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MADAME BOVARY

PROVES ELUSIVE
WEEKEND JOURNAL PAGE 18

STINGING BLOW

U.S. SOCCER
TIES SWEDEN

HOUSE REJECTS OBAMAS APPEALS, IMPERILS HIS


TRADE AGENDA
NATION PAGE 7

SPORTS PAGE 11

Leading local news coverage on the Peninsula

www.smdailyjournal.com

Weekend June 13-14, 2015 Vol XV, Edition 258

Overcoming any obstacle to achieve


San Carlos native will use scholarship from Amputee Coalition to pursue degree at MIT
By Austin Walsh
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

The spirit of competition drives


San Carlos native Riley Quinn to
success.
And though some may be alienated by those always looking for a
challenge, Quinn uses his predisposition for contest to uplift

Riley Quinn

those around
him.
As an exhibition of his
desire to unify
and achieve,
during
his
freshman year
at Saint Francis
High School in

Mountain View, Quinn would offer


his classmates $100 to show him
a report card full of straight As to
match his own.
Now the time has come for others to help Quinn, as he accepts a
$1, 000 scholarship from the
Amputee Coalition in advance of
beginning his first semester at the
Massachusetts
Institute
of

Technology next fall.


Quinn, 18, is eligible for the
scholarship reserved for those
who have a limb difference or an
amputation because he was born
without a left forearm.
He used the lessons he learned in
overcoming his physical disadvantage to overachieve in almost
every other aspect of his life, said

his mother Cheryl Quinn.


When he lost his hand, he got
so many other gifts, she said.
Perhaps his greatest gift is his
insatiable drive, born in part from
his sense of competition, which
his mother said was developed
while learning tasks that many

See QUINN, Page 20

State: Large
water cuts
for farmers
Reduction expected to have little
immediate impact on food prices
By Fenit Nirappil
and Scott Smith
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

AUSTIN WALSH/DAILY JOURNAL

Alessandro Cavero, 2, checks out a sheep at the San Mateo County Fair Friday, June 12. The fair will continue
through the rest of the weekend at the San Mateo County Event Center. Below: Makayla Arvin, 18, sits with her
steer Rocko, which was shown in the livestock competition at the San Mateo County Fair.

Honoring and appreciating animals


Local 4-H members show off their livestock at San Mateo County Fair
By Austin Walsh
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

Since she was 5 years old,


Makayla Arvin has been raising
farm animals, many of which went
on to be shown in the youth livestock auction at the San Mateo
County Fair.
And as the fair wraps up this
weekend at the San Mateo Event
Center, the 18-year-old Redwood
City native is entering her final
days of participating in the 4-H
ceremonies.

See 4-H, Page 24

SACRAMENTO As California
grapples with a relentless drought,
state regulators on Friday ordered
farmers and others who hold some
of the strongest water rights in the
state to stop all pumping from
three major waterways in one of
countrys prime farm regions.
The order involving record cuts
by senior water rights holders in
the Sacramento, San Joaquin and
delta watersheds followed mandatory water curtailment earlier this
year to cities and towns and to

farmers with
less
ironclad water
rights.
The waterways targeted Friday in
Federal agencies
the order by
pledge another $110
the
State
million in drought aid
See page 5 W a t e r
R e s o ur c e s
Control Board provide water to
farms and cities in the agriculturalrich Central Valley and beyond.
Economists and agriculture
experts say growing of some

Inside

See WATER, Page 20

Half Moon Bay has $4M surplus


Improved finances excite City Council
By Samantha Weigel
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

After years of treading water to


stay afloat during the recession
while settling a multi-million-dollar lawsuit, Half Moon Bay officials are thrilled the citys balanced budget for the coming fiscal
year
highlights
significant
progress.
The City Council approved its
budget last week that includes a

nearly $4.1 million general fund


surplus as well as significant
investments in capital improvement projects that will benefit the
community.
Notably, the city is making
progress toward paying off its debt
incurred from the lawsuit over the
botched Beachwood property
decades early, hiring new employees cut during the recession and

See BUDGET, Page 24

FOR THE RECORD

Weekend June 13-14, 2015

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Thought for the Day


There are no strangers here,
only friends you have not yet met.
William Butler Yeats (1865-1939)

This Day in History

1865

Nobel Prize-winning poet-playwright


William Butler Yeats was born in
Dublin, Ireland.

In 1 5 2 5 , German theologian Martin Luther married former


nun Katharina von Bora.
In 1 8 4 2 , Queen Victoria became the first British monarch
to ride on a train, traveling from Slough Railway Station to
Paddington in 25 minutes.
In 1 8 8 6 , King Ludwig II of Bavaria drowned in Lake
Starnberg.
In 1 9 2 7 , aviation hero Charles Lindbergh was honored
with a ticker-tape parade in New York City.
In 1 9 3 5 , James Braddock claimed the title of world heavyweight boxing champion from Max Baer in a 15-round fight
in Queens, New York. Becky Sharp, the first movie photographed in three-strip Technicolor, opened in New York.
In 1 9 4 2 , the first of two four-man Nazi sabotage teams
arrived in the United States during World War II. (The eight
were arrested after one of them went to U.S. authorities; six
of the saboteurs were executed.)
In 1 9 5 7 , the Mayflower II, a replica of the ship that
brought the Pilgrims to America in 1620, arrived at
Plymouth, Massachusetts, after a nearly two-month journey
from England.
In 1 9 6 6 , the Supreme Court ruled in Miranda v. Arizona
that criminal suspects had to be informed of their constitutional right to consult with an attorney and to remain silent.
In 1 9 7 1 , The New York Times began publishing excerpts
of the Pentagon Papers, a secret study of Americas involvement in Vietnam from 1945 to 1967 that had been leaked to
the paper by military analyst Daniel Ellsberg.
In 1 9 8 1 , a scare occurred during a parade in London when a
teenager fired six blank shots at Queen Elizabeth II.
In 1 9 8 3 , the U.S. space probe Pioneer 10, launched in
1972, became the first spacecraft to leave the solar system
as it crossed the orbit of Neptune.

U.N.
Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon is 71.

Actor Steve-O is
41.

Actor Bob McGrath is 83. Artist Christo is 80. Singer Bobby


Freeman is 75. Actor Malcolm McDowell is 72. Singer Dennis
Locorriere is 66. Actor Richard Thomas is 64. Actor Jonathan
Hogan is 64. Actor Stellan Skarsgard is 64. Comedian Tim
Allen is 62. Actress Ally Sheedy is 53. TV anchor Hannah
Storm is 53. Rock musician Paul deLisle (Smash Mouth) is 52.
Actress Lisa Vidal is 50. Singer David Gray is 47. Rhythm-andblues singer Deniece Pearson (Five Star) is 47. Rock musician
Soren Rasted (Aqua) is 46. Actor Jamie Walters is 46. Singermusician Rivers Cuomo (Weezer) is 45.

he term soap opera was created


in the 1930s, in reference to the
radio dramas that were becoming
very popular. Most of the shows were
sponsored by manufacturers of household cleaning products.
***
The Guiding Light (1952-2009)
soap opera began as a radio drama in
1937.
***
Soap operas that have been on television for more than 30 years include
All My Children (debuted 1970),
Days of Our Lives (1965), The
Young and the Restless (1973) and
One Life to Live (1968).
***
The most watched event on daytime
television ever was a wedding on a
soap opera. Do you know who the couple was and the soap opera they were
on? The year? See answer at end.
***
The soap operas General Hospital,
on ABC, and The Doctors, on NBC,

Lotto

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME


by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

June 10 Powerball

Unscramble these four Jumbles,


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

31

32

48

53

49

25

USHOE

SIFMIT

Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app

2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC


All Rights Reserved.

June 12 Mega Millions


1

40

42

62

56

2
Mega number

June 10 Super Lotto Plus


1

39

43

44

47

10

12

20

28

Daily Four
3

Daily three midday


6

10

any North American bird. A nest was


found in Florida that measured 9 feet
across and weighed 2 tons. Eagles
reuse nests and continue to build on to
them for many years.
***
The Great Seal of the United States,
designed in 1782, pictures an eagle
wearing a shield with 13 red and white
stripes and a blue field with 13 stars.
The eagle holds an olive branch and a
bundle of 13 arrows in his talons.
There is a scroll held in the eagles
beak that reads E Pluribus Unum.
***
E Pluribus Unum is a Latin phrase
meaning Out of Many, One.
***
The reverse side of the Great Seal pictures a pyramid with an eye over it .
The Latin phrase above the pyramid,
Annuit Coeptis, means Providence
has Favored Our Undertakings. The
Latin phrase below thepyramid, Novus
Ordo Seclorum, means A New Order of
the Ages.
***
A n s w e r: Thirty million people
watched the wedding of Luk e and Laura
on General Hospital in Nov ember
1981. It was the highest rated episode
of any day time soap opera.
Know It All is by Kerry McArdle. It runs in
the weekend and Wednesday editions of the
Daily Journal. Questions? Comments?
Email knowitall(at)smdailyjournal.com or
call 344-5200 ext. 114.

Local Weather Forecast

Fantasy Five
Powerball

WREAA

both debuted April 1, 1963. The


Doctors ended in 1982.
***
The television series Diagnosis
Murder (1993-2001) starred Dick Van
Dyke (born 1925) as Dr. Mark Sloan.
His real life son Barry Van Dyke (born
1951) played Detective Steve Sloan
on the show.
***
Dick Van Dyke hosted CBS Cartoon
Theatre in 1956. Van Dyke introduced
the Heckle and Jeckle cartoon segments. He conversed with the mischievous black magpies through animation.
***
Black-billed magpies take up to 40
days to construct their large nests. The
western horned owl and the long-eared
owl make homes of abandoned magpie
nests.
***
There are two species of magpies
native to Australia: the western magpie and the black-backed magpie.
Magpies
are
protected
under
Australias Wildlife Conservation Act.
***
The American bald eagle is protected
by the Bald Eagle Protection Act of
1940 and the Endangered Species Act
of 1973.
***
The eagle became the national emblem
of the United States in 1782.
***
Bald Eagles build the largest nest of

Birthdays

Magician Siegfried
is 76.

REUTERS

Fireworks explode during the opening ceremony of the first European Games in Baku, Azerbaijan.

Daily three evening

Mega number

The Daily Derby race winners are Gold Rush, No.


1, in first place; Eureka, No. 7, in second place; and
Money Bags, No. 11, in third place.The race time
was clocked at 1:47.90.

Saturday : Mostly cloudy in the morning


then becoming partly cloudy. Patchy fog
in the morning. Highs in the mid 60s to
lower 70s. Southwest winds 5 to 15 mph.
Saturday ni g ht: Partly cloudy in the
evening then becoming mostly cloudy.
Patchy fog after midnight. Lows in the
lower 50s. Southwest winds 5 to 15 mph.
Sunday : Mostly cloudy in the morning then becoming
sunny. Patchy fog in the morning. Highs in the 60s.
Southwest winds 5 to 10 mph...Becoming south 10 to 20
mph in the afternoon.
Sunday ni g ht: Mostly clear in the evening then becoming cloudy. Patchy fog. Lows in the lower 50s.
Mo nday thro ug h Thurs day : Mostly cloudy. Patchy
fog. Highs in the 60s. Lows in the lower 50s.

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

Print your
answer here:
Yesterdays

(Answers Monday)
Jumbles: OOMPH
TRUTH
MISUSE
FINALE
Answer: The Jumble creators usually call it a day
when they PUN OUT OF STEAM

The San Mateo Daily Journal


800 S. Claremont St., Suite 210, San Mateo, CA 94402
Publisher: Jerry Lee
Editor in Chief: Jon Mays
jerry@smdailyjournal.com
jon@smdailyjournal.com
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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.

THE DAILY JOURNAL

LOCAL

Victim sues former social worker, county


Lawsuit claims officials failed to protect girl from harm
By Samantha Weigel
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

The alleged victim of a former social


worker facing more than 30 felonies for
sexually assaulting minor clients filed a
civil lawsuit against her abuser and San
Mateo County for failing to protect her.
To protect the minors identity, her courtappointed guardian Jonathan McDougall
filed the suit Thursday on behalf of Jane
Doe against the county and its former
employee Manuel Sedillo-Messer, the former social worker with the Human Services
Agency.
Sedillo-Messer, 38, has pleaded not
guilty to his criminal charges in which
prosecutors allege he abused three young
girls who he was tasked with overseeing as
a social worker.
The first victim, who met Sedillo-Messer
in 2011, is now suing both her alleged abuser and the county with a range of complaints
that includes sexual assault, negligence and
breach of mandatory duty.
[Sedillo-Messer] preyed on minor girls,
who were especially vulnerable because of
their life circumstances and placement in
the dependency system of [the county], by
coercing them into having sexual relationships with him, according to the suit.
Sedillo-Messer began having sexual relations with Jane Doe in June 2014 when she
was 16 years old and included encounters in
hotels, county-owned vehicles, at the victims mothers home and on various beaches in the county, according to the suit.

He would also send her


explicit text messages
and photographs in addition to disclosing details
about
other
sexual
encounters and his extramarital affairs, according
to the suit.
On one occasion,
Sedillo-Messer
took the
Manuel
Sedillo-Messer girl to a hotel room
where he proceeded to
have sexual intercourse with her four times,
twice without protection, according to the
suit.
The conduct of Sedillo-Messer was so
outrageous in character and so extreme in
degree as to go beyond all possible bounds
of decency, and should be regarded as despicable, atrocious and utterly intolerable in a
civilized community, according to the suit.
During the two to three months SedilloMesser allegedly engaged in the inappropriate contact with Jane Doe, he was visiting
her almost daily. However, according to
state rules governing social services,
Sedillo-Messer should have at least a twoweek time frame between visits, the majority of which should take place at the childs
foster home, according to the suit.
Other employees of the county of San
Mateo had concrete and credible evidence
that at least one of these relationships was
occurring, yet all failed to meet their duties
of mandatory reporting, thereby continuing
to expose the victims to further abuse,
according to the suit.

McDougall and Jane Doe are represented


in the suit by the Emanuel Law Group.
Neither McDougall, nor an attorney from
the group were available to comment on
what evidence county allegedly had.
However, the suit alleges other county
employees had enough information to reasonably form a suspicion of sexual abuse
yet breached their mandatory duty to report
it. The suit also claims the county failed to
properly oversee and train Sedillo-Messer.
Chief Deputy County Counsel Paul Okada
said his office hadnt yet reviewed the case
as of Friday morning, but would proceed
with caution.
Were not in a position to comment
given the pending criminal matter, Okada
said.
Sedillo-Messer is also charged with having sexual encounters with a second victim,
who reported he was like a father to her, at
an upscale San Jose hotel, according to the
District Attorneys Office.
Since Sedillo-Messers arrest last
October, a third victim came forward alleging he sexually assaulted her in his personal car and county-provided cars, according
to the District Attorneys Office.
Sedillo-Messer is scheduled to appear in
court Monday for a pretrial conference on
his criminal proceedings. He is scheduled to
face a jury July 20, according to the District
Attorneys Office.
A case management conference to discuss
the civil suit is scheduled Oct. 28.
Sedillo-Messers attorney did not return a
request for comment.

Weekend June 13-14, 2015

Police reports
Can you take a gander?
An injured goose was seen limping
around at Hallmark Drive and Benson
Way in Belmont before 6:58 p. m.
Wednesday, June 10.

MILLBRAE
Burg l ary . Multiple tools were stolen from a
residence on the 100 block of Alturas Drive
before 10:07 a.m. Thursday, June 11.
Burg l ary . A person stole property valued at
approximately $5,500 from a residence on
the 100 block of La Prenda before 4 p.m.
Tuesday, June 9.
Arres t. A person under the inuence of a controlled substance was arrested for possession
of hypodermic needles on Center Street and El
Camino Real before 10:45 p.m. Saturday,
June 6.
Arres t. A person was arrested for driving
under the inuence on Capuchino Drive and
Magnolia Avenue before 8:12 p.m. Friday,
June 5.

BURLINGAME
Petty theft. Groceries were stolen on
Howard Avenue before 8:33 a.m. Wednesday,
June 10.
Grand theft. Several items were discovered
missing from a retail store during inventory
on Burlingame Avenue before 8:09 p.m.
Tuesday, June 9.
Fraud. A resident contacted police when he
never received coins he bought online on
Cadillac Way before 9:38 a.m. Tuesday, June
9.
Arres t. A person was arrested for driving
under the inuence on Highland and Peninsula
avenues before 1:03 a.m. Saturday, May 30.

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Weekend June 13-14, 2015

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THE DAILY JOURNAL

Weekend June 13-14, 2015

Federal agencies pledge another $110M in drought aid


By Juliet Williams
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SACRAMENTO Federal agencies


pledged another $110 million in aid Friday
to help states struggling with the crippling
drought after President Barack Obama talked
to leaders from seven western states.
The president met by phone and video
link for about an hour with the governors of
Arizona, California, Colorado, Montana,
Oregon, and Wyoming and with the lieutenant governor of Utah, according to the
White House.
The funding announced Friday includes:
$18 million for a jobs program to help
as many as 1,000 Californians who are
unemployed because of the drought get temporary jobs doing drought-related work or
as part of programs to help make communities more drought-resistant. The administration cited a recent University of California
study estimating 18, 000 lost jobs in
California.
It also provides a much needed infusion
of economic support right back into these
communities that need it, said Assistant
Secretary of Labor for Employment and
Training Portia Wu on a conference call
with reporters.
$30 million to extend a program so
farmers who suffer one or two years of
exceptionally low production because of
the drought do not lose crop insurance.
$10 million to reduce the threat of wild-

REUTERS

Agricultural farm land is shown surrounding the town of Calipatria.


fires by cleaning up landscapes so they are
less prone to fires.
$6.5 million in grants for water management improvement projects.

$7 million to address the drought-related


needs of water utilities and households.
Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack,
Environmental Protection Administrator

Gina McCarthy, Federal Emergency


Management Agency Administrator Craig
Fugate, Deputy Interior Secretary Mike
Connor and Wu were among those on the
call.
Representatives of those agencies said
the $110 million in new spending comes on
top of $190 million already pledged in
short-term help for the states and in addition to other programs aimed at making
long-term changes.
California Gov. Jerry Brown, a Democrat,
said his state has already seen more than
half a million acres gone fallow and thousands of job losses.
This aid will provide new opportunities
for farmworkers and rural communities most
impacted by the drought and make the state
more water-efficient and drought resilient,
he said in a statement.
Officials also used the call to promote
legislation by congressional Republicans
to speed up timber harvests and the removal
of underbrush that the U.S. Forest Service
deemed necessary, which the Obama administration supports.
The administration has warned of potentially catastrophic wildfires this summer in
the Southwest and Northwest, and is forecasting costs of more than $200 million
above the budget for federal firefighting.
Forest Service officials say the budgeting
system requires them to shift money from
fire-prevention efforts to firefighting,
exacerbating fire problems.

Brown, lawmakers continue budget talks ahead of deadline


By Judy Lin
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SACRAMENTO California lawmakers


have scheduled a vote Monday on a $117.5
billion spending plan that increases social
spending for the poor even though Gov. Jerry
Brown hasnt signed off on that version of the
budget.
The Legislatures two Democratic leaders
say theirs is a responsible budget that sets
aside money for a rainy day, pays down debt
and boosts schools. They are hoping to get
Browns blessing to spend an additional $749
million for the fiscal year that begins July 1.

But Brown, also a


Democrat, is reluctant to
go along with new spending commitments in welfare, health care and child
care. He and Republicans
are concerned that the
state wont collect as
much in taxes, leaving the
state more vulnerable
Jerry Brown when the next economic
downturn hits.
This means that even if a budget is passed
Monday, negotiations will continue in the
days ahead.

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Where things stand


WHAT DO THE GOVERNOR
AND LAWMAKERS AGREE ON?
Theres a lot of common ground between Brown and lawmakers.
Both sides are calling for billions in additional spending for
public schools, setting aside money in the states rainy day fund,
paying down debt and adopting a new earned income tax
credit to help as many as 2 million Californians.
In-state tuition at the University of California wont rise for most
undergraduates for two years. In exchange, the state will increase
the universitys budget by $120 million, or 4 percent, and send
more money to UCs pension fund.
The budget also calls for funding increases at the California
State University system to enroll more community college
transfer students and get more students to earn their bachelors
degrees in four years.
WHAT ARE THE STICKING POINTS?
Brown proposed a $115.3 billion budget, but Democrats have

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crafted a $117.5 billion spending plan by assuming the state


will collect more tax revenues than the governor estimates.
Democrats are using that extra revenue to justify spending
$749 million more next year on programs to help the poor.They
want to boost child care, health care, welfare and higher
education, among other programs.
WHATS NOT IN THE BUDGET?
The governor and legislative leaders said they were unable to
reach agreement on how to spend a growing pot of money
collected from the states landmark effort to curb greenhouse
gas emissions. Taking the cap-and-trade funding out of the
budget will give them more time to negotiate a way to spend
that money.
WHY IS THERE A VOTE MONDAY IF THERES NO DEAL?
Lawmakers want to continue getting paid. Under Proposition
25 passed by voters in 2010, state lawmakers have to pass a
balanced budget by June 15 or forfeit pay.

Weekend June 13-14, 2015

o ni ca Nag y
will
begin
serving
as
principal of Sky l i ne
El ementary Scho o l in
South San Francisco at
the beginning of the
next school year.
She joins the district
after serving as an elementary school principal for the past three
years in the Frankl i nMcKi nl ey
Scho o l
Di s tri ct in San Jose.
***
A series of concerts will take place at Menl o Co l l eg e
over the summer.
The series begins on Friday, June 26, when rock cover
band Murphy s Lawy ers plays beginning at 5 p.m. The
next show will be Friday, July 10, when Underco v er performs and the following show will be two weeks later when
Al ex ander Eccl es plays. The penultimate show will be El
Des ay uno on Friday, Aug. 7, and the last performance will
be Go o g apel l a, The Vo cal Netwo rk, So ng bi rds and
Sy nco pati o n on Aug. 21.
To find out more contact linda.teutshel@menlo.edu.
Menlo College is located at 1000 El Camino Real,
Atherton.
***
Yao Li u One, of San Mateo, graduated from Wo rces ter
Po l y techni c Ins ti tute.
***
Eri k Wi jmans , of Menlo Park, was named to the Deans
Li s t at Juni ata Co l l eg e, located in Huntingdon,
Pennsylvania.
***
Marg ueri te Dana, of San Bruno, was named to the
Deans Li s t for the spring semester at Benedi cti ne
Co l l eg e, in Atchison, Kansas.
***
To ri ka Bal ei l ekutu, of Hillsborough, and Jo rdan
Ri chwo o d, of San Mateo, were named to the Deans Li s t
at the Uni v ers i ty o f Memphi s .
***
Eri n Ho o v er and Andrew Marti nez, of Menlo Park,
graduated from Co l by Co l l eg e in Waterville, Maine.
Class notes is a column dedicated to school news. It is compiled by
education reporter Austin Walsh. You can contact him at (650) 3445200, ext. 105 or at austin@smdailyjournal.com.

LOCAL
Man caught with
drugs while wearing
girls panties changes plea
A man with one of the longest criminal records the San Mateo County
District Attorneys Office has ever
encountered changed his plea to not
guilty after he was caught with numerous baggies of methamphetamine hidden in two pairs of underwear he wore
into county jail.
Bobby William Wilcox, a 52-yearold Redwood City resident also known
as Bobby Chung, has decided to face a
jury despite pleading no contest April
29 to charges he smuggled nine bags
of drugs in a pair of mens underwear
and girls panties, according to prosecutors.
Wilcox, who has 53 prior convictions, was stopped by a sheriffs
deputy who recognized him in San
Bruno Jan. 17. Wilcox, who was on
probation and open to search and
seizure, had two warrants for his arrest,
according to the District Attorneys
Office.
The deputy took Wilcox to jail and,
as part of the normal booking process,
was searched. Wilcox was allegedly
wearing two pairs of underwear, a
mans pair that contained two baggies
of methamphetamine and a pair of little girls panties that had seven baggies of methamphetamine, according
to the District Attorneys Office.
Wilcox said the drugs werent his,
according to the District Attorneys
Office.
Wilcoxs 33-year criminal history
includes 29 felonies and he has been to
state prison eight times one of the
longest record District Attorney Steve
Wagstaffe said hes ever encountered.
Wilcox originally pleaded nolo contendere and was set for imposition of
sentence Friday in front of San Mateo
County Superior Court Judge Joseph
Bergeron, who originally promised no

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Local briefs
prison time in exchange for the plea.
Instead, Wilcox decided he wanted to
go to a jury trial and prove his innocence, according to Wagstaffe.

