Professional Documents
Culture Documents
law unlocks retail potential Sebastopol property keeps Cardinal Newman hands
for local home cooks. A3 retired couple busy. D1 Rancho Cotate first loss. C1
WINNER OF THE 2018 PULITZER PRIZE
WASHINGTON — Last
month, deep in a 500-page en-
vironmental impact statement,
the Trump administration made
a startling assumption: On its
current course, the planet will
warm a disastrous 7 degrees by
the end of this century.
A rise of 7 degrees Fahren-
heit, or about 4 degrees Celsius,
compared with preindustrial
levels would be catastrophic, ac-
cording to sci-
entists. Many INSIDE
coral reefs ■ Regulators
would dissolve move to defend
in increasingly state emissions
acidic oceans. standards / B1
Parts of Man-
hattan and ■ Scotland fights
Miami would to save historic
be underwater coastal sites from
without costly sea level rise / B1
coastal defens-
es. Extreme heat waves would
routinely smother large parts of
the globe.
But the administration did
not offer this dire forecast,
premised on the idea that the
ERIK CASTRO / FOR THE PRESS DEMOCRAT
world will fail to cut its green-
SOMBER REFLECTION: During a moment to honor survivors of the October wildfires, participants end a ceremony Sunday by gathering beneath a Jewish talit to house gas emissions, as part of
receive a rabbi’s blessing at Congregation Shomrei Torah in Santa Rosa. an argument to combat climate
change. Just the opposite: The
Survivors mark a year of grief: ‘There’s no rebuilding’ the lives of victims analysis assumes the planet’s
fate is already sealed.
The draft statement, issued
By DANNY MUELLER by the National Highway Traffic
G
THE PRESS DEMOCRAT Safety Administration (NHT-
SA), was written to justify Presi-
eorge Powell’s dogs dent Donald Trump’s decision to
have been a lifeline freeze federal fuel efficiency stan-
dards for cars and light trucks
during the worst year built after 2020. While the propos-
of his life. al would increase greenhouse gas
They’re working dogs — emissions, the impact statement
border collies — and he has TURN TO CLIMATE » PAGE A7
turned to them and the herd-
ing bred into their bloodline
INSIDE
as a salve for the terrible loss
BREACH INVESTIGATED:
inflicted on him in last Octo- Another blow to Facebook
ber’s wildfires. as company says hackers
exposed personal info on
“Working out there in the middle of
50 million users / B1
the field with just your dog and a few
head of sheep is really therapeutic,” SANTA ROSA
Powell said. “You have a partnership High 68, Low 52
going on. It’s not just the dog doing
something, it’s not just you doing some- CHRISTOPHER CHUNG / THE PRESS DEMOCRAT THE WEATHER, C8
thing. You have to work together. It takes COMFORT FROM PETS: George Powell’s wife, Lynn Anderson Powell, died while fleeing the Tubbs fire. Powell
me out of my pain.” has navigated through this difficult time with his emotional support dog, Kipp, left, and his herding dog, Taff. Advice B7 Legals C5
George and Lynne Anderson Powell Business B8 Lotto A2
lived on Blue Ridge Trail, at the western
edge of the canyon leading up the Mark
cian, left shortly before her husband
that night, driving away from their home
COMING SUNDAY Classified
Comics
D5
B6
Movies D2
Nation-World B1
West Creek corridor. When the Tubbs with one of their border collies, Jemma. Anniversary coverage: The October firestorm
exacted an unprecedented toll on lives and property, Crossword B7 Obituaries B3
fire came roaring down the drainage In the thick smoke, she missed a sharp
with the deepest losses in Sonoma County. The Press Editorial A8 Scoreboard C7
from Napa County last October, Lynne,
an avid hiker and accomplished musi- Democrat will explore how life has changed.
TURN TO FAMILIES » PAGE A5
ONLINE See more stories, photos and videos related to the anniversary of the October firestorm at pressdemocrat.com/fireanniversary
©2018 The Press Democrat
A2 THE PRESS DEMOCRAT • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2018
imposed on this investiga- hearing room grew as more ald McGahn, has urged
en of them.
tion.” and more senators shuf- ers have yet to lock down Trump to hold his fire and
NO Bars • NO Springs • NO Sagging
The announcement fol- fled in and out of the back the minimum 50 votes to let the confirmation battle
and hallways as small as
27” when disassembled.
Fits in narrow doorways
lowed a vote along party room for the discussions, confirm Kavanaugh. Sen. play out, advisers to both
lines by the Judiciary Com- which Collins called in to Doug Jones, D-Alabama, men said. Both Trump
seven
mittee to advance Kavana- via phone. Besieged by col- announced late Thursday and McGahn had told oth-
ugh’s nomination — an leagues, Flake and Coons that he would oppose the ers that they did not want
One size doesn’t fit all.That’s why wee have se
11-to-10 roll call that was even sought privacy for nominee, and on Friday, an FBI investigation, two
left significantly in doubt their conversations in one Sen. Joe Donnelly of In- senior officials said — but
amid a contentious yet odd of the Senate’s old-fash- diana — one of just three that it was inevitable once
debate as senators dashed ioned phone booths. Democratic senators who it became clear that Kava-
into an anteroom behind The senators eventually supported now-Justice naugh could not be con-
the hearing space. returned, and Flake an- Neil Gorsuch in April 2017 firmed without one.
The committee fight al- nounced that he would still — said he would reject Ka- Mark Judge, a friend
ready was tense, as sever- vote to advance Kavana- vanaugh as well. and high school classmate
al Democrats — including ugh’s nomination, on the Collins and Murkowski of Kavanaugh’s, is likely
Queen, Full,Twin, Cot and Double Cot
sizes are endless sectional choices.
Sens. Kamala Harris of condition that a final vote have not declared a position to be a prominent figure
California, Richard Blu- would be delayed no more on Kavanaugh’s nomina- in any inquiry by the FBI.
Choose from King, Queen Plus,
menthal of Connecticut, than a week to allow for an tion; neither has Manchin Ford claims he was present
Mazie Hirono of Hawaii investigation. nor Sen. Heidi Heitkamp, when Kavanaugh allegedly
and Sheldon Whitehouse Shortly afterward, Mur- D-North Dakota. attacked her. Another Ka-
All sleeping surfaces are
a full 80” long, 8” longer
than average sleepers.
of Rhode Island — walked kowski, Collins and Sen. Trump told advisers in vanaugh accuser alleges
out in protest. Flake often Joe Manchin, D-West Vir- meetings Thursday and that Judge and Kavanaugh
appeared conflicted and ginia, said they supported Friday that prolonging the sought on multiple occa-
pained as senators en- his call for a limited FBI vote doesn’t help Kava- sions in high school to drug
gaged in a contentious de- probe. Manchin said in a naugh but that if an FBI inebriated girls for non-
bate over the nomination. statement that “the Amer- check came up clean, he consensual sex with mul-
After Sen. Christopher ican people have been could use that as a cud- tiple boys — an accusation
Coons, D-Delaware, im- pulled apart by this entire gel to get more votes. But Kavanaugh has strongly
plored Republicans to join spectacle.” the biggest concern in the denied.
Democrats in calling for an “What I’m encouraged White House is that with “If the FBI or any law en-
n Furnitu
ldTow r FBI probe, Flake walked
over and gestured to Coons
by is that in an anteroom,
back-hall conversation —
more time, more wom-
en, more accusations and
forcement agency requests
Mr. Judge’s cooperation,
O
e
to join him in the anteroom. first with Sen. Flake and more stories could emerge. he will answer any and all
The two close friends, as then with Sen. (Dianne) “It’s not the FBI investi- questions posed to him,”
Historic Railroad Square • www.oldtownfurnitures.com well as Sen. Amy Klobu- Feinstein and then with gation that sparks the fear Judge’s lawyer Barbara
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char, D-Minnesota, left — many other senators of like it is just another week Van Gelder said Friday.
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THE PRESS DEMOCRAT • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2018 A3
Woman
Victory for home cooking escapes
violent
attack
Police say victim knew
assailant, who choked,
bit her, flashed a knife
By NASHELLY CHAVEZ
THE PRESS DEMOCRAT
Governor enacts law enabling cooks to market food made in their kitchens ing to get help,” Rohnert Park
Police Sgt. Jeff Justice said.
Officers arrested a suspect,
By HANNAH BEAUSANG commerce and food culture. Jeff Jackson identified as Sergio Here-
THE PRESS DEMOCRAT Under the The Homemade Food makes notes on dia-Trujillo, also 25, when they
J
Operations Act, cooks could only sell 60 a to-do list. A spotted him returning to his
eff Jackson has long dreamed of us- meals a week as supplemental income, new law gives apartment later that morning.
ing his home kitchen as a base for a a cap advocates are trying to increase. Sonoma Heredia-Trujillo matched the
small business that would allow him Operators need to apply for permits, get County officials description of a suspect seen
to share the curries, stews and pas- a food handler’s card, a home inspection the option to nearby breaking a car window
tries he and his wife make. at the onset and another each year to legalize home about an hour after the wom-
He feeds thousands of students as a comply. culinary an called police. The woman’s
chef at Sonoma State University, but “This would be a great opportunity for businesses cellphone, pieces of her ripped
hasn’t pursued selling food from his a lot of people who have a lot of talents beginning underwear and glass were
Rincon Valley home because laws have to get food and hard work and passion Jan. 1, which found in his pockets, police
precluded home cooks from starting out to people,” Jackson, 33, said. “Be- would allow said.
such enterprises. Now, a bill Gov. Jerry fore this opportunity took place, people Jackson to The woman, who was not
Brown signed into law last week gives might not even ever have had the chance pursue his identified, told officers He-
Sonoma County officials the option to to try it.” dream. redia-Trujillo was a former
legalize such business activity starting
Jan. 1, unlocking a new marketplace for TURN TO COOKING » PAGE A6 TURN TO ATTACK » PAGE A4
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A4 NORTH COAST THE PRESS DEMOCRAT • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2018
Suspected BENEDETTI
package CONTINUED FROM A3
arrested
Benedetti’s smoked ducks.
“He loved his business,” said
Arthur Benedetti of Petaluma,
one of Benedetti’s two sons.
By NASHELLY CHAVEZ Last October, the Tubbs fire
THE PRESS DEMOCRAT threatened the Benedettis’ work-
ing farm northeast of Santa
Two men suspected of Rosa. As many as 40,000 holiday
stealing packages from a birds might have perished had
Petaluma UPS drop box state firefighters not aggressively
and other homes around fought the fire and opened Calis-
town were arrested Thurs- toga Road to allow trucks to bring
day, the Petaluma Police in feed and ship out turkeys.
Department said. “Cal Fire saved these turkeys,”
Officers began looking Willie Benedetti declared at the
for the suspects after a res- time.
ident noticed a man break His late parents, Walter and Alo-
into a UPS drop box in the ha, and Walter’s brother, Alvin,
100 block of Lynch Creek got their start in the poultry busi-
Way, near the Petaluma ness outside of Petaluma following
Valley Hospital, about World War II. But they focused on
11:20 a.m. The man took selling fertile turkey eggs.
several packages and got Willie Benedetti was only 14
into a waiting car with a when, in 1963, he rerouted the Willie Benedetti, a partner in Benedetti Farms and in the Willie Bird’s Restaurant best known for his smoked-
Wyoming license plate, the family into raising turkeys for the then-griilled turkey legs, died of cancer Friday at 69.
witness reported. The ve- dinner table. As a Future Farm- raising tens of thousands of Wil- More than a year ago, he became His son, Arthur, said Friday
hicle, described as a silver ers of America project, the Sono- lie Bird turkeys for sale around entangled in a legal beef with that his dad and the County of
hatchback, then headed ma Valley High School freshman the country for Thanksgiving and Marin County when he applied to Marin resolved the dispute, and
west on East Washington hatched nearly 500 turkeys and Christmas. build a home on the land for his permission for the construction
Street. raised them for sale as holiday It was Benedetti’s mother, Alo- son, Arthur. of a home for him and his family
Officers stopped a car that dinners. ha Benedetti, who founded Willie County land-use officials told has been approved. But with his
matched the description as Benedetti’s father wasn’t wild Bird’s Restaurant in 1980 in a for- him that to comply with a new father’s death, he said, the con-
it was exiting Highway 101 about the project because of the mer hofbrau. Her son, the joint’s law, he could not build the home struction plan is on hold.
at Lakeville Highway. extra work involved in raising namesake, later took it over from unless he abandoned plans for re- If Willie Benedetti wasn’t rais-
Inside, police found Su- meat birds, but his wife aided and her. tirement and agreed to continue ing turkeys or spending time with
isun City resident Mark abetted it. Benedetti and his partners farming on the land. Benedetti his family, he was happiest watch-
Ganzon Carrion, 41, and The story goes that on the day also fired up the grill at the Sono- and the Pacific Legal Foundation ing and promoting the sport of
Vallejo resident Christo- before Thanksgiving of 1963, the ma County Fair, Santa Rosa’s sued Marin County. rugby, or fishing.
pher Advincula Lopez, 39, Benedetti boy walked into John Wednesday Night Market and Benedetti told a reporter last In addition to his son in Peta-
along with several packages King’s Beauty Salon in Petaluma other public events. Their huge February, “It’s crazy because if luma and his brother, Riley, in
that did not belong to either to deliver a freshly dressed turkey turkey legs, previously smoked I build the house, the county will Santa Rosa, Benedetti is survived
men, the news release said. to a stylist and she announced, and then grilled on-site, are leg- literally never see it or even know by son Aaron Benedetti of Valley
Police later identified the “Here comes the Willie bird!” endary. it’s here. Ford, brother Eddie Benedetti of
packages as stolen items, Then and there was born the Willie Bird smoked turkey ba- “My nearest neighbor is 5 miles Petaluma and two grandchildren.
some taken from Petaluma name of the fledgling Benedetti con is hugely popular, too. away,” he said. “Who in the hell Arrangements for services
homes. Mail belonging to business. Willie Benedetti, a 1967 gradu- is the house going to bother? I’m have not yet been made.
residents from the Suisun In time, Willie Benedetti and ate of Sonoma Valley High, lived talking about a little house for my
City area also was inside his brother, Riley Benedetti, and on a 267-acre ranch in western son and grandkids out here beside You can reach Staff Writer Chris
the car. Officers also found their cousin, Rocky Koch, were Marin County, near Valley Ford. me.” Smith at 707 521-5211.
what they suspected was
methamphetamine and
drug paraphernalia in the
vehicle.
Both men were booked
into the Sonoma County
FORD Kavanaugh got on top
of her, groped her, tried
to take her clothes off and
mony.
Ford was 15.
Lisa was 14 and,
good men in her
immediate circle,
and she sees a ther-
Jail on suspicion of several CONTINUED FROM A3 placed his hand over her similarly, she apist. But watching
crimes, including burglary, mouth to stop her from attended a gath- the Kavanaugh
possession of metham- “When I watch these pushed into a bedroom at screaming, she said. “In- ering at a home hearings made her
phetamine and conspiracy hearings and I hear what a house party in suburban delible in the hippocampus in Ukiah as she relive her trauma,
to commit a crime, police she says, it’s me,” Lisa Maryland. Kavanaugh and is the laughter, the laugh entered her fresh- in a way. And she’s
said. Officers are conduct- said. “I was raped and his friend, Mark Judge, — the uproarious laughter man year of high angry that some
Brett
ing an additional investiga- I’ve never been able to were in the room where between the two, and their school. There was government offi-
Kavanaugh
tion to identify the owners tell everybody.” music was playing, she tes- having fun at my expense,” beer. She wanted cials don’t believe
of the stolen mail. Ford described being tified to the committee. she said during her testi- to make friends and be ac- Ford, a psychology profes-
cepted. sor at Palo Alto and Stan-
Instead, she said a senior ford University.
male student who played “I’m not a liberal, I’m
on the school football team not a conservative, I’m just
instructed friends to hold a thinker,” Lisa said. “(Ka-
her down as he raped her. vanaugh) talks just like the
Like Ford, Lisa distinct- guy who did this to me.”
ly remembers the boys’ At Verity, Castillo gave
laughter. employees permission
“I just submitted,” she to watch the Kavanaugh
said. hearings during the work
Afterward, she hid, and day on Thursday because
when all was clear she she thought it was critical
walked home in pain. She for them to hear it.
didn’t remember exactly “It’s difficult to make
where she was. It’s com- sense of this,” Castillo
mon for victims of sexu- said.
al assault to forget those On Friday, President
types of details, Castillo Donald Trump, who has
said. criticized Ford’s allega-
“You don’t remember if tions, agreed to a request
it was 61st Street or 62nd. from Senate Republican
But you do remember and Democratic leaders
what happened to your for a limited FBI investiga-
body,” Castillo said. tion into Ford’s allegations
N OV EM B ER 4, 2018
Traumatized, Lisa before the full Senate votes
skipped high school expe- up or down on Kavana-
riences like dances, and in- ugh’s nomination to the
stead spent the next three Supreme Court.
support the futu r e of agr icu ltu r e! years homeschooled. Verity’s 24-hour crisis is
“It’s been 23 years and 707-545-7273. All calls are
AT WOOD R A NCH, G LEN ELLEN I still cry about it. It nev- confidential.
er goes away,” Lisa said.
“It’s kind of followed me You can reach Staff Writer
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THE PRESS DEMOCRAT • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2018 A7
CLIMATE Burney
firefighter
Bob May
School of Management
professor John Sterman.
“First, the administration
heat waves, and estimates
that seas could rise nearly
3 feet globally by 2100 if the
CONTINUED FROM A1 keeps a watch proposes vehicle efficien- world does not decrease its
for spot fires cy policies that would do carbon output.
says, that policy would add Aug. 2 during almost nothing (to fight Administration officials
just a very small drop to a the River fire climate change). Then (the say they take federal scien-
very big, hot bucket. near Lakeport. administration) makes tific findings into account
“The amazing thing Environmental their impact seem even when crafting energy pol-
they’re saying is human scientists say smaller by comparing their icy — along with their in-
activities are going to lead the severity of proposals to what would terpretation of the law and
to this rise of carbon di- recent wildfires happen if the entire world President Trump’s agenda.
oxide that is disastrous is evidence does nothing.” But the debate comes af-
for the environment and of a warming This week, U.N. Sec- ter a troubling summer of
society. And then they’re planet. retary-General António devastating wildfires, re-
saying they’re not going to Guterres warned leaders cord-breaking heat and a
do anything about it,” said KENT PORTER
gathered in New York, “If catastrophic hurricane —
Michael MacCracken, who THE PRESS DEMOCRAT we do not change course in each of which, federal sci-
served as a senior scientist the next two years, we risk entists say, signals a warm-
at the U.S. Global Change sphere; and prevent new the Trump administra- projections in their envi- runaway climate change. ing world.
Research Program from curbs on greenhouse gases tion’s approach, calling it ronmental impact state- … Our future is at stake.” Some Democratic elect-
1993 to 2002. used in refrigerators and a more reasonable course. ments. Instead, they tend Federal and indepen- ed officials said Americans
The document projects air conditioning units. The Obama’s climate policies to assess a regulation’s im- dent research — including are starting to recognize
that global temperature vehicle rule alone would were costly to industry pact during the life of the projections that were part these events as evidence of
will rise by nearly 3.5 de- put 8 billion additional and yet “mostly symbolic,” program — the years a coal of last month’s analysis of climate change. In Febru-
grees Celsius above the av- tons of carbon dioxide in because they would have plant would run, for exam- the revised fuel-efficiency ary, Washington Gov. Jay
erage temperature between the atmosphere this cen- made barely a dent in glob- ple, or the amount of time standards — echoes that Inslee met privately with
1986 and 2005 regardless of tury, more than a year’s al carbon dioxide emis- certain vehicles would be theme. The environmen- several Cabinet officials,
whether Obama-era tail- worth of total U.S. emis- sions, said Heritage Foun- on the road. tal impact statement cites accusing them of engaging
pipe standards take effect sions, according to the gov- dation research fellow Using the no-action sce- “evidence of climate-in- in “morally reprehensible”
or are frozen for six years, ernment’s own analysis. Nick Loris. Federal agen- nario “is a textbook ex- duced changes,” such as behavior that threatened
as the Trump adminis- Administration esti- cies typically do not in- ample of how to lie with more frequent droughts, his children and grandchil-
tration has proposed. The mates acknowledge that clude centurylong climate statistics,” said MIT Sloan floods, severe storms and dren.
global average temperature the policies would release
rose more than 0.5 degrees far more greenhouse gas
Celsius between 1880, the emissions from America’s
start of industrialization, energy and transportation
and 1986, so the analysis sectors than otherwise
assumes a roughly 4 degree would have been allowed.
Celsius or 7 degree Fahren- The statement is the lat-
heit increase from prein- est evidence of deep con-
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A8 THE PRESS DEMOCRAT • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2018
EDITORIAL
Senate is right
to wait for facts
on Kavanaugh LET THE PUBLIC SPEAK
C
arguments fall into my-eyes-
onservatives were glaze-over territory.
probably hoping on A small yet important
Thursday that the Sen- audience, however, cares
ate Judiciary Committee tes- very much: Republican mod-
timony of research psychol- erates. Sen. Susan Collins,
ogist Christine Blasey Ford, R-Maine, the most publicly
the woman who has accused vocal member of that select
Judge Brett Kavanaugh of group, has signaled that she
trying to rape her when they wants to get to the bottom of
were in high school, would the allegations, but also that
make her look like a strident she’s very displeased with
left-wing activist, or a flake. the political machinations.
They were sorely disappoint- There’s something deeply “You could have just not watched the
ed. Ford was soft-spoken, awful about treating this as hearing. How does that make you feel?”
warm and very likable. a political question rather RICHARD SMITH, Santa Rosa
Rachel Mitchell, the Ari- than one of justice. But the
zona sex-crimes prosecutor vagueness of Ford’s allega- “No, you haven’t entered an alternate
who questioned Ford, spent tions — neither provable nor universe. It’s true that the president
little time trying to poke
holes in Ford’s somewhat There’s something deeply awful falsifiable — always meant
that, unless new evidence
is from ‘The Celebrity Apprentice,’ Bill
Cosby is a sex offender, and they’re
vague story. Instead, she
quickly shifted the focus
about treating this as a political surfaced, it would come
down to a judgment call. And
bringing back ‘Murphy Brown.’ ”
RENE FOPPE, Petaluma
toward Senate Democrats.
The latter half of Mitch-
question rather than one of justice. the way both sides have exer-
cised that judgment, weigh-
“Have you noticed that running for
ell’s questioning elicited the ing their political priorities
from flying for work, family the truth, you sure wouldn’t
Congress has made your nose
following facts: at least as carefully as the
visits or for surfing vaca- have done what you done to
grow abnormally long?”
