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FRONT-RUNNER?
NATION PAGE 7

WORLD PAGE 8

Leading local news coverage on the Peninsula

www.smdailyjournal.com

Monday Sept. 7 2015 Vol XVI, Edition 18

Trails sought for open space


San Mateo considers improvements to 225-acre Sugarloaf Mountain
By Samantha Weigel
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

A joint effort to preserve one of


San Mateos largest recreational
assets is progressing as city officials
and members of the nonprofit Trail
Center promote safe access to
Sugarloaf Mountain.

The group of avid hikers partnered with city staff to propose


nearly five miles of new trails as
part of an updated management plan
for San Mateos largest open space
landholding
leading
into
Laurelwood Park.
Although the city has yet to budget the estimated $3.35 million cost

for the improvements, the Parks and


Recreation Commission approved
the amendments to the sites plan
Wednesday. The City Council will
consider the proposal in October,
said Parks and Recreation Director
Sheila Canzian.
The update was spurred by the
Trail Center, which initially

approached the city to create a dedicated path to the top of the mountain that will deter users from veering off course thereby contributing
to erosion.
We were really pleased that this
group stepped forward and said, we
really have some expertise in this
area and we really believe that by

providing a better, more accessible


trail, more people will be able to
enjoy
Sugarloaf
Mountain,
Canzian said.
With new developments spurring
along the Peninsula, theres never
been a better time to promote access

See TRAILS, Page 20

Housing project
faces resistance

GRIZZLIES GO LARGE

Residents, builders condemn


SSF apartment development
By Austin Walsh
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

TERRY BERNAL/DAILY JOURNAL

Jefferson debuted its new Grizzlies mascot in style in Saturday's opener with a 38-0 win at Galileo. Senior David
Benjamin Jr. was Jeff's busiest running back, gaining 57 yards on 12 carries as the Grizzlies outgained Galileo
369-30 in total offense. STORY PAGE 11.

Affordable housing advocates and


union workers joined together in
opposition of a keystone housing
project which they claim will help
define the vision of South San
Franciscos new downtown.
Residents, local teachers and
members of a local sheetmetal
workers union, among others, spoke
out during a Thursday, Sept. 3
Planning Commission meeting
against a proposal to reduce the size
and scope of a new apartment building slated to be built at 211 Airport
Blvd.
Despite those who decried the
wishes of development company
Pinefino to reduce the amount of
below-market-rate units included in
the project, as well as an unwillingness to pay prevailing union wage to
builders, the commission approved

the project by a vote of 4-1, with


Planning Commissioner Mark
Nagales dissenting.
Under the approval, the project
will offer 69 units for rent spread
across five stories, which is a reduction from the 84 units over seven
stories which was initially proposed.
Edwin Law, a representative of
developer Pinefino, said the proposed development shrunk due in
part to his skepticism regarding the
health of the economy, which took a
significant dip in recent weeks, and
he is reluctant to make the larger
investment required to build a bigger project while the perceived
threat of a market crash looms.
Due to the cutback in size and
density, Pinefino is no longer
required to offer a variety of community benefits, such as a banquet
room available to non-residents, that

See SSF, Page 20

The e-nose knows


Device determines freshness of meat
By Bill Silverfarb
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

A new portable, handheld device


is apparently better than the human
nose at detecting spoiling beef, fish,
poultry and pork.
The Foodsniffer just hit the market and independent lab tests show
that its accuracy at detecting nearrotting meat is at least 80 percent,
according to the devices maker

Lithuania-based ARS Lab.


The Foodsniffer was invented by
a Lithuanian inventor Augustas
Alesiunas who reportedly came up
with the idea after falling ill from
food poisoning.
The device was first called Peres
by its makers who have since opted
for the more marketing-friendly
term Foodsniffer.
Television commercials for the
product have started to air in the

United States as the company looks


to expand its Redwood City-based
operations.
It works by sampling the air near
the meat or fish and analyzing the
sample using a unique algorithm
based on whether the product is
beef, poultry, pork or fish.
After calculating the information
in the cloud, Foodsniffer returns

Phones Cameras Watches


Cars Hearing Aids Tools

Just South of Whipple Avenue

The Foodsniffer just hit the market and independent lab tests show that
See SNIFF, Page 19 its accuracy at detecting near-rotting meat is at least 80 percent.

FOR THE RECORD

Monday Sept. 7 2015

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Thought for the Day


The theory seems to be that as long as a
man is a failure he is one of Gods children,
but that as soon as he succeeds he is taken
over by the devil.
H.L. Mencken, American journalist-author (1880-1956).

This Day in History

1940

Nazi Germany began its eight-month


blitz of Britain during World War II
with the first air attack on London.

In 1533, Englands Queen Elizabeth I was born in Greenwich.


In 1812, the Battle of Borodino took place as French troops
clashed with Russian forces outside Moscow. (The battle, ultimately won by Russia, was commemorated by composer Peter
Ilyich Tchaikovskys 1812 Overture.)
In 1825, the Marquis de Lafayette, the French hero of the
American Revolution, bade farewell to President John Quincy
Adams at the White House.
In 1927, American television pioneer Philo T. Farnsworth, 21,
succeeded in transmitting the image of a line through purely
electronic means with a device called an image dissector.
In 1936, rock legend Buddy Holly was born Charles Hardin
Holley in Lubbock, Texas.
In 1963, the National Professional Football Hall of Fame was
dedicated in Canton, Ohio.
In 1964, the controversial Daisy commercial for President
Lyndon Johnsons election campaign, featuring a girl plucking
flower petals followed by footage of a nuclear explosion, aired
on NBC-TV.
In 1977, the Panama Canal treaties, calling for the U.S. to
eventually turn over control of the waterway to Panama, were
signed in Washington by President Jimmy Carter and
Panamanian leader Omar Torrijos (toh-REE-hohs).
In 1996, rapper Tupac Shakur was shot and mortally wounded
on the Las Vegas Strip; he died six days later.
Ten years ago: Police and soldiers went house to house in
New Orleans to try to coax the last stubborn holdouts into leaving the storm-shattered city. President George W. Bush led the
nation in a final tribute to William H. Rehnquist, remembering
the late chief justice as the Supreme Courts steady leader and
a man of lifetime integrity.

Birthdays

Singer Chrissie
Hynde is 64.

Actress Diane Farr


is 46.

Actress Evan
Rachel Wood is 28.

Jazz musician Sonny Rollins is 85. Actor Bruce Gray is 79.


Singer Gloria Gaynor is 72. Actress Susan Blakely is 67. Actress
Julie Kavner is 64. Actor Corbin Bernsen is 61. Actor Michael
Emerson is 61. Pianist Michael Feinstein is 59. Singer Margot
Chapman is 58. Actress J. Smith-Cameron is 58. Actor W. Earl
Brown is 52. Actor Toby Jones is 49. Model-actress Angie
Everhart is 46. Actress Monique Gabriela Curnen is 45. Actor
Tom Everett Scott is 45. Rock musician Chad Sexton (311) is 45.
Actress Shannon Elizabeth is 42. Actor Oliver Hudson is 39.
Actor Devon Sawa (SAH-wuh) is 37. Actor JD Pardo is 36.
Singer-musician Wes Willis (Rush of Fools) is 29.

REUTERS

Carolyn Finnegan, 21, wears glasses with peace signs in the colors of the U.S. flag at the fourth annual Made in America
Music Festival in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Sunday.

In other news ...


Japanese-American WWII
war hero Ben Kuroki dies
CAMARILLO, Calif. Ben Kuroki,
who overcame the American militarys
discriminatory policies to become the
only Japanese American to fly over
Japan during World War II, has died. He
was 98.
Kuroki died Tuesday at his Camarillo,
California, home, where he was under
hospice care, his daughter Julie Kuroki
told the Los Angeles Times on Saturday.
The son of Japanese immigrants who
was raised on a Hershey, Nebraska,
farm, Kuroki and his brother, Fred, volunteered for service after the Dec. 7,
1941, attack on Pearl Harbor.
They were initially rejected by
recruiters who questioned the loyalty of
the children of Japanese immigrants.
Undeterred, the brothers drove 150
miles to another recruiter, who allowed
them to sign up.
At the time, the Army Air Forces
banned soldiers of Japanese ancestry
from flying, but Kuroki earned his way
onto a bomber crew and flew 58 bomber
missions over Europe, North Africa and
Japan during the war. He took part in the
August 1943 raid over Nazi oil fields in
Ploesti, Romania, that killed 310 fliers
in his group. He was captured after his
plane ran out of fuel over Morocco, but
he managed to escape with crewmates to
England.
Because of his Japanese ancestry, he
was initially rejected when he asked to

by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

Sept. 5 Powerball

2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC


All Rights Reserved.

NILCG

CEFINT

10

16

18

29

45

19

Sept. 4 Mega Millions


17

21

39

52

57

5
Mega number

Sept. 5 Super Lotto Plus


4

22

39

44

47

25

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Daily Four
9

Daily three midday


3

whale that got tangled up in hundreds of


feet of line, and rescuers said unless
they free it, the massive mammal could
eventually die.
A Los Angeles County sheriffs helicopter was among the craft searching for
the whale from Santa Barbara south to
Orange County.
My gut feeling is it went south but
its actual path remained a mystery, said
Peter Wallerstein, president of the nonprofit group Marine Animal Rescue.
Were having to look all over for it,
he said.
The whale was estimated to be 80 feet
long, twice the size of the average city
bus. It was spotted Friday in the channel
between Santa Catalina Island and the
mainland.
The whale was towing a 200-foot line
with an attached buoy that may be from
a crab pot, Wallerstein said.
The whale was spouting, swimming
on the surface and occasionally diving.
It appeared healthy, if a little thin but the
huge animal cannot drag the line forever, Wallerstein said.
Eventually its going to get tired out
and die, he said.
The sea was too rough to try
approaching the whale or cutting the
line Friday evening so rescuers just
attached a larger buoy to make it easier
to spot. However, it slipped away
overnight. Blue whales are the largest
animal species that ever lived. They can
reached 100 feet in length and weigh
200 tons.

Local Weather Forecast

Daily three evening

Mega number

Labor Day: Sunny. Highs in the upper 60s


to mid 70s. Northeast winds around 5
mph...Becoming west in the afternoon.
Monday night: Mostly clear. Lows in the
mid 50s. Northwest winds 5 to 10
mph...Becoming northeast after midnight.
Tuesday: Sunny. Highs in the lower to mid
70s. East winds around 5 mph in the morning...Becoming light.
Tuesday night: Mostly clear. Lows in the lower 50s.
Wednesday through saturday...Mostly clear. Highs in the 60s
to mid 70s. Lows in the mid 50s.

The Daily Derby race winners are Gold Rush, No.


1, in first place; Money Bags, No. 11, in second
place; and Big Ben, No. 4, in third place. The race
time was clocked at 1:41.75.

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

Print your
answer here:
Saturdays

RANCHO PALOS VERDES, Calif.


Boats, airplanes and helicopters
searched up and down the Southern
California coast Saturday for a blue

Fantasy Five
Powerball

Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app

TODAP

Rescuers seek blue whale


tangled up off California coast

Lotto

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

Unscramble these four Jumbles,


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

serve on a B-29 bomber that was to be


used in the Pacific. But after repeated
requests and a review of his stellar service record, Secretary of War Harry
Stimson granted an exception.
Crew members nicknamed him Most
Honorable Son, and the War
Department gave him a Distinguished
Flying Cross. He was saluted by Time
magazine in 1944 under the headline
HEROES: Ben Kuroki, American.
He was hailed a hero and a patriot at a
time when tens of thousands of Japanese
Americans were confined at internment
camps amid fears of a Japanese invasion
of the West Coast.
After the war, Kuroki enrolled at the
University of Nebraska, where he
obtained a journalism degree. He published a weekly newspaper in Nebraska
for a short time before moving to
Michigan and finally to California,
where he retired as the news editor of
Ventura Star-Free Press in 1984.
In 2005, he received the U.S. Army
Distinguished Service Medal, one of the
nations highest military honors.
I had to fight like hell for the right to
fight for my own country, Kuroki said
at the award ceremony in Lincoln,
Nebraska. And I now feel vindication.

(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles: COACH
HEFTY
GOSSIP
IMPORT
Answer: The cow who was always borrowing money
was a MOOCHER

The San Mateo Daily Journal


1900 Alameda de las Pulgas, Suite 112, San Mateo, CA 94403
Publisher: Jerry Lee
Editor in Chief: Jon Mays
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As a public service, the Daily Journal prints obituaries of approximately 200 words or less with a photo one time on the date of the familys choosing.To submit obituaries, email
information along with a jpeg photo to news@smdailyjournal.com. Free obituaries are edited for style, clarity, length and grammar. If you would like to have an obituary printed
more than once, longer than 200 words or without editing, please submit an inquiry to our advertising department at ads@smdailyjournal.com.

THE DAILY JOURNAL

LOCAL
Police reports
Power outage
Burglary. Someone stole $2,405 worth of
power tools from a locked storage container at a construction site on the 1100
block of El Camino Real in Millbrae
before 2:15 p.m. Monday, Aug. 31.

MILLBRAE
Vandalism. An unknown person used an
explosive to break the windshield of a vehicle
on the 1000 block of Ridgewood Drive before
3:34 a.m. Saturday, July 11.
Vandalism. An unknown person drove a vehicle over a lawn causing damage to the lawn
and smashing a decorative light xture on the
300 block of Loyola Drive before 5 a.m.
Friday, July 10.
Attempted burglary. A man was arrested
after he was found trespassing and removing
wire from the ground on the 1100 block of El
Camino Real before 8:30 p.m. Thursday, July
9.

BURLINGAME
Suspicious circumstances. A person reported
to be behaving oddly near the hospital was
actually just waiting for the bus on Trousdale
Drive before 8:35 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 1.
Animal problem. A mountain lion was seen
on Sebastian Drive and Frontera Way before
8:28 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 1.
City code violation. An illegal barbecue
operation was being carried out on an apartment balcony on Carolan Avenue before 6:47
p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 1.
Found property. Someone received a suspicious sculpture that they did not order on
Belvedere Court before 3:28 p.m. Tuesday,
Sept. 1.

Monday Sept. 7 2015

Suspicious circumstances. A person reported


to be tampering with the front door of a house
under construction was actually a handyman
working on the house on Easton Drive before
1:07 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 1.
Suspicious person. Someone was washing
windows without a permit on Trousdale Drive
before 10:46 a.m. Tuesday, Sept. 1.
Malicious mischief. A car window was
smashed on Old Bayshore Boulevard before
7:16 a.m. Tuesday, Sept. 1.
Petty theft. A phone that was reported stolen
from a hotel room was actually left in a taxi
on Old Bayshore Boulevard before 12:50 a.m.
Tuesday, Sept. 1.
Burglary. A car window was smashed and
items stolen on Old Bayshore Boulevard
before 3:47 p.m. Saturday, August 29.
Assault and battery. A woman reported
being struck with a shopping cart in an incident that police deemed accidental on
Burlingame Avenue before 2:37 p.m.
Saturday, August 29.
Accident. A minor-injury accident occurred
on Rollins Road before 8:40 a.m. Saturday,
August 29.

BELMONT
Reckless driver. A man in a truck was
attempting to run people off the road on
Highway 101 and Ralston Avenue before 1:35
p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 1.
Suspicious circumstances. A hiker reported
multiple electrical boxes that had been
stripped of their copper wiring on Ralston
Avenue before 1:09 p.m. Sunday, August 30.
Vandalism. A womans house was egged for
the fth time on Notre Dame Avenue before
1:24 p.m. Sunday, August 23.
Reckless driving. A driver was intentionally
swerving and cutting off another driver and
making obscene gestures toward her on
Prindle Road before 12:31 p.m. Sunday,
August 23.

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Monday Sept. 7 2015

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THE DAILY JOURNAL

Monday Sept. 7 2015

Building a bridge to success


Grant funding enhances after-school programs for local students
By Austin Walsh
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

Under substantial grant funding


offered by a couple giants in the
technology industry, underprivileged local middle students will
have greater access to cutting edge
curriculum and education programs
designed to put them on the path to
college.
Peninsula Bridge, an intensive
education program offered throughout San Mateo and Santa Clara
counties, received $100,000 grants
from Google and Dell which will be
spent partially toward the benet of
the students enrolled in after-school
programs at Bayside STEM
Academy in San Mateo.
The funds will be spent to help
offer extended learning opportunities to sixth- and seventh-graders
from Borel and Abbott middle
schools, Bayside STEM Academy
and North Shoreview Elementary in
San Mateo enrolled in the afterschool program.
Randi Shafton, executive codirector of Peninsula Bridge,

expressed enthusiasm for the additional paths to success the grant


funding could provide.
We are very excited, she said.
This is really a game changer.
Peninsula Bridge was formed
roughly 25 years ago to stem student learning loss over the summer
vacation, by offering classes to
highly-motivated students from
underserved communities during
the weeks when most schools were
out of session.
But in recent years, the program
has expanded its services to provide
year-round support to the more than
400 students from 32 schools, spanning between Mountain View and
San Mateo.
Students enrolled in the program
have been selected by teachers or
administrators who recognize they
are highly motivated with a passion
for education, have earned a GPA of
at least 3.0, and come from an economically disadvantaged background.
Shafton said the programs services were expanded after administrators began to realize solely offer-

ing classes during the summer


months was insufcient.
We saw kids were falling off
track, she said. They really needed more.
Since developing the after-school
program, which was introduced last
year at Bayside STEM Academy,
Shafton said a variety of intensive
programs were offered to students
with an eye to preparing them for
critical thinking that would be useful as they continue to pursue
opportunities in higher education.
These kids are motivated and
hungry to learn, and we want to
connect them with academic opportunities, said Shafton. And with
that they thrive.
Last year students enrolled in the
after-school program at Bayside
STEM Academy engaged in what
Shafton described as investigative
learning, focused on understanding
the inuence of physical beauty on
society.
She said building curriculum
around lessons which teachers may
not have time to focus on during the
typical school day can go a long

Officials work to stop thefts


of Native American artifacts
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LAKEPORT The four-year drought that


has ravaged California and the wildfires charring through the states dry forests have
exposed prehistoric Native American sites as
water levels drop and thick brush and poison
oak are burned away.
That has helped artifact looters searching
for obsidian spear points and other artifacts.
Drought brings the water down. Much of
the lake (normally) hides cultural sites and
villages, said Bill Salta, the state parks superintendent in Lake County.
The looters know this, flocking to the
waters newly exposed edge. Or they traverse
the scorched earth looking for signs of Native
American sites, the San Francisco Chronicle
reported Sunday.
Taking the artifacts is illegal, in some cases
a felony. Still, its typically an under-the-radar
crime, but in Lake County and some other
places, theres a new effort by officials to
attack the problem before it gets worse.
In mid-August, several members of the
Lake County Sheriffs Office attended training on illegal looting of artifacts, and learned
that many times looters are looking for quick
cash to buy drugs.
Two days after the training ended, a Lake
County deputy ran across an artifacts looter
while checking on a report of a man trying to
approach an underage girl. The deputy saw
the suspect, Brian Gene Smith, had a satchel

full of spear points, serrated hand tools and


obsidian flakes. Some were attached to index
cards noting where and when the items were
found, sheriffs officials said. They said Smith
his hands unable to remain still said he
was writing a book and was going to return
the items to the tribes.
Everything from the artifact training was
playing out in front of the deputy, officials
said: the drugs. The documentation. Photos of
finds on a digital camera.
Smith was jailed on suspicion of crimes
including possession of Native American artifacts and removing objects of archaeological
or historical interest.
The arrest was a milestone in efforts to get
law enforcement to recognize such crimes,
said Dino Beltran, treasurer of the Tribal
Council for the Koi Nation, one of the Pomo
tribes in the region.
The whole Native American community
up here in Northern California is absolutely
elated, rejoicing that there is a feeling of
respect, Beltran said.
Human artifacts in the region date back
more than 14,000 years, when humans settled
around what is believed to be the oldest lake
in North America. Anderson Marsh State
Historic Park, comprising 1,700 acres south of
Clear Lake, was created in 1985 to preserve
archaeological interests
Public officials in Lake County and elsewhere are urging people to report looting and
to leave artifacts where they are.