Stanford University president


to step down after 15 years
SAN FRANCISCO The president
of Stanford University is stepping
down after 15 years on a high note,
with one university official calling his
run as president one of the greatest in
Stanfords history and the annals of
American higher education.
John L. Hennessy, 62, is a computer
scientist who came to Stanford nearly
40 years ago as an assistant professor,
then served as the engineering school
dean and campus provost before taking
the helm of the university in October
2000.
A search for a successor will begin in
the fall. He will leave the post in the
summer of 2016.
The time has come to return to what
brought me to Stanford teaching
and research. Maintaining and
improving this university is the work
of many people, and I am deeply
appreciative of the dedication of so
many colleagues to Stanford and its
students, Hennessy told the Faculty
Senate on Thursday.
Hennessy was not specific about his
future plans. But university spokeswoman Lisa Lapin said Friday that his
return to research and teaching is fully
expected to be at Stanford.

Got pot? San Francisco to host


medical marijuana food fair
SAN FRANCISCO If a spoonful of
sugar helps the medicine go down,
imagine what a pancake breakfast
might do for medical marijuana.
Marijuana is only legal for medical
purposes in California, but that isnt

stopping purveyors of pot-infused


cupcakes, nuts and other edible forms
of the drug from putting on an outdoor
food festival to showcase their wares.
The Get Baked Sale happening
Saturday at a food truck hub in San
Francisco comes as marijuana advocates are working to legalize recreational use of the drug through a
statewide voter initiative in November
2016.
Its going to be legal next year, so
if we integrate it now, people can come
see what its like and have fun, that its
not what they think and its definitely
going mainstream, event creator
Jared Stratton said.
The fair will be only to all, but under
California law only people with proof
of a doctors recommendation for medical marijuana would be authorized to
eat the cannabis-cooked pancakes that
will be served during the breakfast portion of the daylong event.

Owners of nudist camp


charged with stealing water
LOS GATOS The owners of a
Northern California nudist resort have
been charged with stealing water during the states historic drought.
Seventy-seven-year old Glyn Stout
and his wife 53-year-old Lori Kay
Stout, co-owners of Lupin Lodge, were
charged Friday with felony conspiracy
to commit trespassing for the purpose
of injuring a property right. Officials
say they repeatedly diverted water from
a section of a local creek that they did
not own, according to a statement
from the Santa Clara County District
Attorneys office.
Two employees are also facing
charges.
The resorts owners have said they
are entitled to use the waterfall, which
they need to keep their water tank full
in case of a fire and to top off their
pool for both skinny-dipping and as a
backup water source for a fire.

NATION

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Weekend June 13-14, 2015

Officials say second


cyberbreach leaked
military, intel data
By Ken Dilanian and Ted Bridis
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

REUTERS

Barack Obama, with House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi at his side, walks from a meeting room after making a last-ditch
appeal to House Democrats to support a package of trade bills vital to his Asian policy agenda.

House rejects Obamas appeals


and imperils his trade agenda
By Charles Babington
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON Led by unionbacked Democrats, the House delivered a


stinging blow to President Barack
Obama on Friday and left his ambitious
global trade agenda in serious doubt.
Republican leaders, who generally
support Obamas trade objectives, signaled they might try to revive the package as early as next week. But that could
require the shifting of at least 90 votes
within either or both parties, a heavy
lift.
Fridays setback was deep and personal for Obama, who made a surprise, lastminute trip to the Capitol to ask House
Democrats to back him.
Not only did they reject him by the
dozens, they were led by party leader
Nancy Pelosi of California, who has
often expressed deep admiration for the
president. She joined in a tactic that
even some Democrats called devious and
cynical: voting against a favorite job-

retraining program in order to imperil


the trade packages main component:
fast track negotiating authority for
Obama.
Hours earlier, Obama had specifically
asked Democrats not to do that. But in a
crowded House chamber, Pelosi urged
her colleagues to ignore him.
Slow down the fast track to get a better deal for the American people, she
said, drawing praise from labor unions,
liberals and others who say free-trade
deals send U.S. jobs abroad. Pelosi
added possible new burdens to the legislative package, saying new highway
funding and environmental justice
should be linked to its passage if its
revived.
In a statement, Obama said the job
retraining program would give roughly
100,000 American workers access to
vital support each year, and he urged
the House to pass it as soon as possible
and send the entire trade package for him
to sign.
Other presidents have had fast track

Exp. 6/30/15

authority, which lets them propose trade


agreements that Congress can ratify or
reject but not amend. The administration currently is trying to conclude
negotiations with 11 Pacific-rim countries including Japan and Canada. Other
trade agreements could follow.
One possible route for pro-trade forces
in Congress is to send revised legislation back to the Senate. But senators
approved the larger package only narrowly last month after intense battles,
and the White House desperately wants
to avoid giving opponents there another chance to strangle the legislation.
White House spokesman Josh Earnest
said Fridays vote showed congressional support for fast track, and our work is
not done yet. As for Democrats rejecting the retraining program, he said, the
administration will contend they have
registered their objections to (fast track)
and it didnt work. Earnest said the
administration will urge Democrats to
support a policy that they have strongly supported in the past.

WASHINGTON Hackers linked to China have gained


access to the sensitive background information submitted
by intelligence and military personnel for security clearances, U.S. officials said Friday, describing a cyberbreach
of federal records dramatically worse than first acknowledged.
The forms authorities believed may have been stolen en
masse, known as Standard Form 86, require applicants to
fill out deeply personal information about mental illnesses,
drug and alcohol use, past arrests and bankruptcies. They
also require the listing of contacts and relatives, potentially exposing any foreign relatives of U.S. intelligence
employees to coercion. Both the applicants Social
Security number and that of his or her cohabitant is
required.
In a statement, the White House said that on June 8,
investigators concluded there was a high degree of confidence that ... systems containing information related to the
background investigations of current, former and prospective federal government employees, and those for whom a
federal background investigation was conducted, may have
been exfiltrated.
This tells the Chinese the identities of almost everybody who has got a United States security clearance, said
Joel Brenner, a former top U.S. counterintelligence official. That makes it very hard for any of those people to
function as an intelligence officer. The database also tells
the Chinese an enormous amount of information about
almost everyone with a security clearance. Thats a gold
mine. It helps you approach and recruit spies.
The Office of Personnel Management, which was the target of the hack, did not respond to requests for comment.
OPM spokesman Samuel Schumach and Jackie Koszczuk,
the director of communications, have consistently said
there was no evidence that security clearance information
had been compromised.
The White House statement said the hack into the security clearance database was separate from the breach of federal personnel data announced last week a breach that is
itself appearing far worse than first believed. It could not be
learned whether the security database breach happened when
an OPM contractor was hacked in 2013, an attack that was
discovered last year. Members of Congress received classified briefings about that breach in September, but there was
no public mention of security clearance information being
exposed.
Nearly all of the millions of security clearance holders,
including some CIA, National Security Agency and military special operations personnel, are potentially exposed
in the security clearance breach, the officials said. More
than 4 million people had been investigated for a security
clearance as of October 2014, according to government
records.

NATION/WORLD

Weekend June 13-14, 2015

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Saudi airstrikes
destroy historic
Yemen houses
By Ahmed Al-Haj
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SANAA, Yemen Saudi-led


airstrikes targeting Shiite rebels
and their allies in Yemen
destroyed historic houses on
Friday in the center of the capital,
Sanaa, a UNESCO world heritage
site. Rescue teams digging
through the debris pulled the bodies of six civilians from under the
rubble.
The bombing drew swift condemnation from the U.N. cultural
agency, whose chief expressed sorrow at the loss of human life and
the destruction of priceless architectural heritage.
Yemens conflict has left millions of the Arab worlds poorest
nation in dire need of humanitarian
assistance in just about everything
from fuel to water, food, electricity and medical supplies as
civilians are increasingly caught
in the crossfire.
Also, early on Friday, random
shelling killed 12 civilians in the
southwestern city of Taiz, which
witnessed some of the fiercest battles between rebels and southern
fighters, witnesses and officials
said.
In the Sanaa airstrikes, residents
initially believed the warplanes
had targeted a house occupied by a
senior rebel commander, but officials and witnesses later said there

were no Shiite rebels among the


victims.
The impact of the missiles flattened at least three houses and
caused cracks in surrounding buildings, which are cemented to one
another, leaving large sections of
the old citys district at the risk of
collapse.
At a destroyed four-story building, an Associated Press reporter
saw a pile of bricks, dust and wood
mingled with clothes, kitchenware
and water tanks, which are traditionally kept on roofs. An adjacent
three-story building was split in
half, wooden window frames dangling from the upper floors. Rescue
workers were covered with dust as
they searched for victims.
Most of the old citys three-tofour-story buildings had been emptied out weeks ago, as their residents left in fear of the airstrikes.
The Saudi-led coalition launched
the campaign in March, in an effort
to halt the power grab by Yemens
Shiite rebels, known as Houthis.
U.N.-brokered peace talks are due
to start end of the week in Geneva
in an attempt to end the conflict.
Mohammed al-Raddni, a neighbor whose grandfather lives next
door to one of the destroyed
buildings, said those killed in
Fridays airstrikes included three
women and two men, one of
whom was a doctor. A 16-year-old
teenager remains under the rub-

REUTERS

People search for survivors under the rubble of houses destroyed by an air strike in Sanaa, Yemen.
ble, said al-Raddni.
What do they want from us?
This is unfair. Why dont they go
search for Houthis somewhere
else, shouted Zahwa Hammoud, an
elderly woman dressed in traditional Yemeni clothing, as she looked
at the damage.
Hammoud, one of few residents
remaining in the neighborhood,
said there was a deafening sound
that made me feel my ears exploding when the missiles struck.
A police car with a loudspeaker
urged residents to stay away from
the rubble.
Online activists posted photographs of the damaged parts of the
old city of Sanaa, known as al-

Qasimi. The old city dates back


2,500 years and is one of the most
popular and historic tourist attractions in the Yemeni capital, famous
for its decorated buildings made of
packed earth with burnt brick towers.
UNESCOs general director condemned the attack that targeted the
worlds oldest jewels of Islamic
urban landscape and expressing
sorrow for the loss of lives.
I am shocked by the images of
these magnificent many-storied
tower-houses and serene gardens
reduced to rubble, Irina Bokova
said in the statement. She urged the
warring parties to preserve the heritage of Yemen, which bears the

soul of the Yemeni people and


belongs to all humankind.
UNESCO said that since the
beginning of the conflict, several
historic monuments across Yemen
have suffered damage. It said that
on June 9, the Ottoman era alOwrdhi historical compound, outside the walls of Sanaas old city,
was severely damaged.
In recent days, airstrikes damaged an eight-century Great Dam of
Marib, in eastern Yemen, as well as
the ancient castle of al-Qahira in
the southwestern city of Taiz and
the Dhamar Museum, which houses
thousands of artifacts, south of
Sanaa, reported the state-run antiquities agency.

Advertisement

Can Marriage Exist Between

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MILLBRAE

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Iowa Republicans end straw


poll, a tradition born in 1979
By Barbara Rodriguez
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

DES MOINES, Iowa The Iowa


Republican straw poll, once a staple campaign event for GOP presidential candidates,
is vanishing because of waning interest
from 2016 hopefuls.
The governing board for the Republican
Party of Iowa voted unanimously during a
private conference call Friday to drop the
event, said state GOP Chairman Jeff
Kaufmann. It was scheduled to be held in the
central Iowa city of Boone on Aug. 8.
Republican officials wanted to make sure
negativity surrounding the straw poll didnt
hurt Iowas traditional place in holding the
first votes of the presidential nomination
contest, with its leadoff caucuses.
Kaufmann said he was particularly concerned that GOP candidates were feeling
unnecessary pressure to participate in the
event.
You spend more time gaming your own
candidates rather than worrying about
Hillary Clinton, he said, referring to the
Democratic Partys front-runner for the presidential nomination. Thats not how a
first-in-the-nation state acts. A first-in-thenation state has to roll out the welcome
mat.
Since 1979, the straw poll has been held
every summer before a contested presidential caucus and grew from a county fundraiser to a splashy event where candidates spent
lavishly to bus in and entertain supporters.
While the carnival-like event is beloved by
Iowas political activists, critics say it has
become a costly sideshow, and many candidates fear the humiliation of a poor showing.
For years, the poll has been considered an
early but unreliable test of strength in presidential campaigns. In the six polls con-

ducted since its first year, the winner has


gone on to win the state caucuses three
times. The eventual Republican nominee
has won the poll only twice.
An indication of the polls demise this
year was the reluctance of 2016 GOP hopefuls to commit to attending it. Former
Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, former
Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and South Carolina
Sen. Lindsey Graham were among those
who said they would skip the event. Others
said they would not spend money to participate.
Jimmy Centers, a spokesman for Iowa
Gov. Terry Branstad, said the state party
officials made a decision based on what
they believed was best for the party and the
caucuses.
In fact, Branstad was a leading proponent
of ending the straw poll. He said in
December the event was a turnoff for many
candidates and could diminish the impact of
the caucuses. The most important thing is
to keep the Iowa precinct caucuses first in
the nation and the first real test of strength
of candidates, he said then.
State party officials debated the events
future in January but at that point decided to
keep it. In an effort to appease concerns, the
officials told candidates they would no
longer have to bid up to $35,000 for space
to pitch tents at the event.
In 2011, about 17,000 people turned out
for the poll, far fewer than the roughly
120,000 who voted in the January 2012 caucuses. Candidate Michele Bachmann spent
$2 million on the straw poll and won, but
she left the race after a poor showing in the
Iowa caucuses. The eventual GOP presidential nominee, Mitt Romney, did not participate in the straw poll.
Still, Kaufmann didnt rule out a return to
the straw poll in coming years, if party
activists want it and if candidates will come.

WORLD

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Weekend June 13-14, 2015

Multiple injuries in car


explosion in Sweden
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

STOCKHOLM A car exploded Friday in a roundabout in


the Swedish city of Goteborg, leaving several people seriously injured, police and rescue officials said.
Police said there were four or five people in the car when
it exploded Friday afternoon in the district of Torslanda.
The local rescue service could only say there were multiple
injuries and possible fatalities.
The cause of the blast was not immediately clear.
Rescue spokesman Bosse Andersson said the car exploded in a roundabout near a fire station. When rescuers from
the fire station arrived at the scene they found the car
severely demolished, he said.
Eyewitness Janne Wolltin told Swedish Radio that he was
driving into the roundabout when the explosion happened.
And I saw how, I think it was the roof, flew up in the air,
he said. It was a very strong blast.
Police said they were questioning witnesses and cordoned
off the area to allow experts to investigate the wreckage.
Located on the countrys southwestern coast, Goteborg is
Swedens second largest city. Its seen a surge in violent
showdowns between rival criminal gangs, including a
restaurant shooting in March that left two people dead and
about a dozen injured.

REUTERS

Iraqs Shiite paramilitaries and members of Iraqi security forces hold an Islamist State flag which they pulled down in Anbar.

Iraq militias: We dont need


U.S. help in Anbar operation
By Vivian Salama

Around the world


Former IMF chief
Strauss-Kahn acquitted in pimping trial
LILLE, France Dominique Strauss-Kahn had a caustic
reaction as four years of legal battles involving sex charges
on two continents ended without a single
conviction: All that for this?
From a sordid New York hotel encounter
to orgies in Paris, the former
International Monetary Fund chief has
admitted to questionable behavior that
destroyed his political career and onetime
presidential ambitions. Hes a sexual libertine, by his own admission. But courts
have repeatedly found no grounds to conDominique
vict him as a criminal.
Strauss-Kahn
Fridays ruling in the northern French
city of Lille closed a sometimes surreal chapter for StraussKahn and for France, where the unusual public airing of his
private life sent shockwaves through society and upended
high-level politics. Some Frenchwomen hoped the DSK
scandal, as it became known, would make it easier to hold
powerful men accountable for sexual wrongdoing a hope
largely unfulfilled.
In a packed courtroom Friday, a panel of judges acquitted all
but one of the 13 defendants of accusations of involvement
in a prostitution ring. Strauss-Kahn faced charges of aggravated pimping, but the judges said he was not involved in
hiring the prostitutes involved or paying them.
Thats what Strauss-Kahn said all along: All that for
this? he scoffed as he rose to leave the courtroom with his
girlfriend and adult daughter. What a waste.

French airport police detain


6-year-old girl in ID crackdown
PARIS Paris airport police held a 6-year-old French girl
for three days on suspicion she had a fake passport until a
judge ordered her released into her mothers arms, a lawyer
said Friday.
Authorities insist that police were just doing their jobs to
protect children from trafficking, but the case has caused
indignation in France amid sensitive debate over police
treatment of waves of undocumented migrants coming to
Europe in recent months.
The girl was detained Saturday at Charles de Gaulle airport,
after arriving from Cameroon, said lawyer Sidonie Leoue.
The girl was traveling as an unaccompanied minor carrying
all necessary documents, and her mother was waiting at the
Paris airport to greet her, Leoue said.
She waited three days.
Police thought the girls passport photo didnt resemble
her, and suspected a fake, according to the lawyer and the
French Interior Ministry.

Attackers seize 10 employees


at Tunisian consulate in Libya
TUNIS, Tunisia An armed militia stormed into the
Tunisian general consulate in Libyas capital on Friday, taking 10 employees hostage, officials said.
Mokhtar Chaouachi, a spokesman for the Tunisian Foreign
Ministry, said it was not clear whether the attackers were
holding the hostages on site or had taken them elsewhere. He
also said he did not know whether the attackers had opened
fire or had made any demands in exchange for the captives.
Khalifa Ghwell, who holds the post of prime minister for
the Islamist-led, militias-backed government in Tripoli, said
that authorities were working to win the release of the
employees.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

KESSARRAT, Iraq Ali Ahsan paced


back and forth carrying a rifle more
than half his height in the searing heat
as his militia convoy made a pit stop in
the Anbar desert to rest and pray.
Unlike the rugged men in fatigues
around him, his prepubescent face has
barely sprung a whisker. Now that
school is out, the petite 14-year-old is
spending his summer break fighting
the Islamic State group with his father
and other members of Iraqs Popular
Mobilization Forces, which includes
the Shiite militias.
Im here because its my duty, the
stone-faced boy in blue jeans said,

IS fighters captured Anbars provincial capital of Ramadi last month,


prompting Defense Secretary Ash
Carter to lament that the U.S.-trained
Iraqi troops lacked the will to fight.
The Popular Mobilization Forces were
called to battle in Anbar after the fall of
Ramadi, despite concerns that their
involvement in the province would
antagonize the Sunni population, and
they are now setting their sights on
Fallujah. We think the liberation of
Fallujah will allow us to enter Ramadi
without any fighting, so the battle that
we are preparing is the battle of
Fallujah, Hadi al-Amiri, the head of
the Popular Mobilization Forces, told
journalists Friday at an outpost on the
Salahuddin-Anbar border.

referring to an edict from Iraqs highest


Shiite religious authority last year.
The Popular Mobilization Forces are
not sectarian forces. They represent all
of Iraq, and I want to help them liberate
Iraq. Despite concerns over heightened sectarian strife, Shiite militiamen
continue to pour into Iraqs Sunni
heartland of Anbar province with the
initial hope of recapturing Fallujah,
the first major Iraqi city to fall to the
Islamic State group last year.
As the U.S. prepares to send an additional 450 personnel to Iraq, the
Iranian-backed militias say that coalition assistance only hurts their efforts,
contradicting statements by the Iraqi
government that more international
support is needed.

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Wednesday Worship 7pm

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217 North Grant Street, San Mateo

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Regardless of religion, singing
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BUDDHIST TEMPLE
Jodo Shinshu Buddhist
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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

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600 W. 42nd Ave., San Mateo
Pastor Eric Ackerman

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GLORIA DEI LUTHERAN
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2600 Ralston Ave., Belmont,
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Sunday Schedule: Sunday
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1900 Monterey Drive


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

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

10

BUSINESS

Weekend June 13-14, 2015

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Greek jitters upset stock markets


By Matthew Craft
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Dow
17,898.84 -140.53 10-Yr Bond 2.38 +0.00
Nasdaq 5,051.10 -31.41 Oil (per barrel) 60.04
S&P 500 2,094.11 -14.75 Gold
1,180.70

Big movers
Stocks that moved substantially or traded heavily Friday on the New
York Stock Exchange and the Nasdaq Stock Market:
NYSE
Twitter Inc., up 6 cents to $35.90
Dick Costolo is stepping down as CEO of the messaging startup and will
temporarily be replaced by co-founder Jack Dorsey.
Restoration Hardware Holdings Inc., up $1.39 to $96.22
The furniture and housewares company reported better-than-expected
first-quarter results and boosted its guidance.
LeapFrog Enterprises Inc., down 53 cents to $1.54
The developer of the LeapPad2 tablet for children reported worse-thanexpected fiscal fourth-quarter profit and revenue.
T-Mobile US Inc., up 88 cents to $39
Dish Network Corp. is exploring options for a bid to buy the mobile
services company, according to the Wall Street Journal.
Nasdaq
Agios Pharmaceuticals Inc., down $12.46 to $110.13
The biotechnology company reported promising results from an ongoing
early stage study of a potential leukemia treatment.
InterDigital Inc., up $3.31 to $59.65
The wireless research and development company increased its stock
buyback authorization to $400 million from $300 million.
Amicus Therapeutics Inc., up $1.05 to $14.34
The biotechnology company priced an offering of about 17 million shares
at $13.25 apiece and expects gross proceeds of $225 million.
Aveo Pharmaceuticals Inc., down 17 cents to $2
The biotechnology company is facing potential delays in moving a
potential colon cancer treatment to late-stage development.

NEW YORK A setback in talks


between Greece and its creditors
helped knock the stock market lower
on Friday, amid renewed concerns
that the country could default on its
debts.
Despite the drop, the Standard &
Poors 500 index managed to eke out
a 1-point gain for the week, snapping a two-week slump.
An unexpected decision by the
International Monetary Fund to walk
away from talks with Greece spurred
the selling. At a summit meeting in
Brussels late Thursday, the IMF
pulled its negotiators out of talks
with Greece, saying there had been
no progress and that major differences remained on key issues.
Without a deal by the end of the
month, Greece faces the prospect of
going bankrupt and dropping the
euro currency.
Markets are likely to make sudden
turns until Greece and its creditors
reach a deal, said Ninh Chung, head of
investment strategy at SVB Asset
Management. Earlier this week,
stocks on both sides of the Atlantic
rallied on reports of progress in the
talks.
There had been optimism over

Greece, Chung said, and now it


seems like weve had a complete 180.
The S&P 500 slipped 14.75 points,
or 0.7 percent, to close at 2,094.11.
The Dow Jones industrial average fell
140. 53 points, or 0. 8 percent, to
17,898.84, and the Nasdaq composite lost 31.41 points, or 0.6 percent,
to 5,051.10.
The losses were modest but broad:
All 30 companies in the Dow and all
10 industries in the S&P 500 finished
with losses.
Speculation over Greeces fate and
the Federal Reserves first interest
rate increase have weighed on markets over recent weeks. Many think
an improving U. S. economy will
push the Fed to raise its benchmark
interest rate later this year for the
first time since the Great Recession.
The Feds ultra-cheap interest rates
have helped fuel the six-year bull
market in stocks.
Im not sure the downside risk
with Greece is as big as investors
believe, but its caught investors
attention, said Jack Ablin, chief
investment officer at BMO Private
Bank. Its the same with the Fed
tightening.
Major indexes in Europe slumped
on Friday, wiping out gains from earlier in the week. Greeces market fell
the most, with the main Athens index

down 6 percent. Germanys DAX sank


1. 2 percent, and the CAC-40 in
France finished with a loss of 1.4
percent. Britains FTSE 100 lost 1
percent.
In Asia, Japans Nikkei 225 inched
up 0. 1 percent. In China, the
Shanghai composite index advanced
0.9 percent, and Hong Kongs Hang
Seng rose 1.4 percent.
Back in the U. S. , shares of
Wingstop vaulted 61 percent in their
first day of trading as a public company. The chicken-wings chain raised
$110.2 million in its initial public
offering late Thursday, selling shares
at $19 each. Wingstop soared $11.59
to $30.59.
Government bond prices wavered,
finishing the day slightly lower. The
yield on the10 -year Treasury inched
up to 2.39 percent from 2.38 percent
the day before.
In metals trading, gold fell $1.20
to settle at $1, 179. 20 an ounce,
while silver slipped 14 cents to
$15.83 an ounce. Copper picked up a
penny to $2.68 a pound.
Oil fell for a second straight day
after reaching a high for the year on
Wednesday. Benchmark crude oil
sank 81 cents to settle at $59.96 a
barrel. Brent crude, an international
benchmark, dropped $1.24 to $63.87
a barrel.