■ That Ford was willing to evidence, meant that when
talk to investigators from the tions in places as far-flung as this guy.” the judgment came, it was JACK BAUMAN, Windsor
Judiciary Committee, though French Polynesia. “We could have handled likely to be ugly.
the committee was somehow The committee’s Republi- this in private,” said Sen. Kavanaugh’s name is “You dreamed that Mexico and Canada
unable to arrange this with cans, in effect, put their fel- Ben Sasse, R-Nebraska, in publicly sullied, his family paid for walls to keep us out?”
her lawyers. low Democrats in the dock, the gently shocked tone that put through a nightmare. JON YATABE, Bodega Bay
■ That Ford was somehow painting an unlovely picture passes for a searing rebuke Progressive groups are
unaware that the committee of them concealing explosive in the Midwest. Sen. Ted already calling for him to be “So you’re terrified the Democrats
had, according to Chairman charges from Republicans Cruz, R-Texas, thundered, impeached from his current won’t win the election and
Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, until they could only be “This committee could have judgeship on the U.S. Court also terrified they will?”
offered to fly investigators to aired in an 11th-hour public investigated Dr. Ford’s claim of Appeals for the D.C. BROOKE CLYDE, Santa Rosa
California to interview her, spectacle and of politically in a confidential way that Circuit. Conservative rage at
though her lawyers should connected lawyers helping respected her privacy.” this state of affairs can only
presumably have communi- the Democrats delay. So Democrats, unexpect- be assuaged by confirming
cated that fact. Kavanaugh took a similar edly, had to defend against him — and thereby igniting
■ That Ford had found line during an emotional, the implication that they had an equally livid revolt from
her lawyer through the office and often angry, opening strategically mishandled the left at the thought of
of Sen. Dianne Feinstein of statement, emphasizing his the process. Sen. Kamala Ford’s attacker sitting on the
California, the committee’s lack of ill-will toward Ford Harris of California start- Supreme Court.
ranking Democrat, before while lashing out at the ed explaining that an FBI While I have said the
the confirmation hearings Democrats who had put him investigation — the prime best course is to leave the
began. and his family in this hellish Democratic talking point for nomination open and launch
■ That only Feinstein and situation. weeks — would not be able an all-out investigation, I
Rep. Anna Eshoo, D-Palo Later, Republican sena- to reach any conclusions. hadn’t seen enough remain-
Alto, had the letter in which tors took over. Sen. Lindsey And Feinstein felt compelled ing goodwill to get us to that
Ford outlined her allega- Graham, R-South Carolina, to deny that she’d been the compromise. There still may
tions. The letter set off the launched into a blanket source of the leak. be no way to resolve this
current turmoil when its denunciation of Democrats Democrats do look that one side will not see as HOW TO ENTER ‘THE LAST WORD’:
existence was leaked to the on the committee: “If you ridiculous explaining the a declaration of total war on Go to pressdemocrat.com/opinion where
media, despite Feinstein’s wanted an FBI investiga- extraordinarily convenient all that is decent in America. you’ll find this cartoon posted by Gary Varvel
promise that it would be kept tion, you could have come timing by citing Ford’s And no matter what is de- of the Indianapolis Star. Write a caption or
confidential — unless Ford to us. What you want to do request for confidentiality — cided about Kavanaugh, that vote for your favorite. Our top picks will be
decided to go public. is destroy this guy’s life while treating the leak that it has reached this point is republished here. Be sure to include your
■ That Ford’s fear of and hold this seat open, and breached it as a sort of act of an indictment of our entire name, city and email address for verification.
flying, which her attorneys hope you win in 2020 … This God, an immaculate defec- political class. Entries also may be emailed to jim.sweeney@
claimed made it impossible is the most unethical sham tion. But how much does that pressdemocrat.com
to hold the hearing last week, since I’ve been in politics. If matter? Though catnip to Megan McArdle is a colum-
apparently didn’t keep her you really wanted to know Beltway insiders, in the rest nist for Washington Post.
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Mark Zuckerberg
Facebook:
Hack put
50M users’
data at risk
By MIKE ISAAC
AND SHEERA FRENKEL
NEW YORK TIMES
O
NEW YORK TIMES
tect the privacy and security of climate changes accelerated by human
social media users,” Sen. Mark ff the north coast of Scotland, activity.
Warner, D-Virginia, one of Face- Orkney’s soft green landscapes About half of Orkney’s 3,000 sites,
book’s most vocal critics in Con- hold a trove of things from ev- many built before Stonehenge or the
gress, said in a statement. “A full eryday life before history was written. pyramids, are under threat from those
investigation should be swiftly More than 3,000 archaeological sites changes, according to the county
conducted and made public so — among them standing stone cir- archaeologist. Some are already being
that we can understand more cles, Norse halls and a Neolithic tomb washed away.
about what happened.” graffitied by Vikings — have endured Since 1970, Orkney beaches have
In the conference call Friday, for millenniums, scattered across the eroded twice as fast as in the previous
Guy Rosen, a vice president of roughly 70 islands that make up the century. Others that had been stable
product management at Face- Orkney archipelago. are now shrinking. Rains, falling
book, declined to say whether At Skara Brae, one of Europe’s Jane Downes works at an archaeological site on
best-preserved Stone Age villages, TURN TO SCOTLAND » PAGE B2
July 30 on Sanday, one of the Orkney Islands.
TURN TO FACEBOOK » PAGE B5
NEWSWATCH NATION
WASHINGTON
Judge: Dems have standing to sue Trump
Congressional Democrats cleared a key hurdle
Friday in their effort to sue President Donald Trump
over whether he is illegally profiting from business
dealings with foreign governments, in a case that
could give the lawmakers access to the Trump Orga-
nization’s finances.
Judge Emmet Sullivan of the U.S. District Court in
Washington ruled that the lawmakers have stand-
ing to sue Trump for accepting payments and other
benefits from foreign governments without obtaining
permission from Congress, which would violate the
Constitution’s clause that bars federal officials from
accepting gifts, or emoluments, from foreign powers
without congressional approval.
Sullivan dismissed the Justice Department’s claim
that the legislators did not have standing to sue and
denied its request to dismiss the lawsuit.
Sullivan wrote in his opinion that Trump “has nei-
ther asked for their consent nor provided them with
any information about the prohibited foreign emolu-
ments he has already allegedly accepted.”
Life Tributes
IN THIS SECTION
FABLE, Christina Pierina
RUDEE, Helen (Browning)
WALRAVEN, Lorraine Carley
GONG, Lee H. YOLO, Sr., Daniel John
MOES, Howard
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“CAL FIRE INVESTIGATORS SAID FRIDAY THAT
EQUIPMENT OWNED AND
OPERATED BY PG&E IGNITED 12 WILDFIRES” *
Fire survivor and local attorney,
Roy Miller speaks out:
“PG&E burned down my home and threatened my family’s life
and the lives of all our neighbors and everyone in our community.
While the last eight months have been brutal for my family and
yours, as we try to rebuild our lives, we should all be proud of
how much our community has done to help each other. My firm
is helping hundreds of people in our community sort though their
insurance issues and hold PG&E accountable for the destruction
they brought upon us. My local firm has been here for decades
and will be here helping our community long after the PG&E case
is over. We are here to help.”
Roy also stated, “Sonoma, Napa, and Mendocino Counties all
blame PG&E for the fires, as does the insurance industry.”
*According to the June 8, 2018 pressdemocrat.com article
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H E R B A L S
THE PRESS DEMOCRAT • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2018 NATION B5
Founder of
Jefferson
Airplane dies
Musician was landmark second album,
“Surrealistic Pillow.” One
at forefront of ’60s of rock’s most charismat-
San Francisco sound ic singers and performers,
she displaced Balin as the
By HILLEL ITALIE perceived leader, on stage
ASSOCIATED PRESS and on the Airplane’s best
known songs, “Somebody
NEW YORK — Marty to Love” and “White Rab-
Balin, a patron of the 1960s bit.”
“San Francisco Sound” “Every time I did some-
both as founder and lead thing, it was always Grace
singer of the Jefferson Slick and the Airplane
Airplane and co-owner and Grace Slick and the
of the club where Starship,” he told
the Airplane and Relix magazine
GIULIA MARCHI / NEW YORK TIMES other Bay Area in 1993. “Even if
Students watch Feng Wuzhong’s online lecture during a May course on Maoist ideology at Tsinghua University in Beijing. bands performed, it was my voice.
The Chinese Communist Party is cracking down on a group of student protesters. has died. He was I’ve even done
76. songs of mine on
IF YOUR BIRTHDAY IS push as hard as you have been. 21) ★★★★ Defer to a loved one’s
FACEBOOK economy and national security,” Rohit
Chopra, a commissioner of the Federal
Trade Commission, said in a statement.
TODAY: This year could present a You might want to spend some ideas. Both of you will have a good CONTINUED FROM B1 “The cost of inaction is growing, and we
lot of interesting moments. You will time alone or with your best friend. time, no matter what is planned.
want to take action and be spon- You could be contemplating a lot Spending more time together need answers.”
taneous. Most of the time, you will more than others realize. Having a enhances the warmth and comfort the attack could have been coordinated Facebook has been roundly criticized
give in to your impulsiveness. Travel confidant proves to be helpful and between you. Do not give in to a by hackers supported by a nation-state. for being slow to acknowledge a vast dis-
could be very significant as well. uplifting. Tonight: Play it low-key ... minor disagreement today. Let go Three software flaws in Facebook’s information campaign run by Russian
If you are single you could meet for now. and relax more. Tonight: Go along systems allowed hackers to break into operatives on its platform and other so-
someone who might have a big LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) with established plans. user accounts, including those of top cial media outlets before the 2016 presi-
impact on your life. This event could ★★★★★ Emphasize your CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. executives Mark Zuckerberg and Sheryl dential election.
occur at any time. If you are at- friends and new possibilities. You 19) ★★★★ You have a lot going
tached, the two of you might make meet people with ease and enjoy on around you. Use your energy Sandberg, according to two people famil- Sandberg, Facebook’s chief operat-
special plans that involve traveling networking far more than you have well, and get into a project that you iar with the investigation but not allowed ing officer, testified in a Senate hearing
to a long-desired spot. You will be in the recent past. Friends surround have been postponing. Honor a fast to discuss it publicly. Once in, the attack- about what the company was trying to do
unusually energetic and demonstra- you. Your popularity soars, and, as change of pace. Throw yourself into ers could have gained access to apps like to prevent the same thing from happen-
tive with your sweetie. GEMINI a result, many invitations come for- the moment. Your ability to see past Spotify, Instagram and hundreds of oth- ing in midterm elections in November.
makes an interesting friend. ward. Tonight: Where the action is. the obvious will help you eliminate ers that give users a way to log into their In April, Zuckerberg testified about
ARIES (March 21-April 19) VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) what is unnecessary. Tonight: Out systems through Facebook. revelations that Cambridge Analytica,
★★★★ You make a statement ★★ You might feel as if you must late.
today. You are clear about what you make a public appearance but don’t AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) The software bugs were particularly the British analytics firm that worked
need to say to a key person in your feel up to it. A loved one starts ★★★★★ You typically aren’t as awkward for a company that takes pride with the Trump presidential campaign,
life. Although you expect clear com- cheering you on. You feel sup- easygoing and lighthearted as you in its engineering: The first two were in- siphoned personal information of mil-
munication, you still feel the need ported and capable of doing what seem to be today. Honor a fast troduced by an online tool meant to im- lions of Facebook users.
to verify what is happening around is needed. How you project yourself change of pace. Sometimes you prove the privacy of users. The third was Outside the United States, the impact
you. Confirm others’ ideas. Tonight: in public is much different from your overthink what is going on in a introduced in July 2017 by a tool meant of disinformation appearing on Face-
Note how everything is connected. authentic self. Tonight: Accept an relationship. Why not just live in the book and the popular messaging service
to easily upload birthday videos.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) invitation. moment? The other party could be
★★★★ You could be getting a LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) quite delighted by your attention. Facebook said it had fixed the vulnera- it owns, WhatsApp, has been severe. In
clearer understanding of a risk. You ★★★★ One-on-one communica- Tonight: Ever playful. bilities and notified law enforcement offi- countries such as Myanmar and India,
might feel as if you need to rethink tion can be very satisfying. Make PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) cials. Company officials do not know the false rumors spread on social media are
this issue with more emphasis on a point of walking in someone ★★★ Allowing more give-and-take identity or the origin of the attackers, believed to have led to widespread killing.
how you would handle a failure. else’s shoes. A child or new friend would help you get past an unex- nor have they fully assessed the scope Facebook said the attackers had ex-
Could you afford a letdown? Be as volunteers to pitch in; accept the pected communication. Understand of the attack or if particular users were ploited two bugs in the site’s “View As”
realistic as possible. Tonight: Treat a offer. The results could be excellent. that others could be a little out targeted. The investigation is still in its feature, which allows users to check on
loved one as you would like to be Two heads work better than one. of whack and more volatile than
treated. Tonight: Where you can hear great usual. Let go of judgments, espe- beginning stages. what information other people can see
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) music. cially when dealing with a powerful “We’re taking it really seriously,” about them. The feature was built to give
★★★★ You wake up feeling more SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) friend. Tonight: Lighten your mood. Zuckerberg, the chief executive, said in a users move control over their privacy.
vibrant than you have in a while. ★★★ You might want to seriously conference call with reporters. “I’m glad The company said those flaws were
You will make better choices as a consider a partner’s offer. You have Day rating: we found this, but it definitely is an issue compounded by a bug in Facebook’s vid-
result. You cannot be stopped once to start at the beginning sooner or Dynamic ★★★★★ that this happened in the first place.” eo-uploading program for birthday cele-
you get going. Your enthusiasm is later to accomplish what you want. Positive ★★★★
contagious. Others want to be close Be willing to avoid taking shortcuts. Critics say the attack is the latest sign brations, a software feature that was in-
Average ★★★ that Facebook has yet to come to terms troduced in July 2017. It is not clear when
to you, and delight in your company. Listen to news more openly. One- So-so ★★
Tonight: Whatever makes you smile. on-one discussions flourish. Tonight: Difficult ★ ©2018 King with its problems. the attack happened, but it appears to
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Make nice with a special person. Features Syndicate
“Breaches don’t just violate our priva- have occurred after the video-uploading
★★★ Slow down and try not to SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 09/29/2018 cy. They create enormous risks for our program was introduced, Facebook said.
B6 THE PRESS DEMOCRAT • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2018
FAMILY CIRCUS Bil & Jeff Keane BIZARRO Wayno & Piraro BLISS Harry Bliss THE ARGYLE SWEATER Scott Hilburn
DOONESBURY Garry Trudeau BABY BLUES Rick Kirkman & Jerry Scott
GARFIELD Jim Davis SALLY FORTH Francesco Marciuliano & Jim Keefe
HAGAR THE HORRIBLE Chris Browne BLONDIE Dean Young & John Marshall
PICKLES Brian Crane REX MORGAN Woody Wilson & Terry Beatty
THE PRESS DEMOCRAT • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2018 B7
Business
DOW
26,458.31
+18.38
NASDAQ
8,046.35
+4.39
S&P 500
2,913.98
-0.02
US, Mexico near trade pact
STRICTLY NAFTA » Countries expected to sign preliminary working to get Canada into a changes to NAFTA involve the
pact that has become critical to rules governing car manufac-
agreement Nov. 30; Canada left out, for now businesses, like automakers and turing, which are being altered
BUSINESS
farmers, across North America. in an effort to bring more car
By ALAN RAPPEPORT is also expected to release the After trilateral talks between production back to the United
NEW YORK TIMES text. The bilateral agreement, the United States, Mexico and States from Mexico.
which does not include Canada, Canada stalled earlier this year, The preliminary agreement
WASHINGTON — The United would replace the 25-year-old the Trump administration began unveiled in August required that
SANTA CLARA States and Mexico are expected NAFTA pact, which has stitched working directly with Mexico at least 75 percent of a car’s val-
to release text of a bipartisan together the economies of Mexi- to reach a bilateral agreement. ue be produced in North Amer-
Intel boosts spending by trade deal the two countries co, Canada and the United States. Trump announced the deal in ica for a company to import it
$1 billion, raises output reached last month, setting up a President Donald Trump and August and said Canada, while into the United States duty free.
potential showdown with Cana- Mexican President Enrique not included, could still join “if it That is up from 62.5 percent un-
Intel Corp., which domi- da and Congress over the future Peña Nieto are expected to sign is willing.” der the original NAFTA.
nates the market for personal of the North American Free the pact Nov. 30 but the agree- But Canada and the United Carmakers also would be re-
computer processors, said it’s Trade Agreement. ment faces an uncertain fate States have so far failed to reach quired to use more local steel,
taking steps to increase output The Mexican government without Canada, which has been an agreement, and there is in- aluminum, glass and other
and alleviate a shortage that plans to publish the agreement unable to resolve several big creasing rancor between Trump parts. And 40 to 45 percent of
had threatened to slow the over the weekend, according to disagreements with the United and Justin Trudeau, Canada’s vehicles would have to be made
industry’s growth. a Mexican government official, States. Lawmakers have urged prime minister. by workers earning at least
The Santa Clara-based chip- and the U.S. trade representative the White House to continue Many of the most significant $16 an hour.
maker is adding an extra
$1 billion to its capital equip-
ment budget this year, increas-
ing output from facilities in
ELON MUSK » GENIUS OR OUT OF CONTROL?
Tesla at a crossroads
the U.S., Ireland and Israel.
The company said it’s been
surprised by a return to growth
in demand for personal com-
puters. Total spending in 2018
will be $15 billion, Intel said in
a letter to customers posted on
its website Friday. The shares
gained 3.8 percent to $47.64 Fri-
day in New York, after jumping
as much as 4.1 percent on the
announcement.
SAN FRANCISCO
Twitter on track to be
S&P 500’s big loser in 3Q
Twitter Inc. is on track to
seize a title no company wants:
the worst performer in the S&P
500 Index.
If shares of the social-media
giant hold at their current level
through today’s close, they will
end the third quarter with a
loss of about 34 percent. That
would be worse than any other
company in the S&P 500.
Twitter’s tough quarter was
touched off by a disappointing
earnings report. The stock
plunged the most in four years
after the firm said in July that
monthly users had dropped by
1 million in the second quarter.
Shares sunk further earlier this
month after an analyst at Mof-
fettNathanson flagged “smoke
and mirrors” in the company’s
expense reporting.
T
price of wine and other spirits SAN FRANCISCO is what leads to these Herculean accom- line of a breakdown,” said Erik Gordon,
will increase to $9, American he very attributes that have fueled plishments,” said Keith Rabois, a venture a professor at the University of Michigan
Airlines said. a mania around Elon Musk — his capitalist who used to work with Musk at Ross School of Business.
The price increase comes vision, brash personality and will- PayPal. “They are all a little bit off central In an apparent attempt to reassure
after the Fort Worth-based car- ingness to take risks — could prove to be casting in their own way, but that sort of is rattled shareholders, Musk took to social
rier matched the bag fee hike of his downfall. what lets them walk through these walls ... media on Friday, tweeting, “And remem-
JetBlue and United Airlines. On The Tesla CEO who made his fortune when most people are terrified.” ber…” with the message “Don’t panic”
Sept. 21, American Airlines be- and his renegade-genius reputation by The Securities and Exchange Commis- in the dashboard of a car headed toward
gan charging domestic travelers bursting through the barriers of con- sion filed a complaint against Musk on Earth from outer space.
$30 for the first checked bag, up ventional thinking faces a humiliating Thursday, alleging he falsely claimed in an Even before the SEC went after his job,
from $25, and $40 for the second comedown as government regulators try Aug. 7 tweet that he had secured financing Musk had raised hackles by ridiculing
bag, up from $35. to oust him from the company in a lawsuit to buy out Tesla and take it private at stock market analysts for posing fairly
Airline industry experts have accusing him of duping the electric car $420 per share, a substantial premium standard questions about Tesla’s shaky fi-
said they expected the airlines maker’s stockholders. over the stock price at the time. nances, and then called a diver who helped
to boost a variety fees to com- But extracting Musk from the company The SEC is asking a federal court in rescue 12 boys on a Thai soccer team from
pensate for higher fuel costs. he has become synonymous with could New York to bar Musk from serving as an a flooded cave a pedophile, triggering a
devastate Tesla. officer or director of any public company. libel lawsuit against himself.
Musk’s fans maintain that Tesla would The case is not expected to go to trial until Musk’s charisma and accomplishments
LOS ANGELES be insane to get rid of him, arguing it early next year. as a disrupter of several industries are
would go down as a huge mistake similar The fraud case comes amid a squall of worth $130 per share — or about
Facial recognition used to the one Apple made in 1985 when it disquieting tweets and other troubling dis- $22 billion — to Tesla, Barclays analyst
at airports falls short ousted its own visionary founder, Steve closures that have raised questions about Brian Johnson wrote in a note. He called it
Jobs, only to bring him back with the whether Musk should remain at the helm the “Musk premium.”
The U.S. Customs and Border
Protection agency is expected
to complete a 30-day test next
month of the use of facial rec-
“I PHIL BARBER
start by saying that it is a Al Davis, the
regretful day, very much late Raiders
so.” owner, used
And with that, Al Davis kicked an overhead
off the most surreal and eventful projector in a
press conference in the history of unique press
press conferences. It happened 10 conference to
years ago Sunday, and no one in An Al Davis presser was always announce the
attendance will ever forget it. a highly anticipated media event, firing of coach
It wasn’t just the overhead pro- but this one didn’t figure to hold Lane Kiffin
jector that Davis used to humiliate many surprises. Everyone knew 10 years ago.
the coach he was firing, Lane Kif- that Kiffin was getting canned. He
fin — though that was a brilliant had been daring Davis to do it for
touch. It was the layers of secrecy months, mocking the boss’ previ-
IAN BOOK and decorum that the then-79-year- ous personnel moves, insinuating
old team owner voluntarily peeled that defensive coordinator Rob
TODAY’S GAMES away from his organization. All in
front of a live studio audience.
TO WATCH TURN TO BARBER » PAGE C4 CHRISTOPHER CHUNG / THE PRESS DEMOCRAT
I
t’s Saturday, so it
must be time for col-
EMPIRE FOOTBALL
lege football. Break
out the spread of food,
sink into your couch
and watch from morn-
ing till night. Here’s a
WEEK 7 ■ CARDINAL NEWMAN 42, RANCHO COTATE 21
MORNING
No. 12 West Virgin-
ia (3-0) at No. 25 Texas
Tech (3-1)
Kickoff: 9 a.m.,
ESPN2
Favorite: West Vir-
ginia by 5 (73 total)
Storyline: The over/
under total is the high-
est of the weekend — so
things will probably will
come down to which de-
fense can pull out a stop
or two here or there.
