered and
unloaded handgun in his car, and had
10 knives in his pockets and hidden in
his vest, according to prosecutors.
Nearly six months later in June
2016, probation officers and police
conducted a search of his Redwood
City home and found 20 firearms, six
high capacity rifle magazines and

Ami Bera wasnt charged and denied


knowledge of his fathers activities, but
Jones tried to tarnish him through corruption allegations.
Jones withdrew his endorsement of
Donald Trump after a tape surfaced of the
presidential candidate bragging about his
advances on women.
Bera attacked Jones over allegations that
he made unwanted sexual advances toward a
subordinate more than a decade ago. Jones
denied the allegations.

Local briefs
5,000 rounds of ammunition, according to prosecutors.
Elkins was on probation for a 2014
conviction. In 2013, he attempted to
check a military-style bag at the San
Francisco International Airport.
Security found a semi-automatic riffle,
a pistol, ammunition, a replica U.S.
Marshals Service badge, handcuffs, a
window punch, knives, laser pointer,
first aid kits and other survival equipment, according to prosecutors.
During Fridays sentencing, prosecutors sought three years in jail but the
judge gave him two years with one year
behind bars. He already has 309 days
credit for time served, according to
prosecutors.

Cabbie drives
enraged vandal to police
A taxi driver at the Millbrae Bay Area
Rapid Transit Station gave a free ride
to an enraged man who was jumping on
the hood of his car all the way to the
police station, according to prosecutors.
Dadesi Brown, an Oakland resident,

was charged with felony vandalism and


false imprisonment for an early
Wednesday morning incident at the
transit station, according to prosecutors.
Brown allegedly approached a cab
driver around 12:15 a.m. Nov. 16 asking for a ride to San Leandro. The driver requested $130 up front, to which
Brown responded hed prefer to go to
San Francisco. The driver then said it
would be $50 up front and Brown
angrily left and kicked another car,
according to prosecutors.
Brown, who is 6 feet 6 inches tall,
returned and jumped onto the hood of
the cab drivers car where he began
kicking and hitting the vehicle,
according to prosecutors.
The scared cab driver then began to
drive with Brown still on the hood of
the car, stopping at traffic lights and
stop signs, all the way to the
Burlingame Police Station about three
blocks away, according to prosecutors.
Brown was caught on the police stations video surveillance damaging the
vehicle and was arrested. He has since
posted bail and is scheduled to return to
court Dec. 22 to enter a plea, according
to prosecutors.

Peninsula Youth Ballet's

The Nutcracker
November 26, 2pm and 7pm
November 27, 2pm

Tickets available now at www.pyb.org


Adult: $45, Senior $35, Child/Student: $25
Plus, meet the dancers at Clara's Tea Party, $10,
immediately after each 2pm performance

San Mateo Performing Arts Center, 600 N Delaware Street, San Mateo

NATION

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Weekend Nov. 19-20, 2016

Shifting U.S. policy to right,


Trump taps Sessions, Flynn
By Julie Pace
and Jonathan Lemire
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

REUTERS FILE PHOTO

Donald Trump at a campaign event in Wilmington, Ohio.

Trump agrees to $25M


settlement to resolve
Trump University suits
By David Klepper
and Elliot Spagat
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAN DIEGO President-elect


Donald Trump agreed Friday to pay
$25 million to settle lawsuits
against his now-defunct Trump
University
for real
estate
investors, averting a trial in a
potentially embarrassing case that
he had vowed during the campaign
to keep fighting.
The agreement came 10 days
before jury selection was scheduled to begin in one of three cases.
The complaints accused Trump
University, which wasnt an
accredited school, of defrauding
students who paid up to $35,000 a
year to enroll in programs that
promised to share Trumps real
estate secrets.
About 7,000 students would be
eligible for refunds if U.S. District
Judge Gonzalo Curiel approves the
proposed settlement. Under the
terms, Trump admitted no wrongdoing in two class-action lawsuits
in San Diego and a civil suit
brought by New York Attorney
General Eric Schneiderman.
The settlement lifts what would

probably have been a major


headache for Trump as he works to
fill key executive branch positions and get acquainted with foreign leaders. The San Diego trial,
on a case filed in 2010, was
expected to last several weeks,
guaranteeing daily news coverage
of a controversy that dogged him
during the campaign.
Trumps political rivals seized
on the lawsuits to try to portray
him as dishonest and deceitful.
Trump brought more attention to
them by repeatedly assailing
Curiel, who oversaw the San
Diego cases. Trump suggested the
Indiana-born judges Mexican heritage exposed a bias.
The thousands of former students covered by the San Diego
lawsuits will be eligible to receive
at least half and possibly all their
money back, as much as $35,000,
said Jason Forge, an attorney for
the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs
attorneys waived their fees.
Trump has denied the allegations
and said during the campaign that
he would not settle. He told supporters at a May rally that he
would come to San Diego to testify after winning the presidency.

NEW YORK President-elect


Donald Trump signaled a sharp
rightward shift in U.S. national
security policy Friday with his
announcement that he will nominate Alabama Sen. Jeff Sessions as
attorney general and Kansas Rep.
Mike Pompeo to head the CIA, turning to a pair of staunch conservatives as he begins to fill out his
Cabinet.
Trump also named retired Lt. Gen
Michael Flynn as his national security adviser. A former military intelligence chief, Flynn has accused the
Obama administration of being too
soft on terrorism and has cast Islam
as a political ideology and driver
of extremism.
Sessions and Flynn were ardent
Trump supporters during the campaign, and their promotions were
seen in part as a reward for their loyalty.
The selections form the first outlines of Trumps Cabinet and
national security teams. Given his
lack of governing experience and
vague policy proposals during the
campaign, his selection of advisers
is being scrutinized both in the
U.S. and abroad.
Trumps initial decisions suggest
a more aggressive military
involvement in counterterror strat-

REUTERS

Defense Intelligence Agency director U.S. Army Lt. General Michael Flynn,
left, and Sen. Jeff Sessions.
egy and a greater emphasis on
Islams role in stoking extremism.
Sessions, who is best known for
his hard-line immigration views,
has questioned whether terror suspects should benefit from the
rights available in U.S. courts.
Pompeo has said Muslim leaders
are potentially complicit in
attacks if they do not denounce violence carried out in the name of
Islam.
Pompeos nomination to lead the
CIA also opens the prospect of the
U.S. resuming torture of detainees.
Trump has backed harsh interrogation techniques that President
Barack Obama and Congress have
banned, saying the U.S. should go
tougher than waterboarding,
which simulates drowning. In
2014, Pompeo criticized Obama for

ending our interrogation program


and said intelligence officials are
not torturers, they are patriots.
In a separate matter Friday, it was
announced that Trump had agreed to
a $25 million settlement to resolve
three lawsuits over Trump
University, his former school for
real estate investors. The lawsuits
alleged the school misled students
and failed to deliver on its promises
in programs that cost up to
$35,000.
Trump has denied the allegations
and has said repeatedly he would not
settle. New York Attorney General
Eric Schneiderman, who announced
the settlement, called it a stunning
reversal by Donald Trump and a
major victory for the over 6,000
victims of his fraudulent university.

Trump taps conservative Kansas congressman for CIA


By Deb Riechmann
and Richard Lardner
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON

Mike
Pompeo, Donald Trumps pick to
be director of the CIA, is a hardline Republican congressman who
shares the president-elects pugnacious worldview and, like Trump,
spent years as a businessman
before becoming a politician.
Pompeo has heavily criticized
the landmark Iran nuclear deal,
blasted Hillary Clinton over the
attack on a U.S. diplomatic outpost in Libya and her use of a pri-

vate email server, and believes


E d w a r d
Snowden is a
traitor
who
deserves a death
sentence.
He
also supports
restoring the
Mike Pompeo N a t i o n a l
S e c u r i t y
Agencys bulk collection of telephone metadata, a contentious terror-fighting tool Congress eliminated after Snowdens revelations.
Before taking over the spy
agency, the Kansas lawmaker has

to be confirmed by the GOP-led


Senate. One issue that could dominate the confirmation hearing is
Pompeos view on using harsh
interrogation techniques on
detainees. Trump has backed these
techniques, saying, We should go
tougher than waterboarding,
which simulates drowning.
During the campaign, Trump
suggested that he would push to
change laws that prohibit waterboarding and other harsh techniques. He said that banning those
methods puts the U.S. at a strategic disadvantage against Islamic
State militants.

Weekend Nov. 19-20, 2016

NATION/WORLD

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Obama coaches Trump to be world leader


By Josh Lederman
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BERLIN Its the last thing President


Barack Obama ever expected hed be doing
in his final months in office: Coaching
Donald Trump on how to be a world leader.
As the president-elect holes up in his skyscraper, Obama is giving Trump policy
advice, style tips and gentle nudges to let
the fervor of the campaign give way to the
sobriety of the Oval Office. And as Obama
completes his last world tour, hes been
thrust into the unexpected role of Trump
translator to anxious U.S. allies.
Standing next to German Chancellor
Angela Merkel in Berlin, Obama said Trump
would quickly see that a presidents responsibilities cant be treated casually and that
diverse countries can only be governed by
listening and reaching out.
It is my hope that that is what will happen, Obama said. And Im going to do
everything I can over the next two months
to help assure that that happens.
Though the outgoing president made clear
his profound disdain for Trump throughout
the campaign, perhaps no one is better
positioned than Obama to get him up to

election, Obama resolved to spend more


time helping prepare Trump than he might
under different circumstances say, if
Hillary Clinton had been elected, aides said.
Trump, to the surprise of many, seemed
game. He said he wanted Obamas counsel
and looked forward to many, many more
meetings.
In the run-up to the election, the White
House had planned only perfunctory,
refresher-style briefings for Clinton, who
is no stranger to the White House and whose
transition team had prepared extensively
for an expected takeover.
Soon after Trumps victory, White House
chief of staff Denis McDonough directed
that his preparatory materials be thickened
and his intelligence briefings expanded to
include more basic information, according
to U.S. officials, who werent authorized to
discuss the matter publicly and requested
anonymity.
REUTERS
Obama and his closest advisers were irriBarack Obama speaks during a joint news conference with German Chancellor Angela Merkel tated when it leaked out that Trump, during
in Berlin, Germany.
his White House visit, had displayed a lack
ing will substantially change Trumps vast of thorough knowledge about key issues
speed in a matter of weeks.
Its unclear, though, how much help differences with Obama, who he called the while Trumps aides appeared unfamiliar
Trump wants or will accept from Obama. worst president in U.S. history.
with the process of staffing up a White
After meeting with Trump following the House, officials said.
And no one expects that the executive tutor-

Obama blocks new oil, gas drilling in Arctic Ocean


By Matthew Daly
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON The Obama administration is blocking new oil and gas drilling in
the Arctic Ocean, handing a victory to environmentalists who say industrial activity in
the icy waters will harm whales, walruses
and other wildlife and exacerbate global
warming.
A five-year offshore drilling plan
announced on Friday blocks the planned

sale of new oil and gas drilling rights in the


Chukchi and Beaufort seas north of Alaska.
The plan allows drilling to go forward in
Alaskas Cook Inlet southwest of
Anchorage. The blueprint for drilling from
2017 to 2022 can be rewritten by Presidentelect Donald Trump, in a process that could
take months or years.
Besides Cook Inlet, the plan also allows
drilling in the Gulf of Mexico, long the center of U.S. offshore oil production. Ten of
the 11 lease sales proposed in the five-year

plan are in the Gulf, mostly off the coasts of


Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas and
Alabama.
Confirming a decision announced this
spring, the five-year plan also bars drilling
in the Atlantic Ocean.
The plan focuses lease sales in the best
places - those with the highest resource
potential, lowest conflict and established
infrastructure - and removes regions that are
simply not right to lease, said Interior
Secretary Sally Jewell.

Given the unique and challenging Arctic


environment and industrys declining interest in the area, forgoing lease sales in the
Arctic is the right path forward, Jewell said.
The decision follows an announcement
last year by Royal Dutch Shell PLC that it
would cease exploration in the Chukchi and
Beaufort seas after spending nearly $7 billion. The company cited disappointing
results from a well drilled in the Chukchi
and the unpredictable federal regulatory
environment.

WORLD

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Weekend Nov. 19-20, 2016

Around the world


Shelling of market in Yemens Taiz kills 21

REUTERS

Shiite fighters fire a rocket toward IS militants during a battle at the airport of Tal Afar west of Mosul, Iraq.

Iraqi forces advance into Mosul


By Qassim Absul-Zahra
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MOSUL, Iraq Iraqi troops


advanced cautiously into eastern districts of Mosul on Friday, facing stiff
resistance from Islamic State militants
a day after they paused their assault due
to poor visibility, officers said.
Airstrikes, automatic fire and
artillery were heard from dawn and one
soldier was reported killed in clashes.
Civilians, some of them wounded,
could be seen fleeing the fighting.
According to the officers, the Iraqi
forces aim to take complete control of
the citys Tahrir area and from there
move into the adjacent Muharabeen
district. The officers spoke on condition of anonymity because they were

not authorized to talk to the media.


Iraqi forces launched the long-awaited operation to retake Mosul a month
ago but have only advanced into a few
eastern districts. The troops have faced
fierce resistance, with snipers, mortar
fire and Islamic State suicide bombers
driving armor-plated vehicles packed
with explosives.
On Thursday, cloudy skies over
Iraqs second-largest city obscured the
visibility of the drones and warplanes
on which the troops rely, hindering
their advance. Instead, special forces
secured areas they had seized, set up
checkpoints and swept for explosives.
The pause also allowed the residents
running out of food in areas liberated
from IS to get some supplies from Iraqi
troops and aid organizations.

Mosul is the last major holdout for


the militants in Iraq. Driving them out
would deal a severe blow to the Islamic
States self-styled caliphate stretching
into Syria.
IS on Friday claimed responsibility
for an attack the previous night in
which a suicide car bomber struck a
wedding near the western city of
Fallujah, killing at least 10 people and
wounding 32.
The wedding was full of governmentallied Sunni tribal fighters who are
also part of the campaign to rid the
country of IS, said Interior Ministry
spokesman Brig. Gen. Saad Maan.
It was the second incident this week
in Fallujah. On Monday, twin suicide
bombers targeted the citys security
checkpoints, killing six people.

SANAA, Yemen More than 20 civilians were killed in


the shelling of a busy market in the war-torn Yemeni city of
Taiz, including a member of an international aid group, the
group and medical officials said on Friday.
Doctors Without Borders, known by the French acronym
MSF, said that its hospitals received a total of 21 victims
on Friday, including a group worker, and 75 wounded, with
many suffering from fractures, severe burns, open wounds
and lacerations, as well as internal injuries.
Sadly, one of our colleagues who works as a watchman at
the MSF trauma center in Taiz was killed whilst he was off
duty when a blast hit a local market in the neighborhood,
said Djoen Besselink, MSFs Head of Mission in Yemen.
Another heartbreaking example of a hard-working citizen affected by this ongoing conflict.
Later in the day, the Yemeni Press Syndicate said that a
young photographer, Awab al-Zubairi, has been killed in
Taiz while he was covering the destruction of districts
recently seized by pro-government forces.
Taiz has been one of the worst-hit cities in Yemens conflict where fighting between Shiite rebels, known as the
Houthis, and forces loyal to the internationally-recognized
government escalated this week.

The effects of Indias


currency reform? Chaos say analysts
NEW DELHI The sudden withdrawal of 86 percent of
Indias currency has left cash in short supply, retail sales
stumbling and wholesale markets in turmoil.
Thats just the immediate fallout from Prime Minister
Narendra Modis surprise effort to stamp out corruption by
making cash hoards in large denomination bills worthless.
But what lies ahead could be even worse, some analysts say.
Basically, youve created chaos, said Steve H. Hanke,
an applied economist at Johns Hopkins University in
Baltimore and a global authority on currency policy. India
is a cash economy. Its not like Europe or the U.S. where
everyone is running around with a credit card. Thats not the
world of India.
It doesnt look like this thing was thought through at
all, he said. Every day or so, soothing assurances about
Indias overnight currency reform spill from the offices of
top government officials.
Enough cash is available, Economic Affairs Secretary
Shaktikanta Das said Thursday during a nationally televised
press conference, as millions of people waited in hourslong lines.

10

BUSINESS

Weekend Nov. 19-20, 2016

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Drugmaker losses pull stocks lower


By Marley Jay

DOW JONES INDUSTRIALS

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK Major U.S. stock


indexes slipped Friday as drug
companies dragged the market
lower. Small-company stocks
bucked the downward trend and
continued to climb, and bond
yields rose to their highest level
in a year.
Drugmakers like Merck and
biotech company Amgen took
some of the biggest losses Friday.
Weak results from Gap and
Abercrombie & Fitch hurt retailers
as investors kept a close eye on
the upcoming holiday season.
Small companies including
regional banks continued to make
large gains. Those stocks have
risen sharply since the presidential election last week and are now
at record highs.
Some of the proposals that
(President-elect Donald) Trump
has promoted, specifically deregulation and also some of his trade
proposals, are better for small
companies than potentially they
are for large ones, said Katie
Nixon, chief investment officer
for Northern Trust.
The Dow Jones industrial average slid 35.89 points, or 0.2 percent, to 18,867.93. The Standard
& Poors 500 index lost 5. 22
points, or 0. 2 percent, to
2,181.90. The Nasdaq composite

High:
Low:
Close:
Change:

17,636.22
17,418.21
17,526.62
-3.36

OTHER INDEXES

touched a record high early on, but


turned lower and gave up 12.46
points, or 0. 2 percent, to
5,321.51.
Thats not a big loss, but the
major indexes hadnt fallen that
much since before the presidential
election. Still, the S&P 500 and
Nasdaq finished substantially
higher this week after their big
gains the week before. But indexes
of smaller companies, like the
Russell 2000 and the S&P 600, did
better. They are on 11-day winning streaks and have hit all-time
highs.
Among small-company stocks,
mortgage lending service company LendingTree added $6.80, or
7. 3 percent, to $100 and coal

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

2181.90
10,709.51
5321.51
2194.68
1315.64
22,805.93

-5.22
-30.57
-12.46
+9.02
+6.16
-34.34

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

2.34
45.60
1,211.30

+0.06
+0.18
-8.30

miner Cloud Peak Energy rose 79


cents, or 15.8 percent, to $5.79.
Losses for drug companies
weighed down health care stocks.
Botox maker Allergan retreated
$8.20, or 4.1 percent, to $191.78
and biotech giant Amgen fell
$2. 13, or 1. 4 percent, to
$145.23. Hepatitis C drugmaker
Gilead Sciences shed 96 cents, or
1.3 percent, to $74.62.
Drug company stocks are coming off their biggest weekly gain
in two years. The stocks had been
falling in the months leading up
to the election because investors
worried that under a Hillary
Clinton presidency, the federal
government would take steps to
rein in drug prices. Those kinds of

steps are less likely under a Trump


presidency and a Republican-controlled Congress.
The dollar continued to climb.
Its near one-year highs against
the euro and six-month highs
against the yen. The dollar rose to
110.63 yen from 109.89 yen. The
euro fell to $1. 0599 from
$1.0626.
The dollar hasnt been this
strong since early 2003. Nixon of
Northern Trust said thats affecting big multinational companies
because it can hurt their sales outside the U.S., but its less of a
problem for smaller, domestically-oriented companies.
Investors continued to sell U.S.
government bonds at a rapid clip,

and bond prices wobbled and


turned lower. The yield on the 10year Treasury note rose to 2.34
percent from 2.30 percent. Bond
prices have fallen hard since the
election and yields are now at their
highest in a year.
Teen
clothing
company
Abercrombie & Fitch plunged
$2.33, or 13.8 percent, to $14.60
after it reported weak sales and a
smaller profit than analysts had
expected. Gaps said fewer people
visited its stores heading into the
holiday season. Its stock gave up
$5. 10, or 16. 6 percent, to
$25.61. Sporting goods Hibbett
Sports retailer cut its annual forecasts after a weak third-quarter
report. It dropped $4.90, or 10.8
percent, to $40.40.
Shoppers are not buying as
many clothes and moving toward
discount chains. That trend continued as discount retailer Ross
Stores rose $2.47, or 3.8 percent,
to $68 after it posted a betterthan-expected profit and sales.
Companies that sell common
household products are also moving lower. Procter & Gamble gave
up $1.07, or 1.3 percent, to $82
and drugstore operator Walgreens
Boots Alliance slumped 72 cents
to $83.27. Those companies have
fallen since the election as
investors buy companies that
could benefit more from faster economic growth.

Volkswagen to shed 30,000 jobs, cutting costs after scandal


By David McHugh
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

FRANKFURT, Germany
Volkswagen announced plans
Friday to cut 30,000 jobs in a
wide-ranging restructuring of its
namesake brand as it tries to
recover from a scandal over cars
rigged to cheat on diesel emissions tests.
The German company said the
job cuts, which account to
around 5 percent of its global
workforce, are part of a longterm plan to improve profitability and shift resources and
investment to electric-powered

vehicles and digital services.


At a news conference at
Volkswagens headquarters in
Wolfsburg, company officials said
23,000 of the job cuts will be in
Germany and that the measures
will save some 3.7 billion euros
($4 billion) a year from 2020.
Volkswagen employs around
120,000 people at its namesake
brand in Germany.
The company also said it would
be hiring for some 9,000 new
positions related to new technology, and that some of those jobs
could go to current employees.
CEO Matthias Mueller said it
was the biggest reform package

in the history of our core brand.