Why it matters that so few mutual fund managers are women


By Stan Choe
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK Diversify. The financial


industry says you have to do it with your
investments.
But when it comes to whos running mutual funds, diversity can be tough to find. Less
than 10 percent of all managers are women,
according to a recent tally by Morningstar.
Women make up similarly small percentages across the spectrum of investment professionals, from money managers to analysts to consultants, according to a study by
the State Street Center for Applied Research.
After surveying hundreds of professionals
around the world, the think tank found that
women approach investing in a complementary way to men.
Suzanne Duncan, the centers global head
of research, recently talked about why that
means better-balanced mutual fund management teams could lead to better results.
Answers have been edited for clarity and
length.
Q: Why s ho ul d I care that s o few
mutual -fund manag ers are wo men?
A: Its about the return on investment.
Men and women approach investing very
differently, but in a complementary way, so
diversification can make a difference when it
comes to managing money.
Its about how were wired biologically to
define and measure success. Male mutual-fund

managers tend to focus on outperforming


their benchmark or their peer group. They
want to be in the top quartile. The female definition of success is not that. It is to achieve
the long-term goal. For the professional,
that could be her organizations long-term
goal. Or, for the individual investor, the
most common long-term goal is to comfortably retire.
There is no right or wrong answer. We do
need near-term metrics to evaluate success,
but we also need to be focused on the longterm goal of what success should actually
result in. If you put those together, you can
achieve a superior outcome.
Q: It do es nt s eem l i ke theres much
res earch s ay i ng that wo men are better
i nv es to rs than men, i n the s ho rt- o r
the l o ng term.
A: The more important question in our
view is: Are men, together with women, better investors? There isnt research about that,
specifically for investment performance,
because the sample size is too small. There
arent many teams of men and women managing money. It just doesnt happen in
todays world. But research has been done
about highly successful teams in other areas,
and its not about high IQ. Its about diversity. One of the characteristics of having a
high-performing team is gender diversity.
Q: Ho w el s e di d y o u fi nd that mal e
fund manag ers di ffer fro m wo men?
A: Men, on average, tend to take credit for
their decisions when theyre successful. And

when theyre not successful, they blame others. Women are the opposite. We dont take
credit when were successful, and we blame
ourselves when we fail.
We asked portfolio managers around the
world: Tell us about a recent successful
investment that you made and why were you
successful. The No. 1 reason men gave was
my experience. My analytical abilities
was No. 2. My ability to strip out my emotions from my investment decisions was
No. 3. My, my, my. All factors that are internal to them. The next question we asked was:
Tell us about a recent investment you made
that was not so successful and why. The No.
1 reason was the markets took a turn for the
worse. No. 2 was bad luck.
Its a coping mechanism to deal with fear.
We asked the portfolio managers how many
months of underperformance it would take to
be fired. The average response was 18
months, a very short-term basis. So we end
up building this entire system, this machine,
on a very short-term basis. And we are taking
away from the ability to focus on what we
should, which is the long-term goal.
Enter the female into the equation.
Q: Are y o u s eei ng mo re o f a pus h to
g et mo re wo men i nto thes e ro l es ?
A: Yes, theres the 30% Club (a group that
advocates getting more women on boards of
directors). The CFA Institute just had their
first-ever Women in Investment conference.
Gender diversity has picked up momentum in
a pretty meaningful way. As were out there

doing face-to-face interviews, we find that it


is top of the list in terms of not only awareness but also execution on what to do about
the issue. And thats new. Thats largely
since the financial crisis.
Q: Do y o u thi nk i ts becaus e o f the
cri s i s ?
A: The crisis was a very powerful inflection point. Everyone is taking a step back.
It started with a conversation between
spouses, and thats trickling through the
whole system. Males have been mainly
responsible for the decision making in couples finances in this country, and after the
financial crisis, couples said, We just lost a
lot of money. Can we start talking about
partnering and making decisions together as
opposed to the male making decisions in
isolation?
That is trickling through the financial
adviser community, where the first movement has been. Now the mutual-fund managers, who are selling their product to the
financial advisers, now theyre paying attention.
Think about the DNA of this industry.
Think about what these mutual-fund managers do on a day-to-day basis. They construct diversified portfolios. Thats what we
live and breathe in this industry. We have yet
to apply diversification when it comes to talent. It is a huge missed opportunity. If we can
do it for assets and securities, I have to think
we can do it for talent. And diversity in general, not just gender but also ethnicity.

Business brief
Court allows contested
contact lens price-fixing law
SALT LAKE CITY A federal appeals court cleared the
way for a hotly contested Utah law banning price fixing for
contact lenses Friday, a ruling that could have wide-ranging
effects on the $4 billion industry.
The decision handed down from the 10th Circuit Court of
Appeals in Denver comes after three of the nations largest
contact lens manufacturers sued to halt the measure. Alcon
Laboratories, Johnson & Johnson and Bausch & Lomb contend the law is a brazen overreach written to give Utahbased retailer 1-800 Contacts and other discount sellers an
illegal end run around minimum prices set by the companies.
But the Utah attorney general says the companies are
wrongly driving up prices, and the law is a legitimate
antitrust measure designed to enhance competition and help
customers.

CAMERAS AND CUTS: NBA CALLED TO TASK FOLLOWING LEBRON JAMES HEAD INJURY >> PAGE 16

<<< Page 15, Defense rules


Stanley Cup Final thus far
Weekend June 13-14, 2015

CCS loss wont define career


By Nathan Mollat
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

Aragon badminton player Candy Zhang was


attempting to make history this season.
As the three-time defending Central Coast
Section girls singles champion, Zhang was
looking to close out her high school career
with an unprecedented fourth consecutive section title.
For Zhang, one of the top junior players in
the country, the only goal was winning CCS
titles. She dominated play in the Peninsula
Athletic League and finds very little competition during the league season. Everything she
does at the high school level is to prepare her for CCS.
Her big challenge was going to be CCS,
said Aragon coach Linda Brown. Its kind of
the way it always is.
Unfortunately for Zhang, there would be no
crowning glory. After knocking off top-seeded Karen Ma in the winners bracket final, the
second-seeded Zhang lost two straight match-

es to Ma, ending Zhangs 14-match winning


streak.
Those two losses, however, do not diminish
an otherwise outstanding season as she is the
Daily Journals Badminton Player of the Year
for the second straight year.
I dont think she was frustrated, Brown
said. She had graduated from high school two
days before (the CCS final). There was so
much going on. Im not going to yell at her
for not winning.
After going undefeated in PAL play and winning her fourth straight PAL tournament title,
Zhang entered the 2015 CCS tournament on a
12-match winning streak. She went undefeated in her three previous CCS tournaments,
dropping only one set during that span
winning most of the time in dominating
fashion. In eight of those matches, her opponent failed to reach double digits in points during the best-of-three matches.
It was obvious during the 2015 tournament,
however, that the rest of the section appears
to be catching up to Zhangs talents. After a

first-round bye, she won her winners bracket


semifinal match over Gunns Angela Lin 2112, 21-10 to move into the winners bracket
finals, where she faced off with Monta Vistas
Ma.
Zhang posted a 21-17, 12-21, 21-14 win for
her 14th CCS win in a row and sent her into
the finals for the fourth straight year.
Unfortunately, that would be Zhangs last
high school win. With that initial loss, Ma
dropped into the losers bracket final, where
she won to advance to the championship
round against Zhang, who needed to be beaten
twice to be denied the championship.
Ma went on to win four consecutive sets to
end Zhangs reign.
But given Zhangs hectic schedule, she didnt have a lot of time to focus solely on badminton. Zhang was also the captain of
Aragons robotics team and took a number of
trips while deciding on which college she
wanted to attend.

See ZHANG, Page 14

U.S. women
in good spot
to move on
By Anne M. Peterson
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

KYLE TERADA/USA TODAY SPORTS

Its been 40 years since Golden State won a title, but Warriors fans have
stuck by the team through the thin times. Many believe this is the year
the Warriors end the championship drought.

Warriors fans believe


title wait almost over
By Antonio Gonzalez
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

OAKLAND Gary Liss still has


the ticket from Game 2 of the 1975
NBA Finals in his wallet. The seat
cost just $10, but watching the
Golden State Warriors win the title
remains a priceless memory.
World champions? Thats a hard
thing to do, said Liss, who has
been a season-ticket holder since
the
Warriors
moved from
Philadelphia in 1962.
For many loyal fans like Liss, it
has been a long and grueling wait
to experience that moment again.
The Warriors will play their
biggest game in a generation when
they host LeBron James and the
Cleveland Cavaliers on Sunday
night in Game 5 of the NBA Finals.
The best-of-seven series is tied at
two games apiece, and the anticipation is equally exciting and
exhausting in Oakland.
It has been 40 years the
longest span between finals
appearances in league history
since the franchises long-suffering fans could feel such a rush.

After decades of bad drafts, terrible


trades and lots of losses, the most
hardened Warriors supporters are
soaking in every second of this
run.
Its just magical. Theres never
going to be another season like
it, said Leslie Sosnick, a 61-yearold fan from Oakland. All Ive
ever wanted is to have a good product on the court.
Sosnick first saw a good product
when her father, Peter, took her to
a Warriors game in San Francisco
to celebrate her 9th birthday. She
watched Wilt Chamberlain from
the upper deck and thought the Big
Dipper looked slow and small.
She eventually found her way
behind the basket when the team
warmed up before the second half
and got an up-close look at the size
and speed of NBA players. Sosnick
has been hooked ever since.
Her father died in 1978 and her
mother passed away about 15 years
ago, but she has held on to a cherished family heirloom for more
than 50 years: Warriors seasontickets.

See WARRIORS, Page 16

WINNIPEG, Manitoba The


United States played to a 0-0 tie with
Sweden and former coach Pia
Sundhage Friday night in one of the
most anticipated matches of the
group stage at the Womens World
Cup.
Abby Wambach came off the
bench in the second half, but her
header in the 72nd minute was
popped up and over the crossbar by
Swedish goalkeeper Hedvig Lindahl.
A win would have assured the
United States a spot in the knockout
round as the Americans seek their
third World Cup title, but first since
1999. The U.S. women advanced to
the final four years ago in Germany,
but fell to Japan on penalty kicks.
The United States, ranked No. 2 in
the world, has one more group stage
match, on Tuesday in Vancouver,
British Columbia, against Nigeria.
Sweden heads to Edmonton, Alberta,
for its final group match with
Australia. The monthlong tournament, with an expanded field of 24
teams, is being played across six
Canadian cities.

See SOCCER, Page 14

MICHAEL CHOW/USA TODAY SPORTS

United States midfielder Megan Rapinoe, right, and Sweden midfielder


Terese Sjogran battle for the ball a scoreless draw in a pool play game of
the Womens World Cup in Canada Friday.

115th U.S. Open gets a new look


By Doug Ferguson
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

So much is brand new about


Americas oldest golf championship.
Not to worry. The U.S. Open
hasnt lost its reputation as the
toughest test in golf. And its still
the most democratic of the majors,
with more than half the eld
including a pair of two-time champions having to go through
qualifying.

Just about everything else at the


115th U.S. Open is breaking new
ground, starting with where it is
being played.
Chambers Bay, a public course
perched along Puget Sound south
of Seattle, for more than a century
was a sand and gravel pit used for
mining. Ten years ago, it was still
being built. And now its the rst
U. S. Open in the Pacic
Northwest, and the rst major in
the area since Vijay Singh won the
PGA Championship in 1998 at

Sahalee. No other golf course has


been awarded a U.S. Open so soon
after it opened.
Also new this year: Fox Sports
was awarded a 12-year contract
that starts this year. Johnny
Miller no longer will be calling
the shots. That now falls to Greg
Norman. And Fox will be making
its debut in major championship
golf with a course hardly anyone
has seen.

See GOLF, Page 14

12

SPORTS

Weekend June 13-14, 2015

Exhausted Giants shut down


By Janie McCauley
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAN FRANCISCO Chase Anderson lost


his no-hit bid when he got hit on the right calf
by Buster Poseys sharp comebacker with one
out in the seventh inning, and the Arizona
Diamondbacks beat the San Francisco Giants
1-0 Friday night.
Anderson grimaced in pain after the ball ricocheted off his leg and rolled toward the thirdbase line, leaving the Diamondbacks without
a play on Poseys infield single. But the righthander finished the inning and outpitched
World Series MVP Madison Bumgarner as the
Giants lost their sixth straight home game.
Anderson (2-1) struck out two, walked one
and plunked No. 7 hitter Matt Duffy twice
before giving way to Daniel Hudson in the
eighth.
Backed by Ender Inciartes second-inning
RBI single, Anderson snapped a three-start
winless stretch since his previous victory
May 20 at Miami.

Angels 5, Athletics 4
Oakland ab
Burns cf 4
Canha lf 4
Parrino ss 0
Sogard ph0
Reddick rf5
Zobrist 2b4
Butler dh 4
Vogt 1b 4
Lawrie 3b 4
Phegley c 4
Semien ss3
Fuld lf
1
Totals 37
Oakland
Los Angeles

r
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
4

h bi
1 0
2 0
0 0
0 0
1 2
1 0
0 0
0 0
2 1
2 1
0 0
1 0
10 4

Angels
ab r
Aybar ss 4 0
Trout cf
3 2
Pujols 1b 4 1
Calhoun rf 4 1
Giavotella 2b3 1
E.Navarro lf4 0
Joyce dh 2 0
C.Perez c 3 0
Kubitza 3b 3 0

Totals

h
0
3
1
2
1
1
0
1
0

30 5 9

bi
0
1
0
3
0
1
0
0
0

000 200 200 4 10 1


010 002 02x 5 9 0

EChavez (1). DPOakland 3. LOBOakland 8,


Los Angeles 4. 2BPhegley (6), Pujols (9), Giavotella
(9). HRReddick (10), Lawrie (6), Phegley (2), Trout
(18), Calhoun (6). SBCanha 2 (5). CSE.Navarro
(2).
Oakland
IP H
Chavez
7
7
Scribner L,1-1 BS,3-3 1-3
Pomeranz
2-3 0
Angels
IP H
Santiago
5 2-3 7
Bedrosian
1-3 0
Salas BS,1-1
1
2
J.Alvarez W,1-1 1
0
Street S,18-20
1
1

R
3
2
0
R
2
0
2
0
0

ER
3
2
0
ER
2
0
2
0
0

BB
2
2
0
BB
1
0
0
0
1

SO
3
1
0
SO
6
0
2
0
1

WPStreet.
UmpiresHome, Ted Barrett; First, Chris Conroy; Second, Angel Hernandez; Third, Scott Barry.
T2:55. A42,113 (45,957).

Arizona didnt allow a runner past second


and held on while outhitting San Francisco
11-2.
Three days after rookie Chris Heston
pitched a no-hitter against the Mets in New
York, the Giants were on the other end of a nohit bid for much of the night. Joe Panik had
his 15-game hitting streak snapped.
Bumgarner (7-3) allowed nine hits for his
second-highest total of the season but lost for
only the second time in his last 12 starts
against Arizona. He struck out seven and
walked three in eight innings, losing for the
first time in six starts overall.
Bumgarner traveled back with the team on
the overnight flight from New York despite
manager Bruce Bochy and pitching coach
Dave Righetti advising him to travel ahead of
time. The team landed about 4:30 a.m. and
reported later than usual to the ballpark Friday
afternoon.
Hes hard-headed, Bochy said of his ace
left-hander.
Matt Duffy hit a leadoff single against
Hudson in the eighth and advanced on a wild

pitch. He was tagged out at third in a rundown


after pinch-hitter Casey McGehees grounder.
Brad Ziegler worked a perfect ninth for his
seventh save as the Diamondbacks won for
the fourth time in the last five against San
Francisco.
Bumgarner loaded the bases with two outs in
the first on back-to-back singles by Paul
Goldschmidt and Yasmany Tomas and a walk
to Aaron Hill.
Left fielder Nori Aoki threw out
Goldschmidt at the plate to end the third and
save a run.
Aoki lined into an inning-ending double
play in the third.

Bochys beef
Bochy reiterated again how frustrated he is
that the Giants had to play a night game at the
Mets on Thursday before flying cross-country. He hopes the players union will take a
stand regarding the schedule.
The Giants annually have among the highest total of air miles traveled.

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Diamondbacks 1, Giants 0
Arizona ab
Inciart lf-rf5
Pollock cf 5
Gldsch 1b4
Tomas rf 4
DPerlt lf 0
A.Hill 3b 3
Owings 2b4
WCastll c 4
Ahmed ss3
CAndrs p 1
DHdsn p 0
Lamb ph 0
Ziegler p 0
Totals 33

r
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
1

h bi
1 1
1 0
2 0
1 0
0 0
2 0
0 0
3 0
1 0
0 0
0 0
0 0
0 0
11 1

Giants ab
Aoki lf
Panik 2b
Pagan cf
Posey c
Belt 1b
BCrwfr ss
MDuffy 3b
Maxwll rf
Bmgrn p
McGeh ph
Casilla p
Affeldt p
Strckln p
Totals

r
4
4
4
4
3
3
1
3
1
1
0
0
0
28

h bi
00
00
00
01
00
00
01
00
00
00
00
00
00
02

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

Arizona
010 000 000 1 11 0
San Francisco 000 000 000 0 2 0
DPArizona 1, San Francisco 2. LOBArizona 11, San
Francisco 4. 2BW.Castillo (3). SBM.Duffy (2). S
C.Anderson 2.
Arizona
IP H R
ER BB SO
C.Anderson W,2-17
1
0
0
1
2
D.Hudson H,4
1
1
0
0
0
1
Ziegler S,7-9
1
0
0
0
0
0
San Francisco IP H R
ER BB SO
Bumgarner L,7-3 8
9
1
1
3
7
Casilla
1-3 1
0
0
0
0
Affeldt
1-3 0
0
0
1
1
Strickland
1-3 1
0
0
0
0
HBPby C.Anderson (M.Duffy, M.Duffy). WPC.Anderson, D.Hudson.
UmpiresHome, Mark Carlson; First, Brian Gorman; Second, Adam Hamari; Third, Mike DiMuro.
T2:52. A41,952 (41,915).

Another bullpen meltdown for As


By Joe Resnick
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ANAHEIM Mike Trout and Kole Calhoun


drove in the tying and go-ahead runs with
eighth-inning homers, leading the Los
Angeles Angels to a seesaw 5-4 victory over
the Oakland Athletics on Friday night.
Josh Reddick had given the As a 4-3 lead in
the seventh with a two-run shot against
Fernando Salas. That put starter Jesse Chavez
in line for a victory after Brett Lawrie and
Josh Phegley supported him with back-toback homers in the fourth against Hector
Santiago.
But Evan Scribner (1-1) served up Trouts
18th of the season leading off the eighth,
then retired Albert Pujols on a towering fly to
the warning track in left before Calhoun
drove a 1-0 pitch deep into the seats in right
for his sixth of the season. It was the fourth
lead change of the game.
Jose Alvarez (1-1) pitched a perfect eighth
for the victory and Huston Street got three
outs for his 18th save in 20 attempts, retiring
Reddick on a fly ball to center with his 26th

pitch of the ninth and runners at first and second.


Trout led off the sixth with a single, Pujols
followed with a double and Calhoun drove
them both in with a single up the middle on
Chavezs next pitch. Johnny Giavotella then
barely beat out a grounder to third, but was
called out by umpire Chris Conroy.
Television replays confirmed that the runner
was safe, but Angels manager Mike Scioscia
was out of challenges by then after burning an
earlier one in which Oaklands Mark Canhas
steal of second base in the third inning was
upheld. Scioscia charged out of the dugout after
the Giavotella ruling and had a lengthy oneway argument with Conroy before he was
ejected.
Santiago threw 106 pitches in 5 2-3
innings, allowing two runs and seven hits
with six strikeouts and a walk before leaving
with a 2-1 deficit. He was 3-0 with a 1.01 ERA
in his six previous career starts against
Oakland.
After stranding a runner at second base in
each of the first three innings, Santiago retired
the first two batters in the fourth before Lawrie

ended an 0-for-16 drought with his sixth homer


and Phegley hit his second four pitches later.
It was the second time this season that an
opposing team has gone back-to-back against
the Angels. On May 3, Jered Weaver gave up
homers to his first two batters Nori Aoki
and Joe Panik in a 5-0 loss at San
Francisco.
Giavotella led off the Angels second with a
double and scored on Efren Navarros single off
Chavez, who allowed three runs and seven hits
over seven innings on five days rest.

Trainers room
Athl eti cs : Pat Venditte, who last week
became the first ambidextrous pitcher to
appear in a major league game since Greg
Harris in 1995 was placed on the 15-day DL
because of a right shoulder strain. The move is
retroactive to June 10. Venditte is the ninth
player currently on the teams DL. They
already have used the DL 17 times this season,
one fewer than last year, and 15 players have
been on it including CF Coco Crisp and
closer Sean Doolittle twice each.

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Weekend June 13-14, 2015

13

14

SPORTS

Weekend June 13-14, 2015

SOCCER

GOLF

Continued from page 11

Continued from page 11

The U.S. leads the Group D standings with four points, following a 3-1 victory over No. 10 Australia in the opener.
Sweden was surprised in its opener by No. 33 Nigeria, which
erased a 2-0 deficit at the half for a 3-all tie.

Its more than location that makes it so different.


Instead of thick rough typical of a U.S. Open, Chambers
Bay has ne fescue grass that allows the ball to bounce and
roll, similar to a links course. There are no tree-lined fairways because there is only one tree on the golf course.
Its everything like a British Open, Phil Mickelson said
after playing the Robert Trent Jones Jr. design. Ive never
seen this type of fescue in the United States. Ive never seen
greens with fescue grass in the United States. The ball runs
like the British. Youre hitting the same shots as the
British.
Maybe that bodes well for Mickelson, who hasnt won a
tournament since the 2013 British Open. This is his second
shot at trying to become only the sixth player with the
career Grand Slam. All he has from the U.S. Open, the only
major he has never won, is a record six silver medals.
The par 70, but even that is different. The USGA plans to
move the tees and alternate par between 4 and 5 on the rst
and 18th holes. And theres a par 3 (No. 9) that has two sets
of tees one that makes it play slightly uphill, the other
has a 100-foot drop to the green.
Players already are suspicious, especially after USGA
executive director Mike Davis said that anyone who plays
only two practice rounds and has his caddie walk the course
to get the yardage off the tee and to the green is done.
Its not clear if the USGA is trying to identify the best
player or the best student of architecture.
Theres going to be someone lifting the trophy at the end
of the week, said Rory McIlroy, the worlds No. 1 player.

Earlier Friday the Matildas defeated Nigeria 2-0.


U.S. coach Jill Ellis tinkered with her lineup for the match
against Sweden, starting 22-year old Morgan Brian while
Wambach was on the bench.
Wambach did give the U.S. an immediate boost after entering in the 68th minute, but Lindahl kept the match scoreless.
Liddahl was named the player of the match.
Some five mintues after Wambachs chance, Caroline
Segers hard shot from far out was saved by defender Meghan
Klingenberg, who deflected the ball to the crossbar. Goal-line
technology was used to make sure the ball never crossed the
line on its descent.

Humm, Bachmann lead


Switzerland past Ecuador 10-1
Fabienne Humm and Ramona Bachmann both had secondhalf hat tricks as Switzerland earned its first womens World
Cup victory with a 10-1 victory over Ecuador on Friday at
Vancouver, British Columbia.
Humms three goals came within 6 minutes early in the second half, the first coming on a powerful strike from outside
the penalty box in the 47th minute to put Switzerland up 3-0.
Bachmann capped her scoring binge in the 81st minute for
Switzerlands 10th goal.
Eseosa Aigbogun and Martina Moser added goals for
Switzerland, which opened with a 1-0 defeat to defending
champion Japan on Monday.
Angie Ponce scored Ecuadors first World Cup goal on a
penalty kick in the 64th minute.
Switzerland (1-1) faces Cameroon in its final group stage
match on Tuesday, while Ecuador (0-2) takes on Japan.