Other games to
watch: Louisiana-La-
fayette at No. 1 Alabama
(-49), 9 a.m., SEC Net-
work; Syracuse at No. 3
Clemson (-25½), 9 a.m.,
ABC; Central Michigan
at No. 21 Michigan State
(-29½), 9 a.m, FS1.
AFTERNOON
Tennessee (2-2) at
No. 2 Georgia (4-0)
Kickoff: 12:30 p.m.,
Fox
Favorite: Georgia by
31 (55 total)
Storyline: Tennessee
hasn’t beaten a Power
Five team since a sea-
son-opening win over
Georgia Tech in 2017,
losing 10 times since.
EVENING
No. 19 Oregon (3-1)
at No. 24 Cal (4-0)
A
Kickoff: 7:30 p.m., FS1
Favorite: Oregon by 2
(58 total)
t the proverbial turn in
the fall girls golf season,
KERRY BENEFIELD Cardinals could not get by the
Healdsburg Hounds when they
season that will be pretty road
heavy.
Storyline: Cal is in Healdsburg has estab- met at the Healdsburg Golf Club “We were pretty successful
the Top 25 for the first lished itself as the team to beat in at Tayman Park Wednesday, that first half and we also had
time since 2015, and the North Bay League-Redwood where they fell 260-279. three matches at home that real-
they face a Ducks team division. “It’s a tough course,” Cardi- ly made a difference for us,” she
coming off a tough loss And Cardinal Newman has nals coach T.J. McMahon said. said. “Going into this part of it,
to Stanford last week. the player to beat: Sophomore impressed Montgomery coach “It’s one of those courses, if we only have two matches here.”
Oregon has won eight of Abby Leighton. Tom Fitchie through the first we probably played a few more Yes, but she has seniors Tiffa-
the last nine vs. Cal. “Abby is for sure the lowest half of the season as well. times, we would have been clos- ny Vanvranken as her No. 1 and
Other games to average in the Redwood division, “She’s the real deal,” he er. You definitely have to play Piper Jones at No. 2. Not a bad
watch: Mississippi at by far and away,” Healdsburg said. “Just to watch her play so some holes safe and smart.” combination.
No. 5 Louisiana State coach Jane Wann said. “She smooth, so easy. She’s probably But that is the thing with prep “They are our go-to players,”
(-9), 6 p.m., ESPN; USC has such a beautiful game and the cream of the crop.” golf — for beginning players she said. “They are really the
(-3) at Arizona State, a wonderful stroke. It’s so much Leighton is backed by the Car- who may not get a ton of rounds leaders of the team. The next
7:30 p.m., ESPN2. fun to see her, just to watch her dinals’ No. 2, her sister, fresh- in, the home course can be a three players are all shooting in
hit.” man Tori Leighton. huge boon for host teams. To
— Press Democrat Leighton, the Cardinals’ No. 1 But even with the one-two that end, Wann is readying her
news services for the second season in a row, punch of the Leightons, the crew for a second half of the TURN TO BENEFIELD » PAGE C5
C2 THE PRESS DEMOCRAT • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2018
BASEBALL TODAY
Blue Jays 7, Rays 6 Indians 14, Royals 6 AMERICAN LEAGUE BASEBALL NOTES
Rockies clinch
Toronto AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Cleveland AB R H BI BB SO Avg. West Division W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
McKinney rf 4 0 1 0 1 0 .263 Lindor ss 5 1 1 1 1 0 .279 x-Houston 101 58 .635 — — 7-3 W-1 46-35 55-23
Pillar cf 4 1 1 0 0 2 .248 Brantley lf 4 0 1 0 0 1 .309
Solarte 3b 5 0 0 0 0 1 .226 Davis lf 2 0 0 0 0 0 .226 y-A’s 96 64 .600 5½ — 6-4 L-1 50-31 46-33
Tellez 1b 5 2 1 1 0 2 .317 Ramirez 2b 4 1 0 0 1 1 .270 Seattle 87 73 .544 14½ 9 4-6 W-1 43-36 44-37
Hernandez dh 3 2 2 1 2 1 .240 Encarnacion dh 4 1 1 1 0 1 .245 Los Angeles 79 81 .494 22½ 17 5-5 W-4 41-38 38-43
McGuire c 3 0 1 0 0 1 .286 Haase ph-dh 1 0 0 0 0 0 .167
playoff berth
a-Grichuk ph 1 0 1 3 0 0 .244 Donaldson 3b 4 2 2 4 0 0 .249 Texas 67 93 .419 34½ 29 3-7 L-1 34-47 33-46
1-Davis pr-lf 1 0 0 0 0 0 .211 Diaz 3b 0 1 0 0 1 0 .306 East Division W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Smith Jr. lf 2 1 1 0 1 1 .266 Alonso 1b 3 0 2 1 0 0 .250 x-Boston 107 53 .669 — — 4-6 L-2 56-23 51-30
b-Jansen ph-c 1 0 0 0 1 0 .256 Rosales pr-1b 2 3 2 0 0 0 .235
Urena ss 4 1 3 0 0 1 .304 Cabrera rf 3 0 1 0 0 0 .280 y-New York 99 61 .619 8 — 7-3 W-2 53-28 46-33
Berti 2b 4 0 1 2 0 2 .286 Barnes pr-rf 2 1 0 0 0 0 .294 Tampa Bay 88 72 .550 19 8 4-6 L-2 49-30 39-42
Totals 37 7 12 7 5 11 Kipnis cf 3 1 2 1 0 0 .231 Toronto 73 87 .456 34 23 5-5 W-2 40-41 33-46
Tampa Bay AB R H BI BB SO Avg. G.Allen pr-cf 2 2 2 1 0 0 .255
Smith cf 5 2 3 0 0 0 .294 R.Perez c 5 1 2 3 0 0 .169 Baltimore 46 113 .289 60½ 49½ 3-7 L-1 27-51 19-62
Pham lf 2 1 0 1 2 1 .272 Totals 44 14 16 12 3 3 Central Division W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Wendle 3b 4 1 1 1 1 1 .300 Kansas City AB R H BI BB SO Avg. x-Cleveland 90 70 .563 — — 6-4 W-1 49-32 41-38 ASSOCIATED PRESS
Cron dh 3 0 1 1 1 0 .255 Merrifield 2b 5 0 1 0 0 2 .303
Lowe 2b 5 0 1 0 0 2 .238 Mondesi ss 4 0 0 0 0 2 .280 Minnesota 76 84 .475 14 20 7-3 W-4 47-32 29-52
Adames ss
Bauers 1b
4 1 2 1 1 1 .271
5 0 0 0 0 2 .194
Gordon lf
Herrera ph-rf
2 0 0 0 0 1 .244
2 1 1 0 0 0 .234
Detroit 64 96 .400 26 32 3-7 L-3 38-43 26-53
The NL West-leading Colorado Rockies locked up a
Chicago 62 98 .388 28 34 3-7 L-3 30-51 32-47
Meadows rf 5 0 2 0 0 1 .289 S.Perez dh 4 1 2 1 0 0 .237
Kansas City 57 103 .356 33 39 5-5 L-1 31-48 26-55 playoff berth for the second straight season, beating the
Moore c 4 1 2 2 0 0 .235 O’Hearn 1b 3 2 1 0 1 1 .271
Totals 37 6 12 6 5 8 Dozier 3b 3 1 1 1 1 0 .227 x-clinched division Washington Nationals 5-2 on Friday night in Denver for
Toronto 010 003 300 — 7 12 1 Goodwin cf
Bonifacio rf-lf
4 1 1 4 0 0 .238
3 0 0 0 1 1 .223
y-clinched wild card
their eighth win in a row behind a resilient start from
Tampa Bay 300 011 010 — 6 12 1
Gallagher c 4 0 0 0 0 0 .206 NATIONAL LEAGUE Kyle Freeland.
a-tripled for McGuire in the 7th. b-walked for Smith Totals 34 6 7 6 3 7 West Division W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Jr. in the 7th. 1-ran for Grichuk in the 7th. E—Urena
Cleveland 001 000 1003 — 14 16 0 z-Colorado 90 70 .563 — — 8-2 W-8 46-33 44-37
David Dahl homered for the fifth consecutive game to
(3), Lowe (1). LOB—Toronto 9, Tampa Bay 11. 2B—
McKinney (7), Pillar (39), Berti (1), Smith (27), Wendle Kansas City 000 000 105 — 6 7 1 Los Angeles 89 71 .556 1 — 7-3 W-1 44-37 45-34 help Colorado clinch at least a wild card with two games
(33). 3B—Grichuk (1), Smith (10). HR—Hernandez
(21), off Glasnow; Tellez (4), off Glasnow; Moore (1),
E—O’Hearn (5). LOB—Cleveland 6, Kansas City
4. 2B—Donaldson (13), R.Perez (9), Rosales (1),
Arizona 81 78 .509 8½ 7½ 3-7 W-2 40-41 41-37 remaining. The Rockies entered the night with a one-
off Fernandez. RBIs—Tellez (13), Hernandez (56), G.Allen (11), S.Perez (23), O’Hearn (10), Dozier (19). Giants 73 87 .456 17 16 3-7 L-2 42-37 31-50 game lead over the Dodgers as they try to wrap up the
Berti 2 (2), Grichuk 3 (60), Pham (62), Wendle (59), HR—Kipnis (18), off Kennedy; Donaldson (8), off San Diego 64 95 .403 25½ 24½ 5-5 W-1 29-49 35-46
Cron (73), Adames (34), Moore 2 (2). SB—Hernandez Newberry; Goodwin (6), off Plutko. RBIs—Lindor East Division W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
franchise’s first division crown.
(5), Urena 2 (2), Smith (38). CS—Hernandez (5). (91), Encarnacion (106), Donaldson 4 (23), Alonso
x-Atlanta 90 70 .563 — — 7-3 W-1 43-38 47-32
SF—Pham, Cron. Runners left in scoring
position—Toronto 6 (McKinney, Solarte 2, Tellez,
(82), Kipnis (75), R.Perez 3 (19), G.Allen (20), S.Perez
(80), Dozier (34), Goodwin 4 (25). Runners left in Washington 81 79 .506 9 8 5-5 L-1 41-40 40-39 Yankees clinch home field for wild-card game
Berti 2); Tampa Bay 6 (Pham, Wendle 2, Cron, Lowe, scoring position—Cleveland 2 (R.Perez, Davis);
Meadows). RISP—Toronto 2 for 13; Tampa Bay 3 for Kansas City 2 (Goodwin 2). RISP—Cleveland 9 for
Philadelphia 78 82 .488 12 11 1-9 L-9 47-32 31-50 New York clinched home-field advantage for the AL
New York 75 85 .469 15 14 5-5 L-1 35-44 40-41
15. Runners moved up—Solarte, Moore. 15; Kansas City 2 for 6.
Miami 63 96 .396 26½ 25½ 5-5 W-1 38-43 25-53
wild-card game, hitting four homers to tie the major
Toronto IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Cleveland IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Pannone 51/3 7 5 5 3 3 94 4.19 Clevinger, W, 13-8 62/3 3 1 1 0 5 101 3.02 Central Division W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away league single-season record and beat Boston 11-6.
Petricka 3 1 0 0 1 0 12 4.53 Cimber 11/3 1 0 0 0 0 21 3.42
Aaron Judge hit his first homer since coming off the
1/
z-Chicago 94 66 .588 — — 6-4 W-3 50-29 44-37
Mayza, W, 2-0 1/
3 0 0 0 0 0 2 3.31 C.Allen 1/
3 2 4 4 2 1 20 4.46
Biagini, H, 5 1/
3 1 0 0 1 1 17 5.68 Plutko 2/
3 1 1 1 1 1 15 5.28 z-Milwaukee 93 67 .581 1 — 8-2 W-5 49-30 44-37 disabled list Sept. 14, and Gary Sanchez, Aaron Hicks
Fernandez, H, 2 2/
3 2 1 1 0 0 14 6.30 Kansas City IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA St. Louis 87 73 .544 7 2 5-5 L-4 43-38 44-35
Tepera, H, 19 1 0 0 0 0 2 13 3.62 Kennedy, L, 3-9 6 6 4 4 1 2 102 4.66 Pittsburgh 81 78 .509 12½ 7½ 6-4 W-1 44-36 37-42
and Luke Voit also homered to match the mark of 264 set
Giles, S, 26-26 1 1 0 0 0 2 16 4.65 Hill 3 2 3 2 0 0 14 4.63
by the 1997 Seattle Mariners.
1/
1/
3 2 1
3 1 1
1 0 0 10 3.93
1 0 0 9 3.65
Kennedy pitched to 3 batters in the 7th. Inherited
runners-scored—Cimber 1-1, Plutko 3-3, Hill 2-2,
x-clinched division
y-clinched wild card
Cardinals’ postseason hopes take another hit
Alvarado, L, 1-6 3 1 2 1 2 1 22 2.39 Newberry 2-2. Umpires—Home, Kerwin Danley;
Kyle Hendricks went eight innings in another strong
1/
Wood 1/
3 0 0 0 0 0 1 3.54 First, Mike Estabrook; Second, Bruce Dreckman; Third,
Nuno 1 0 0 0 0 0 9 1.64 Chad Fairchild. T—3:16. A—15,920 (37,903). AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE
start, Kris Bryant homered and Chicago moved closer to
Romo 1 1 0 0 0 1 12 4.07 Friday’s Results Friday’s Results
Fernandez pitched to 2 batters in the 8th. Inherited Astros 2, Orioles 1 L.A. Angels 8, A’s 5 L.A. Dodgers 3, Giants 1 the NL Central championship and dealt another hit to
runners-scored—Petricka 2-1, Mayza 3-0, Fernan-
dez 2-0, Tepera 1-0, Kolarek 2-1, Alvarado 1-1, Wood
Houston
Altuve 2b
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
3 0 1 0 0 0 .314
Minnesota 2, Chicago White Sox 1, 1st game
Houston 2, Baltimore 1
Chicago Cubs 8, St. Louis 4
Pittsburgh 8, Cincinnati 4 St. Louis’ playoff hopes with an 8-4 victory. The Cardi-
2-0. HBP—Glasnow (Pillar). WP—Glasnow. Marisnick cf 0 1 0 0 1 0 .212 N.Y. Yankees 11, Boston 6 Atlanta 10, Philadelphia 2 nals, who dropped their fourth in a row, came in trailing
Umpires—Home, Mark Carlson; First, Lance Barks- Reddick rf 3 1 1 1 0 0 .239 Toronto 7, Tampa Bay 6 Miami 8, N.Y. Mets 1
dale; Second, Will Little; Third, Ted Barrett. T—3:39. Tucker rf 0 0 0 0 1 0 .138 Minnesota 12, Chicago White Sox 4, 2nd game Colorado 5, Washington 2 Los Angeles by a game for the second wild card.
A—12,061 (42,735). Bregman 3b 4 0 1 0 0 2 .289 Milwaukee 6, Detroit 5 Milwaukee 6, Detroit 5
Twins 2, White Sox 1 Gonzalez lf-2b
Correa ss
4 0 1 1 0 0 .249
3 0 0 0 1 1 .237
Cleveland 14, Kansas City 6
Seattle 12, Texas 6
Arizona at San Diego, late
Today’s Games
Brewers keep pace with division-leading Cubs
First Game White 1b 4 0 0 0 0 2 .282
Chicago AB R H BI BB SO Avg. McCann dh 2 0 0 0 0 0 .205
Today’s Games
A’s (Cahill 6-4) at
L.A. Dodgers (Kershaw 9-5) at
Giants (Rodriguez 6-4), 1:05 p.m. Ryan Braun hit two homers, the second a solo shot in
Sanchez 3b
L.Garcia 2b
4 0 1 0 0 2 .245
4 0 1 1 0 1 .276
Gattis ph-dh
Maldonado c
1 0 0 0 1 0 .229
4 0 1 0 0 0 .228
L.A. Angels (Skaggs 8-9), 6:07 p.m. St. Louis (Mikolas 17-4) at the eighth inning that bounced off right fielder Nicholas
N.Y. Yankees (Lynn 9-10) at Chicago Cubs (Hamels 9-11), 10:05 a.m.
A.Garcia rf 3 0 1 0 1 1 .238 Kemp cf-lf 2 0 0 0 0 0 .265 Boston (Eovaldi 6-7), 10:05 a.m. Pittsburgh (Taillon 14-9) at Castellanos’ glove and over the fence, and Milwaukee
Cordell rf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .077 Totals 30 2 5 2 4 5
Palka lf 3 0 0 0 1 2 .236 Baltimore AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Houston (Verlander 16-9) at Cincinnati (Lorenzen 3-2), 1:10 p.m. beat Detroit 6-5 to keep pace with the NL Central-leading
Baltimore (Bundy 8-16), 1:05 p.m., 1st game Atlanta (Sanchez 7-6) at
Davidson 1b
Narvaez dh
4 0 0 0 0 2 .231
2 0 0 0 1 1 .269
Mullins cf
Villar ss
4 0 1 0 0 1 .247
3 1 1 0 1 0 .262 Toronto (Borucki 4-5) at Philadelphia (Nola 16-6), 4:05 p.m. Cubs. Already assured a playoff spot, the second-place
a-Smith ph-dh 1 0 0 0 0 1 .291 Mancini 1b 4 0 0 0 0 0 .242 Tampa Bay (Snell 21-5), 3:10 p.m. Detroit (Norris 0-5) at Brewers (93-67) stayed one game back of Chicago, with
Castillo c 3 0 1 0 1 1 .257 Jones rf 4 0 1 1 0 1 .281 Chicago White Sox (Rodon 6-7) at Milwaukee (Miley 5-2), 4:10 p.m.
Anderson ss 3 1 0 0 0 0 .240 Stewart lf 4 0 1 0 0 2 .242 Minnesota (Gibson 9-13), 4:10 p.m. Miami (Richards 4-9) at two games left in the regular season.
Engel cf 3 0 0 0 0 1 .235 Andreoli pr 0 0 0 0 0 0 .220 Detroit (Norris 0-5) at N.Y. Mets (Matz 5-11), 4:10 p.m.
Totals
Minnesota
30 1 4 1 4 12
AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Joseph dh
Nunez ph-dh
2 0 1 0 0 0 .235
2 0 0 0 0 0 .256
Milwaukee (Miley 5-2), 4:10 p.m.
Cleveland (Kluber 20-7) at
Washington (Strasburg 9-7) at
Colorado (Gray 12-8), 5:10 p.m.
Wright grounds out in return to Mets
Mauer dh 4 1 2 0 0 1 .278 Wilkerson 2b 3 0 0 0 0 1 .195
Polanco ss 4 0 0 0 0 2 .286 Peterson 3b 3 0 0 0 0 0 .201
Kansas City (Junis 8-12), 4:15 p.m.
Houston (Keuchel 12-11) at
Arizona (Godley 14-11) at
San Diego (Nix 2-4), 5:40 p.m.
David Wright finally made it back into a major league
Cave cf 3 1 1 0 1 2 .266 Wynns c 3 0 1 0 0 2 .250 Baltimore (Ramirez 1-7), 4:35 p.m., 2nd game Sunday’s Games game Friday night, grounding out in his first plate appear-
Grossman lf 2 0 2 0 2 0 .275 Totals 32 1 6 1 1 7
Austin 1b 3 0 0 1 1 1 .233 Houston 000 001 010 — 2 5 0
Texas (Sampson 0-2) at
Seattle (Paxton 11-6), 6:10 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at Giants, 12:05 p.m.
Atlanta at Philadelphia, 12:05 p.m.
ance for the Mets in nearly 2½ years as New York lost 8-1
Kepler rf
Astudillo c
4 0 0 0 0 0 .221
1 0 0 1 1 0 .353
Baltimore 100 000 000 — 1 6 0 Sunday’s Games Arizona at San Diego, 12:10 p.m. to the Miami Marlins. Sidelined by neck, back and shoul-
Detroit at Milwaukee, 12:10 p.m.
Adrianza 3b 3 0 0 0 0 1 .254 2B—Jones (34), Joseph (1). HR—Reddick (17), off
Hess. RBIs—Reddick (47), Gonzalez (68), Jones (63).
A’s at L.A. Angels, 12:07 p.m.
Houston at Baltimore, 12:05 p.m. Miami at N.Y. Mets, 12:10 p.m. der injuries since May 27, 2016, the 35-year-old Wright
Petit 2b 3 0 0 0 0 1 .250
Totals 27 2 5 2 5 8 CS—Mullins (3). Runners left in scoring posi- N.Y. Yankees at Boston, 12:05 p.m. Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, 12:10 p.m.
Washington at Colorado, 12:10 p.m.
came up as a pinch-hitter leading off the fifth inning.
tion—Houston 2 (Reddick, Maldonado); Baltimore 3 Chicago White Sox at Minnesota, 12:10 p.m.
Chicago 001 000 000 — 1 4 0 (Stewart, Wilkerson, Nunez). RISP—Houston 2 for 6; Detroit at Milwaukee, 12:10 p.m. St. Louis at Chicago Cubs, 12:20 p.m.
Minnesota 100 001 00x — 2 5 0 Baltimore 1 for 4. Texas at Seattle, 12:10 p.m.
a-struck out for Narvaez in the 9th. LOB—Chicago 6, Runners moved up—Altuve, Mancini. FIDP— Toronto at Tampa Bay, 12:10 p.m.
Minnesota 7. 2B—Cave (15). RBIs—L.Garcia (32), Altuve. GIDP—Correa. DP—Baltimore 2 (Stewart, Cleveland at Kansas City, 12:15 p.m.
Austin (46), Astudillo (20). CS—Mauer (1). SF— Peterson), (Peterson, Wilkerson, Mancini).