In addition to Volkswagen, the
company also makes cars under
other brands including Porsche,
Audi,
SEAT,
Skoda
and
Lamborghini.
The announcement caps a difficult year for Volkswagen, which
has been embroiled in an emissions-rigging scandal that damaged the companys reputation and
cost it billions.
In response, Volkswagen has
agreed to pay $15 billion to U.S.
authorities and owners of some
500,000 vehicles with software
that turned off emissions controls. Around 11 million cars

worldwide have the deceptive software.


The scandal has been a spur for
the company to address longstanding problems such as high
fixed costs at its manufacturing
locations in Germany and excessively top-down management that
many say created an environment
that enabled the cheating.
Herbert Diess, head of the core
Volkswagen brand, conceded that
Volkswagen had let its costs rise
and lost ground in terms of productivity. The changes, he said,
would make the company leaner
and more efficient.
The cuts are aimed at addressing

Volkswagens longstanding cost


issue.
Volkswagen, with 624, 000
employees around the world, sells
roughly the same number of cars
as Toyota and General Motors
around 10 million a year. But
Toyota does it with 349, 000
workers and GM with 202,000.
One reason often cited for VWs
higher cost-base and headcount is
the role that employee representatives play at the company. As at
other large German companies,
employees have half the seats on
the board, a power they can use to
resist moving production outside
Germany or to suppliers.

Dakota Access oil pipeline


developer: No rerouting
By John Mone and Blake Nicholson
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

DALLAS The head of the company


building the Dakota Access oil pipeline said
Friday that it wont be rerouted but that hed
like to meet with the head of an American
Indian tribe to try to ease the tribes concerns about the project.
Kelcy Warren, the CEO of Dallas-based
Energy Transfer Partners, told the
Associated Press that the company has no
alternative than to stick to its plan for the
$3.8 billion pipeline, which would ship oil
from North Dakota to Illinois and which is
nearly completed.
Theres not another way. Were building
at that location, Warren said.
Warren said he would welcome the chance
to meet with Dave Archambault, the chairman of the Standing Rock Sioux, to address
the tribes concerns that the pipeline skirting its reservation would endanger drinking
water and cultural sites.
Archambault, who was with celebrity
sympathizers who toured the tribes protest
encampment Friday, including the actors
Shailene Woodley and Ezra Miller, said hed
be willing to meet with Warren but that he

doesnt think it would make a difference.


We already know what hes going to say
that this is the cleanest, safest pipeline
ever, the chairman said. What he doesnt
know is that this is still an issue for
Standing Rock and all indigenous people.
The 1,200-mile, four-state pipeline is
largely complete except for a section that
would pump oil under Lake Oahe, a Missouri
River reservoir in southern North Dakota.
The Standing Rock tribe fears that a leak
could contaminate the drinking water on its
nearby reservation and says the project also
threatens sacred sites, which Warren disputes.
President Barack Obama earlier this
month raised the possibility of rerouting
the pipeline, and Archambault has told the
AP that would be acceptable to the tribe as
long as the new route wouldnt take it near
the reservation.
Warren noted that the Dakota Access route
parallels the existing Northern Border
Pipeline, which crosses the Dakotas as it
carries natural gas from Canada and the U.S.
to the Chicago area.
Were going to cross the river at that
location, he said, calling it the least
impactful site.

CCS FOOTBALL: M-A 21, BELLARMINE 0; SERRA 31, ST. FRANCIS 17; HMB 16, SHP 13; MENLO SCHOOL 34, SEASIDE 28

<<< Page 15, Ward-Kovalev


fight could be best of the year
Weekend Nov. 19-20, 2016

Serra shuts down St. Francis


By Terry Bernal
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

MOUNTAIN VIEW For the first time in


program history, the Serra Padres have won a
Central Coast Section playoff game against
rival St. Francis.
The Padres (8-4 overall) found the hot hand
Friday night at St. Francis in sophomore quarterback Luke Bottari and senior cornerback
Niko Vaefaga, and rode their efforts to a 31-17
victory over the Lancers (10-2) in the CCS

Open Division II semifinals. With the win, Serra


advances to its third CCS
championship game in six
years to face another West
Catholic Athletic League
foe in Mitty, this Friday at
Westmont High School at
7 p.m.
Not only was it the first
Niko Vaefaga
playoff win over St.
Francis the two teams met one other time in
CCS play, with the Lancers winning that 2003

matchup it was a rare Serra win at St. Francis,


according to Padres head coach Patrick Walsh.
We havent won that much here in Serra history 67, 2011 and tonight, Walsh said.
The pressure was on the players and they all
came through. All the credit goes to them.
In the face of that pressure, Bottari was grace
under fire. He entered the game in the first half
when junior running back Isiah Kendrick left
with concussion symptoms, which meant
starting quarterback Leki Nunn moved to running back. It took the sophomore some time to
find his footing, completing just five of his

first 11 passes.
But with Serra clinging to a 17-14 fourthquarter lead and facing a third-and-12 from the
St. Francis 47-yard line, Bottari exacted a 17yard pass to junior Shane Villaroman for a first
down. It was the first of seven consecutive
passes completed by Bottari, who put Serra in
the end zone two plays later with a 10-yard
touchdown pass to Patrick Nunn. Bottari finished the night 13-of-20 passing for 179
yards.

See SERRA, Page 16

Cougars to defend title Lady Colts


surge into
postseason
By Nathan Mollat

DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

For the second year in a row, and for the third


time in school history, the Half Moon Bay
football team will play for a Central Coast
Section title.
The Cougars, seeded fourth in the CCS
Division V bracket, will defend their 2015 title
next weekend after beating No. 8 Sacred Heart
Prep 16-13 Friday night in Half Moon Bay.
Defend is the key word because thats precisely what Half Moon Bay (10-2) did against
Sacred Heart Prep (3-9). The Cougars held the
Gators to just 78 yards of offense in the first half
and just 229 yards for the game. They recorded
four more sacks, after having seven last week
against Scotts Valley. The Cougars also recorded a safety when Gators quarterback Brad Yaffe
was called for intentional grounding in the end
zone with Kellan Royce all over him, and Jake
Quosig came up with the games only turnover,
intercepting a pass.
All in all, it was a dominant performance by
the Cougars defense.
It was a fist fight, said Half Moon Bay
coach Keith Holden. (The defense) showed up.
Best effort all year.
Waiting to meet the Cougars in the championship game is Peninsula Athletic League
nemesis and No. 3-seed Menlo School, which
took down No. 2 Seaside, 34-28. The Cougars
handed Menlo (11-1) its only loss of the season, 36-27, in the Ocean Division opener Sept.
30.
While both the Half Moon Bay and SHP
defenses played well, it didnt start out that way
as each team put together a long scoring drive
on their first possessions.
Half Moon Bay took the opening kickoff and
marched 75 yards on 12 plays. The Cougars
faced a critical third-and-long on the third play
of the drive, but quarterback Gavin Tomberlin
who completed 7 of 8 passes for 88 yards and
a touchdown found Hayden Von Almen for a
19-yard gain and a first down. Two plays later,
running back Chase Hofmann got his first carry
of the game, going for 16 yards. He carried the
ball four more times, bulling his way into the
end zone from 2 yards out to give the Cougars a
7-0 lead.

NATHAN MOLLAT/DAILY JOURNAL

See HMB, Page 16

Half Moon Bays Andrew Olivero, left, congratulates Jojo Weinberger following the first of
two sacks during the Cougars 16-13 over Sacred Heart Prep in the CCS Division V semifinals.

By Terry Bernal
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

By virtue of a four-game winning streak


to close the regular season, the Caada
womens soccer team is heading to the
California Community College Athletic
Association playoffs for the first time
since 2007.
The Lady Colts were facing long odds at
the outset of November to qualify for the 16team Northern California postseason field.
Then a 4-4 tie with Chabot a team that had
two overall wins at the
time saw Caada fall to
No. 20 in the Nor Cal
rankings.
This is the most talented team Ive coached
in a long time, Caada
head
coach
Katie
Osborne said. But we
Katie Osborne werent getting results
and I said they werent
going to see the playoffs unless we saw
some career improvement.
With Osborne shaking up her lineup
moving one of the states leading scorers,
sophomore Brady Candaele, to center midfielder and bumping freshman Erika Negrete
to forward Caada went on a four-game run
with wins over Foothill 5-3, Las Positas 4-3,
Cabrillo 3-0 and Hartnell 3-1.
I knew we could beat those teams,
Osborne said. From the very beginning I
knew my team was very talented but weve
had some personnel issues.
Since the outset of the season, Osborne
has been candid about her teams off-field
problems, including eligibility issues and
personal drama, affecting the on-field lineup.
The talent, however, speaks for itself. In

See COLTS, Page 14

12

SPORTS

Weekend Nov. 19-20, 2016

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Third quarter propels Warriors Cal QB Davis Webb is


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BOSTON Kevin Durant deflected a Boston pass, tipped it


ahead to Stephen Curry and ran to the basket to finish off an
alley-oop.
The next time down, Curry stole the ball and pulled up for a 3pointer.
What had been a seven-point Golden State halftime lead was
now a 22-point blowout. And the fans who booed Durant before
the game for spurning their city were turning against their own
team.
That was incredible to start the half off that way, forward
Draymond Green said after the Warriors went on a 24-3 run to
start the third quarter and held on for a 10488 victory over Boston on Friday night.
That was amazing.
Klay Thompson scored 28 points, Durant
had 23 points and 10 rebounds and the
Warriors scored 18 in a row in the third quarter to blow the game open. Curry had just 16
points his second-fewest of the season
while sitting out much of the fourth as
Golden State held on for its sixth straight
Klay Thompson victory.
Theyre really good, and we all know
that. But you just cant have droughts against them, Celtics
coach Brad Stevens said. They can make it a landslide quickly.
Going six straight possessions without scoring, that just crushes you.
The Celtics signed Al Horford over the summer and courted
Durant, too, even bringing along Patriots quarterback Tom
Brady to meet with the free agent in the Hamptons. But they
were unable to land the former Oklahoma City star, and the
Boston fans remembered.
Durant was greeted with loud boos before the game and often
when he touched the ball.
Its just the beer talking, Golden State coach Steve Kerr
said.
They come to enjoy the show. Theres no hard feelings,
Durant said. Ive still got love for Boston, I still love playing
here. You have one of the best crowds in the league. Thats what

Warriors 104, Celtics 88


theyre supposed to do.
Avery Bradley had 17 points and 10 rebounds and Isaiah
Thomas scored a season-low 18 for Boston, which challenged
the Warriors last season while they were on their way to a recordbreaking 73-9 regular season. After losing in double overtime
in Boston, the Celtics beat the Warriors on April 1 to hand them
their first home loss of the season.
But this one was over during a third quarter in which Golden
State outscored the home team 31-9. Boston shot 2 for 17 in the
period and turned the ball over five times.

The run
Thomas hit a 3-pointer early in the third quarter to make it a
10-point game, but the Warriors scored the next 18 points.
They made it 86-57 at the end of the third and opened a 30-point
lead in the fourth.
I guess we just gave up, coaching staff as well, Thomas said.
We started subbing. It was bad. Especially ... I only played 27
minutes. We gave up.

Tip-ins
Warri o rs : Golden State had 30 or more assists for the sixth
straight game and the eighth time this season. ... Durant took
out referee Lauren Holtkamp and a TV cameraman under the basket late in the third quarter and nearly wound up in the lap of a
woman sitting in the front row. ... Zaza Pachulia had 12
rebounds and Green had eight rebounds and eight assists.
Cel ti cs : Horford missed his ninth straight game with a concussion, but he sat on the bench during the game. Jae Crowder
missed his eighth straight game with a sprained left ankle.
Stevens said they would both join the team on the flight to
Detroit after the game. ... Rookie Jaylen Brown was called for a
technical in the second quarter for an unnatural act when he
kicked his leg out and catching Andre Iguodala between the legs.

Up next
Warri o rs : Visit the Milwaukee Bucks on Saturday for the
third game of a four-game trip.

excited for Big Game


By Josh Dubow
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BERKELEY Growing up in Texas, Davis Webb knew all


about the Big Game rivalry between California and
Stanford.
Now as he finishes up his only season as starting quarterback at Cal, Webb gets to experience it first hand when the
Golden Bears (4-6, 2-5 Pac-12) host the Cardinal (7-3, 5-3)
on Saturday.
I dont think theres anything like this game, he said.
Theres so much tradition, so much pageantry and so many
great players that have played in this
game. Im just excited to be a part of it.
From afar, living in Dallas, everybody
knew what the Big Game was. Its going
to be one of the greatest experiences Ive
ever had in my life.
While the Big Game is new to Webb, it
has been part of Stanford coach David
Shaws life for decades.
Shaw remembers watching his first as a
Davis Webb high school senior in 1989 when his
father, Willie, was an assistant at
Stanford and immediately noticed the heightened noise,
energy and excitement in the stadium.
That only increased the following year when Shaw was a
player at Stanford and the Cardinal rallied for a 27-25 win
after scoring a touchdown with 12 seconds left, missing a 2point conversion, recovering an onside kick and capitalizing on two personal fouls to set up John Hopkins gamewinning field goal.
I say this every year, to the freshmen from all over the
country and maybe the sophomores who didnt play last
year, to not be surprised by the emotion as you walk
through the stadium. Youre going to feel it, Shaw said. I
feel it as a coach. Im an alum. Im a Stanford guy. And Big
Game is always Big.
Here are some other things to watch:

Big Game streak


The rivalry has been extremely one-sided of late with
Stanford winning the past six meetings one shy of the
longest streak in series history held by the Cardinal from
1995-2001. Only one of those games was decided by fewer
than 10 points and the average margin of victory has been
23.2 points per game.
Thatd be a pretty cool legacy to leave, to be a part of a
team that was able to beat Stanford, Webb said.

Bowl bid
After opening the season 4-3, Cal has lost three straight
games to put the Bears hopes of returning to a bowl game
in serious jeopardy. The Bears must win their final two
games against Stanford and UCLA to become bowl eligible,
although they could have an outside shot of making a bowl
with five wins if there are not enough six-win teams to fill
up all the slots.

See BIG GAME, Page 17

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SPORTS

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Weekend Nov. 19-20, 2016

13

Brady finally faces 49ers in Bay Area


By Janie McCauley
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SANTA CLARA Not even in grade


school, Tom Brady cried from his seat at The
Stick when Dwight Clark made The Catch.
The New England quarterback had so
counted on playing at Candlestick Park in
2008, his first NFL game back home in the
Bay Area against the 49ers team he watched
Joe Montana lead when Brady was a boy.
Then, a season-ending knee injury
spoiled his plans. He cant quite believe it
took until age 39 and his 17th NFL season
to finally get a shot on San Franciscos
home field.
I had everything arranged and set up
before the season for my family and friends,
and then I got hurt, Brady said. So it is
(shocking), it is. It will be a lot of fun. Ive
got a lot of people coming to the game and
it will just be a great environment.
This could perhaps be the only time Brady
gets the opportunity, and he should feel

pretty confident about


his chances of winning
with the AFC East-leading Patriots (7-2). The
New England quarterback
might have to change
teams to visit Levis
Stadium again after
Sundays matchup with
the Niners (1-8), losers
Tom Brady
of eight straight since a
season-opening win against the Rams.
He was there when Clark leaped high and
pulled down the Montana touchdown pass
that helped send San Francisco to its first
Super Bowl after the 1981 season.
I was, I think 4 years old and my parents
brought me. I cried I wanted one of those
foam fingers and I cried the entire first
half, Brady recalled. Finally, my dad
bought me one to shut me up for the second
half. I think I have a picture of it.
It was just a great. I remember we were on
the opposite side of the stadium, and I started crying when everyone jumped up and

screamed at the end when Dwight made the


catch. I still have those memories.
San Francisco went to New England in
2004 and again in 2012 to win 41-34 during
the 49ers Super Bowl season.
It was a great feeling to go up there, get
that victory, especially against a team like
that, quarterback Colin Kaepernick said.
It was huge and it was another confidence
builder for our team.
Here are some things to watch for Sunday:

Betheas first pick


San Francisco safety Antoine Betheas first
career interception is still plenty fresh 10
years later. He has the ball at home in a case.
It came with the Colts against Brady, in
Foxborough, on Nov. 5, 2006, the first of
three career picks he has of Brady passes.
Its definitely something I remember, out
there in Foxborough, Bethea said. Of course
Im always going to remember that, especially because it comes on a top-caliber quarterback.

Hot ticket
Brady, who grew up in nearby San Mateo,
has arranged countless tickets for Sunday
more than ever.
I may never get the opportunity again,
so its nice to have all the support, and Ive
had a lot from the Bay Area over the years,
Brady said. My high school, my elementary school, and I still have so many friends
from growing up, and coaches, my family,
my aunts and uncles, cousins. It will just be
a lot of fun to be out there.

Kapernick improves
After failing to complete even half of his
passes in each of his first two starts, Kaepernick
has been much sharper the past two weeks after
the bye.
Healthy again after three surgeries, and promoted in favor of Blaine Gabbert last month, he
is completing 59 percent of his passes for 304
yards, three touchdowns, one interception and a
96.8 passer rating.

Raiders, Texans bring winning records to Mexico


By Josh Dubow
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

For more than a decade, the NFL has been


taking its game abroad looking to attract
new fans and new markets to football.
When the Oakland Raiders take on the
Houston Texans on Monday night in
Mexico City, the fans at Azteca Stadium will
see something no foreign audience has ever
gotten the chance to watch: two teams with
winning records.
Instead of watching the dregs of the
league, the sold-out crowd at the renovated
Azteca Stadium will see a game with playoff
implications when the Raiders (7-2) take on
the Texans (6-3) in a matchup of first-place
teams.
Despite the big stage, high stakes and
international flair, it still is just one game.
We know if you dont win, it doesnt
mean anything. Its a cool thing to look
back on someday, Raiders quarterback
Derek Carr said. It doesnt change the game
for me. It doesnt change my heart rate. It
stays the same.
The Raiders enter the game on a roll having won three straight games before a bye,
capped by a 30-20 prime-time win over
defending Super Bowl champion Denver on

Nov. 6. That has Oakland


off to its best start since
2001 as the team hopes
to end a 13-year playoff
drought .
The Texans have won
two straight and are in
sole possession of first
place in the AFC South,
but have gotten much
Derek Carr
less publicity for their
record than Oakland. In part, thats because
Houston has been outscored by 27 points
with lopsided losses to New England,
Minnesota and Denver overshadowing the
wins.
A victory against a Raiders team that has
been so impressive of late would be a big
step forward for the Texans
I think every single week is a statement
game, Texans quarterback Brock Osweiler
said. When you look across the National
Football League, every single week is different. You see one team maybe blow out
somebody one week and then the next week
they get blown out, or a win and then the
next week they lose. So, I think every single week you need to go out there and prove
yourself.
Here are some other things to watch:

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Wrong Carr
After David Carr failed to develop into a
franchise quarterback when Houston drafted
him with its first pick as an expansion team
in 2002, the Texans twice passed on his little brother in 2014. Houston took pass
rusher Jadeveon Clowney with the first
overall pick, then guard Xavier Sua-Filo at
the top of the second round three picks
before Derek went to Oakland. That move
looks suspect now with Carr developing
into one of the leagues top young quarterbacks.
We chose who we chose and were happy
with who we chose, coach Bill OBrien
said. Dereks having a good year.

capable of doing obviously I experienced


it firsthand last year and we will have
answers for him, Osweiler said.

Higher ground
Both teams will have to deal with the altitude for the game played at an elevation of
7, 350 feet. The teams wont arrive in
Mexico until Sunday in hopes of limiting
the effects of the altitude, and they spent the
week preparing for it.
Just work hard, Mack said. You cant
really control the elevation. Its like
Denver and all those other places. Just get
ready and expect you might have a hard time
breathing.

Mack attack

Oaklands engine

The Raiders were very happy with


Houstons draft that year. They ended up
with edge rusher Khalil Mack with the fifth
pick and he has outperformed Clowney so
far with 26 sacks to Clowneys 7 . Then
they got Carr in the second round.
Mack has sacks in four straight games and
is looking forward to a rematch with
Osweiler after sacking him five times in one
game last year in Denver.
We are well aware of what Khalil Macks

The Raiders have invested heavily in the


offensive line the past few years by signing
free agents Rodney Hudson, Kelechi
Osemele, Donald Penn and Austin Howard
and it is paying big dividends now. Oakland
has allowed a league-low 11 sacks and has
run the ball effectively of late, especially
two weeks ago against Denver when the
Raidersgained 218 yards on the ground. Carr
attributes the success of the team to the play
of the line.

SPORTS

Weekend Nov. 19-20, 2016

COLTS
Continued from page 11
Osbornes second year at the helm she
took over the team last season after its reinstatement from a one-year hiatus she has
recruited a potent lineup, which saw Negrete
(18 goals) and Candaele (16 goals) finish tied
as the second most prolific scoring tandem in
Northern
California.
Only
Solano
Community College did better.
Still, Caadas playoff chances went down
to the last day of the regular season. Even
with a win over No. 6 ranked Las Positas ear-

lier in the week on Nov. 6, it was the win over


No. 11 Hartnell that clinched the Colts first
postseason berth in nine years.
In the Hartnell win, Caadas new offensive
front showed up big time. Negrete recorded
two assists on the first two goals of the game.
With Osborne maneuvering Negrete from
striker to left wing, the freshman was able to
use her speed up the sideline to get the Colts
on the board with a cross pass to Marianna
Burns in the 16th minute. Then just before
halftime, Negrete weaved a pass to sophomore Ashley Harper to put Caada up 2-0.
Harper has been another moving part for
the Colts. After starting the season as a
defender, the sophomore transitioned to center midfield and quickly became Caadas

THE DAILY JOURNAL

third leading scorer. Harper totaled nine goals


on the regular season, four of which came
over the final five games.
While Negrete finished the regular season
with a flourish in assists, Candaele still paced
the team with 12, tying the sophomore for
fifth in the state.
Shes been very good, Osborne said.
She is able to take on more of a leadership
role because shes more centrally located. ...
Last year she had to be our goal scorer but this
year we have a couple.
When the Colts last appeared in the postseason in 2007, they were eliminated in the
opening round by Santa Rosa Junior College.
This season, Caada enters as the No. 14 seed
and must once again travel to Santa Rosa, the

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No. 3 seed. The two teams meet Saturday in


Santa Rosa at 2 p.m.
Caada has not played Santa Rosa during
Osbornes two years at the helm. In fact, even
in three previous years as an assistant coach
at De Anza, she never crossed paths with the
Bear Cubs.
While Santa Rosa hasnt lost since Sept.
20, wins have been hard to come by the team
that finished in third place in the powerhouse
Big 8 Conference. The Bear Cubs went 2-0-5
over their last seven regular-season games.
We have been peaking, Osborne said. I
would be scared to play us. That said, this is
still a junior college womens team, and we
still have some issues but I think my team
is talented enough to win.