ZHANG
Continued from page 11
Given her prodigious talent, it wasnt necessary for Zhang
to be at every match this season. Because the drop in the caliber of play between Zhang and the rest of the PAL was fairly significant, Brown didnt need her for every match.
But like the Lone Ranger riding in to make the rescue,
whenever Brown needed Zhang, she was there for her teammates.
Brown said he had a couple of players, including Zhang,
who she would meet with at the beginning of the week to discuss their schedules. When important matches were on the
docket, Zhang would be there to all but give the Dons an
automatic point.
If I ever called her to practice, she came in. She never
ignored a request, Brown said. She understood, when needed, she would sacrifice everything else to help the team.
She was always there for the big matches.
Not that Zhang is simply messing around when shes not
with her high school team. Since her parents own and oper-

THE DAILY JOURNAL


Its a bit of an unknown to most people, so you have to prepare. But you can fall into the trap of trying to over prepare.
He said that right before he missed consecutive cuts in
Europe, his nal competition before the second major of the
year. Missing cuts is nothing new for McIlroy, but no less
startling for the worlds No. 1 player who has made minislumps in the summer two of the last three years.
Still, nothing is more surprising these days than Tiger
Woods.
The last time the four-time champion played in the U.S.
Open, at Merion in 2013, he was No. 1 in the world and in
the midst of a ve-win season. Now he is No. 181 and has
gone nearly two victory since his last victory. Woods took
two months off early in the year when his game hit an alltime low an 82 in the Phoenix Open and then three
tournaments into his return, he shot an 85 at the Memorial.
Woods also took a reconnaissance trip to Chambers Bay
and was struck by how different it could play, with a variety
of tees that could allow some par 4s to be reached off the tee,
and other par 4s that required a fairway metal for the second
shot.
What combinations is Mike going to present us? Woods
said. He could make it to where its just brutal, or he can
make it to where its pretty easy and give us a combination
of both and then switch it up on every other hole. Thats
going to be the interesting part.
McIlroy and Masters champion Jordan Spieth are the betting favorites, and the form is with Spieth. Only three times
in his last 10 events has Spieth nished out of the top 3,
including a 65 at the Memorial in his nal start. The 21year-old Texan also has the advantage of being one of the
few to have competed at Chambers Bay, although it may be
a bad memory.
ate Infinity Badminton Club in Belmont, Zhang gets plenty
of court time.
A lot of her training is done over there (at Infinity),
Brown said. She plays a lot of higher-level tournaments.
The play in high schools is just not as high. There are a couple of girls (in the PAL) who play her tough.
Because Zhang is so good and such a good teammate,
Brown used her a couple of different ways this season. The
Dons, who finished a game behind Mills in the PAL Bay
Division standings, beat the Vikings in the first matchup of
the year because Brown juggled her lineup.
Instead of just sticking Zhang at No. 1 girls singles and
winning easily, Brown put her in the No. 2 doubles spot,
where Mills had a formidable duo. Zhang and her partner won
that match as the Dons went on to beat the Vikings in the
team competition.
Mills is a very good team, Brown said. [Zhang and her
partner] won their (No. 2 doubles) match. Thats how we beat
[Mills]. Everyone agreed that was a good setup.
Against Mills the second time, she talked me out of
[playing her at doubles].
Aragon lost to Mills the second time around, but Zhang
won her singles match as she did more often than not during her Aragon career.

SPORTS

THE DAILY JOURNAL

East Division

East Division
New York
Tampa Bay
Toronto
Baltimore
Boston
Central Division
Kansas City
Minnesota
Detroit
Chicago
Cleveland
West Division
Houston
Texas
Los Angeles
Seattle
As

W
33
33
32
30
27

L
27
29
30
30
35

Pct
.550
.532
.516
.500
.435

GB

1
2
3
7

W
34
33
32
28
28

L
24
27
29
31
32

Pct
.586
.550
.525
.475
.467

GB

2
3 1/2
6 1/2
7

W
35
32
31
27
25

L
27
29
30
34
38

Pct
.565
.525
.508
.443
.397

GB

2 1/2
3 1/2
7 1/2
10 1/2

Fridays Games
Baltimore 11, N.Y. Yankees 3
Detroit 4, Cleveland 0
Tampa Bay 7, Chicago White Sox 5
Toronto 13, Boston 10
Texas 6, Minnesota 2
Houston 10, Seattle 0
St. Louis 4, Kansas City 0
L.A. Angels 5, Oakland 4
Saturdays Games
Toronto (Dickey 2-6) at Boston (Buchholz 3-6), 10:35
a.m.
Minnesota (Pelfrey 5-2) at Texas (Lewis 5-3), 1:05
p.m.
Cleveland (Carrasco 7-5) at Detroit (Verlander 0-0),
1:08 p.m.
Chicago White Sox (Samardzija 4-4) at Tampa Bay
(Archer 7-4), 1:10 p.m.
Kansas City (Guthrie 4-3) at St. Louis (Lyons 0-0),
1:10 p.m.
Seattle (Montgomery 0-1) at Houston (McHugh 62), 1:10 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Sabathia 3-7) at Baltimore (B.Norris
2-4), 4:15 p.m.
Oakland (Graveman 3-2) at L.A. Angels (C.Wilson
3-5), 7:05 p.m.
Sundays Games
Cleveland at Detroit, 10:08 a.m.
Chicago White Sox at Tampa Bay, 10:10 a.m.
N.Y. Yankees at Baltimore, 10:35 a.m.
Toronto at Boston, 10:35 a.m.
Seattle at Houston, 11:10 a.m.
Kansas City at St. Louis, 11:15 a.m.

W
New York
33
Washington
31
Atlanta
29
Miami
26
Philadelphia
22
Central Division
W
St. Louis
40
Pittsburgh
33
Chicago
32
Cincinnati
28
Milwaukee
24
West Division
W
Los Angeles
35
Giants
34
San Diego
31
Arizona
28
Colorado
27

L
29
30
32
36
40

Pct
.532
.508
.475
.419
.355

GB

1 1/2
3 1/2
7
11

L
21
27
27
32
38

Pct
.656
.550
.542
.467
.387

GB

6 1/2
7
11 1/2
16 1/2

L
25
28
31
32
33

Pct
.583
.548
.500
.467
.450

GB

2
5
7
8

Fridays Games
Cincinnati 5, Chicago Cubs 4, 10 innings
Pittsburgh 1, Philadelphia 0, 13 innings
N.Y. Mets 5, Atlanta 3
Miami 5, Colorado 1
Milwaukee 8, Washington 4
St. Louis 4, Kansas City 0
L.A. Dodgers at San Diego, late
Arizona 1, San Francisco 0
Saturdays Games
Philadelphia (OSullivan 1-4) at Pittsburgh (G.Cole
9-2), 1:05 p.m.
Atlanta (S.Miller 5-2) at N.Y. Mets (deGrom 7-4), 1:10
p.m.
Colorado (Hale 2-0) at Miami (Latos 1-4), 1:10 p.m.
Kansas City (Guthrie 4-3) at St. Louis (Lyons 0-0),
1:10 p.m.
Washington (J.Ross 0-1) at Milwaukee (Nelson 36), 1:10 p.m.
Arizona (Collmenter 3-6) at San Francisco (Vogelsong 4-4), 4:15 p.m.
Cincinnati (Leake 3-4) at Chicago Cubs (Hendricks
2-2), 4:15 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers (Greinke 5-1) at San Diego (Kennedy
3-5), 7:10 p.m.
Sundays Games
Atlanta at N.Y. Mets, 10:10 a.m.
Colorado at Miami, 10:10 a.m.
Philadelphia at Pittsburgh, 11:35 a.m.
Washington at Milwaukee, 11:10 a.m.
Kansas City at St. Louis, 11:15 a.m.

FIRST ROUND
GROUP A

GROUP D

W L T GF
Canada
1 0 1 1
China
1 1 0 1
Netherlands
1 1 0 1
New Zealand
0 1 1 0
Saturday, June 6
At Edmonton, Alberta
Canada 1, China 0
Netherlands 1, New Zealand 0
Thursday, June 11
At Edmonton, Alberta
China 1, Netherlands 0
Canada 0, New Zealand 0
Monday, June 15
At Montreal
Canada vs. Netherlands, 4:30 p.m.
At Winnipeg, Manitoba
China vs. New Zealand, 4:30 p.m.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BRANDON, Fla. After Steven Stamkos


stepped off the Lightnings practice rink on
a 90-degree June day, the Tampa Bay captain
made it clear he is well aware that he hasnt
scored a goal yet in his first Stanley Cup
Final.
Stamkos and his Lightning teammates are
determined to keep their cool and their focus
when this exceptionally even series with the
Chicago Blackhawks begins its sprint to the
finish in Game 5 on Saturday night.
Keep playing the game the right way, and
eventually youre going to get rewarded,
Stamkos said Friday.
Chicagos Patrick Kane feels much the
same way, both about his own goalless final
and the Blackhawks game in general. Both
stars are hoping for that breakthrough score
this weekend at Amalie Arena, where either
the Lightning or the Blackhawks will end
the 2-2 series tie and move one win away
from a title.
The Lightning and the Blackhawks realize
the enormous stakes for Game 5 in a series
that still hasnt featured a two-goal lead for
either team. Theyre also attempting to
direct that excitement into motivation
instead of intimidation.
Youve got to get caught up in the
moment, Tampa Bay coach Jon Cooper
said. You have to embrace where we are. Its
the middle of June, and were still playing
hockey. The Stanley Cup is up for grabs in
the best-two-out-of-three. I dont think we
should be afraid of that. I dont think we
should walk around being tense and looking
at the magnitude of where we are, being
afraid of the moment. This is the time of our
lives.
Chicagos Duncan Keith and Tampa Bays
Victor Hedman have embraced this moment
better than anyone. Stamkos, Kane and the
Finals quiet forwards have been upstaged by
these two star defensemen, who are both

W L T GF
United States 1 0 1 3
Australia
1 1 0 3
Sweden
0 0 2 3
Nigeria
0 1 1 3
Monday, June 8
At Winnipeg, Manitoba
Sweden 3, Nigeria 3, tie
United States 3, Australia 1
Friday, June 12
At Winnipeg, Manitoba
Australia 2, Nigeria 0
United States 0, Sweden 0
Tuesday, June 16
At Vancouver, British Columbia
Nigeria vs. United States, 3 p.m.
At Edmonton, Alberta
Australia vs. Sweden, 5 p.m.

GA Pts
1 4
3 3
3 2
5 1

GROUP E

GROUP B
W
1
1
1
0

L
0
0
1
2

T
1
1
0
0

Germany
Norway
Thailand
Ivory Coast
Sunday, June 7
At Ottawa, Ontario
Norway 4, Thailand 0
Germany 10, Ivory Coast 0
Thursday, June 11
At Ottawa, Ontario
Germany 1, Norway 1
Thailand 3, Ivory Coast 2
Monday, June 15
At Winnipeg, Manitoba
Thailand vs. Germany, 1 p.m.
At Moncton, New Brunswick
Ivory Coast vs. Norway, 1 p.m.

GF
11
5
3
2

GA Pts
1 4
1 4
6 3
13 0

W L T GF
Japan
2 0 0 3
Cameroon
1 1 0 7
Switzerland
1 1 0 10
Ecuador
0 2 0 1
Monday, June 8
At Vancouver, British Columbia
Cameroon 6, Equador 0
Japan 1, Switzerland 0
Friday, June 12
At Vancouver, British Columbia
Switzerland 10, Ecuador 1
Japan 2, Cameroon 1
Tuesday, June 16
At Winnipeg, Manitoba
Ecuador vs. Japan, 2 p.m.
At Edmonton, Alberta
Switzerland vs. Cameroon, 2 p.m.

turning in dominant playoff performances.


In a postseason missing a breakout offensive performance or a dominant goaltending
run, Keith or Hedman are the odds-on
favorites to win the Conn Smythe Trophy as
the playoffs MVP. Barring a spectacular pile
of goals from a forward, the series winner
seems likely to feature the first defenseman
to claim the Conn Smythe since Anaheims
Scott Niedermayer in 2007.
Keith and Hedman are 1-2 in the NHL in
postseason plus-minus ratings and total
minutes. Keith leads the playoffs with 18
assists during his incredible extended ice
time, while Hedman has set franchise playoff
records for assists and points by a defenseman.
Although they play the game differently,
theyre filling a similar do-everything role
for their respective teams.
In a lot of ways, yeah, (Hedman) is a guy
like Duncan, Chicago captain Jonathan
Toews said. He makes, more times than not,
the players hes out there with better. Hes a
catalyst when hes in his own zone or the
offensive zone.
Only four defensemen in NHL history have
recorded more than Keiths 18 assists in this
postseason, and nobody has done it since
Brian Leetchs 23 during the New York
Rangers Stanley Cup run in 1994.
Keiths numbers are uniformly strong in
the postseason, but his sheer minutes are the
most jaw-dropping aspect of it all.
Blackhawks coach Joel Quenneville is relying largely on four veteran defenseman,
showing little interest in his third pairing
or perhaps simply demonstrating confidence
that Keith can handle more minutes that just
about any defenseman in recent memory.
Keith has played 655 minutes and 55 seconds in the postseason nearly 11 full regulation games. Its tough to quantify whether
those extra minutes have affected Keiths
overall aggressiveness, particularly on the
offensive end, but its unlikely hell get or
want any respite in the final games.

W L T GF
Costa Rica
0 0 1 1
Spain
0 0 1 1
Brazil
0 0 0 0
South Korea
0 0 0 0
Tuesday, June 9
At Montreal
Spain 1, Costa Rica 1, tie
Brazil vs. South Korea, 7 p.m.
Saturday, June 13
At Montreal
Brazil vs. Spain, 1 p.m.
South Korea vs. Costa Rica, 4 p.m.
Wednesday, June 17
At Moncton, New Brunswick
Costa Rica vs. Brazil, 4 p.m.
At Ottawa, Ontario
South Korea vs. Spain, 5 p.m.

GA Pts
1 1
1 1
0 0
0 0

GA Pts
1 6
2 3
2 3
16 0

W L T
France
1 0 0
Colombia
0 0 1
Mexico
0 0 1
England
0 1 0
Tuesday, June 9
At Moncton, New Brunswick
France 1, England 0
Colombia 1, Mexico 1, tie
Saturday, June 13
At Moncton, New Brunswick
France vs. Colombia, 2 p.m.
England vs. Mexico, 5 p.m.
Wednesday, June 17
At Montreal
England vs. Colombia, 1 p.m.
At Ottawa, Ontario
Mexico vs. France, 2 p.m.

GF
1
1
1
0

EASTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA
D.C. United
8 4 4 28 20 15
New England
5 4 6 21 20 20
Toronto FC
6 5 1 19 19 16
Orlando City
4 5 5 17 19 19
New York
4 4 5 17 17 17
Columbus
4 6 4 16 20 21
Philadelphia
4 9 3 15 18 25
Montreal
4 4 2 14 13 15
Chicago
4 7 2 14 17 20
New York City FC 2 7 5 11 12 18
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA
Seattle
8 4 2 26 20 11
Vancouver
8 6 2 26 18 15
Sporting K.C.
6 2 6 24 22 15
Portland
6 5 4 22 15 14
FC Dallas
6 4 4 22 18 19
Los Angeles
5 5 6 21 15 18
Houston
5 5 5 20 21 19
Earthquakes
5 5 4 19 14 15
Real Salt Lake
4 5 6 18 13 18
Colorado
2 4 8 14 11 12
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie.

Saturday, June 13
Montreal at New York City FC, 4 p.m.
Los Angeles at Columbus, 4:30 p.m.
Chicago at New England, 4:30 p.m.
FC Dallas at Seattle, 7 p.m.
Sunday, June 14
D.C. United at Orlando City, 4 p.m.

NBA FINALS

GROUP F

GROUP C

Defense stars in a tight,


tense Stanley Cup Final
By Greg Beacham

GA Pts
0 4
1 3
1 3
1 1

15

MLS GLANCE

WOMENS WORLD CUP

NL GLANCE

AL GLANCE

Weekend June 13-14, 2015

GA Pts
0 3
1 1
1 1
1 0

Cleveland 2, Golden State 2


Thursday, June 4: Warriors 108, Cavs 100, OT
Sunday, June 7: Cavs 95, Warriors 93, OT
Tuesday, June 9: Cavs 96, Warriros 91
Thursday, June 11: Warriors 103, Cavs 82
x-Sunday, June 14: Cleveland at Warriors, 5 p.m.
x-Tuesday, June 16: Warriors at Cleveland, 6 p.m.
x-Friday, June 19: Cleveland at Warriors, 6 p.m.

NHL FINALS
Tampa Bay 2, Chicago 2
Wednesday, June 3: Chicago 2, Tampa Bay 1
Saturday, June 6: Tampa Bay 4, Chicago 3
Monday, June 8: Tampa Bay 3, Chicago 2
Wednesday, June 10: Chicago 2, Tampa Bay 1
Saturday, June 13: Chicago at Tampa Bay, 5 p.m.
Monday, June 15: Tampa Bay at Chicago, 5 p.m.
x-Wednesday, June 17: Chicago at Tampa Bay, 5 p.m.

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For information call the Daily Journal (650) 344-5200


Events subject to change.

16

Weekend June 13-14, 2015

SPORTS

THE DAILY JOURNAL

LeBrons slight headache a big deal in NBA Finals


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CLEVELAND LeBron James called it a


slight headache, though nothing involving the games best player is ever minor.
So when James got a cut on his head after
falling into a TV camera during Game 4 of the
NBA Finals, it led to questions about everything from how the NBA treats head injuries
to whether someone taking pictures should be
close enough to cause one.
The league tried to deal with both issues
long before Thursday night.
Baseline photography and TV positions
were already reduced last summer, and a concussion protocol was previously in place. But
according to the leagues policy, a cut on the
head alone is not a trigger for it.

WARRIORS
Continued from page 11
I just feel that I have each of my parents
on my shoulders and were going through
this together and celebrating it with them.
Its extremely emotional for me, she said,
her voice cracking. But in the very best
way.
For Mark and Jan Wilson, the Warriors are
a personal love affair.
One of their first dates was at a game on
Valentines Day in 2007. They sat in section
214 a buy-one-get-one special on Feb. 14
and watched the Warriors beat the New
York Knicks.
The We Believe Warriors, as they
became known, went on to upset the topseeded Dallas Mavericks in the first round of
the playoffs. The couple bought seasontickets the following year and continued to
commute from their home in Santa Cruz,

The protocol requires concussion evaluation when a player is suspected of having a


concussion or exhibits signs or symptoms of
one. Based on the players response, teams
make the clinical judgment call whether to
evaluate.
James was bleeding but not showing concussion symptoms. He was thinking clearly,
saying he was aware he needed to stay in the
game to shoot his free throws after being
fouled by Andrew Bogut, or he wouldnt have
been able to re-enter, according to league
rules.
No, I didnt have to go through any concussion protocol. I had a slight headache,
which I think every last one of you guys
would probably have if you ran into a camera.
You might have a little bit more than that,

James said during his postgame news conference.


But I didnt go through any protocol. Im
fine. Like I said, I got a few stitches and I got
a little slight headache right now, but Ill be
fine with that.
The league had already been looking at
player safety behind the baselines over the
previous five years.
New rules last summer mandated an extra
foot of open space on both sides of the basket
stanchion. The escape lanes, the unoccupied area on either side of the stanchion to the
closest photographer spot, increased from 3
to 4 feet, and only 20 camera positions, 10
on each baseline, remained, down from 24 in
2013-14 and 40 during the 2010-11 regular
season.

about a 90-minute drive without traffic.


This is like our vacations coming out
here, said Mark Wilson, now 65.
Liss, 72, went to his first game during the
teams inaugural season in the Bay Area. He
sat courtside and became friends with players
and management over the years, and he sits
in the first row behind the Warriors bench
now.
Every game he attended brought new memories, and that was enough to keep him coming back even when the team was terrible.
Each time that I went, the games always
started zero-zero. They always had a
chance, Liss said, chuckling.
While its easy to root for the Warriors
now, they have tested the faith and fortitude
of fans.
The Warriors missed the playoffs nine
straight years after the 1976-77 season.
Chris Mullin led the franchise to the postseason five times between 1987 and 1994,
including the brief but exciting Run TMC
teams coached by Don Nelson, but the
Warriors made the playoffs just once in the

next 19 years.
These fans have been through it, current
Warriors owner Joe Lacob said. Theyve
been through hell. I know it. I was a fan for
a long time. Im just extremely happy for
them now.
Oracle Arena, nicknamed Roaracle, has
long been considered one of the leagues
loudest venues. The low roof and concrete
surfaces send sound waves bouncing at earsplitting decibels, giving the Warriors a
home-court advantage few franchises can
match.
The Warriors are a league-best 47-4 at
home this season, including 8-2 in the playoffs, and players routinely credit the raucous
crowds for willing them to wins.
Every time I think it cant get louder, it
does, forward Draymond Green said.
As the Warriors have improved the past
three years, going to games has become a
tough ticket in the basketball-united Bay
Area, where fans of the 49ers, Giants,
Raiders and Athletics come together to support the markets only NBA team.

NBA Finals brief


Game 4 draws best rating since 2004
NEW YORK The NBA Finals Game 4
has drawn its highest television rating in
more than a decade.
The Golden State Warriors 103-82 win
over the Cleveland Cavaliers on Thursday
night to even the series at 2-2 averaged an
11.7 rating on ABC. Thats the best since
the Pistons-Lakers series in 2004.
ESPN said Friday that the nearly 19.8 million viewers were up 34 percent from the
14. 8 million for last years matchup
between the San Antonio Spurs and Miami
Heat.
Ratings represent the percentage of U.S.
homes with televisions tuned to a program.
The Warriors have sold-out 133 straight
games entering Sundays contest. The waitlist for season tickets surpassed 10,000 earlier this year. And despite an increase in
price, that number is only expected to rise.
The Warriors are planning to move to a
new arena in San Francisco as early as the
start of the 2018-19 season. Fans have
expressed concern that the teams famed
home atmosphere and blue-collar culture
could change in tech-savvy San Francisco.
Warriors President Rick Welts, who is
spearheading the arena effort, has said the
franchise needs a new facility to be financially viable long-term and is doing all it
can to duplicate Oracles electric environment.
And in the end, thats what keeps their
legion of loyal fans coming back.
Whenever the season is over, I always
have this withdrawal, Sosnick said. And
then we walk back into the arena at the end
of October or early November, and it feels
like Im home.

SPECIALIZING IN KIDS BEDROOM FURNITURE


AND TRAMPOLINES

SUMMER
SPECIALS

On All AlleyOop
Trampolines

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Weekend June 13-14, 2015

17

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Choir Boy
Play tells
coming of age
story for black youths

SEE PAGE 21

Bovary proves elusive


on
screen,
once
again
It is forbidden
By Jocelyn Noveck
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

By Emily Shen

ight before finals, our Spanish


teacher gave us a parting gift:
cookies and a poem, food for the
stomach and food for the soul. I have
already forgotten how that cookie tasted, or
for that matter, whether it was a snickerdoodle or chocolate chip, but I have thought
about that poem It is forbidden, by
Pablo Neruda often since finishing junior year.
In this poem, Neruda
starts every stanza with
queda prohibido, or it
is forbidden, commanding his reader not to do
certain things. He gives a
lot of sound advice, but I
believe all of it can be
distilled into one idea: it
is forbidden to fear, to
fear your memories, to fear opening yourself up to love, to fear risking something
for happiness, to fear life itself.
Our Spanish class, save for me and three
other juniors, is full of seniors. Our teacher
clearly made a very conscious choice giving this poem to a bunch of students on the
brink of graduation, who were feeling
excitement as well as apprehension at the
new chapter they were beginning. But
though I have not graduated, I will be taking his advice as well. I think it is very
applicable to me as an incoming senior.
I have recently been thinking about all
the things I have been afraid to do in the
last three years Ive been at Aragon. I have
been afraid of reaching out to people at the
risk of looking weak or needy. I have been
afraid of trying new things at the risk of
failure, sticking instead to what I know and
what I know I am good at. I have been afraid
to apologize. I have been afraid of being
alone. I have gotten better at this, coming
out of my shell more and more each year I
spend at Aragon, but I am not quite done
yet.
I am already at a disadvantage. When I
think of high school in the future, I might
still have fear of my memories, as Neruda
forbids me to, because I might be afraid that
all of it wasnt enough, afraid that I might
feel regret. But Neruda also forbids me to
cry without learning, and I have one year
left of high school and hopefully many left

What is it about Emma


Bovary?
She is, of course, one of literatures most famous and tragic
heroines, and so its no surprise
that directors from Jean Renoir
(1934) to Vincente Minnelli (1949) to
Claude Chabrol (1991) have tried to
immortalize Gustave Flauberts frustrated,
yearning 19th-century housewife on film.
But the task has proven exceedingly difficult.
Now, tantalizingly, we have a female director
Sophie Barthes attempting to capture
Emmas devastating story. Sad to say, Barthes version doesnt break much ground. In fact, though its
often beautiful and stars the usually compelling Mia
Wasikowska, the film is maddeningly flat, and at times
simply tiresome.
The curiosities of this version start at the
very beginning. We see Emma running through the woods in a lovely embroidered dress, clutching
at her stomach, clearly suffering.
Soon shes lying on the ground,
turning deadly pale.
Barthes is, essentially, giving
us the end before the start. It
would have been more effective
to get there gradually. We now
need to put this image behind us,
and focus on how Emma got to
her moment of crisis. But the
drama of the next 117 minutes
never lives up to that of the first.
After the opening, we go back to
Emmas school years in a rural
Normandy convent. Her education

See STUDENT, Page 22

See BOVARY, Page 22

TheatreWorks stages Nol


Cowards Fallen Angels
By Judy Richter
DAILY JOURNAL CORRESPONDENT

KEVIN BERNE

Sarah Overman and Rebecca Dines are two wives whooping it up in Fallen Angels.