Astudillo. Runners left in scoring position—Chi- Houston IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Pirates 8, Reds 4 Marlins 8, Mets 1
Pittsburgh AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Miami AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
cago 2 (A.Garcia, Anderson); Minnesota 4 (Kepler 2,
Adrianza 2). RISP—Chicago 1 for 4; Minnesota 0 for
Cole
Sipp, W, 3-1
6 5 1 1 1 4 86 2.88
1 0 0 0 0 1 13 1.86
Angels 8, A’s 5 Dodgers 3, Giants 1 Frazier rf 5 1 1 0 0 1 .278 Rojas ss 6 2 4 1 0 0 .253
5. Runners moved up—Austin. GIDP—Anderson. McHugh, H, 12 1 0 0 0 0 2 16 2.02 Oakland AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Los Angeles AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Marte cf 3 3 2 0 2 0 .276 Castro 2b 5 0 1 0 1 1 .278
DP—Chicago 1 (Castillo, Anderson); Minnesota 1 Osuna, S, 21-22 1 1 0 0 0 0 20 2.37 Martini lf 2 0 0 0 1 0 .302 K.Hernandez rf-cf-2b 4 2 3 0 0 1 .246 Bell 1b 5 1 1 0 0 1 .263 Realmuto c 5 0 1 1 0 2 .277
(Polanco, Petit, Austin). Baltimore IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA b-Canha ph-lf 1 1 1 0 0 0 .249 Turner 3b 4 1 1 2 0 1 .316 Dickerson lf 5 0 2 1 0 2 .299 O’Brien 1b 5 2 2 1 0 1 .293
Chicago IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Hess 7 3 1 1 2 4 91 4.88 c-Joyce ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .210 Freese 1b 2 0 1 0 1 0 .295 Diaz c 4 1 1 2 0 2 .286 Anderson 3b 3 1 2 0 2 0 .275
Lopez, L, 7-10 6 4 2 2 5 5 101 3.91 Scott, L, 3-3 1/
3 2 1 1 2 0 19 5.40 Chapman 3b 5 1 1 0 0 3 .280 Alexander p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Moran 3b 4 1 2 3 0 1 .277 Brinson cf 5 1 1 1 0 0 .200
Minaya 1 0 0 0 0 1 16 3.33 Meisinger 2/
3 0 0 0 0 0 3 6.43 Lowrie 2b 5 0 2 1 0 0 .268 Baez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Kramer 2b 5 1 2 1 0 1 .152 Dean lf 4 1 2 1 1 2 .227
Frare 1 1 0 0 0 2 19 5.14 Givens 1 0 0 0 0 1 13 4.10 Davis dh 4 0 0 0 1 3 .247 Wood p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .045 Newman ss 4 0 1 1 0 0 .200 Garcia p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Minnesota IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Inherited runners-scored—Meisinger 3-0. Olson 1b 2 1 0 0 2 1 .247 e-Pederson ph-lf 1 0 0 0 0 1 .247 Kingham p 1 0 0 0 0 1 .087 Wittgren p 0 0 0 0 0 0 ---
Berrios, W, 12-11 7 3 1 1 4 9 106 3.84 HBP—Hess (Kemp). WP—Osuna. Umpires—Home, Piscotty rf 2 1 0 0 2 2 .267 Machado ss 4 0 1 1 0 0 .295 Brault p 1 0 0 0 0 1 .150 Sierra rf 5 0 0 1 0 1 .188
Rogers, H, 17 11/3 1 0 0 0 1 13 2.67 Bill Miller; First, Angel Hernandez; Second, Alan Porter; Laureano cf 3 1 0 0 1 2 .289 Kemp lf 3 0 0 0 0 2 .284 Kang ph 1 0 1 0 0 0 1.000 Urena p 2 1 0 0 1 2 .042
May, S, 2-2 2/
3 0 0 0 0 2 11 3.33 Third, Chad Whitson. T—2:39. A—18,434 (45,971). Semien ss 3 0 1 2 1 1 .257 Bellinger cf-1b-cf 1 0 1 0 0 0 .262 Rodriguez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Dietrich ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .265
WP—Lopez. Umpires—Home, Mark Wegner; Lucroy c 3 0 0 0 1 0 .241 Taylor cf-lf 4 0 0 0 0 3 .251 Osuna ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .218 Barraclough p 0 0 0 0 0 0 ---
First, Jansen Visconti; Second, John Libka; Third, Jim Yankees 11, Red Sox 6 Totals 31 5 5 3 9 13 Maeda p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .094 Feliz p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Galloway lf 1 0 0 0 0 0 .207
Reynolds. T—2:45. A—20,245 (38,649). New York AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Los Angeles AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Jansen p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --- Neverauskas p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --- Totals 42 8 13 6 5 10
McCutchen lf 5 1 1 1 0 1 .254 Calhoun rf 4 2 2 0 0 0 .207 Grandal c 4 0 2 0 0 0 .241 Totals 39 8 13 8 2 10 New York AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Twins 12, White Sox 4 Judge rf 4 3 2 1 1 1 .280
Hermosillo cf 1 0 0 0 0 0 .204 Dozier 2b 3 0 0 0 0 1 .214 Cincinnati AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Nimmo cf 3 0 2 0 1 0 .263
Fernandez 1b 3 1 1 0 0 1 .263 f-Muncy ph-1b 1 0 0 0 0 0 .258 Schebler lf 4 0 1 0 1 0 .259 McNeil 2b 4 1 1 0 0 0 .327
Second Game Hicks cf 5 1 2 3 0 1 .249
a-Marte ph-1b 1 0 0 0 0 0 .209 Ryu p 2 0 0 0 0 1 .269 Peraza ss 5 0 1 0 0 1 .291 Conforto rf 4 0 0 0 0 0 .243
Chicago AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Stanton dh 5 0 2 1 0 1 .263
Trout cf 3 2 2 2 1 0 .315 b-Puig ph-rf 2 0 0 0 0 0 .266 Dixon 1b 0 0 0 0 0 0 .183 Bruce 1b 2 0 0 0 2 0 .228
Moncada 2b 4 1 1 0 1 1 .233 Voit 1b 4 1 1 1 1 1 .317
Blash rf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .111 Totals 35 3 9 3 1 10 Votto 1b 3 1 2 0 2 0 .287 Rosario ss 4 0 1 1 0 2 .257
Sanchez 3b 4 1 1 1 0 1 .245 Gregorius ss 5 1 1 0 0 0 .267
Ohtani dh 3 1 3 2 0 0 .289 San Francisco AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Trahan ss 0 0 0 0 0 0 .273 Smith lf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .223
Palka rf 3 0 1 1 1 2 .237 Andujar 3b 4 1 1 0 1 0 .296
Upton lf 1 1 0 0 2 0 .259 Pence rf 4 0 0 0 0 0 .225 Gennett 2b 5 0 0 0 0 1 .310 Frazier 3b 1 0 0 0 2 0 .210
Davidson 1b 3 0 0 0 0 1 .230 Sanchez c 4 2 2 1 1 1 .186
1-Young Jr. pr-lf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .210 Panik 2b 4 0 2 0 0 0 .254 Suarez 3b 5 2 3 2 0 1 .284 Plawecki c 2 0 0 0 0 1 .215
Narvaez dh 4 0 2 0 0 0 .272 Torres 2b 5 1 1 2 0 3 .273 Simmons ss 3 0 0 1 1 1 .293
Smith c 4 1 1 1 0 2 .290 Totals 41 11 13 10 4 9 Longoria 3b 4 0 0 0 0 0 .243 Barnhart c 5 1 5 2 0 0 .249 Lobaton ph-c 2 0 0 0 0 1 .143
Arcia c 4 0 0 1 0 1 .210 Hundley c 4 1 1 1 0 1 .244 Ervin rf 4 0 0 0 1 2 .252 Oswalt p 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Delmonico lf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .217 Boston AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Ward 3b 4 1 1 2 0 2 .172
Rondon ss 4 1 1 1 0 0 .237 Betts cf-rf 3 2 1 0 2 1 .346 Crawford ss 1 0 1 0 2 0 .257 DeSclafani p 1 0 0 0 0 1 .143 Sewald p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Cowart 2b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .132 Garcia 1b 3 0 2 0 1 0 .321 Herrera ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .173 Wright ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Cordell cf 4 0 0 0 0 0 .067 Benintendi lf 5 1 2 0 0 2 .288 Totals 31 8 9 8 4 6
Totals 34 4 8 4 2 7 Martinez rf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .330 Slater lf 1 0 0 0 0 0 .251 Peralta p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Gagnon p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Minnesota AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Lin cf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .246 Oakland 000 000 050 — 5 5 0 a-Tomlinson ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .209 Wisler p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Rhame p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Mauer dh 4 2 2 0 1 1 .280 Vazquez ph 0 0 0 0 1 0 .210 Los Angeles 032 010 20x — 8 9 2 Blanco lf 1 0 0 0 0 1 .214 Garrett p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Reyes ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .189
1-Petit pr-dh 1 0 0 0 0 0 .246 Bogaerts ss 3 1 0 1 2 1 .286 G.Hernandez cf 3 0 0 0 0 1 .235 Williams ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .280 Peterson p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
a-grounded out for Fernandez in the 7th. b-singled Bumgarner p 2 0 0 0 0 2 .159 Reinheimer ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .138
Polanco ss 4 2 1 1 1 3 .286 Pearce 1b 5 1 2 5 0 1 .284 for Martini in the 8th. c-struck out for Canha in the Reyes p 0 0 0 0 0 0 ---
a-Gimenez ph-3b 1 0 0 0 0 1 .214 Devers 3b 3 0 0 0 1 0 .242 Moronta p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Iglesias p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Totals 30 1 5 1 5 4
9th. 1-ran for Upton in the 7th. E—Ward (5), Blash c-Hanson ph 0 0 0 0 0 0 .253
Cave cf 4 3 2 0 1 1 .269 Nunez dh 4 0 0 0 0 0 .262 (1). LOB—Oakland 8, Los Angeles 5. 2B—Semien Casali ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .288 Miami 000 121 400 — 8 13 1
Grossman lf 4 1 2 3 0 1 .277 Kinsler 2b 3 0 0 0 1 1 .241 d-d’Arnaud ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .217 Hamilton cf 3 0 1 0 1 2 .234 New York 100 000 000 — 1 5 3
(35), Calhoun 2 (18), Fernandez (8), Ohtani (21). Dyson p 0 0 0 0 0 0 ---
Field lf 1 0 1 0 0 0 .217 Swihart c 3 0 0 0 0 3 .231 HR—Ward (5), off Fiers; Trout (39), off Fiers. RBIs— Totals 38 4 13 4 5 10 E—O’Brien (1), McNeil (3), Rosario (16), Frazier
Garver 1b 5 1 4 6 0 0 .268 Travis ph 1 1 0 0 0 0 .188 Strickland p 0 0 0 0 0 0 ---
Lowrie (97), Semien 2 (70), Trout 2 (79), Ohtani 2 (61), Totals 29 1 6 1 3 6 Pittsburgh 200 102 021 — 8 13 1 (12). LOB—Miami 12, New York 8. 2B—Rojas (13),
Kepler rf 4 0 1 2 0 1 .222 Totals 34 6 6 6 7 9 Simmons (75), Arcia (23), Ward 2 (13). SB—Ohtani Cincinnati 002 000 002 — 4 13 2 O’Brien (5), Anderson (34), Brinson (10). RBIs—Rojas
Forsythe 2b 3 0 0 0 2 2 .230 New York 002 600 210 — 11 13 1 (10), Upton (8). CS—Laureano (1). SF—Ohtani. Los Angeles 001 020 000 — 3 9 1 (53), Realmuto (74), O’Brien (10), Brinson (42), Dean
San Francisco 010 000 000 — 1 6 1 E—Marte (3), Ervin (3), Iglesias (1). LOB—Pittsburgh
Adrianza 3b-ss 4 1 0 0 1 0 .251 Boston 000 004 011 — 6 6 1 Runners left in scoring position—Oakland 5 (14), Sierra (7), Rosario (51). SB—Sierra (3), McNeil
8, Cincinnati 13. 2B—Frazier (23), Marte (30), Dick-
Graterol c 4 2 1 0 1 0 .400 (Chapman, Davis, Piscotty, Laureano, Lucroy); Los a-grounded out for Slater in the 4th. b-flied out for (7). CS—Rojas (3), Frazier (4). GIDP—Rosario.
E—Gregorius (6), Bogaerts (10). LOB—New York erson (35), Votto (28). 3B—Barnhart (3). HR—Diaz
Totals 39 12 14 12 7 10 Angeles 2 (Simmons 2). RISP—Oakland 1 for 7; Los Ryu in the 7th. c-pinch hit for Moronta in the 7th. DP—Miami 1 (Rojas, Castro, O’Brien); New York 1
7, Boston 8. 2B—Andujar (44), Sanchez (17), Torres (10), off DeSclafani; Moran (11), off Reyes; Suarez
Chicago 001 010 020 — 4 8 1 Angeles 4 for 12. Runners moved up—Lowrie, d-struck out for Hanson in the 7th. e-struck out for (33), off Kingham; Barnhart (10), off Neverauskas. (Oswalt, Plawecki).
(16), Benintendi (41). HR—Sanchez (18), off Johnson; Arcia, Marte. GIDP—Lucroy, Arcia. DP—Oakland 1
Minnesota 343 010 10x — 12 14 0 Wood in the 8th. f-lined out for Dozier in the 9th. RBIs—Dickerson (55), Diaz 2 (34), Moran 3 (58), Miami IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Hicks (27), off Cuevas; Voit (14), off Pomeranz; Judge (Brooks, Lucroy, Olson); Los Angeles 2 (Arcia, Cowart), E—Freese (7), Crawford (16). LOB—Los Angeles 6, Kramer (3), Newman (5), Suarez 2 (103), Barnhart 2 Urena, W, 9-12 6 5 1 1 4 2 96 3.98
a-struck out for Polanco in the 8th. 1-ran for Mauer (27), off Poyner; Pearce (11), off Happ. RBIs— (Simmons, Cowart, Fernandez). San Francisco 5. 2B—Grandal (22). HR—Turner (14), (46). SB—Votto (2), Hamilton (33). SF—Diaz, Mo- Barraclough 1 0 0 0 1 0 14 4.28
in the 6th. E—Moncada (20). LOB—Chicago 6, McCutchen (65), Judge (67), Hicks 3 (79), Stanton Oakland IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA off Bumgarner; Hundley (10), off Ryu. RBIs—Turner ran. S—DeSclafani. GIDP—Ervin. DP—Pittsburgh 1 Garcia 1 0 0 0 0 0 10 4.80
Minnesota 11. 2B—Moncada (29), Cave (16), Garver (98), Voit (34), Sanchez (53), Torres 2 (75), Bogaerts Trivino 1 0 0 0 0 0 11 2.96 2 (51), Machado (105), Hundley (31). SB—Bellinger (Newman, Kramer, Bell). Wittgren 1 0 0 0 0 2 26 2.94
2 (19), Field (12). 3B—Sanchez (10). HR—Rondon (101), Pearce 5 (42). Runners left in scoring Fiers, L, 12-8 31/3 7 6 6 0 3 53 3.56 New York IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
(6), off De Jong; Smith (3), off De Jong. RBIs— position—New York 3 (McCutchen, Voit, Torres); (13). Runners left in scoring position—Los Pittsburgh IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Dull 2/
3 0 0 0 1 1 11 4.26 Angeles 3 (Kemp 2, Taylor); San Francisco 2 (G.Her- Oswalt 4 4 1 1 3 4 85 5.85
Sanchez (54), Palka (67), Smith (21), Rondon (14), Boston 5 (Pearce 3, Nunez 2). RISP—New York 4 for Kingham 32/3 6 2 2 3 3 76 5.21
Bassitt 1 0 0 0 0 2 9 3.02 nandez, d’Arnaud). RISP—Los Angeles 1 for 6; San Sewald, L, 0-7 1 3 2 2 1 1 29 6.07
Polanco (41), Grossman 3 (48), Garver 6 (45), Kepler 9; Boston 2 for 10. Brault, W, 6-3 21/3 3 0 0 1 3 43 4.67
Kiekhefer 1/
3 2 2 2 1 0 17 18.00 Francisco 1 for 7. Runners moved up—Machado, Gagnon 12/3 5 5 1 1 3 47 5.25
2 (56). SB—Adrianza (5). Runners left in scoring New York IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Rodriguez, H, 15 1 2 0 0 0 1 19 2.47
Brooks 2/
3 0 0 0 2 0 13 0.00 Slater. LIDP—Muncy. GIDP—Kemp, Longoria 2, Gar- Rhame 1/
3 1 0 0 0 1 9 6.23
position—Chicago 5 (Moncada, Davidson 2, Smith, Happ, W, 17-6 6 4 4 4 2 7 88 3.65 Feliz 1 0 0 0 1 2 17 5.79
Pagan 1 0 0 0 0 0 9 4.43 cia, Slater, Tomlinson. DP—Los Angeles 5 (Machado, Peterson 2 0 0 0 0 1 22 6.18
Rondon); Minnesota 5 (Polanco, Forsythe, Adrianza 3). Green 1 0 0 0 0 1 17 2.50 Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Neverauskas 1 2 2 2 0 1 21 8.31
Dozier, Freese), (Dozier, Machado, Freese), (Machado, Cincinnati IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Inherited runners-scored—Rhame 2-1.
RISP—Chicago 1 for 10; Minnesota 7 for 18. Betances 1 2 1 1 2 1 30 2.70 Barria 42/3 0 0 0 6 4 81 3.41 HBP—Wittgren (Frazier). WP—Oswalt, Gagnon.
Runners moved up—Delmonico, Rondon, Kepler. Britton 1 0 1 0 3 0 30 3.10 Dozier, Freese), (Machado, Dozier, Bellinger), (Turner, DeSclafani, L, 7-8 5 3 3 3 1 6 84 4.93
Cole, W, 4-2 21/3 1 0 0 1 5 44 2.75 K.Hernandez, Muncy); San Francisco 2 (Crawford, Umpires—Home, Mike Winters; First, Tim Timmons;
GIDP—Smith. DP—Minnesota 1 (De Jong, Forsythe, Boston IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Jerez 2/
3 2 4 2 2 1 28 6.43 Peralta 0 3 2 2 0 0 10 5.36
Panik, Garcia), (Crawford). Wisler 11/3 3 0 0 0 1 19 3.89 Second, Ryan Blakney; Third, Mike Muchlinski.
Garver). Johnson, L, 4-5 3 3 2 2 2 2 66 4.17 Tazawa 1/
3 1 1 0 0 0 10 7.33 T—3:07. A—27,045 (41,922).
Chicago IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Cuevas 1/
3 6 6 6 1 0 32 7.41 Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Garrett 2/
3 0 0 0 0 1 11 4.19
Robles, S, 2-3 1 1 0 0 0 3 11 3.70 Ryu, W, 7-3 6 4 1 1 2 3 85 1.97
Giolito, L, 10-13 11/3 5 7 7 4 2 56 6.13 Hembree 2/
3 0 0 0 0 0 5 4.27 Inherited runners-scored—Dull 2-1, Brooks 2-1, Alexander 0 0 0 0 1 0 7 3.68
Reyes 1 3 2 1 0 0 15 3.18 Braves 10, Phillies 2
Santiago 42/3 7 4 4 2 7 97 4.50 Pomeranz 21/3 2 2 1 1 4 44 6.29 Cole 2-0, Tazawa 2-2. HBP—Fiers (Upton). WP— Iglesias 1 1 1 0 1 2 21 2.44
Baez, H, 7 2/
3 1 0 0 0 2 15 2.91 Peralta pitched to 3 batters in the 6th. Inherited Atlanta AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Scahill 2 2 1 1 1 1 25 5.40 Kelly 2/
3 0 0 0 0 1 15 4.45 Tazawa. Umpires—Home, Doug Eddings; First, Joe Acuna lf 6 1 3 2 0 2 .293
Minnesota IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Poyner 2 2 1 1 0 2 30 2.53 Wood, H, 1 1/
3 0 0 0 0 1 5 3.71 runners-scored—Brault 1-0, Wisler 3-2, Garrett
West; Second, Marty Foster; Third, Mark Ripperger. Maeda, H, 4 1 1 0 0 0 0 12 3.85 Inciarte cf 5 1 2 1 1 1 .266
De Jong, W, 1-1 6 4 2 2 1 4 74 3.57 Inherited runners-scored—Hembree 1-0, T—3:17. A—35,041 (45,050). 2-0. Umpires—Home, Brian O’Nora; First, Chris
Jansen, S, 38-42 1 0 0 0 0 0 17 2.83 Conroy; Second, CB Bucknor; Third, Fieldin Culbreth. F.Freeman 1b 5 0 4 3 1 1 .312
Drake 1 1 0 0 0 1 16 5.40 Kelly 2-1. Umpires—Home, Laz Diaz; First, Manny Markakis rf 5 1 0 0 0 2 .297
San Francisco IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Vasquez 1 2 2 2 1 1 18 6.75 Gonzalez; Second, Andy Fletcher; Third, Jeff Nelson. Brewers 6, Tigers 5 Bumgarner, L, 6-7 6 7 3 3 1 6 112 3.26
T—3:36. A—19,689 (42,319).
Camargo 3b 5 1 3 1 0 1 .274
Slegers 1 1 0 0 0 1 20 5.27 T—3:27. A—36,779 (37,731).