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way toward supplementing traditional education, and also introducing lessons which can expand a students perspective to focus on
broader cultural issues.
Students served by Peninsula
Bridge appreciate the additional
opportunity to continue their education beyond the traditional school
day, and respond well to the extra
hours spent learning, said Shafton.
These kids are intellectually
hungry, and enjoy being pushed
beyond their bounds, she said.
The grant money will be spent to
offer student students lessons in a
variety of technology-based educational programs, such as cuttingedge mathematics and science programs, which they would likely not
have access to otherwise, said
Shafton.
Our programs are a whole lot
stronger with access to technology,
she said.
Though the oldest students who
have been through the middle
school after-school program are
currently sophomores in high
school, Shafton said there is a wide

Bay Area brief


Guard says he did not
touch inmate found dead
DUBLIN One of three California jail
guards arrested on suspicion of murder in the
death of an inmate proclaimed his innocence
and said he never touched the 31-year-old
man.

base of summer school program


alumni enrolled in universities
throughout the country which serve
as models for the success of
Peninsula Bridge.
She said the ultimate goal is to
offer programming designed to supply students with a broad set of
skills which will lead to their enrollment in college, and ultimately
serve them professionally after
graduation.
But in a more general sense,
Shafton said the program aims to
develop self-motivated students
who can be an example of success
for their communities.
The kids really drive themselves
to be academic and life role models
for their parents and siblings, she
said.
But none of that would be possible without collaboration of schools
in San Mateo, she said.
Our partnerships with the school
district is everything, she said.

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

Rafael Rodriguez said the guard uniform he


wore the night authorities say he and two
other officers entered inmate Michael Tyrees
cell was clean, showing no signs that he made
contact with the inmate, he told the San Jose
Mercury News in an exclusive interview published Sunday.
It sucks being in here for something I didnt do, Rodriguez said while seated behind
protective glass in the Dublin jails visiting
area.

NATION

Monday Sept. 7 2015

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Congress returns to unfinished business


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON Congress
returns on Tuesday with a critical
need for a characteristic rarely evident through a contentious spring
and summer cooperation
between Republicans and President
Barack Obama.
Lawmakers face a weighty list of
unfinished business and looming
deadlines, including a stopgap
spending bill to keep the government open beyond Sept. 30. The
most intractable issues a solution
to a yearlong battle over agency
budgets and a deal on a long-sought
highway bill have been kicked to
the fall.
Its going to take a sense of give
and take on both sides, said Rep.
Tom Cole, R-Okla. The big deal
will be, Can you come to a deal on
transportation, debt ceiling and
avoiding sequester? So a large
budget deal will determine, I think,
whether or not weve really been
successful.
Automatic budget cuts called
sequestration are the result of a
hard-fought deal Obama signed in a
2011.
GOP leaders are playing down
talk of a government shutdown
thats being driven by conservatives
determined to use the spending legislation to strip funds from Planned
Parenthood. The organization is
under intense scrutiny after secretly

recorded videos
raised uncomfortable questions about its
practices
in
procuring
research tissue
from
aborted
fetuses.
Cole
said
Barack Obama
passing a shortterm spending bill will not be a
contention-free exercise.
The first days for Congress will
be marked by a fierce debate over
the nuclear deal with Iran that
Republicans insist makes too many
concessions to Tehran. Democrats
have rallied behind the president
and have already demonstrated they
have the votes to sustain a promised
Obama veto of a resolution challenging the hard-won agreement.

Crowded agenda
Also on the crowded fall agenda
are efforts to increase the governments borrowing authority and
avoid a first-ever federal default;
extend some 50 tax breaks; pass a
defense policy bill that Obama has
threatened to veto; and renew the
Federal Aviation Administrations
authority to spend money.
A historic address to Congress by
Pope Francis on Sept. 24 promises a
welcome respite from the partisanship that has gripped the Capitol for
most of the year.

Some tea party lawmakers say


they will only back legislation to
keep the government open in the
new budget year, which begins Oct.
1, if the measure also terminates
Planned Parenthoods federal
money even if their battle with
Obama over the issue should spiral
into a government shutdown.
Im for doing everything to halt
funds for Planned Parenthood, said
Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio. There is
no way they can get taxpayer support.
Conservative groups such as
Heritage Action are backing the
strategy, though establishment antiabortion organizations arent throwing their influence behind it.

Planned Parenthood
Douglas Johnson, legislative
director for the powerful National
Right to Life Committee, said
recently that while blocking
Planned Parenthoods funds makes
sense, the Senate lacks the votes to
do so and abortions would continue
anyway. He said lawmakers should
also focus on bills halting abortions.
We just dont have the votes to
get the outcome that wed like,
Senate Majority Leader Mitch
McConnell, R-Ky., told a Kentucky
television station last week. He
called ending Planned Parenthoods
funding another issue that awaits a
new president.
Past efforts to use must-pass

funding bills to block Obamas


health care law and his executive
actions on immigration have failed
badly, with the heath law dispute
resulting in a partial government
shutdown in 2013.
As a result, House GOP leaders
are considering separate legislation
this month cutting Planned
Parenthoods funds and the health
overhaul, according to a GOP aide
and a lobbyist. They hope such a
bill, which would advance free of a
filibuster threat by Senate
Democrats, would satisfy Planned
Parenthoods opponents and free up
the temporary government funding
bill.
Obama would be certain to veto
such a bill, but it would allow
Republicans to vote for those
changes and underscore the need for
a GOP president to institute them.
Facing demands for negotiations
to lift domestic agency budgets hit
by the return of automatic spending
cuts, McConnell has signaled that
he is open to talks on a deal that
would pair increases for domestic
programs with budget relief for the
Pentagon.
To get to an agreement, however,
Republicans must strike a deal with
Obama and his Democratic allies
over companion spending cuts elsewhere in the budget to defray the
cost of new spending for the
Pentagon and domestic programs.
Theres a limited pool of such off-

sets, at least those with an acceptable level of political pain, and considerable competition over what to
spend them on.
For instance, McConnell helped
assemble a 10-year, $47 billion offsets package to pay for a Senate bill
with small increases for highway
and transit programs. Democrats are
eying the same set of cuts to pay for
boosting domestic agencies.
No one is underestimating the difficulty in reaching agreement.
Speculation is growing that
Republicans will try to advance a
bill that would keep most federal
agencies operating at current budget
levels, with only a few changes for
the most pressing programs. The
White House has pledged to block
that idea.

Defense spending
One potential glimmer of hope
for the talks is that earlier this year
Republicans reversed a position
they held in talks two years ago and
declared that additional defense
spending doesnt require companion spending cuts.
Congress also needs to raise the
governments $18.1 trillion borrowing cap by mid-November or early
December, an uncomfortable
prospect for GOP leaders already
facing potshots from tea party
purists and Republican presidential
candidates as next years nomination contests loom.

Parts of toddlers dismembered body found in park


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHICAGO Detectives investigating a lagoon at a Chicago urban park


where a toddlers dismembered feet and
hand were discovered waded through
cattail reeds and waist-high water
Sunday, hoping to find more clues about
the young victims identity.
A dog with a K-9 unit sniffed though
shrubbery, branches and boulders on the

edge of Garfield Park on the citys west


side, while investigators felt the muddy
lagoon bottom with their hands, looking
for other body parts or evidence.
The search began Saturday afternoon
after someone reported seeing what
turned out to be a left foot floating in the
lagoon. Officers later found a decomposed right foot and a hand about 25
yards away, police spokesman Anthony
Guglielmi said.

Jason Ervin, the alderman for the district, said investigators told him the victim was likely 2 to 4 years old. Kids that
age, Ervin said Sunday, would be
noticed by relatives or neighbors if they
went missing.
It is unthinkable that someone would
dismember a child and throw them into
the lagoon, he said.
Investigators havent determined the
childs identity, Guglielmi said.

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NATION

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Monday Sept. 7 2015

Trump supporters defy political gravity


By Jill Colvin
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NORWOOD, Mass. Donald


Trump insults and exaggerates.
He dismisses the need for public
policy ideas, gets confused about
world affairs and sometimes says
things that flat out arent true.
And the cheers from his supporters only grow louder.
By the standard that voters typically use to judge presidential candidates, Trump probably should not
have survived his first day in the
2016 race.
Yet as the summer draws to a
close and the initial votes in the
nominating calendar appear on the
horizon, Trump has established
himself as the Republican front-runner.
Listen to these voters:
Its totally refreshing. Hes not
politically correct. He has a backbone and he cannot be bought, said

Leigh
Ann
Crouse, 55, of
Dubuque, Iowa.
This country
needs a businessman
just
like him to put
us back on track,
to make us stop
Donald Trump being the laughing stock of this
world, said Ken Brand, 56, of
Derry, New Hampshire.
He says everything that I would
like to say, but Im afraid to say.
What comes out of his mouth is not
what he thinks I want to hear, said
Janet Boyden, 67, of Chester,
Massachusetts.
They are among the dozens of
voters interviewed in the past two
weeks by the Associated Press to
understand how Trump has defied
the laws of political gravity.
Uniting them is a deep-rooted
anger and frustration with the

nations political leaders


President Barack Obama and conservative Republicans who, these
voters say, havent sufficiently
stood up to the Democratic administration.
Some havent voted in years, or
ever, and may not next year. But at
this moment, they are entranced by
Trumps combination of utter selfassurance, record of business success and a promise that his bank
account is big enough to remain
insulated from the forces they
believe have poisoned Washington.
By the way, they say its not that
they are willing to look past
Trumps flaws to fix what they
believe ills the country. Its that
those flaws are exactly what makes
him the leader America needs.
At least we know where he
stands, said Kurt Esche, 49, an
independent who was at Trumps
recent rally outside Boston. These
other guys, I dont trust anything

that comes out of their mouths.


Theyre lying to get elected. This
guys at least saying what he
believes.
He may have started as a joke,
Esche said, but he may be the real
deal.
Crouse is a merchandise processor at a retail distributor outside
Dubuque, the Mississippi River
town where Trump tossed
Univision anchor Jorge Ramos from
a news conference.
A political independent who has
never participated in Iowas leadoff
presidential caucuses, Crouse said
she began following Trump from
the moment he referred to Mexican
immigrants as criminals during his
campaign kickoff.
Hes just attracting people who
are frustrated, and as you can see,
there are a lot of us, she said.
Illegal immigration is the perfect
summation of Trumps unorthodox
campaign.

Debate over immigration


strains EU, US solidarity
By David Crary
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK The United States and the


European Union project themselves as models
for the world when it comes to democracy and
human rights. Yet a common issue migration is bitterly dividing each of them, testing whether they can maintain solidarity amid
virulent debate over border controls, deportations and national values.
In the 28-nation EU, some countries have
sought to block the unprecedented flow of
migrants fleeing war or poverty in the Middle
East and Africa, while Germany the EUs
powerhouse is bracing to handle 800,000
migrants this year and wants other nations to
step up as well.
In the U.S., the influx of immigrants entering illegally has eased recently, but the political rhetoric is red-hot. Donald Trump, the
leading Republican presidential candidate, is
calling for mass deportation of millions of
immigrants living in the U.S. without legal
permission, and some of his rivals have joined
in proposing to stop granting citizenship to
children born to such immigrants and to wall
off the U.S.-Mexico border.
In Europe, the future of the EUs passportfree internal borders is now in question, and a
rising death toll adds to the sense of urgency.
More than 2,800 migrants have died this year
trying to reach Europe, mostly at sea, according to the International Organization for

Migration; the decomposing bodies of 71


migrants were found Aug. 27 in an abandoned
truck near Vienna, apparently after suffocating.
On Hungarys border with Serbia, some 300
flag-waving extremists marched to a crossing
point a few days ago and shouted at frightened migrants many of whom had just
completed a daylong hike to go back
where they came from.
It was reminiscent of the scene in July 2014
in Murietta, California, where screaming antiimmigration protesters, some waving
American flags, blocked buses of women and
children headed to a Border Patrol processing
center after making their way to the U.S. from
troubled parts of Central America. Return to
Sender was among the messages on the protesters signs.
So volatile is the issue that President Barack
Obama has drawn fire from both the left and
right for his moves on immigration.
Supporters of a crackdown were angered by
Obamas efforts to ease up on deportation of
immigrants living illegally in the U.S. over
the long term. Led by Texas, 26 states have
sued to block that change in deportation policy.
In contrast, immigrant-rights groups note
that Obama has overseen a record number of
deportations and allowed the detention of
many of the Central American mothers who
flooded across the border with their children.

Ohio couple calls out heroin


in teen daughters obituary
By Dan Sewell
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MIDDLETOWN, Ohio Confronted with


the sudden death of their 18-year-old daughter, Fred and Dorothy McIntosh Shuemake
made a defiant decision: they would not worry
about any finger-pointing, whispers or family
stigma.
They directed the funeral home to begin
Alison Shuemakes obituary by stating flatly
that she died of a heroin overdose. They
arent the first grieving American parents to
cite heroin in an obituary as such deaths nearly quadrupled nationally over a decade, but
its rare, even in a southwest Ohio community
headed toward another record year in heroinrelated deaths.
There was no hesitation, Dorothy said.
Weve seen other deaths when its heroin,
and the families dont talk about it because
theyre ashamed or they feel guilty. Shame
doesnt matter right now.
Her voice cracked as she sat at a table covered with photos of Alison: the high school

diploma earned this year, awards certificates,


and favorite things such as her stuffed bunny
named Ashley that says I love you in a voice
recording Alison made as a small child.
What really matters is keeping some other
person, especially a child, from trying this ...
We didnt want anybody else to feel the same
agony and wretchedness that were left with,
she said.
She and Fred, a retired Middletown police
detective who investigated crimes against
children, want to promote a potentially preventive dialogue about what the U.S. Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention calls an
epidemic.
In Butler County, where the Shuemakes
live, the coroners statistics show heroin-related deaths jumped in two years from 30 to 103
in 2014, with 86 recorded already through the
first six months of this year.
Their decision has drawn a wide outpouring
of support, both locally and on social media,
with online comments and emails from around
the world.

Expires 10-31-2015

He claims its an issue the GOP


would not be discussing if not for
his presence in the race, even
though the topic has been at the center of political debate for years.
Its the only one on which he has
made a concrete proposal; his
rivals, by comparison, have rolled
out lots of ideas on a range of
issues.
Heres Trumps pitch: deport millions of people who are living in the
United States illegally and build a
border wall. Critics deride this
approach as naove, but his supporters say its the obvious solution.
As crazy as it might be, I think
hes addressing something that
needs to be heard, said Randy
Thomas, 40, of Bedford, New
Hampshire.
I think hes saying something
that everybody thinks always has to
be addressed. If you have a country
of laws, you have to abide by the
laws, he said.

Monday Sept. 7 2015

WORLD

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Migrants flow west on trains


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

HEGYESHALOM, Hungary Hungarian


police stood by as thousands of migrants
hopped cross-border trains Sunday into
Austria, taking advantage of Hungarys surprise decision to stop screening international
train travelers for travel visas, a get-tough
measure that the country had launched only
days before to block their path to asylum in
Western Europe.
Fourteen trains from Hungarys capital of
Budapest arrived at the Hegyeshalom station
near the Austrian border, disgorging migrants
onto the platform. Police didnt check documents as passengers, mostly migrants, walked
a few yards (meters) to waiting Austria-bound
trains, which typically left less than 3 minutes
later. Austrian police said more than 13,000
migrants have passed through their country to
Germany over the past two days, far more
than expected.
Arabs, Asians and Africans who often have
spent weeks traveling through Turkey, Greece
and the Balkans to reach Hungary, a popular
back door into the European Union, found to
their surprise they were permitted Sunday to
buy tickets to take them all the way into
Austria and Germany. Hungary had insisted
last week they would no longer be allowed to
do this.
Ticket sellers at Budapests Keleti station
merely rolled their eyes when asked by AP
why they were selling Vienna tickets to asylum seekers. Several migrants told the AP
they had expected to be rejected, but easily
bought international tickets to Vienna without
visa checks.
No check, no problem, said Reza Wafai, a
19-year-old from Bamiyan, Afghanistan, who
hopes to join relatives in Dortmund,
Germany. He displayed his just-purchased
ticket to Vienna costing 9,135 forints
($32.50). He was traveling without a passport,
carrying only a black-and-white Hungarian
asylum seeker ID.

REUTERS

Migrants board a train after crossing the Macedonian-Greek border near Gevgelija,
Macedonia Sunday
EU rules stipulate asylum seekers should
seek refuge in their initial EU entry point. But
virtually none of the migrants want to claim
asylum in Hungary, where the government is
building border defenses and trying to make it
increasingly hard for asylum seekers to enter.
Hungarian government spokesman Zoltan
Kovacs told The Associated Press that
Hungary had decided to drop visa checks on
train ticket customers, a measure introduced
only Tuesday, because of the sudden drop in
migrant numbers made possible by Germany
and Austrias breakthrough decision to take
thousands of asylum seekers stuck in
Hungary.
The country used 104 buses to clear

Budapests central Keleti train station and


Hungarys major motorway of more than
4,000 migrants and deliver them to the border.
Sundays free movement for migrants on
trains represented an effort to return to normality, whatever that is, Kovacs said.
Last week the security situation was such
that we had to step up in-depth checking,
Kovacs said, referring to Hungarys effort to
require suspected migrants to show valid travel visas when trying to buy train tickets. The
rule effectively blocked every migrant from a
cross-border train.
Now anybody can buy a ticket again, and
this is normal. Police typically do not check
tickets and railways do not check visas,

Kovacs said.
But complicating the ever-changing picture,
Austrias railway company told the AP it
plans to end its connections to Hegyeshalom
on Monday. Direct Vienna-Budapest services
will take their place, spokeswoman Sonya
Horner said. It remains to be seen whether
Hungarian or Austrian police will screen
those services for migrants traveling without
visas.
Hungary, for its part, is making a concerted
effort to make it harder for asylum seekers to
reach its territory from non-EU member
Serbia. Serbia Railways said Hungarian
authorities refused Sunday to permit two passenger trains to travel into Hungary citing, for
the first time, large groups of migrants
aboard.
Serbia Railways said in a statement that
migrants refused to disembark from the train
before reaching Hungary, the typical practice
in recent months. One train was canceled and
its legal passengers permitted to enter
Hungary by bus, while the second train
entered Hungary after migrants aboard were
isolated on two carriages that were decoupled
and left behind, forcing the migrants to walk
to the border.
The week has seen rapid policy reversals:
On Monday, Hungary annoyed its EU neighbors by permitting thousands of migrants to
storm aboard trains bound for Vienna and the
German cities of Munich and Hamburg. On
Tuesday, Hungary announced that travelers
would require passports and visas to travel
west by train to other EU nations, frustrating
thousands more migrants who had just bought
tickets.
On Thursday, Hungary canceled all westbound international services in a failed effort
to woo migrants away from Keleti, where
they had camped in their thousands, and into
state-run refugee camps.
Now Sundays bigger than expected flow
could create a challenge to the asylum support
structures in Germany.