Not many actors can get away with the


style of comic acting seen in TheatreWorks
production of Nol Cowards Fallen
Angels, but Rebecca Dines and her colleagues do so with hilarious results.
Cannily directed by Robert Kelley, the
play is set in a dining-drawing room of a
London flat in the fall of 1927. The plot
concerns two complacently married women,
friends since girlhood, who had passionate
flings with the same Frenchman before they
were married.
They havent seen him in the intervening

years, but he has told them that hes in


London and wants to see them. This news
sets them both aflame, but they dont want
to jeopardize their upper middle class marriages.
Dines plays Jane Banbury, married to
Willy Banbury (Cassidy Brown). Her friend
is Julia Sterroll (Sarah Overman), married to
Fred Sterroll (Mark Anderson Phillips).
While the stodgy husbands go golfing,
Jane visits Julia, and the two talk and talk.
They also drink and drink, getting quite
drunk while waiting to hear from their former lover, Maurice Duclos (Aldo

See ANGELS, Page 22

THE DAILY JOURNAL

WEEKEND JOURNAL

Weekend June 13-14, 2015

19

By Susan Cohn
DAILY JOURNAL SENIOR CORRESPONDENT

A S CULPTURE TOUR ON THE


MALECN: ART AT THE HEART OF
PUERTO VALLARTA, MEXICO. Puerto
Vallartas spectacular curving esplanade
known as the Malecn is an inviting place
for a relaxing stroll any time of the day, but
Tuesday mornings hold a special attraction
a free guided tour of the dramatic largescale bronze and stone sculptures that punctuate this broad, exclusively pedestrian,
seaside promenade. The guide for these tours
is Gary Thompson, the owner since 1987 of
Galeria Pacifico in the historic heart of
Puerto Vallarta.
Thompson, who knows many of the featured sculptors personally, said: In the mid
1990s I started doing tours in vans of
artists studios scattered around the Puerto
Vallarta area. We would pass by a few sculptures on the Malecn that I would comment
on while heading to the first studio.
Eventually more sculptures had been added
on the Malecn and adjacent streets, and it
seemed to me that a tour of just the monumental bronzes might be something of
interest. Many visitors have gone multiple
times and some winter and full-time residents always include it as something to do
with visiting friends. A common comment
is Ive been visiting Vallarta for 5-30 years
and always wondered about the sculptures
but never knew anything about them until
now.
The walks numerous sculptures include
works by Ramiz Barquet (La nostalgia;
Nostalgia); Sergio Bustamante (En busca
de la razn; In Search of Reason);
Alejandro Colunga (La rotonda del Mar;
Rotunda of the Sea); Manuel Lepe (The
Fish Sellers Mosaic); Pedro Tello (Origen y
destino; Origin and Destiny); and Rafael
Zamarripa, whose Boy on the Seahorse (El
caballito de mar) is the playful symbol of
Puerto Vallarta. A selection may be seen at
http://www.puertovallarta.net.
TUESDAY MORNING SCULPTURE
TOUR PARTICULARS . The approximately two hour free tours begin at 9:30

a.m. on Tuesday mornings from the middle


of November to the middle of April. The
starting point is artist Fernando Banoss
Millennium sculpture next to the Hotel
Rosita. Although the tour was initially
designed for about 35 people, 50 are common during the busiest weeks of the season.
Joining Thompson on the Tuesday morning
walks is Kevin Simpson, Artistic Director
of Colectika Ancestral Contemporary Art
Gallery, who explains the symbols of the
Huichol Indians that have been created as
reliefs of black pebbles in the pavement of
the Malecn.
WEDNESDAY EVENING ART WALK.
Simpsons Galeria Colectika joins with
Thompsons Galeria Pacifico and numerous
other galleries to host Art Walk, held from 6
p.m. to 10 p.m. on Wednesday nights from
October through May in the Historic Center
of the City, just inland from the Malecn.
This art community open house offers visitors a chance to meet gallery owners, artists
and fellow art aficionados. The galleries
cover the spectrum of decorative and fine
arts including contemporary museum quality works by Mexican folk artists and representative international pieces. Simpson
said: The [Wednesday evening] Art Walk in
Puerto Vallarta allows tourists and locals
alike a chance to see some of the finest
examples of art created in Mexico. In combination with the fine dining available in
downtown Puerto Vallarta, Wednesday night
on the town has become an event not to be
missed. There are 10 participating galleries
whose styles of work ranges considerably.
It is a self-guided tour so you can spend as
much time as you want in one gallery and
skip the ones whose genre might not be

JIMMIE ELLIS

Gary Thompson, owner of Galeria Pacifico in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, leads free weekly art
walks of the monumental public sculptures on the Malecn, the resort towns mile-long
seafront promenade.
your cup of tea. Some of the galleries have
artists in residence so you can get to know
the actual artists and ask them about their
work or what influences them.
PUERTO VALLARTA GALLERIES TO
CHECK OUT. Galeria Pacifico presents an
eclectic blend of sculptures and paintings
by Mexican artists as well as by foreigners
living and working in Mexico. Paintings
and sculptures are shown together, with an
emphasis on local painters. Aldama 174,
second Floor. Centro/Downtown.
***
Colectika Ancestral Contemporary Art
Gallery displays folk art from the younger
generation of artists who use new ways to
express ancient traditions. 852 Guadalupe
Sanchez at Allende. Centro/Downtown.

***
Galeria de Ollas, founded in 1998, is dedicated to displaying and selling the works of
potters from Mata Ortiz, a little town in the
middle of the desert in Chihuahua State that
is home to about 400 ceramists. Corona
176, Centro/Downtown.
AND REMEMBER: To paint ... to travel ... to combine the two ... is to celebrate
life. Jack R. Brouwer.
Susan Cohn is a member of the North American
Travel Journalists Association, Bay Area Travel
Writers, and the International Food, Wine & Travel
Writers Association. She may be reached at
susan@smdailyjournal.com. More of her stories
may be found at http://ifwtwa.org/author/susancohn.

20

Weekend June 13-14, 2015

WATER
Continued from page 1
crops will shift in the short-term to regions
with more water, so the water cuts are
expected to have little immediate impact on
food prices.
The curtailment order applies to 114 entities including individual landowners and
water districts serving farmers and small
communities with claims dating back to
1914 or before.
It will force thousands of water users in
the state to tap groundwater, buy water at
rising costs, use previously stored water, or
go dry.
Its going to be a different story for each
one of them, and a struggle for all of them,
Thomas Howard, executive director of the
water board, acknowledged.
There are several thousand senior rights
holders who are the last to have their water
rights curtailed in times of scarcity.
The people and entities who were cut off
on Friday are the first of many senior right
holders who will see curtailments in the
coming weeks.
Its the first time since a 1977 drought
that California has directed a significant
number of senior water rights holders to
stop pumping because of drought and
amounts to the most widespread cuts ever
among those with some of the states
strongest water rights.
California water law was built around preserving the water rights of those who staked
claims to waterways more than a century
ago or have property that abuts the rivers
and streams.
Water regulators had spared the seniorrights holders until now but warn that still

QUINN
Continued from page 1
other kids took for granted, such as learning to tie his shoes or play catch with a
baseball glove.
Quinn though said he sees his challenges
as no different from the kinds with which
others have to cope.
Everyone has a problem, but mine is a
little bit more visible, he said. I know I
have to work harder and try harder.
His commitment to that philosophy was
integral in gaining acceptance to the prestigious science and research institute,
where he intends to take on a double major
that he hopes might lead to a career as an

WEEKEND JOURNAL
more cuts will be coming for farmers and
others in weeks to follow.
People ordered Friday to cut back have
water rights going back to 1903. Officials
say they have rights to an estimated 1.2
million acre-feet for a year more than a
dozen times San Franciscos annual use
but the officials do not know how much the
curtailments will save this summer.
We are now at the point where demand in
our system is outstripping supply for even
the most senior water rights holders, said
Caren Trgovcich, chief deputy director of
the water board.
Farmers and water districts have promised
court battles to stop what are the broadest
incursions on record to the water allotted to
senior-rights holders.
Jeanne Zolezzi, an attorney for two small
irrigation districts serving farmers in the
San Joaquin area, says she plans to go to
court next week to stop the boards action.
She said her clients include small family
farms that grow permanent crops such as
apricots and walnuts, and have no back-up
supplies in wells or reservoirs.
A lot of trees would die, and a lot of people would go out of business, said Zolezzi.
We are not talking about a 25 percent cut
like imposed on urban. This is a 100 percent
cut, no water supplies.
Jonas Minton, an adviser at the private
Planning and Conservation League environmental group, said droughts of this scale
are not unprecedented in California.
What is different, he said, is that the state
has grown to a population of 38 million and
has vast acres of farmland to irrigate. He
said state bureaucrats or environmentalists
cant be blamed.
Todays curtailments are not being done
by choice, Minton said. Theyre a reaction to the reality of the shrinking water
supply.
investment banker.
Quinn never earned a grade less than an A
during his four years in high school,
despite being a member of the basketball,
football and baseball teams.
He will continue his athletic career as he
goes on to play free safety for the universitys football team.
Cheryl said he commitment and desire is
admirable, if not difficult for others to
understand.
He knows no limits, she said. He sets
goals, and goes and gets them. He is
exhausting.
She said that drive remains on display
even when Quinn is vacationing, as he is
in Hawaii this week with friends and
classmates celebrating their high school
g raduat i o n , b ut h e deman ded p ack i n g
workout clothes so he could get up in the

THE DAILY JOURNAL

A look at Californias
senior water rights holders
Farmers and other landowners who staked
some of the earliest claims to Californias
water are the latest to face mandatory
cutbacks ordered by the state during the
relentless drought.
Regulators on Friday ordered more than 100
so-called senior water rights holders to stop
taking water from some rivers and streams,
the first of several rounds of cutbacks
expected this summer.
Heres a primer on who holds senior water
rights:

WHO ARE THEY?


More than half are corporations such as
power companies that use water for
hydroelectric dams. Claims are also held by
rural irrigation districts that serve thousands
of farmers throughout Central California and
the Sierra Nevada foothills. Water
departments in San Francisco and Los
Angeles are among the biggest users,
although those agencies have multiple
sources of water and have yet to be
curtailed.

exempted previous claims from the process.

WHO WATCHES THEM?


The State Water Resources Control Board
oversees the water rights system and
decides when conditions are too dry to
meet demand. Every three years, it requires
senior water rights holders to report how
much water they have diverted, used and
conserved. Since regulators lack widespread
remote sensors or meters, they depend
largely on the honor system to guard against
illegal uses and conduct field inspections in
response to complaints.

HOW MUCH WATER DO THEY USE?


Trillions of gallons a year, but no one knows
exactly how much. An Associated Press
investigation last year found the data riddled
with obvious errors. State water officials
concede they need better real-time
monitoring of flows and diversions. As it is,
they generally enforce cutback orders when
someone complains.

HOW DID THEY GET WATER RIGHTS?

WHY DO THEY
HAVE SPECIAL STATUS?

Establishing an early right to California


water was as simple as going ahead and
diverting it. The paperwork came later. San
Francisco got the Sierra Nevada water that
fed its lush gardens by tacking a
handwritten notice to a tree in 1902. The
state started requiring applications and
monitoring consumption after 1914 but

Much of the parched West was developed


around the principle that water goes to
those who claimed the limited resource first.
Unused water may be sold or transferred.
But California is unusual among Western
states, in that it doesnt monitor senior rights
holders as closely as it does junior rights
holders.

morning and exercise.


It takes a lot of time management,
Quinn said, of maintaining his hectic
schedule. I cant be screwing around.
Susan Stout, president and CEO of the
Amputee Coalition, said his perspective
and mindset are key components of why he
was selected to receive the scholarship.
His accomplishments, his vision and
his aspirations for the future embody what
the scholarship is all about. His upbeat,
positive attitude is an inspiration to all
with limb loss, she said in a prepared
statement.
Quinn said he is excited about the opportunity to take on the new challenges associated with starting a new chapter of his life
away from home.
His mother said such anticipation is
refreshing, because taking him out of his

comfort zone as a child was one of the most


difficult aspect of parenting for her.
It was hard early on, with all the stares
and questions, she said. I felt bad. I dont
know what I did or didnt do, but I felt somewhat responsible. It was easier to not go to
new places.
Quinn though said he has cleared that hurdle, as he is now becoming accustomed to
doing.
Im really excited, but somewhat nervous, he said of going to MIT. Its a bigger
stage and a bigger platform. Hopefully I
can succeed there as well, but it will take a
lot of grit.

austin@smdailyjournal.com
(650) 344-5200 ext. 105

THE DAILY JOURNAL

WEEKEND JOURNAL

Weekend June 13-14, 2015

21

Choir Boy tells coming of age story for black youths


By Judy Richter
DAILY JOURNAL CORRESPONDENT

Five students at the all-black Charles R. Drew Prep


School for Boys try to find their way to adulthood through
their studies and especially through its prestigious choir in
Tarell Alvin McCraneys Choir Boy at Marin Theatre
Company.
The title character is Pharus Jonathan Young (Jelani
Alladin), whose homosexuality is an open secret at the
boarding school.
As the play opens, hes a junior singing the school hymn
at the schools 49th graduation. He becomes distracted
when someone in the background whispers slurs.
However, citing the schools honor code, he refuses to
tell Headmaster Marrow (Ken Robinson) who it was.
In an effort to instill more unity among the boys the next
fall, the headmaster asks a former Drew teacher, Mr.
Pendleton (Charles Shaw Robinson), a white man, to teach
a class of his choosing.
He chooses critical thinking. Soon the boys are engaged
in a lively debate about the role of spirituals among blacks
both during the slavery era and today.
Other choir members are Pharus nemesis, Bobby Marrow
(Dimitri Woods), the headmasters nephew; A.J. James
(Jaysen Wright), an athlete and Pharus kind, mature roommate; Junior Davis (Rotimi Agbabiaka), Bobbys sidekick;
and David Heard (Forest Van Dyke), who wants to become a
minister.
The choir is their unifying element as the young men
evolve during the school year. Hence, they do a lot of wonderful a cappella singing, blending well (Darius Smith is
music director).
Playwright McCraney is a talent to be reckoned with. Bay
Area audiences may recall his The Brother/Sister Plays
trilogy with MTC, Magic Theatre and American
Conservatory Theater each presenting one of the plays.
His Head of Passes was a hit for Berkeley Repertory
Theatre this season.
Choir Boy is a noteworthy addition to his canon
despite some underwriting for characters like David and Mr.
Pendleton. The play includes a several-minute shower scene
with full frontal nudity, but its significance becomes clear
later.
Director Kent Gash keeps the action flowing smoothly,
aided by an outstanding ensemble cast, especially Alladin
as Pharus.
This 2012 play runs slightly more than 100 minutes with
no intermission.
Its a thought-provoking, absorbing, coming of age
story told with empathy, music, humor and drama.
Choir Boy will continue through June 28 at Marin
Theatre Company, 397 Miller Ave., Mill Valley. For tickets
and information call (415) 388-5208 or visit
www.marintheatre.org.

Sunday news shows


ABCs This Week 8 a.m.
Gov. Chris Christie, R-N.J.; Joel Benenson, campaign
adviser to Hillary Rodham Clinton.

NBCs Meet the Press 8 a.m.


Mitt Romney; John Podesta, Clintons campaign
chairman.

CBS Face the Nation 8:30 a.m.

KEVIN BERNE

Junior (Rotimi Agbabiaka), Pharus (Jelani Alladin), David (Forest Van Dyke), AJ (Jaysen Wright) and Bobby (Dimitri Woods) sing
as they go to bed in Choir Boy.

As your local newspaper on the Peninsula it is important to be involved in the community and to support local
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Events supported by the Daily Journal in 2014


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a Daily Journal event

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Feb. 22 .....................Family Resources Fair, San Mateo,


a Daily Journal event
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a Daily Journal event
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April 19.....................Redwood Symphony Concert, Redwood City

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Sens. Bernie Sanders, D-Vt., and Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.;


Robby Mook, Clintons campaign manager.

May 2 .......................Mills-Peninsula Womens Luncheon,


Burlingame

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CNNs State of the Union 3 p.m.

May 3 .......................Senior Showcase, Burlingame,


a Daily Journal event

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Fox News Sunday 8 a.m.


Rep. Paul Ryan; Hillary Clinton spokeswoman Karen
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May 17 .....................Soul Stroll, San Mateo
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June 7 ......................Redwood Symphony Concert, Redwood City
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San Mateo

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San Carlos
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a Daily Journal event

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22

Weekend June 13-14, 2015

WEEKEND JOURNAL

STUDENT

BOVARY

Continued from page 18

Continued from page 18

of life to live fearlessly and take risks and find as much


happiness as possible.
You do, too. Dont be afraid. Summer is a time full of
promise and exploration. Use that to your advantage.

is ending, though; Emma is to be married to a country doctor chosen by her


father. Barthes does a lovely job portraying a simple French country wedding, with a church ceremony and family meal in the garden.
Soon Emmas off in a horse-drawn
carriage to her new life. Charles
Bovary (Henry Lloyd-Hughes) is a
very decent but dull man, with few
ambitions other than to serve the local
townspeople. Emma dreams of something more.
One of this films main problems
surfaces early: a strange disconnect in
the way the actors sound. They speak
in English, but in their own accents
French accents, British accents,
American accents. Wasikowska,
though shes Australian, sounds like
shes in the modern-day U.S here, and
her very contemporary manner of
speaking becomes increasingly jar-

Emily Shen is soon-to-be senior at Aragon High School in San


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

ANGELS
Continued from page 18

Expires 6/30/15

Billingslea).
The drunker they get, the more physical their comedy becomes, with Dines
seemingly able to move her body and
face any way she wants. Overmans
reactions are more subtle but humorous
nonetheless.
Occasional witness to their goingson is Tory Ross as Saunders, the
Sterrolls new maid. Usually deadpan

THE DAILY JOURNAL

ring in this period piece.


When the disillusioned Emma meets
Leon, a young, handsome law clerk
(Ezra Miller), we know theres going
to be trouble. She rejects his amorous
advances, reminding him shes married, but when she hears hes moving
to nearby Rouen to pursue his studies,
she falls apart. I imagined that this
would be the happiest time in my life,
she weeps to her household maid. Is
my future just a dark corridor with a
bolted door at the end?
Emmas road to ruin adultery
comes first with the handsome, rakish
Marquis (Logan Marshall-Green), who
invites the couple to a hunt at his
estate. To clothe herself properly,
Emma seeks out local merchant
Monsieur Lheureux (Rhys Ifans, amusingly villainous and injecting life into
the proceedings), who agrees to make
her a lovely riding dress on credit
the start of a dangerous relationship.
Soon, other dangerous relationships
form. Emma succumbs to the physical
charms of the Marquis. While cheating
on Charles, shes also filling their

home with beautiful carpets and silks


from Monsieur Lheureux none of
which her oblivious husband can
afford. Then, her lover bails on her
commitment issues, of course, plus
hes French.
Once recovered from that trauma,
Emma reconnects with young Leon,
but that affair, too, will end in tatters.
And then Lheureux comes calling for
his money.
Readers know what happens. Alas,
along the way to the screen, much of
the famous detail in Flauberts novel
has gotten lost somewhere in those
beautiful, misty woods that Emma frequently escapes to, and where our story
ends. This movie may find you wanting to pick up the book to fill those
gaps.
Which isnt a bad thing at all, of
course.
Madame Bovary, an Alchemy
release, is rated R by the Motion
Picture Association of America for
some sexuality/nudity. Running
time: 118 minutes. Two stars out of
four.

and discreet, shes a fount of knowledge from her varied past experiences.
She also sings well.
Fallen Angels is one of Cowards
earliest plays, written when he was
only 24. It lacks the depth, bite and
polish of many of his later works.
Nevertheless, it reflects the changes
taking place in English society as
women begin to break free from the
Victorian strictures that had defined
their roles for so long.
Besides the skilled cast, this production features a handsomely tasteful set
by J.B. Wilson.
Fumiko Bielefeldt, designer of the

elegant costumes, says she adopted


French fashion for the women and
British country style for the men.
William Liberatore serves as vocal
coach and pianist.
Running more than two hours with
one intermission, the play is talky and
the plot is thin, but this production
succeeds because of Kelleys direction
and some superb acting.
Fallen Angels will continue
through June 28 at the Mountain View
Center for the Performing Arts, 500
Castro St., Mountain View. For tickets
and information call (650) 463-1960
or visit www.theatreworks.org.

WEEKEND JOURNAL

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Weekend June 13-14, 2015

23

Sundances Me
and Earl melds
tragedy and wit
By Lindsey Bahr
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

If youve heard of Me and Earl


and the Dying Girl already, its
probably because it had the unique
misfortune of being the favorite of
many at this years Sundance Film
Festival, where it also won the top
prizes. Sometimes when those
films finally hit theaters, you get a
Whiplash. Other times youre
just left wondering what the
Sundance altitude has done to
everyones judgment.
In this case, there is a bit of a
backlash brewing as folks see it
closer to sea level and react to the
early festival hype. But perhaps no
movie this precious could live up
to that standard. Me and Earl and
the Dying Girl might not be a perfect film, but it is small, earnest,
occasionally witty and even affecting. It is flawed, yes, but forgivable.
Set i n Pi t t s b urg h , t h e ci t y
where all misfit youths come of
age (see: Wonder Boys, The
Perks of Being a Wallflower,
Adv en t urel an d, et c. ), an d
based on a book of the same
name, this is the tale of a high
school senior who befriends a

girl dying of leukemia.


Greg (Thomas Mann), the me
in question, is introduced as hes
trying to begin writing the story of
the movie were about to see. Hes
the type of milquetoast nice guy
whod rather be acquaintances with
everyone and friends with no one.
He eats in his tattooed teachers
(Jon Bernthal) office to avoid the
social awkwardness of the lunchroom. His bedroom is adorned with
a bookshelf of vintage cameras and
a (400) Blows poster. He wears a
Nosferatu T-shirt regularly and he
makes films with his friend Earl
(RJ Cyler).
These arent just any films,
though. Theyre whimsical, punny
takes on a host of Criterion
Collection-approved titles (i.e.
Mono Rash, The (400) Bros,
The Seven Seals, Sockwork
Orange). Greg and Earl are Very
Interesting, the movie shouts at
every opportunity, right down to
the Brian Eno songs underscoring
the most memorable moments.
Was anyone ever this precocious?
Greg is both the films narrator
and protagonist, which could be
perceived as the films greatest
mistake. The girl, Rachel, played
by the beguiling Olivia Cooke (a

Me and Earl and the Dying Girl might not be a perfect film, but it is small, earnest and occasionally witty.
cross between Dakota Fanning and
Rachel McAdams in both demeanor
and looks), is a prop in the story of
Gregs (debatable) emotional maturation. While Rachel isnt a doormat, she also isnt really given
much to do. Dry and witty, she has
emotional ups and downs throughout her disease, a few reflections on
dying and some maddening monologues about how she isnt beautiful. But otherwise, shes there to
serve Greg and wait for the movie
that hes supposed to make for her.
Me and Earl ... also borrows
more than it creates. It preys on our
affection for those classic films,
not just in referencing them, but
also by lacing the score with the

music from Vertigo, The Tales


of Hoffman and others. That
might be perceived as unearned
emotional currency by some, and
perhaps it is. But, Me and Earl ...
is also telling a story from the
point of view of a selfish high
school kid. Of course, hed score
his own minor meltdown to
Vertigo and frame a friends disease around what it means for his
own trajectory. At least there is no
weepy romance here.
The filmmaking from Alfonso
Gomez-Rejon (Glee, American
Horror Story) is hyper-stylized
and a bit wonky at times, with a few
odd security camera angles thrown
into the mix. But its also energetic

and mostly fun to watch, especially


the glimpses of their awful
movies.
Still, just when you think youve
possibly passed through this sad
tale without a sniffle or a true emotional connection, the film
reminds you that sometimes all you
need is The Big Ship and a pair of
soulful, welling eyes to turn you
into a puddle.
Me and Earl and the Dying
Girl, a Fox Searchlight release, is
rated PG-13 by the Motion Picture
Association of America for sexual
content, drug material, language
and some thematic elements.
Running time: 105 minutes. Two
and a half stars out of four.