Inherited runners-scored—Santiago 2-1. HBP—
Detroit AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Moronta 1 0 0 0 0 2 15 2.49 Rockies 5, Nationals 2 Albies 2b 5 1 2 0 0 1 .265
Santiago (Kepler), Vasquez (Davidson). WP—De Cubs 8, Cardinals 4 Candelario 3b
Castro 2b
3 1 0 0 0 2 .224
3 1 1 0 0 0 .250
Dyson 1 1 0 0 0 2 20 2.69 Washington AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Flowers c
Culberson ss
4 2 1 0 1 1 .229
5 2 2 2 0 2 .274
Jong, Giolito 2. Umpires—Home, John Tumpane; Strickland 1 1 0 0 0 0 12 3.40 Robles cf 5 0 2 0 0 2 .286
St. Louis AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Lugo ph-2b 1 1 1 2 0 0 .218 Alexander pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. Inherited Foltynewicz p 1 0 0 0 0 1 .052
First, John Libka; Second, Jim Reynolds; Third, Jansen Carpenter 1b 4 1 0 0 0 1 .257 Castellanos rf 3 1 1 0 1 1 .298 Turner ss 5 0 1 2 0 0 .269 Ruiz ph 1 0 1 0 0 0 .100
Visconti. T—3:02. A—28,191 (38,649). runners-scored—Baez 1-0, Wood 2-0. HBP— Harper rf 5 0 2 0 0 1 .246
Martinez rf 5 1 1 0 0 0 .305 Goodrum ss-1b 4 1 1 1 0 0 .240 Jansen (Crawford). Umpires—Home, Brian Knight; Biddle p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .500
DeJong ss 5 0 1 1 0 1 .238 Rendon 3b 4 0 2 0 0 1 .311
Mariners 12, Rangers 6 Ozuna lf 4 0 2 1 0 0 .280
Adduci 1b
Wilson p
3 0 1 1 0 0 .269
0 0 0 0 0 0 ---
First, Gerry Davis; Second, Todd Tichenor; Third, Pat Soto lf 3 0 0 0 1 1 .292
Brach p
Tucker ph
0 0 0 0 0 0
1 1 1 0 0 0 .230
---
Hoberg. T—3:16. A—41,167 (41,915). Reynolds 1b 4 0 1 0 0 2 .251
Texas AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Gyorko 3b 3 0 0 0 1 0 .265 Mahtook ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .208 Sobotka p 0 0 0 0 0 0 1.000
Odor 2b 4 0 0 0 1 0 .255 Molina c 4 0 0 0 0 0 .263 Alcantara p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --- Sanchez 2b 3 1 2 0 0 0 .273 Adams ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .261
Choo lf
Andrus ss
5 1 2 0 0 2 .264
4 2 3 0 1 1 .258
Wong 2b
Munoz ph
2 0 2 0 1 0 .249
1 1 1 0 0 0 .278
McCann c 4 0 2 1 0 1 .220 ON THIS DATE Eaton ph
Suero p
1 0 0 0 0 1 .296
0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Vizcaino p 0 0 0 0 0 0 ---
Jones cf 3 0 0 0 0 2 .209 S.Freeman p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Beltre dh 4 1 1 2 0 1 .272 Bader cf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .266 Reyes lf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .223 Sept. 29 Kieboom c 3 1 2 0 0 0 .238 Totals 44 10 19 9 3 13
Mazara rf 4 1 1 1 0 1 .258 Wainwright p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .091 Zimmermann p 1 0 0 0 0 1 .000 Difo ph-2b 1 0 0 0 0 0 .229 Philadelphia AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Profar 3b 4 0 1 0 0 0 .253 Garcia ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .221 1913 — Walter Johnson of the Washington Sena- Ross p 2 0 0 0 0 1 .000
Saltalamacchia ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .000 tors finished the season with 36 victories by virtue of Hernandez 2b 1 1 0 0 2 1 .253
Gallo cf 3 0 0 0 1 2 .206 Webb p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Hardy p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --- Taylor ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .223 Bour 1b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .227
Chirinos c 3 1 2 2 1 0 .222 Brebbia p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 a 1-0 decision over the Philadelphia A’s. Solis p 0 0 0 0 0 0 ---
Rodriguez ss 2 0 0 0 0 1 .225 1915 — The Philadelphia Phillies clinched their Herrera rf 2 0 1 1 0 1 .257
Guzman 1b 4 0 1 0 0 2 .237 Adams ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .239 Totals 33 5 7 5 1 10 Miller p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Anderson p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Totals 35 6 11 5 4 9 Norris p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --- first NL pennant, beating the Boston Braves, 5-0, Cordero p 0 0 0 0 0 0 ---
Milwaukee AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Bautista ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .199
Seattle AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Shreve p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 behind Grover Alexander’s one-hitter. Stevenson ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .253
Cain cf 4 1 1 0 0 1 .310 Morgan p 0 0 0 0 0 0 ---
Haniger rf 4 1 2 1 1 1 .285 Hicks p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 1954 — Willie Mays made his famous over-the- Severino c 0 0 0 0 0 0 .168
Yelich rf-lf 2 2 1 2 2 1 .322 Garcia p 0 0 0 0 0 0 ---
Segura ss 1 1 0 0 1 0 .301 Leone p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --- shoulder catch of Vic Wertz’s long drive to center Totals 38 2 12 2 1 9
Aguilar 1b 4 0 1 0 0 3 .274 Davis p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Beckham 3b 2 0 0 0 1 2 .186 O’Neill ph 1 1 1 1 0 0 .256 field and pinch-hitter Dusty Rhodes homered off Colorado AB R H BI BB SO Avg.
Hader p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .500 Rios p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Cano 2b 5 2 4 2 0 0 .304 Totals 35 4 9 3 2 3 Bob Lemon in the 10th inning to lead the New York Blackmon cf 4 1 1 1 0 0 .287
Soria p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --- Crawford ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .214
Cruz dh 3 1 1 1 2 1 .259 Chicago AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Giants to a 5-2 victory over the Cleveland Indians in LeMahieu 2b 4 0 0 0 0 0 .278
Jeffress p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --- Hoskins lf 4 1 1 1 0 0 .245
Healy 1b 3 1 0 0 2 2 .237 Murphy 2b 3 2 2 1 0 0 .297 Game 1 of the World Series. Dahl lf 4 1 1 1 0 1 .282
Shaw 2b-1b 4 0 0 0 0 3 .240 Santana 3b 3 0 0 0 1 2 .227
Zunino c 5 1 0 0 0 4 .200 Almora cf 1 0 1 2 0 0 .286 1963 — Stan Musial ended his career by going Arenado 3b 4 0 1 0 0 0 .296
Braun lf 4 2 3 2 0 0 .254 Kingery ss 4 0 0 0 0 1 .227
Heredia cf 4 3 2 1 1 0 .233 Zobrist rf-2b 4 1 1 0 1 0 .309 Broxton rf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .182 2-for-3 as the St. Louis Cardinals defeated the Cincin- Story ss 2 0 0 0 1 0 .290
nati Reds, 3-2 in 14 innings at Busch Stadium. Musial Knapp c 4 0 1 0 0 2 .203
Maybin lf 5 1 3 4 0 0 .244 Rizzo 1b 3 0 1 2 0 0 .278 Moustakas 3b 4 0 2 1 0 0 .251 Gonzalez rf 3 1 2 0 0 0 .279 Eickhoff p 1 0 0 0 0 1 .000
Negron 3b-ss 5 1 0 0 0 1 .233 Baez ss 4 0 0 0 0 3 .291 Kratz c 4 0 0 0 0 0 .241 finished his career with 3,630 hits, 475 homers, 1951 Desmond 1b 3 1 1 2 0 0 .238 Ramos p 0 0 0 0 0 0 ---
Totals 37 12 12 9 8 11 Heyward cf-rf 4 0 1 1 0 0 .271 Arcia ss 4 1 2 0 0 0 .226 RBIs and a .331 batting average. Iannetta c 3 1 2 1 0 1 .224 Loup p 0 0 0 0 0 0 ---
Bryant lf 3 2 1 1 0 1 .276 Davies p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .067 1963 — John Paciorek of the Houston Colt .45s, Freeland p 2 0 0 0 0 2 .092
Texas 000 420 000 — 6 11 2 Cozens rf 2 0 1 0 1 1 .171
Contreras c 4 1 0 0 0 1 .250 a-Santana ph 1 0 1 1 0 0 .263 in his only major league appearance, went 3-for-3 Musgrave p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Seattle 072 000 03x — 12 12 1 Quinn cf 4 0 0 0 0 4 .272
Hendricks p 2 1 0 0 1 1 .067 Woodruff p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .250 with three RBIs and four runs scored against the New Oberg p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --- Totals 31 2 4 2 4 14
E—Mazara (2), Guzman (6), Haniger (8). LOB— La Stella ph 0 1 0 0 1 0 .271 c-Thames ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .220 York Mets. A back injury ended his baseball career Parra ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .286
Texas 7, Seattle 9. 2B—Choo (30), Andrus (20), Beltre the next season. Ottavino p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --- Atlanta 000 400 132 — 10 19 0
De La Rosa p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Knebel p 0 0 0 0 0 0 ---
(22), Mazara (25), Haniger (38), Cano (22), Cruz (18), 1976 — John Montefusco of the San Francisco Davis p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --- Philadelphia 000 100 001 — 2 4 2
Bote 3b 3 0 1 1 1 2 .240 Perez 2b 0 0 0 0 0 0 .253
Heredia (13), Maybin (14). HR—Chirinos (18), off Totals 31 8 8 8 4 8 Totals 32 6 11 6 2 9 Giants pitched a 9-0 no-hitter over the Braves in Totals 30 5 8 5 1 4 E—Kingery (13), Quinn (2). LOB—Atlanta 11, Phila-
LeBlanc. RBIs—Beltre 2 (64), Mazara (77), Chirinos Atlanta. delphia 7. 2B—F.Freeman 3 (44), Albies (40), Flowers
2 (65), Haniger (92), Cano 2 (49), Cruz (97), Heredia St. Louis 000 002 002 — 4 9 3 Detroit 300 000 020 — 5 7 0 1983 — Mike Warren of the Oakland A’s pitched a Washington 000 200 000 — 2 12 0
Colorado 001 031 00x — 5 8 0 (9), Herrera (19), Cozens (2). HR—Camargo (19), off
(19), Maybin 4 (28). SB—Andrus (5). SF—Beltre. Chicago 200 110 13x — 8 8 3 Milwaukee 301 100 01x — 6 11 0 no-hitter to beat the Chicago White Sox, 3-0. Eickhoff; Hoskins (34), off Vizcaino. RBIs—Acuna 2
Runners left in scoring position—Texas 3 (Odor, E—Gyorko 2 (16), Wong (9), Baez (17), Bryant (14), LOB—Detroit 4, Milwaukee 5. 2B—Braun (24), 1986 — Chicago Cubs rookie Greg Maddux LOB—Washington 10, Colorado 2. 2B—Robles (3), (63), Inciarte (61), F.Freeman 3 (98), Camargo (76),
Profar 2); Seattle 6 (Cruz 2, Healy, Heredia, Negron, Bote (5). LOB—St. Louis 8, Chicago 6. 2B—Martinez Arcia (16). HR—Lugo (1), off Hader; Yelich (34), off defeated the Philadelphia Phillies 8-3 in the City of Rendon (44), Arenado (38), Gonzalez (32). 3B—Turn- Culberson 2 (45), Herrera (70), Hoskins (95). SB—
Beckham). RISP—Texas 4 for 11; Seattle 6 for 18. (30), DeJong (24), Wong (18), Murphy (14). HR— Zimmermann; Braun (19), off Zimmermann; Braun Brotherly Love. The losing pitcher was his brother, er (6). HR—Blackmon (28), off Ross; Desmond (22), Albies (14). CS—Inciarte (14). S—Foltynewicz.
Runners moved up—Profar. GIDP—Cano. DP— Bryant (13), off Wainwright. RBIs—DeJong (66), (20), off Alcantara. RBIs—Goodrum (50), Adduci Mike, also a rookie. It was the first time brothers off Ross; Iannetta (11), off Ross; Dahl (15), off Solis. Atlanta IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Texas 1 (Odor, Andrus, Guzman); Seattle 1 (Negron, Ozuna (88), O’Neill (23), Murphy (42), Rizzo 2 (99), (21), McCann (39), Lugo 2 (8), Yelich 2 (106), Braun faced each other as rookie pitchers. RBIs—Turner 2 (70), Blackmon (67), Dahl (45), Des- Fltynewicz, W, 13-10 5 1 1 1 0 9 76 2.85
Healy, Zunino). Heyward (56), Bryant (50), Bote (33), Almora 2 (40). 2 (61), Moustakas (94), Santana (20). S—Davies. 1987 — Don Mattingly’s major league record mond 2 (88), Iannetta (36). SB—Robles (3), Harper Biddle, H, 12 1 0 0 0 1 1 19 3.11
Texas IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA SF—Murphy, Rizzo. S—Wainwright. GIDP—Gyorko. GIDP—Reyes, Kratz. DP—Detroit 1 (Goodrum, sixth grand slam of the season backed the four-hit (13). GIDP—Ross, Desmond, Parra. DP—Wash- Brach 1 0 0 0 0 1 15 3.59
Perez, L, 2-7 12/3 1 5 2 5 2 55 6.22 DP—Chicago 1 (Bote, Murphy, Rizzo). Castro, Adduci); Milwaukee 1 (Perez, Arcia, Shaw). pitching of Charles Hudson to lead the New York ington 2 (Ross, Turner, Reynolds), (Turner, Reynolds); Sobotka 1 1 0 0 1 2 22 1.88
Springs 2/
3 4 4 2 0 1 32 3.38 St. Louis IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Detroit IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Yankees to a 6-0 victory over the Boston Red Sox. Colorado 1 (Story, Freeland, Iannetta, Desmond). Vizcaino 2/
3 2 1 1 2 0 23 2.11
Butler 22/3 2 0 0 1 4 49 5.62 Wainwright, L, 2-4 5 5 4 4 1 7 94 4.46 Zimmermann 4 8 5 5 2 4 85 4.52 1996 — Brady Anderson of the Baltimore Orioles Washington IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA S.Freeman 1/
3 0 0 0 0 1 7 4.29
Moore 2 2 0 0 1 3 34 6.84 Webb 1/
3 0 0 0 0 0 5 4.58 Hardy 1 2 0 0 0 1 20 3.57 became the 14th player to reach the 50-homer mark Ross, L, 0-2 5 5 4 4 1 4 81 5.06 Philadelphia IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Pelham 2/
3 2 3 3 1 1 22 7.04 Brebbia 2/
3 0 0 0 0 0 7 3.20 Wilson 2 0 0 0 0 4 25 3.36 in a 4-1 loss at Toronto. Anderson’s previous season Solis 0 1 1 1 0 0 6 6.41 Eickhoff, L, 0-1 31/3 5 2 2 0 8 56 6.75
Curtis 1/
3 1 0 0 0 0 10 5.28 Norris 0 1 1 0 1 0 7 3.59 Alcantara, L, 1-1 1 1 1 1 0 0 21 2.40 high was 21. The Orioles ended the season with Miller 1 1 0 0 0 0 13 3.61 Ramos 1/
3 2 2 2 1 0 16 2.36
Seattle IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Shreve 1 0 0 0 0 0 6 3.96 Milwaukee IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA record 257 homers. Cordero 1 1 0 0 0 0 9 6.00 Loup 1/
3 0 0 0 0 0 4 4.58
LeBlanc, W, 9-5 5 6 6 5 2 6 91 3.72 Hicks 2/
3 1 3 3 2 1 22 3.59 Davies 4 5 3 3 0 3 74 4.77 1996 — Vinny Castilla of the Colorado Rockies Suero 1 0 0 0 0 0 12 3.59 Anderson 2 2 0 0 0 3 37 4.97
Pazos, H, 18 1 1 0 0 1 0 20 2.76 Leone 1/
3 1 0 0 0 0 11 4.50 Woodruff 2 0 0 0 0 3 21 3.61 hit his 40th homer in a 12-3 victory at San Francisco. Colorado IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Morgan 1 2 1 0 1 0 18 3.88
Festa, H, 1 1/
3 2 0 0 0 1 12 2.16 Chicago IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Knebel, H, 6 1 1 0 0 0 3 19 3.71 He combined with teammates Andres Galarraga Freeland, W, 17-7 6 11 2 2 1 4 96 2.85 Garcia 1/
3 4 3 3 0 1 14 6.07
Duke, H, 16 2/
3 0 0 0 0 1 9 4.24 Hendricks, W, 14-11 8 7 2 2 2 2 104 3.44 Hader, BS, 5-16 1/
3 1 2 2 1 0 22 2.50 (47 homers) and Ellis Burks (40) to form the first Musgrave, H, 5 1/
3 0 0 0 0 0 6 4.57 Davis 11/3 3 2 2 1 1 34 4.15
Colome, H, 29 1 1 0 0 1 0 16 3.09 De La Rosa 1 2 2 0 0 1 14 3.44 Soria, W, 2-4 2/
3 0 0 0 0 1 9 3.19 40-homer trio on one team since the 1973 Atlanta Oberg, H, 14 2/
3 1 0 0 0 2 13 2.48 Rios 1/
3 1 0 0 0 0 5 6.75
Warren 1 1 0 0 0 1 17 3.14 Norris pitched to 2 batters in the 7th. Inherited Jeffress, S, 14-19 1 0 0 0 0 0 12 1.31 Braves: Davey Johnson (43), Darrell Evans (41), Hank Ottavino, H, 34 1 0 0 0 0 1 7 2.43 Inherited runners-scored—S.Freeman 3-0, Ramos
Inherited runners-scored—Springs 3-3, runners-scored—Shreve 2-1, Leone 3-2. HBP— Inherited runners-scored—Soria 1-0. HBP—Ha- Aaron (40). Davis, S, 43-49 1 0 0 0 0 2 11 4.13 1-1, Loup 1-0, Davis 1-0, Rios 3-3. HBP—Foltynewicz
Butler 1-0, Curtis 2-2, Duke 2-0. PB—Zunino (10). Hendricks (Carpenter), Hicks (Bryant). der (Candelario), Jeffress (Jones). Umpires—Home, 1998 — Mo Vaughn homered twice and tied a Solis pitched to 1 batter in the 6th. HBP—Freeland (Hernandez). WP—Ramos, Garcia. PB—Flowers (8).
Umpires—Home, Quinn Wolcott; First, Nick Mahrley; Umpires—Home, Adam Hamari; First, Phil Cuzzi; Alfonso Marquez; First, D.J. Reyburn; Second, Sam record with seven RBIs as Boston ended a 13-game (Robles). Umpires—Home, Dave Rackley; First, Larry Umpires—Home, Jerry Layne; First, Jordan Baker;
Second, Ryan Additon; Third, Marvin Hudson. Second, Tom Hallion; Third, Dan Bellino. T—3:07. Holbrook; Third, Jim Wolf. T—3:07. A—44,770 postseason skid, beating Cleveland 11-3 in the AL Vanover; Second, Hunter Wendelstedt; Third, Chris Second, Greg Gibson; Third, Vic Carapazza. T—3:42.
T—3:47. A—23,598 (47,943). A—39,442 (41,649). (41,900). Divisional Playoff series opener. Guccione. T—2:51. A—48,089 (50,398). A—24,306 (43,647).
THE PRESS DEMOCRAT • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2018 C3
about QB plan
ed in the Ryder Cup.
And then Europe fin-
ished even better.
Four hours later, the
cheers at Le Golf Nation-
al ramped up to a feverish
pitch as Europe swept all
Kelly says Book, Stanford’s No. 1 quar-
terback last November
four matches Friday after- Wimbush both and his best performance
noon for a 5-3. It was the
first time Europe swept a
MATT DUNHAM / ASSOCIATED PRESS prepared to play down the stretch was
against Notre Dame,
Europe’s Francesco Molinari celebrates after winning a foursome match with his partner
session since 1989, and the Tommy Fleetwood on the opening day of the Ryder Cup on Friday in France. By JOHN FINERAN throwing four touchdown
first time ever at the Ryder ASSOCIATED PRESS passes and no intercep-
Cup in foursomes. athon, and we’re delight- into the air as the gallery language significantly tions in the regular-sea-
“We didn’t come here to ed with the way the day gasped, and plopped down changed to all smiles and SOUTH BEND, Indiana son finale victory.
win the foursomes,” Fran- turned out because it was 3 feet from the hole. boisterous and hugs and — Last year, Stanford Last Saturday at Ore-
cesco Molinari said. “We a fairly tough morning. We They wound up winning high-fives, and I’m sure the made an in-season quar- gon, Costello, the 6-foot-5,
came here to win some- go home happy tonight, but on the 18th when Rose hit looks on some of my play- terback change, going to 215-pound junior, was 19
thing else.” we refocus and look for- into the water, the only ers were not quite the hap- K.J. Costello late in the for 26 for 327 yards and
Molinari and Tommy ward to tomorrow.” time Finau and Koepka led piest, and dead opposite season to boost an offense three touchdowns in a
Fleetwood were the only The change was notice- all match. this morning.” that was relying too much wild comeback victory in
Europeans to play both able in the body language. In the afternoon, the Furyk tried to see the big on the running game and overtime for the Cardinal.
matches, and they won The Americans walked mood changed in the mild picture. help the Cardinal surge a “He’s gritty; he keeps
them both. They combined tall and had reason to feel air and freshening wind. “It was four points out Pac-12 title game appear- playing and makes plays
for five birdies over their as though nothing could Spieth was shaking his of 28 that we played for,” ance. and gets his team back in
last seven holes to polish go wrong, especially Tony head after all those putts he said. “We are not happy This season, Notre the game,” Kelly said.
off Woods and Patrick Reed Finau. It was his amazing that dropped in the morn- with it. I think we use it as Dame has made a simi- Costello has completed
and salvage something fortune that turned the ing slid by the edge of the motivation tomorrow.” lar move. Fighting Irish 64 percent of his pass-
from a morning that be- tide in the morning. He cup in the afternoon. Ian The Americans are try- coach Brian Kelly did es (73 of 114) for 1,056
longed to the Americans. and Brooks Koepka were Poulter’s eyes grew wider ing to end 25 years of los- not wait as long as Cardi- yards and 10 touchdowns
They took down Jordan 1 down to Justin Rose and with each hole he won with ing the Ryder Cup in Eu- nal coach David Shaw to against three intercep-
Spieth and Justin Thomas Jon Rahm on the par-3 16th Rory McIlroy in the after- rope, and for one morning, make the switch, and he tions. “He has made a
in the afternoon. when Finau’s 8-iron ap- noon. it looked as though this also is still playing it coy lot of growth since last
“It was a bit of a roll- peared headed for the wa- “You see a change in might be the time. By the about how committed he year,” Shaw said. “I be-
er-coaster ride,” Europe- ter. Instead, it landed on the body language,” U.S. cap- end of the day, the Ameri- is to last week’s starter, lieve there is a really high
an captain Thomas Bjorn 12-inch wide boards that tain Jim Furyk said. “I’m cans were seeing blue, and Ian Book. ceiling he’d like to reach,
said. “We know it’s a mar- frame the green, soared sure the Europeans’ body plenty of it. “We’ve prepared both and we’d really love him
quarterbacks and they to reach.”
are both ready to play,” Kelly started Book, a
Kelly said. junior, last week after se-
BASEBALL » DODGERS 3, GIANTS 1 And Shaw says No. 7 nior Brandon Wimbush
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
CONTRACTORS
LSU basketball player Sims shot to death PROTECT YOUr ONSITE EFFORTS
ASSOCIATED PRESS Stadium, where homecom- ing to identify that individ- was always smiling and, as ES
INCLUD X
ing festivities are taking ual, along with any others one of the few players with a LOCKB
O
BATON ROUGE, Louisi- place this weekend. in the video, to see if they car, would happily shepherd
ana — LSU basketball play- Police have begun cir- have further information teammates around town on
er Wayde Sims died after culating a video of a fight on who is responsible for errands or to show off the
he was shot during a fight among several men in a taking the life of Sims,” city where he grew up.
involving several men early street which they believe Coppola said. “Everybody on the team
Friday near the campus of led to the shooting of Sims. LSU basketball coach loved him,” Wade said. “He
another university in his
hometown of Baton Rouge.