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SPORTS

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Weekend Nov. 19-20, 2016

15

Ward-Kovalev bout could be best of 2016


By Tim Dahlberg
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LAS VEGAS Andre Ward has done just


about everything in boxing except the one
thing that truly defines fighters these days
headline a pay-per-view card in this gambling
city.
Its been a long time coming but he can check
that off Saturday when he meets Sergey
Kovalev in what might be the best fight of
what has been a down year for the sport. The
two meet for Kovalevs light heavyweight
titles in a rare matchup of unbeaten fighters in
their prime.
Ive been here so many times for so many
fights. I just wasnt fighting, Ward said. The
difference is Im the headliner now and it feels
good. What this town represents for the sport
of boxing, its an honor to be headlining here.
The fight is a classic clash of styles, pitting
the slick-boxing Ward against a big puncher
who has knocked out almost everyone put in
front of him. Its also a Cold War reprise of
sorts, with Ward a 2004 American Olympic
gold medalist and Kovalev coming from Russia

without much love for his


challenger.
Im going to deal with
the elephant in the room:
This is Russia vs. the
USA, Wards manager,
James Prince, said at the
final prefight news conference this week. And the
Andre Ward best of Russia cant beat
the best of the United
States of America. In nothing!
Actually, Kovalev has fought most of his
career in the U.S., has a home in Los Angeles
and has made himself fluent in English. But
this is boxing, and theres a pay-per-view to
sell for $64.95 to fans who havent reached
into their wallets for recent bouts.
The fight itself needs no extra hype.
Oddsmakers slightly favor Ward for his ability
to win a decision, but neither fighter has lost
and Kovalev is always just one big punch away
from ending any fight.
I will try to make it an interesting fight,
Kovalev said. If Andre Ward wins the fight all
boxing fans will lose some interesting fights

Sports brief
Daily fantasy sports rivals
DraftKings and FanDuel to merge
BOSTON Daily fantasy sports rivals DraftKings and
FanDuel have agreed to merge after months of speculation
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The two companies made the announcement Friday, saying the combined organization would be able to reduce costs
as they work to become profitable and battle with regulators
across the country to remain legal.

in the future because his


fights are boring. If I win
they will see interesting
fights again.
Ward has fought only
three times in the last three
years because of an injured
shoulder and a court dispute
with his late promoter, Dan
Sergey Kovalev Goossen. Hes a former
168-pound champion now
comfortable at 175 pounds, and has not lost a
fight, amateur or pro, in 20 years.
If theres a knock against him its that hes
defensive minded and has rarely fought outside
his hometown of Oakland. Hes also never captured the hearts of casual fight fans, even while
long being considered one of the top poundfor-pound fighters in the world.
Everyone has their own journey and this is
how the chips fell, Ward said. I think its just
a good thing its happening now. Just finding
the right opponent has something to do with
it. Something where people want to come and
travel from around the country to see the fight.
The right opponent seems to be Kovalev,

who came to America from Russia seven years


ago to try to make his mark in boxing. He
fought on undercards in small arenas for years
before finally becoming a regular attraction on
HBO, largely because of his knockout power.
Hes even more popular at home in Russia,
where promoters say the fight will be televised
live on state-run broadcaster Channel One.
America gave me opportunity, Kovalev
said. Its two great countries for me. I love
both countries, which is why I have two houses, Russia and America. Im very comfortable
with the people and the boxing in America.
Both fighters are 30-0, though Kovalev has
27 knockouts to 15 for Ward, who was the last
American to win a boxing gold medal when he
did it at the Athens Olympics 12 years ago.
Ward counters that power with better speed,
more experience, and the confidence that not
having lost since the age of 13 can give a fighter.
Hes a good boxer and obviously he can
punch, Ward said. Hes stubborn and Im stubborn. Whos going to break? Thats what it
comes down to. Its about going out there and
doing it and Ive done it my entire career.

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through investors and sponsorship deals, but state attorneys general, lawmakers and regulators have questioned
whether their online games in which players pick teams
of real life athletes and vie for cash and other prizes based
on how those athletes do in actual games amount to illegal sports betting.
The companies said in their statement that the merger,
which still requires federal approval, would help them more
efficiently lobby policymakers for a standard regulatory
framework for the relatively new industry, which grew out
of the traditional season-long fantasy sports competitions
played by millions of Americans.

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SPORTS

Weekend Nov. 19-20, 2016

HMB
Continued from page 11
Hofmann finished the game with 136 yards
on 28 carries.
It appeared the Gators had the game tied when
Tommy Barnd took the ensuing kickoff at the
12 and bolted through the Cougars kick coverage and down the left sideline for an apparent
touchdown.
But a block in the back at midfield negated the
score and forced the Gators to start their first
drive from their 34.
(That was) big, said SHP coach Pete
Lavorato. A touchdown on a kickoff return?
Thats a big momentum swing.
The Gators, however, put that behind them
and embarked on a long scoring drive of its
own, going 66 yards on 12 plays. They converted a key fourth-and-1 near midfield to keep

SERRA
Continued from page 11
When he gets going, we all know what hes
going to do, Patrick Nunn said. Whenever we
need him, he always steps up.
On defense, Vaefaga turned in a career game.
Having got his first taste of cornerback in
Serras regular-season win over St. Francis on
Oct. 8, he has been starting at the position ever
since. Until Friday, however, he hadnt recorded an interception. Now he has two, notching
half of Serras four picks of Lancers quarterback
Reed Vettel.
Vaefaga started the year as a slot receiver but
suffered a shoulder injury opening week. While
he was on the shelf, it dawned on him he could
see more action as a two-way player. He last

THE DAILY JOURNAL

the drive alive and Isoa Moimoi capped it with a


2-yard plunge of his own.
The snap on the extra point sailed over the
holders head, however, and the Gators trailed 76.
After that, both defenses took over. The
Gators forced a Cougars punt near midfield on
their next drive. But Tomberlin, who doubles as
the Half Moon Bay punter, pinned SHP deep in
its own end, as the Gators took over at their own
10. After a pair of negative plays, SHP faced
third-and-long from its own 6. Yaffe dropped
back to pass as the Cougars pass rush closed in.
Royce had Yaffe who finished with 140 yards
on 15-of-24 passing wrapped up in the end
zone when he tossed the ball to no one in particular. The flag came, intentional grounding
was called and because it was in the end zone, it
went for a safety to put the Cougars up 9-6.
People always focus on the last plays of the
game, Holden said. But they all matter.
It was just the first of several big plays made
by the Half Moon Bay defense. Linebacker Sean

Baird was all over the place, knifing into the


SHP backfield to make several tackles.
Our defense stepped it up, Baird said. That
(safety) was huge. We played with a better defensive attitude.
The teams traded punts on their next possessions and with 2:29 left in the half, Half Moon
Bay took over near midfield. After a 17-yard
screen pass to Quosig and two Hofmann carries,
the Cougars had a first down at the Gators 24.
On the next play, Tomberlin threw a perfect fade
pass to the corner of the end zone, where Von
Almen out-battled the defensive back to haul in
a 24-yard scoring pass to give the Cougars a 166 lead at the half.
In the second half, defense ruled through a
scoreless third quarter and most of the fourth.
With 6:22 left in the game, the Gators mounted
a 13-play, 80-yard drive that was capped when
running back Thomas Wine who spent most
of the season as the starting quarterback hit
Michael Mooring for a 40-yard score to cut the
Cougars lead to 16-13. But the Gators could not

recover the pooch kick and after forcing the


Cougars to punt, took over at their own 31 with
five seconds to play. The Gators tried to run a
razzle-dazzle play, but Wine was stopped after
catching a 27-yard pass, which ended the game.

played both sides of the ball with the juniorvarsity team, but had never done so until getting the call in the middle of the first showdown
with St. Francis.
From being injured, it changed my perspective more, Vaefaga said. So I told my coach
during this injury I wanted to play both sides of
the ball.
It was Vaefagas first varsity interception
midway through the first quarter that gave the
Padres a huge momentum swing and set up their
first score after the Serra offense opened the
game with two punts.
With Serra trailing 7-0, Vaefagas first INT
gave the Padres the ball at their own 23. They
nearly turned over the ball when Sitaleki Nunn
got stripped at the end of a short scramble. St.
Francis came up with the loose ball, but a defensive holding penalty by the Lancers nullified
the play and gave Serra its initial first down of
the game.

Three plays later, Kendrick hit pay dirt with a


59-yard scoring run to even the score at 7-7
with 2:32 remaining in the first quarter.
Kendrick took a play-action handoff from
Nunn. The junior tailback got to the sideline
and turned on the afterburners to outrun the St.
Francis pursuit.
The Lancers fired right back, taking over at
their own 31 and marching into Serra territory
with a 6-yard run, followed by a pair of 15-yard
gains. But with St. Francis facing third-and-16
from the Serra 39, Padres linebacker TC Lavulo
stepped right in front of a Vettel attempt over
the middle for an interception.
With Serra taking over at the Lancers 30,
Sitaleki Nunn opened with an 18-yard scramble
to get the Padres into field-goal range. Three
plays later, freshman place kicker Damon
Lewis who was called up to the varsity squad
just three weeks ago booted a 24-yard field
goal to give Serra a 10-7 lead going into half-

time. It was a costly drive, however, as two


plays previous to the go-ahead kick, Kendrick
departed and would not return.
With Bottari at quarterback to start the second half, Sitaleki Nunn got going out of the
backfield. He totaled 113 rushing yards on 16
carries, including a 44-yard dash into the red
zone on Serras first drive of the third quarter.
Four plays later, he punched it in on fourth-andinches to give the Padres a 17-7 lead.
After Serra and St. Francis traded scores to
give the Padres a 24-14 advantage with 8:59 to
go, Serra got the ball back on Vaefagas second
interception of the night, coming down with a
jump ball in the St. Francis end zone. Instead of
putting the ball on the ground to manage the
clock, however, Serra stayed with the hot hand
of Bottari, who completed 5 of 6 passes on the
ensuing drive, including a 30-yard strike to
Villaroman six catches for 91 yards to put
the game out of reach.

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When the final whistle blew, Half Moon Bay


began to celebrate. And why not? Its not every
year the Cougars make a CCS final although
it is the second year in a row.
Ive had 1-9 years, 3-7 years. Lots of years
when we didnt even make the playoffs, Holden
said. I know this is special.
In Open Division I play, No. 1 MenloAtherton (10-2) shut out No. 4 Bellarmine (75), 21-0. Aajon Johnson had another big game.
He rushed 9 yards for a touchdown and also
hooked up with Mekhi Blackmon for a 90-yard
scoring pass. Running back Jordan Mims
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take on No. 3 Milpitas, which beat No. 2 San
Benito 35-28.

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SPORTS

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Sports brief
Group reveals plan for $200M
soccer stadium in St. Louis
ST. LOUIS The NFLs Rams are
gone, and attention in St. Louis now
turns to soccer with an ownership
group pursuing a Major League
Soccer expansion team.
The effort includes plans to build a
$200 million stadium downtown
that would require millions of dollars in public funding.
The ownership group revealed
Thursday is known as SC STL. Paul
Edgerley, a partner at the investment
firm VantEdge Partners, is lead
owner and chairman. Among his
partners is Dave Peacock, former
president of Anheuser-Busch and a
driving force behind the effort last
year to build a $1 billion riverfront
stadium for the Rams.
The football stadium plan died
when the NFL in January approved
Rams owner Stan Kroenkes request

BIG GAME
Continued from page 12
We know whats at stake, Cal
receiver Bug
Rivera said.
Everybody knows whats at
stake. Wed really like to get that
bowl opportunity and think were
going to get it done.

Chrysts progress
After going just 24 for 47 for
164 yards in his first two starts,
Stanford quarterback Keller Chryst
showed signs of improvement last
week at Oregon. He completed 19
of 26 passes for 258 yards and
three touchdowns.
Hes been making incremental

to move the team to Los Angeles.


Since the departure of football,
efforts to secure an MLS team have
escalated.
The MLS is already adding two
new teams to expand to 24 by the
end of the decade, and eventually
plans to add four more, league
spokesman Dan Courtemanche said.
St. Louis is among eight markets
that have publicly expressed interest in the four additional expansion
slots, Courtemanche said. A
timetable for when those cities
would join the league has not been
determined.
Commissioner Don Garber said in
a statement that league officials
have had very productive meetings with Edgerley and his partners.
SC STL said it would fund much
of the stadium construction cost, but
St. Louis voters in April would be
asked to fund a significant share, up
to $80 million, according to the St.
Louis Post-Dispatch.
improvements the first two
games, Shaw said. Its the execution of the offense. All the positive signs were there in practice.
No one wants it more and no one is
pushing himself harder than
Keller. All he has to do is play his
part. He doesnt have to take the
game over.

Stopping McCaffrey
After being slowed by an undisclosed injury last month, Stanford
running back Christian McCaffrey
has been back to his dynamic self
the past three weeks. He has rushed
for 503 yards at an average of 7.0
yards per carry and scored seven
TDs in that span. He faces a Cal run
defense that is second-worst in the
FBS, allowing 283.4 yards rushing per game.

Weekend Nov. 19-20, 2016

NFL GLANCE

NBA GLANCE

AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct
New England 7 2 0 .778
Miami
5 4 0 .556
Buffalo
4 5 0 .444
N.Y. Jets
3 7 0 .300

PF
241
204
237
179

PA
163
206
203
244

South
Houston
Tennessee
Indianapolis
Jacksonville

6
5
4
2

3
5
5
7

0
0
0
0

.667
.500
.444
.222

161
264
239
174

188
251
256
239

North
Baltimore
Pittsburgh
Cincinnati
Cleveland

5
4
3
0

4 0
5 0
5 1
10 0

.556
.444
.389
.000

182
214
187
175

160
206
210
301

West
Kansas City
Raiders
Denver
San Diego

7
7
7
4

2
2
3
6

.778
.778
.700
.400

205
245
239
292

168
223
189
278

0
0
0
0

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East
Dallas
8 1 0 .889
N.Y. Giants
6 3 0 .667
Washington
5 3 1 .611
Philadelphia 5 4 0 .556

258
182
212
226

170
184
209
160

South
Atlanta
Tampa Bay
New Orleans
Carolina

6
4
4
4

4
5
6
6

0
0
0
0

.600
.444
.400
.400

320
216
285
244

283
242
286
246

North
Detroit
Minnesota
Green Bay
Chicago

5
5
4
2

4
4
5
7

0
0
0
0

.556
.556
.444
.222

205
175
223
141

206
152
234
215

West
Seattle
Arizona
Los Angeles
49ers

6
4
4
1

2
4
5
8

1
1
0
0

.722
.500
.444
.111

193
202
139
187

158
160
173
283

Thursdays Game
Carolina 23, New Orleans 20
Sunday's Games
Baltimore at Dallas, 10 a.m.
Chicago at N.Y. Giants, 10 a.m.
Jacksonville at Detroit, 10 a.m.
Tennessee at Indianapolis, 10 a.m.
Arizona at Minnesota, 10 a.m.
Pittsburgh at Cleveland, 10 a.m.
Buffalo at Cincinnati, 10 a.m.
Tampa Bay at Kansas City, 10 a.m.
Miami at Los Angeles, 1:05 p.m.
New England at San Francisco, 1:25 p.m.
Philadelphia at Seattle, 1:25 p.m.
Green Bay at Washington, 5:30 p.m.
Open: San Diego, Atlanta, Denver, N.Y. Jets
Monday's Game
Houston at Oakland, 5:30 p.m.

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W
L
Toronto
8
4
Boston
6
6
New York
5
7
Brooklyn
4
8
Philadelphia
2
10
Southeast Division
Atlanta
9
3
Charlotte
8
3
Orlando
5
7
Miami
3
8
Washington
3
8
Central Division
Cleveland
10
2
Chicago
8
4
Detroit
6
7
Indiana
6
7
Milwaukee
5
6
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Southwest Division
San Antonio
10
3
Memphis
7
5
Houston
7
5
New Orleans
3
10
Dallas
2
9
Northwest Division
Oklahoma City
8
5
Utah
7
6
Portland
7
7
Minnesota
4
7
Denver
4
8
Pacific Division
L.A. Clippers
11
2
Warriors
10
2
L.A. Lakers
7
6
Sacramento
4
9
Phoenix
4
9

17

NHL GLANCE

Pct
.667
.500
.417
.333
.167

GB

2
3
4
6

.750
.727
.417
.273
.273

1/2
4
5 1/2
5 1/2

.833
.667
.462
.462
.455

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

.769
.583
.583
.231
.182

2 1/2
2 1/2
7
7

.615
.538
.500
.364
.333

1
1 1/2
3
3 1/2

.846
.833
.538
.308
.308

1/2
4
7
7

Fridays Games
Charlotte 100, Atlanta 96
Phoenix 116, Indiana 96
Cleveland 104, Detroit 81
Golden State 104, Boston 88
New Orleans 113, Portland 101
Oklahoma City 124, Brooklyn 105
Memphis 80, Dallas 64
Toronto 113, Denver 111, OT
L.A. Clippers 121, Sacramento 115
San Antonio 116, L.A. Lakers 107
Saturdays Games
Utah at Houston, 2 p.m.
Boston at Detroit, 4 p.m.
Charlotte at New Orleans, 4 p.m.
Dallas at Orlando, 4 p.m.
Miami at Washington, 4 p.m.
Phoenix at Philadelphia, 4:30 p.m.
Minnesota at Memphis, 5 p.m.
Golden State at Milwaukee, 5:30 p.m.
Chicago at L.A. Clippers, 7:30 p.m.
Sundays Games
Atlanta at New York, 9 a.m.
Portland at Brooklyn, 12:30 p.m.
Indiana at Oklahoma City, 4 p.m.
Toronto at Sacramento, 6 p.m.
Utah at Denver, 6 p.m.
Chicago at L.A. Lakers, 6:30 p.m.

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
GP W
Montreal
18 13
Tampa Bay
18 11
Ottawa
17 10
Boston
17 10
Toronto
17 8
Florida
17 8
Detroit
18 8
Buffalo
17 5

L
3
6
6
7
6
8
9
8

OT
2
1
1
0
3
1
1
4

Pts
28
23
21
20
19
17
17
14

GF
58
58
39
41
56
45
44
31

GA
41
46
42
39
58
48
48
45

Metropolitan Division
N.Y. Rangers 18 13
Washington 17 11
Pittsburgh
17 11
New Jersey
16 9
Columbus
15 9
Philadelphia 18 8
Carolina
16 6
N.Y. Islanders 17 5

5
4
4
4
4
7
6
8

0
2
2
3
2
3
4
4

26
24
24
21
20
19
16
14

74
46
51
39
51
62
42
42

42
37
48
34
35
64
48
54

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
Chicago
18 12 4
St. Louis
18 9 6
Winnipeg
19 9 8
Minnesota
16 9 6
Dallas
18 7 6
Nashville
16 7 6
Colorado
16 7 9

2
3
2
1
5
3
0

26
21
20
19
19
17
14

57
44
56
42
48
46
33

45
50
55
29
59
44
45

Pacific Division
Anaheim
18
Edmonton
18
Sharks
17
Los Angeles 18
Vancouver
18
Calgary
19
Arizona
16

3
1
0
1
1
1
2

21
19
18
17
15
15
12

48
49
39
44
38
44
41

43
49
39
47
57
63
54

9
9
9
8
7
7
5

6
8
8
9
10
11
9

Friday's Games
Pittsburgh 3, N.Y. Islanders 2, OT
Washington 1, Detroit 0
Columbus 4, N.Y. Rangers 2
Carolina 3, Montreal 2
Chicago 3, Calgary 2
Saturday's Games
Tampa Bay at Philadelphia, 10 a.m.
New Jersey at Los Angeles, 1 p.m.
Toronto at Montreal, 4 p.m.
Edmonton at Dallas, 4 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Buffalo, 4 p.m.
Winnipeg at Boston, 4 p.m.
Florida at Ottawa, 4 p.m.
San Jose at Arizona, 5 p.m.
Colorado at Minnesota, 5 p.m.
Nashville at St. Louis, 5 p.m.
Chicago at Vancouver, 7 p.m.
Sundays Games
Columbus at Washington, 9:30 a.m.
Winnipeg at Carolina, 2 p.m.
Florida at N.Y. Rangers, 4 p.m.
Calgary at Detroit, 4:30 p.m.
Los Angeles at Anaheim, 5 p.m.