Becoming Us captures a familys transgender journey


By Frazier Moore
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK This family


would make a great TV show!
Thats what Evanston, Illinois,
teen Ben Lehwald told his mother
a couple of years ago.
Clearly, Ben was on to something. Becoming Us, the show
that resulted, follows him as a 16year-old dealing with the usual

challenges of high school and


encroaching adulthood plus the
recent news that his father is
becoming a woman.
The family went on camera
between October and February
after Bens idea reached Ryan
Seacrest, who signed on as executive producer of the ABC Family
unscripted series airing its second
episode Monday at 9 p.m. EDT.
Were just regular people,

says Suzy Crawford, Bens mother.


The 58-year-old fitness instructor is divorced from Bens 49year-old father, an information
security analyst now named Carly
Lehwald but who, as Charlie,
began taking female hormones
years before sharing the plan for
transition with the family. Suzy
continues to work through feelings of betrayal and bitterness

even as she and Carly remain a


team in parenting Ben.
Bens
half-sister,
Sutton
Crawford, is now a New Yorker,
but shes back in Evanston as she
and her mother plan her upcoming
wedding, which comes laden with
protocol issues. (Should Carly
walk the bride down the aisle?)
Finally,
Bens
girlfriend,
Danielle, also has a father who is
transgender (and who, on the first

episode, accepted bra-shopping


counsel from Carly, with Danielle
and Ben tagging along).
Unconventional, maybe, but on
Becoming Us these folks reveal
themselves as authentic and relatable, which makes the series an
illuminating glimpse into the
world we all occupy, a world Time
magazine earlier this year declared
was at the transgender tipping
point.

24

Weekend June 13-14, 2015

WEEKEND JOURNAL

4-H
Continued from page 1
Though showing her steer Rocko in
front of crowds for her final time may
be bittersweet, Arvin takes great pride
in the lifetime of lessons she has
gained from her participation in the
agriculture competition.
This has taught me a ton of skills,
said Arvin.
Through the organization, she said
she has developed a sense of responsibility in caring for the animals she was
raising, appreciation of where her food
comes from, confidence from performing shows in front of crowds and a variety of other talents which will go on to
serve her throughout her life.
Arvin has grown Rocko alongside
her friend Jenette Masarie, 17, who
raised Duke, which won a competition
at the fair for steer.
Masarie, also a Redwood City native,
agreed the organization has played a
pivotal role in her path to adulthood.
It has become a family in another
way, she said.
Through 4-H, which stands for Head,
Heart, Hands and Health, Masarie said
she believes she has found her career
calling, as she will go on to study animal science in college with the intention to become a large animal vet.
Its an amazing experience, she
said.
Even though Masaries steer received
an honor this year, she said the process
of raising and caring for Duke was the

BUDGET
Continued from page 1
setting aside funds for a new library.
I have immense confidence in [Half
Moon Bays] fiscal outlook and the
2015-16 budget that we approved. Its
no accident that were on solid financial footing. As the city was teetering
on the edge of financial doom some
years ago, the City Council made some
very strategic decisions that paved the
way to our financial health today,
Vice Mayor Rick Kowalczyk wrote in
an email.
Some of the tough choices included
outsourcing services such as contracting with the county Sheriffs Office for
law enforcement and working in conjunction with the Coastside Boys and
Girls Club to run recreation programs.
Weve been able to take advantage
of opportunities and implemented
measures to get us to this point. We
really fought hard for every dollar and
maximized and created partnerships
and collaborated to get us to this
point. This certainly ushers in a new
financial era for Half Moon Bay, said

greatest achievement.
I didnt care if I won or if I came in
last, she said.
Since she began participating in 4-H
more than a decade ago, Masarie said
she would go through the annual
process of purchasing an animal, traditionally a pig but this year a steer for
the first time, and raise it through the
competition in the fair, and then auction it off, before using the money from
the sale to invest again in another animal the next year.
But even considering the financial
incentive, which at times could be in
the range of $1,000 to $2,000, Masarie
said she never participated to earn.
This should not be about the
money, she said.
Emmalee Holmes, an 18-year-old
Redwood City native, agreed.
Its about showing love and dedication to another animal, said Holmes,
who showed her sheep Jack in the fair
this year.
Mayor Marina Fraser.
Having slimmed down staff and contracted for many services, being able
to make new hires is a significant indicator for the small city.
Now, the city plans to enlist three
new full-time employees a senior
analyst in the City Managers Office, a
dedicated city engineer and counter
technician who would assist those
inquiring about city services.
Its wonderful, particularly for
Public Works because our Public Works
people have been working so hard and
they havent gotten much help,
Councilman John Muller said. Were
building our employees back up
through pretty difficult times.
While remaining mindful that the
economy could turn, the citys $14
million general fund budget is a significant improvement from the small $8
million the city had to work with a few
years ago, Fraser said.
With the improved conditions, its
important to reinvest in the city by
undertaking projects that will benefit
the community, Kowalczyk and Fraser
said.
The council opted to set aside another $2 million toward the construction

She said the path to getting animals


prepared for show can require a substantial amount of commitment, as members of the organization must spend
countless hours developing the animals performance skills, and grooming it.
Its an insane amount of work, she
said.
Masarie agreed, and said she could not
recall how many days or weeks she
spent trying to train Duke.
We put so many hours into these animals, she said.
As many of the animals being shown
at the fair are auctioned off in the coming days, Arvin said one of the most
important elements of the performance
is showing the public how deeply they
appreciate the livestock they have
raised.
What a lot of people dont understand is that we love and care for our
animals, she said.
Franklin Landaverde, a 16-year-old
from Redwood City, who is entering his
first year of 4-H membership with a
focus on teaching local elementary students the basics of gardening, said he
has gained a deeper appreciation for
agriculture since joining the organization, and seeing the hard work his fellow members have put into raising their
animals.
This has just given me a new perspective, he said.
And as Arvin prepares to move on to
greener pastures, she said she looks forward to spending the rest of the fair with
Rocko, which will likely be their final
days together.
of a new library, $2.25 million to continue its street resurfacing projects and
about $150,000 to create a new and
more user-friendly website, according
to a staff report.
Yet challenges remain as Half Moon
Bay, like many Bay Area municipalities, has nearly $32.8 million in capital improvement needs without identified funding sources, according to the
report. The city also has a five-year
capital improvement program budgeted for more than $52 million to cover
parks, streets, public buildings, trails,
sewers and more.
Furthermore, the city is slated to
lose Measure J, a half-cent sales tax
bringing in about $1.5 million annually that will expire in April 2016.
To account for the possibility of
another recession, the budget also
allots healthy reserves that would
cover three months of its operating
expenses.
The city still faces challenges,
Kowalczyk said. But fortunately,
were in a position of strength to face
them.

samantha@smdailyjournal.com
(650) 344-5200 ext. 106

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Calendar
SATURDAY, JUNE 13
Community Blood Drive sponsored by the Foster City Lions
Club. WM Walker Rec Center, Spirit
Room, 955 Diaz Lane, Foster City.
Schedule an appointment online at
www.bloodheroes.com. Click on
Donate Blood and enter sponsor
code: Foster City. Each donor
receives a free San Francisco Giants
T-shirt. Bring a photo ID and eat
before donating. For more information email Jody Johnson at jjohnson@windowsolutions.com.
Twenty-third Annual Flag Day. 8
a.m. Dudley Perkins Harley
Davidson, 333 Corey Way, South San
Francisco. Participate in a ceremony
with the American Legion and
Honor Guard and enjoy a barbecue,
a raffle and more. $25. For more
information call 599-2064.
George Feely Tournament. 9:20
a.m. to 10:35 a.m. Chanteloup Field,
San Mateo. The Feely Softball
Tournament is a class B tournament
for girls in three different age groups
from all over the Bay Area. All
food/concession and merchandise
profit go into the Feely Foundation
Scholarship Fund. Free. For more
information go to www.smysa.net.
San Bruno AARP Chapter 2895
Meeting. 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. San
Bruno Senior Center, 1555 Crystal
Springs Road, San Bruno. Pre-meeting coffee and doughnuts from 9
a.m. to 10 a.m. Serendipity Dancers
to perform. Free. For more information call 201-9137.
The Nuts and Bolts of Going Solar.
10 a.m. to Noon. San Mateo Main
Library, Oak Room, 55 E. Third Ave.,
San Mateo. Free. RSVP to
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/thenuts-and-bolts-of-going-solar-tickets-16901186905.
Huge book used book/CD/DVD
sale. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Cubberley
Community Center, 4000 Middlefield
Road, Palo Alto. Friends of the Palo
Alto Library is holding its next
monthly sale of 50,000 gently used
books and media. For more information, visit www.fopal.org or call 2138755.
San Mateo County Fair. 11 a.m. to
10 p.m. 1346 Saratoga Drive, San
Mateo. For tickets visit sanmateocountyfair.com.
Little Dog Adoption Day. 11 a.m. to
2 p.m. San Carlos Library, Courtyard,
610 Elm St., San Carlos. Sponsored by
Pets In Need of Redwood City, the
first no-kill shelter in Northern
California. For more information call
Pets in Need at 367-1405 or the
library at 591-0341.
San
Mateo
County
Pride
Celebration. 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Central Park, San Mateo. A family
friendly alternative for San Mateo
County LGBTQ residents and allies
who desire a local opportunity to
celebrate LGBTQ communities on
the Peninsula. Free. For more information email jafrica@smcgov.org.
Smart Meditation. Noon to 2 p.m.
San Carlos Library, 610 Elm St., San
Carlos. This Mensa event is open to
the public and will include free meditation instruction and practice for
adults and accompanied children.
RSVP
required
to
bezanpsy3506@hotmail.com. For
more information go to www.meetup.com and enter event name
(Smart Meditation) in dialogue box.
George Feely Tournament. 3:05
p.m. to 4:20 p.m. Chanteloup Field,
San Mateo. The Feely Softball
Tournament is a class B tournament
for girls in three different age groups
from all over the Bay Area. All
food/concession and merchandise
profit go into the Feely Foundation
Scholarship Fund. Free. For more
information go to www.smysa.net.
Vintage Car Exhibition with Live
Music at Hillsdale Shopping
Center. Noon to 5 p.m. Hillsdale
Shopping Center, corner of Hillsdale
Blvd. and West Sailer Drive. Free. For
more information about the event
go to www.hillsdale.com.
Origami Time at San Mateo Pride.
1 p.m. Central Park, San Mateo. Fun
activity for all ages at the Reach And
Teach booth. Free. For more information
email
craig@reachandteach.com.
Summer Design Workshops. 2 p.m.
San Mateo Public Library, 55 W. Third
Ave., San Mateo. For fifth- to eighthgraders. Learn about physics, engineering and programming. Register
at the childrens reference desk.
Fund A Need Tablet Drive. 2 p.m. to
5 p.m. Trapeze Restaurant, 266
Lorton Ave., Burlingame. New and
gently used tablet drive to donate to
needy seniors. For more information
go to www.fundaneed.org.
Quantum Leap Portals of
Awakening Through Art and
Dance. Matinee at 3 p.m., second
showing at 7 p.m. 149 South Blvd.,

San Mateo. This is a poetic weave of


dance, art and narrative verse that
bridges together art and science
sharing ancient wisdom with the
ideas of quantum physics. $20 and
includes wine and cheese reception.
AUM is a non-profit dedicated to
wellness through the arts. For tickets,
visit
http://artsunitymovement.com/eve
nts/ or call 569-1276.
The Columnist. 8 p.m. Dragon
Theatre, 2120 Broadway, Redwood
City. $35 for general admission and
$27 for students and seniors. For
more information or to purchase
tickets go to http://dragonproductions.net/.
SUNDAY, JUNE 14
Community Blood Drive. Our Lady
of Mercy, 5 Elmwood Drive, Daly City.
Schedule an appointment online at
www.bloodheroes.com. Click on
Donate Blood and enter sponsor
code: OLMDC. Appointments are
encouraged, but walk-ins are always
welcome. Complimentary coffee
and doughnuts for all donors courtesy of the Knights of Columbus
Council No. 15242. Each donor
receives a free San Francisco Giants
T-shirt. Bring a photo ID and eat
before donating. For more information call KOC Blood Drive
Coordinator Patrick Ligot at (310)
968-8855.
Huge book used book/CD/DVD
sale. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Cubberley
Community Center, 4000 Middlefield
Road, Palo Alto. Friends of the Palo
Alto Library is holding its next
monthly sale of 50,000 gently used
books and media. For more information, visit www.fopal.org or call 2138755.
San Mateo County Fair. 11 a.m. to
10 p.m. 1346 Saratoga Drive, San
Mateo. For tickets and more information visit sanmateocountyfair.com.
Concerts in the Park: Tom Rigney
and Flambeau. 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Twin
Pines Meadow, Belmont. Free.
The Columnist. 2 p.m. Dragon
Theatre, 2120 Broadway, Redwood
City. $35 for general admission and
$27 for students and seniors. For
more information or to purchase
tickets go to http://dragonproductions.net/.
The
Burlingame
Historical
Society's New Exhibit: The Rise
and Fall of Pacific City The
Coney Island of the West. 1 p.m. to
4 p.m. Burlingame Ave. Railroad
Station, 290 California Drive,
Burlingame. There will be a photo
presentation as well as Duck and
Cover, artifacts and photos related
to Burlingames Civil Defense
Program. Free, but donations appreciated.
Meet Pulitzer Prize Winning
Author Jane Smiley. 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.
Belmont Library, 1110 Alameda de
las Pulgas, Belmont. Recipient of the
PEN Lifetime Achievement Award
for Literature and a national treasure, Ms. Smiley will be discussing her
latest novel. Free. For more information email belmont@smcl.org.
Ninth
Annual
Bowl-A-Thon
fundraiser. 2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Homestead Bowl, 20990 Homestead
Road, Cupertino.
Quantum Leap Portals of
Awakening Through Art and
Dance. Matinee at 3 p.m. 149 South
Blvd., San Mateo. This is a poetic
weave of dance, art and narrative
verse that bridges together art and
science sharing ancient wisdom
with the ideas of quantum physics.
$20 and includes wine and cheese
reception. AUM is a non-profit dedicated to wellness through the arts.
For tickets visit http://artsunitymovement.com/events/ or call 5691276.
Bay Area Bigfoot Meeting. 3 p.m. to
5 p.m. Round Table Pizza, 61 43rd
Ave., San Mateo. We will discuss the
latest news about bigfoot/sasquatch
in a casual setting. Free. For more
information call 504-1782.
MONDAY, JUNE 15
Senior Health Talk. Noon to 1 p.m.
Belmont Library, 1110 Alameda de
las Pulgas, Belmont. Every third
Monday of the month, please join us
for an informative session on various
health topics, presented by Dignity
Health of Sequoia Hospital. A
healthy snack will be provided. Free.
For more information email belmont@smcl.org.
Henna and Craft Workshop. 2 p.m.
to 4 p.m. San Mateo Public Library,
55 W. Third Ave., San Mateo. You will
learn the history of Henna, preparation and many different crafts surrounding this unique cultural art.
The artist will apply henna on all participants. Free for ages 12-18. Parent
permission form required. For more
information call 522-7818.
For more events visit
smdailyjournal.com, click Calendar.

COMICS/GAMES

THE DAILY JOURNAL

DILBERT

Weekend June 13-14, 2015

25

CROSSWORD PUZZLE

HOLY MOLE

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE

ACROSS
1 Pen points
5 Zeus wife
9 Yodelers perch
12 Divas piece
13 Eager
14 Paulo
15 Oven glove
16 Emergency (2 wds.)
18 Regard highly
20 Urges on
21 Scoundrel
22 Above, to a bard
23 More friendly
26 Organ part
30 Give a squeeze
33 Burnoose wearer
34 Sherpas sighting
35 Fermi split it
37 Classical poet
39 Arith. term
40 Island near Borneo
41 Foul-smelling
43 Came down with
45 Small nail

GET FUZZY

48
51
53
56
57
58
59
60
61
62

Walk noisily
Quaking trees
German shepherd
Intrigue
Many oz.
Town east of Wichita
Corsica neighbor
That, to Juan
Sect
Promising

DOWN
1 Identify
2 Dublin natives
3 Please, in Vienna
4 Glossy fabric
5 Injure
6 Night before
7 Unburdened
8 Old saying
9 Between ports
10 Animal fat
11 Lobster traps
17 Queens truck
19 Charles Lamb

22
24
25
27
28
29
30
31
32
36
38
42
44
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
54
55

Circle the earth


Tomb raider Lara
Icicle site
Sushi morsel
List shortener
Performed
Uris novel The
Ms. Hagen
State VIP
Molten rock
Dahs partners
Well-dressed
Eye nerve
String quartet member
Door openers
Mr. Yarborough
Attorneys degs.
Plinys bones
Med. course
Remain
Promise to pay
Each and every

6-13-15

PREVIOUS
SUDOKU
ANSWERS

SATURDAY, JUNE 13, 2015


GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Pressures at home and
quarrelsome relatives will test your patience. To avoid
conict, make a point to get together with friends for
some fun and entertainment.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Develop a closer
relationship with people whose achievements inspire
you. You will learn valuable tips that will help you
expand your pursuits and develop new concepts.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Impatience and
restlessness will result in mishaps. Stay focused
on what you are doing, or you may endanger your
safety. An elderly relative will need your help.

KenKen is a registered trademark of Nextoy, LLC. 2015 KenKen Puzzle LLC. All rights reserved.
Dist. by Universal Uclick for UFS, Inc. www.kenken.com

FRIDAYS 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.

Act responsibly.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) The time is right to
move forward. Get rid of insecurity, and embrace
confidence. Mastering self-doubt will be an
important step in your progress. If you believe in
your ability, so will others.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Overspending will
lead to financial instability. Dont take unnecessary
risks buying things on a whim or taking out a highinterest loan. An unexpected expense will put a
hole in your savings.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Cooperation and
tact will go a long way in both your personal and
professional partnerships. Being stubborn will not
win you friends, but it will earn you a reputation

6-13-15
Want More Fun
and Games?
Jumble Page 2 La Times Crossword Puzzle Classieds
Tundra & Over the Hedge Comics Classieds
Boggle Puzzle Everyday in DateBook

for troublemaking.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) You will feel
better once you have dealt with distressing emotional
matters. Talking things over with a close friend will
give you the means to resolve your dilemma.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) You are in a
high cycle regarding love, marriage and children.
Focus on home, family and nurturing what you
have. Live life fully.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Be organized and
put order back in your life. Go through your personal
papers carefully. A haphazard attitude toward legal,
nancial or insurance documents could cost you.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Being well
informed about current affairs will help you

confidently interact with others at social or


business functions. Listen, learn and contribute to
whatever is going on around you.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) You can get all the
help you need if you are willing to ask for it. You have
many talents, but taking on too many tasks at once
will prevent you from achieving an important goal.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Dont be fooled
by false flattery. Someone will deliberately try to
confuse you. Insist on doing your own research
before you make a decision that can lead to an
unfortunate alliance.
COPYRIGHT 2015 United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

26

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Weekend June 13-14, 2015

104 Training

Ofce Assistant
Receptionist
Assisted living facility in SSF.
Days Thurs - Monday 10:30AM - 7:00PM.
Apply in person
Westborough Royale,
89 Westborough Blvd, South SF

DRIVERS
WANTED
San Mateo Daily Journal
Newspaper Routes

Early mornings, six days per week,


Monday through Saturday
Pick up papers between 3:30 a.m.
and 4:30 a.m. 2 to 4 hour routes
available from South SF to Palo Alto and the Coast.
Pay dependent on route size.
Apply in person 800 S. Claremont
Street #210 in San Mateo

TERMS & CONDITIONS


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

110 Employment

AUTO MECHANIC
WANTED
Experience needed
Busy San Mateo shop.
(650)342-6342

CAREGIVER
WANTED

Senior Living Facility


San Carlos
(650)596-3489
Ask for Violet
HOME CARE AIDES
Multiple shifts to meet your needs. Great
pay & benefits, Sign-on bonus, 1yr exp
required.
Matched Caregivers (650)839-2273,
(408)280-7039 or (888)340-2273

110 Employment

110 Employment

CAREGIVERS

CRYSTAL CLEANING
CENTER
San Mateo, CA
Customer Service
Presser

2 years experience
required.
Immediate placement
on all assignments.

Are you..Dependable, friendly,


detail oriented,
willing to learn new skills?

Call
(650)777-9000

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


employment and employment
benefits?

CAREGIVERS WANTED for residential


+ day programs for adults with developmental special needs. Full and Part time
jobs available. Call (650) 403-0403.
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
EXPERIENCED CAREGIVERS needed
for companion care, Live-in and hourly
assignments. The ability to drive a plus.
Call: (866) 995-3300.

GOT JOBS?

110 Employment

Please call for an


Appointment: 650-342-6978
DUMP TRUCK DRIVER, Class A or B.
SM, good pay, benefits. (650)343-5946
M-F, 8-5.

FT HOUSEKEEPER NEEDED
San Carlos, Mon - Fri, 11am-7pm
Cleaning, laundry, ironing,
grocery shopping
Must have 3+ yrs pro. exp.
in private homes.
$25+/hr T+CR 510-463-3600
www.tandcr.com

GREAT OPPORTUNITY
Carpet Cleaner
$13 - $15 per hour starting
20 - 40 hours per week
Call (650)773-4117
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED

HOUSE CLEANERS NEEDED


$12.25 per hour. Company Car.
Call Molly Maid at (650)837-9788.
1700 S. Amphlett, #218, San Mateo.
OASIS DAY PROGRAM
serving adults with developmental disabilities and challenging behaviors, is hiring direct care staff. Monday-Friday, day
shift. $11-$13/hour. Pick up applications
at 230 Grand Avenue, South San Francisco. Call (650) 588-3300 for more information.

The best career seekers


read the Daily Journal.
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...
Contact us for a free consultation

Call (650) 344-5200 or


Email: ads@smdailyjournal.com

Now Accepting Applications

Assistant Candy
Maker Trainees

Seasonal
Quality Assurance Inspector

Qualications for Assistant


Candy Maker Trainees
include, but are not limited to:
follow formulas, be able to
work day and night shifts,
read, speak and write English
and regularly lift up to 50 lbs.
Entry level rate of pay is
$14.00/hour.

Qualications for the Seasonal


Quality Assurance Inspector include,
but are not limited to: check the
weight, appearance and overall
quality of our product at various
steps of manufacturing; read, speak
and write English. Must pass a
written math test. Entry level rate of
pay is $13.00/hour.

Applicants must be available for day or night shift and overtime, as required.

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


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

THE DAILY JOURNAL


110 Employment

Weekend June 13-14, 2015


110 Employment

NEWSPAPER INTERNS
JOURNALISM

The Daily Journal is looking for interns to do entry level reporting, research, updates of our ongoing features and interviews. Photo interns also welcome.
We expect a commitment of four to
eight hours a week for at least four
months. The internship is unpaid, but
intelligent, aggressive and talented interns have progressed in time into
paid correspondents and full-time reporters.
College students or recent graduates
are encouraged to apply. Newspaper
experience is preferred but not necessarily required.
Please send a cover letter describing
your interest in newspapers, a resume
and three recent clips. Before you apply, you should familiarize yourself
with our publication. Our Web site:
www.smdailyjournal.com.
Send your information via e-mail to
news@smdailyjournal.com or by regular mail to 800 S. Claremont St #210,
San Mateo CA 94402.

127 Elderly Care


FAMILY RESOURCE
GUIDE

The San Mateo Daily Journals


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

Every Tuesday & Weekend


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

203 Public Notices


CASE# CIV 533595
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
Selester J. Love
TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS:
Petitioner: Selester J. Love filed a petition with this court for a decree changing
name as follows:
Present name: Selester Jessica Love
Proposed Name: Seleste Jessica Love
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 June 23,
2015 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: 05/11/2015
/s/ Robert D. Foiles /
Judge of the Superior Court
Dated: 05/07/2015
(Published 06/06/15, 06/13/15,
06/20/15, 06/27/15)

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Tuesday, June 23,


2015 at 7:00 p.m. in the Millbrae City Council Chamber,
621 Magnolia Ave., Millbrae,
CA, the Millbrae City Council
will conduct a public hearing
on the following matter:
603
Juanita
Avenue
(Young): MODIFICATION
of an approved DESIGN
REVIEW permit; specifically,
General Condition #4, to allow second floor exterior
stairs on a single-family residence. (Public Hearing) City
Contact: Tonya Ward (650)
259-2341
At the time of the hearing, all
interested persons are invited to appear and be heard.
For further information or to
review the application and
exhibits, please contact the
Millbrae Community Development Department, 621
Magnolia Avenue, Millbrae
at (650) 259-2341; or contact the project planner as
indicated above.
6/13/15
CNS-2762302#
SAN MATEO DAILY JOURNAL

Tundra

Tundra

Tundra

Over the Hedge

Over the Hedge

Over the Hedge

203 Public Notices


NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on Monday, June
23, 2015 at 7:00 p.m. (or as
soon thereafter as the matter is heard) in the Millbrae
City Council Chamber, 621
Magnolia Ave., Millbrae, CA,
the Millbrae City Council will
conduct a public hearing to
consider a recommendation
of the Planning Commission
on the following matter that
has a citywide impact:
Text Amendments to Chapter 10.05 (the Zoning Ordinance) of the Millbrae Municipal Code regarding state
density bonus law and consideration of appropriate environmental review of the
aforementioned
amendments in accordance with
the California Environmental
Quality Act.
At the time of the hearing, all
interested persons are invited to appear and be heard.
For further information or to
review the materials regarding these matters, please
contact the Millbrae Community Development Department, 621 Magnolia Avenue,
Millbrae at (650) 259-2341
or City Contact: Christine di
Iorio, Community Development Director (650) 2592416.
6/13/15
CNS-2762291#
SAN MATEO DAILY JOURNAL

868 Cowan Road - Burlingame, CA

NOW HIRING!
DRIVERS - CLASS A and B
DRIVER HELPER
COOK - HALAL & ARABIC FOODS and WESTERN
FOOD PREPARER
ASSEMBLY - BEVERAGE & EQUIPMENT
UTILITY WORKER/PORTER

RETENTION BONUS AVAILABLE!