Police did not identify Sims
in the video, which also
Will Wade, speaking along-
side Athletic Director Joe
got us going in practice. He
would do anything for any- NEW
Sims, 20, was shot around
12:25 a.m. and died from his
shows cars stopping to
avoid the melee, but Coppo-
Alleva at LSU’s Pete Mar-
avich Assembly Center on
body on our team.”
Sims was entering his
10’, 20’, 40’ Available.
wounds at a hospital, Baton la said police are primarily Friday morning, said the junior season at LSU. The
Rouge police Sgt. Don Cop- interested in identifying team is “devastated” and 6-foot-6 forward averaged We’re Local!
pola Jr. said. The shooting
happened near Southern
a man seen wearing red
pants with a white stripe.
“in shock.”
Wade described Sims as
5.6 points and 2.6 rebounds
per game last year with 10
707-528-3200
University’s A.W. Mumford “Investigators are look- the “team jokester” who starts in 32 games. 4275 Santa Rosa Ave. Santa Rosa american-storage.com
C4 THE PRESS DEMOCRAT • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2018
In 1792
Zach Carpenter, CEO Rosa, CA 95403.
The name, address and telephone number of plaintiff’s attorney, or plaintiff This statement was filed with the
This statement was filed with the A copy of this Order to Show Cause
without an attorney, is (El nombre, la dirección y el número de teléfono del abo- County Clerk of SONOMA COUNTY on County Clerk of SONOMA COUNTY ON
gado del demandante, o del demandante que no tiene abogado, es): shall be published at least once each
JOhn E. Stringer
08/28/2018
I hereby certify that this copy is a
08/27/2018.
I hereby certify that this copy is a
week for four successive weeks prior Englishman George
to the date set for hearing on the
259 Oak Street
San Francisco, CA 94102
correct copy of the original statement correct copy of the original statement
petition in the following newspaper Va n c o u v e r s u r v e y e d
on file in my office. on file in my office.
415-934-1827 WILLIAM F. ROUSSEAU WILLIAM F. ROUSSEAU
of general circulation, printed in this
county: The Press Democrat.
Bodega Bay.
DATE (Fecha): JUL 24 2017 Sonoma County Clerk Sonoma County Clerk
Jose O. Guillen, By /s/ Darrell Light By /s/ Alma Roman Dated: AUG 31 2018 Copyright © 2010
Clerk Deputy Clerk Deputy Clerk RENE AUGUSTE CHOUTEAU
Judge of the Superior Court
Sonoma County Historical Society
By GRISELDA ZAVALA, SEAL SEAL
Deputy P.O. Box 1373, Santa Rosa, CA 95402
2819551 - Pub. Sept 8, 15, 22, 29, 2818947 - Pub. Sept 1, 8, 15, 22, 2819403 – Pub. Sept 8, 15, 22, 29, www.sonomacountyhistory.org
2819981 - Pub Sept 15, 22, 29, Oct 6, 2018 4ti. 2018 4ti. 2018 4ti. 2018 4ti.
C6 THE PRESS DEMOCRAT • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2018
WEATHER
TODAY IN WEATHER HISTORY Nation’s hottest and coldest
(for the 48 contiguous states)
Algeria and Tunisia are typically dry, Death Valley 110
but on Sept. 29, 1969, severe flooding Angel Fire, New Mexico 17
killed 600 people.
REPORT
NATIONAL
Today Tomorrow
City Hi/Lo Sky Hi/Lo Sky
Photo by KALI BORDESSA / Cotati Albuquerque 86/59 s 85/59 s
TO SUBMIT A PHOTO: Email the photo with your full name Anchorage 61/44 s 58/41 s
and city to pdweatherphoto@gmail.com. Photos should be Atlanta 86/70 pc 82/68 t
horizontal. Atlantic City 77/53 s 74/57 s
Baltimore 74/53 s 73/59 s
Bismarck 48/32 r 46/34 c
Boise 83/54 pc 72/48 pc
SANTA ROSA TODAY’S FORECAST Boston 72/51 s 66/55 s
Buffalo 60/45 pc 64/56 c
TODAY SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY Burlington, Vt. 65/43 s 64/50 pc
Fort Bragg MENDOCINO COUNTY: Mostly Cheyenne 80/38 pc 65/42 pc
68 52 72 49 70 50 75 48 cloudy today with a shower in Chicago 59/49 pc 69/58 c
66/56 Cincinnati 69/52 pc 77/60 s
the afternoon. A passing shower
this evening. Mostly cloudy Cleveland 62/49 pc 75/58 c
Columbia, S.C. 87/67 t 83/66 t
Ukiah Sunday. Monday: an afternoon Dallas-Ft. Worth 82/67 t 85/68 pc
71/51 shower. Denver 88/45 pc 75/49 pc
Lakeport Des Moines 53/45 c 58/51 sh
SONOMA/NAPA: Cloudy most Detroit 62/49 pc 69/55 c
A shower Mostly Mostly Showers 67/49 of the time today; a shower El Paso 94/64 s 92/65 s
likely cloudy cloudy possible in western areas during the Fairbanks 58/29 pc 56/31 s
Gualala afternoon. Mostly cloudy tonight.
Cloverdale Flagstaff 73/42 s 71/44 s
REGIONAL OUTLOOK COAST 64/54
70/55 Mainly cloudy Sunday. Hartford 69/44 s 68/50 s
A trough moving into the region will bring a Middletown Helena 44/34 c 46/35 sn
NORTHERN COAST 70/51
mostly cloudy and cooler day to the region RUSSIAN RIVER/COAST:
Honolulu 87/77 sh 87/76 pc
Wind south-southeast 7-14 knots Healdsburg Houston 80/69 t 83/69 t
today along with an afternoon shower. Tonight Mostly cloudy and cool today
today. Waves 1-2 feet; southwest 69/53 Indianapolis 67/53 pc 78/59 pc
will be mostly clear. It will remain rather cool with a shower during the
swell 2-4 feet at 18 seconds. Guerneville Calistoga Jackson, Miss. 80/65 c 87/68 t
on Sunday along with a mostly cloudy sky; Santa Rosa afternoon. A passing shower in Kansas City 63/59 r 81/64 pc
Visibility under 2 miles in an 69/56 72/56
however, it should be free of rain. 68/52 the evening; otherwise, mostly Las Vegas 97/71 s 95/73 s
afternoon shower. Little Rock 78/57 pc 82/64 c
EXTENDED Sonoma cloudy tonight. Forestville, 70/56.
Bodega Bay Sebastopol Louisville 72/55 pc 81/64 s
Monday: cool with variable cloudiness. Tuesday: SAN FRANCISCO BAY 71/54 Medford, Ore. 75/50 pc 76/50 pc
mostly cloudy and cool with a couple of 65/59 70/56 SANTA ROSA PLAIN: Mostly
Wind from the southwest at 7-14 knots Memphis 79/60 pc 84/67 pc
showers possible. today. Waters a light chop on the bay. cloudy today with a shower Miami Beach 90/79 t 89/79 t
Petaluma Napa during the afternoon. Mostly Milwaukee 55/49 pc 62/52 sh
Visibility generally clear. 71/54 cloudy tonight. Rohnert Park, Mpls-St. Paul 52/41 pc 55/45 c
71/56
FRIDAY LOG 70/56. Nashville 78/57 pc 85/66 pc
24-hour totals Hi/Lo Rain Season Last year New Orleans 85/73 t 87/75 c
Ending at 4 p.m. To date To date San Rafael Vallejo New York City 72/54 s 69/60 s
Bodega Bay 59/52 0.00 25.28 48.62 BODEGA BAY TIDES 72/56 71/56 LAKE COUNTY: Mostly cloudy Oklahoma City 78/64 pc 82/64 pc
today with a passing shower in Omaha 56/49 c 60/53 sh
Boonville 76/50 0.00 22.90 64.57 Date Time High Time Low Shown is the afternoon. A passing shower Orlando 93/74 pc 90/74 pc
Calistoga 75/51 0.00 18.84 52.06 Sept. 29 2:40 a.m. 4.5’ 8:07 a.m. 2.3’ today’s weather. tonight. Philadelphia 75/55 s 73/60 s
Cazadero 71/53 0.00 41.63 102.08 2:11 p.m. 5.6’ 9:01 p.m. 0.5’ Temperatures are Phoenix 102/79 s 96/74 s
Cloverdale 84/50 0.00 32.32 75.49 today’s highs and
Sept. 30 3:47 a.m. 4.3’ 8:56 a.m. 2.7’ tonight’s lows. San Francisco SAN FRANCISCO: Mostly Pittsburgh 65/46 pc 74/58 pc
Fort Bragg 63/50 0.00 34.58 61.71 2:57 p.m. 5.5’ 10:03 p.m. 0.5’ 71/56 cloudy today. Mostly cloudy Portland, Ore. 71/55 pc 73/54 sh
Guerneville 68/51 0.00 26.57 57.41 STATE FORECAST tonight; however, partly cloudy
Providence
Raleigh-Durham 81/61 pc
72/49 s 68/52 s
80/62 s
Healdsburg 78/52 0.00 21.13 61.62 SUN & MOON in the south and outer East Bay.
Lakeport 91/50 0.00 15.78 46.25 Crescent City Reno 78/47 pc 75/49 pc
61/51 Oakland, 70/55. Richmond 79/56 s 79/58 s
Middletown 90/63 0.00 20.21 69.57 Shortly before midnight, the St. Louis 70/56 pc 85/63 s
Petaluma 76/55 0.00 20.45 40.12 waning gibbous Moon and Mt. Shasta
Rohnert Park 74/53 0.00 20.24 46.92 the reddish star Aldebaran 65/43
PACIFIC JET STREAM Salt Lake City 89/63 pc 80/51 pc
San Antonio 83/68 t 84/69 t
Santa Rosa 74/51 0.00 24.83 60.40 Full (the eye of Taurus the Bull) Santa Fe 83/50 s 83/49 s
Sea Ranch 66/51 0.00 23.49 44.46 Oct. 24 rise together in the east. Eureka Seattle 72/55 pc 67/55 sh
Redding
Sebastopol 71/53 0.00 21.85 49.29 Aldebaran is one of several 64/54
73/51 Jet Stream Spokane 62/40 pc 57/39 c
Sonoma 73/52 0.00 19.18 50.76 bright stars close enough to Tampa-St. Pete. 94/77 s 93/77 s
St. Helena 90/52 0.00 22.41 55.07 the moon’s path against the Chico Tucson 97/69 s 91/71 c
constellations that the moon 76/57 Washington, D.C. 76/57 s 76/61 s
Ukiah 84/51 0.00 23.65 52.24 Last qtr. often passes nearby. Wichita 75/62 pc 85/65 pc
Windsor 77/52 0.00 27.69 72.97 Oct. 2 s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers,
Sacramento Tahoe
*Season runs October 1 through September 30 Venus sets at 7:49 p.m. 76/53 65/39 r-rain, sf-flurries, sn-snow, t-thunderstorms,
Lakeport temperatures temporarily unavailable. Mars sets at 1:57 a.m. San i-ice, T-trace
Francisco
RECORDS FOR FRIDAY Jupiter sets at 8:59 p.m.
Saturn sets at 11:34 p.m.
71/56
San Jose
Yosemite INTERNATIONAL
SANTA ROSA 72/46
New 75/56 Today Tomorrow
Average Record low: City Hi/Lo Sky Hi/Lo Sky
temperatures: Oct. 8 Source: Morrison Planetarium,
38 in 1931 California Academy of Sciences Fresno Cooler with Acapulco 93/78 t 89/77 t
High 81, Low 48 Monterey 82/55
Average rainfall Today 68/54 more clouds Amsterdam 60/52 pc 59/41 s
Record high: since October 1: Sunrise 7:05 a.m. than sun across Athens 68/60 t 71/66 r
Death Valley Auckland 56/47 pc 60/48 pc
104 in 2010 36.26 inches Sunset 6:57 p.m. San Luis Bakersfield 104/74 from western
First qtr. Sunday 84/56 Baghdad 107/70 s 103/72 s
Obispo Washington Bangkok 93/82 pc 92/78 t
CALIFORNIA Oct. 16 Sunrise 7:06 a.m. 71/50 south into Beijing 75/53 s 70/49 s
Friday Today Sunset 6:55 p.m. San Bernardino Northern Berlin 61/50 pc 59/40 s
City Hi/Lo Prec. Hi/Lo Sky Santa
Barbara 86/60 California with Buenos Aires 68/58 t 73/53 r
Alturas
Bakersfield
86/33
98/68
73/38 pc
84/56 s
LAKES & RIVERS 70/55 an afternoon Cairo 97/75 s 100/77 s
Palm Springs Calgary 45/34 c 39/20 pc
Barstow 100/70 95/59 s Lake Sonoma: Los 101/72 shower or two. Cancun 88/75 t 88/76 t
Bishop 91/47 88/41 pc Capacity: 381,000 acre-feet. Storage: Angeles Some sunshine
Blythe 102/66 103/74 s Caracas 85/76 t 87/77 t
196,503. Water supply pool: 244,833, 80.26% 77/64 elsewhere. Copenhagen 56/52 pc 56/50 pc
Chico 88/59 76/57 c
Concord 75/56 75/57 c Elevation: 431.28 Release: 116 cfs. San Diego Dublin 57/36 pc 58/47 pc
Crescent City 60/49 61/51 sh NATIONAL FORECAST 75/65 Frankfurt 64/41 pc 63/38 s
Eureka 61/48 64/54 sh Lake Mendocino: Geneva 77/46 s 68/51 pc
Fresno 96/65 82/55 pc Capacity: 116,500 acre-feet. Storage: Havana 90/73 pc 88/74 pc
Seattle
Livermore 71/55 74/53 c 59,922. Water supply pool: 111,000, 53.98% 72/55 Ho Chi Minh 87/81 pc 91/78 c
Long Beach 73/64 76/61 pc Elevation: 732.30 Release: 151 cfs. Hong Kong 89/75 pc 88/76 pc
Los Angeles 82/64 77/64 pc Billings Istanbul 72/61 pc 75/66 pc
Minneapolis
L.A. Airport 74/65 72/61 pc 45/33 52/41 Jerusalem 89/65 s 89/68 s
Marysville 85/53 74/54 c Lake Pillsbury: Detroit
Capacity: 74,933 acre-feet. Storage: 43,001. Johannesburg 83/60 pc 82/47 t
Monterey 66/55 68/54 c 62/49
Kabul 87/40 s 83/51 s
Mt. Shasta 86/44 65/43 c Water supply pool: 74,993, 57.34% Elevation: Chicago New York Lima 68/60 pc 69/60 pc
Needles 108/75 104/79 s 1,892 feet. Release: 106 cfs. San Francisco 59/49 72/54 Lisbon 90/73 s 84/62 s
Oakland 67/56 70/55 c 71/56
Palm Springs 107/77 101/72 s Denver W ashington London 63/54 s 63/42 s
Russian River: 88/45 76/57 Madrid 86/57 s 85/56 s
Pasadena 86/64 80/60 pc Kansas City
At Hacienda Bridge: 2.13 feet; 103 cfs. 63/59 Manila 88/80 c 88/78 c
Paso Robles 87/49 77/45 pc — Sonoma County Water Agency Operations Los Angeles
Redding 93/52 73/51 c 77/64
Atlanta Mecca 106/86 t 113/82 s
Department readings as of 7 a.m. Friday. 86/70
Redwood City 68/57 72/57 c Mexico City 74/56 t 72/56 t
Riverside 90/62 86/58 s Montreal 70/55 pc 62/46 sh
Sacramento 78/55 76/53 pc Clear Lake: Moscow 55/43 r 50/31 c
El Paso
Salinas 66/55 T 70/54 c 1.36 feet Rumsey. (The Rumsey scale starts at 94/64 New Delhi 96/75 s 94/75 s
San Diego 72/67 75/65 pc 1,318.26 feet above sea level.) Oslo 51/36 s 53/44 pc
San Francisco 65/55 68/58 c Fairbanks Houston
— Source: USGS 80/69
Paris 66/50 pc 65/40 s
S.F. Airport 68/53 71/56 c 58/29 Miami Rio 82/71 c 80/71 t
San Jose 71/57 75/56 c Honolulu 90/79
Rome 75/55 s 78/57 s
San Luis Obispo 73/54 71/50 pc INDEX AIR QUALITY Anchorage
Juneau
87/77
Sao Paulo 72/64 c 75/64 c
San Rafael 72/52 72/56 c 61/44
Ultraviolet: 2 Pollution: 38 59/36 Hilo Seoul 72/58 pc 78/56 s
Santa Ana 80/66 75/61 pc 87/72
Santa Barbara 71/62 70/55 pc 0 5 11+ 0 50 100 150 200 Singapore 90/79 pc 90/80 pc
Santa Cruz 66/54 67/57 c Stockholm 49/39 sh 52/46 pc
Santa Maria 70/56 71/53 pc Low Mod. High Low Mod. High Sydney 81/54 pc 67/52 pc
Santa Monica 76/66 73/61 pc 0-50 Good Cold Warm Stationary Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow Ice Tokyo 75/59 s 72/65 r
Stockton 82/54 79/53 pc The higher the AccuWeather 51-100 Moderate Toronto 72/50 pc 58/45 pc
Susanville 88/48 71/43 pc UV IndexTM number, the 101-150 Unhealthy (SG) -10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s Vancouver 66/55 pc 65/51 c
Tahoe Valley 79/33 65/39 pc greater the need for eye and 151-200 Unhealthy Vienna 73/46 s 59/38 pc
skin protection. Shown is the
Truckee 81/32 67/31 pc
highest value of the day.
201+ Very Unhealthy
PRESSDEMOCRAT.COM FOR CONTINUOUS NEWS AND WEATHER Warsaw 61/52 pc 57/37 s
Vallejo 72/54 71/56 c Source: Bay Area AQMD
Yosemite Valley 90/57 72/46 pc www.sparetheair.org Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2018
j
NORCAL SIDELINES
BASKETBALL
Heirloom Expos
xposition
REBUIlD US women reach World Cup semifinals
Breanna Stewart scored 19 points and the United
States rallied to beat Nigeria 71-40 in the quarterfinals
PROTECT YOUR
of the Women’s Basketball World Cup on Friday.
The Nigerians went right at the U.S. and built a 17-9
lead after one quarter. It was the lowest-scoring quarter
Why Plant Cover Crop? - Maile Arnold, 10 a.m.
Attendees will receive a discount coupon for related supplies!
ONSITE EFFORTS of the tournament for the U.S., but the Americans
closed the half with a 14-3 run and opened a double-digit
lead in the third quarter that they wouldn’t relinquish.
Spain, Belgium and Australia also won their quarter-
INCLUD X
ES final games Friday. The U.S. will face Belgium today.
O C K B O
L
UCLA’s O’Neal to undergo heart surgery
Gr e e n Ma nur e M ixe s, Ve t c h, Be ll Be an s, UCLA freshman Shareef O’Neal will sit out the entire
Oat s, C lo ve r s, Ce r e a l Gr ai n s, E r os io n Co nt r o l, upcoming season because of a heart condition that the
R ye s, . . . a nd m u c h m o r e ! son of Hall of Famer Shaquille O’Neal says is “risky.”
The younger O’Neal didn’t specify the condition in a
TMZ Sports video, saying only that “I know it’s some-
thing serious and it’s risky.”
O’Neal is expected to be sidelined for three to four
Hardneck months after surgery. He said doctors discovered the
condition after he “felt funny” during practices.
& Softneck
NEW MOTORSPORTS
Kurt Busch wins pole for NC playoff race
10’, 20’, 40’ Available. Kurt Busch won the pole for the NASCAR playoff
race at the new “roval” at Charlotte Motor Speedway, a
hybrid of a road course and oval.
Busch, who is eighth in the playoff standings, will be
joined by non-playoff contender A.J. Allmendinger on
the front row Sunday.
■ Daniel Hemric was promoted Friday to a full-
Fall Planted. Spring Blooming! time NASCAR Cup Series ride next season for Richard
Childress Racing. Hemric will replace Ryan Newman
From $ .99 to $26.99 at RCR in the No. 31 Chevrolet. Newman will drive next
Daffodils, Iris, Tulips, Freesias, Alliums.
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■ Ryan Preece will join JTG Daugherty Racing next
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4275 Santa Rosa Ave. Santa Rosa
season as the replacement for AJ Allmendinger. JTG
said Friday it signed Preece to a multi-year contract to
drive the No. 47 Chevrolet beginning with next season’s
3244 Gravenstein Hwy North Sebastopol (near Graton) Daytona 500 opening race.
Mon - Sat 7:30 – 6:00, Sun 8:30 – 5:00 american-storage.com
707.823.9125 www.harmonyfarm.com — Press Democrat news services
HOME AMBIENCE » Architects looking FIND IT! » Your guide to searching,
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wxyt &
HOME S GARDEN
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homes reflect their regions
Western Australia forms — minimalist boxes, as it
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Dale Martin Oct. 9. Martin’s free a homogeneous collection of local landscapes and cultures,”
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talk is based on a trip to Australia sleek glass boxes may want to says David Sokol, author of
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more than 400 orchid species always meant to commune with
TvN N-:Mv0 -Z 0)R0(MOCM0 TvN
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'R9CN0e AM ”M99M0Hand the landscape and reflect the “They share a common spirit,
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trial orchids are unique to modernist homes in the United
States have tended to reflect land modernism . and then you
AIBb Ax kBqtcLU pfgt ,r regional differences, say the go to Sarasota, Florida, or Palm PAUL WARCHOL / MONACELLI PRESS
TURN TO BRIEFS » PAGE D2
authors of two new books on Springs, or the Midwest and you The inside of architect Steven
the movement. see utterly different approach- Holl’s home in the Hudson Valley.
“Most people think of mod- This is a sitting room on the
ernist architecture as simplified TURN TO MODERNIST » PAGE D4 home’s second floor.
D2 THE PRESS DEMOCRAT • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2018
Security
cameras
for homes
By CHRISTINA HALL
DETROIT FREE PRESS
R
achel Murray, a securi-
ty system specialist for
Prudential Alarm in Oak
Park, Illinois, said people often
install security cameras in
their homes to watch their pets,
children, and elderly relatives
— right from their cellphone or
computer.
Others believe exterior secu-
rity devices may be a deterrent
to crime, similar to a home
alarm system.
PHOTOS BY REBECCA CHOTKOWSKI
Some devices even allow the
owner to communicate with the
Jennifer and John Jenks greet the end of a long workday at their Sebastopol home in their usual manner with a glass of red in their backyard. person at the door.