Syrian media says militant behind


southern bombings was arrested
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

DAMASCUS, Syria A militant suspected of masterminding car bombings in a southern Syrian province that killed a prominent
cleric and at least 25 others was arrested
Sunday after the slayings sparked anti-government protests, pro-government media
reported.
Syrian state television said the militant,
known as Wafi Abu Trabi, confessed to elders
in Sweida province of plotting the bombings
and subsequent violence against security
forces there. The state news agency SANA
identified him as a member of the Nusra
Front, Syrias al-Qaida affiliate.
Late Sunday, the state television aired confessions by Abu Trabi, in which he said he
was recruited by a Syrian rebel to kill the cleric.
Sweida is a predominantly Druze region

that largely has stayed out of the civil war raging in Syria since 2011. But the two car bombs
bombing there Friday killed anti-government
Sheikh Wahid Balous, stirring angry protests
by the clerics supporters who accused the
government of killing him.
Balous was a vocal critic of Syrian
President Bashar Assad. Soon after the bombings, clashes erupted outside police stations
and security offices that killed some security
agents, local resident and activist Tarek
Abdul-Hai said. The Britain-based Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights said six security personnel were killed.
Abdul-Hai, speaking to the Associated
Press by telephone from Sweida, said that
calm has returned to the city as armed militias took charge of patrolling the area. AbdulHai said police and security agents have
withdrawn from public view to ease the tension.

Pope: Vatican will shelter 2


families fleeing war, hunger
By Frances DEmilio
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

VATICAN CITY The Vatican will shelter two families of refugees who are fleeing
death from war or hunger, Pope Francis
announced Sunday as he called on Catholic
parishes, convents and monasteries across
Europe to do the same.
Francis cited Mother Teresa, the Europeanborn nun who cared for the poorest in India, in
making his appeal in remarks to pilgrims and
tourists in St. Peters Square.
Faced with the tragedy of tens of thousands of refugees who are fleeing death by
war and by hunger, and who are on a path
toward a hope for life, the Gospel calls us to
be neighbors to the smallest and most aban-

doned, to give them concrete hope, Francis said.


Its not enough to say
Have courage, hang in
there, he added.
May every parish,
every religious community, every monastery, every
sanctuary in Europe host a
Pope Francis family, starting with my
diocese of Rome, Francis
said. He also asked bishops throughout
Europe to have their dioceses take up his call
to express the Gospel in concrete terms and
take in a family of refugees.
The Vatican is a tiny city-state and some of
its citizens, including families with children,
live in apartments inside its ancient walls.

OPINION

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Monday Sept. 7 2015

Guest perspective

We want justice, but not just for us


By Shelley Kessler

n our country, poverty is accepted


as a natural state by those in
power. They justify their wealth
and claim it was not gained through
inheritance or privilege, but through
their hard work as if the poor working two or three jobs are not working
hard enough. That the lack of education
or access to medical care, or just being
born with a different skin color let
alone any type of deformity are
acceptable grounds for denying a fair
and dignied existence.
The rich and powerful ght every
effort for the poor to rise above their
poverty, as if someone who can barely
feed themselves and their families
doesnt deserve even a small modicum
of creature comforts or health care.
How can they justify that cruel existence? And yet, people who are one
paycheck away from losing it all are
the most generous, often donating more
of their time and a larger percentage of
their income to charity than those with
great wealth.
Why cant everyone have a pension,
health care, housing and food? Why
does it bother the rich that others have
enough to survive and thrive on? What
is their problem? When is enough
money enough?
Recently I watched a movie called

Salt of the Earth


not the one that
many of us are
familiar with, but
one in which a photographer documented the impacts of
drought, famine and
oppression around
the world. It showed
the ravages of war and exploitation; the
withholding of resources, food and
water that lead to mass extermination
of thousands of people from many cultures in many countries.
The conditions shared by those in
makeshift mobile villages, concentration camps and internment centers all
depicted the outrageous willful condemnation of the powerless by the privileged. Cholera, famine, diseases of all
kinds are plagues visited upon entire
communities by deliberate denials of
medicine, food, shelter and any level of
human kindness or dignity.
How is it today, with so much wealth
and resources in the world, that human
beings can inict such carnage upon
whole populations? What religion gives
blessings that celebrate this depredation?
And how easy it is for those of us
who do not bear witness to this to live
daily without a second thought for
those out-of-sight-out-of-mind existences.

By pitting workers against one another, the super afuent protect their greed
by keeping us ghting among ourselves. It is the same old divide-andconquer technique that has been used
for years. This has to stop! Raising the
quality of life for those who create the
wealth so they can enjoy the fruits of
their labor is our call to action; not just
for union members, but for all working
people and their families here as well
as around the world.
Thats why Labor Day really should
be on May 1, joining with the international community in honoring those
who toil. We have a global community
and its about time all workers united
together in the effort to achieve the dignity we all deserve.
I ache knowing that there is so little I
as one person can do yet I am aware
that proactive engagement will make a
difference. The struggle is to realize
that every effort matters no matter how
small. Because together we can make a
difference and if we dont try, we
wont. Lets answer the call and join
with everyone who shares a vision for
social and economic fairness. Because
justice is not about just us!
Shelley Kessler is the executive secretary-treasurer of the San Mateo County
Labor Council.

Letters to the editor


Belmont council dismisses
key element in process
for zoning changes
Editor,
At the July 14 meeting, MayorDavid
Braunsteinrequested Ask Belmont
Citizens (ABC) to come forward and
tell us what youd like. The committee
responded with a process proposal that
included acitizensadvisory committee
and town hall meetings conducted by a
facilitator. The key is that the citizens
committee guiding the process would
meet in public to promote transparency
versus a subcommittee of council members making decisions behind closed
doors. None of the councilmembers
reached out to ABC members to discuss our proposal.
In a side conversation with
MayorBraunstein, I urged him to consider such a committee. I shared
withBraunsteinthat Terry Nagel,
mayor of Burlingame, told me that
Burlingame has a citizensadvisory
committee on each major project. I was
hopeful that he would initiate a discus-

Jerry Lee, Publisher


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

sion about it at the Aug. 25 council


meeting. I was also encouraged by a
quote in this newspaper on Aug. 22
from Councilman Eric Reed stating
the whole point of Tuesdays discussion is to gure out what the right
direction is. We have some proposals
on the table ... . Its going to take a discussion to gure out whats the best
way to get public input ... .
At its Aug. 25 meeting, the council
did not discuss the pros and cons of a
citizens committee. Only Councilman
Charles Stone objected to the idea with
how many folks will get a chance to
participate in that ... .
And with that, the council dismissed
thecitizens committeeidea and didnt
discuss any other ideas. They approved
the process proposed by the subcommittee members which retains the decision making authority with Reed and
Stone. So much for the public discussions and input from citizens. Its business as usual for the Belmont City
Council with their one voice vote.
Tran Tran
Belmont

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Ricci Lam, Production Assistant


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

San Mateo ice rink


Editor,
If I were to write a letter to the City
Council about saving our ice rink, it
would go something like this:
Dear Council, Throw us a bone. You
are killing us on all other fronts:
smart growth, looking to extend a
temporary tax another 30 years (when
we already pay the highest in the
nation), having the schools ask us for
money to t in all the kids your
approved development is bringing, hitting us up to replace the 100-year-old
sewer system, throwing a drop of water
on the raging re that is our trafc.
Must you also take away something
thathas given so many people pleasure? A place where kids can do kid
things and families can gather?Exactly
who are you serving?

Lisa Taner
San Mateo
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Journal, please contact the editor at
news@smdailyjournal.com
or by phone at: 344-5200, ext. 107
Editorials represent the viewpoint of the Daily Journal
editorial board and not any one individual.

Adventures
with a new
iPhone
W

arning: This column is not suitable for anyone


under 55 years of age. I try to keep up with new
tech. For decades I have used a computer and
email. Then I decided to get with it and get an iPhone. I
bought an iPhone 3. My grandkids put in family phone numbers and showed me how to
text. But I needed to do
more.
So this summer, I purchased an iPhone 5. But it
wasnt easy. At the AT&T
store, the saleswoman spent
two hours writing down a
series of numbers I did not
understand. I offered to pay
for the phone up front but
was told, oh no, you have to
do it over an extended period and then it costs this, plus
that, plus that, etc. After two
hours, I was ready to buy the
Brooklyn Bridge. Then the
saleswoman said she had
given me gures for the wrong phone. But no matter, I said
weakly. I will buy what you have. It turns out they didnt
have that either. But would send it to me.
***
The phone arrived about two weeks later and so did an
online bill from AT&T. I couldnt understand why the
monthly charges had zoomed. Even amortizing the price of
the new phone over two years would not equal the amount
which was now going to be my monthly charge. I called the
online help number. An expert in India apologized for the
inconvenience and said he would look into it. It would take a
while. Eventually I received a message that it was more
complex than he thought and would take more time. He gave
me a case number.
I wrote a letter to the president of AT&T. I was surprised
at the quick response. I received a call from the presidents
customer service secretary who said I was sold an unlimited
data plan but, if I didnt want that, it could be replaced with
my old plan.
When the phone nally arrived, I went to the local Apple
store where they graciously without cost transferred the
information from my old phone to my new phone. I signed
up for lessons. Big problem. My phone wouldnt work. At
least I couldnt get my email or do much of anything. A
manager was called over and he called AT&T. It turns out I
needed a more expensive data plan (not unlimited but more)
to use the Internet. I guess that is what the salesperson in the
store was trying to explain. So I added on another $20 a
month. I had already paid the full price of the phone.
***
On my second lesson I learned how to use the map function to get directions, nd a location, etc. We used a
Starbucks in San Carlos as my trial destination. I was
thrilled. Then when I got into my car and was off to a meeting some distance away, a voice started telling me to turn
left, then turn right. I was getting directions to the San
Carlos coffee shop. I tried to turn off the phone as best I
could while driving. I thought that had ended it. But when I
was back in my car, and driving home the voice came back
again. It was like a brave new world. Or the machines taking
over. Out of the car and safely and quietly at home I gured
out, I guess, how to end these unending series of vocal directions.
But then my email stopped working. I kept getting messages you are not connected to the server. I turned on settings to make sure my WiFi was on. I had been warned not
having it on would eat up data. So until I had my next lesson
my expensive new phone lay idle.
Back at the Apple store for a third lesson, the instructor
could not gure out what had happened but somehow she
got it to work. I had not lost that much data. Then I wanted
to learn how to use new apps like Uber. We got on the Uber
site but I couldnt remember my Apple password correctly
so couldnt get it going. Or so I thought. When I got home
there was a message from Uber charging me $10 for failing
to cancel a call.
Oh no. There is somehow a life inside this phone not connected to anything I want it to do. I promptly wrote to Uber
that it was all a mistake. They apologized and removed the
$10 charge.
***
So here I am with new phone and my new monthly bill
but almost terried of what will come next.
Sue Lempert is the former mayor of San Mateo. Her column
runs every Monday. She can be reached at sue@smdailyjournal.com.

10

BUSINESS

Monday Sept. 7 2015

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Solid hiring but tepid pay in job market


By Josh Boak
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON On Labor
Day weekend 2015, the U.S. job
market has found an old sweet spot:
5.1 percent unemployment many
miles from the 10 percent joblessness America endured back in 2009.
Its the lowest rate in more than
seven years, suggestive of healthy
hiring levels that have traditionally
fostered rising incomes, consumer
spending and economic growth.
In August, the unemployment rate
fell on the strength of a decent if
less-than-stellar 173,000 added
jobs. And most economists expect
the government to eventually revise
up that job gain because of seasonal
trends that are notoriously difficult
to calculate.
Fridays employment data reflected the durability of the U.S. economy, which has so far withstood distress worldwide: Tumultuous stock
markets, a sharp slowdown in
China, a perpetually struggling
European economy and the start of
a recession in Canada, Americas
largest trading partner.
Yet the report also spotlighted
aspects of an economic expansion
that has been steady without being
fully satisfying: Wage growth
remains slight. And millions remain

relegated to the sidelines of the job


market.
Joseph LaVorgna, chief U.S.
economist at Deutsche Bank, grades
the job market as good but not
great.
Its a solid B, LaVorgna said.
Definitely not an A.

5.1 PERCENT
UNEMPLOYMENT
That figure serves as compelling
evidence for why the U.S. job market is the envy of most of the industrialized world. The unemployment
rate has dropped a full percentage
point over the past 12 months, and
for a good reason: More Americans
are finding work.
At previous times during the
recovery from the Great Recession,
the unemployment rate had dipped
only because many people had
abandoned their job searches and
were no longer counted as unemployed.
Employers have added nearly 2.6
million workers since last year
about 764,000 more than the number who left the workforce to retire,
start school or end their job hunts in
frustration, according to the governments monthly survey of households.
A 5.1 percent unemployment rate

also fits the Federal Reserves picture of a normal economy. And so it


heightens expectations that the Fed
will raise interest rates from record
lows later this month. Maximizing
employment is one of the Feds
mandates.
But the Fed must balance that
task with its other mandate: To stabilize prices. And across the economy, inflation remains well short of
the Feds 2 percent target, at which
point a rate hike would be appropriate.

10.3 PERCENT
Besides the official unemployment rate, the jobs report includes a
broader measure of joblessness: It
takes account not only of people
seeking work but also of part-time
workers who cant find full-time
jobs and other people on the fringes
of the job market. This broader
measure was 10.3 percent last
month, relatively high for a baseline
unemployment rate of 5.1 percent.
When the unemployment rate was
most recently this low, in early
2008, the broader measure was 9.2
percent. That gap between 9.2 percent in 2008 and 10.3 percent today
translates into an additional 1.9 million Americans who are still barely
getting by, testament to a job market
has yet to fully heal.

221,000 JOBS
Thats the average monthly job
growth over the past three months.
That average could rise later
because economists say seasonal
adjustment quirks could cause the
August jobs figure of 173,000 to be
revised up by 50,000 or more.
Why do job gains of more than
200,000 matter so much? Its roughly twice the monthly influx of workers into the job market. It means that
demand for workers exceeds the
incoming supply and suggests that
employers foresee continued customer demand.
Tellingly, hiring in August shifted
away from sectors with heavy exposure to the global economy.
Manufacturers, for example, shed
17,000 jobs. The pace of hiring also
slipped for business services.
More than half the added jobs
came from industries largely insulated from overseas turmoil:
Government, education and health
services. Their share of job growth
nearly doubled last month from
27.1 percent in July.

40.3 PERCENT
Thats the share of employed
Americans older than 25 with college degrees. This figure has

climbed more than a percentage


point from 39.2 percent over the
previous 12 months. Seven years
ago, the share of college-graduate
workers was roughly 35 percent.
The change points to an encouraging shift since the recession:
American workers are increasingly
better educated. College graduates
not only earn more on average than
non-college grads, but on top of
that, their unemployment rate is
now a scant 2.5 percent less than
half the national average.

$25.09
The average hourly earnings have
crept up just 2.2 percent over the
past year to $25.09. That increase
looks adequate to some economists
because of ultra-low inflation over
that time. But an unemployment
rate barely above 5 percent would
normally drive faster pay growth.
Thats because when hiring picks
up, the supply of available workers
tightens and employers generally
feel compelled to raise pay to attract
talent.
Yet since 2012, average hourly
earnings have largely risen between
1.8 percent and 2.2 percent in the
monthly reports not nearly
enough for many Americans to feel
that their living standards have
improved.

Apple building second-largest campus in Austin


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

AUSTIN, Texas Apple Inc. is


quietly building a home away from
home.
The tech giant is transforming a
38-acre wooded lot into its largest
global operation outside of Silicon
Valley, the Austin AmericanStatesman
reported
(http://atxne.ws/1O6Crzc ).
In line to receive $35 million in
tax incentives from the city, county

and state for its Austin expansion,


Apple has pledged to create 3,600
new jobs while retaining at least
3,100 existing jobs.
If Apple reaches those hiring figures, it would make it the secondlargest technology employer in
Central Texas behind Dell Inc.,
which has about 14,000 local workers. The company also agreed to
spend $282 million on new buildings and equipment in Austin over
the next decade.

When Apple completes its Austin


campus next year, it will boast 1.1
million square feet of space including restaurants, a gym and a wellness center. Apples new campus is
responsible for running the companys business operations for the
Western Hemisphere.
It will help create a new wave of
talent, Mark McClain, CEO of
Austin software maker SailPoint
and chairman of the Austin
Technology Council, told the news-

paper. Some people will come to


work for Apple and get the entrepreneurial bug and go start a company. Others will eventually leave
to join local tech companies that
need their expertise.
Denise Young Smith, Apples
head of human resources, said the
company was drawn not only by
Austins talent pool but also
because of its cultural diversity.
Austin has always been a voice
and proponent of diversity and

inclusiveness, Young Smith said.


And there is also diversity in terms
of talent, including the music and
artistic community. We like that
cross-pollination, and the job candidates that have been able to hire
because of it.
Despite stock market uncertainty
because of an economic slowdown
in China, Apple is still growing. The
company reported a jump in profits
during the third quarter as demand
for iPhones soared.

Japan lifts evacuation order for town near doomed nuke plant
By Mari Yamaguchi
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NARAHA, Japan Japans


government on Saturday lifted a 4
1/2-year-old evacuation order for
the northeastern town of Naraha
that had sent all of the towns 7,400
residents away following the disaster at the nearby Fukushima nuclear
plant.
Naraha became the first to get the
order lifted among seven municipalities forced to empty entirely due to
radiation contamination following
the massive earthquake and tsunami

that sent the plants reactors into


triple meltdowns in March 2011.
The central government has said
radiation levels in Naraha have fallen to levels deemed safe following
decontamination efforts.
According to a government survey, however, 53 percent of the
evacuees from Naraha, which is 20
kilometers (12 miles) south of the
nuclear plant, say theyre either not
ready to return home permanently
or are undecided. Some say theyve
found jobs elsewhere over the past
few years, while others cite radiation concerns.

Naraha represents a test case, as


most residents remain cautious
amid lingering health concerns and
a lack of infrastructure. In the onceabandoned town, a segment of a
national railway is still out of service, with the tracks covered with
grass. Some houses are falling
down and wild boars roam around
at night.
Only about 100 of the nearly
2,600 households have returned
since a trial period began in April.
Last year, the government lifted
evacuation orders for parts of two
nearby towns, but only about half of

their former residents have


returned. Naraha Mayor Yukiei
Matsumoto said that Saturday
marked an important milestone.
Our clock started moving
again, he said during a ceremony
held at a childrens park. The lifting of the evacuation order is one
key step, but this is just a start.
Matsumoto said he hoped Naraha
could set a good example of a
recovering town for the other affected municipalities.
About 100,000 people from about
10 municipalities around the
wrecked plant still cannot go home.

The government hopes to lift all


evacuation orders except for the
most contaminated areas closest to
the plant by March 2017 a plan
many evacuees criticize as an
attempt to showcase Fukushimas
recovery ahead of the 2020 Tokyo
Summer Olympics.
Matsumoto said that fear of radiation and nuclear safety was still
present, and that Naraha had a long
way to go in its recovery. The town
will be without a medical clinic
until October, while a new prefectural hospital wont be ready until
February.