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18

Weekend Nov. 19-20, 2016

FEES
Continued from page 1
The council originally considered linkage
fees over a year ago after participating in the
countywide 21 Elements Nexus study
which draws correlations between new nonresidential developments and an increased
demand on housing. After stalling when
Foster City officials couldnt agree as to how
the fees might be spent, the city is now
reconsidering a policy that other local jurisdictions have adopted.
Its been a long time coming. I support it
because theyre necessary fees because these
[new developments] impact our community,
said Mayor Herb Perez.
City staff increased the amount its recommending developers pay per square foot of net
new hotel, retail and office space although
the rates remain below what the nexus study
consultants suggested, according to a staff
report.
The proposal is to charge by the square foot
with developers paying $6.25 for retail
space, $12.50 for hotels and $27.50 for new
office construction. In contrast, both the
county and city of San Mateo charge $5 for
retail space, $10 for hotel and $25 for office
space, according to the report.

LANGE
Continued from page 1
The collection documenting the companionship between Chongs grandmother and
Lange will be displayed at the museum, at
1777 California Drive in Burlingame, beginning Sunday, Jan. 29.
Chong said after years of sharing the photographs exclusively with friends and family,
she is ready to show the world the images
taken at Lovetts former property near Santa
Cruz where Lange would visit during the summer. But Chong acknowledged she harbors
some cautious optimism about exposing pictures amounting to personal family history
with strangers.
Its a mixed emotion thing for me because
to me these are family photos, she said.
These are priceless. Im sure someone could
put a value on them. But they are priceless to
me.
Chong was willing to exhibit the photographs in hopes of driving more attention

LOCAL

THE DAILY JOURNAL

In all cases in which linkage fees have been


adopted in the county thus far, the rates dont
reflect the actual cost of constructing housing
to offset impact. For example, consultants
estimate accommodating impacts generated
by developments such as resulting in new
jobs would actually cost between $151 to
$262 per square foot of commercial space,
according to the report. Its still below actual
construction estimates for building new
housing.
Perez noted the revenue generated from the
fees might not be a significant amount, particularly as the city is primarily built out and
linkage fees are only charged to net new
square footage meaning if a developer
demolishes 100,000 square feet of office
space and constructs a new 120,000 square
foot office building, theyd only pay fees on
the additional 20,000 square feet.
But if the city continues to be built out per
its general plan, the linkage fees could generate an estimated $29 million to $53 million,
according to the report.
However, the fees are one aspect of a multifaceted approach to addressing housing
needs, he said.
We have to do something and this is a
great starting point, Perez said.
Councilman Gary Pollard said its too bad
the city didnt enact linkage fees earlier as
projects approved over the last year wont

qualify. Previously, a decision was stalled


when there was concern over passing new
fees before deciding how to spend the money.
Now, Pollard said hes hopeful adopting linkage fees will again prompt a serious discussion on how the revenue should be spent.
Im really sad that we didnt do this when
we had an opportunity almost a year and a half
ago, Pollard said. It still hasnt been determined how, where and when were going to
use these fees but we havent had a roll-upthe-sleeves conversation yet.
A number of residents have expressed
staunch opposition to creating any new housing units in the small city and both Pollard
and Perez noted there may be other options
on how to spend the money. For example, the
city has more than 70 units that are currently
set aside as affordable within private developments, but are slated to expire in 2020. One
option could be to pay property owners to
retain units as affordable. Another might be
to contribute toward nonprofits such as the
Housing Endowment and Regional Trust of
San Mateo County, or HEART.
Pollard said he might also want to consider
whether there should be more flexibility in
how the funds can be spent based on whats
needed at the time.
Another concern, which he plans on articulating during Mondays meeting, is whether
to provide exemptions or discounts to devel-

opers who pay construction workers higher


wages.
San Mateo and the county offer discounts to
builders who ensure those constructing the
facilities are paid area standard wages. Foster
City will consider the same, although Pollard
and Perez both indicated they werent sold on
providing exemptions. For example, the city
is typically able to negotiate with developers
to pay higher wages as part of the development agreement process or when builders
seek special exemptions or rezoning.
The suggested fees would only apply to
commercial developments, however, the city
has an inclusionary zoning policy whereby it
urges developers of multi-family housing
projects to set aside about 20 percent of the
units as affordable.
The commercial linkage fees would not
apply to projects of 5,000 square feet or less,
to public facilities such as schools or hospitals or to government-owned properties,
according to the report.
I think its time to reinvest in the affordable housing component, Perez said. From
time to time we get people that come through
and have really sad stories about their inability to live in Foster City. As Ive said before,
we cant be a solution to everything, but we
can be part of the solution.

and funding to the museum where she keeps a


studio showing her work as a painter.
I want this museum to succeed, she said.
Lange, who died in 1965, is one of
Americas most recognized photographers
and photojournalists after rising to fame
based on her work documenting those affected by the Great Depression. The former Bay
Area resident took Migrant Mother,
Florence Owens Thompson, in California. It
is perhaps her most notable image.
Chong said her grandmother bonded with
Lange when Lovett visited the photographers studio some time around 1920.
She walked in for a portrait and walked out
with a friend, said Chong.
The two grew closer over the years, and
Lange would frequently visit Lovett and her
husband at their property in Soquel, where
they would spend the days basking in the
nearby creek, said Chong.
Many of the images displayed in the exhibit are taken from the creek, and illustrate a
side of Chongs grandparents that she did not
know as a child. Chong said she was surprised
to learn her grandparents, who were strict
Protestants, had a predisposition for sun-

bathing nude, as is documented in the exhibit. The series also shows some of the children
Lange had with famous painter Maynard
Dixon skinny dipping in the water adjacent
to the land Chong inherited from her grandparents and still visits during vacations with
her husband.
She said perhaps the most interesting feature of the Lovett collection is seeing work
by Lange illustrating her subjects happy and
relaxed, which is apart from the dour tone of
much of the work she became most famous for
producing.
Lange and Lovett remained friends for
years, as the two would often send their children to stay for extended periods of time with
one another during vacations. Chong said she
remembers hearing stories from her aunt
about the time she spent visiting Lange and
feeling unwelcome due to the photographers
blunt nature.
Beyond the photographs, Chong said her
family also has preserved notes and letters
shared between Lange and Lovett as the two
stayed in contact over the years.
Considering the wealth of Langes work
preserved by Chongs family, she believes

many others probably have similar collections which could become public in the
future. I would not be surprised if this is the
only personal stash, she said. We are just
the first to do this.
She encouraged those who may suspect
they may have some of Langes private work
to contact the Oakland Museum of California,
where the photographers personal archives
were donated, along with 25,000 negatives,
6,000 prints and an extensive collection of
original field notes and memorabilia.
But as she prepares for her exhibit to open
locally, Chong said she is happy to share this
small slice of her familys life with the world.
Im proud of the family history they have
captured, she said.
During the preview for the museum
fundraiser, there will also be a showing of
documentary film Child of Giants, by
Langes son Daniel Dixon, based on his
childhood raised by famous artistic parents.
The Louise Lovett Collection will be displayed beginning Sunday, Jan. 27, at the
Peninsula Museum of Art, 1777 California
Drive. Visit peninsulamuseum.org for more
information.

The City Council meets 7 p.m. Monday,


Nov. 15 at City Hall, 620 Foster City Blvd.

Bleed
for This
A comeback
story times two
SEE PAGE 21

Lesson from
the election
By Cindy Zhang

Xenophobia. Prejudice. Oppression.


Whos up for a little escapism at the multiplex?
J.K. Rowling, embarking on her new,
post-Potter blockbuster franchise with
Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find
Them, has said herself that her screenplay,
which she began several years ago, was
informed by world events particularly,
she noted, a rise in populism around the
globe.
And so theres definitely some darkness

At school, the days immediately following the election were filled with emotion.
Emotions of all sorts: there was disappointment and elation, fear and hope,
embarrassment and relief. And given the
exhausting length and the particularly divisive rhetoric of this years presidential
election, it was hardly
surprising to see students, teachers and staff
with such strong, heartfelt reactions.
Yet, in the midst of the
tears and the shaking
heads and the drawn-out
sighs, some teachers
including a few of my
own at San Mateo High
School saw an opportunity.
This years presidential election was,
undoubtedly, one of the most closely followed and widely publicized ones in
American history. Yet, despite its pervasiveness, there seemed to be a lack of real
understanding on all sides; it appeared as
though a significant number of people had
what were incomplete at best, incorrect at
worst, ideas about the presidents responsibilities and how the government works.
So in some of the classrooms at my high
school, teachers chose to move beyond the
complicated feelings and mixed emotions,
using the election and its relatively
unexpected results as a way to open and
prompt a more scholarly discussion about
our government and democracy.
We often started our one-and-a-half-hour
blocks of class time with Donald Trumps
win, the majority of the class choosing to
condemn some of his campaign promises
and inflammatory comments. Yet, while
Trump, as the new president-elect, certainly
could have been the center of the conversation, the discussion, guided by teachers,
shifted away from the election and its winners and losers. Instead, we focused on the
implications of a Republican victory after
eight years of a Democrat president, the
roles and responsibilities of the president
and the vice president, the creation of and
purpose behind the Electoral College.
We talked about the presidents role in
domestic and foreign affairs, the system of
checks and balances, the presidents
appointment of Cabinet members. We discussed the formal requirements to being

See BEASTS, Page 22

See STUDENT, Page 21

Fantastic Beasts promising,


but not yet Potter-magical
Redmayne on finally getting his Potter shot
By Jake Coyle
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK After spending two


straight falls consumed by awards season,
Eddie Redmayne is taking a break from the
Oscars and fronting his first franchise.
In the Harry Potter prequel Fantastic
Beasts and Where to Find Them, the mantle of J.K. Rowlings leading man has
been passed from Radcliffe to Redmayne.
His Newt Scamander also wields a wand,

but hes a humbler operator in the same


magical realm. Newt is a sheepish Brit
arriving in 1926 New York, with a leather
case stuffed with wondrous but outlawed
creatures.
Though the film, which also stars Colin
Farrell, Katherine Waterson and Dan
Fogler, is an ensemble, Redmayne is
undoubtedly the freckled face of the new
Pottermania. Its a new, high-pressured
role for Redmayne, an Oscar winner for his

See POTTER, Page 22

By Jocelyn Noveck
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Im not normal the quirky genius that is Alton Brown


By Mark Kennedy
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK Alton Brown thinks about


food differently than you do. You dont get
obsessive with hummus. He does. You dont
research the long, weird history of nutmeg
or put sumac in everything. He does.
You never considered having spaghetti in
the morning. He did and made it delicious. Why arent we having pasta for

breakfast? I dont understand why we dont do


this? the TV chef and
writer asked recently.
You can find Brown at
the intersection of food,
science, history and theater. Its a weird place, as
even he admits: I dont
Alton Brown fit in anywhere. He has
a restless, inquisitive
mind and a chemists rigor. He blends his

own red pepper flakes and yet knows how


strange that is. Im a freak, he confesses.
Brown returns this fall with two typically
idiosyncratic offerings: A cookbook of the
unexpected stuff he eats at home and a live
variety show that hits Broadway with a mix
of unusual food demonstrations, puppets
and songs.
EveryDayCook:
This
Time Its
Personal, his eighth book and first in five
years, has 100 quirky recipes, from mussels
in miso to kimchi crabcakes. The recipes

were adapted from memory; some were


scribbled on cabinet doors.
Ostensibly, its a self-portrait in food,
he says. That is what I eat and cook. If you
were to come over to my house, it would be
something out of that book. I think I was at
a point in life where it was time to do a selfportrait.
How Brown came up with one dish his
breakfast carbonara is instructive: It was

See BROWN Page 21

20

WEEKEND JOURNAL

Weekend Nov. 19-20, 2016

THE DAILY JOURNAL

MUSEUM GOTTA SEE UM


By Susan Cohn
DAILY JOURNAL SENIOR CORRESPONDENT

CANTOR ARTS CENTER EXHIBITION PRESENTS DUTCH GOLDEN


AGE PRINTS BY REMBRANDT VAN
RIJN AND HIS PEERS. In the Dutch
Republic during the 17th century, in an era
known as the Golden Age, newly wealthy
collectors demanded contemporary Dutch
prints. Rembrandt van Rijn and his peers
responded not only with traditional biblical and mythological subjects, but also
familiar landscapes and character studies
inspired by daily life. Now, the Cantor Arts
Center at Stanford University presents The
Wonder of Everyday Life: Dutch Golden Age
Prints, a major exhibition of approximately 55 works by Rembrandt van Rijn
and his Dutch peers. The images were created during an extraordinary moment in the
history of prints, when unprecedented economic prosperity and patronage elevated
printmaking.
A hallmark of Golden Age prints is the
emphasis bordering on obsession
placed on depicting the material world. The
images were often imagined scenes composed in the studio from previously
observed vignettes. However, they so
closely capture the details of Dutch culture
as to feel like direct documentation. Whats
more, the small scale of many prints meant
that the viewer must physically engage with
them hold them close, feel the paper and
smell the ink. These works inspired the
public to regard visual art as capable of
rivaling poetry in describing complex sensory and emotional experiences and helping people navigate spiritualitys role in a
modern and affluent society.

On view at the Cantor Arts Center at Stanford University are (left to right) Jan de Baens The Burning of the Town Hall in Amsterdam, 1652;
Rembrandt van Rijns Joseph Telling his Dreams, 1638; Anthonie Waterloos Landscape with Church in Moonlight, 1650s; and Rembrandt
van Rijns Portrait of Jan Asselyn, Painter, 1647.
Works in the show include portraits and
self-portraits by Rembrandt that demonstrate how he revolutionized etching, using
it with the intimacy and directness generally associated with drawing. Figure studies,
such as Rembrandts well-known work The
Pancake Woman (1635) and Adriaen van
Ostades The Knife Grinder (1671), represent various trades and social types, and
give descriptive attention to clothing and
naturalistic
gestures.
A landscape
Rembrandt created in 1641 captures the traditional architecture and the ways people
lived in the areas outside Amsterdam, while
landscapes by Anthonie Waterloo and
Reinier Nooms demonstrate the Dutch fascination with manipulating light and dark to
create visual drama.
Elizabeth Kathleen Mitchell, Burton and
Deedee McMurtry Curator of Drawings,
Prints and Photographs, said, These
visionary artists held a mirror up to society,
enabling the Dutch to contemplate their
identity and values during a time of tremendous change. The resulting images are as

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The Cantor Arts Center is open six days a
week, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Wednesday-Monday,
Thursday until 8 p. m. ; closed Tuesday.
Admission is free. The Cantor is located on
the Stanford campus, off Palm Drive at
Museum Way. Parking is free after 4 p.m.
weekdays and all day on weekends and major
holidays. For information call 723-4177 or
visit museum.stanford.edu. The Wonder of
Everyday Life: Dutch Golden Age Prints is
on view through March 20, 2017.
***
ART ON THE SQUARES HOLIDAY
SHOW IN THE SAN MATEO COUNTY
HISTORY MUSEUM. Shop for original
art under the spectacular stained glass rotunda in the Old Courthouse at 2200 Broadway
in Redwood City. Jewelry, photography,
leather bags, paintings and more. Saturday,
Nov. 19, from 11 a.m. until 4 p.m. For more
information
visit
http://www.historysmc.org/main.php?pag
e=holidayart or call 868-9027.

***
B URLINGAME
ART
S OCIETY
ANNOUNCES NEW MEETING LOCATION. Beginning in January 2017, the
Burlingame Art Society will meet from 7
p.m. to 9 p.m. on the second Monday of
every month (except July, August and
December) in the Lane Room of the
Burlingame Library, 480 Primrose Road.
The Society was organized in 1957 by
artists who wanted to practice the principles
of traditional art. BAS membership includes
men and women actively participating in
the pursuit of quality visual arts, while providing friendly relationships with other
artists. Among its members are art teachers
and talented artists, as well as those who are
genuinely interested in a learning experience. Beginners are welcome. For more
information visit http://burlingameartsociety.org or come to a meeting.
Susan Cohn can be reached at susan@smdailyjournal.com or www.twitter.com/susancityscene.

WEEKEND JOURNAL

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Weekend Nov. 19-20, 2016

21

In Bleed for This, a comeback times two


By Jake Coyle
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A melee has broken out in the boxing


film. The genres ring is so crowded, a
fighter leaning back for a left hook might
inadvertently sock the wrong opponent.
Training montages could be combined to
make a legitimate exercise video.
The films are literally bleeding together: Southpaw, Hands of Stone,
Grudge Match, Creed and now Bleed
for This. Most of these have loyally kept
to the boxing movies conventions; only
Ryan Cooglers terrific Creed had moves
of its own (and it was a reboot).
Ben Youngers Bleed for This, starring
Miles Teller, distinguishes itself by doubling down on some of the tried-and-true
formulas. Its a comeback times two.
Teller plays Vinny Pazienza (Paz or
the Pazmanian Devil), a lightweight and
middleweight champ from blue-collar
Providence, Rhode Island. He isnt exceptionally powerful or technical, but he
thrives on pain. In the ring, he doesnt

BROWN
Continued from page 19
an accident. He had been intending to make
biscuits and gravy with sausage but burned
the biscuits. So he threw some leftover
pasta into the gravy.
I started thinking, Wait a second, this
isnt that far away from carbonara, he
recalled, and stated adding more ingredients. All of a sudden, I had a different dish.
That was born of a complete goof on my
part.
It was only after he saw the books photos
all taken by his assistant using an
iPhone of the way he likes to serve his
food that Brown, as he politely notes, was
made mindful that Im not normal.
Not everyone plates their chips and salsa
in a 1974 Mercury hubcap. Not everybody

STUDENT
Continued from page 19
president (there are only three; you must be
a natural-born U.S. citizen, at least 35
years old and have lived in the United
States for 14 years), the increasing polarization of American politics (and the repercussions of such a pronounced divide), the

seem to get fired up until hes been hit a


little. You got heart, kid, one character
tells him, but you wear it on your chin.
Hes also brash. Though he refuses alcohol or drugs, Vinny will gamble past midnight before a fight or show up to a weighin in leopard-spotted underwear. (This is
the late 80s, complete with big hair,
Corvettes, black shades and leather jackets aplenty.) This makes him a perfect role
for Teller who, following his turn as the
tyrannically-tutored jazz drummer in
Whiplash, is steadily building an
impressively masochistic resume.
Vinnys boxing career is on the ropes,
and after a bad loss, hes left pleading his
promoters for just another fight. When a
knockout lands him in the hospital, he
tells the doctor: The pain doesnt bother
me.
This, it turns out, is tempting fate.
Thanks to a rejuvenating new trainer,
Kevin Rooney (an excellent Aaron
Eckhart, almost unrecognizable with a
bald head and round stomach), Vinnys
career finally takes an upswing. But this is

quickly wiped out, on a run to Foxwoods,


by a car crash that nearly breaks his spine.
In the wreckage, Vinnys bloody unconscious head rests gently on a shattered
window as if it were a pillow.
Hes fitted with a halo, a metal contraption that surrounds his head to keep
his neck straight. Told he might not walk
again, let alone fight, Vinny resolutely
embarks on an almost quixotic comeback.
The films finest scenes are of a Vinny,
a man built to hit things, wired with steel
so that he cant touch anything let alone
jab it. One less-than-enthusiastic girlfriend, who gets her hair caught in it, is
replaced by a more accommodating
brunette: Its like braces times a thousand, she says, enthusiastically. Vinnys
sister, across the kitchen table, deadpans
to Vinny: She might be the one.
Yo un g er, t h e di rect o r o f Bo i l er
Ro o m an d Pri me, fi l ms Vi n n y s j o urn ey i n a l audab l y un s en t i men t al
ap p ro ach . On e o f Tel l ers fi n es t qual i t i es , t o o , i s h i s di s i n t eres t i n an y t h i n g
co rn y o r s acch ari n e. Hes a mo v i e s t ar,

wi t h o ut t h e us ual s h een .
Most of the films big moments, even
its triumphant fight scenes, are sufficient
if uninspired. At this point, the boxing
movies are even stepping over each in the
ring; one major fight here is with Roberto
Duran, the subject of Hands of Stone.
Bleed for This has some colorful New
England flavor (particularly thanks to the
great Ciaran Hinds as Vinnys father). But
that, too, feels lifted from David O.
Russells The Fighter.
Bleed for This is ultimately a
straightforward, well-acted parable about
taking punches. Maybe thats why boxing movies are everywhere these days:
people, feeling beat-up, want the inspiration. Or maybe if the standard boxing
tropes keep swinging, they just want to
duck.
Bleed for This, an Open Road Films
release, is rated R by the Motion Picture
Association of America for language,
sexuality/nudity and some accident
images. Running time: 117 minutes.
Two and a half stars out of four.

plates crackers in a Kodak slide carousel. I


had not really reckoned with how odd I am,
he says. If you dont like this book, odds
are you dont like me. Because thats pretty
much me.
There will be more of Brown on view on
Broadway when his touring show Eat Your
Science lands at the Barrymore Theatre. A
former actor with a theater degree who did
summer stock, Brown models his shows on
The Sonny & Cher Comedy Hour and
describes it as culinary vaudeville.
I can finally say to my mom, Yes, my
theater degree did matter, he jokes.
Lee D. Marshall, a producer at
MagicSpace Entertainment, says Browns
stage shows are funny and informative,
drawing on his background as a writer, producer, cinematographer and comedian.
Most folks that are television chefs,
they cook. He explains how things work,
Marshall says. He can make making scram-

bled eggs the most interesting topic on the


planet.
Brown says he doesnt get caught up in
food trends and often doesnt trust them. He
avoided jumping on the molecular gastronomy bandwagon a few years back because he
really didnt care.
Nobody wakes up in the middle of the
night craving soy sauce spheres. We wake
up craving pizza. Im far more interested in
helping people get to the dishes they kind
of already want, he says.
Brown made his name with the quirky
Good Eats on Food Network from 19992011. In each episode, Brown examined a
new recipe or ingredient, the science behind
it, the proper tools to use and its history. He
plans on reviving the show as an onlineonly series.
But though hes a star, Brown is leery of
the Kitchen-Industrial Complex, telling
fans they dont need to buy titanium

corkscrews or an $8,000 pizza oven. On


Good Eats, he insisted that every gadget
do multiple tasks.
I have no endorsement deals and I dont
have multiple homes, says Brown. At
some point along the line, I decided authenticity above everything else. He adds: I
like empowering people.
His own tastes are, as you might expect,
all over the map. He puts harissa and mayonnaise in his scrambled eggs, and adds
curry to watermelon, suspecting that since
India and the American South both have
fearsome heat, they might have complementary flavors.
Im pedantic, I guess, when it comes to
my tastes, he says. Im fascinated by
Japanese food and, at the same time, Id
rather have a well-made Cuban (sandwich)
than almost anything on earth. And Im
pretty sure french fries are the best food on
earth.

importance of and impact of third parties.

geographical location could skew voting


patterns to favor a particular candidate or
party, but also how they could be used to
explain low voter turnout.

high school classroom discussion, when


we vote (yes, when we vote, not if we
vote), we will be more knowledgeable,
more thoughtful and more conscious of our
own impact on the landscape of American
politics.