Murray reminds residents
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FRI - WED: 7:45, 10:10 SUN: 4:15 PM
THE HOUSE WITH A CLOCK IN ITS WALLS (PG) MON & TUE: 1:30, 4:30, 7:15
FRI - WED: 10:45 AM, 12:45, 1:15, 3:15, 3:40, 5:40, 6:05, WED: 4:15 PM
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MON - THU: (4:00), 6:30, 8:55
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THU: (3:15 PM) For All Your Lighting Needs
THE WIFE (R)
FRI - SUN: (1:00), (3:45), 6:20, 8:45 FRI - SUN: (12:45), 6:15, 8:40
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THE PRESS DEMOCRAT • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2018 HOME D3
T
they see their value ers have planted terraced
he first year that Bob — even if clients don’t gardens and, in one case,
Webb Homes used request them, says Stu added a pool.
JOHN EVANS / BIA OF CENTRAL OHIO PARADE OF HOMES
transom windows Narofsky of Narofsky Homeowners who aren’t
in the showcase house the Architecture in New planning to build a new This Romanelli & Hughes home features deep window wells, a glass-enclosed fitness center
company built for a home York City. Sometimes the house still have options — and glass doors in the basement to increase the amount of natural light in the home.
tour, visitors described additions are simple, like at a variety of price points
the house as bright, warm placing a bedroom window — for bringing more
and inviting. While few where the light it lets in natural light into their
mentioned the windows, will illuminate a hallway, space, said Jim Bimstefer,
of Worship
home’s more traditionally home, designed for the can we get more light com-
placed windows. 2018 BIA Parade of Homes ing in?’” Bimstefer said.
“They couldn’t quite in Columbus, Ohio, fea- “More light makes a house
figure out why our house tures a retractable glass feel bigger.”
felt different,” said chief wall in the living room and The solution can be as
operating officer Scott a basement workout room simple as trimming bushes
Shively. “It was all the that’s delineated by sliding and trees that are block-
natural light. It just makes glass, barn-style doors. ing windows, removing
you feel good.” More Midwest builders screens or keeping blinds
Taking a lead from ar- have begun using the raised during showings, he
chitects who design office retractable walls, which
buildings, residential have long been prominent
said. “There a lot of little
things that can increase
BAHA’I FAITH JEWISH
builders and architects on the West Coast and the value of the home,” he ALL AGES WELCOME CONGREGATION BETH AMI
say they are increasingly Hawaii, because they too said. “If there is vegetation Free children/youth/adult classes & prayer meetings. (CONSERVATIVE)
looking for ways to incor- have undergone improve- in front of the windows, “Let your hearts burn with loving kindness for all.” 1st Fri. 6:00pm Service other Fri. 7:30pm;
porate natural light into ments that allow them to absolutely cut it back. 573-0337, 823-6875, 765-8877 & 795-0251
be used in colder climates, Clean the windows. Let the Sat. Service 9:30am
homes. (Numerous stud-
www.bahai.us Religious & Pre-Schools, Rabbi Mordecai Miller
ies have shown that office Shively said. natural light in.”
workers with windows are The see-through doors Other options can be 4676 Mayette Ave. 360-3000 www.BethAmiSR.org
healthier and happier.) In to the exercise room serve more pricy, like adding
addition to transom win- two functions, he said. glass doors, enlarging BAPTIST
CONGREGATION NER SHALOM
dows, many new homes They help incorporate windows or installing COMMUNITY BAPTIST CHURCH (RECONSTRUCTIONIST)
include large sliding glass the workout area into the skylights. Those improve- Sunday School 9:00am. Worship Service 10:00am Shabbat services, Holiday Celebrations. Community
doors, interior glass doors main room and provide ments are best done long
and thoughtful window natural light to the whole before listing a property so Rev. H. Lee Turner, Pastor, School for Jewish Learning, Sunday School.
placement that lets light space. The doors work that the homeowner can 1620 Sonoma Ave. SR 546-0744 85 La Plaza, Cotati 664-8622 www.nershalom.org
pass through multiple because the architect also enjoy the benefits, he said.
spaces. incorporated deep, wide The budget considerations CONGREGATION SHOMREI TORAH
Improvements in weath- window wells into the
erproofing and insulation basement’s design. “It’s
are “completely different”
if you intend to live in
(REFORM) BUDDHISM
ENMANJI BUDDHIST TEMPLE Shabbat services, educational & cultural programs.
materials and in installa- amazing what those deep- the house for many years
Rabbi George Gittleman & Rabbi Stephanie Kramer.
tion methods for windows er wells can do. It makes a before selling it, Bimstefer Jodo Shinshu - Sunday service 10:30am
and doors have made it huge difference, and that said. “Go crazy. Pull the 2600 Bennett Valley Rd. SR 578-5519 www.cstsr.org
light bleeds into the rest of walls down. Replace the All are welcome to attend
possible to increase the
amount of glass in a house the lower level,” Shively old front door. Open it up. See website to confirm service schedule B’NAI ISRAEL JEWISH CENTER
without creating drafts, said. Put as much glass in as 1200 Gravenstein Hwy S, Sebastopol 707-823-2252 Saturday Shabbat Svc 9:45am. Rabbi Ted Feldman.
said Shively. In several homes that you can.” enmanjibuddhisttemple.org Gan Israel Preschool, Educational & Cultural Events.
740 Western Ave. Petaluma 762-0340 www.bnaiisrael.net
✿ BERRIES ✿ FRUIT TREES ✿ VEGETABLES ✿ SEEDS ✿
CATHOLIC CONGREGATION SHIR SHALOM
Gift Cards & Delivery Available Sat 9/29 to Fri 10/12 Please Join Us for the High Holy Days The Center of
POTTERY ✿ STATUARY ✿ FOUNTAINS ✿ SEEDS ✿ BULBS ✿ ROSES ✿ GARDEN GIFTS ✿
RESURRECTION PARISH
POTTERY ✿ STATUARY ✿ FERTILIZERS ✿ WATERING SUPPLIES ✿ HOUSEPLANTS ✿ TREES ✿ SHRUBS ✿ PERENNIALS
Mass Sat., 5:30pm, Sun. 9:00 & 10:30am. Jewish Life in Sonoma Valley We’d love you to
Spanish Mass Sun. 7am., 12:30pm & 7pm. celebrate the Jewish High Holy Days with our
welcoming and inclusive Shir Shalom community.
Stony Pt. Rd., and W. Third Street. SR 544-7272.
We observe old traditions and add new ones as we
celebrate with thought, prayer, song and music.
CENTERS FOR Services will be led by Rabbi Steve Finley, music with
Yaffa Finley, Howard Egger-Bovet and the Shir Shalom
SPIRITUAL LIVING Choir. Musical accompaniment with Stephanie Ozer.
CENTER FOR SPIRITUAL LIVING, Rosh Hashanah: September 9 & 10, 2018 Yom Kippur:
SANTA ROSA September 18 & 19, 2018 Please go to
Services Sun. 8:30, 10, 11:30am; Sun/Wed. 7pm. www.shir-shalom.org for more specific information
Edward Viljoen, Minister and to purchase tickets, or contact Maddy Leader at:
Fall Clearance SALE 2075 Occidental Rd. SR 546-4543 www.cslsr.org
maddy@maddyleader.com or 707-938-7099.
Wheelchair Accessible 252 West Spain Street,
Sept 29 - Oct 12 Sonoma, just off the Plaza
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
SANTA ROSA FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, METHODIST
SCIENTIST
CHRIST CHURCH UNITED METHODIST
Sunday: Church and Sunday School: 10:00am
40% off
Inclusive community focused on Jesus’ teachings &
330 Hope St.
Wed. testimony mtg. and Reading Rm. hrs. service to others. All invited to worship Sun. 9:30am
(707) 542-5514 www.christiansciencesantarosa.net 1717 Yulupa Ave., SR 542-2569 www.srchristchurch.org
20% off (707) 542-2100 www.eck-ca.org/ Montgomery High Breakfast Program. Bible Study
Sun. 8:15am, Sun. Worship 10am. Rev. Dr. Cindy
Alloway, Pastor. 2500 Patio Ct. (near Montg. Village)
Sale is limited to stock on hand so hurry in FOURSQUARE GOSPEL 547 Mendocino Ave; 568-5381 www.uusantarosa.org
for best selection. No unpaid holds please. THE LIGHTHOUSE SANTA ROSA
2 Services 9:00am and 10:30am UNITY
If you are over 55, Save 10% Every TUESDAY! Coffee Bar, come casual, contemporary music,
Kidz church,Teens & midweek mtgs.
UNITY: THE CHURCH OF THE DAILY WORD
Sunday Service at 10:30am
Veterans, Active Military & Hometown Heroes, Save 10% every day. 88 Middle Rincon Rd. 4857 Old Redwood Hwy. (across from Molsberry’s) SR
*excludes sale items & services www.LighthouseSR.org / 707-539-2877 542-7729 www.UnityofSantaRosa.org
Two locations!
SANTA ROSA HEALDSBURG To advertise your place of worship contact
5875 Sonoma Hwy 12950 Old Redwood Hwy Amanda Brower at 707-526-8587 or
707-539-3030 707-433-8904
prickettsnursery.com Amanda.Brower@pressdemocrat.com
✿ ✿
TREES ✿ SHRUBS ✿ PERENNIALS ✿ ANNUALS
D4 THE PRESS DEMOCRAT • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2018
MODERNIST
CONTINUED FROM D1
es,” he says.
Meanwhile, in “Texas Made/
Texas Modern: the House and
the Land” (The Monacelli Press,
October 2018, photos by Casey
Dunn), author Helen Thompson
shows how architects in Dallas,
for example, adapted European
modernism to the topography,
climate and culture of Texas.
“If ever there was an archi-
tectural movement that sprang
from local identity and the joy of
discovery, Texas regionalism is
it,” she says.
Whether in Texas or New
York’s Hudson Valley, modernist
architects make use of local ma-
terials and take into account lo-
cal lifestyles and climates, while
adhering to a common respect
for the landscape, clean lines
and casual living. The results
couldn’t be more different.
PHOTOS BY PAUL WARCHOL / MONACELLI PRESS
“The colder, more streamlined
version is what most people A guest house in New York’s Hudson Valley, designed by Desai Chia Architecture, is featured in the book “Hudson Modern: Residential Landscapes” by
associate with modernism, but David Sokol. Whether in Texas or New York, modernist architects make use of local materials and take into account local lifestyles and climates.
it’s had a whole different side
that gets lost in that image of with the outdoors, Thompson He points out that even Philip
things,” Thompson says. “A lot says, “A big sliding glass door Johnson’s iconic Glass House, in
of environments can’t support a may not be what you’d want in New Canaan, Connecticut, was
glass-box look. And people want Texas. Large overhangs that designed alongside a less famous
homes with some warmth.” provide shade, and hallways that and cozier Brick House.
“The Texas centennial was in work their way toward outdoor Hudson modern homes tend
1936 and people were reconsid- spaces tend to be more enticing.” to include timber and stone,
ering what Texas meant. Texans In the woodsy Hudson River either locally sourced or evoking
love shiny new things and have Valley in the Northeast, on the the local environment. They
never been short on ego, and other hand, the aesthetic is tend to relate to the largely agri-
Modernist homes really start- quite different. Winters can be cultural landscape and architec-
ed speaking to people. It was a long and cold, summers muggy, ture around them, and many are
whole period of new freshness,” and many of the architects and designed as a counterpoint to
she explains. homeowners live, or have lived, life in New York City — they’re
Unlike modernism elsewhere in nearby New York City. often designed as country hous-
in the country, Texans favored “Glass doesn’t do the greatest es for city dwellers.
hand-crafted details, and local job of keeping out the weath- “It’s really hard to understand
features like thick walls made of er. And sometimes what you what Hudson modern is without A side view of Steven Holl’s Hudson Valley home. The home, which is
Mexican-style “Saint Joe brick”; want is some opacity and some understanding what New York featured in the book “Hudson Modern: Residential Landscapes” by David
screened-in porches; patios; and solid surfaces, to feel protected City is,” Sokol says. Sokol, is only 918 square feet.
narrow connectors between from the elements,” Sokol says. “These houses are all typi-
spaces known as “dog trots.” “There’s a poetic and a spiri- cally modern because they’re this area,” he says. own particular lifestyle and
“They felt like modernism tual need as well. If there’s a high-tech and emphasize a close “When you realize that landscape, then you realize just
needed to look like it belonged snowstorm brewing outside you connection between indoors and modernism is about rethinking how diverse modernist homes
where it was,” she says. might not want to be in a glass outdoors, but they also have this certain rules, about saying, ‘This must be,” he explains. “There’s
And while modernist homes house. And it gets hot there in sense of coziness and respect for is who I am and I don’t apolo- a house for every self, and, of
in Texas are about communing the summer.” history that’s very particular to gize for it’ and embracing your course, for every region.”
Cabinets 101
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Register Today and Reserve Your Free Spot 290 Harvest Ln (off Occidental Rd) Hard Money Loans from the SonomaMobileHomes.com
Guys in the White Hats! Your premier mobile home
www.pressdemocrat.com/sonomajobs $2,100, 2BD 1BA1 car garage
707-523-2099 buying & selling resource.
near JC. Please drive by Lisa M Rook 707-360-5571
127 Carrillo St, or call 544-7125 x106 Sun Pacific Mortgage & RE
CABRE #01464899/ Shultz Real Estate
to arrange showing. CABRE#01129446
NMLS #360993
HOUSES / SANTA ROSA
$2,395.00 W. SANTA ROSA- BEAUTI-
FUL HOME 3br 2Ba New carpets, tile
entry & in baths & kitchen, Italian
MERCHANDISE
tile surround Kohler tubs, 2 car gar.,
Wshr/Dryr hkps, elect range, disw- RECORDS WANTED
shr, grbg dispsal, dual pane wndws, APPLIANCES Call us First- We Pay MORE $$
cntrl heat, nice closet space. No for Record Collections
pets/smkrs /grwrs. (707) 322-1100 ELECTRIC WATER HEATER PRE- 45's, Lps, Rock, Metal,
OWNED Rheen - 50-gallon R&B, Blues, Jazz. Personal
- copper water connections Collector will travel
$2750/MO, 3BD/2BA - purchased 12/2014 $175.00 (707) Darla, 707-836-4366
OPEN SAT/SUN 1-5 775-3768
BENNETT VLy, 4229 BROOKSHIRE WANTED KITCHEN CABINETS &
CIR. LR/FR,c.pool,2 car.gar,yard
1543 SQ.FT. Call 510-3636311
BUILDING MATERIALS sink. Possibly extra shower stall.
Call Tony 707-935-9038
The County is accepting applications OFFERED BY OWNER INSULATED EXTERIOR LOCKING
for these exciting employment opportunities: $3,300.00 BEAUTIFUL RINCON VAL- Assisted by Broker WALL PANELS Aluminum skinned
locking foam panels.
LEY HOME 3br 2Ba 1800sf, quiet cul REDUCED FEES
16- 30’ long x 42" wide.
Deputy Director Engineering & Maintenance de sac.Beautiful yard (incl maint). 2 MICHAEL J. GIRARD 22- Misc panels averaging 17’ long.
Car garage. Liv/Rm, Fam/Rm w/F/P, BRE: 01039825
$143,385 - $174,316 /Annually D/R. Sunroom. (707) 953-9990 SINCE 1988
Located in Calistoga
$350.00 (707) 963-9963
Apply by 10/17/18 CALL: 1.800.339.7653 www.barrelbuilders.com
MOBILE HOME RealEstate@mjGirard.com
Mail, Materials & Records Handler II WWW.KWTF.NET Sat @8am CELLULAR EQUIPMENT
$3,450 - $4,193 /Monthly & TRAILER SPACES
Apply by 10/11/18 MORNING HELP on ranch in
/ ELECTRONICS
exchange for living space for Get an iPhone 8 or Samsung Gal-
one person. Call 707-772-7366. axy8 for $34/month. Call AT&T
Water Resource Civil Engineer I - Extra-Help Sonoma County Wireless today to learn how to get
$41.77 - $50.77/Hourly Movie Trivia: a new phone. Call while supplies
Apply by 10/1/18 Q: Sonoma Plaza was used to film last. 1-855-561-2351 (CDCN)
Auto buying tip: scenes from what 2001 comedy
Find out if a used auto for sale starring a contestant from the
For more information, benefits, and to apply online, has been stolen or totaled. reality show “Survivor”?
visit www.yourpath2sonomacounty.org The National Insurance A: The Animal, co-starred Colleen Press Democrat Classifieds – Green tip:
or call HR, 707-565-2331. EOE Crime Bureau offers a free check Haskell, who was on the first window shopping in the comfort Donate your unsold items
online at www.nicb.org season of Survivor. of your own home! to a local nonprofit
D6 THE PRESS DEMOCRAT • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2018
DRYWALL & SHEETROCK SONOMA COUNTY'S BEST VALUE FERNANDEZ TREE SERVICE
www.landzen.co 707 591-1629
So Very Relaxing...
PEDRO'S HAULING SERVICE (707) 823-2210
Garage cleanup, high weeds, Private Full Body In Call
demolition, masonry repair.
Free estimates Unlic'd.
Heating, Water Heaters,
Plumbing, Electrical, Drywall,
cell 707-591-1101or 707-824-9049 PAINTING / WALLPAPERING
Patching, Painting, Appliance
Repairs, Honey Do's, Etc. Tree pruning, shaping or
GALOS DRYWALL Quality & Affordable removal, shrubs & limbs, stump
grinding & removal, cleanup
Affordable. Repair, Patch, & maintenance. Free Estimates
Acoustic Removal. Lic # 875902
galosdrywall@gmail.com
707 529-3008
(707) 322-2133
OCHOA DRYWALL
Match any texture sheetrock, ,
acoustic removal, etc. Big &
small jobs! 25 yrs exp. TOTAL YARD CLEAN UP
Free Estimates 707 486-6288 Landscaping, gardening, $ $ave up to $100/Day $
irrigation, tree trimming. Off Regular Rates. 30 yrs. exp.
Ray's Landscaping Int/Exterior. The Paint Doctor,
ELECTRICAL I do just about everything. Dry
Free estimate. 707-975-1267 Lic# 844656 • 479-2263 707 623-3438 Lic# 973424
rot, fire damage, electrical,
plumbing, carpentry. 43 yrs.
exp. Excl. ref. Lic# 1018081 LANDSCAPE
LOPEZ GARDEN & MAINTENANCE
Martin, Cell (786) 290 4363
Office (707) 865-5157
GARDENING / ROTOTILLING General Yard Work and Clean up,
Tree Trimming or Removal, New
Fence Install/Repair, Hedge Trim.,
& Irrigation. Ins'rd, (707) 236-4092
MASSAGE THERAPISTS
Hunt
BUY USED, 40’ with vents,
6’w roll door…$3850
BIKE Specialized Rockhopper with PHARMACY LAMP brass adj. ht. arm
19.5" frame $95.00 (707) 591-5499 & shade rotate$45.00 (707) 539-2512 Auto selling tip:
Collect all documentation
BRAIDED WOOL RUG 48 x 30 Oval, POTS/PANS Farberware 16 pc, exc. including the pink slip,
Autumn colors $50.00 (707) 529-9488 cond. $100.00 (707) 823-0780 registration, owners manual and
maintenance records in a folder
for potential buyers to review.
CASH REG 1940’s ncr,elect,4 draw- PRESSURE WASHER Needs tune up. Make sure you have a DMV bill of
er,nds rep,big, $70.00 (707) 696-6577 $0.00 (707) 849-3796 sale form on hand.