BULLDOGS BLAST SISKIYOUS: CSM FOOTBALL ESTABLISHES GROUND GAME TO OPEN SEASON WITH 35-6 VICTORY >> PAGE 12

<<< Page 15, Serena cruises past Keys


secures matchup with Venus at U.S. Open
Monday Sept. 7, 2015

Hayne makes the cut


Ex-Australian rugby star makes 49ers roster
By Janie McCauley
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SANTA CLARA Jarryd Hayne


made his way to the San Francisco
waterfront with his visiting mother
and sisters then waited for word.
When 15 minutes went by after the
deadline for NFL roster cuts
Saturday, he finally dialed his agent
and found out the thrilling news: He
made the 49ers 53-man roster.
Thats the first time Ive been
nervous in a while, he said. Big
relief.
Hayne joined the Niners this past
spring with the daunting task of
making the transition from rugby

league star back home in Australia


to NFL newcomer across the world.
The 27-year-old rookie return
man made good on his goal nearly a
year after leaving his old sport to
chase an American football dream,
and his quest captivated a country
more than 7,000 miles away.
I have a journey Im on at the
moment. Im just blessed and honored to be a part of the 49ers franchise, Hayne said. Theyve given
me the opportunity. Theyre the
one that put faith in me.
Hayne was so giddy he announced
on Twitter he made the cut before
the 49ers formally said it.
IT ALWAYS WORKS OUT! I

thank GOD for WHAT HE has done


and going to do on this incredible
journey!! Im on the 53 MAN ROSTER FOR THE (hash)49ers, Hayne
wrote on Twitter to his 153,000 followers.
Call him the Hayne Plane or the
Hayne Train, both nicknames have
stuck and, now, so has Hayne.
Coach Jim Tomsula said last
weekend following the third exhibition game at Denver that he had
seen all he needed from Hayne,
including those countless hours of
tape he watched of him as a rugby
league player.
KYLE TERADA/USA TODAY SPORTS

See 49ERS, Page 14

Jarryd Hayne was named to the 49ers 53-man roster Saturday.

Gordon leads CCSF


in comeback thriller
By Terry Bernal
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

TERRY BERNAL/DAILY JOURNAL

Jefferson QB Damari Cual-Davis threw for 155 yards and ran for another 107 in Saturdays 38-0 win at Galileo.

Throughout his high school


career at Terra Nova, quarterback
Anthony Gordon was known for
high-scoring offensive shootouts.
His collegiate debut for City
College of San Francisco continued
that tradition.
CCSF opened the community college football season with a 25-24
win at Sierra College in an absolute
thriller of a matchup.
With less than five minutes
remaining in the game, the Rams
trailed 24-9. Over their final two
possessions, however, Gordon
completed 7-of-11 passes, including a pair of touchdown strikes to
Serra graduate Easop Winston, coupled with a pair of two-point conversions, to claim the victory.
We kept the tempo and Sierra
stayed in defenses we knew we could
beat, Gordon said. So we just
stayed with Easop over the top.
Gordon was 28-of-50 passing
for 306 yards on the day, including
two touchdowns and an interception. Winston totaled 12 catches

for 173 yards.


Sophomore
running back
Elijah
Dale
totaled 88 yards
on 18 carries.
But it was
Dales
twopoint conversion run with 35
Anthony
seconds remainGordon
ing on the clock
that gave CCSF the decisive lead.
Following the final touchdown
score on a 9-yard slant from Gordon
to Winston, the Rams trailing by
1 initially lined up to kick a
game-tying extra point. But prior
to the snap, Sierra was flagged for
an offside penalty.
With the ball then spotted at the
1-yard line, CCSF opted to go for
broke with a two-point conversion
play, allowing Dale to blast the ball
into the end zone for the win.
We made a point we were running
the ball no matter what, Gordon
said. We got it in our heavy formation and gave it to Elijah.

See RAMS, Page 16

Grizzlies roar

Poseys 100th career homer


backs MadBums 17th win

By Terry Bernal

DENVER Even when Madison


Bumgarner is in damage controlmode, hes tough to beat.
Buster Posey connected for his
100th career home run and Matt
Duffy hit a tiebreaking, two-run
triple in a five-run fifth, backing a
gritty effort from Bumgarner as the
San Francisco Giants beat the
Colorado Rockies 7-4 Sunday.
Bumgarner (17-7) went six
innings and allowed four runs and
nine hits, twice working out of
bases-loaded situations and keeping the game under control in hitter-friendly Coors Field. He
walked one and struck out three in
helping the Giants salvage a split
of the four-game set and win successive games on the road for the
first time in a month.

DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

One might think the Jefferson


Grizzlies who debuted Saturday
with a hardnosed, high-intensity
brand of football akin to 1970s
Oakland Raiders teams are secretly being coached by Jeffs most
notable alumnus, John Madden.
Not the case, Jefferson head
coach Will Maddox said with a
hearty laugh after his Grizzlies dismantled Galileo 38-0 in Saturdays
season opener.
Maddox has reason to be in good
spirits after winning his first game
as Jeffersons head coach. His
Grizzlies debuted a new mascot
theyre previous longtime mascot

was the Indians with an authoritative romp at Galileo, outgaining the


Lions 369-30 yards in total offense.
Thats what we want to do,
Maddox said. We are no-huddle and
we want to set the tempo.
The Grizzlies four-man defensive
front consisting of ends Patrick
Liwanag and Juan Gonzalez, and
tackles Jorge Gomez and Ako
Tamasese set the tone, as Galileo
made just two first downs in the first
half and five throughout the game.
And while Jeffs defense was in
lockdown mode, senior quarterback Damari Cual-Davis put on
quite a show. Remember the Jamie
Foxx character Willie Beamen
from the film Any Given
Sunday? Cual-Davis plays like

hes cut from that stone only


Jeffs flashy 6-foot, 165-pouund
helmsman is a real dude.
Jeffs offensive was cooled by
penalties through the first quarter
and took several possessions to
hit stride. The Grizzlies totaled
nine penalties for 105 yards in the
game, 85 yards of which were in
the first half.
Something we have to clean up
is those penalties, Maddox said.
Its the first game. It took awhile
to get going. We had to make a few
adjustments and the players
responded great.
After several touchdown plays
were called back in the first half, the
Grizzlies finally got on the board

See JEFF, Page 16

By Dennis Georgatos
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Any time you


get a win at
Coors
Field,
thats gratifying
in
itself,
Bumgarner said.
And also when
youre not having maybe your
Buster Posey best game and
you still find a
way to win, thats definitely a big
plus for you and something you
can feel good about.
Duffy said Bumgarners tenacity
at key moments made all the difference.
For him to get out of those situations, it was kind of the tipping
point there in that game, Duffy
said.
Duffy also helped swing the

See GIANTS, Page 13

12

Monday Sept. 7 2015

SPORTS

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Bulldogs bull past Siskiyous in JUCO football opener


By Terry Bernal
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

College of San Mateo running back Isaiah


Williams rushed for a game-high 126 yards
and quarterback Dru Brown combined for 126
more as the Bulldogs cruised through College
of the Siskiyous with a 35-6 in Saturdays
community college football season opener.
It was a good first game but theres a lot of
work to be done, CSM head coach Bret
Pollack said. And hey, we got to go on a field
trip.
The Bulldogs defense held strong, allowing
just 142 yards on the afternoon.
The defense was very solid did a good job
of shutting down their running game and pressuring to their quarterback, Pollack said.
After CSM got on the board in the first quarter on a 6-yard scoring run by Washington,
Siskiyous scored its only touchdown early in
the second quarter. The Eagles took possession
at midfield, and two plays last Lashone
Garnett busted a 46-yard touchdown run.

CSM responded with


four unanswered touchdowns though, including a
big 70-yard touchdown
gallop by Williams to end
the third quarter. Williams
had two scores on the day.
CSM freshman Ramiah
Marshall closed the first
Dru Brown
with a 4-yard touchdown
run; and freshman Joey
Wood capped the days scoring with a 6-yard
touchdown in the fourth quarter.
Brown, making his collegiate debut, added
a 43-yard touchdown throw to Johnny
Niupalau in the second quarter.
[Brown] did a good job, Pollack said. He
was efficient with the football and did a good
job throwing. I was really pleased with his
first performance.
The Bulldogs saw 10 different players run
the ball, combining for 294 total rushing
yards. Williams averaged 10.5 yards per run
on 12 carries. Wood added 54 yards on 10 car-

ries. Marshall had six carries for 30 yards.


We mainly used three (rushers) in the
game and each one brought a little something
else, Pollack said. They all did a good job of
protecting the football and not turning it
over.
CSM created four turnovers, including
interceptions by Mikias Alipate and Nick
Maka. Maka a freshman safety out of Serra
helped keep Siskiyous off the board in the
second half with an interception in the end
zone. Siskiyous quarterback Goa Mayak tried
to force a throw into the end zone on thirdand-16 from the CSM 24-yard line, but Maka
got out front of the play and nabbed the overthrown pass.
Freshmen outside linebackers Daniel
Lavulo and Perry Cheney did well to contain
the Siskiyous offense from sideline to sideline. The tandem paced the Bulldogs with five
tackles apiece.
Those guys did a good job of keeping the
ends from coming off and making plays,
Pollack said.

Sophomore defensive end Cody Brown


notched CSMs only sack of the afternoon
midway through the third quarter. Brown was
dropped twice by the Siskiyous defense.
But Browns passing efficiency was off
the charts. Other than an interception near
the end of the first half, be was virtually
perfect. While he completed 9-of-12 passes
for 116 yards, two of his incompletions
were dropped. Brown also rushed for 10
yards.
Browns best target was Niupalau, who
totaled four catches for 62 yards. Chikwado
Nzerem added two catches for 34 yards. Place
kicker Anthony Cantabrana converted 5 of 5
extra-point tries. Sophomore punter Wes Nail
boomed five punts for 210 yards, including a
49-yard long.
Next up for the Bulldogs is this Saturdays
home opener. CSM hosts Modesto Junior
College in a rematch of last years home
opener, when the Bulldogs rolled to a 51-26
victory. Kickoff at College Heights Stadium is
scheduled for 1 p.m.

Caseys two late goals U.S. adds Bradley for Brazil game;
stop streaking Quakes Dempsey stays put with Sounders
THE ASSOCIATE PRESS

SAN JOSE Conor Casey scored two late


goals on headers and the Philadelphia Union
rallied to beat San Jose 2-1 on Saturday night,
ending the Earthquakes winning streak at
four games.
Casey entered as a substitute in the 60th
minute and tied it in the 74th, finishing
Raymon Gaddis diagonal cross with a leaping header. The goal snapped San Joses 447minute shutout streak, the longest in MLS this
season.
The Union (8-14-6) took the lead in the 86th

minute when Casey redirected


Tranquillo
Barnettas free kick with a
glancing header.
Chris
Wondolowski
converted from the spot to
open the scoring for the
Quakes (11-11-5) in the
64th minute. With a victoConor Casey ry, San Jose would have
moved ahead of Sporting
Kansas City and the Portland Timbers into a
fourth-place tie with FC Dallas in the Western
Conference.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHICAGO U.S. coach Jurgen Klinsmann


added Toronto FC midfielder Michael Bradley
to the team that will face Brazil on Tuesday
night in Foxborough, Massachusetts, and said
Sunday that forward Clint Dempsey will remain
with the Seattle Sounders as he recovers from a
hamstring injury.
The U.S. beat Peru 2-1 on Friday night in
Washington, and Klinsmann is using the exhibitions to decide his roster for the playoff
against Mexico on Oct. 10 that will determine
CONCACAFs representative at the 2017
Confederations Cup.
I had a good conversation with Clint,
Klinsmann said. Hes still not 100 percent
and we agreed its best to let him stay with
Seattle to allow him to continue making
progress ahead of next months match against
Mexico.
Klinsmann also added Chicago Fire goalkeeper Sean Johnson and Stanford University
forward Jordan Morris, and returned defender
Matt Besler to Sporting Kansas City and goalkeeper William Yarbrough to Club Leon.
We were impressed with Matt Besler this
past week, Klinsmann said. We definitely
saw what we needed to see from him as we
prepare for the Mexico clash and Sporting KC

FOOTBALL
Menlo 28, Carmel 21
In a rematch of the 2010 Central Coast
Section Division IV championship game,
Menlo rolled to a home victory over Carmel
Saturday in its 2015 season opener.
Knights fullback Charlie Roth rambled for
166 yards on 24 carries, marking a career high
for the second-year varsity senior. He scored
two touchdowns, including a 70-yard run.
Junior running back Charlie Ferguson added
88 yards on 10 carries, including a 58-yard
touchdown score.
Ferguson also paced the Knights with four
tackles. J.H. Tevis and Zeke Coxe had one
sack apiece.
In Friday action, Aragon shut out Carlmont
33-0. South City shut out James Lick 49-0.
Saratoga defeated Hillsdale 22-7.

VOLLEYBALL
NDB goes 3-2 at Spikefest
Notre Dame-Belmont ended on a positive at
Milpitas Spikefest Saturday, downing Clovis
West 25-21, 25-21 to cap a five-game run at
the annual tournament.
The Tigers opened with wins over Woodside
25-7, 25-12, and Menlo 25-20, 25-20. They then
locked up with powerhouse St. Francis, falling
25-23, 25-22. The following loss to Bishop
ODowd went three sets, 23-25, 25-22, 15-13.

badly wanted him back


for Wednesday, so we
agreed to send him
home.
Brazil beat Costa Rica
1-0 on Saturday in
Harrison, New Jersey.
The roster:
Goalkeepers:
Brad
Michael
Guzan (Aston Villa), Tim
Howard (Everton), Sean
Bradley
Johnson (Chicago Fire)
Defenders: Ventura Alvarado (Club
America), John Brooks (Hertha Berlin), Geoff
Cameron (Stoke City), Greg Garza (Atlas),
Omar Gonzalez (LA Galaxy), Michael
Orozco (Club Tijuana), Tim Ream (Fulham),
Jonathan Spector (Birmingham City)
Midfielders: Alejandro Bedoya (Nantes),
Michael Bradley (Toronto FC), Joe Corona
(Veracruz), Mix Diskerud (New York City
FC), Jermaine Jones (New England
Revolution), Alfredo Morales (FC Ingolstadt),
Danny Williams (Reading), DeAndre Yedlin
(Tottenham Hotspur)
Forwards: Jozy Altidore (Toronto FC),
Aron Johannsson (Werder Bremen), Jordan
Morris (Stanford), Bobby Wood (Union
Berlin), Andrew Wooten (SV Sandhausen),
Gyasi Zardes (LA Galaxy)

Local sports briefs


Senior outside hitter Tammy Byrne paced
NDB with 42 kills through the tourney. She
added five aces, 21 digs and five blocks.
Katarina Warburton totaled 48 digs and seven
aces. Tuesday, the Tigers host Carlmont at
6:30 p.m.

Carlmont takes 12th at Spikefest


The Scots posted a 2-3 record at Milpitas
Spikefest Saturday, posting wins over Gunn 2519, 25-16 and Menlo 25-14, 21-25, 15-5.
Senior middle Alexis Morrow tabbed a .714
hitting percentage in the opener against Gunn,
totaling eight saves. In the win over Menlo,
Morrow and Maya McClellan paced the Scots
with nine kills apiece.
Carlmont dropped games to St. Francis 2520, 25-20; to Los Altos 25-17, 25-17; and Los
Gatos 25-16, 26-24. Senior Erin Alonso totaled
37 digs through the three losses.

Menlo places 13th at Spikefest


Menlo School (4-2) posted a 3-2 record to
take 13th place at Milpitas Spikefest, capping
the Saturday tourney with a 25-9, 25-23 win
over Harker. Outside hitter Maddie Stewart
continued her resurgent senior year with 37
kills in the tourney. Freshman Sianna
Houghton totaled 21 kills and 23 digs. Mia
Vandermeer paced the team with 11 blocks.

SPORTS

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Mariners 3, As 2
Seattle
ab
KMarte ss 4
KSeagr 3b 2
SRomr rf 4
4
Cano dh
Trumbo lf 4
Smith pr-lf 0
Morrsn 1b 4
BMiller 2b 4
2
Sucre c
OMally cf 2

Totals

r
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
1

h
1
1
0
0
1
0
1
2
0
1

bi
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

30 3 7 2

Seattle
Oakland

Oakland
Burns cf
Canha lf-1b
Vogt 1b-c
Blair c
Valencia 3b
Lawrie 2b
Butler dh
Smlnski rf
Crisp ph-lf
Phegly c

ab
5
4
3
0
4
4
4
2
2
2
Rddck ph-rf 2
Sogard ss 2
Smien ph-ss 2
Totals
36

r
0
1
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
2

h
2
2
0
0
0
0
2
0
1
0
1
0
1
9

bi
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
2

000 030 000 3 7 0


000 000 110 2 9 0

DPOakland 1.LOBSeattle 4,Oakland 9.2BTrumbo (9).HR


B.Butler (10).SBK.Marte (5).CSK.Seager (5).SFK.Seager.

Seattle
Iwakuma W,7-3
Nuno
Zych H,1
Kensing H,6
Wilhelmsen S,10
Oakland
Nolin L,0-1
Dull
Pomeranz
Doolittle

IP
6.1
0
.2
.1
1.2
IP
6
1
1
1

H
5
1
0
1
2
H
5
0
1
1

R
1
0
0
1
0
R
3
0
0
0

ER
1
0
0
1
0
ER
3
0
0
0

BB
1
0
0
1
0
BB
3
0
0
0

SO
3
0
1
0
0
SO
1
2
0
1

GIANTS
Continued from page 11
game in the Giants favor, tripling off Yohan
Flande (3-2) after consecutive singles by
Gregor Blanco and Kelby Tomlinson. Flande
intentionally walked Posey and was relieved
by Brooks Brown. Marlon Byrd, who had four
hits on the day, greeted Brown with an RBI
single.
Rex Brothers relieved and walked Brandon
Belt before Brandon Crawford laced a tworun double to center.
The Rockies had the bases loaded with none
out in the fifth when Cristhian Adames hit a
two-run single, pulling Colorado within three
runs.
But Bumgarner then got hot-hitting Nolan
Arenado to ground into a double play before
retiring Carlos Gonzalez on a lineout to first.
When you have a guy like Bumgarner and
you give him a second chance, I dont think
hes going to waste that opportunity,
Gonzalez said. We tried hard. We had some
opportunities. That line drive hit to first base,
that should have been 7-5. Its a different
game. But it is what it is part of the game.
Santiago Casilla pitched a perfect ninth for
his 32nd save in 37 opportunities.
Arenado finished with a double and a run-

Monday Sept. 7 2015

13

Vogt injured in As loss to Ms


By Rick Eymer
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

OAKLAND Stephen Vogt writhed in pain


for several minutes after getting hit in the groin
by a foul tip in the eighth inning. Oaklands AllStar catcher had just come in to catch after
starting the game at first base.
Manager Bob Melvin, a former catcher,
knew immediately it was serious. Vogt was sent
to a local hospital for tests before the Mariners
finished off the As 3-2 on Sunday.
He was in a lot of pain, Melvin said. Its
going to be a few days and it could be a little
while. I hope there is nothing fractured.
Vogt, who has his own personal cheer when
he comes to the plate, is one of the most popular players on the team for fans and teammates.
Backup catcher Josh Phegley was out of the
scoring fielders choice, snapping his teamrecord home run streak at six games.
Down 2-0 early, the Giants evened the score
when Posey led off the fourth with his 17th
home run of the season, driving an offering
from Flande into the Rockies bullpen behind
the right-center field fence.
The Rockies loaded the bases with none out
in the first, but Bumgarner then retired the
next three batters, limiting the damage to two
runs on a fielders choice by Gonzalez and a
sacrifice fly by Wilin Rosario.
Poseys 100th homer was his first in a
month, but that did not diminish the sweetness
of achieving the milestone. Its special, he
said. If you had told me when I was kid that
Id have 100 home runs in the major leagues
one day, it would probably put a pretty good
smile on my face.

game, so Carson Blair was called upon to make


his major league debut.
Blair drew a walk in his only at-bat, extending an As scoring rally.
Billy Butler hit a home run for the Athletics,
who lost their fifth straight. The long ball gives
the As a 12-game streak with at least one homer,
currently the longest active streak as Seattle had
its 13-game run snapped.
Sean Nolin (0-1) became the 28th pitcher
used by the As, a franchise record. He made his
first ML appearance in nearly a year and his
first start in two years.
Nolin gave up three runs on five hits over six
innings. He walked three and struck out one.
Hisashi Iwakuma (7-3) pitched 6 1/3 solid
innings to avenge his only loss since the end of
July. He allowed one run on five hits. Iwakuma
walked one and struck out three.