Speaking in turn, with teachers providing insight or commentary, we voiced our


own thoughts about why Trump had won,
despite low voter approval and a plethora
of derogatory remarks, and about why
Clinton had lost, despite polls predicting
an easy victory and a landslide of endorsements. We considered how different demographics had voted, how factors such as
race, gender, socioeconomic status and

And as we put aside our personal opinions about the election itself knowing
that the votes had all been cast and that the
next president had already been determined
and talked about government bureaucracy and American politics, I realized that
four years from now, thanks in part to this

Cindy Zhang is a senior at San Mateo High School.


Student News appears in the weekend edition. You
can email Student News at news@smdailyjournal.com.

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22

Weekend Nov. 19-20, 2016

BEASTS
Continued from page 19
in Fantastic Beasts, despite its being a
family film, complete with the sweetest little
beasts (and bigger ones) imaginable
expect to see your kid melt forthwith over
the lovable jewelry-imbibing Niffler (Its
stunning how many carats he can consume
without gaining weight.)
But theres also a refreshingly light tone
competing with the sinister themes, thanks
especially to two exceedingly appealing
supporting characters headed for a sweet confection of a romance.
But first, the title: Harry Potter fans will
know that Fantastic Beasts was a required
text for Harry and his Hogwarts mates. That
little book has now become the seed of a
franchise there are FOUR films to come
based on its author, Newt Scamander (Eddie
Redmayne), a wizard Magizoologist with a

POTTER
Continued from page 19
Stephen Hawking in The Theory of
Everything and a nominee for last years
The Danish Girl. So is fatherhood; in
June, his wife, Hannah Bagshawe, gave
birth to their daughter, Iris.
A few hours after taking a break from promotional duties with Iris, Redmayne chatted
in a downtown Manhattan hotel about his
headlong dive into Rowlings empire, the
films multicultural message and just how
many movies hes gotten himself into.
AP: Yo ur fi rs t bl us h wi th the Harry
Po tter wo rl d came much earl i er, di dnt i t?
Redmay ne: This is true. When I was at
university, they were casting the net quite
wide for Tom Riddle, the young Voldemort. I
had gotten an audition. I think I was seeing
the casting directors eighth assistant. I

WEEKEND JOURNAL

THE DAILY JOURNAL

mop haircut, a bashful grin, and one fabulous


briefcase.
Why is this briefcase so great? Well, its
magic, like Mary Poppins carpet bag. But
while Mary basically pulled out room furnishings, Scamander has not only a
menagerie of fantastical creatures, but seemingly a whole mini-planet in there to house
them.
We start with Scamander just off the boat in
1926 New York, a few years before the Great
Depression. Director David Yates, of the last
four Potter films, has clearly spared no
expense in creating this Jazz Age Big Apple,
from the grand skyscrapers and period automobiles to Colleen Atwoods delicious costumes, to of course the endlessly inventive
CGI beasts.
Its not the best time for a young wizard
and his pets to be arriving. Magical folk
have gone undercover. Among the No-Majs
(thats American for Muggles, or humans),
zealots from the Second Salemers (as in
Salem Witch Trials) are looking to destroy
wizards and witches.

So the wizards governing body,


MACUSA, is suppressing all magical
beasts, lest they expose the wizards. Its particularly inconvenient when Newts creatures are accidentally set loose across the
city.
It becomes a race against time for Newt and
three companions to rescue them and save
the city from an undefined, sinister force.
These companions are Tina (Katherine
Waterston), an ambitious but well-meaning
MACUSA investigator; Jacob (Dan Fogler),
an amiable, portly No-Maj baker who gets
caught up in it all; and Queenie, Tinas mindreading, sweetly sensitive sister (Alison
Sudol).
Also in the mix: Percival Graves (Colin
Farrell, in an undefined role), the mysterious
director of MACUSA, and zealot Mary Lou
Barebone (Samantha Morton). And theres
one more big star bigger than all who
makes a late appearance. (We wont spoil it
here feel free to Google.)
Its all entertaining, lovely, expertly done.
Why then does it feel as if somethings miss-

ing? Perhaps its our inescapable urge to


compare it to the Potter phenomenon.
Or perhaps its that Harry was, well, a kid,
who we watched grow up. Fantastic Beasts
is obviously more of an adult story.
Redmayne is charming, though less commanding than in some other roles. He has
nice charisma with the winsomely earnest
Waterston. But the real chemistry is between
Fogler and Sudol, an unlikely couple eyeing
each other coyly across the Wizard/No-Maj
chasm.
Then there are the beasts not just
Niffler, but Bowtruckle, Erumpent, Murtlaf
and Mooncalf, to name a few. Here, Rowling
delivers as only she can. I dont think Im
dreaming, Jacob says. I aint got the
brains to make this up.
Other than Rowling, who really does?
Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find
Them, a Warner Bros. release, is rated PG-13
by the Motion Picture Association of
America for some fantasy action violence.
Running time: 133 minutes. Three stars out
of four.

remember surviving about three and a half


lines of the first scene before I was shown
the door, so I wasnt very successful. It wasnt the greatest introduction to the Harry
Potter world.
AP: I i mag i ne, bei ng a y o ung acto r
i n Bri tai n, many o f y o ur co ntempo rari es were fi ndi ng thei r way i n.
Redmay ne: I definitely thought having
a slight ginger gene there must be some distant relative of a Weasley I could be. I had
lots of friends Robert Pattinson did the
film and then Domhnall Gleeson played a
Weasley. They would come back with wonderful tales. But I never got the call.
AP: So ho w di d Fantas ti c Beas ts
co me to y o u?
Redmay ne: It came in the most wonderfully cryptic, slightly sort of Harry Potter-y
way. I got a call saying that (director) David
Yates wanted to meet. We met at a club called
Blacks in Soho in London. I went downstairs and I found David sitting by a roaring
fire. And I have this little case, this Globe-

Trotter case that I always use as my work


case. I think I was working on The Danish
Girl so I came from there. He just gently
started telling me this story and introducing
me to who Newt Scamander was. And then he
mentioned this case that had this sort of
Mary Poppins-like quality. And I subtly
pushed my case back. I was so mortified that
he might think I was that actor who had
turned up dressed as the character.
AP: What di d Ro wl i ng tel l y o u
abo ut Newt?
Redmay ne: We had a discussion for
about an hour two weeks before filming. It
was the first time I met her. She told me
where Newt came from in her imagination
and aspects of her own life. It was a really
wonderful conversation and galvanizing
conversation. But its not one thats really
my place to talk about because it was personal to her.
AP: The fantas ti cal beas ts y o ur
character i s s ecretl y s hepherdi ng are
deepl y feared and banned i n Ameri ca.

The po l i ti cal s ubtex t i s hard to mi s s .


Redmay ne: I find that interesting in
what it represents of things we dont know,
things we see as other that we just become
terrified of and dismiss. Newt believes, with
the right education for both wizards and the
creatures, theres a way to live harmoniously. I dont feel like hes a broadcaster. Hes
doing it in his own gentle way.
AP:
Ro wl i n g
h as
re c e n t l y
anno unced s he pl ans no t three but
fi v e Fantas ti c Beas ts fi l ms . Wi l l
y o u be aro und fo r al l o f them?
Redmay ne: In my heart of hearts, I dont
know. Im contracted to a few more but they
always contract you to more in case youre
needed. But I think only Jo knows what the
story is. What I feel, what I get the sense of,
is that Newt and his case and the beasts are
the catalyst and the entrance our eyes
into this much bigger story that she wants
to tell about good versus evil. I had the most
wonderful time doing it and I would love to
be a part of it as it moves forward unless
I get killed off!

YOUR ONE-STOP TRAVEL CENTER!

THE DAILY JOURNAL

WEEKEND JOURNAL

Weekend Nov. 19-20, 2016

23

Brothers clash in Safe House at Aurora


By Judy Richter
DAILY JOURNAL CORRESPONDENT

The Edge of Seventeenis a charmingly sardonic coming-of-age


story from the promising writer-director Kelly Fremon Craig.

Steinfelds angst shines in


The Edge of Seventeen
By Lindsey Bahr
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Whens the last time you saw a truly fresh talent on


screen? Someone so charismatic that you couldnt wait to
find out who they are, what theyve done before and why
youve never noticed? Thats what it feels like to watch
Hayden Szeto as the sweetly dorky love interest to Hailee
Steinfelds lead in The Edge of Seventeen, a charmingly
sardonic coming-of-age story from the promising writerdirector Kelly Fremon Craig in her feature debut.
There are other reasons to go see The Edge of Seventeen,
of course. Szeto, a relative newcomer, is just one of them. He
actually has a fairly small part. But its the kind of introduction to a should-be star thats not to be missed. Also, that
the small love interest role had such an impact is a testament to the care with which this movie was put together.
From the first shot of a grungy maroon sedan door splattered
with mud screeching to a halt outside of a high school where
our heroine Nadine (Steinfeld) informs her teacher (a terrific
Woody Harrelson) that she plans to kill herself, its clear
that this is no sanitized high school nostalgia trip. Its a
movie with a bite and one for the people who would never
actually want to go back to that part of life.
Nadine (Steinfeld) is a sarcastic, often inappropriate,
occasionally blue and perpetually aggrieved young woman
who exists on the peripheries of the high school ecosystem.
Its been this way since childhood for her, and hasnt been
helped by the fact that her brother Darian (Blake Jenner) is
at the top of the social ladder. Hes handsome and popular
and good at sports and would probably be real annoying if it
werent for the fact that hes also a decent, kind person who
seems to have his head on straight.
But hes the bane of Nadines existence, and just a consistent reminder how other she is. It certainly doesnt help
when her best friend Krista (Haley Lu Richardson) takes up
with her brother, but that pivotal moment does send her into
a story-propelling spiral of action, screw-ups and self-discovery.
There is, of course, the perpetual problem in the
Hollywood treatment of high school outcast stories whereby were asked to believe that beautiful movie stars are capable of being invisible, but The Edge of Seventeen even
does a reasonable job making us buy into Nadines apartness. She had some unfortunate skin and haircuts when she
was younger and never quite got comfortable with kids her
own age.

Aurora Theatre Company sheds light


on a little-known chapter of American
history,
specifically
AfricanAmerican history, in the West Coast
premiere of the 2014 Safe House by
Keith Josef Adkins.
Set in Kentucky in 1843, Safe
House concerns the Pedigrews, a free
family of color. They are free because
they had an ancestor who was the child
of a black woman and a white man.
Addison Pedigrew (David Everett
Moore) is a skilled shoemaker assisted by his brother, Frank (Lance
Gardner), and their aunt, Dorcas (Dawn
L. Troupe).
Although nominally free, theyre
nearing the end of what amounts to a
two-year house arrest imposed by the
local sheriff because they had helped a
runaway slave trying to get to Liberia
via the Underground Railroad.
(According to Wikipedia, The
Republic of Liberia began as a settlement of the American Colonization
Society, which believed blacks would
face better chances for freedom in
Africa than in the United States.
Thousands moved there during the
approximately 40 years before the
Civil War).
Addison could go around the county
selling shoes, but he and the others
had to be home by sundown, keep
their doors open and faced other
restrictions. The sheriffs helper,
Bracken (Cassidy Brown), came by
frequently to check that they werent
breaking any rules.

DAVID ALLEN

From left, Addison (David Everett Moore), Dorcas (Dawn L.Troupe) and Frank (Lance
Gardner) look over their new freedom papers in Safe House.
With the restrictions about to end,
the brothers find themselves at odds.
Addison wants to open a shoe shop in
their house and assumes Frank agrees.
Frank has other ideas, such as getting
out from under Addisons domination.
Addison also assumes that their
neighbor, Clarissa (Dezi Soly), will
marry him, but she and Frank are
secretly in love.
The conflicts come to a head when
Frank and Dorcas assist a fugitive
slave, Roxie (Jamella Cross). Thats
when Frank learns just how far
Addison will go to fulfill his dream no
matter what the cost to Frank.

Baptist

Church of Christ

PILGRIM BAPTIST CHURCH


Dr. Larry Wayne Ellis, Pastor

CHURCH OF CHRIST
525 South Bayshore Blvd. SM
650-343-4997
Bible School 9:45am
Services 11:00am and
2:00pm
Wednesday Bible Study 7:00pm
Minister J.S. Oxendine
www.church-of-christ.org/cocsm

(650) 343-5415

217 North Grant Street, San Mateo


Sunday School 9:00 am
Sunday Worship Services 10:00 am
Wednesday Worship 7pm

www.pilgrimbcsm.org

As skillfully directed by L. Peter


Callender, the drama unfolds grippingly. Each character is clearly
defined.
Troupe as Dorcas creates an especially strong character, one who provides stability and who tries to keep
peace between the brothers.
This thought-provoking drama runs
just over two hours with one intermission. Its well worth seeing.
Safe House will continue through
Dec. 4 at Aurora Theatre Company,
2081 Addison St., Berkeley. For tickets and information call (510) 8434822 or visit www.auroratheatre.org.

LISTEN TO OUR
RADIO BROADCAST!
(KFAX 1100 on the AM Dial)
4:30 a.m.at 5:30 PM

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

(650) 342-2541

Sunday English Service &


Dharma School - 9:30 AM
Reverend Henry Adams
www.sanmateobuddhisttemple.org

A FAMILY SHARING HOPE IN CHRIST

HOPE EVANGELICAL
LUTHERAN CHURCH
600 W. 42nd Ave., San Mateo
Worship Service
Sunday School

10:00 AM
11:00 AM

Hope Lutheran Preschool


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

Call (650) 349-0100

HopeLutheranSanMateo.org

24

Weekend Nov. 19-20, 2016

PROPERTY
Continued from page 1
Housing and parking are recommended as top priorities for the two adjacent
parcels based on input collected during
a council study session earlier this year
and stakeholder input gathered during
summertime community meetings.
As part of the citys request for qualifications, both nonprofit and for-profit
developers are asked to submit concepts on how to best design a project
that meets the citys goals.
The housing crisis remains a top concern for many county leaders and peaked
in controversy during the election
when San Mateo voters considered a citizens initiative to enact rent control,
which was ultimately defeated.
Although the city and even council were
divided over the initiative, many have
remained committed to addressing the
affordability crisis through expanding
supply and officials have cited the redevelopment parcels as a key component
to their approach.
Goethals said he hopes to prioritize
housing workers who serve the community.
The crisis is that school teachers,
police officers, firefighters and government workers who we rely on cannot
afford to live here, Goethals said. All
the folks we rely on day in and day out
who dont get those tech salaries and
who are still an essential part of the
community, we have this opportunity
to take advantage of these sites and provide them housing.
He added the properties location bordering the Caltrain line and close to
transit is ideal, as is its proximity to
downtown. He hopes for synergy in
which future resident would support
local businesses and restaurants.
In working with a developer, the city
may offer the land valued at up to $16
million under a ground-lease and may

TRUMP
Continued from page 1
response to questions about the elections effect on students living in the
country illegally.
The New York Legal Assistance Group
said its receiving 40 to 60 daily calls
about immigration, up from 20 to 30.
The Coalition for Humane Immigrant
Rights of Los Angeles reported 19 walkins on a single day, all with citizenship
questions.
The most urgent inquiries have been
from young people benefiting from a
2012 federal program started by
President Barack Obamas administration that allows immigrants brought to
the country illegally as children to
avoid deportation and get work permits.

WEEKEND JOURNAL
need to offer subsidies to create new
below-market rate units. The council
has prioritized helping both lowincome workers making 60 percent or
below the area median income, as well
as workforce housing for those making
between 80 percent and 120 percent of
the local average, according to a staff
report.
Creating a project targeted toward
low-income workers would more likely
make the project eligible for tax credit
financing, but will also likely entail
between $100,000 and $200,000 subsidy per unit from local sources, according to the report. As part of the developers submissions, they will likely
suggest ideas on how to finance the
project.
Parking is another main component
of the criteria for developers to consider when submitting their ideas.
Consultants have estimated the need
for an additional 600 parking spots to
accommodate growing demand downtown. The northern Kinkos lot at 405
E. Fourth Ave. currently has 235 surface-level publicly accessible spaces.
Members of the public as well as the
business-oriented Downtown San
Mateo Association indicated at a minimum, the need to replace those spaces
within the new projects, according to
the report.
Mondays discussion will primarily
revolve around the council and community providing direction on what
should be considered for the site. A formal request for proposals wont be
issued until January, according to the
report.
The councils agenda for next week
also includes a variety of other items.
The council will hear an appeal from
a property owner whose application to
construct 15 new condominiums at 210
Fremont St. was denied by the Planning
Commission in August. The owner
hopes to construct a new four-story
multi-family building with underground
parking at a 15,308-square-foot parcel

that has hosted a seasonal Christmas


tree lot.
Consider an agreement for an affordable housing project at a city-owned lot
that was secured as part of the Bay
Meadows redevelopment. Bridge
Housing was chosen to construct
between 68 and 72 affordable one-, twoand three-bedroom apartments for very
low-income families at the 1-acre parcel. The city is expected to offer an
essentially free ground lease for 99
years, as well as a $2 million loan
toward construction.
Approve an agreement to spend
$925,000 toward updating the
Downtown Plan, including a $850,000
consultant contract. The plan, last
updated in 2009, aims to develop a
vision for San Mateos bustling downtown for the next 20 years.
Consider the feasibility of forming
an assessment district to help generate
$25.3 million to improve the levee and
pump stations used to prevent flooding
in the North Shoreview neighborhood.
Residents in the affected area will be
polled on whether they would support
taxing themselves to help pay for
improvements that would remove them
from
the
Federal
Emergency
Management Agencys flood zone map,
thereby alleviating flood insurance
requirements.
Introduce a new property maintenance ordinance that seeks to ensure
rental housing owners keep up their
units to modern state health and safety
codes. Tenants who are forced to leave
while a landlord repairs a severe code
violation may also be entitled to relocation assistance per state law.
A study session will be held prior to
the regular meeting to discuss the selection process for nominating members
of the public to oversee expenditures of
Measure S, the citys quarter-cent sales
tax extension.

About 740,000 people have participated in the Deferred Action for Childhood
Arrivals system.
Attorneys say the program is vulnerable because it was created by executive
order, not by law, leaving new potential
applicants second-guessing whether to
sign up.
Andrea Aguilera, a 20-year-old college
student in suburban Chicago, feels in
limbo with her DACA paperwork expiring next year.
She was brought across the Mexican
border illegally as a 4-year-old and
largely kept her immigration status
secret until she was able to get a work
permit through DACA four years ago.
Shes since worked as a grocery store
cashier and intern at a downtown financial company. Two of her siblings are in
the program; another is a U.S. citizen.
Its been hard to focus on school,
Aguilera said. I just dont know whats

going to come next for us.


During the campaign, Trump pledged
to deport the estimated 11 million
immigrants living in the country illegally and to build a border wall. The
Republican president-elect has not
detailed how he will proceed and recently walked back the number of anticipated deportees.
The Center for Immigration Studies,
which advocates for lower immigration
levels, explained the spike in activity
as uncertainty about whether existing
laws will be enforced by Trumps administration. Jon Feere, a legal analyst at
the Washington D.C.-based research
organization, said those enrolled in
DACA were aware of the risks when they
signed up. Others should have little concern.
Those who are in compliance with
the law have nothing to worry about,
he said.
Still, even immigrants with
permanent legal status have
had questions since the election.
Attorneys and immigrant
organizations said green card
holders feel new urgency to
ensure that paperwork such as
a renewal application is in
order over fears that laws
could change under a new
administration. Most immigrants can seek citizenship
three to five years after getting a green card.
Roughly 9 million green
card holders are currently eligible for citizenship, according to the most recent
Department of Homeland
Security statistics. Some citizens also sought clarity about
when they could sponsor family members abroad.
People need reassurance,
said Irina Matiychenko, who
leads the immigrant protection unit at the New York
Legal Assistance Group.
People need guidance.

The City Council meets 7 p.m.


Monday, Nov. 21, at City Hall, 330 W.
20th Av e.