Contact Info: Phone: 650-259-3100 Fax: 650-692-2318
Email: stephane.ako@lsgskychefs.com

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #265404
The following person is doing business
as: Eco-Friendly Car Wash & Detailing,
404 19th Ave, SAN MATEO, CA 94403.
Registered Owner: Shahrokh Bandi
Amirabad, 3073 N. Main St Apt #308,
WALNUT CREEK, CA 94597. The business is conducted by an Individual. The
registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on
/s/ Shahrokh Bandi Amirabad/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 05/19/2015. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
05/23/15, 05/30/15, 06/06/15, 06/13/15)

27

203 Public Notices

203 Public Notices

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #265102
The following person is doing business
as: Passion Decor Furniture, 132 Brentwood Dr, SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO, CA
94080. Registered Owner: Lok Yam Music Chow, CA. The business is conducted by a Corporation. The registrants
commenced to transact business under
the FBN on
/s/ Lok Yam Music Chow/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 04/28/2015. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
05/23/15, 05/30/15, 06/06/15, 06/13/15)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #265493
The following person is doing business
as: 1) Ikes Love and Sandwiches, 128
Serramonte Center, DALY CITY, CA
94015. 2) Ikess Lair, Same address.
Registered Owner: ISP2 Serramonte
Inc., CA. The business is conducted by a
Corporation. The registrants commenced
to transact business under the FBN on
/s/Sangam Patel/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 05/28/2015. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
05/30/15, 06/06/15, 06/13/15, 06/20/15)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #265448
The following person is doing business
as: Paramount Properties, 1699 El Camino Real, Ste 101, MILLBRAE, CA 94030.
Registered Owner: LDH Realty, Inc., CA.
The business is conducted by a Corporation. The registrants commenced to
transact business under the FBN on
/s/ Lawrence Ho/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 05/21/2015. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
05/23/15, 05/30/15, 06/06/15, 06/13/15)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #265509
The following person is doing business
as: Kingdom County Services, PO Box
3382, Redwood City, CA 96064. Registered Owner: Michael Brendon McElligot,
same address. The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrants commenced to transact business under the
FBN on 06/01/2015
/s/Michael McElligot/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 05/29/2015. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
05/30/15, 06/06/15, 06/13/15, 06/20/15)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #265445
The following person is doing business
as: San Francisco Videos, 515 California
Drive, BURLINGAME, CA 94010. Registered Owner: Patrick Sedillo, same address. The business is conducted by an
Individual. The registrants commenced to
transact business under the FBN on
/s/ Patrick Sedillo /
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 05/21/2015. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
05/23/15, 05/30/15, 06/06/15, 06/13/15)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #265554
The following person is doing business
as: Artis School of Music, 2033 Ralston
Ave, BELMONT, CA 94002. Registered
Owner: Jui Wen Ho, Po Box 7021, San
Mateo, CA 94403. The business is conducted by an individual. The registrant
commenced to transact business under
the FBN on
/s/Jui Wen Ho/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 06/02/2015. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
06/06/15, 06/13/15, 06/20/15, 06/27/15)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #265038
The following person is doing business
as: V&S HR Consultant Group, 1857 Evergreen St, SAN MATEO, CA 94401.
Registered Owner: Vika Sinipata, same
address. The business is conducted by
an Individual. The registrants commenced to transact business under the
FBN on
/s/ Vika Sinipata /
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 04/22/2015. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
05/23/15, 05/30/15, 06/06/15, 06/13/15)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #265446
The following person is doing business
as: forLincoln, 2201 Village Ct, #6, BELMONT, CA 94002. Registered Owner: 1)
Jacquie Torres, same address. 2) Daniel
Torres, same address. The business is
conducted by a General Partnership. The
registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on May 21, 2015
/s/ Jacquie Torres/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 05/21/2015. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
05/23/15, 05/30/15, 06/06/15, 06/13/15)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #265494
The following person is doing business
as: Verus Press, 325 Sharon Park Dr,
#208, MENLO PARK, CA 94025. Registered Owner: James Pooley, 460 Golden
Oak Dr, Portola Valley, CA 94028. The
business is conducted by an Individual.
The registrants commenced to transact
business under the FBN on January 2,
2015
/s/James Pooley/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 05/28/2015. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
05/30/15, 06/06/15, 06/13/15, 06/20/15)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #265522
The following person is doing business
as: Legion Air, 883 Santa Cruz Ave,
Suite 200, MENLO PARK, CA 94025.
Registered Owner: Alta Collis LLC. The
business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company. The registrant commenced to transact business under the
FBN on
/s/Alex Bucur/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 06/01/2015. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
06/06/15, 06/13/15, 06/20/15, 06/27/15)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #265449
The following person is doing business
as: Concrete Plus, 1900 Newbridge Ave,
SAN MATEO, CA 94401. Registered
Owner: Tevita Lata, same address. The
business is conducted by an individual.
The registrant commenced to transact
business under the FBN on
/s/Tevita Lata/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 05/21/2015. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
06/06/15, 06/13/15, 06/20/15, 06/27/15)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #265581
The following person is doing business
as: Compass Capital Management
Group LLC, 303 Twin Dolphin Drive, 6th
Floor, REDWOOD CITY, CA 94065.
Registered Owner: Compass Capital
Management Group LLC, CA. The business is conducted by a Limited Liability
Company. The registrants commenced
to transact business under the FBN on
/s/Nathan Dingler/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 06/04/2015. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
06/13/15, 06/20/15, 06/27/15, 07/04/15)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #265666
The following person is doing business
as: Small Haul SF, 2047 Monroe Ave,
BELMONT, CA 94002. Registered Owner: Julian Bradford, same address. The
business is conducted by an individual.
The registrants commenced to transact
business under the FBN on
/s/Julian Bradford/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 06/12/2015. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
06/13/15, 06/20/15, 06/27/15, 07/04/15)

28

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Weekend June 13-14, 2015


203 Public Notices

210 Lost & Found

296 Appliances

298 Collectibles

304 Furniture

306 Housewares

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #265497
The following person is doing business
as: Oral Solutions Group, 663B Old
County Rd., SAN CARLOS, CA 94070.
Registered Owner: 1) Joseph Hirsch,
2554 27th Ave, San Francisco, CA
94116. 2) Karrie Duke Sikes, 3507 Daybreak Ct., Santa Rosa, CA 95404. The
business is conducted by a General Partnership. The registrants commenced to
transact business under the FBN on
/s/Joseph Hirsch, Karrie Duke-Sikes/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 05/28/2015. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
06/13/15, 06/20/15, 06/27/15, 07/04/15)

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.

FRIDGE, MINI, unopened, plugs, cord,


can use for warmer also $40, (650) 5789208

2 VINTAGE Light Bulbs circa 1905. Edison Mazda Lamps. Both still working $50 (650)-762-6048

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

NEW PORTABLE electric fan wind machine, round, adjustable $15


Cell phone: (650)580-6324

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #265667
The following person is doing business
as: Professional Planner, 110 Winchester St., FOSTER CITY, CA 94404. Registered Owner: Michael Cardona, same
address. The business is conducted by a
individual. The registrant commenced to
transact business under the FBN on N/A
/s/Michael Cardona/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 06/12/2015. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
06/13/15, 06/20/15, 06/27/15, 07/04/15)

LOST GOLD Cross at Carlmont Shopping Center, by Lunardis market


(Reward) (415)559-7291
LOST PRESCRIPTION glasses (2
pairs). REWARD! 1 pair dark tinted bifocals, green flames in black case with red
zero & red arrow. 2nd pair clear lenses
bifocals. Green frames. Lost at Lucky
Chances Casino in Colma or Chilis in
San Bruno. (650)245-9061
LOST: SMALL diamond cross, silver
necklace with VERY sentimental
meaning. Lost in San Mateo 2/6/12
(650)578-0323.

Books
16 BOOKS on History of WWII Excellent
condition. $95 all obo, (650)345-5502
BOOK
"LIFETIME"
(408)249-3858

WW1

$12.,

210 Lost & Found

JAMES PATTERSON H.B. Books. 4 @


$3 each.650-341-1861

FOUND-LARGE SIZED Diamond Ring in


San Carlos Bank Parking Lot on 5/21.
(650)888-2662.

JOHN GRISHAM H.B. books 3 @ $3


each. Call 650-341-1861

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


(415)378-3634
FOUND: RING Silver color ring found
on 1/7/2014 in Burlingame. Parking Lot
M (next to Dethrone). Brand inscribed.
Gary @ (650)347-2301
LOST - Apple Ipad, Sunday 5.3 on Caltrain #426, between Burlingame and
Redwood City, south bound. REWARD.
(415)830-0012
LOST - MY COLLAPSIBLE music stand,
clip lights, and music in black bags were
taken from my car in Foster City and may
have been thrown out by disappointed
thieves. Please call (650)704-3595
LOST - Womans diamond ring. Lost
12/18. Broadway, Redwood City.
REWARD! (650)339-2410

JACK LALANE juicer $25 or best offer.


650-593-0893.
MAYTAG STOVE, 4 burner, gas, 30
wide, $300. (650)344-9783
PONDEROSA WOOD STOVE, like
new, used one load for only 14 hours.
$1,200. Call (650)333-4400

WHIRLPOOL REAR tub assembly for a


front
loading
washing
machine,
$200/obo. (650)591-2227

RENO SILVER LEGACY Casino four


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

ENTERTAINMENT
CENTER
with
shelves for books, pure oak. Purchased
for $750. Sell for $99. (650)348-5169

WHIRLPOOL shock absorber for front


loading washing machine, $30/obo.
(650)591-2227

SAN MATEO County Phone Book,


1952, good shape, $30, 650-591-9769
San Carlos

ESPRESSO TABLE 30 square, 40 tall,


$95 (650)375-8021

297 Bicycles

SCHILLER HIPPIE poster, linen, Sparta


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

2 KIDS Bikes for $60. 310-889-4850.


Text Only. Will send pictures upon request.
AB CIRCLE machine. $55. 310-8894850. Text Only. Will send pictures upon
request.
BICYCLE DIAMONDBACK Cobra, 6speed, 20-inch, excellent condition, barely ridden. $80 obo (650)345-1347

GIRLS 24" 10-speed purple-blue bike,


manual, carrier, bell, like new. used <15
mi. $80. 650-328-6709.

TAMI HOAG H.B. books. 6 @ $3 each.


650-341-1861

LANDRIDER
AUTO-SHIFT.
Never
Used. Paid $320. Asking $75.(650)4588280

CHEFMATE TOASTER oven, brand


new, bakes, broils, toasts, adjustable
temperature. $25 OBO. (650)580-4763
CHICKEN ROASTERS (4) vertical, One
pulsing chopper, both unopened, in original packaging, $27.(650) 578 9208

LANDRIDER AUTOSHIFT, excellent


condition, $40, 650-591-9769 San Carlos

298 Collectibles
1920'S AQUA Glass Beaded Flapper
Purse (drawstring bag) & Faux Pearl
Flapper Collar. $50. 650-762-6048
1940 VINTAGE telephone bench maple
antiques collectibles $75 (650)755-9833
COLORIZED TERRITORIAL Quarters
uncirculated
with
Holder
$15/all,
(408)249-3858

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle


Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis
ACROSS
1 Card __
6 The Hobbit
being
9 Tied accessory
14 Cameron Indoor
Stadium college
hoopster
16 It has a backup
17 Feigns
innocence
18 Like Zitronen
19 Inexperienced
20 Tons
21 First
22 Acidity nos.
24 Virtue of the
2010 Olympic
champion ice
dancing team
Virtue and Moir
26 Gershon of Killer
Joe
27 It involves pockets
29 Some crosses
31 Alley ending?
32 Freelancers
encls.
34 Ross Sea sight
35 Captains dir.
36 Does some
political
maneuvering
40 Tokyo-born artist
41 Lit __
42 Kennel pickup
area
43 Coin first minted
in 13th-century
France
44 Challenging pitch
46 Baryshnikov, at
birth
48 What c may
mean in South
Africa
50 One can say
everything best
over __: George
Eliot
52 Corp. treasurer,
perhaps
53 Playground
comeback
55 __ Dei
57 Bodybuilder
Ferrigno
59 Ballerina Shearer
60 Eccentrics
62 Big name in
auditing
63 Police-search
discovery

30 Calyx part
47 Amble (along)
33 Aleppos land
49 Statue subject
36 Marlboro Man
51 __ and His
contemporary
Empire: 1972
37 Again
Pulitzer-winning
biography
38 Frat founded in
DOWN
1855 at Ohios
54 Mares
1 It takes you to the
Miami University
mouthful
top
39 Gp. that includes 56 Terrier type
2 Sadie Hawkins
58 Like many eBay
Nigeria
creator
45 Country with the
items
3 Reaction to
largest surface
61 One hanging out
excessive
in a coll. office?
area of water
attention to detail
4 __ Troyens:
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:
Berlioz opera
5 Krabappel of
The Simpsons
6 More wicked
7 Unplugs in a big
way
8 Traveled alone,
perhaps
9 Lhasa __
10 Urban Dictionary
content
11 Post-washing
warning
12 Game for two
13 Roofing material
15 Bridge column
word
23 Gouge
25 Festoon
28 Clinging type
06/13/15
xwordeditor@aol.com
64 Colorful Danish
export
65 B.C. neighbor
66 10th-century
English king

TRANSFORMERS SDCC Shockwave


Lab Beast Hunters, $75 OBO Dan 650303-3568 lv msg

299 Computers
DELL
LAPTOP
Computer
Bag
Fabric/Nylon great condition $20 (650)
692-3260

300 Toys
3-STORY BARBIE Dollhouse with spiral
staircase and elevator. $60. (650)5588142
5 RARE purple card Star Wars figures
mint unopened. $75. Steve, 650-5186614.
COMPLETE 1999 UD1&2 set of 525
baseball cards - mint. $50. Steve, 650518-6614.
STAR WARS Battle Droid figures mint
unopened. 4 for $40. Steve, 650-5186614.
STAR WARS SDCC Stormtrooper
Commander $29 OBO Dan,
650-303-3568 lv msg

302 Antiques
1912 COFFEE Percolator Urn. perfect
condition includes electric cord $85.
(415)565-6719

EXECUTIVE DESK Chair, upholstered,


adjustable height, excellent condition,
$150 (650)212-7151
FADED GOLD antique framed mirror,
25in x 33in $15 Cell number:
(650)580-6324
GRACO 40" x28" x 28" kid pack 'n play
exc $40 (650) 756-9516 Daly City

HIGH END childrens bedroom set,


white, solid, well built, in great/near
perfect condition. Comes with mattress (twin size) in great condition. Includes bed frame, two dressers, night
stands, book case, desk with additional 3 drawers for storage. Perfect for
one child. Sheets available if wanted.
$550. (415)730-1453.

SOLID TEAK floor model 16 wine rack


with turntable $60. (650)592-7483
WROUGHT IRON wine rack, 24 bottle,
black, pristine $29 650-595-3933

307 Jewelry & Clothing


NEW IN box, quarts wristwatch stainless
case/strap $19 650-595-3933

NEW STORE

COSTUME JEWELRY $2

Friditas

132 Hazelwood Dr, SSF


(415)828-2997
www.friditas.com
VAN GOGH Vase of White Roses
wood and glass frame. 24 x 30. $70.
(650)298-8546. p.m. only please

308 Tools
10 POUND Sledge
(650)368-0748

Hammer

$2

12 FOOT Heavy Duty Jumper Cables


$25 (650)368-0748
14 FT Extension Ladder. Extends to 26
FT. $125. Good Condition. (650)3687537

HOME MADE Banquet/Picnic Table 3' X


8' $10. (650)368-0748

4 WHEEL movers dolly cost $40 asking


$25 obo 650 591 6842

INTAGE ART-DECO style wood chair,


carved back & legs, tapestry seat, $50.
650-861-0088.

AIR COMPRESSOR - All trade. 125psi.


25 gallon. $99. (650)591-8062

ITALIAN TABLE 34 X 34 X 29Hm Beautiful Oak inlaid $90 OBO In RC (650)3630360


LAWN CHAIRS (4) White, plastic, $8.
each, (415)346-6038
LOUNGE CHAIRS - 2 new, with cover &
plastic carring case & headrest, $35.
each, (650)592-7483

BOSTITCH 16 gage Finish nailer Model


SB 664FN $99 (650)359-9269
CRACO 395 SP-PRO, electronic paint
sprayer. Commercial grade. Used only
once. $600/obo. (650)784-3427
CRAFTMAN RADIAL SAW, with cabinet
stand, $200 Cash Only, (650)851-1045
CRAFTSMAN 3/4 horse power 3,450
RPM $60 (650)347-5373
CRAFTSMAN 3/4 horse power 3,450
RPM $60 (650)347-5373

ANTIQUE ITALIAN lamp 18 high, $70


(650)387-4002

MIRROR, NOT framed41" x 34" $ 15.


(650)366-8168

CRAFTSMAN 9" Radial Arm Saw with 6"


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

BEAUTIFUL AND UNIQUE Victorian


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

MIRROR, SOLID OAK. 30" x 19 1/2",


curved edges; beautiful. $85.00 OBO.
Linda 650 366-2135.

CRAFTSMAN BELT & disc sander $99.


(650)573-5269

MAHOGANY ANTIQUE Secretary desk,


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

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


(650)726-6429

OLD VINTAGE Wooden Sea Captains


Tool Chest 35 x 16 x 16, $65
(650)591-3313
VINTAGE ATWATER Kent Radio. Circa
1929 $100. (650)245-7517

303 Electronics
27 INCH Sony TV (not flat screen) Excellent condition $75.00. 650-347-6875.

OAK SIX SHELF Book Case 6FT 4FT


$55 (650)458-8280
OAK WINE CABINET, beautiful, glass
front, 18 x 25 x 48 5 shelves, grooved
for bottles. 25-bottle capacity. $299.
(360)624-1898
ONKYO AV Receiver HT-R570 .Digital
Surround, HDMI, Dolby, Sirius Ready,
Cinema Filter.$95/ Offer 650-591-2393

CRAFTSMAN HEAVY duty 10 inch saw


1 hp, blades/accessories, $90 (650)3455224 before 8:00 p.m.
CRAFTSMAN JIGSAW 3.9 amp. with
variable speeds $65 (650)359-9269
CRAFTSMAN RADIAL Arm Saw Stand.
In box. $30. (650)245-7517
HAND EDGER $3. (650)368-0748
HEAVY DUTY,
(650)368-0748

Mattock/Pick

$10.

HEDGE TRIMMER, battery operated


with charger. $90. (650)344-9783

OUTDOOR WOOD SCREEN - new $80


obo Retail $130 (650)873-8167

36 TELEVISION with stand. Three


glass shelves; wood frame. $50 (650)
571-8103.

OXYGEN AND acetylene welding tanks,


small size, $95.00. 650-341-0282.

OVAL LIVING room cocktail table. Wood


with glass 48x28x18. Retail $250.
$75 OBO (650)343-4461

4 CAR speaker Pioneer 5/1/4" unused in


box 130wtts.$30.00 all. (650)992-4544

PAPASAN CHAIRS (2) -with cushions


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

POWER INVERTER - STATPOWER


PROWATT 2500. modified, Sine wave
phase corrected. $245.
650-591-8062

46 MITSUBISHI Projector TV, great


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

PORTABLE JEWELRY display case


wood, see through lid $45. 25 x 20 x 4 inches. (650)592-2648.

BIC TURNTABLE Model 940.


Good Shape $40. (650)245-7517

Very

BLUE NINTENDO DS Lite. Hardly used.


$70 OBO. (760) 996-0767
COMPLETE COLOR photo developer
Besler Enlarger, Color Head, trays, photo
tools $50/ 650-921-1996

SINGLE BED with 3 drawer wood


frame,exc condition $99. 650-756-9516
Daly City.

VINTAGE CRAFTSMAN Jig Saw. Circa


1947. $60. (650)245-7517

FREE 36" COLOR TV (not a flat


screen). Great condition. Ph. 650 6302329.

STEREO CABINET with 3 black shelves


42" x 21" x 17" exc cond $30. (650)7569516

LEFT-HAND ERGONOMIC keyboard


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

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


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

PHILIPS 20-INCH color tube TV with remote. Great picture. $20. Pacifica (650)
355-0266

TABLE, WHITE, sturdy wood, tile top,


35" square. $35. (650)861-0088

RECORD PLAYER - BIC Model #940.


Excellent Condition. $30. Call
(650) 368-7537.
SONY PROJECTION TV 48" with remote good condition $99 (650)345-1111
SUBWOOFER 12" wide 34" good condition. $40. 650-504-6057

SKILL SAW 7/1/4" CRAFTMAN profesional unused $ 45. (650)992-4544


TOYOTA, SMALL hidraulic Jack like
new $20.00 (650)992-4544

SOLID WOOD BOOKCASE 33 x 78


with flip bar ask $75 obo (650)743-4274

PRINTER DELL946, perfect, new black


ink inst, new color ink never installed,
$75. 650-591-0063

SHOPSMITH MARK V 50th Anniversary


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

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

ELECTRONIC TYPEWRITER good


condition $50., (650)878-9542

PIONNER PAIRS car speakers ,in box


never used 5/1/4" 130 wtts. $15.
(650)992-4544

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


TORCHIERE $35. (650) 631-6505

WILLIAMS #1191 CHROME 2 1/16"


Combination "SuperRrench". Mint. $89.
650-218-7059.
WILLIAMS #40251, 4 PC. Tool Set
(Hose Remover, Cotter Puller, Awl, Scraper). Mint. $29. 650-218-7059.

309 Office Equipment


BROTHER P-TOUCH Labeler LCD display organize files, unused (2) for$ 20.00
STAND WITH shelves, 29" high. Can be
used for TV, computer, printer. $10. Pacifica (650)355-0266

310 Misc. For Sale

TV STAND in great condition. 3'x 20"x


18", light grey. $20. (650)366-8168

10 VIDEOTAPES (3 unused) - $3
each/$20 all. Call 574-3229 after 10 am.

VINTAGE LARGE Marble Coffee Table,


round. $75.(650)458-8280

BASE BOARD 110v heaters (2). 6'


white, 1500 watts. New. $25 each.
(650)342-7933

WALNUT CHEST, small (4 drawer with


upper bookcase $50. (650)726-6429
WHITE WICKER Shelf unit, adjustable.
Excellent condition. 5 ft by 2 ft. $50.
(650)315-6184
WOOD - wall Unit - 30" long x 6' tall x
17.5" deep. $90. (650)631-9311
WOOD BOOKCASE unit - good condition $65.00 (650)504-6058

GAME "BEAT THE EXPERTS" never


used $8., (408)249-3858
HARLEY DAVIDSON black phone, perfect condition, $65., (650) 867-2720
KENNESAW ORIGINAL salute cannon
$30. (650)726-1037
LITTLE PLAYMATE by IGLOO 10 "x
10", cooler includes icepak. $20
(650)574-3229

304 Furniture

WOOD FURNITURE- one end table and


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

BATHTUB SEAT, electric. Bathmaster


2000. Enables in and out of bath safely.$99 650-375-1414

WOOD ROCKING chair with foam and


foot rest; swivels; very comfortable and
relaxing. $45 (650)580-6324

PATTERN- MAKING KIT with 5 curved


plastic rulers. $60. Call 574-3229 after
10 am.

306 Housewares

PROCRASTINATION CURE - 6 audiocassette course by Nightingale- Conant.


$30. Call 574-3229 after 10 am

CABINET, ENTERTAINMENT, Wood.