MOVIE TIMES
CHAIN SAW Gas Homelite Super 2 ROCKER blue, cushioned,comfort-
FLATBED TRAILERS: 2 SETS OF
auto oil 8.14 lbs $75.00 (707) 526-2217 able; exc con$60.00 (707) 539-2512
DOUBLES W/VALLEY BIN CLIPS 2
sets of double flatbeds (4). Both
Auto selling tip:
Collect all documentation
CHAIR Malibu Pilates $125.00 (707) ROTOTILLER, 5 HP, excellent condi- sets are: 1996 Alloy 24’ double including the pink slip,
838-6063 tion, front tines $85.00 (707) 584-9498 trailers (semi & pull) L.P. 22.5 registration, owners manual and
tires, configured w/2-ton valley maintenance records in a folder
COSTUME TIGGER cute warm wash- SADDLES 2 Herefords, 1 Keyston. bin rails/clips for grapes. for potential buyers to review.
able 6-12 mos. $18.00 (707) 536-5640
EXERCISE BIKE Aerobic Rider exer- STOVE Black, glass topped electric. sponsored by
cise bike. $50.00 (707) 303-7332 Great cond. $100.00 (707) 823-0780
FENDER ACOUSTIC GUITAR CD60SB 5TH WHEEL TAILGATE For full size Manage your subscription online SANTA ROSA
$100.00 (707) 824-8117 truck 67" $100.00 (707) 579-4850 CINEMAS
FIRE PLACE INSERT Glasier Bay TORO ULTRA BLOWER/VACUUM
• Make a payment
Wood Burning $200.00 (707) 433-7079 $35.00 (707) 541-0511
$480,000 2Br/2Ba Su 1-4 111 Clover Springs Drive $750,000.00 4Br/3Ba Su 1pm-4pm 1359 Wilson Rd. NEW PRICE $2,599,000 Su 1-6PM, 404/406 North St $645,000 3Br/2.5Ba Sa/Su 12-4pm 120 Chiquita $895,000 3Br/3Ba Sa 1-4pm 1976 Redwood Dr
S. Cloverdale Blvd. Left on Del Webb L. on C. Springs DIR: Citrus Fair to Crocker to River to Wilson DIR: Healdsburg Ave. to North Street- Pacific Union DIR: N on Hbg Ave. 1mi. N of Plaza, Left on Chiquita DIR: North Fitch Mountain to Redwood
KB Properties, Chelsea Wiecek 707-696-2299 Home Smart / Sandy Belvedere 707-326-0740 Chad Verbish 707-694-6217, 404NorthStreet.com Coldwell Banker, 10 New Homes 707-433-3397 RE/MAX FS, Danielle Williams 707-391-6906
$580000 3Br/2Ba Su 1:00-4:00 492 S Foothill Blvd $734,999 3Br/4Ba gst ste. Sa 12-3 8272 Knoll Dr. $559,000 2Br/2Ba Sa/Su 1-4 pm 301 Orchard St $695,000 4Br/4Ba Sa/Su 12-4pm 120 Grayson $1,995,000 3Br/3Ba Su 1-4pm 322 North St
DIR: Cloverdale Blvd - Healdsburg Ave - S Foothill DIR: Hwy.116 to Mirabel to Park DIR: Matheson to S Fitch Mtn Rd, R on Orchard DIR: N on Hbg Ave. 1mi. N of Plaza, Left on Grayson DIR: North Healdsburg Ave, East North St
BHHS Drysdale, Emily Rainsford 707.953.1511 Pacific Union, Leslie Davis 707-322-1235 Vanguard Properties, Jo Ann Bursick 707-484-6072 Coldwell Banker, 28 New Homes 707-433-3397 Vanguard Properties, The Lucero Group 888-2649
$2,325,000 3Br/2.5 Sa 1:00-4:00 23550 Vineyard $725000 3Br/2Ba Su 1-4 465 Hillsdale Drive $1,325,000 3Br/2Ba Su 1-4 9527 Old Redwood Hwy $749,000 4Br/3Ba Su 12 to 3p 861 Maria Drive $1,185,000 4Br/2.5Ba Su 1-3 pm 601 Cherry Street
DIR: Hwy 128 lft River Rd to Vineyard Rd 10 acres DIR: Oakmont Dr to Hillsdale. Veer right at split DIR: entrance across from Fern Ave DIR: Sonoma Mountain Parkway To Maria DIR: E. Washington to Keokuk to Cherry
North County Prop, Scott Alexander 707-756-2401 C21 VOM, Paula Lewis 707-332-0433 C21 NBA, Pat Miller 707-484-1280 W Real Estate, SCHG 707-687-9525 Bradley Real Estate, Monique/Anne M. 707-478-8251
$735000 2Br/2Ba Sa 12-3 8963 Oakmont Drive $1,295,000 2Br/2.5Ba Su 1-4 724 Keller Ct
DIR: Hwy 12 to Pythian. Left on Oakmont Dr. DIR: E Wash to downtown. Rt on Keller to West
$2,795,000 3Br/3Ba Su 1:00-4:00 626 Johnson St. C21 VOM, Debbie Tittle 415-275-4565 $759,000 3Br/2Ba SUN 2-4pm 2 Makena Court Legend Real Estate, Chad Rummonds 707-291-4767
DIR: Healdsburg Ave. - Grant St - Johnson St. 2MakenaCourt.com
Pacific Union, Robin Gordon & Caroline 707-291-7952 Vanguard Properties, ROB SULLIVAN 707-772-9171
$925,000 2Br/2Ba Su 1-4pm 9438 Oak Trail Circle
DIR: Hwy 12 to Pythian to Oak Trail Dr to Oak Trail Cir
Sotheby’s Int’l Realty, Maria Lounibos 707-696-4070
$675,000 2Br/2Ba Su 1-4 PM 8863 Oak Trail Drive $1,174,000 2Br/2Ba Su 1-4 7618 Oak Leaf Dr $629,000 3Br/2Ba Sa/Su 1:00-4:00 504 Sutter St $1,185,000 4Br/2.5Ba Sa 2-4; Sun 1-3 - 601 Cherry $344,900 2Br/2Ba Su 12-3 8201 Camino Colegio #187
DIR: Hwy 12 E /Pythian/Oak Leaf Dr. DIR: Magnolia to Keokuk, R on Cherry Street (#601)
DIR: Hwy 12 to Pythian Rd. left on Oak Trail Dr. DIR: Ely to Sutter DIR: East Cotati to Camino Colegio
Pacific Union, Karen Grotte 707-494-3829 Robert J. RAPP, Bradley 707-695-9542
McBride Realty, Don Albright 707.328.5920 C21 NBA, Kelly Sullivan 707-888-0434 C21 NBA, Shana Hellman 415-246-3277
D8 THE PRESS DEMOCRAT • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2018
$349,900 2Br/1.5Ba Su 1-4 1435 Gold Way $455,000 2Br/2Ba Su 1-4 986 Santa Cruz Way $589950 3Br/2.5Ba Sa/Su 12-3pm 625 Wilford Cir $89,500 2Br/1Ba Sa 10-12 121 Colonial Park Drive $430,000 2Br/1Ba Sa 12-3 560 Juilliard Park Dr
DIR: Golf Course to Gold Way DIR: Country Club, E on Santa Cruz DIR: Gravenstein Way to Wilford Lane to Wilford Cir DIR: Old Redwood Hwy to Colonial Park DIR: Santa Rosa Ave, west bound on Juilliard Park Dr.
RE/MAX Full Spectrum, Judy Tobin 707-494-8314 C21NBA, Arlee Geary 707-427-2499 RE/MAX Marketplace, Ken Schrier 707-529-4819 HomeSmart, Michael Pellegrini 707-921-9592 Coldwell Banker, Anna Wong 415-678-9902
$389,900 2Br/1Ba Sa/Su 1-4 39 George St. $249,000 2Br/2Ba Su 12-3 PM 29 Tiffany Place
DIR: Old Redwood Hwy, E on George St. DIR: Hwy 12 to Village Pkwy to Tiffany Pl
C21NBA, Mark Miller 707-888-7664 Artisan Sotheby’s, Larry Tristano 707-575-5678
$439,000 3Br/2Ba Sa 12-2pm 7223 Camino Colegio $589,000 3Br/2Ba Su 2-4 pm 4540 Heron Court $779000 2Br/1Ba Su 1-4 6051 Van Keppel Road $425000 2Br Sa/Su 12:00 to 3:00 3006 Aurora $585,000 3Br/2Ba Su 2pm-4pm 5025 Maiden Lane
DIR: E. Cotati, N Camino Colegio DIR: 116 to Covey Rd to Van Keppel DIR: Lakeview to Terraces
DIR: Golf Course drive, hillview to heron DIR: Desirable Rincon Valley Location.
Re/Max Gold, Realtor Robin 707-249-7380 Vanguard Properties, Richard Petersen 707-548-5259 Keller Williams, Jackie Nordquist 707-889-2600
Keller Williams , Linda Tams 707-495-4222 Sotheby’s Inter. Tammy Owens 707-327-6202
$589,000 3Br/2Ba Su 1 to 4p 333 Major Drive $749,000 3Br/2.5Ba Sa 2-4 2100 Grace Dr $1,250,000 4Br/4Ba Su 1-4 3452 Baldwin Way $1,299,000 4Br/3.5Ba Su 1 to 4p 2387 Los Olivos $199,000 2Br/2Ba Sa 12-3 1945 Piner Rd #160
DIR: East on Steele, North on Meyers, Right on Major DIR: Bryden Lane to Grace Drive DIR: Bicentennial to right on Lake Park DIR: Montecito to Los Olivos Rd DIR: Piner Rd to Pinecrest to Orchard Complex
W Real Estate, Casey Moll 707-931-8999 Coldwell Banker, Logan Adams 707-477-0009 C21 NBA, Kendra Holmes 707-696-7243 W Real Estate, Mario Tamo 707-529-8385 Better Homes & Gardens, Jill Rake 707-481-4625
$818,000 3Br/2Ba Su 1-4pm 1707 La Caida Court $335000 2Br/1Ba Sa 12-2 901 Russell Ave #140
DIR: Unique opportunity. Many possibilities, .40 acre! $1,295,000 3bd/3.5B Su 1-4p 2140 Parrish Dr DIR: Range to Russell
POOL. Cul-de-sac. E&V, Ryan Styles 707-540-2000 Fab lrg hm- w/pool, yard, spa and guest house! RE/MAX FULL SPECTRUM, Kent 707-284-0389
M. DiNardo, APR 415-321-4358 $599K 4Br/2Ba Sa/Su 1-4pm 916 Quieto Calle
$699,000 2Br/2Ba Su 1-4 1725 Mark W Springs Rd Sunshine to Tranquilo to Quieto Calle
DIR: River Rd Exit, R on Mark West Springs Rd. Trish McCall Lic# 01364281 Ph: 707-636-4215
Pacific Union, Lysbeth Wiggins 707-529-5087
$849,000 3Br/2Ba Su 2-4 1523 Escalero Rd $459,000 3Br/2Ba Su 12 to 3p 988 Stanislaus Way
DIR: Hwy 12 to St Francis Rd to Escalero Rd DIR: W College to Putney, R on Truckee- Stanislaus
Bradley Real Estate, Michelle Kirby 707-235-8729 W Real Estate, Michael Langhals 707-490-4300
$1,299,000 3Br/2.5Ba Su 1-4 155 Alice St
$700,000 3Br/2.5Ba Su 1-4 PM 546 Talbot Ave. DIR: Sunridge to Alice $89,500 2Br/1Ba Su 10-12 121 Colonial Park Drive
$849,000 3Br/3.5Ba Su 1-4PM 546 Aslan Lair Ct Bertolone Realty, Julie Bernd 707-695-9402 DIR: Old Redwood Hwy to Colonial Park $499,000 3Br/2Ba Sa 1pm - 4pm 1627 West 3rd Street
DIR: Sonoma Ave to Talbot Ave
DIR: Hwy 12 to Brush Creek to Aslan Lair Ct HomeSmart, Jennifer Peschken 707-293-8009 Stony Point, Right at West 3rd. JS Harper Real Estate,
Real Property Advisors, Craig Saxon 707-849-8995
Mary Haufler, Artisan Sotheby’s Int’l 707-636-4477 Barbara Holmes BRE# 01401416 7075668738
$745,000 4Br/3Ba Su 12 to 3p 5029 Deerwood Dr $1,150,000 4Br/3Ba Su 1-3 PM 1569 Manzanita $1,299,000 4Br/2.5Ba Su 1-4pm 5239 Beaumont $119,500 2Br/2Ba Su 1-4 1174 Healey Ct $575,000 3Br/2Ba Su 1:00-4:00 281 Michael Dr
DIR: North on Old Redwood Hwy. Left on Deerwood DIR: Brush Creek Rd/Los Olivos, right on Manzanita DIR: Montecito Blvd or Calistoga Road to Beaumont DIR: W College to Woodcrest Dr, L on Healey Ct Don’t miss this gorgeous updated single story .
W Real Estate, Gary Negri 707-975-0321 Alain Pinel Realtors, Mark Stornetta 707-815-8749 Bradley Real Estate, Isis Gonzalez 415-755-3874 C21NBA, Bridgette Stratford 707-799-6521 Keller Williams Dena Clover-Vargas 707-495-7113
THE PRESS DEMOCRAT • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2018 D9
$635000 4Br/2.5Ba Su 1:00-4:00 2138 Longhorn Cir $649950 3Br/2Ba Sa/Su 1-4pm 794 Hunter Lane $1,489,000 3Br/2.5Ba Su 1-4 5155 Burnham Ranch $750000 2Br/2Ba Su 1 - 4 9969 Chestnut Lane $1,599,000 5Br/3.5Ba Sa 1-4pm 195 Fisher Lane
DIR: Occidental, Brittan, Donahue Snyder or Santa Rosa Ave to Mountain View to Hunter DIR: Summit View Ranch Rd/Burnham Ranch Rd DIR: Sullivan to Chestnut DIR: mls# 21823090
BHHS Drysdale Prop, Teresa Alvarez 707-484-0825 RE/MAX Marketplace, Ken Schrier 707-529-4819 Pacific Union, Doug Solwick 707-328-2654 Vanguard Properties, Susan Dechant 707-529-1084 Coldwell Banker BOV, David Stearn 707-536-6976
$689000 3Br/2Ba Su 1-3 4119 Siskiyou Ave $729,000 3Br/2Ba Su 1-4 8135 Valentine Ave. $615000 4Br/3Ba Su 1-4 pm 952 Bond Place
DIR: Sacramento to Contra Costa to Siskiyou DIR: Bodega to Pleasant Hill to Valentine DIR: North Brooks Rd S, East Bond Pl
HomeSmart, Jennifer Peschken 707-293-8009 C21NBA, Lisa Nunes 707-291-5800 Vanguard Properties, The Lucero Group 888-2649
$1,390,000 3Br/3Ba Sa/Su 1-4pm 12310 Fiori Lane
$699,950 4Br/4Ba Su 1 to 4p 2017-2019 Northfield DIR: Jonive to Fiori Lane
DIR: From Marlow - L on Windmill. R on Northfield Dr. Vanguard Properties, Tyler Williams 707-799-4884
W Real Estate, Randy Waller 707-843-1382
$294,000.00 2Br/1.5Ba Su 11-3 619 Olive st $765,000 4Br/2.5Ba Su 1-4pm 4845 Devonshire Pl $750,000 2Br/2Ba Sa 12 - 3 9969 Chestnut Lane $915,000 4Br/3Ba Sa/Su 2-4PM 1355 Bainbridge Ln $698000 3Br/2.5Ba Su 1-4pm 9234 Lakewood Drive
DIR: Stonehedge Dr, S on Devonshire Pl DIR: Sullivan to Chestnut DIR: Lakewood Drive into Private Gated Community
DIR: 101 to 3rd st ea, left on Railroad to Olive DIR: Leveroni to Bainbridge Ln
Praxis Realty, Inc, Pam Bradford 707-291-3553 Vanguard Properties, Mill Cannata 707-477-7839 BHHSDrysdale, Jacklyn Wright-Gridley 707-490-5119
Keller Williams, Tamara Blass 707-703-7734 Sothebys IR, Cari Isham 707-732-1342
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to be your one and only.
Cirugia para Cats? Nuh-uh.
Esterilizar
Su Mascota
Gratuita 5345 Hwy 12 West, SR.
Tu-Th 12-6, Fr-Sa 10-7, Su 10-5
SALE MAP
Bajo Precio 5345 Hwy 12 West, SR.
Tu-Th 12-6, Fr-Sa 10-7, Su 10-5
HumaneSocietySoCo.org online at
Para mas informacion sobre (707) 542-0882
HumaneSocietySoCo.org Locally Founded-Locally Funded
cirugia gratuita o de bajo precio (707) 542-0882
para esterilizar mascotas Locally Founded-Locally Funded
(perros y gatos) visite MONTANA 5th Wheel. 2007. 37ft
www.FAIREonlie.org Like a one bedroom apartment.
Las mascotas esterilizadas Ideal to live in. 4 slides, desk &
disfrutan mejor salud y una MINI SCHNAUZER PUPPIES 3Beauti- Need a handyperson? fireplace. Plenty of
vida mas larga. ful Females Championship Blood- Check out storage area.
Click Classifieds > Garage Sales
Sponsored by line Black & Sliver AKC Reg. 1st shot the Service Solutions ads
in this section
$21,500. 707-279-4096.
Dew claws Tails done Parents on
www.FAIREonline.org site $1,200.00 (530) 921-5282
Garage Sales
PROVEN BLACK Standard Poodle.
BELLA AKC, CKC certified. Pedigree. Stud
service. $1,200 Call 707-281-6003
Web: pressdemocrat.com/placead
Findit!
Golden Girl Phone: 707-795-2223 or 800-649-5056
Don’t think you humans are
the only ones making middle
PUPPIES FOR SALE Purebred
age look good. I mean, look at
miniature Australian Shep-
me – nary a wrinkle on my
gorgeous face, nor a grey hair
herd’s. Two boys, two girls. Their
tails have been docked, and their
ESTATE SALES / CRAFT FAIRS GARAGE SALE GARAGE SALE - PETALUMA GARAGE SALE
on my plush brown tabby bod.
At 10 years old, I’ve got a play
dewclaws have been removed. / FLEA MARKETS NORTHEAST SANTA ROSA ESTATE SALE --EVERYTHING $1
OAKMONT / KENWOOD
Ready for there forever home.
style that puts kittens to ALL household goods & furniture ESTATE SALE. W/D, dining table 4
$1,000.00 and up. (707) 245-9522
shame. Maybe you’ve seen GARAGE SALE HUGE MULTI-FAMILY MOVING SALE! big & small $1 or free. Bring your chairs, buffet, furniture, sleeper
me in action on HSSC’s EVERYTHING’S GOTTA GO! truck and a friend to help you load.
Facebook page? Just between NORTHWEST SANTA ROSA Clothing, COMPUTERS (including a EVERYTHING MUST GO!
sofa, artwork, & many more items!
323 Twin Lakes Dr.
you and me, while I like the SHORTHAIR CATAHOULA Pups 24"iMac, a Lenovo Windows 10 PC, a BARGAINS!!! BARGAINS!!! Fr, Sa, Su, 10-5
“likes” I get on social media, GARAGE SALE. Disney movies, Windows tablet PC and more!)
6F and 1M Good family & lawnmower, TV's, furniture, light- 841 Chapman Lane, Petaluma
I know nothing can take the
place of the meaningful
hunting dogs.$450-$500 ing & much more to see!
household goods, yard equipment,
R/C Drones,Floor cleaners, home
Sep. 29 9:00 AM-12:00 PM GARAGE SALE - GLEN ELLEN
Call (916) 284-0221 1877 Jennings Ave
companionship and love I’ll audio, office furniture, & MORE! RETIREMENT SALE.
get in a fabulous furrever home. Sa 8-4 & Su 9-2 2145 Dennis Lane Garden succulents, assorted
Looking to share your digs Sep. 29 8:00 AM-3:00 PM Rain or
with an affectionate, sweetly GARAGE SALE Shine
agave, sculptures, statuaries, clay
pots, planted stuff, collectors
sassy and purr-ifically SOUTHWEST SANTA ROSA items, large planter box, & more!
confident cat like me? You, 28TH ANNUAL YARD SALE. Original Odds & ends of 40 yrs of business.
my friend, are golden! art, collectibles, antique furniture 733 Elm Dr
ESTATE & ART SALE, SAT., SEP. 29 lamps & light fixtures, costumes, Sa, Su, Mo, 9-4
Fine art and crafts, including oil clothing, bikes, wooden boxes,
paintings, photography & sculpture; jewelry, toys, dishware, Green Star
women’s brand-name clothing; oak juicer & much more! The Great Petaluma
hutch; jewelry (no gold); art books; 1153 Humboldt St Quilt Show
luggage set; fiction and nonfiction Sa/Su 9-5
books; comfortable women’s cloth- Petaluma Quilt Guild is hosting Surplus Sale
5345 Hwy 12 West, SR. ing (sizes 12-16); housewares; musi-
Tu-Th 12-6, Fr-Sa 10-7, Su 10-5 cal instruments; mannequin parts; GARAGE SALE the Great Petaluma Quilt show. Sat., Sept. 29th, 8:30am -2pm
HumaneSocietySoCo.org Visit our website for entertain. ctr.; two backpacks. SOUTHEAST SANTA ROSA
Over 200 quilts on display. Furniture, tables, dressers,
(707) 542-0882 Boutique sales of handmade chairs, kitchen supplies, & more
Locally Founded-Locally Funded
links to the adoptable 4917 Yeager Drive, Santa Rosa items, quilts, fabric, and quilt All items as is and must be
pets available at the Sep. 29 10:00 AM-3:00 PM Rain or
Shine GARAGE SALE. Leather furniture, supplies. Raffles for donated removed that day,
6 animal shelters sports & exercise eq. Roll top com- items and gift certificates. all sales final.
Featured Artist, Barbara Confer, Sonoma Developmental Center
GERMAN SHEPPARD Puppies. 1
male pure white. 4 male pure
in Sonoma County. puter desk, cookbooks, home gym,
will show lovely landscape art 15000 Arnold Dr., Eldridge
GARAGE SALE fixtures, mtn bike, massage chair
white, 1 female brown & black. GREAT SALE: NEW AND USED FURNI- & miscellaneous. All must go! quilts. Cost $5.00 Children free. Located in Wagner Building
Born 8/17. $700 1 Male pure white www.FAIREonline.org TOR, COMPUTERS, BOOK, CD, COL- 2147 Nectarine Dr.
German Sheppard. 1yr old. Born LECTABLES, YARD TOOLS. ETC: Sa & Su 9-3. October 6, from 10-4
8/29/17 $300 Call 707-490-2484 1763 Windrose Ln Santa Rosa ca Petaluma Community Center GARAGE SALE - SONOMA
95403 G & G ESTATE SALES 320 North McDowell Blvd.
Sep. 23 8:00 AM-12:00 PM 3552 Fir St. SONOMA NEIGHBORHOOD GARAGE
Off Hoan turn on Cypress Way SALE
GARAGE SALE Sa/Su 9 - 3 GARAGE SALE Lots of great buys including Nord-
strom designer clothes, shoes &
NORTHEAST SANTA ROSA GUERNEVILLE / RIO NIDO purses. Furniture, bed, dining room
GARAGE SALE - PENNGROVE table, dresser, household items,
Sherpa blankets, toys, play kitchen
ANNUAL WHITE YARD SALE. with accessories, train table, etc...
BIG SALE
ELEPHANT & BAKE SALE! Art, hshld, furn., books, CD's, Lots of unique items--antiques, 1290 Pickett Street, Sonoma CA
Lots of great stuff at antiques, & much more! lamps, elliptical, jewelry, flat 95476
Help us help the animals, reasonable prices! Cash only Sep. 29 8:00 AM-2:00 PM, Sep. 30 8:00
Send donations to PO Box 2001, 65 Davis Ln screen, clothes, Milgard window,
Rancho Cabeza Clubhouse. Sa, Su, 10-5 camping, kitchen, garden stuff, AM-2:00 PM Rain or Shine
Rohnert Park, Ca 94927 677 Calistoga Rd treasures! 16065 Brookdale Dr,
Golden Retriever Sa ONLY, 8-2
Sonoma County Guerneville 95446 YARD, ESTATE, GARAGE SALE AT
Puppies Home buying tip: Movie Trivia: Sep. 29 9:00 AM-3:00 PM, Sep. 30 SEVEN FLAGS OF SONOMA
Gorgeous AKC-OFA . All shots 9:00 AM-3:00 PM Rain or Shine 20 HOMES, Art Frames, furniture,
Before you start your home Q: Sonoma Plaza was used to film
included. Will obedience search, make a list of what scenes from what 2001 comedy Tools, Kitchen ware, Antiques, Misc.
train/house break $1,000. features you can’t live without, starring a contestant from the Household, Clothes and other trea-
Call 415-912-6285 what you would like to have, but reality show “Survivor”? Home selling tip: sures. Hot Dog Sale etc. at Club-
are not a deal-breaker, and items A: The Animal, co-starred Colleen Make your house sparkle. house 10:30-1:30
you cannot live with. This will help Haskell, who was on the first Remove clutter and give your Watmaugh at Arnold
GORGEOUS MALTESE Pups. 8 wks, home a good cleaning. Sep. 29 9:00 AM-4:00 PM
vet chk'd, shots, nail trim. narrow down your home search. season of Survivor.
Paper/Yard train.! Delivery avai.
Cash $700-$900. 2/ $1500
as buddies. Call 707-829-2600
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Sources: Scarborough Research, 2017 R2; internal audience analysis and estimates