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Calendar
SATURDAY, NOV. 19
Twin Pines Holiday Craft Faire. 9
a.m. - 5 p.m., Twin Pines Park, 30
Twin Pines Lane (enter from Ralston
Avenue) Belmont. Shop for unique
handmade gifts from local artists.
Free admission. For more information call 595-7441.
Samaritan
House
Food
Distribution. 9 a.m. College Park
Elementary School, 714 Indian Ave.,
San Mateo. Free, fresh food will be
distributed. For more information
call 504-9392.
International Games Day at Your
Library. All day. South San
Francisco Main Library, 840 W.
Orange Ave., South San Francisco.
Library will join over a thousand
other libraries around the world fot
the ninth annual celebration of
gaming in libraries. For more information email valle@plsinfo.org.
Creating an Effective Marketing
Strategy for Your Book. 10 a.m.
Sequoia Yacht Club, 441 Seaport
Court, Redwood City. Free to firsttimers, $10 members, $15 nonmembers, $10 students with ID. Register
in advance at www.cwc-peninsula.org/. For more information
bbaynes303@aol.com.
Shark Day. 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.
and 10:30 a.m. to noon. Marine
Science Institute, 500 Discovery
Parkway, Redwood City. Learn about
sharks, from great whites to leopard. Tickets are $20. For more information, email events@sfbaymsi.org.
America Recycles Day. 10 a.m. to 1
p.m. 333 Shoreway Road, San
Carlos. Come for free compost, ewaste recycling, shredding, giveaways and other fall family fun. For
more information call 802-8355.
ART on the Squares Holiday
Show. 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. San Mateo
County History Museum, Redwood
City. For more information visit historysmc.org or call 868-9027.
Thanksgiving in the Park. Noon to
3 p.m. 1120 Roosevelt Ave.,
Redwood City. his event will feature
a three course Thanksgiving lunch
sponsored by Whole Foods including salad, turkey, mashed potatoes,
cranberry sauce, pumpkin pie and
drinks. Free admission to the event.
Thanksgiving lunch tickets $14 in
advance, $18 at the door. For more
information contact jennifer@coppersdream.org.
Photos with Santa. Noon to 3 p.m.
1020 Sixth Ave., Belmont. Families,
kids, pets and everyone else are
welcome to take pictures with
Santa Claus. $20 donation for sitting. Proceeds to go Canine
Companions and Belmont Lions
Club Benevolent Fund. For more
information call 544-9023.
Rumpelstiltsk in Private Eye. 1
p.m. 828 Chestnut St., San Carlos.
San Carlos Childrens Theater presents
the
fairytale
comedy
Rumpelstiltskin Private Eye. $14
students / $19 adults. For more
information visit sancarloschildrenstheater.com.
Pastel Demonstration by Terri
Ford. 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. 527 San Mateo
Ave., San Bruno. Terri Ford will
demonstrate a pastel landscape
showing her under painting technique as well as her Deeper, Darker,
Richer approach to color and pure
pigment light. For more information
visit
societyofwesternartists.com.
Joyce
Barron
Leopardo
Demonstration on Abstract
Painting. 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. SWA Fine
Art Center, 527 San Mateo Ave., San
Bruno. For more information visit
www.societyofwesternartists.com.
Drop-in Computer Help. 2 p.m. to
3 p.m. Redwood City Library, 1044
Middlefield Road, Redwood City.
Come to get one-on-one help
regarding your laptop, phone or
other electronic devices. For more
information email gsuarez@redwoodcity.org.
Taste Buds: Cook ing Class for
Kids 10 and older. 2 p.m. to 4:30
p.m. South San Francisco Main
Library, 840 W. Orange Ave., South
San Francisco. Learn how to make
Turkey Pot Pie from scratch. The
class is designed to teach young
children very basic cooking skills.
For more information contact
valle@plsinfo.org.
Sequoia High School presents
Loserville. 7 p.m. Sequoia High
School Carrington Hall, 1201
Brewster Ave., Redwood City. Also
on Nov. 20 at 3 p.m. For more information
or
tickets
visit
showtix4u.com.
Mahl/Er/Werk. 8 p.m. 4200 Farm
Hill Blvd., Redwood City. Redwood
Symphony offers a new take on
Mahler. For more information visit
redwoodsymphony.org.
SUNDAY, NOV. 20

Junior League of Palo Alto. 10:30


a.m. to noon. Gatehouse, 555
Ravenswood Ave., Menlo Park.
Event is free. For more information
email jlpampcomm@gmail.com.
Peninsula School Craft Fair. 11
a.m. to 4 p.m. The Peninsula School,
920 Peninsula Way, Menlo Park.
Come browse our great selection of
toys, clothing, pottery, jewelry, bath
products and gift items. Children
can make their own crafts for free.
For more information visit
www.peninsulaschool.org/craftfair.
Photos with Santa. Noon to 3 p.m.
1020 Sixth Ave., Belmont. Families,
kids, pets and everyone else are
welcome to take pictures with
Santa Claus. $20 donation for sitting. Proceeds to go Canine
Companions and Belmont Lions
Club Benevolent Fund. For more
information call 544-9023.
Friends Book Sale. 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.
San Carlos Library, 610 Elm St., San
Carlos. Free and open to the public.
For more information call 5910341ext. 237.
Rumpelstiltsk in Private Eye. 1
p.m. 828 Chestnut St., San Carlos.
San Carlos Childrens Theater presents the fairy tale comedy
Rumpelstiltskin Private Eye. $14
students / $19 adults. For more
information visit sancarloschildrenstheater.com.
The Crestmont Conservatory of
Music Student Recitals. 2 p.m. to
3:30 p.m. 2575 Flores St., San Mateo.
Two free recitals that will feature
piano, cello, violin and viola performances by students of The
Crestmont Conservatory of Music.
For more information email crestmontmusic@aol.com.
The Body as a Metaphor and
States of Change Reception. 2
p.m. to 4 p.m. 1777 California Drive,
Burlingame. The Body as a
Metaphor is a sculpture by Ellen
Lowenstein in the east gallery and
States of Change are paintings by
Amir Salamat in the north gallery. It
is opened from Wednesday through
Sunday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Free
admission. For more information
call 692-2101.
Turkey Bingo. 2 p.m. 1110 Alameda
de las Pulgas, Belmont. For more
information
contact
belmont@smcl.org.
California Youth Symphony
Concert. 2:30 p.m. 600 N. Delaware
St., San Mateo. For more information visit cys.org.
Walgreens: Immunizations. 2:30
p.m. South San Francisco Main
Library, 840 W. Orange Ave., South
San Francisco. For more information
email valle@plsinfo.org.
Sequoia High School presents
Loserville. 7 p.m. Sequoia High
School Carrington Hall, 1201
Brewster Ave., Redwood City. For
more information or tickets visit
showtix4u.com.
Larry Vuckovich: 80th Birthday
Bash, featuring John Santos and
Jackie Ryan. 4:30 p.m. Larrys birthday bash includes swinging jazz,
bebop, Latin/Brazilian and Mel
Tormes hit Christmas song, Comin
Home Baby. Bach Dancing &
Dynamite Society, 311 Mirada Road,
Half Moon Bay. For more information call 726-4143.
MONDAY, NOV. 21
Experience Corps Volunteer Info
Session. 11 a.m. to noon. Daly City
Serramonte Library Community
Room, 40 Wembley Drive, Daly City.
Experience Corps Bay Area is seeking volunteer tutors and mentors
(ages 50 and up) to tutor students.
For more information visit experiencecorpsbayarea.org.
Thanksgiving Luncheon at Little
House. 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Little
House, Middle Ave., Menlo Park. $9
fee. RSVP. For more information call
272-5045.
Maturing Gracefully Talk: Singing
the Holiday Blues. Noon. 1110
Alameda de las Pulgas, Belmont. For
more information contact belmont@smcl.org.
Thank sgiving Day Luncheon.
Noon. San Mateo Senior Center,
2645 Alameda de las Pulgas, San
Mateo. Prepare to eat a feast and
win door prizes. Wear your best for
this celebration. The Executive Chef
of Creekside Grill will be preparing
lunch. Pre-registration is required.
Cost is $16 per person. For more
information call 522-7490.
Hula for Heart. 5 p.m. to 6 p.m. 150
San Mateo Road, Half Moon Bay.
Learn basic steps, form, and technique for hula and dance to beautiful music. Admission is $15. For
more
information
email
patti@bondmarcom.com.
For more events visit
smdailyjournal.com, click Calendar.

COMICS/GAMES

THE DAILY JOURNAL

DILBERT

Weekend Nov. 19-20, 2016

25

CROSSWORD PUZZLE

HOLY MOLE

PEARLs BEFORE SWINE

ACROSS
1 Nonsense
5 Cede
10 Financial
12 Dent site
13 Assert
14 Lay waste to
15 Flashy sign
16 Dundee refusal
18 Do yard work
19 Went bad, as meat
23 Englands FBI
26 Gentle bear
27 Bad habit
30 Venus singer
32 Whoop
34 Overcome
35 Surfing the web
36 Mix
37 Quip
38 L.A. zone
39 Unfavorable
42 Took a chair
45 Left Bank pal
46 Waldheim or Cobain

GET FUZZY

50 Shipping boxes
53 Beamed
55 Fuel rating
56 Reddish dyes
57 Turns to liquid
58 Lab gel
DOWN
1 Ill humor
2 European capital
3 Whiff
4 Old crone
5 Roll-call vote
6 Stock on hand
7 Red-waxed cheese
8 Engineering toy
9 Took a straw
10 Enthusiast
11 Permissive
12 Stew over
17 Blyth or Sothern
20 On a plane
21 Goings-on
22 Herb in a pickle
23 No gentleman

24 Curriers partner
25 Squirrelly
28 Paper holder
29 Geological periods
31 Darths daughter
32 Unmannerly
33 Clammy
37 Dues payer, for short
40 Bud holder
41 Barely getting by
42 Highlander
43 Foot part
44 Toodle-oo! (hyph.)
47 Bone below the elbow
48 Cabooses place
49 Six-pointers
51 Prize marble
52 Annapolis grad
54 Call cab

11-19-16

Previous
Sudoku
answers

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2016


SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) The past can help you
make a positive choice when it comes to partnerships
and domestic matters. Rely on your experience to help
you reach your objective.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Solidify any
pending agreement. Your ability to negotiate and bring
about positive change should be put into play. Stick
to the truth and verify secondhand information. Take
charge.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Call in a favor, but
make it clear what you want, need and are willing to do
in return. Stay on top of a situation that involves others

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

weekend PUZZLE SOLVED

Each row and each column must contain the


numbers 1 through 6 without repeating.
The numbers within the heavily outlined boxes,
called cages, must combine using the given operation
(in any order) to produce the target numbers in the
top-left corners.
Freebies: Fill in single-box cages with the number in
the top-left corner.

to ensure good results.


AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Dont labor over what
needs to be done. Take care of your responsibilities
quickly and manage your time wisely in order to get to
the things that bring you joy.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Youll be tempted
to get involved in something that isnt in your best
interest. Dont overpay or make promises that will stifle
your chance to pursue personal dreams.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) Do your own research
and handle your own affairs. Youve got far more going
for you than you realize. Negotiate for what you want
and make the changes that will improve your life.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Dont let stubbornness
be your downfall. Anger will solve nothing, but

11-19-16
Want More Fun
and Games?
Jumble Page 2 La Times Crossword Puzzle Classifieds
Tundra & Over the Hedge Comics Classifieds
Boggle Puzzle Everyday in DateBook

working toward positive personal change and taking


progressive action will lead to success. Offer love and
peace, and avoid discord.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Take time to visit a
destination that encourages learning, sightseeing or
spending time with someone you admire. There is
plenty to gain from getting out and about.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) You can score big by
taking on additional responsibilities. Your ability to get
things done and to do so within budget and on time will
be what impresses others the most. Avoid indulgent
people.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Get involved in programs
or situations that will help you gain knowledge and
experience. Making plans with a loved one will bring

you closer together.


VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Dont fear criticism when
you can use it to better yourself and what you do.
Success comes from honing your skills and keeping up
with trends.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Consider what you
want to do next. A hobby or skill you enjoy should be
developed and turned into a lucrative pastime. Live
your dream instead of just thinking about it.
COPYRIGHT 2016 United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

26

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Weekend Nov. 19-20, 2016

104 Training

Exciting Opportunities at

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.

Candy Maker Training Program


Applicants who are committed to Quality and Excellence
welcome to apply.
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t2VJDLTBMBSZQSPHSFTTJPO
t2VBMJmDBUJPOTJODMVEF CVUBSFOPUMJNJUFEUP'PMMPXJOHGPSNVMBT 
TUBOEJOH XBMLJOH CFOEJOH UXJTUJOHBOEMJGUJOHMCTGSFRVFOUMZ
t"QQMJDBOUTNVTUCFBWBJMBCMFUPXPSLEBZBOEOJHIU
TIJGUBOEPWFSUJNF
t.VTUCFBCMFUPSFBE TQFBLBOEXSJUF&OHMJTI
t1SFWJPVTFYQFSJFODFJONBOVGBDUVSJOHQSFGFSSFE
t&NQMPZFFTBSFNFNCFSTPG-PDBM
t1PTJUJPOTMPDBUFEBU&M$BNJOP3FBM
4PVUI4BO'SBODJTDP

If interested, please call Eugenia or Ava at


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

PIAZZAS FINE FOODS

110 Employment

CAREGIVERS
NOW HIRING
3 Shifts Available!

LOOKING FOR ENERGETIC PEOPLE WITH


A FOCUS ON CUSTOMER SERVICE
DELI CLERKS CHECKERS MEAT CLERKS
FAX RESUME TO:
(650) 367-7341 OR EMAIL:
JOBS@PIAZZASFINEFOODS.COM
San Mateo / Palo Alto Store Locations
Part Time / Full Time
We offer union benets and union-scale wage
progression. We have advancement opportunities.

Assisted Living Community


for Seniors in Burlingame
(Close to Broadway).
Near Public Transportation.

Call Ana
650-771-1127
HOME CARE AIDES
Multiple shifts to meet your needs. Great
pay & benefits, Sign-on bonus, 1yr exp
required. Starting at $15 per hour.
Matched Caregivers (650)839-2273,
(408)280-7039 or (888)340-2273

GOT JOBS?

HOUSE CLEANERS
NEEDED

Up to $15 per hour. Company Car.


Call Molly Maid at (650)837-9788.
90 Glenn Way #2, SAN CARLOS

The best career seekers


read the Daily Journal.

Exciting Seasonal Opportunities at

We will help you recruit qualified, talented


individuals to join your company or organization.
The Daily Journals readership covers a wide
range of qualifications for all types of positions.
For the best value and the best results,
recruit from the Daily Journal...

UTILITY Starting Rate: $12.50/hour

Contact us for a free consultation

Assist in the manufacturing & packing of candy in Production and Packing.

Call (650) 344-5200 or


Email: ads@smdailyjournal.com

QUALITY ASSURANCE INSPECTOR Starting Rate: $15.00/hour


Check the weight, appearance and overall quality of the product at various steps of the
manufacturing process. Must pass written test.

PRODUCTION SPECIALIST Starting Rate: $13.50/hour


Assist with candy production.

SANITATION Starting Rate: $13.50/hour


General cleaning of plant, ofces, warehouse buildings and grounds to maintain
sanitary conditions in accordance with Good Food Manufacturing Practices.

MACHINE OPERATOR Starting Rate: $13.50/hour


Operate and maintain all kitchen machinery or wrapping equipment.

SHIPPING Starting Rate: $14.00/hour


Fill orders for product and/or materials supplied to the manufacturing depts. and
retail shops, ensuring orders are properly lled, weighed and identied with
shipping information. Must pass a written test.

Requirements for all positions include:


t"QQMJDBOUTNVTUCFBWBJMBCMFUPXPSLEBZBOEPSOJHIUTIJGUBOEPWFSUJNF

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

You will be offering a wide variety of


marketing solutions including print advertising,
inserts, graphic design, niche publications,
online advertising, event marketing, social media
and whatever else we come up with if as the
industry continues its evolution and our paper
continues its upward trajectory.
Experience with print advertising and online
marketing a plus. But we will consider a
candidate with little or no sales experience as
long as you have these traits:

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t1PTJUJPOTBWBJMBCMFJO4PVUI4BO'SBODJTDPPS%BMZ$JUZ
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t"CMFUPQFSGPSNUIFFTTFOUJBMGVODUJPOTPGUIFKPC JODMVEJOH
lifting 30-50 lbs. frequently, depending on position.

Apply at 210 El Camino Real, So. San Francisco, Monday-Friday, 8:30 am 3:30 pm,
at the Guard Station on Spruce Street, Rear Parking Lot. EOE

Hunger for success Ability to adapt to change


Prociency with computers and comfort with numbers
General business acumen and common sense marketing abilities
Join us, if you check off on these qualities and also believe in the future of newspapers.
Please email your resume to ads@smdailyjournal.com
A cover letter with your views on the newspaper industry would also be helpful.

Leading local news coverage on the Peninsula

THE DAILY JOURNAL


110 Employment

Weekend Nov. 19-20, 2016


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

127 Elderly Care


FAMILY RESOURCE
GUIDE

The San Mateo Daily Journals


twice-a-week resource guide for
children and families.

Every Tuesday & Weekend

NEWSPAPER INTERNS
JOURNALISM

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

RESTAURANT - Need Cook/Kitchen


help. Fletchs catering business is taking
off. We need help! Call (650)685-8301
SALES - Telemarketing and Inside Sales
Representative needed to sell newspaper print and web advertising and event
marketing solutions. To apply, please call
650-344-5200 and send resume to
info@smdailyjournal.com

Look for it in todays paper to


find information on family
resources in the local area,
including childcare.

203 Public Notices


FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #271145
The following person is doing business
as: Nellies Toffee, 2105 Pullman Ave.,
BELMONT, CA 94002. Registered Owner: Jonathan Nightingale, same address.
The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on N/A.
/s/Jonathan Nightingale/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 10/14/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
11/12/16, 11/19/16, 11/26/16, 12/3/16).
STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF
THE USE OF A FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT 267556
Name of the person abandoning the use
of the Fictitious Business Name: Rick
Chen. Name of Business: Oyster Boy
Restaurant. Date of original filing:
12/21/2015. Address of Principal Place
of Business: 1300 Howard Ave, BURLINGAME, CA 94010. Registrant: Highway
29 Wine and Bistro, 111 Shooting Star
Isle, FOSTER CITY, CA 94404. The
business was conducted by a Corporation.
/s/Rick Chen/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk-Recorder of San Mateo
County on 10/5/16. (Published in the San
Mateo Daily Journal, 10/29/16, 11/5/16,
11/12/16, 11/19/16).

SEAMSTRESS UPHOLSTERY
Full Time Position
2 years + Min Experience. Cutting, pattern matching. Sewing cushions, pillows
with zippers on industrial sewing machines. Top Wages, 401K. M-F 8 4:30
Contact Tony (650) 348-8869.
RETAIL -

JEWELRY SALES +
SEASONAL FT/PT
Entry up to $16
Diamond Exp up to $25

Tundra

Tundra

Tundra

Over the Hedge

Over the Hedge

Over the Hedge

203 Public Notices


CASE# 16CIV02054
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
Albert Axiaq
TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS:
Petitioner: Albert Axiaq filed a petition
with this court for a decree changing
name as follows:
Present name: Albert Axiaq
Proposed Name: Albert Axiak
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 12/13/16 at 9
a.m., Dept. PJ, Room 2D, at 400 County
Center, Redwood City, CA 94063. A
copy of this Order to Show Cause shall
be published at least once each week for
four successive weeks prior to the date
set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation:
San Mateo Daily Journal
Filed: 10/31/2016
/s/ Robert D. Foiles /
Judge of the Superior Court
Dated: 10/27/2016
(Published 11/5/16, 11/12/16, 11/19/16,
11/26/16)

CASE# 16CIV02055
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
Sadik Bayrakeri
TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS:
Petitioner: Sadik Bayrakeri filed a petition
with this court for a decree changing
name as follows:
Present name: Sadik Bayrakeri
Proposed Name: Michael Orkun Bayrakeri
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 12/14/16 at 9
a.m., Dept. PJ, Room 2D, at 400 County
Center, Redwood City, CA 94063. A
copy of this Order to Show Cause shall
be published at least once each week for
four successive weeks prior to the date
set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation:
San Mateo Daily Journal
Filed: 10/28/2016
/s/ Robert D. Foiles /
Judge of the Superior Court
Dated: 10/27/2016
(Published 11/5/16, 11/12/16, 11/19/16,
11/26/16)

27

203 Public Notices

203 Public Notices

203 Public Notices

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #271029
The following person is doing business
as: Genji Bar and Bistro, 1300 Howard
Ave, BURLINGAME, CA 94010. Registered Owner: Highway 29 Wine and Bistro, CA. The business is conducted by a
Corporation. The registrants commenced
to transact business under the FBN on
10/5/16
/s/Rick Chen/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 10/5/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
10/29/16, 11/5/16, 11/12/16, 11/19/16).

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #271328
The following person is doing business
as:
MILESTONE ACADEMY PRESCHOOL ONE, 164 School Street, DALY CITY, CA 94015. Registered Owner:
1) Phyu Nwe Win, 212 Saint Francis
Blvd, DALY CITY, CA 94015 2) Kay
Khine Win, same address. The business
is conducted by a General Partnership.
The registrants commenced to transact
business under the FBN on
/s/Phyu Nwe Win/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 11/2/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
11/12/16, 11/19/16, 11/26/16, 12/3/16).

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #271297
The following person is doing business
as: A Miracle Plumbing, 430 N. Canal
St. Unit 12A, SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO,
CA 94080. Registered Owner: Lonnie
Daniels Jr., 1119 Gaven St., San Francisco, CA 94134. The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrants
commenced to transact business under
the FBN on N/A.
/s/Lonnie Daniels /
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 10/28/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
11/19/16,11/26/16,12/3/16,12/10/16).