MLB brief

Giants 7, Rockies 4
Giants
Blanco cf
Tmlnsn 2b
Duffy 3b
Posey c
Byrd rf
Belt 1b
Crwfrd ss
Perez lf

ab
5
5
5
4
5
4
5
3
De Aza ph-lf 1
Bmgrner p 3
Strcklnd p 0
Pagan ph 0
Lopez p 0
Romo p 0
Casilla p 0

Totals

r
1
1
1
3
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

h
1
2
1
2
4
2
1
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0

bi
0
0
2
1
1
1
2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

40 7 14 7

Rockies ab
Reyes ss
4
Adames 2b 4
Arenado 3b 3
CGnzlz rf
4
WRosr 1b 1
Blckmn ph 1
Ja.Diaz p 0
Hundly c 2
Garnea c 2
KParkr lf
2
Hale p
0
Descalso ph 1
JMiller p 0
Fridrch p 0
Germn p 0
Paulsn 1b 1
Barnes cf 3
Morneau ph 1
Flande p
1
Brown p 0
Brothrs p 0
Ynoa lf
3
Totals
33

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

h
2
2
0
1
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
2
0
0
0
0
1
9

San Francisco 010 150 000 7 14 0


Colorado
200 020 000 4 9 0

Trainers room

DPSan Francisco 1.LOBSan Francisco 9,Colorado


5.2BTomlinson (3),Posey (24),Byrd (18),B.Crawford
(30), Bumgarner (2), Ca.Gonzalez (24). 3BM.Duffy
(6). HRPosey (17). SW.Rosario. SFW.Rosario.

C Hector Sanchez will miss the rest of the


season after suffering a left ankle sprain and
strained left hamstring running out a sacrifice
bunt during Fridays game. ... C Andrew
Susac has been placed on the 60-day DL
because of a lingering right wrist injury. ... OF
Nori Aoki has experienced some post-concussion symptoms and was being sent to
Pittsburgh, where he will be examined later
this week by Dr. Michael Collins, a concussion specialist.

San Francisco
Bmgarner W,17-7
Strickland H,15
Lopez H,15
Romo H,29
Casilla S,32
Colorado
Flande L,3-2
B.Brown
Brothers
Hale
J.Miller
Friedrich
Germen
Ja.Diaz

IP
6
1
.1
.2
1
IP
4.1
0
.1
1.1
.2
.1
1
1

H
9
0
0
0
0
H
8
1
1
1
0
1
0
2

R
4
0
0
0
0
R
6
1
0
0
0
0
0
0

KELLEY L. COX/USA TODAY SPORTS

Trainers assist As catcher Stephen Vogt off the


field in the eighth inning Sunday in Oakland.

ER
4
0
0
0
0
ER
6
1
0
0
0
0
0
0

BB
1
0
0
0
0
BB
1
0
1
0
0
0
1
0

SO
3
0
0
0
2
SO
2
0
0
0
0
0
1
1

bi
0
2
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
4

Lowries slam lifts Astros over Twins


HOUSTON Jed Lowrie hit a grand slam
in a five-run seventh inning and Dallas
Keuchel became the American Leagues first
17-game winner as the
Houston Astros rallied for
a 8-5 victory over the
Twins Sunday.
The Astros trailed by 1
when Lowrie hit his second career grand slam and
his first since 2009 into the
second row in right field
off Trevor May (8-9) to
Jed Lowrie
make it 5-2. May dropped
his head when Lowrie connected and shook it
as he bounded around the bases and into a celebration at home plate.
Keuchel (17-6) improved to 13-0 at home
this season and set a franchise record with his
14th straight win in Houston dating back to last
season.
The victory salvaged a series win for the AL
West-leading Astros, who now lead the second-place Rangers by three games.
Starter Scott Feldman will be re-evaluated
early next week after having discomfort in his
right shoulder while throwing catch on
Saturday. Feldman left his start on Tuesday in
the third inning with discomfort in his shoulder and had a cortisone injection on
Wednesday.

14

SPORTS

Monday Sept. 7 2015

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Andre Holmes returns to practice with Raiders


By Michael Wagaman
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ALAMEDA Oakland Raiders


wide receiver Andre Holmes practiced Sunday for the first time since
breaking his hand three weeks ago.
The teams top deep threat the
past two years while averaging
15.6 yards a catch, Holmes showed
no lingering effects from the injury
while catching passes from quarterbacks Derek Carr and Matt
McGloin during the workout.
Holmes also ran well, which was
a concern after not practicing since
Aug. 16.
It felt good being back out there
and just catching the ball, running
routes and just getting back to how
I was during training camp,
Holmes said. Everything went
well. Now its just moving forward.
That might be trickier to do in

Pac-12 briefs
No. 21 Stanford loses 16-6
stunner to Northwestern
EVANSTON, Ill. Freshman
Clayton Thorson ran 42 yards for a
touchdown while playing turnoverfree ball at quarterback, Justin
Jackson added 134 yards rushing,
and Northwestern beat No. 21
Stanford 16-6 in the season-opener
Saturday afternoon.

REUTERS FILE PHOTO

Wide receiver Andre Holmes has led


the Raiders with 15.6 yards per catch
the last two seasons.
Oakland than it was previously.
Holmes, who was third on the

49ERS
Continued from page 11

Cal blows out Grambling

Am I extremely proud, yes, in


taking a chance and looking outside
the box here as an organization?
Yes, Tomsula said. Im extremely
grateful and proud that the organization did that. Im extremely grateful
and proud of the coaches that coach
him every day. I just think its a
good thing for everyone.

BERKELEY Jared Goff threw


for 309 yards and three touchdowns
in one half and California returned
two interceptions for scores to beat
Grambling State 73-14 in a season
opener Saturday.

Hayne left the National Rugby


League last fall, then signed a threeyear contract with San Francisco in
March as an undrafted free agent in
a deal he said included $100,000 in
guaranteed money. Hayne spent the

team with 47 catches in 2014, joins


an already crowded receiving
group anchored by first-round draft
pick Amari Cooper and veterans
Michael Crabtree and Rod Streater.
Cooper, the fifth overall pick in
the draft, and Crabtree are the
unquestioned
starters
while
Streater who missed much of
last season with a broken foot is
expected to compete with Holmes
for third on the depth chart. Brice
Butler and undrafted free agent
Seth Roberts round out the group.
Every one of us can go out there
and make plays, every one of us
can be a game-changer, Holmes
said. Definitely its been a huge
upgrade here.
Holmes said he ran pass patterns
and kept up his conditioning while
out, but acknowledged it might
take some time to get back in
rhythm with the rest of the offense.
There might be a little bit of

timing (issues) and running the


routes the way I was before,
Holmes said. I felt that a little bit,
just being a little bit off but nothing
major.
Rookie tight end Clive Walford,
who is expected to play a significant role in Oaklands offense, also
returned to the field after a prolonged absence, giving coach Jack
Del Rio a mostly healthy roster
heading into the season opener.
Walford, a third-round draft pick,
missed almost all of training camp
reportedly because of a hamstring
injury. He practiced two days
before aggravating the injury. The
Raiders shut him down after that
with the hope of getting the rookie
ready for the season opener.
It was a long process but it felt
really good to be back out there
with my teammates, Walford said.
It was a little frustrating because I
wanted to come back earlier before

the preseason actually ended but I


had to sit out.
How much Holmes and Walford
will play against the Cincinnati
Bengals on Sept. 13 is uncertain.
Del Rio wouldnt discuss either
players status and said a decision
will be made later in the week.
The Raiders also added depth to
their secondary by claiming safety
Keenan Lambert off waivers from
Seattle. To clear room on the roster,
Oakland
waived
cornerback
SaQwan Edwards.
Notes: Defensive end Benson
Mayowa did not practice. ... Del
Rio was asked what was behind the
decision to trade linebacker Sio
Moore to the Indianapolis Colts
after Moore started 26 games the
past two seasons. He wasnt going
to make our team, Del Rio said.
It was an opportunity to acquire a
pick for a guy that somebody else
may want to have.

previous nine years from 200614 with the Parramatta Eels.


Its been really fun to watch.
Right off the bat you notice how
well he ca4n catch a ball, veteran
placekicker Phil Dawson said.
Catching a punt is probably one of
the toughest skills in the NFL and
hes just stepped right in and looks
like a natural. Thats something that
was God given.
Under the guidance of running
backs coach Tom Rathman he
learned the nuances of football, and
with sound advice from teammates
on everything from taking a hit, to
proper pad level and even the basics
of American living, Hayne found his
way even if hes still struggling to
get a decent cup of coffee that compares to his caffeine back home.
Tight end Vernon Davis had a

chance to chat with Hayne in the


locker room hot tub recovering from
a recent workout and told the running back he was more than a rookie given his experience.
When it comes to Jarryd Hayne,
hes tough, hes physical, hes
relentless, Davis said. Hes passionate and hes just a special and
unique player, his ability to make
guys miss and run really well with
the football in his hands. Its amazing to see that.
Hayne carried 10 times for 58
yards, caught a pair of passes for 17
yards, and returned three punts for
43 yards in a win against the
Chargers to conclude his impressive
preseason.
He has shown he is sure-handed
and unafraid to take a hit. Hayne had
one fair catch on a punt return this

preseason, and he was instructed to


do so Thursday night against San
Diego.
I want to take a risk, I want to
put myself out there, he said.
In other moves Saturday, San
Francisco placed rookie tight end
Busta Anderson and running back
Kendall Hunter on injured reserve
and released linebacker Nick
Moody, who had hoped to compete
for a starting spot.
Other players cut were: WR
DiAndre Campbell, CB Marcus
Cromartie, G/C Dillon Farrell, RB
Kendall Gaskins, TE Xavier
Grimble, CB Leon McFadden, DT
Kaleb Ramsey, OL Justin Renfrow,
DL Marcus Rush, NT Garrison
Smith, QB Dylan Thompson, G
Andrew
Tiller,
S
Jermaine
Whitehead.

SPORTS

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Monday Sept. 7 2015

15

Serena beats Keys to set up U.S. Open QF vs. Venus Stenson takes
Deutsche lead

By Howard Fendrich
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

By Doug Ferguson
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ADREES LATIF/REUTERS

Serena Williams was at her best Sunday in a 6-3, 6-3 win over Madison Keys.
qualifier Anett Kontaveit of Estonia 6-2, 6-1
in 50 minutes.
The sisters mother, Oracene Price, said she
wouldnt attend the quarterfinal.
As for whether Venus will be in a tough
spot hoping to win, yet also well aware of
what her sibling is pursuing Price said: I
know its going to be hard, because I know
(Venus) wants (Serena) to get it.
Another womens fourth-round match
scheduled for Sunday was scratched when
25th-seeded Eugenie Bouchard withdrew
with a concussion, two days after slipping
and falling in the locker room. That allowed
Roberta Vinci of Italy to advance to the quar-

terfinals against the winner of Sunday nights


match between No. 13 Ekaterina Makarova
and Kristina Mladenovic.
Two mens matchups in the round of eight
are set: No. 1 Novak Djokovic vs. No. 18
Feliciano Lopez, and defending champion
Marin Cilic vs. No. 19 Jo-Wilfried Tsonga.
Djokovic lost a set for the first time this
tournament and responded by stomping on
a racket while it leaned on his red bag next to
a changeover chair, earning a warning from
the chair umpire. But he reached the quarterfinals at a 26th consecutive major by beating
23rd-seeded Roberto Bautista Agut 6-3, 4-6,
6-4, 6-3 at night.

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NEW YORK No reason for any extra


practice after this performance by Serena
Williams.
Plus, its not as if she needs to study too
hard to figure out how to deal with her next
opponent.
Playing the best she has during this U.S.
Open as she chases a calendar-year Grand
Slam, Williams set up a quarterfinal against
older sister Venus by making only six
unforced errors in a 6-3, 6-3 victory over
19th-seeded Madison Keys on Sunday.
Looking ahead, No. 1 Serena described No.
23 Venus this way: Its like playing a mirror.
Serena took only 68 minutes to dismiss
Keys, a 20-year-old American with formidable serves and forehands who simply was
outplayed.
Already a winner of the past four major
tournaments, including last years U.S. Open,
Serena is trying to become the first tennis
player to win all four in the same season since
Steffi Graf in 1988.
Asked why its been so long since anyone
else pulled off a true Grand Slam, Serena
paused for effect, smiled and answered: I
dont know why it took me so long.
Standing in the way at the moment is
Venus. This will be the 27th all-Williams
match over their long and successful careers,
and Serena leads 15-11, including 8-5 at
majors. Each has beaten the other twice at the
U.S. Open, with Venus winning the 2001
final and Serena the 2002 final.
Venus, at 35 the oldest woman in the tournament, was on court even less time than her
sibling on Sunday, overwhelming 19-year-old

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NORTON, Mass. One 3-wood quickly


put Henrik Stenson into the mix at the
Deutsche Bank Championship. Another one
helped to give him the lead.
Stenson drilled a 3-wood on the 298-yard
fourth hole at the TPC Boston that hit into the
bank and rolled up to 20 feet for an eagle that
allowed him to bolt up the leaderboard. The
Swede showed off his supreme strength on the
par-5 closing hole with a 3-wood off the tee that
left him only a 6-iron into the green for a twoputt birdie that gave him a 6-under 65 and a
one-shot lead over Rickie Fowler.
Five shots behind going into the third round
Sunday, Stenson made up that deficit in just
seven holes. He can only hope to make up that
kind of ground on a winless season during the
final month of the FedEx Cup playoffs.
Fowler had a 67, missing out on a chance to
share the lead when his 5-iron into the 18th
was too strong and he had to scramble to salvage a par. Sean OHair (67) and Matt Jones
(68) were two shots behind.
They all took advantage of a collapse by
Charley Hoffman, who blazed his way to victory at the TPC Boston five years ago. After
opening with a birdie, Hoffman put his second
shot into the hazard at the par-5 second hole
and made bogey, and it slipped away from
there. He shot 41 on front, had five bogeys in
a seven-hole stretch and didnt make another
birdie until his last hole for a 76.
Jordan Spieth was headed for a return to No.
1, and hes not even here after missing his second straight cut.

16

SPORTS

Monday Sept. 7 2015

AL GLANCE
W
Toronto
78
New York
76
Tampa Bay 67
Baltimore
65
Boston
64
Central Division
W
Kansas City 82
Minnesota 70
Cleveland
66
Chicago
65
Detroit
62
West Division
W
Houston
75
Texas
71
Angels
69
Seattle
66
As
58

East Division
L
58
59
69
71
72

Pct
.574
.563
.493
.478
.471

GB

1 1/2
11
13
14

L
54
66
69
70
74

Pct
.603
.515
.489
.481
.456

GB

12
15 1/2
16 1/2
20

L
62
64
67
71
79

Pct
.547
.526
.507
.482
.423

GB

3
5 1/2
9
17

Saturdays Games
Tampa Bay 3, N.Y. Yankees 2
Toronto 5, Baltimore 1
Boston 9, Philadelphia 2
Detroit 6, Cleveland 0
Chicago White Sox 6, Kansas City 1
Minnesota 3, Houston 2
Seattle 8, Oakland 3
Texas 2, Angels 1
Sundays Games
N.Y. Yankees 6, Tampa Bay 4
Toronto 10, Baltimore 4
Cleveland 4, Detroit 0
Boston 6, Philadelphia 2
Chicago White Sox 7, Kansas City 5
Houston 8, Minnesota 5
Angels 7, Texas 0
Seattle 3, Oakland 2
Mondays Games
Os (W.Chen 8-7) at NYY (Pineda 10-8), 10:05 a.m.
Rays (Smyly 2-2) at Detroit (Wolf 0-3), 10:08 a.m.
Jays (Buehrle 14-6) at Boston (Porcello 6-12),10:35 a.m.
Tribe (Bauer 10-11) at ChiSox (Sale 12-7), 11:10 a.m.
Houston (Fiers 2-0) at As (Doubront 2-1), 1:05 p.m.
Texas (Gallardo 11-9) at Ms (Elias 4-7), 3:40 p.m.
Twins (Milone 7-4) at K.C. (Ventura 10-7), 5:10 p.m.
L.A.(Greinke 15-3) at Angels (Tropeano 1-2), 6:05 p.m.

Soccer brief
Rooney ties scoring record
England achieved its target in
Serravalle. Wayne Rooney fell just
short of his.
With a routine win against a San
Marino team that included a barman,
a lawyer, a pharmacist, and a student,
England guaranteed its place in Euro
2016 with three games to spare and
remained on course to finish group
play with maximum points.
Rooney started the match needing
two goals to surpass Charltons record.
He got one from the penalty spot in the
13th minute but was taken off just
before the hour mark, denying him a
chance of a second goal against a tiring
home defense late on.
Hell get a first chance to reach
50 goals against Switzerland on
Tuesday.
It would have been great if it
had happened tonight, Rooney
said, but it will be (great) on
Tuesday, if selected, with the tradition at Wembley.