49W x 40H x 21D.Good Condition.
$75/Offer. (650)591-2393
CHAIRS 2 Blue Good Condition $50
OBO (650)345-5644
CHAIRS, WITH Chrome Frame, Brown
Vinyl seats $15.00 each. (650)726-5549

06/13/15

EXECUTIVE DESK 60, cherry wood,


excellent condition. $275 (650)212-7151

SHEER DRAPES (White) for two glass


sliding doors great condition $50 (650)
692-3260

LOVE SEAT, Upholstered pale yellow


floral $99. (650)574-4021

PIONEER HOUSE Speakers, pair. 15


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

By Kevin Christian and Jeff Chen


2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

DRESSER, OLD four drawer, painted


wod cottage pine chest of drawers. 40 x
35.5 x 17.5 . $65. (207)329-2853.
DRUM TABLE - brown, perfect condition, nice design, with storage, $45.,
(650)345-1111

NASCAR BOOKS - 1998 - 2007 Annuals, 50th anniversary, and more. $75.
(650)345-9595

296 Appliances

NUTCRACKERS 1 large 2 small $10 for


all 3 (650) 692-3260

DINING TABLE - Round 41. Leaf & 3


chairs. $65. (650) 222-4109.

OLD BLACK Mountain 5 Gallon Glass


Water Jar $39 (650) 692-3260

BRIDGESTONE MOUNTAIN Bike. $95.


27" tires. 310-889-4850. Text Only. Will
send pictures upon request.

295 Art

MICKEY MINI Mouse Vintage 1997 Lenox Christmas plate Gold Trim, Still in
Box $65. (650)438-7345

DINETTE TABLE with Chrome Legs: 36"


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

RANGE HOOD - 36 Stainless Steal.


Good Condition. $55. (650) 222-4109.

JONATHAN KELLERMAN - Hardback


books, (5) $3. each, (650)341-1861

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

ARMY SHIRT, long sleeves, with pockets. XL $15 each (408)249-3858

CHANDELIER 3 Tier,
$95 (650)375-8021

made in Spain

BOXED RED & gold lg serving bowl


18inches - $65 (650) 741-9060 SB

OVAL MIRROR $10 (650)766-4858

COFFEE MAKER, Makes 4 cups $12,


(650)368-3037

SAMSONITE 26" tan hard-sided suit


case, wheels, manual, once used/like
new. $75. 650-328-6709.

FLATWARE - Stanley Roberts stainless


flatware service for 8, plus assorted
pieces. $65 obo (650)591-6842

STAR TREK VCR tape Colombia House,


Complete set 79 episodes $50
(650)355-2167

THE DAILY JOURNAL


310 Misc. For Sale
TASCO LUMINOVA Telescope.with tripod stand, And extra Lenses. Good condition.$90. call 650-591-2393
TELESCOPE. CSTAR 600 power refractor. Tripod included. Excellent condition.
$50. Call 650-871-1778.
TRIPOD : Oak and brass construction.
Used in 1930"s Hollywood In RC $90
OBO (650)363-0360
ULTRASONIC JEWELRY Cleaning Machine Cleans jewelry, eyeglasses, dentures, keys. Concentrate included. $30
OBO. (650)580-4763
VASE WITH flowers 2 piece good for the
Holidays, $25., (650) 867-2720
VINTAGE WHITE Punch Bowl/Serving
Bowl Set with 10 cups plus one extra
$30. (650)873-8167

Weekend June 13-14, 2015


315 Wanted to Buy

318 Sports Equipment


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

WE BUY

Gold, Silver, Platinum


Always True & Honest values

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


info (650)851-0878

Millbrae Jewelers
Est. 1957

WOMEN'S LADY Cougar gold iron set


set - $25. (650)348-6955

400 Broadway - Millbrae

321 Hunting/Fishing

650-697-2685

316 Clothes
VELVET DRAPE, 100% cotton, new
beautiful burgundy 82"X52" W/6"hems:
$45 (415)585-3622

HUNTING
CLUB
Membership
$2,600.Camanche Hills Hunting Preserve, Ione CA. Pheasants, Ducks, Chukar and sporting clay range. Excludes
annual dues and bird card. Call 209-3041975.

335 Rugs

VINTAGE 1970S Grecian made dress,


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

AREA RUG 2X3 $15. (650) 631-6505

WICKER PICNIC basket, mint condition,


handles, light weight, pale tan color.
$10. (650)578-9208

XXL HARLEY Davidson Racing Team


Shirt. $90. 310-889-4850. Text Only. Will
send pictures upon request.

CARPET RUNNER, new, 30 inches,


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

WICKER PICNIC basket, mint condition,


handles, light weight, pale tan color.
$10. (650)578-9208

317 Building Materials

335 Garden Equipment

20 STEEL construction building spikes


3/4" x 24" $40.00 for all. 650-347-6875

LAWNMOWER, GAS powered with rear


bag. Almost new. $100 (650)766-4858

WROUGHT IRON Plant/Curio stand, 5


platforms, 5 high x 1.5 wide. Beautiful
designer style, good condition. $25.
(650)588-1946. San Bruno

311 Musical Instruments


BALDWIN GRAND PIANO, 6 foot, excellent condition, $8,500/obo. Call
(510)784-2598
GULBRANSEN BABY GRAND PIANO Appraised @$5450., want $3500 obo,
(650)343-4461

32 PAVING/EDGING bricks, 12 x 5x1


Brown, smooth surface, good clean condition. $32. (650)588-1946 San Bruno
BATHROOM VANITY, antique, with top
and sink, $65. (650)348-6955
CULTURED MARBLE 2 tone BR vanity
counter top. New toe skin/ scribe. 29 x
19 $300 (408)744-1041
FREE, 3 interior solid core paneled doors
with hardware. Reply
tmckay1@sbcglobal.net

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

MEDICINE CABINET - 18 X 24, almost


new, mirror, $20., (650)515-2605

HAMMOND B-3 Organ and 122 Leslie


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

SCREEN DOOR, (650)678-5133

KIMBALL PIANO with bench. Artists


console. Walnut finish. Good condition.
$600 obo (650)712-9731
WURLITZER PIANO, console, 40 high,
light brown, good condition. $490.
(650)593-7001
YAMAHA PIANO, Upright, Model M-305,
$750. Call (650)572-2337

312 Pets & Animals


ADOPTION IS THE ONLY OPTION

PETS IN NEED
We offer adoptions 7 days a week
noon - 6 PM
871 5th Ave. Redwood City

650.367.1405

www.petsineed.org
Proudly saving lives for 50 years.
BAMBOO BIRD Cage - very intricate design - 21"x15"x16". $50 (650)341-6402
PARROT CAGE, Steel, Large - approx
4 ft by 4 ft, Excellent condition $300 best
offer. (650)245-4084
PET FURNITURE covers. 1 standard
couch 2 lounge chairs. Like new $70
OBO (650)343-4461

Asphalt/Paving

WHITE DOUBLE pane window for $49


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

AUDLT DIAPERS, disposable, 10 bags,


20 diapers per bag, $10 each. (650)3420935
BATH CHAIR LIFT. Peterman battery
operated bath chair lift. Stainless steel
frame. Accepts up to 350lbs. Easily inserted I/O tub.$250 OBO.
(650) 739-6489.

BATH TRANSFER bench, back rest and


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

318 Sports Equipment


G.I. ammo can, medium, good cond.
$10.00. Call (650) 591-4553, days only.
GOLF SET for $95. 310-889-4850. Text
Only. Will send pictures upon request.
HJC MOTORCYCLE helmet, black, DOT
certified, size L/XL, $29, 650-595-3933
IN-GROUND BASKETBALL hoop, fiberglass backboard, adjustable height, $80
obo 650-364-1270
MENS BIKE 24. 10-speed Schwinn
CrossFit. Blue. Good Condition. $50.
(650) 871-1778.
NEW AB Lounger $39 (650) 692-3260
$99

TREADMILL BY PRO-FORM. (Hardly


Used). 10% incline, 2.5 HP motor, 300lb
weight capacity. $329 (650)598-9804
TWO SETS of 10lb barbell weights @
$10 each set. (650)593-0893

ANNUAL
FLEA MARKET
AT SAF KEEP
SELF
STORAGE
SUNDAY, JUNE 14TH
9:00AM-2:00PM
Customers selling itemsright
out of their units. Great stuff,
great bargains! Gates open
to the public at 9:00AM until
2:00PM. Located at 2480
Middlefield Rd, Redwood
City. RIGHT NEXT TO
COSTCO

VENTA ANUAL
EN SAF KEEP
STORAGE
DOMINGO, 14 DEJUNIO 9:00AM-2:00PM
Muchos de nuestros clients
venderan cosas fuera de su
espacio a buen precio. Puertas habren al publico de
9:00AM-2:00PM. Ubicados
en 2480 Middlefield Rd,
Redwood City.
AL LADO DE COSTCO.

HOMEDICS SHIATSU Massaging Cushion, still in box. $25. Pacifica (650) 3550266
PATIENT LIFT - People Lift $400.00
(650)364-8960

BB GUN. $39 (650)678-5133

POWER PLUS Exercise Machine


(650)368-3037

345 Medical Equipment

Garage Sales

WHEEL CHAIR $60. Plastic Restroom


Shower Chair $50. (650)364-8960

Garage Sales

GARAGE SALES
ESTATE SALES
Make money, make room!

List your upcoming garage


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

COMMUNITY

YARD
SALE

Many items for


sale ranging from
A-Z
SAT 6/13
7AM-4PM

Located near 2101


Admiralty Way. On
Concrete pad between
Hillsdale Blvd and
Comet Dr.

USMC TACTICAL folding knife, stainless


steel, boxed $25 650-595-3933

Cabinetry

Cleaning

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

Reach over 76,500


potential home buyers &
renters a day,
from South San Francisco
to Palo Alto.
in your local newspaper.
Call (650)344-5200

440 Apartments
BELMONT-LARGE RENOVATED 1BD
& 2BDs quiet building in prime area. No
smoking, no pets, no housing assistance
phone (650) 591-4046.

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

620 Automobiles
04 AUDI A4 Ultra Sport package, black
on black, 107K miles, $6,900. Call
(650)342-6342
1978 CLASSIC Mercedes Benz, 240D,
136k miles, 2nd owner, all scheduled
maintenance & records available. Good
condition. All original. Always garaged.
New tires. 4 speed manual. Runs &
drives great. Sunroof. Clean interior.
Good leather and carpets. AM/FM radio.
$4500. Call (650)375-1929

Dont lose money


on a trade-in or
consignment!
Sell your vehicle in the
Daily Journals
Auto Classifieds.
Just $42!
Well run it
til you sell it!
Reach 76,500 drivers
from South SF to
Palo Alto

MERCEDES 06 C230 - 6 cylinder, navy


blue, 60K miles, 2 year warranty,
$18,000, (650)455-7461

625 Classic Cars


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

630 Trucks & SUVs


CADILLAC 07 ESCALADE, black on
black, excellent condition. 1 owner, always garaged, have all service records.
122K miles. 4 new tires, and all the
amenities. Runs and drives great, clean
interior, good leather & carpets, amazing
sound system. $19,995. (650)619-0370
DODGE 01 DURANGO, V-8 SUV, 1
owner, dark blue, CLEAN! $5,000/obo.
Call (650)492-1298

640 Motorcycles/Scooters
BMW 03 F650 GS, $3899 OBO. Call
650-995-0003
DAINESE BOOTS Zipper & Velcro Closure, Cushioned Ankle, Excellent Condition Unisex EU40 $65 (650)357-7484
MOTORCYCLE SADDLEBAGS, with
mounting hardware and other parts $35.
Call (650)670-2888
TWO BIKER Trailer-2900lbs
$1300 OBO (650) 594-9768

GVW

670 Auto Parts


1961-63 OLDS F-85 Engine plus many
heads, cranks, Int., Manifold & Carbs. All
$500 (650)348-1449
AUTO REFRIGERATION gauges. R12
and R132 new, professional quality $50.
(650)591-6283
BORLA CAT-BACK exhaust system, 92
to 96 Corvette LT-1, $600/obo.
olivermp2@gmail.com, (650)333-4949
CAR TOW chain 9' $35 (650)948-0912
HONDA SPARE tire 13" $25
(415)999-4947
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

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

CHEVY HHR 08 - Grey, spunky car


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

Concrete

Construction

Construction

JOHN PETERSON
*Paving *Grading *Slurry Sealing
*Paving Stovnes *Concrete
*Patching
WE AIM TO PLEASE!

(408) 422-7695

Lic #935122

Offer your services to 76,500 readers a day, from


Palo Alto to South San Francisco
and all points between!

List your Open House


in the Daily Journal.

JAG 1988 XJ6. Looks great. Runs great.


$1900.00. **SOLD**

AIM CONSTUCTION

Driveways, Parking Lots


Asphalt/Concrete
Repair Installation
Free Estimates
(650)213-2648

in the
HOME & GARDEN SECTION

OPEN HOUSE
LISTINGS

620 Automobiles
HONDA 93 LX SD, 244K miles, all
power, complete, runs. $2,400 or trade,
(650)481-5296

DODGE
99 Van, Good Condition,
$3,500 OBO (650)481-5296

NORTHWEST
ASPHALT PAVING

ADVERTISE
YOUR SERVICE

379 Open Houses

29

LIC.# 916680

Concrete
AAA CONCRETE DESIGN
Stamps Color Driveways
Patios Masonry Block walls
Landscaping

Quality Workmanship,
Free Estimates

(650)533-0187
Lic# 947476

LEMUS CONSTRUCTION

(650)271-3955

Dryrot & Termite Repair


Decks, Doors/Windows, Siding
Bath Remodels, Painting
General Home Improvements

Free Estimates
Lic. #913461

30

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Weekend June 13-14, 2015

Construction

Housecleaning

Hauling

OSULLIVAN
CONSTRUCTION

HOUSE CLEANING
SERVICES
Vacancy, Janitorial,
Post Construction Cleaning.
Commercial & Residential
Cleaning

CHAINEY HAULING

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

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

ALL ELECTRICAL
SERVICE

650-322-9288

for all your electrical needs

650.918.0354

www.MyErrandServicesCA.com

Gutters

O.K.S RAINGUTTER

New Rain Gutter, Down Spouts,


Gutter Cleaning & Screening,
Gutter & Roof Inspections
Friendly Service
CA Lic# 794353/Bonded
CALL TODAY

(650)556-9780

Maintenance New Lawns


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

(650)400-5604
Flooring

Flamingos Flooring

SHOP
AT HOME

WE WILL
BRING THE
SAMPLES
TO YOU.

CARPET
LUXURY VINYL TILE
SHEET VINYL
LAMINATE
TILE
HARDWOOD
Contact us for a
FREE In-Home
Estimate

650-655-6600

info@flamingosflooring.com
www.flamingosflooring.com
We carry all major brands!

SPECIALS
AS LOW AS $2.50/sf.

Mention this ad for


Free Delivery
See website for more info.

kaprizhardwoodfloors.com

Lic#1211534

FRANS
HOUSE CLEANING

Service-Apartments/Homes:
one time service/bi-weekly.
References Available.
FREE ESTIMATES
10 years Exp. Honest. Reliable

(650)458-1965

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

Light moving!
Haul Debris!
650-583-6700

Plumbing

Tree Service

Hillside Tree
LOCALLY OWNED
Trimming
Large

Removal
Grinding

Stump

Free
Estimates

Painting

Mention

Craigs
Painting

(650)296-0568

Free Estimates

Pruning

Shaping

Kitchen/Bathroom Remodeling,
Tile Installation,
Door & Window Installation
Priced for You! Free Estimates

Lic.#834170

HONEST HANDYMAN
Remodeling, Plumbing.
Electrical, Carpentry,
General Home Repair,
Maintenance,
New Construction
No Job Too Small

Residential
Interior
Exterior

(650)740-8602

10 years
of Experience

Lic.# 891766

PAYLESS

HANDYMAN SERVICE

FREE ESTIMATES

Kitchen & bath remodeling


Tile work, roofing and more!

(650) 553-9653

FREE ESTIMATES
(650)771-2432

Lic# 857741

JON LA MOTTE

PAINTING

SENIOR HANDYMAN

Specializing in any size project

Painting Electrical
Carpentry Dry Rot
40 Yrs. Experience

Interior & Exterior


Quality Work, Reasonable
Rates, Free Estimates

650-201-6854

Lic #514269

(650)368-8861

Retrired Licensed Contractor

The Village
Contractor

Remodels Carpentry
Drywall Tile Painting

Call Joe

(650)701-6072
Lic# 979435

Hauling
AAA RATED!

$40 & UP
HAUL

(650)278-0157

CHEAP
HAULING!

Free Estimates

Housecleaning

Free Estimates, 15% off First Visit

SUNNY BAY PAINTING CO.

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

INDEPENDENT
HAULERS

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

Starting at $40 & Up


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

Fences Tree Trimming


Decks Concrete Work
Kitchen and Bathroom
remodeling

650-560-8119
CONSUELOS HOUSE
CLEANING

Interior & Exterior


Residential & Commercial
Carpentry & Sheetrock Repairs
Lead safe certified
Free Estimates
Reasonable Rates
Lic. #913461

Furniture / Appliance / Disposal


Tree / Bush / Dirt / Concrete Demo

Family Owned Since 2000

DISCOUNT HANDYMAN
& PLUMBING

J.B GARDENING

LEMUS PAINTING
(650)271-3955

Junk & Debris Clean Up

CONTRERAS HANDYMAN
SERVICES

Gardening

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

Roofing

Service

contrerashandy12@yahoo.com

Sprinklers and irrigation


Lawn Aeration
Pressure washing, rock gardens,
and lots more!

Painting

Handy Help

ELECTRIC SERVICE GROUP

CALL NOW FOR


SPRING LAWN
MAINTENANCE

Landscaping

Since 1988/Licensed & Insured


Monthly Specials
Fast, Dependable Service

Free Estimates
A+ BBB Rating

(650)341-7482
Landscaping
SERVANDO ARRELLIN
The Garden Doctor
Landscaping & Demolition
Fences Interlocking Pavers
Clean-Ups Hauling
Retaining Walls
(650)771-2276
Lic# 36267

The Daily Journal


to get 10% off
for new customers
Call Luis (650) 704-9635
Window Washing
MEYER PLUMBING SUPPLY
Toilets, Sinks, Vanities,
Faucets, Water heaters,
Whirlpools and more!
Wholesale Pricing &
Closeout Specials.
2030 S Delaware St
San Mateo
650-350-1960

Roofing

REED
ROOFERS

Serving the entire Bay Area


Residential & Commercial
License #931457

Call for Free Estimate

(650) 591-8291

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

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Weekend June 13-14, 2015

Attorneys

Dental Services

Food

Furniture

Law Office of Jason Honaker

Do you want a White,Brighter


Smile?

CROWNE PLAZA
Foster City-San Mateo

STOOLS*BAR*DINETTES

BANKRUPTCY
Chapter 7 &13
Call us for a consultation

650-259-9200
www.honakerlegal.com
Beauty

GRAND OPENING
Alexis Beauty Salon

Safe, Painless, Long Lasting

Maui Whitening
650.508.8669

1217 Laurel St., San Carlos


(Between Greenwood & Howard)
www.mauiwhitening.com

I - SMILE

Implant & Orthodontict Center


1702 Miramonte Ave. Suite B
Mountain View

Exceptional.
Reliable. Inovative
650-282-5555

MILLBRAE SMILE CENTER

Valerie de Leon, DDS


Implant, Cosmetic and
Family Dentistry
Spanish and Tagalog Spoken

(650)697-9000

10% OFF

All Services with Ad


t/BUVSBM.BOJDVSF
t"DSZMJD(FM4FU
t'VMM4FU1JOL8IJUF
320 El Camino Real
San Bruno

tt
Cemetery

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

$5 CHARLEY'S

Sporting apparel from your


49ers, Giants & Warriors,
low prices, large selection.
450 W. San Bruno Ave.
San Bruno

(650)771-6564

15 El Camino Real,
MILLBRAE, CA

RUSSO DENTAL CARE

The Clubhouse Bistro


Wedding, Event &
Meeting Facilities

(650) 295-6123

1221 Chess Drive Foster City


Hwy 92 at Foster City Blvd. Exit

FATTORIA E MARE
Locally Sourced
Fresh Italian Food.
Join us for
Happy Hour 4-6:30 M-F
1095 Rollins Road
Burlingame
(650) 342-4922

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

PANCHO VILLA
TAQUERIA

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

Because Flavor Still Matters


365 B Street
San Mateo

(650)583-2273

www.sfpanchovillia.com

www.russodentalcare.com

Divorce

Financial
UNITED AMERICAN BANK
San Mateo , Redwood City,
Half Moon Bay

Call (650)579-1500
for simply better banking
unitedamericanbank.com

DIVORCE CENTERS
OF CALIFORNIA
Low-cost service for Uncontested
Divorce. Caring and experienced
staff will prepare your forms
and le them at the court.
Registered
Bonded Affordable
Compassionate.
DIVORCE CENTERS OF CALIFORNIA

650.347.2500

Legal Document Assistants Complete


and le forms Uncontested Divorce
Low Cost fast ---Easy

www.divorcecenters.com
We are not a law rm. We can only provide self
help services at your specic direction.

Furniture

Bedroom Express
Where Dreams Begin

2833 El Camino Real


San Mateo - (650)458-8881
184 El Camino Real
So. S. Francisco -(650)583-2221
www.bedroomexpress.com

CALIFORNIA
(650)591-3900

Tons of Furniture to match


your lifestyle

31

Insurance

Music

NEW YORK LIFE

Music Lessons
Sales Repairs Rentals

www.barrettinsuranceservices.net

Eric L. Barrett,

Bronstein Music

363 Grand Ave, So. San Francisco

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

CLU, RHU, REBC, CLTC, LUTCF


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

Health & Medical

Legal Services

Real Estate Loans

BACK, LEG PAIN OR


NUMBNESS?

DOCUMENTS PLUS

LEGAL

We Fund Bank Turndowns!

(650)588-2502

bronsteinmusic.com

REAL ESTATE LOANS


Equity based direct lender
Homes Multi-family
Mixed-use Commercial

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

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

DENTAL
IMPLANTS

Jeri Blatt, LDA #11

legaldocumentsplus.com

Wachter Investments, Inc.


Real Estate Broker
CA Bureau of Real Estate#746683
Nationwide Mortgage
Licensing System ID #348268

Call Millbrae Dental


for details
650-583-5880

Marketing

Seniors

Save $500 on
Implant Abutment &
Crown Package.

EYE EXAMINATIONS

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

Registered & Bonded

(650)574-2087

"I am not an attorney. I can only


provide self help services at your
specific direction."

GROW

YOUR SMALL BUSINESS


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

Massage Therapy

KAY'S HEALTH
& BEAUTY
Facials Waxing Fitness
Body Fat Reduction

381 El Camino Real


Millbrae

(650)697-6868

NCP COLLEGE OF NURSING


& CAREER COLLEGE

Train to become a Licensed


Vocational Nurse in 12 months or a
Certified Nursing Assistant in as little
as 8 weeks.
Call (800) 339-5145 for more
information or visit
ncpcollegeofnursing.edu and
ncpcareercollege.com

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

650-583-5880
Millbrae Dental

COMFORT PRO
MASSAGE
Foot Massage $24.99

Body Massage $44.99/hr


10 am - 10 pm
1115 California Dr. Burlingame

(650)389-2468

FULL BODY MASSAGE

$48

Belbien Day Spa

1204 West Hillsdale Blvd.


SAN MATEO
(650)403-1400

CALIFORNIA
MENTOR
We are looking for quality
caregivers for adults
with developmental
disabilities. If you have a
spare bedroom and a
desire to open your
home and make a
difference, attend an
information session:
Thursdays 11:00 AM
1710 S. Amphlett Blvd.
Suite 230
San Mateo
(near Marriott Hotel)

Please call to RSVP

(650)389-5787 ext.2
Competitive Stipend offered.
www.MentorsWanted.com

650-348-7191

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

CARE ON CALL
24/7 Care Provider
www.mycareoncall.com
(650)276-0270
1818 Gilbreth Rd., Ste 127
Burlingame
CNA, HHA & Companion Help

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

HEALING MASSAGE

Wills & Trusts

10 am to 9 pm
New Masseuses
every two weeks

ESTATE PLANNING

2305-A Carlos St.


Alongside Highway 1

Moss Beach
(Cash Only)

Housing

All Credit Accepted


Purchase / Refinance/
Cash Out
Investors welcome
Loan servicing since 1979

HEALING TOUCH IN...

ACUHEALTH

Best Asian Body Massage

$35/hr

(with this ad for first time visitors)

Free Parking

(650)692-1989

1838 El Camino #103, Burlingame

TrustandEstatePlan.com

San Mateo Office


1(844)687-3782
Complete Estate Plans
Starting at $399

32

Weekend June 13-14, 2015

THE DAILY JOURNAL

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