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #271304
The following person is doing business
as: R&D Properties, 63 Bovet Rd Apt
508, SAN MATEO, CA 94402. Registered Owners: 1) David R. Holtzclaw 2)
Roslyn J. Holtzclaw, same address. The
business is conducted by a Married Couple. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on 11/14/12
/s/David R. Holtzclaw/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 10/31/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
11/5/16, 11/12/16, 11/19/16, 11/26/16).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #271077
The following person is doing business
as: Glow Limo, 600 2nd Avenue, SAN
BRUNO, CA 94066. Registered Owners:
1) George Franklin Campelo Vieira, 600
2nd Ave, SAN BRUNO, CA 94066 2)
Mario Queiroz Dasilva Neto, 920 Easton
Ave, SAN BRUNO, CA 94066. The business is conducted by Co-Partners. The
registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on N/A.
/s/George Franklin Campelo Vieira/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 10/11/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
11/12/16, 11/19/16, 11/26/16, 12/3/16).

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #271421
The following person is doing business
as: Germaine Design, 2723 Burlingview
Dr, BURLINGAME, CA 94010. Registered Owner: Melissa Germaine, same
address. The business is conducted by
an Individual. The registrants commenced to transact business under the
FBN on 1/1/15
/s/Melissa Germaine/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 11/10/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
11/12/16, 11/19/16, 11/26/16, 12/3/16).

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #271318
The following person is doing business
as: Cecys Beauty Salon, 808 Maple
Street, REDWOOD CITY, CA 94063.
Registered Owner: Cecilia Aguilar Cazares, 1855 Woodside Rd, Apt 104,
REDWOOD CITY, CA 94061. The business is conducted by an Individual. The
registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on N/A.
/s/Cecilia Aguilar Cazares/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 11/1/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
11/19/16,11/26/16,12/3/16,12/10/16).

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #271102
The following person is doing business
as: MAIA MASTER CLEANING, 209
PINE AVE, SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO,
CA 94080. Registered Owner: Zulmira A.
Maia, 812 Antoinette Lane #L, SOUTH
SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94080. The business is conducted by an Individual. The
registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on N/A
/s/Zulmira A. Maia/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 10/12/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
11/12/16, 11/19/16, 11/26/16, 12/3/16).

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #271408
The following person is doing business
as: The Childrens Place, 1336 Arroyo
Avenue, SAN CARLOS, CA94070. Registered Owner: Community United
Church of Christ in San Carlos, CA. The
business is conducted by a Corporation.
The registrants commenced to transact
business under the FBN on 11/9/16
(NA).
/s/Siv Nickerson/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 11/9/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
11/19/16,11/26/16,12/3/16,12/10/16).

Benefits-Bonus-No Nights
650-367-6500
FX: 367-6400
jobs@jewelryexchange.com

LEGAL NOTICES

Fictitious Business Name Statements,


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

Fax your request to: 650-344-5290


Email them to: ads@smdailyjournal.com

ATTENTION CAREGIVERS!
Immediate need for Full Time/Part Time
Home Care Providers
$250 Sign on Bonus*
Paid Training & Benets
Must have valid DL and reliable transportation
Call or stop by TODAY!

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

(650) 458-2200

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

NEWSPAPER
DELIVERY
ROUTES

San Mateo Daily Journal


Seeking Delivery drivers to manage newspaper routes on the
Peninsula.
Requires early morning work six days per week Mon-Sat. Papers are picked up early morning between 3am and 4:30am
Routes available from South SF to Palo Alto.
Call 650-344-5200

28

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Weekend Nov. 19-20, 2016


203 Public Notices

203 Public Notices

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #271318
The following person is doing business
as: Evart, Young & Hobbs Investment
Management, 3 Lagoon Drive #155,
REDWOOD CITY, CA 94065. Registered Owner: Leo H. Evart, Inc, CA. The
business is conducted by a Corporation.
The registrants commenced to transact
business under the FBN on 01/01/2006.
/s/Rosalee Young/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 11/18/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
11/19/16,11/26/16,12/3/16,12/10/16).

NOTICE TO CREDITORS OF BULK


SALE (SECS. 6101-6111 U.C.C)
Escrow No. 5102-5318243
Notice is hereby given to the creditors of
Odedra Pharmacy, Inc. (Seller),
whose business address is 40 Stone
Pine Road, Ste. I, Half Moon Bay
94019, that a bulk sale is about to be
made to Apothecary Pharmacy, Inc.
(Buyer), whose address is 880 Meridian Bay Lane, #210, Foster CIty, CA
94404.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #271452
The following person is doing business
as: Se Come Asi Taqueria, 1302 Bayshore Hwy, BURLINGAME, CA 94010.
Registered Owner: Rosa Maria Vasquez,
28240 Armour St., Hayward, CA 94545.
The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on 1/1/17
/s/Rosa Maria Vasquez /
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 11/14/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
11/19/16,11/26/16,12/3/16,12/10/16).
STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF
THE USE OF A FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT 262093
Name of the person abandoning the use
of the Fictitious Business Name: Kin
Kwan. Name of Business: 1 Salon. Date
of original filing: Aug 29, 2014. Address
of Principal Place of Business: 34 San
Pedro Dr., DALY CITY, CA 94014. Registrant: Kin C Kwan, same address The
business was conducted by an Individual.
/s/Kin Kwan/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk-Recorder of San Mateo
County on 11/2/16. (Published in the San
Mateo Daily Journal, 11/5/16, 11/12/16,
11/19/16, 11/26/16).

The property to be transferred is located


at 40 Stone Pine Road, Ste. I, City of
Half Moon Bay, County of San Mateo,
State of California. Said property is described as : ALL INVENTORY, STOCK
IN TRADE, FIXTURES, EQUIPMENT
AND GOODWILL OF THE BUSINESS
KNOWN AS Half Moon Bay Pharmacy.
The bulk sale will be consummated on or
after November 23, 2016, at First
American Title Company, 415 Century
Park Drive, Yuba City, CA 95991 pursuant to Division 6 of the California
Code.
[This bulk sale is subject to Section
6106.2 of the California Commercial
Code. ALL CLAIMS TO BE SENT C/O
First American Title Company, 51025318243, 415 Century Park Drive, Yuba City, CA 95991.
The last date for filing claims shall be
November 22, 2016.]
So far as known to Buyer, all busines
names and addresses used by Seller for
the three years last past, if different from
the above, are:
Name:

none

Address:

none

Dated: October 28, 2016


Buyer:

203 Public Notices


First American Title Company
415 Century prk Drive
Yuba City, CA 95991
ATTN: Kathryn Grossman
(Printed and Published in The San Mateo
Daily Journal: 11/5, 11/12, 11/19, 11/26)

300 Toys

303 Electronics

3-STORY BARBIE Dollhouse with spiral


staircase and elevator. $60. (650)5588142

SONY DHG-HDD250 DVR and programable remote.


Record OTA. Clock set issues $99 650595-8855

FISHER-PRICE HEALTHY Care booster


seat - $5 (650)592-5864.

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

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

HIGH CHAIR (wooden) excellent condition $35.00 (650)348-2306

296 Appliances
210 Lost & Found
FOUND: KEYS at Westwood Park in
Redwood City, off of Fernside. Call to
claim (650)714-8893
FOUND: LADIES watch outside Safeway Millbrae 11/10/14 call Matt,
(415)378-3634
LOST - MY COLLAPSIBLE music stand,
clip lights, and music in black bags were
taken from my car in Foster City and may
have been thrown out by disappointed
thieves. Please call (650)704-3595

AIR CONDITIONER 10000 BTU w/remote. Slider model fits all windows. LG
brand $199 runs like new. (650)2350898
AIR CONDITIONER, Portable, 14,000
BTU,
Commercial
Cool
model
CPN14XC9, almost like new! All accessories plus remote included.
20 x 16-5/8 x 33-1/2 $345.
(650)345-1835
CHARCOAL GRILL with cover, almost
new $40. (650)368-0748
CHEFMATE TOASTER oven, brand
new, bakes, broils, toasts, adjustable
temperature. $25 OBO. (650)580-4763

LOST - Womans diamond ring. Lost


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

CIRRUS STEAM mop model SM212B 4


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

LOST CAT Our Felicity, weighs 7 lbs,


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

COLEMAN LXE Roadtrip Grill Red Brand New! (still in box) $100
(650)918-9847

LOST CAT. Black and White. Black


patch on right eye. REWARD.
Call (323) 439-7713.

JACK LALANE'S power juicer. $40.


Call 650 364-1243. Leave message.
REFRIGERATOR WHITE Full sized 2
door Whirlpool Perfect condition .$98.
650 583-9901 650 678-0221

LOST SMALL gray and green Parrot.


Redwood Shores. (650)207-2303.

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

Books

UPRIGHT VACUUM Cleaner, $10. Call


Ed, (415)298-0645 South San Francisco

QUALITY BOOKS used and rare. World


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

WHIRLPOOL WASHER DRYER, GE


Refrigerator all working and in good condition all for $99.00 650-315-3240.

Apothecary Pharmacy, Inc., a California


corporation
By: /s/Andrew Lai/
Title: CEO

294 Baby Stuff


BASSINET $25 (Musical, Rocks, vibrates, has 4 wheels, includes sheets &
mattress) (650)348-2306

297 Bicycles

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle

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

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

298 Collectibles

ACROSS
1 Diagnostic aid
13 ESPN game
show where four
expert panelists
compete debatestyle
15 42 subject
17 Water __
18 Gets ready to
eat, in a way
19 Key of
Beethovens
Sym. No. 7
21 Clipped
affirmative
23 Other: Pref.
25 Scary story
sound
28 One of a
prohibitive septet
31 Industry bigwigs
32 Hide out, with
down
34 School offering
belts
36 Get
37 Rihanna album
whose title is a
common prefix
38 Cosmic balance
40 Analogy part
41 An ace is under it
42 Desert bordering
the Altai
Mountains
43 Mitt with ten
fingers
45 Luck Be __:
Guys and Dolls
song
47 Smoking
evidence
49 Shuffles, say
50 Firming (up)
52 Italian recipe
word
54 User of recording
devices called
quipus
55 WWII conference
city
58 Home of MLBs
Redbirds
61 Learn
65 Early U.S. Navy
flag motto
66 Likely to be
returned
DOWN
1 Persian for
crown

35 Shake up
53 Rapper
2 Subjects of IRS
Pub. 590
39 Old hoops org.
Kendrick __
3 Belt
56 Mennen skin
40 Thick paint
4 Japanese hot pot
applications
product
dish
42 OB/__
57 Voldemorts title
5 Athletes wear,
44 Sauting
59 Cookie containers
for short
substance
60 __-Tokoin
6 Idyllic settings
46 Unicellular alga
Airport: Togo hub
7 Toys with
48 Abomination
62 Pasta ending
strings?
63 Soft drink ending
51 Peer __
8 I see now
Homecoming:
64 Young adult fiction
9 Leave __!
Grieg work
author Vizzini
10 Trey Anastasios
band
11 Chaney of the
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:
screen
12 Imitation
14 Unequivocal
rejection
16 Told
20 Alcotts Little
Men sequel
22 __ out a victory
24 Prefix with tourist
25 Indian flatbread
26 Words with a
dismissive wave
27 Unable to look
away
29 Actor __ Elba of
The Wire
30 French handle?
33 Citizen Kane
studio
11/19/16
xwordeditor@aol.com

1920'S AQUA Glass Beaded Flapper


Purse (drawstring bag) & Faux Pearl
Flapper Collar. $50. 650-762-6048

STAR WARS one 4 orange card action figure, Luke Skywalker (Ceremonial) $6 Steve 650-518-6614
STAR WARS SDCC Stormtrooper
Commander $29 OBO Dan,
650-303-3568 lv msg
THOMAS THE TRAIN; trains, crossing
gate, bridge, track; good condition;
$25/OBO. 650-345-1347.
THOMAS TRAINS; Cranky the Crane
$15/OBO; Tidmouth Shed w/turntable
$50/OBO. 650-345-1347.

302 Antiques
ANTIQUE BUFFET Cabinet, with 2 large
drawers w/skeleton key, needs refinishing. $700/obo.. ANTIQUE CHINA cabinet, with doors and legs, dark wood..
$500/obo. (650)952-5049
ANTIQUE ITALIAN lamp 18 high, $70
(650)387-4002
BEAUTIFUL AND UNIQUE Victorian
Side Sewing Table, All original. Rosewood. Carved. EXCELLENT CONDITION! $350. (650)815-8999.
MAHOGANY ANTIQUE Secretary desk,
72 x 40 , 3 drawers, Display case, bevelled glass, $500. (650)766-3024
OLD VINTAGE Wooden Sea Captains
Tool Chest 35 x 16 x 16, $65
(650)591-3313
STORE FRONT display cabinet, From
1930, marble base. 72 long x 40 tallx
21 deep. Asking $500. (650)341-1306

303 Electronics

5 FOOT folding table, still in the box


$40.00 650 368 0748
ANTIQUE DINING table for six people
with chairs $99. (650)580-6324
ANTIQUE MAHOGANY Bookcase. Four
feet tall. $75. (415) 282-0966.
ANTIQUE MAHOGANY double bed with
adjustable steelframe $225.00. OBO.
(650)592-4529
BEIGE SOFA $99. Excellent Condition
(650) 315-2319
CHAIRS 2 Blue Good Condition $50
OBO (650)345-5644
COAT/HAT STAND, solid wood, for your
mountain cabin/house. $50. (650)5207045
COMPUTER SWIVEL CHAIR. Padded
Leather. $80. (650) 455-3409
COMPUTER TABLE, adjustable height,
chrome legs, 29x48 like new $30 (650)
697-8481

BAZOOKA SPEAKER 20, +10W, never


used $95. (650)992-4544

DINETTE TABLE with Chrome Legs: 36"


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

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


$100. (650)593-4490

MILLER LITE Neon sign , work good


$59 call 650-218-6528

FIRST ALERT CO600 Carbon Monoxide


PlugIn Alarm. Simple to use, New - $18
650-952-3500

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


Billy Dee Williams. $38 Steve 650-5186614

304 Furniture
2 TWIN MAPLE bed frames, Cannon
Ball construction **SOLD **

CUSTOM MADE wood sewing storage


cabinet perfect condition $75. (650)4831222

COMPLETE COLOR photo developer


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

STAR WARS Hong Kong exclusive, mint


Pote Snitkin 4 green card action figure.
$15 650-518-6614

VINTAGE ZENITH radio, model L516b


$75. (650)421-5469

60 GIG Ipod, Does not work.


Battery/hard drive not working. $25.
(650)208-5758

LENNOX RED Rose, Unused, hand


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

STAR WARS C-3PO mint pair, green tint


(Japan), gold (U.S.) 4 action figures.
$24 650-518-6614

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


(650)421-5469

COUCH, CREAM IKEA, great condition,


$89, light-weight, compact, sturdy loveseat (415)775-0141

BULOVA WINDUP Travel clocks.Vintage. Set of eight. $99. gene (650)4215469

SCHILLER HIPPIE poster, linen, Sparta


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

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


(650)421-5469

46 MITSUBISHI Projector TV, great


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

1940 VINTAGE telephone bench maple


antiques collectibles $75 (650)755-9833

RENO SILVER LEGACY Casino four


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

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


$60. (650)421-5469

IPHONE 5 Morphie Juice Pack with


charger, Originally $100, now $85.
(650)766-2679
LEFT-HAND ERGONOMIC keyboard
with 'A-shape' key layout Num pad, $20
(650)204-0587
MOTOROLA BRAVO MB 520 (android
4.1 upgrade) smart phone 35$ 8GB SD
card Belmont (650)595-8855
ONKYO AV Receiver HT-R570 .Digital
Surround, HDMI, Dolby, Sirius Ready,
Cinema Filter.$95/ Offer 650-591-2393
ONKYO AV Receiver HT-R570 .Digital
Surround, HDMI, Dolby, Sirius Ready,
Cinema Filter.$95/ Offer 650-591-2393

DINETTE TABLE, 3 adjustable leaf.$30.


(650) 756-9516.Daly City.
DINING ROOM table Good Condition
$90.00 or best offer ( 650)-780-0193
DRUM TABLE - brown, perfect condition, nice design, with storage, $45.,
(650)345-1111
ENTERTAINMENT CENTER for $50.
Good shape, blonde, about 5' high.
(650)726-4102
ESPRESSO TABLE 30 square, 40 tall,
$95 (650)375-8021
FREE: TWO full-size featherbeds. Excellent
condition.
Redwood City
location. 650-503-4170.
INFINITY FLOOR speakers H 38" x W
11 1/2" x D 10" good $50. (650)756-9516
KITCHEN TABLE with 4 chairs, Blonde
wood, Farm Style. Apartment sized.
Good condition. $25. (650)359-0213
LAWN CHAIRS (4) White, plastic, $8.
each, (415)346-6038
LEATHER SOFA, black, excellent condition. $100 obo. (650)878-5533
LOVE SEAT, Upholstered pale yellow
floral $99. (650)574-4021

299 Computers

OPTIMUS H36 ST5800 Tower Speaker


36x10x11 $30. (650)580-6324

KOGI 15 inch computer monitor. Model


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

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

MAHOGANY BOOKCASE 40"W x 15"D


x 41"H. Double doors with lock & key.
$35 650-832-1448

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


(650) 578 9208

PIONEER HOUSE Speakers, pair. 15


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

MAHOGANY BOOKCASE 40"W x 15"D


x 41"H. Double doors with lock & key.
$35 650-832-1448

The San Mateo Daily Journal has a reporter opening.


You must be familiar with daily reporting, preferably at
a newspaper. Layout and design experience using
Quark or InDesign is a plus. Interest in social media is a
bonus. Daily Journal reporters cover government meetings, track trends, write light features and news
features, investigate everything and live for scoops.
Candidates cannot be shy of working nights and taking
own photos. Reporters average two stories a day while
making time for project reporting. The Daily Journal is
an award-winning newspaper in a very competitive
environment. We need someone with a very strong
work ethic, writing air and a great attitude. Local
candidates preferred.
If interested send a letter of interest, a resume and
three to ve clips to Jon Mays, editor, San Mateo Daily
Journal, 1900 Alameda de las Pulgas, San Mateo, CA
94403 or email at jon@smdailyjournal.com. No
phone calls please.

By Erik Agard
2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

Leading local news coverage on the Peninsula

11/19/16

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Weekend Nov. 19-20, 2016

29

304 Furniture

308 Tools

311 Musical Instruments

318 Sports Equipment

440 Apartments

625 Classic Cars

MAHOGANY BOOKCASE 40"W x 15"D


x 41"H. Double doors with lock & key.
$35 650-832-1448

CRAFTSMEN 3 saw blades $20. new.


(650)573-5269

HARMONICA.
HOHNER Pocket Pal.
Key of C. Original box. Never used.
$10. (650)588-0842

IGLOO BLUE 38-Quart Wheelie Cool


Cooler/Ice Chest $14 650-952-3500

STUDIO, 1 person only, all updated


Kitchen and Bathroom. All utilities included. One carport parking space. Laundry
facilities. $1375 per month. (650) 4920625.

FORD 64 Falcon. 4DR Sedan. 6 cyl.


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

470 Rooms

LINCOLN 02 Navigator, excellent condition. Runs great! Must sell! $4,500/obo.


(650)342-4227.

METAL CHAIRS, quantity 4, brand new


in box $35. (650)368-0748
NEW DELUXE Twin Folding Bed, Linens, cover, Cost $618. Sale $250. Must
Sell! (650) 875-8159.
NEW TWIN Mattress set plus frame
$30.00 (650) 347-2356
NICE WOOD table 36"L x19"W x20"H
$30.(415)231-4825.Daly City
NICE WOOD table 36"L x19"W x20"H
$30.(415)231-4825.Daly City
OAK BOOKCASE, 30"x30" x12". $25.
(650)726-6429
OAK SIX SHELF Book Case 6FT 4FT
$55 (650)458-8280

DELTA CABINET SAW with overrun table. $1,500/obo. ((650)342-6993


DYNAGLOPRO
HEATER.
Phone: 650-591-8062

$40.00

PAINTING TOOLS - hooks, stirrups 110


ropes, poles, 20 plank, 440 Graco Spary
Machine, $500, Asking (650)-483-8048
POWERMATIC TABLE SAW, heavy duty, excellent condition, perfect for contractor or carpenter. $750 or best offer.
Call anytime, (650)713-6272

RECLINING SWIVEL & high-back chair


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

SOFA & Love seat perfect condition $99


Edie 650 345 8981
TEAK CABINET 28"x32", used for stereo equipment $25. (650)726-6429
TEAK-VENEER COMPUTER desk with
single drawer and stacked shelves. $30
obo. 650-465-2344
THOMASVILLE BEVELED mirror 22" x
12" $50. Call 650-834-4833
WALNUT CHEST, small (4 drawer with
upper bookcase $50. (650)726-6429
WOOD - wall Unit - 30" long x 6' tall x
17.5" deep. $90. (650)631-9311
WOOD FURNITURE- one end table and
coffee table. In good condition. $30
OBO. (760)996-0767.

306 Housewares
10 TULIP CHAMPAGNE
FOR $12 (415)990-6134

GLASSES

CHRISTMAS TREE China, Fairfield


Peace on Earth. Complete Set of 12 (48
pieces) $75. 650-493-5026
COMPLETE SET OF CHINA - Windsor
Garden, Noritake. Four place-settings,
20-pieces in original box, never used.
$250 per box
(3 boxes available).
(650)342-5630
GARBAGE CANS: brute 44 gal. Excellent condition $15. 650 504-6057
PORCELAIN JAPANESE Tea set, Unopened, in wood box, great gift $30.
(650)578-9208.