W
New York
75
Washington 71
Miami
57
Atlanta
54
Philadelphia 53
Central Division
W
St. Louis
87
Pittsburgh 81
Chicago
78
Milwaukee 60
Cincinnati
56
West Division
W
Los Angeles 78
Giants
71
Arizona
65
San Diego 65
Colorado
56

Nobody was getting through that


offensive line.
Gordon has got some familiar protection on the offensive line this season in former Terra Nova teammate
Malik Maignan, a 6-4, 280-pound
offensive tackle. David Galten, a 6-2,
390-pound freshman out of Hillsdale,
has nabbed a starting guard spot as
well. The Rams also tout a Division-I
commit to Cal in 6-2, 280-pounud
center A.J. McCollum.
The O-line kept me on my feet the
whole (fourth) quarter and that was
pretty much it, Gordon said.
CCSF had a horrendous share of
penalties, getting flagged 23 times for
228 yards. The one that set the tone
for the game came early in the first
quarter on the Rams fourth play from
scrimmage. With CCSF trailing 7-0,
Dale broke a 70-yard touchdown run,
but offensive tackle Elliot Baker was
penalized for an illegal block, bringing the play back.
On CCSFs following possession,
Gordon and Dale balanced a nineplay, 67-yard scoring drive to get on

the board with a 10-yard scoring


strike to San Mateo native Anthony
Vollert, but kicker Cristian Antezana
missed the extra point. In the second
quarter, Antezana redeemed himself
by booting a 40-yard field goal to
give the Rams a brief 9-7 lead.
But Sierra rattled off 10 points
before halftime and added a thirdquarter touchdown to extend its lead
to 24-9.
Well into the fourth quarter, things
werent looking good for the Rams,
whose first three possessions of the
final 15 minutes yielded no scoring
results. The Rams first possession of
the half ended on an incomplete
fourth-down pass from the Sierra 12yard line. The third possession ended
on Gordons lone interception of the
day from the Sierra 35-yard line.
But CCSFs defense gave the ball
right back to Gordon by holding
Sierra to a three-and-out. Another
Terra Nova alumnus, sophomore
linebacker Nick Pierotti, came up
with the tackle on third-and-nine to
force a punt.
The Rams took over at their own
15-yard line, but after Gordon hit
three consecutive completions to
march the ball up to the 40, Gordon
misfired three times to force fourthand-10. Then he made magic with a
60-yard post pattern deep down the

sideline to Winston, who beat a Sierra


double-team to catch Gordons loft in
stride for the score.
Sierra got the ball back with 3:05
remaining on the game clock with
CCSF having no timeouts remaining.
But Sierra went to the air three times,
including a pair of incomplete passes
on second and third down. When
CCSF regained possession via punt,
Gordon had 1:44 to lead the comeback.
And that he did.
Starting from the Rams 33-yard
line, Gordon opened with a 26-yard
completion to Erik Phillip, who got
the ball out of bounds to stop the
clock in Sierra territory. After an
incomplete pass, Gordon went deep
to Winston for a 37-yard completion,
advancing the ball to the Sierra 4yard line. Following a false-start
penalty by the Rams, Gordon found
Winston for the 9-yard scoring strike.
We made a lot of penalties and a
lot of mental errors, Gordon said.
So we played a game we knew we
could have played better. It was a
good team and all, but we feel we
could have put them away earlier. But
a wins a win.
CCSF opens at home Saturday
hosting Laney College-Oakland.
Kickoff is scheduled for 1 p.m.

I always trust him to hit me in my


chest. Hes a D-I prospect. Were
lucky to have him.
Jeffs defense yielded a quick first
down on the following play from
scrimmage when Galileo quarterback
Demaje Ardis connected with
Donovan Hasson for a 13-yard pass,
the Lions longest of the afternoon.
The Grizzlies took the yardage right
back when Liwanag tracked down
Ardis for a sack and a 10-yard loss.
After two no-gainers, Liwanag and
junior linebacker Johan Nava combined for a fourth-down sack as
Galileo turned the ball over on downs
at its own 24-yard line.
On the following play, Cual-Davis
continued peeling off precision spirals, connecting with a wide-open
Shirkh on a secondary route in the
flat for a 24-yard touchdown strike.
In the third quarter, Cual-Davis
added a 23-yard touchdown run. He
then hit his third scoring target of the
day on a 21-yard touchdown pass to
James Narag.
Thats what we worked on in
practice, that I have a lot of people I

can go to, that it isnt just one guy,


Cual-Davis said.
The depth of receivers is critical
with Cual-Davis No. 1 target, senior
Jerriel Dela Cruz, out of action with a
broken collarbone. But the creative
quarterback distributed the ball well.
Junior receiver Jalen Ware paced Jeff
with 61 yards on five catches; Esmail
had 39 yards on three catches; Shirkh
had 24 yards on one catch; Narag had
21 yards on one catch; and senior
Darian Chuck had 20 yards on two
catches.
But Cual-Davis creativity didnt
detour the offensive line from bulling
its way around with a steadfast game
plan up front. Gomez and Liwanag,
in particular, ran steady anchors at the
offensive tackle positions like clockwork.
He knows what hes doing back
there at quarterback, Gomez said.
We just do our thing and, if we do,
hes going to make plays.
And the 6-1, 250-pound two-way
linemen made no apologies for the
Grizzlies early glut of penalties,
including an illegal block, a holding

call and three flags for unsportsmanlike conduct.


We came to eat, Gomez said.
We come out hungry. We want to
win. And we want to win a championship.
Jeffs vocal intensity resonated so
loudly, it was turning the heads of
tourist busses cruising by Galileos
home field just up the street from
Fishermans Wharf. It was an encouraging sign, Maddox said.
We got in trouble a little earlier
playing with our mouths, but we
cleaned that up, Maddox said. We
want our guys playing aggressively,
but we need to play a little smarter.
In fact, Jeff totaled just two penalties in the second half. According to
Cual-Davis, a lot of the first-half
penalties were a symptom of in being
Week 1.
It was just getting used to hitting
another team instead of hitting ourselves in practice, Cual-Davis said.
But once we get rolling, nothing can
stop us.
The win marks Jeffs first openingday victory since 2010.

RAMS

NL GLANCE

East Division

THE DAILY JOURNAL

L
61
65
80
83
84

Pct
.551
.522
.416
.394
.387

GB

4
18 1/2
21 1/2
22 1/2

L
49
54
57
76
79

Pct
.640
.600
.578
.441
.415

GB

5 1/2
8 1/2
27
30 1/2

L
58
66
72
72
80

Pct
.574
.518
.474
.474
.412

GB

7 1/2
13 1/2
13 1/2
22

Saturdays Games
Milwaukee 8, Cincinnati 6, 1st game
Chicago Cubs 2, Arizona 0
Boston 9, Philadelphia 2
St. Louis 4, Pittsburgh 1
Milwaukee 7, Cincinnati 3, 2nd game
Washington 8, Atlanta 2
N.Y. Mets 7, Miami 0
San Francisco 7, Colorado 3
L.A. Dodgers 2, San Diego 0
Sundays Games
Cincinnati 6, Milwaukee 3
Miami 4, N.Y. Mets 3
Washington 8, Atlanta 4
Boston 6, Philadelphia 2
Chicago Cubs 6, Arizona 4
L.A. Dodgers 5, San Diego 1
San Francisco 7, Colorado 4
Pittsburgh 7, St. Louis 1
Mondays Games
NYM (Niese 8-10) at Nats (Scherzer 11-11), 10:05 a.m.
Brews (Z.Davies 0-0) at Fish (Nicolino 3-2), 10:10 a.m.
Bucs (Locke 7-9) at Cinci (DeSclafani 7-10), 10:10 a.m.
Cubs (Haren 8-9) at St.Louis (Wacha 15-4), 11:15 a.m.
Rox (Kendrick 4-12) at S.D. (Kennedy 8-12), 1:10 p.m.
S.F. (Leake 9-7) at Arizona (Corbin 4-3), 1:10 p.m.
Atlanta (W.Perez 4-6) at Phili (Harang 5-14), 4:05 p.m.
L.A.(Greinke 15-3) at Angels (Tropeano 1-2), 6:05 p.m.

JEFF
Continued from page 11
midway through the second quarter,
capping a 13-play, 55-yard drive with
a 3-yard touchdown run by senior
halfback Farhan Shirkh.
It took Cual-Davis precisely two
plays to put two more touchdowns on
the scoreboard.
The senior was 12-of-15 passing
for 155 yards with three touchdowns
and two interceptions. He also paced
the Grizzlies with 107 yard rushing
on seven carries and a touchdown.
Cual-Davis exacted his first scoring pass on the first play of an opportune drive that started from the
Galileo 28-yard line. Senior receiver
Esmail Esmail outran a double team
and for a beautiful spiral right at his
hands; Esmail then took a short
reception on the ensuing two-point
conversion to give Jeff a 15-0 lead.
As a passer, I can rate [CualDavis] 100 out of 100, Esmail said.

Continued from page 11

Leading local news coverage on the Peninsula

ATTENTION:

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THE DAILY JOURNAL

Monday Sept. 7 2015

17

Superheroes, for once, dont rule summer


By Jake Coyle
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK After a lackluster


2014 summer, Hollywood has
bounced back with one of its best
seasons ever. But the most surprising part of the turnaround is that
superheroes arent the ones who
saved the day.
Instead, Hollywoods summer
was led by a banner season from
Universal Pictures, the lone major
studio with nary a cape in its cupboard. With a record-setting $5.3
billion-plus in revenue so far this
year, Universal has powered
Hollywood to a near record summer
with a diverse string of hits including the seasons top film Jurassic
World ($1.6 billion worldwide),
the top animated hit, Minions,

and one of the most successful


sequels, Pitch Perfect 2.
After the summer limps to a close
over Labor Day weekend, the North
American box office will have tallied about $4.4 billion in ticket
receipts, according to box office
data firm Rentrak. Thats second
only to the record $4.75 billion
summer of 2013 and an improvement of about 7.5 percent from last
summers downturn.
And the superhero-less Universal
led the way.
Its a lot of hard work, but its
also an indication that were tapping
audiences in different ways with the
different kind of movies were
releasing, says Nick Carpou, distribution head for Universal. I think
our diverse slate doesnt tend to tire
people out.

onight is the last night for Ringling


Brothers Barnum and Bailey Circus
at the Cow Palace in Daly City. We
sent staff over the weekend to check on the

reach, was the biggest superhero


debacle in at least a decade. Its
$25.7 million opening sent analysts
back to the likes of 2004s
Catwoman to find a comic book
disaster of similar proportions.
It will probably go down as merely a dent in the superhero movies
armor, but its also possible that the
summer of 2015 will later be seen
as a turning point. As Steven
Spielberg reminded in a recent
interview with The Associated
Press, these things are cyclical:
There will be a time when the
superhero movie goes the way of
the Western, he said.
More important, perhaps, is that
the movie business is generally
quite healthy robust, even.
Despite clamors over the effect of
digital media and the competition of

If superhero domination is slipping at all, its not by much.


Avengers: Age of Ultron was the
summers second highest grossing
film in North America with $457.7
million, and Marvel has already
staked out prime summer release
dates for years to come, the billions
sure to follow.
But this was the first summer
since the final Harry Potter chapter in 2011 that a comic book movie
didnt top all films.
Ant-Man (seventh place with
$170.1 million) was bedeviled by
creative differences and fell well
short of Marvels last irreverent
entry, the mammoth summer 2014
hit Guardians of the Galaxy. And
Foxs Fantastic Four, which the
director Josh Trank, himself, suggested was marred by studio over-

welfare of the animals. Our trained investigators attended in plain clothes, they
requested and were granted total access. If
need be, we issue veterinary treatment
notices for animals in need of care or attention. You may be wondering how a humane
society can send its staff in for that role.
Shouldnt watchdogs be impartial? Fair
question, but as the humane organization in
these parts, Im not sure we should or could
be seen as completely neutral. Theres that,
plus we must work within the law. If we
were to nd something illegal, we would
submit it to our local District Attorneys
Ofce for consideration and prosecution.
Were not against circuses or rodeos, etc.

but we are openly opposed to the exploitation of animals and abuse of animals used in
entertainment such as those forms noted
above. Our advice for people who ask about
the circus is to nd an alternative form of
entertainment! Elephants, lions and bears,
by their nature, dont balance on one foot,
jump through rings of re or ride tricycles.
People question how they are trained to do
such unnatural stunts. Of course, performing
animals training sessions arent open to the
public. So, we base our opinion on our
knowledge of what animals normally do (or
avoid), on accounts and descriptions of
training tactics by former trainers and from
footage obtained by undercover types.

television, films are finding success


in a variety of ways. The summer
proved that many of the characteristics that have long driven hits a
reputation for quality (Pixars
Inside Out), the allure of topflight stunts (Mission: Impossible
Rogue Nation), a sense of cultural timeliness (Straight Outta
Compton), blinding B-movie
thrills (Mad Max: Fury Road)
still work just fine.
What audiences are looking for
and they found it, in large part,
this summer is a lot of options, a
lot of different types of movies,
says Paul Dergarabedian, senior
media analyst for Rentrak.
Universal, he says, took what most
would see as a negative and turned
it into a positive by their movies
seeming absolutely fresh.

Consider the fact these circus animals spend


a good part of their lives traveling and, for a
few animal-free alternatives, consider
Cirque du Soleil or Cirque San Jose. Or, to
see those lions, tigers and elephants in a
non-circus setting, book a tour at the
Performing Animal Welfare Society in Galt,
California, home to abused, abandoned and
retired performing animals.
Scott oversees PHS/SPCAs Adoption,
Behavior and Training, Education,
Outreach, Field Services, Cruelty
Investigation, Volunteer and Media/PR program areas and staff from the new Tom and
Annette Lantos Center for Compassion.

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THE DAILY JOURNAL

Monday Sept. 7 2015

Climate battle
comes down to
late negotiations

PIZZA AND KITTENS

By Judy Line
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

TOM JUNG/DAILY JOURNAL

On the third Tuesday of every month, California Pizza Kitchen donates 20 percent of every lunch, dinner, or takeout bill to the Nine Lives Foundation, a community based nonprofit organization that rescues and houses cats
and kittens, caring for them in a true no-kill shelter with on-site medical care while seeking loving permanent
homes for them. Participating Northern California Pizza Kitchen locations include the Hillsdale Shopping Center (San Mateo) and the Stanford Shopping Center (Palo Alto) locations.Those interested can help by visiting the
Nine Lives Foundations FaceBook page, printing out the event flyer, and presenting it with the meal bill. Seen
preparing for upcoming events on Sept. 15, Oct. 20 and Nov. 17 are, left to right, Nine Lives Foundation Board of
Directors members Angela Giannini, Kory Stendall, and Carol Scola; and volunteer Bonnie Breaux.

On the move
San Mateo resident John C.
Adams has been named head of
Commercial Banking for Wells
Fargo, effective immediately. He is
based in San Francisco.
In his new role, Adams will oversee more than 140 Wells Fargo
Regional Commercial Banking
Ofces in 38 states and three
Canadian provinces, serving middle
market companies with annual revenues of greater than $20 million in

a broad spectrum of industries, including


manufacturing,
wholesale,
retail, distribution, construction, clean-tech
and services.
Adams began
John C. Adams
in
banking
career in 1985 with First Interstate
Bank of California. He earned a
bachelors degree in economics and
business administration from

California State University at


Chico, an MBA from Golden Gate
University, and graduated from
Pacic Coast Banking School. He
studied management and leadership
development at the Stanford
Graduate School of Business and
Harvard Business School. Adams is
Silicon Valley Leadership Group
secretary-treasurer.
He also serves on the board of the
Bay Area Council Economic
Institute and the Chiefs Cabinet of
the San Mateo Police Activities
League.

SACRAMENTO Gov. Jerry


Brown has made climate change the
centerpiece of his final tenure by
laying out the most aggressive
benchmark in North America, which
would reduce Californias carbon
footprint and boost the states
renewable energy use to 50 percent
in 15 years.
Securing legislation requiring that
standard in the worlds eighthlargest economy would be a timely
win for Brown before international
leaders meet in Paris in November
for the United Nations climate
change conference. Brown is likely
to attend the conference, but he has
not said so officially.
But first, the Democratic governor has to break through a logjam in
his own party in the final week of
the legislative session.
Many Assembly Democrats
including moderates and those representing less wealthy districts
are concerned that the ambitious
proposal to cut petroleum use by
half, boost renewable electricity use
to 50 percent and double energy
efficiency in existing buildings will
hurt Californias economy and
working-class residents.
An oil industry-funded group, the
California Drivers Alliance, is running what climate law proponents
call fear-mongering ads suggesting the bill will raise gas prices and
even result in rationing, harkening
back to gas lines during the oil crisis
of the 1970s.
Lobbying has intensified on both
fronts. Billionaire environmental
activist Tom Steyer and Oscar-winning actress Halle Berry are making
personal appeals urging undecided
lawmakers to vote for the bill. They
are joined by President Barack
Obama, California U.S. Sens.

Dianne Feinstein and Barbara Boxer


and a long list of fellow Democrats.
So far, the Brown administration
and legislative leaders have shared
little publicly as backroom negotiations come down to Fridays deadline to consider bills.
I think the historic weight of this
measure is starting to be felt, said
Senate President Pro Tem Kevin de
Leon, D-Los Angeles, during a
press conference Tuesday with local
bishops, who cited Pope Francis
encyclical on the environment as a
call to action.
I think at the end of the day that
many members on the Assembly
side will clearly look at the shortand long-term implications of health
and to the economy of California
and will do the right thing, said de
Leon, who is carrying Browns proposal.
Californians share Browns environmental concerns and a majority
supports his call for tougher standards. A July poll by the Public
Policy Institute of California found
79 percent of residents agree global
warming is either a very serious or
somewhat serious threat to quality
of life. One of the main sticking
points for lawmakers reluctant to
tighten climate change rules concerns the California Air Resources
Board, an unelected body with
broad power to set vehicle emissions and fuel standards to decide
how the state will reduce oil use.
Some moderate Democrats want
the Legislature to approve board
regulations, but de Leon has said he
is unwilling to strip the agencys
power. Sen. Fran Pavley, D-Agoura
Hills, who is carrying a companion
bill to extend Californias current
emission-reduction targets to 2050,
said she would add a requirement
for the board to conduct a cost-benefit analysis of policies for lawmakers to review.

Garrett and Rebeca Giovannoni, of


Redwood City, gave birth to a baby boy at
Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City on Aug.
20, 2015.
Manuel Gomez and Susana Ortiz, of
Redwood City, gave birth to a baby boy at
Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City on Aug.
22, 2015.

Birth announcements:
Kevin and Jennifer Anderson, of Half
Moon Bay, gave birth to a baby girl at
Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City on Aug.
20, 2015.
David and Delia Cooper, of Los Gatos,
gave birth to a baby girl at Sequoia Hospital
in Redwood City on Aug. 20, 2015.
Michael and Kayla Firestone, of San
Leandro, gave birth to a baby girl at Sequoia
Hospital in Redwood City on Aug. 20, 2015.
Rushabh Doshi and Kristin Stecher, of
Menlo Park, gave birth to a baby girl at
Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City on Aug.
20, 2015.
Raul Cruz and Sandra Torres, of
Belmont, gave birth to a baby boy at Sequoia
Hospital in Redwood City on Aug. 20, 2015.

Amit and Rina Klein, of Redwood City,


gave birth to a baby girl at Sequoia Hospital
in Redwood City on Aug. 24, 2015.
Roldan and Mary Aisa Saavedra, of San
Mateo, gave birth to a baby girl at Sequoia
Hospital in Redwood City on Aug. 24, 2015.
Jason and Marilyn Huey, of San
Francisco, gave birth to a baby girl at
Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City on Aug.
24, 2015.
Joshua Wellman and Marisyn Camper,
of San Carlos, gave birth to a baby boy at
Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City on Aug.
24, 2015.
Jed Aruejo and Karla Jane Capuz, of
Vacaville, gave birth to a baby boy at
Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City on Aug.
24, 2015.

THE DAILY JOURNAL

LOCAL/STATE

Hollywood on the Peninsula


T

he news that another movie was


being shot on the Peninsula brought a
ashback of famous lms that had
scenes in the area, cinema classics that included Bullitt and Harold and Maude.
Half Moon Bay is the locale of the latest
lm, Swiss Army Man starring Daniel
Radcliffe of Harry Potter fame, which
should pump big bucks in to the area economy, said Brena Bailey, lm commissioner for
the San Mateo County/Silicon Valley
Convention and Visitors Bureau. For example, the new movie resulted in 800 hotel
rooms occupied by cast and crew.
The Peninsula has a tremendous diversity
of breathtaking bay and coastal views,
Bailey said. Best of all, the area is easily
accessible for movie people. San Francisco
International is in our backyard.
Swiss Army Man will be added to a long
list of movies lmed, at least partly, in the
region, a list that would be too long for a
newspaper article, she continued. Half Moon
Bay is no stranger to movie making. It was the
locale for House of Sand and Fog, lmed in
2003, a big year for Half Moon Bay movies.
American Wedding and The Law and Mr.
Lee were also products of the coast in that
year.
Other Half Moon Bay credits list scenes in
the 1971 hit Harold and Maude, which was
set in several San Mateo County cities. The
Film in America website lists 23 San Mateo
County cities as locations for lms. The Filoli
estate has seen its share of screen time,

SNIFF
Continued from page 1
one of three possible results: fresh, cook well
or spoiled.
The device is Bluetooth enabled and connects with smartphones and tablets to send the
information to cloud-based servers and deliver the results to users.
The makers argue it is better than the human
nose because spoiled food is often odorless.
It uses sensors to smell temperature,
humidity, ammonia and other potentially dan-

Harold and Maude and Bullitt were both


shot on the Peninsula.
including Heaven Can Wait and Joy Luck
Club. The estate off Caada Road in
Woodside was also the setting for the television hit Dynasty.
The lm commission, which has been in
operation for 15 years, also brings in crews
that do television commercials, said Bailey.
Its the movies, however, that have longer
runs with the public. The recent movies
include Chasing Mavericks, The Master,
The Internship, and Jobs. Earlier offergerous organic compounds present in food.
The makers are looking to push the product
globally in shops and markets that smell meat
to guarantee it is fresh and safe, said company
spokesman Vincas Snipas.
Food can go bad during processing, in the
store, in the car and in your fridge, the makers
say.
Unless you are preparing meals in a sterile
laboratory you really dont have the ability to
know, inventor Alesiunas told a European
publication.
When a product starts to degrade,
Foodsniffer essentially detects particular isotopes, Snipas said.
It works on lamb too but not on shellfish, he

ings with Peninsula locales boast Sweet


November in 2001, which had a scene in
Daly City, The Right Stuff in 1983 that used
the El Rancho Inn in Millbrae, and the Robin
Williams 1983 Mrs. Doubtre, that featured the historic 1910 courthouse in
Redwood City.
What really sticks to the ribs, however, is
the car chase scene in the 1968 San Francisco
police classic Bullitt starring Steve
McQueen. The race on the Guadalupe Canyon
Parkway between a Mustang and Charger
roars through Daly City and Brisbane, ending
with the Charger crashing into a gas station
and bursting into ames. Theres also a
shootout at San Francisco International
Airport, which, despite its name, is in San
Mateo County.
The movie that featured the most San
Mateo County settings? The envelope, please.
The winner is Harold and Maude, the 1971
movie that featured Ruth Gordon as Maude, a
very senior citizen. One source lists at least a
dozen San Mateo County cities as sites. The
locales range from the Southern Pacic railroad yard in Brisbane to a shot on Highway 1
near Pescadero. In between is Holy Cross
Cemetery in Colma, the San Mateo County
ofce building on Marshall Street in
Redwood City and the Dumbarton Bridge.
Movie making in the area goes back to the
silent screen days when the county hosted a
few studios that eventually failed. My favorite
Peninsula scene was a talkie, but an old one in
black and white 1941s Maltese Falcon,
starring Humphrey Bogart as San Francisco
private eye Sam Spade. Spade asks a cabbie if
he has enough gas to get to Burlingame.
When he arrives he nds he was given a bum
steer. The Burlingame scene, a grocery store,
was probably a Hollywood set. But you just
got to love the lingo.
The Rear View Mirror by history columnist Jim
Clifford appears in the Daily Journal every other
Monday. Objects in The Mirror are closer than they
appear.

said.
The makers are also looking to expand the
technology into other fields.
The company is working on a number of
other products and technologies based on
Foodsniffers patents.
One day, a similar device will be able to
detect various diseases, Snipas told the Daily
Journal.
For now, though, Foodsniffer can save families big money as the U.S. Department of
Agriculture estimates the typical family of
four throws out more than $2,000 a year in

Monday Sept. 7 2015

19

Woman, 31, dies


in crash on I-280
BAY CITY NEWS

A 31-year-old woman died Sunday afternoon in a crash on southbound Interstate 280


just west of Hillsborough, according to the
California Highway Patrol.
The first report of the crash came in at 2:43
p.m. on I-280 just south of Black Mountain
Road in the San Francisco State Fish & Game
Refuge, CHP officials said.
The woman lost control of the vehicle she
was driving and crashed into a guardrail, CHP
Officer Art Montiel said. The woman died at
the crash site, he said.
A passenger in the vehicle suffered minor
injuries and was taken to a hospital, Montiel
said.

Temple co-founder
wants to start Buddhist
fraternity and sorority
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAN DIEGO The Greek gods on


Fraternity Row at San Diego State University
may have to make room for the Buddha.
Planning is underway for a Buddhist fraternity and sorority at the school known for its
partying reputation.
Jeff Zlotnik, a founder of the Dharma Bum
Temple in downtown San Diego, said he envisions the houses offering classes in Buddhism
and meditation to help college students cope
with stress, anxiety and depression.
Were not looking to start this heavy religious organization, he told The San Diego
Union-Tribune (http://bit.ly/1NbV83R). This
is a cultural organization. Were not trying to
create ordained Buddhists.
Zlotnik floated the idea by Abby Cervantes,
a student at the temple, who had started a
sorority when she was in college in 2011. The
two began working on creating the houses that
will be called Delta Bet Tau fraternity and
Delta Beta Theta sorority.
food because it spoils before it can be eaten.
The company is hoping to sell the device
through Sharper Image or Williams Sonoma
one day but for now it is sticking to direct
sales.
It retails for about $130 on the companys
website.
To learn more, go to: myfoodsniffer.com.

bill@smdailyjournal.com
(650) 344-5200 ext. 102

20

LOCAL

Monday Sept. 7 2015

TRAILS
Continued from page 1
to open spaces, said Marilyn Stockdale
Green, Trail Center board member and
San Mateo resident.
It gives people a respite from all the
development and traffic. Somewhere to
go and be quiet and see some wildlife,
Green said. Its also an opportunity to
preserve the sanctuary for the animals,
for the plants and responsibly build
trails.
The city purchased the entire 225-acre
site in 1986 and, in 2011, the park off
Glendora Drive received a major
upgrade with the construction of a playground, restrooms, garden and picnic
areas. Shortly after, the Train Center
stepped in with a group of enthusiasts to
realign a user-established trail and create an easier path to the top of the mountain.
Since the completion of the main
Tenderfoot Trail, Green said the city
should plan for further use of the site by

SSF
Continued from page 1
had been included in the original, larger
proposal.
The smaller project also offers a
decreased profit margin for the developer, according Law, which resulted in a
proposal to eliminate any units being
offered at a reduced rate. The initial proposal offered eight units to be rented at
below-market rates.
When I was seeking 14 additional
units, I had more leeway to give, said
Law.
Despite the city having no legal
authority to obligate developers of rental
properties to set aside any portion of a
project at a reduced rate, there is a prevailing interest among South San
Francisco officials to ensure the city
remains affordable to its longtime residents, according to commission
President Alan Wong.
While its not required, we liked the
idea of having the affordable housing,
he said.
The desire for the development to
include reduced rate units was passionately expressed by a variety of members
of the community, who encouraged the
commissioners to delay granting
approval with an intent of negotiating
more community benefits into the development agreement.
Rates will continue to increase as
you allow developers to set the market,
said Gustavo Lopez, a high school
teacher in South San Francisco said to
the commission. Im asking you to
think about us while you move forward
with this project.
Those sentiments were echoed by
Tracy Choi of the Housing Leadership
Council of San Mateo, who expressed

discouraging user-created trails.


Having a master plan for trails that
provide both ascent and descent and
take into consideration the various plant
communities, is just better for overall
access for residents, Green said. The
top of Sugarloaf has probably the best
view on the mid-Peninsula but we have
the only one really nice trail to get you
up there. But people dont always want
to go out and back (the same way) so to
speak. Having additional trails will give
them additional views and additional
pleasant hiking trails.
The proposed amendments now
include offering a wider variety of trail
loop opportunities, an Americans with
Disabilities Act accessible trail and one
route for a maintenance vehicle to
access the mountains peak. However,
mountain bikers are technically not supposed to use the trail, Canzian said.
The
Parks
and
Recreation
Commission approved the plan 3-1,
with Commissioner Sean Williams voting against it, as he wanted to mountain
bikers to have access, Canzian said.
While the plans are costly and construction expenses only anticipated to

rise, Canzian said the city is very fortunate to have the expertise of Trail Center
volunteers contributing which could
save between $300,000 and $600,000,
according to the report.
I do think it will take time to accrue
those funds. But I think that at least the
good news is that we believe we have
an improved plan. So when the money
becomes available, we would feel comfortable allocating money toward new
trail improvements, Canzian said.
Ultimately, the goal is to keep users
on designated trails so as to avoid disrupting the natural environment,
Canzian said.
I dont think theres ever been a better time. The value for us, is the city has
owned this open space since the 1980s
and its really been efforts like this to try
and highlight and put some spotlight on
it so that it just doesnt become an area
that people go to and create their own
trails, Canzian said. For an open space
area, thats the worst thing that can happen. Because people dont know when
theyre traversing areas that have protected species or plants.

concerns regarding the precedent that


would be set if the commission
approved a new residential development
without including any affordable units.
This sends a clear message of who
you will building downtown for, she
said.
While approving the Downtown
Station Area Specific Plan in January,
the City Council emphasized an effort to
preserve space in the vision of a revitalized downtown for longtime residents
and those who struggled to keep pace
with the constantly increasing cost of
living locally.
The Airport Boulevard development
is one of the first housing projects to be
considered downtown since the specific
plan has been passed.
Officials had also encouraged developers to consider paying local builders
prevailing union wages to construct
projects in the new downtown, which is
slated to add a projected 1,400 new
housing units over the 20-year life span
of the project.
Danny Campbell, a union representative, claimed the Airport Boulevard
project was not in line with the vision of
city officials, and advocated instead for
Pinefino to hire union workers to build
the development.
We need these construction jobs for
our local residents, he said.
Law though said he was unwilling to
consider hiring union labor for the
development, due to allegiance to a
team of contractors he has relied on for
years to build projects.
Though the project shrunk in size, he
was willing make some concessions to
the commission.
Under pressure by Nagales, Law
agreed to offer two of the units at moderate market rates, and contribute roughly $35,000 toward a community benefit
fund and public art to be displayed on

the building.
Despite the concessions though,
Nagales said he did not like the proposed design of the building, and advocated for it to undergo further review by
city officials prior to the commission
granting approval.
Ultimately other commissioners disagreed, citing the belief that the addition
of the new units might help level the
market by making more housing options
available.
We need to build more housing. We
have a housing shortage, said Planning
Commissioner
Daina
Lujan.
Sometimes change is scary, but we also
need homes.
Later at the meeting, the commission
voted 4-1, with Planning Commissioner
Carlos Martin dissenting, to recommend
the City Council approve establishing a
$150 permit to residents wishing to
using home sharing or short-term vacation rental websites such as Airbnb or
VRBO.
Should the council ultimately approve
the permit, a one-year pilot program
would be installed to give officials an
opportunity to review the effectiveness
of the new policy, as well as track the
revenue the permits generate compared
to the money required to operate the
program.
Also, under the proposed policy,
agreements made between residents and
tenants would be subject to the citys
transient occupancy tax, which takes 10
percent of the gross rent paid by guests.
The citys conference center tax would
take an additional nightly rate of $2.50
per occupied room.
The permit program is still pending
approval from the council before going
into effect.
Commission Vice Chair Alex Khalfin
and Planning Commissioner Norm Faria
were absent from the meeting.

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Calendar
MONDAY, SEPT. 7
Kings Mountain Art Fair. 10 a.m.
to 5 p.m. Kings Mountain Firehouse
and Community Center, 13889
Skyline Blvd., Woodside. Fine art fair
featuring over 135 juried artists.
Breakfast available from 8 a.m. Free
admission. For more information
v
i
s
i
t
www.kingsmountainartfair.org or
call 851-2710.
Dance Connection with Music by
the Ron Borelli Trio. Free dance
lessons 6:30 p.m.-7 p.m. with open
dance 7 p.m.-9:30 p.m. Burlingame
Womans Club, 241 Park Road,
Burlingame. Theme is Giants night.
Put on your Giants shirt or orange
and black. Members, bring a new
first-time male friend and earn free
entry for yourself (only one free
entry per new dancer). For more
information call 342-2221.
Its Funny Now Stand-Up
Comedy Night at The Swingin
Door. 9 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. 106 E.
25th Ave., San Mateo. Hosted by
Kevin Wong and DJ Jack. Free.
TUESDAY, SEPT. 8
Star t
and
Grow
Smar t
Businesses. 10 a.m. Burlingame
Public Library, 480 Primrose Road,
Burlingame. Interactive workshop
builds upon business ideas: creating a vision, mission, objectives,
strategies and plans. For more
information contact piche@plsinfo.org.
Menlo Park K iwanis Club
Meeting. Noon to 1:15 p.m. Join
Bayan Bokosi Frank Chunga, who
will speak about challenges facing
the Malawi people. To attend call
327-1313, or visit http://www.menloparkkiwanisclub.org .
Belmont Greek Festival. Noon to
8 p.m. Holy Cross Church, 900
Alameda de las Pulgas, Belmont.
Enjoy Greek meals and desserts
and entertainment and more.
General admission $5. For more
information
email
cecanellos@aol.com.
Seasonal Veggie Dinners with
Amy Fothergill. 6:30 p.m. to 8:30
p.m. Community Classroom, New
Leaf Community Market, 150 San
Mateo Road, Half Moon Bay. $20.
Chef and author Amy Fothergill
gives fresh ideas for preparing seasonal veggies that can be used for
a delicious meal.
Documentary Club. 6:30 p.m. to 9
p.m. Belmont Library, 1110
Alameda de las Pulgas, Belmont.
Watch and discuss a documentary
or independent film. Popcorn and
refreshments will be served. For
more information email belmont@smcl.org.
Carlos Pavan Guitar Recital. 7
p.m. Burlingame Public Library, 480
Primrose Road, Burlingame. For
more
information
contact
piche@plsinfo.org.
B eginner Square Dance Class.
7:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Beresford
Recreation Center, 2720 Alameda
de las Pulgas, San Mateo. $5. For
more information call 762-8008.
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 9
Author Tea with S.K. Kalsi. Noon
to 1 p.m. Belmont Library, 1110
Alameda de las Pulgas, Belmont.
Author S.K. Kalsi will be reading at
the Belmont Library. For more
information
email
belmont@smcl.org.
San Mateo Professional Alliance
Weekly Networking Lunch. Noon
to 1 p.m. Kingfish Restaurant (in the
Kings Room), 201 S. B St., San
Mateo. Meet new business connections and join the SMPA for lunch
and networking. For more information call 430-6500.
Peninsula Recruitment Mixer. 6
p.m. Burlingame Public Library, 480
Primrose
Road,
Burlingame.
Network panel discussion. Register
online at www.phase2careers.org.
For more information contact
piche@plsinfo.org.
Writing through Loss. 6:30 p.m. to
8 p.m. Mission Hospice Office, 1670
Amphlett Blvd., Suite 300, San
Mateo. Explore how creative writing can help you express where
youve been with your grief, and
where youre going. No writing
experience necessary. For more
information call 532-2338 or email
istenzel@missionhospice.org.
Lifetree Cafe: When Faith and
Politics Collide. 6:30 p.m. Bethany
Lutheran Church, 1095 Cloud Ave.,
Menlo Park. Hour-long conversation discussing views concerning
illegal immigration. For more information call 854-5897.
Author Daniel James Brown. 7
p.m. Burlingame Public Library, 480
Primrose Ave., Burlingame. Author

of Boys in the Boat speaking and


signing. For more information contact piche@plsinfo.org.
Guitarist Carlos Pavan. 7 p.m.
Menlo Park Library, 800 Alma St.,
Menlo Park. Guitar recital by Carlos
Pavan.
Water
Conser vation
101
Work shop. 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.
Millbrae Library, 1 Library Ave.,
Millbrae. Free. Learn valuable information on water supplies, drought
conditions, local water use restrictions, state-mandated reductions
and how to reduce water use both
indoors and outdoors. RSVP to 3493000.
THURSDAY, SEPT. 10
Lifetree Cafe: When Faith and
Politics Collide. 9:15 a.m. Bethany
Lutheran Church, 1095 Cloud Ave.,
Menlo Park. Hour-long conversation discussing views concerning
illegal immigration. For more information call 854-5897.
Peninsula Choraliers rehearsals
begin. 10 a.m. Christian Science
Church, 150 N. El Camino Real, San
Mateo. For more information call
593-4287.
Crafts with the A Team
Presents: Back to School Craft
Afternoon. 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. San
Mateo Public Library, 55 W. Third
Ave, San Mateo. Join the A Team for
an afternoon of crafts guaranteed
to get you out of that back to
school slump and ready to take on
the new school year! For tweens in
5th, 6th, 7th and 8th grade. Sign up
in the childrens room. Light
refreshments will be provided. For
more information, call 522-7838.
PPH Restoration and Trail Project
Meeting. 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Pacifica
Community Center Auditorium,
540 Crespi Drive, Pacifica. For more
information go to http://pedropointheadlands.org.
Area C5 Toastmasters Speech
Contest. 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. San Carlos
Library, 610 Elm St., San Carlos.
Learn how to be a better communicator, leader and public speaker.
Join the contest and watch both
novice
and
experienced
Toastmasters in action as they
compete in a humorous contest.
Free. For more information call 3732759.
The Power of Two. 6:30 p.m.
Mission Hospice & Home Care, 1670
S. Amphlett Blvd., San Mateo. Soft
drinks, wine, cheese and popcorn
provided. Free.
Trina Turk and Burlingame
Mothers Club. 6:30 p.m. to 8:30
p.m. Trina Turk, 1223 Burlingame
Ave., Burlingame. An evening of
shopping. Enjoy champagne and
light bites while receiving styling
tips from pro stylist Sherene Chen
of Style by Sherene. For more information email sherene@stylebysherene.com.
Burlingame Renters Meeting. 7
p.m. to 9 p.m. Burlingame United
Methodist Church. Burlingame
Burlingame Advocates for Renter
Protections will be hosting a question and answer session with some
of the people running for the two
vacant city council seats and will
also provide updates on the battle
to overturn Measure T, which prevents renters from having protections in Burlingame.
Movies on the Square: Into the
Woods. 7:45 p.m. Courthouse
Square, 2200 Broadway, Redwood
City. For more information go to
www.redwoodcity.org/events/mus
icinthepark.html.
The Voice of the Prairie by John
Olive. 8 p.m. During the early days
of radio, Davey Quinn becomes
famous as the Voice of the Prairie,
telling tales of his adventures with
Frankie, a blind girl he once saved
from her abusive father. Years later
his radio broadcasts reunite him
with Frankie, now a school teacher,
and their adventures together
begin again. Dragon Theatre, 2120
Broadway, Redwood City. For more
information and to buy tickets call
493-2006 ext. 2.
FRIDAY, SEPT. 11
State of the City discussion with
Mayor Maureen Freschet. 7:30
a.m. Crystal Springs Golf Course,
6650
Golf
Course
Drive,
Burlingame. San Mateo Mayor
Maureen Freschet will discuss the
state of the city and current projects. $15, breakfast included. For
more information call 515-5891.
The Voice of the Prairie by John
Olive. 8 p.m. Dragon Theatre, 2120
Broadway, Redwood City. For more
information and to buy tickets call
493-2006 ext. 2.
For more events visit
smdailyjournal.com, click Calendar.