309 Office Equipment


IBM SELECTRIC II typewriter with several different font balls. Excellent condition; $40; 650-347-5743
INK CARTRIDGES
$19, 650-595-3933

for

HP

printer,

"MOTHER-IN-LAW TONGUES" plants,


3 in 5-gal cans. $10.00 each. 650/5937408.
500-600 BIG Band-era 78's--most mint,
no sleeves--$99.00 for all--650-574-5459
8 TRACKS, billy Joel, Zeppelin, Eagles
,Commodores, more.40 @ $4 each , call
650-393-9908
CIAO SMALL Black Duffel Carry-on,
Overnight or Tote bag with shoulder
strap, $15 650-952-3500
ELECTRONIC TYPEWRITER,
condition $50 (650)878-9542

good

GAME "BEAT THE EXPERTS" never


used $8., (408)249-3858
INCUBATOR, $99, (650)678-5133
LIONEL CHRISTMAS Boxcars 2005,
2006, 2007 New OB $90 lot 650-3687537
LIONEL CHRISTMAS Holiday expansion Set. New OB $99 650-368-7537
LIONEL WESTERN Union Pass car and
dining car. New OB $99 650-368-7537
PREMIUM MOVING blankets good condition $10.00 each (650 ) 504 -6057
RMT CHRISTMAS Diesel train and Caboose. Rare. New OB $99 650-368-7537
SAMSONITE 26" tan hard-sided suit
case, lt. wt., wheels, used once/like new.
$60. 650-328-6709
SILK SAREE 6 yards new nice color.for
$35 only. C all(650)515-2605 for more information.
ULTRASONIC JEWELRY Cleaning Machine Cleans jewelry, eyeglasses, dentures, keys. Concentrate included. $30
OBO. (650)580-4763
VASE WITH flowers 2 piece good for the
Holidays, $25., (650) 867-2720

WAGON WHEEL Wooden, original from


Colorado farm. 34x34
Very good
aged condition $200 San Bruno
(650)588-1946

BOSTITCH 16 gage Finish nailer Model


SB 664FN $99 (650)359-9269
CENTRAL PNEUMATIC Air compressor
for sale. 8 gal. 125 lb. pressure. good
condition $30 650-871-8907
CLICKER TORQUE wrench, 20-150,
$20, 650-595-3933
CRAFTSMAN 9" Radial Arm Saw with 6"
dado set. No stand. $55 (650)341-6402
CRAFTSMAN JIGSAW 3.9 amp. with
variable speeds $65 (650)359-9269
CRAFTSMAN RADIAL Arm Saw Stand.
In box. $30. (650)245-7517
CRAFTSMAN RADIAL SAW, with cabinet stand, $200 Cash Only, (650)8511045

PARROT CAGE, Steel, Large - approx


4 ft by 4 ft, Excellent condition $300 best
offer. (650)245-4084
PET CARRIER, brown ,Very good condition, $15.00 medium zize leave txt or call
650 773-7201

VINTAGE ENGLISH ladies ice skates up to size 7-8, $40., (650)873-8167

WATER STORAGE TANK, brand new,


275 gallons. 48" x 46" x 39" $250. 650771-6324

316 Clothes
BLACK DOUBLE breasted suit size 38
excellent condition $25 650-322-9598

FAUX FUR Coat Woman's brown multi


color
in
excellent
condition
3/4
length $50 650-692-8012
FREE SIZE 38 tan gabardine navy officers uniform great condition Perfect for
that costume party.322-9598
LADIES BOOTS size 8 , 3 pairs different
styles , $20/ pair. call 650-592-2648
LADIES SEQUIN dress, blue, size XL,
pure silk lining, $40.00, (650) 578-9208
LEATHER JACKET, New Black Italian
style, size M Ladies $45 (650) 875-1708
MAN'S BLACK leather jacket, size 40,
like new. $85.00 (650)593-1780
MEN'S STETSON hat, size large, new,
rim, solid black, large, great gift. $40
(650) 578-9208
NEW JOCKEY Men's Classic Crew
white tshirts (L) 3pk $15/each (5 available) 650.952.3466
NEW WITH tags Wool or cotton Men's
pullover
sweaters
(XL)
$15/each
(650)952-3466
PARIS HILTON purse white & silver unused, about 12" long x 9" high $23. 650592-2648
PRADA DAYPACK / Purse, Sturdy black
nylon canvas, like new, made in Italy,
$35 (650)591-6596
VELVET DRAPE, 100% cotton, new
beautiful burgundy 82"X52" W/6"hems:
$45 (415)585-3622
VINTAGE 1970S Grecian made dress,
size 6-8, $35 (650)873-8167
WILSON'S LG Green Suede Jacket
$50.00 (650)367-1508

317 Building Materials


CULTURED MARBLE 2 tone BR vanity
counter top. New toe skin/ scribe. 29 x
19 $300 (408)744-1041

SHUTTERS 2 wooden shutters 32x72


like new $50.00 ea.call 650 368-7891
WHITE DOUBLE pane window for $29
or Best offer. Call Halim @ (650) 6785133.

311 Musical Instruments

318 Sports Equipment


15 SF Giants Posters -- Barry Bonds,
Jeff Kent, JT Snow. 6' x 2.5' Unused. $4
each. $35 all. (650)588-1946 San Bruno

EXCELLENT VIOLIN, previously owned,


first violinist SF Symphony, Mellow
sound. Dated 1894. $5,500/best offer.
(415)751-2416

CHILDS KICK scooter by razor with helmet $25 obo (650)591-6842

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


(650)343-4461

WOMEN'S NORDICA ski boots, size 8


1/2. $50 650-592-2047
YAMAHA ROOF RACK, 58 inches $75.
(650)458-3255

BATH CHAIR LIFT. Peterman battery


operated bath chair lift. Stainless steel
frame. Accepts up to 350lbs. Easily inserted I/O tub.$250 OBO.
(650) 739-6489.
ELECTRIC WHEELCHAIR, great shape,
only 5 years old, $500 or best offer. Call
anytime, (650)713-6272

Garage Sales
MOVING SALE
Antiques, household items,.
oak rocking chair, dining
room table (seats 10)

SAT, SUN
9am-5pm

734 Neal Ave,


San Carlos

GARAGE SALES
ESTATE SALES
Make money, make room!

List your upcoming


garage sale,
moving sale,
estate sale,
yard sale,
rummage sale,
clearance sale, or
whatever sale you
have...
Reach over 83,450 readers
from South San Francisco
to Palo Alto.
in your local newspaper.

Call (650)344-5200

INTERIOR DOORS, 8, Free. Call 5737381.

BALDWIN GRAND PIANO, 6 foot, excellent condition, $8,500/obo. Call


(510)784-2598

FENDER BASS amp 25 watt. electrical


issue box and speaker very good
$45. (650)367-8146

WOMEN'S LADY Cougar gold iron set


set - $25. (650)348-6955

345 Medical Equipment

BOY SCOUT canvas belt with Boy Scout


Buckle. Vintage. Fair condition. $5.
(650)588-0842

SOLID TEAK floor model 16 wine rack


with turntable $60. (650)592-7483

BENCH SAW - 8 INCH includes attached table and accessories $55 (650)3680748

TREADMILL BY PRO-FORM. (Hardly


Used). 10% incline, 2.5 HP motor, 300lb
weight capacity. $329 (650)598-9804

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


info (650)851-0878

VINTAGE WHITE Punch Bowl/Serving


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

ALUMINUM LADDERS 40ft, $99 for two,


Call (650)481-5296

TOTAL GYM XLS, excellent condition.


Paid $2,500. Yours for $900. Call
(650)588-0828

ONE KENNEL Cab ll one Pet Taxi animal carriers 26x16. Excellent cond. $60..
650-593-2066

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

308 Tools

SOCCER BALLS - $8.00 each (like new)


4 available. (650)341-5347

VINTAGE SHOPSMITH and BAND


SAW, good shape. $1,000/obo. Call
(650)342-6993

310 Misc. For Sale

new $20.00

312 Pets & Animals


AIRLINE CARRIER for cats, pur. from
Southwest Airlines, $25, 2 available. Call
(505-228-1480) local.

PRINCE TENNIS 2 section nylon black


Bag with Prince Pro Graphite Racket$55.(650)341-8342

VINTAGE CRAFTSMAN Jig Saw. Circa


1947. $60. (650)245-7517

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

SHELF RUBBER maid


contract joe 650-573-5269

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

$99

VINTAGE NASH Cruisers Mens/ Womens Roller Skates Blue indoor/outdoor sz


6-8. $60 B/O. (650)574-4439

NEAT RECEIPTS Mobile Scanner new


in box $79, call 650-324-8416

RUMMY ROYAL poker table top $30.00


(650)573-5269

POWER PLUS Exercise Machine


(650)368-3037

$95.00,

CANARY BIRD cage 24 x 16 for sale.


$40.00 firm. Used, good condition. Call
650-766-3024

RECLINING SWIVEL chair almost new


$99 650-766-4858

ROCKING CHAIRS solid wood, great


shape asking 30 dollars each. Call
(650)574-4582 Lily

SAXAPHONE FOR SALE. Yamaha YAS-23; Excellent condition. $300 (half


of amazon price). 650-571-6374.

YAMAHA PIANO, Upright, Model M-305,


$750. Call (650)572-2337

TWO WHEEL dolly used $20.00 contact


joe at 650-573-5269

RECLINER CHAIR blue tweed clean


good $75 Call 650 583-3515

MEN'S ROSSIGNOL Skis.


good condition, 650-341-0282.

SHOPSMITH MARK V 50th Anniversary


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

OFFICE TABLE, 24"x48" HD. folding


legs each end. 500# capacity. Cost
$130. Sell $60, 650-591-4141

QUEEN-SIZED SOFA-BED, beige colored, excellent condition, $99.99 or best


offer. Must Go! (650) 952-3063.

PIANO, UPRIGHT, in excellent condition. Asking $345. (650)366-4769

VINTAGE MELODICA Hohner Piano 27


key German w/case $25 call (650)3678146

SLEDGE HAMMER & Hand Held Heavy


Duty Hammer & Hand Held AX $5.00
(650)368-0748

PAPASAN CHAIRS (2) -with cushions


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

LADIES MCGREGOR Golf Clubs


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

ROUTER TABLE ryobi $ 99. like new


650-573-5269

OAK SIX SHELF Book Case 6FT 4FT


$55 (650)458-8280

OUTDOOR WOOD SCREEN - new $80


obo Retail $130 (650)873-8167

MONARCH UPRIGHT player piano $99


(650) 583-4549

EXERCISE STATIONARY Bike - Body


Rider - good condition $50. (650)2663184
FITNESS STEPPER compact
(12"x16") Hardly used! $50. Call
650-766-3024

sized

GOLF CLUBS {13}, Bag, & Pull Cart all-$90.00 (650)341-8342

HAMMOND B-3 Organ and 122 Leslie


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

GOLF CLUBS, new, Warrior woods


3/15 degree 5/21 degree 7/24 degree
$15 ea (650)349-0430

LEXICON LAMBDA cubase LE $60.00


call Patter (650)367-8146

Golf Clubs, used set with Cart for $50.


(650)593-4490

379 Open Houses

OPEN HOUSE
LISTINGS
List your Open House
in the Daily Journal.
Reach over 83,450
potential home buyers &
renters a day,
from South San Francisco
to Palo Alto.
in your local newspaper.
Call (650)344-5200

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

620 Automobiles
Dont lose money
on a trade-in or
consignment!

630 Trucks & SUVs

640 Motorcycles/Scooters
89 GOLD WING. 1500 CC. 39K miles.
Call Joe 650-578-8357
ALPINE STAR motocross boots Tech 8s
size 14 good cond. $75. (650)345-5642
ATV MOTORCYCLE Lift $50.00
Patter (650)367-8146

call

BMW 03 F650 GS, $3899 OBO. Call


650-995-0003

Sell your vehicle in the


Daily Journals
Auto Classifieds.

MOTORCYCLE SADDLEBAGS, with


mounting hardware and other parts $35.
Call (650)670-2888

Just $45
Well run it
til you sell it!

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

Reach 83,450 drivers


from South SF to
Palo Alto
Call (650)344-5200
ads@smdailyjournal.com

BMW 07 X-5, One Owner, Excel. Condition Sports package 3rd row seats reduced $19,995 obo Call (650)520-4650
CADILLAC 02 Deville, 8 cylinder, perfect condition, like new, cashmere outside white inside 4787 miles $13,000.
(415)850-2370
CADILLAC 99 DeVille Concours,
98,500 miles, $3,500 or best offer.
(650)270-6637
CHEVY 10 HHR . 68K. EXCELLENT
CONDITION. $8888. (650)274-8284.
CHEVY HHR 08 - Grey, spunky car
loaded, even seat warmers, $9,500.
(408)807-6529.
DODGE
99 Van, Good Condition,
$5,500, childs play three, call
(650)481-5296

GOT AN OLDER
CAR, BOAT, OR RV?
Do the humane thing.
Donate it to the
Humane Society.
Call 1- 800-943-8412

JAGUAR 94 XJ6, very clean, 110K


miles, $4,500. (650)302-5523
LEXUS 94 GS300 148K miles, very
clean. $2,700. (650)302-5523
MAZDA 12 CX-7 SUV Excellent condition One owner Fully loaded Low
miles reduced $18,995 obo (650)5204650
TOYOTA 06 Prius, 149K, clean. $6,500
(650)302-5523

625 Classic Cars


1955 CHEVY BEL AIR 2 door, Standard
Transmission V8 Motor, non-op $22,000
obo. (650)952-4036.
86 CHEVY CORVETTE. Automatic.
93,000 miles. Sports Package.$6,800
obo. (650) 952-4036.
CORVETTE 69 STINGRAY 327, Horsespeed SPS, 50.000 miles. $18,500.
(650)481-5296.

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

670 Auto Service


LUXURATI AUTO REPAIR
Smog Check
Repair Services
Collision and Body Work

Burlingame & San Mateo Locations

(650) 340-0026

SEE OUR AD FOR DISCOUNTS!

670 Auto Parts


BRIDGESTONE TURANZA RFT (Run
Flat) 205/55/16 EL 42 All Season Like
New $100. (650)483-1222
BRIDGESTONE TURANZA RFT (Run
Flat) 205/55/16 EL42 used 70% left $80.
(650)483-1222
FIRESTONE TIRES 215/70/R16 good
condition $50. (650) 504-6057
NEW CONTINENTAL Temporary tire
mounted on 5 lug rim Size T125/70/R1798M $100. (650)483-1222
SHOP MANUALS for GM Suv's
Year 2002 all for $40 (650)948-0912

680 Autos Wanted


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

30

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Weekend Nov. 19-20, 2016

Cabinetry

Construction

Housecleaning

Hauling

Plumbing

CONSUELOS HOUSE
CLEANING

CHEAP
HAULING!

MEYER
PLUMBING
SUPPLY

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

Free Estimates, 15% off First Visit

(650)219-4066
Lic#1211534

Light moving!
Haul Debris!
650-583-6700

General
House &
Office
Cleaning

Cleaning

CALEDONIAN
MASONRY INC
Landscape Design!
We can design your
outdoor living
experience.

650-350-1960
Notices
Roofing

REED
ROOFERS

Serving the entire Bay Area


Residential & Commercial

PENINSULA
CLEANING

License #931457

Call for Free Estimate

RESIDENTIAL AND COMMERICAL

(650) 591-8291

BONDED
FREE ESTIMATES

1-800-344-7771

Call For Free Estimate:

Handy Help

(650) 525-9154

AAA HANDYMAN & MORE

Toilets, Sinks, Vanities,


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

Experience s Reasonable
References s Free Estimates
Magda Perez
650.533.8063

*BBQs *Pizza Ovens


*Patios *Flagstone
*Concrete/Foundation

Since 1985

Repairs* Remodeling* Painting


Carpentry* Plumbing* Electrical

ALL WORK GUARANTEED

(650) 453-3002

Concrete

Lic: #468963

Rambo
Concrete
Works

HONEST HANDYMAN

Remodeling, Plumbing,
Electrical, Carpentry,
General Home Repair,
Maintenance, New Construction.
No Job Too Small
Lic.# 891766

by Greenstarr

W>>U i>U*>

i`U}}i}>iU,i>}
W>U->i`
Vii
-}*,i>

Licensed Bonded & Insured

Decks & Fences

MARSH FENCE
& DECK CO.

State License #377047


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

Electricians

Service

Landscaping

LOCALLY OWNED

SEASONAL LAWN

Family Owned Since 2000

MAINTENANCE

Hardwood Floors

ACE
HARDWOOD
FLOORS

Refinish & Repair & Install


Carpet removing & Re coat
Ca.Lic.:712755

Drought Tolerant Planting


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

415 640 4111

AAA RATED!

Painting

ALL ELECTRICAL
SERVICE

JON LA MOTTE

for all your electrical needs

$40 & UP
HAUL

Interior & Exterior


Quality Work, Reasonable
Rates, Free Estimates

ELECTRIC SERVICE GROUP

Gardening

THE VILLAGE
CONTRACTOR

LAWN MAINTENANCE

(650)701-6072

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

Drought Tolerant Planting


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

Since 1988/Licensed & Insured


Monthly Specials
Fast, Dependable Service

Free Estimates
A+ BBB Rating

(650)341-7482

PAINTING
(650)368-8861
Lic #514269

MICHAELS
PAINTING

Serving the Peninsula


since 1989

(650) 574-0203
lic#628633

CHAINEY HAULING
Junk & Debris Clean Up

Furniture / Appliance / Disposal


Tree / Bush / Dirt / Concrete Demo

Starting at $40 & Up


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

Pruning

Shaping
Large

Removal
Grinding

Free
Estimates
Mention

The Daily Journal


to get 10% off
for new customers

www.acehardwoodflooring.com

Hauling

Trimming

Stump

INDEPENDENT
HAULERS

650-322-9288

Licensed General and


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

Hillside Tree

650-201-6854

T.M. CONCRETE

Construction

SENIOR HANDYMAN

Retired Licensed Contractor

License#752250 Since 1985

David: (650) 642-1614

Tree Service

Specializing in any size project

TOM (650) 834-2365

Lic: #1017155
*Foundation*Stamp Concrete
*Exposed Aggragate *Retaining Walls
*Bricks *Pavers *Driveways
*Flagstones
Free Estimates

(650)740-8602

Painting Electrical
Carpentry Dry Rot
40 Yrs. Experience

Window Washing

Call Luis (650) 704-9635

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 Nov. 19-20, 2016

31

Caregiver

Dental Services

Furniture

Health & Medical

Marketing

Real Estate Services

JOB FAIR

I - SMILE

STOOLS*BAR*DINETTES

CALIFORNIA

SLEEP APNEA
We can treat it
without CPAP!

GROW

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

Implant & Orthodontict Center


1702 Miramonte Ave. Suite B
Mountain View

November 12, 2016


9:00am to 5:00pm
890 Santa Cruz Ave
Menlo Park

Exceptional.
Reliable. Innovative
650-282-5555

CARE INDEED
(650) 328-1001

Cemetery

LASTING
IMPRESSIONS
ARE OUR FIRST
PRIORITY
Cypress Lawn
1370 El Camino Real
Colma
(650)755-0580
www.cypresslawn.com

MAGNOLIA
DENTAL
650-263-4703
150 N. San Mateo Drive

Food

PANCHO VILLA
TAQUERIA

Because Flavor Still Matters


365 B Street
San Mateo
(650) 343-4123

Computer

COMPUTER
PROBLEMS?

Viruses, lost data, hardware or


software issues? Contact Geeks
On Site! 24/7 Service. Friendly
Repair Experts. Macs and PCs
Call for FREE diagnosis.
1-800-715-9068

Dental Services
COMPLETE IMPLANT
Dentistry Under One Roof

(650)591-3900

Tons of Furniture to match


your lifestyle

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

Health & Medical

DENTAL
IMPLANTS

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

DENTURES
IN A DAY!

A touch of Europe

1308 Burlingame Ave


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

650-583-5880
Millbrae Dental
Insurance

AFFORDABLE

HEALTH INSURANCE
OPEN ENROLLMENT

Eric L. Barrett,

CLU, RHU, REBC, CLTC, LUTCF


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

(in most cases)

Only $1,395 per set


650-419-9674
Roos Dental Care
Redwood City

www.smpanchovilla.com

THE CAKERY

Call for a free


sleep apnea screening

EYE EXAMINATIONS

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

Legal Services

LEGAL

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

(650)574-2087

Same day treatment

legaldocumentsplus.com

Evening & Saturday appts available

"I am not an attorney. I can only


provide self help services at your
specific direction."

Peninsula Dental Implant Center


1201 St Francisco Way, San Carlos
650.232.7650

Peninsula Youth Ballet's

The Nutcracker
November 26, 2pm and 7pm
November 27, 2pm

Tickets available now at www.pyb.org


Adult: $45, Senior $35, Child/Student: $25
Plus, meet the dancers at Clara's Tea Party, $10,
immediately after each 2pm performance

San Mateo Performing Arts Center, 600 N Delaware Street, San Mateo

YOUR SMALL BUSINESS


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

Massage Therapy
BEST ASIAN
BODY MASSAGE
$45/hr
Call (650) 787-9969
Free Parking Behind Building
Mon-Fri, 10am-9pm
Wknds-Holidays. Call Ahead.

1838 El Camino #103,


Burlingame

Real Estate Loans

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

WACHTER

INVESTMENTS, INC.

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

Peninsula Prime Realty


650-591-0119

info@peninsulaprimerealty.com

Travel
FIGONE TRAVEL
GROUP
(650) 595-7750

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

32

Weekend Nov. 19-20, 2016

THE DAILY JOURNAL

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