COMICS/GAMES

THE DAILY JOURNAL

DILBERT

Monday Sept. 7, 2015

21

CROSSWORD PUZZLE

HOLY MOLE

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE

ACROSS
40 Is able to
1 Swabbers need
41 Bottle tops
5 Clash of arms
44 Get by
8 Woofs
47 Dinnys rider (2 wds.)
12 Autobahn vehicle
49 Opera box
13 Terre Haute coll.
51 Layer
14 Fictional plantation
52 Kilt-wearers refusal
15 Wine sediments
53 Online auction site
16 Electronic stylus (2 wds.) 54 Bumblers
18 Jacket parts
55 Put a stop to
20 Topples from power
56 Facet
21 CPA employer
22 Anderson Coopers
DOWN
channel
1 Sidekick
23 Opposite of supine
2 The Valley of Horses
26 New York borough
author
29 Drawn-out
3 Suggestion
30 Pelts
4 Thpeaking like thith?
31 Above, to Tennyson
5 Bequeaths
33 Thou, nowadays
6 Garage sale tag (2 wds.)
34 -- of honor
7 Bearskin, maybe
35 Drescher of The Nanny 8 Harmonize
36 Weekend wear (hyph.)
9 Hard knocks
38 Tiny bottles
10 Stew over
39 Doctrine
11 Minus

GET FUZZY

17
19
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
30
32
34
35
37
38
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
48
50

Whets
Previously
Whey opposite
Pilot a ferry
What fans do
Unwelcome obligation
Say uncle
Director -- Ephron
Apply caulking
Raise corn
Hosp. workers
Performer Elliott
Climaxes
Outdoorsy types
Moving truck
Like Batman
Post-WWII alliance
Essayists pen name
Musical symbol
Ghostly noise
Mongolian desert
By Jove!
Small bill
Ogle

9-7-15

PREVIOUS
SUDOKU
ANSWERS

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2015


VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Flexibility and
compromise will get you through a busy day.
Trying to sway others to your way of thinking will
be disappointing if you dont have solid facts to
back your case.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Financial matters
involving friends or relatives will require careful
thought and planning. You are better off sticking to
your own tasks instead of engaging in petty quarrels.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Concentrate on how to
put together a stellar presentation for a new pursuit.
Once you feel condent, nothing will stand in your way.

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

WEEKENDS PUZZLE SOLVED

Each row and each column must contain the


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

Someone in a key position will grant you a favor.


SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Your future
depends on your own efforts, not the help of others.
Dont wait for someone to lead the way. You can call
in favors, but it is your wisdom and drive that will
initiate the necessary momentum.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Personal matters
will confuse you, and your emotions will have you in
a vulnerable state. A change of scenery will provide a
mental and physical break from your current distress.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Progress requires
discipline and hard work. Make personal changes
that will motivate you to move forward. Time spent on
education or resume-boosting will bring high returns.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Todays emphasis

9-7-15
Want More Fun
and Games?
Jumble Page 2 La Times Crossword Puzzle Classieds
Tundra & Over the Hedge Comics Classieds
Boggle Puzzle Everyday in DateBook

will be on romance and partnerships. There is


positive energy around you that others nd appealing.
Concentrate on collaborating with new personal or
professional acquaintances.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) You are resilient, so stop
punishing yourself and get back in the game. If you
look closely, an alternate route will present itself. You
will end up in a better place than you started.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You cant do
everything by yourself. Lots of people will come to
your aid if you make them aware of your difculties.
Asking for help is not a sign of weakness.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Nurture what and
whom you value most. Your loving nature will ensure
that harmony and tenderness will improve your

romantic relationships as well as your creative and


intuitive abilities.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Evaluate the motives
of someone who comes looking for a financial
contribution. Take a moment to reflect on what
youve done in the past in order to find the best
possible route.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Concern regarding an
elderly or ailing relative will bring you down. Its
important not to allow added responsibility to restrict
your professional progress or personal goals.
COPYRIGHT 2015 United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

22

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Monday Sept. 7, 2015

DRIVERS
WANTED

104 Training

106 Tutoring

110 Employment

TERMS & CONDITIONS


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

HERZBERG TUTORING

Pick up papers between 3:30 a.m.


and 4:30 a.m. 2 to 4 hour routes
available from South SF to Palo Alto and the Coast.
Pay dependent on route size.
Call 650-344-5200.

Looking for compassionate team


member for Assisted Living in Burlingame. 650.771-1127.

(650) 579-2653
110 Employment

AMERICAN GUARD SERVICES is hiring school crossing guards p/t in San


Carlos! Must have transportation & complete Live Scan & Background. Call (510)
895-9245 for information & to apply.

San Mateo Daily Journal


Newspaper Routes

Early mornings, six days per week,


Monday through Saturday

CAREGIVER -

High School and College


History/Social Studies
English Lang/Literaure
Essay Writing CA TA Credential

CAREGIVERS NEEDED

110 Employment

CAREGIVERS
2 years experience
required.

CAREGIVER/
LVN / DISHWASHER
WANTED

Immediate placement
on all assignments.

(650)596-3489

Call
(650)777-9000

Senior Living Facility


San Carlos
Ask for Violet

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

MANUFACTURING -

Jeweler/Setters
Setting + repair
Top Pay + ben + bonus

650-367-6500 FX: 367-6400

jobs@jewelryexchange.com

No Experience Necessary
Training Provided
FT & PT. Driving required.

(650) 458-2202
1660 S. Amphlett Blvd., Suite 115
San Mateo, CA 94402
www.homebridgeca.org

Caregiver Open House & Hiring Event


On-the-spot Interviews and Refreshments Provided

Friday, September 11, 2015


10:00 am 2:00 pm
s &4 AND 04 /PPORTUNITIES
s  3IGN /N "ONUS
s .O %XPERIENCE 2EQUIRED
s 4RAINING !VAILABLE
s #.!((! A PLUS
s $RIVING 2EQUIRED
#ANDIDATES MUST 2360
&OR MORE INFORMATION AND TO RESERVE YOUR SPACE

Call (650) 458-2200


 3 !MPHLETT "LVD 3TE 
3AN -ATEO #! 

www.homebridgeca.org

THE DAILY JOURNAL

LEGAL NOTICES

Fictitious Business Name Statements,


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

Fax your request to: 650-344-5290


Email them to: ads@smdailyjournal.com

110 Employment

Tundra

Tundra

Tundra

Over the Hedge

Over the Hedge

Over the Hedge

COMPUTER Course Hero, Inc. in Redwood City, CA


seeks User Experience and Interface Design Manager to own visual design strategy, collaborate with product teams, develop design standards, tools. Masters
in Graphic Design or Web Design and
New Media +2 years of exp. designing
web, mobile apps in e-commerce, HTML,
CSS, JavaScript. Course work in responsive web design gained before/during/after Masters. Send cover letter and resume
to: VChoi@Coursehero.com No
Calls/ EOE
HOME CARE AIDES
Multiple shifts to meet your needs. Great
pay & benefits, Sign-on bonus, 1yr exp
required.
Matched Caregivers (650)839-2273,
(408)280-7039 or (888)340-2273

110 Employment
NEWSPAPER INTERNS
JOURNALISM

HOUSE CLEANERS NEEDED


$12.25 per hour. Company Car.
Call Molly Maid at (650)837-9788.
1700 S. Amphlett, #218, San Mateo.

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

RESTAURANT -

Dishwasher Required, P.M. shift, San


Carlos Restaurant, Call (650)307-0081
or Chef, (541) 848-0038

Exciting Opportunities at

RESTAURANT -

Hiring Talented P.M. Line Cook. Apply in


person or call Johnston's Saltbox, 1696
Laurel Street, San Carlos. 650 592 7258

Applicants who are committed to Quality and Excellence welcome to apply.

CANDY MAKER TRAINING PROGRAM


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SEASONAL OPPORTUNITIES
SEASONAL QUALITY ASSURANCE INSPECTOR
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Requirements for all positions include:


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23

Monday Sept. 7, 2015

"QQMJDBOUTNVTUCFBWBJMBCMFUPXPSLEBZPSOJHIUTIJGUBOEPWFSUJNF
.VTUCFBCMFUPSFBE TQFBLBOEXSJUF&OHMJTI
1SFWJPVTFYQFSJFODFJONBOVGBDUVSJOHQSFGFSSFE
&NQMPZFFTBSFNFNCFSTPG-PDBM

If interested, please call Eugenia or Ava at


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

210 Lost & Found


FOUND-LARGE SIZED Diamond Ring in
San Carlos Bank Parking Lot on 5/21.
(650)888-2662.
FOUND: LADIES watch outside Safeway Millbrae 11/10/14 call Matt,
(415)378-3634
FOUND: RING Silver color ring found
on 1/7/2014 in Burlingame. Parking Lot
M (next to Dethrone). Brand inscribed.
Gary @ (650)347-2301
LOST - Apple Ipad, Sunday 5.3 on Caltrain #426, between Burlingame and
Redwood City, south bound. REWARD.
(415)830-0012
LOST - MY COLLAPSIBLE music stand,
clip lights, and music in black bags were
taken from my car in Foster City and may
have been thrown out by disappointed
thieves. Please call (650)704-3595

210 Lost & Found

296 Appliances

LOST CAT Our Felicity, weighs 7 lbs,


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

ICE MAKER brand new $90. (415)2653395

LOST DOG, 14 year old Bichon, white


and Fluffy. Reward $500 cash. Her name
is Pumpkin. Lost in Redwood City.
(650) 281-4331.
LOST GOLD Cross at Carlmont Shopping Center, by Lunardis market
(Reward) (415)559-7291
LOST PRESCRIPTION glasses (2
pairs). REWARD! 1 pair dark tinted bifocals, green flames in black case with red
zero & red arrow. 2nd pair clear lenses
bifocals. Green frames. Lost at Lucky
Chances Casino in Colma or Chilis in
San Bruno. (650)245-9061
RING FOUND, 6 years ago, large 14 carat gold, in San Carlos. Eaton Ave.
(650)445-8827

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

WW1

$12.,

DAS ECHOLOT - fuga furiosa Ein kollektives Tagebuch Winter 1945, 4 vol,
boxed New $45. (650)345-2597

JACK LALANE juicer $25 or best offer.


650-593-0893.
KENMORE MICROWAVE quick touch
medium in perfect condition and clean.
$35.[510]684-0187
KIRBY MODEL G7D vacuum with accessories and a supply of HEPA bags.
$150 obo. 650-465-2344
PORTABLE AIR conditioner by windchaser 9000 btu s cools 5,600 ft easily
$90 obo (650)591-6842
SHARP MICROWAVE CAROUSEL II
oven small in perfect condition and clean
$ 35. [510] 684-0187
UPRIGHT VACUUM Cleane, $10. Call
Ed, (415)298-0645 South San Francisco
WEBBER BBQ + chimney + tongs, all
only $20, 650-595-3933

297 Bicycles
1980'S WOMAN'S Red, 26" Schwinn,
thin tires; stored 25 years, like new; $85;
650-591-9769
2 KIDS Bikes for $60. 310-889-4850.
Text Only. Will send pictures upon request.
BIKE CARRIER for auto.
$40.00 (650) 591-0419

Like new.

MAGAZINES. SIX Arizona Highways


magazines from 1974 and 1975. Very
good condition. $15. 650-794-0839.

BRIDGESTONE MOUNTAIN Bike. $95.


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

MARTHA STEWART decorating books.


Two oldies, but goodies. Both for $10.
San Bruno. 650-794-0839.

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

NICHOLAS SPARKS Hardback Books


2 @ $3.00 each - (650)341-1861
STEPHEN KING Hardback Books
2 @ $3.00 each - (650)341-1861

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

296 Appliances
AIR CONDITIONER 10000 BTU w/remote. Slider model fits all windows. LG
brand $199 runs like new. (650)2350898
CHEFMATE TOASTER oven, brand
new, bakes, broils, toasts, adjustable
temperature. $25 OBO. (650)580-4763
CHICKEN ROASTERS (4) vertical, One
pulsing chopper, both unopened, in original packaging, $27.(650) 578 9208

LOST - Womans diamond ring. Lost


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

ELECTRIC FIREPLACE on wheels in


walnut casing made by the Amish exl.
cond. $99. 650-592-2648

LOST SMALL gray and green Parrot.


Redwood Shores. (650)207-2303.

FREE FREEZER!
Works Fine. Check it out. (650)759-6423

GOT JOBS?
The best career seekers
read the Daily Journal.
We will help you recruit qualified, talented
individuals to join your company or organization.
The Daily Journals readership covers a wide
range of qualifications for all types of positions.
For the best value and the best results,
recruit from the Daily Journal...
Contact us for a free consultation

Call (650) 344-5200 or


Email: ads@smdailyjournal.com

298 Collectibles
1920'S AQUA Glass Beaded Flapper
Purse (drawstring bag) & Faux Pearl
Flapper Collar. $50. 650-762-6048
1940 VINTAGE telephone bench maple
antiques collectibles $75 (650)755-9833
2 VINTAGE Light Bulbs circa 1905. Edison Mazda Lamps. Both still working $50 (650)-762-6048
ARMY SHIRT, long sleeves, with pockets. XL $15 each (408)249-3858
BELT BUCKLE-MICKEY Mouse 1937
Marked Sterling. Sun Rubber company.
(650) 355-2167.
CHERISHED TEDDIES Figurines. Over
90 figurines, 1992-1999 (mostly '93-'95).
Mint in Boxes. $99. (408) 506-7691
COLORIZED TERRITORIAL Quarters
uncirculated
with
Holder
$15/all,
(408)249-3858
LIONEL ENGINE #221 Rio Grande diesel, runs good ex-condition
$90.
(650)867-7433
NUTCRACKERS 1 large 2 small $10 for
all 3 (650) 692-3260
OLD BLACK Mountain 5 Gallon Glass
Water Jar $39 (650) 692-3260
RENO SILVER LEGACY Casino four
rare memorabilia items, casino key, two
coins, small charm. $95. (650)676-0974
SCHILLER HIPPIE poster, linen, Sparta
graphics 1968. Mint condition. $600.00.
(650)701-0276
TRANSFORMERS SDCC Shockwave
Lab Beast Hunters, $75 OBO Dan 650303-3568 lv msg

299 Computers
DELL
LAPTOP
Computer
Bag
Fabric/Nylon great condition $20 (650)
692-3260
RECORDABLE CD-R 74, Sealed, Unopened, original packaging, Samsung, 12X,
(650) 578 9208

300 Toys
3-STORY BARBIE Dollhouse with spiral
staircase and elevator. $60. (650)5588142
5 RARE purple card Star Wars figures
mint unopened. $75. Steve, 650-5186614.

24

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Monday Sept. 7, 2015

300 Toys

303 Electronics

303 Electronics

COMPLETE 1999 UD1&2 set of 525


baseball cards - mint. $50. Steve, 650518-6614.

46 MITSUBISHI Projector TV, great


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

PIONEER HOUSE Speakers, pair. 15


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

PLAY KITCHEN Step 2, accessories,


sink, shelves, oven, fridge, extendable,
perfect , $50. 650-878-9511
STAR WARS SDCC Stormtrooper
Commander $29 OBO Dan,
650-303-3568 lv msg

BASUKA BASS tube speakers/ amplifier 20" x 10" auto boat never used $100.
(650)992-4544
BIC TURNTABLE Model 940.
Good Shape $40. (650)245-7517

Very

BLUE NINTENDO DS Lite. Hardly used.


$70 OBO. (760) 996-0767
COMPACT- DVD Video/CD music Player never used in Box $45. (650)9924544

302 Antiques
ANTIQUE 12 Foot Heavy Duty Jumper
Cables $10.00
ANTIQUE ITALIAN lamp 18 high, $70
(650)387-4002
BEAUTIFUL AND UNIQUE Victorian
Side Sewing Table, All original. Rosewood. Carved. EXCELLENT CONDITION! $350. (650)815-8999.

COMPLETE COLOR photo developer


Besler Enlarger, Color Head, trays, photo
tools $50/ 650-921-1996
ELECTRONIC TYPEWRITER good
condition $50., (650)878-9542

PORTABLE AC/DC Altec Lansing


speaker system for IPods/audio sources.
Great for travel. $15. 650-654-9252

304 Furniture

304 Furniture

304 Furniture

made in Spain

GLASS TOP dining table w/ 6 chairs


$75. (415)265-3395

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

COFFEE TABLE @ end table Very nice


condition $80. 650 697 7862

INFINITY FLOOR speakers H 38" x W


11 1/2" x D 10" good $50. (650)756-9516

SET OF 3 oak entertainment cubbies on


casters. 30"W x 20"H x 17"D $10.
ea 305-283-5291

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

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

RECORD PLAYER - BIC Model #940.


Excellent Cond. $30. (650) 368-7537.

LAWN CHAIRS (4) White, plastic, $8.


each, (415)346-6038

COMPUTER SWIVEL CHAIR. Padded


Leather. $80. (650) 455-3409

SONY CD/DVD PLAYER model dvpn5575p brand new silver in the box. $50.
[510]684-0187

LOVE SEAT, Upholstered pale yellow


floral $99. (650)574-4021

CORNER NOOK, table and two upholstered benches with storage, blond wood
$65. 650-592-2648

MIRROR RECTANGULAR with silver


frame approx 50" high x 20 " wide $25
(650)996-0026

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

CUSTOM MADE wood sewing storage


cabinet perfect condition $75. (650)4831222

MIRROR, OAK frame oval on top approx 39" high x 27" Wide. (650)996-0026

DECORATIVE MIRRORS, set of 4, $40


(650)996-0026

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


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

VIDEO REWINDER, Unused, original


box, extends life of VCR. (650) 478 9208

304 Furniture

KENWOOD STEREO Receiver/ equalizer, with CD deck music player 2 Spkrs+.


$50. (650)992-4544

2 WHITE bookcases. 69"H x 27"W x


10"D $10. ea 305-283-5291

MAHOGANY ANTIQUE Secretary desk,


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

LEFT-HAND ERGONOMIC keyboard


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

ANTIQUE DINING table for six people


with chairs $99. (650)580-6324

OLD VINTAGE Wooden Sea Captains


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

MOTOROLA BRAVO MB 520 (android


4.1 upgrade) smart phone 35$ 8GB SD
card Belmont (650)595-8855

BOOKCASES. 6 all wood Good condition. 32"W x 70"H x 12"D $15. ea. 305283-5291

PAIR OF beautiful candalabras . Marble


and brass. $90. (650)697-7862

ONKYO AV Receiver HT-R570 .Digital


Surround, HDMI, Dolby, Sirius Ready,
Cinema Filter.$95/ Offer 650-591-2393

BRASS / METAL ETAGERE 6.5 ft tall.


Rugs, Pictures, Mirrors. Four shelf. $200.
(650) 343-0631

VINTAGE ATWATER Kent Radio. Circa


1929 $100. (650)245-7517

OPTIMUS H36 ST5800 Tower Speaker


36x10x11 $30. (650)580-6324

CHAIRS 2 Blue Good Condition $50


OBO (650)345-5644

DESKS. TWO glass/metal, 62"L x 30"W


and 44"L x 30", w/monitor shelf 16"D.
$25. ea 305-283-5291
DINETTE TABLE with Chrome Legs: 36"
x58" (with one leaf 11 1/2") - $50.
(650)341-5347
DINING ROOM table Good Condition
$90.00 or best offer ( 650)-780-0193
DRUM TABLE - brown, perfect condition, nice design, with storage, $45.,
(650)345-1111
ENTERTAINMENT
(650) 283-6997.

CENTER

FREE

ESPRESSO TABLE 30 square, 40 tall,


$95 (650)375-8021

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle

FREE 2 piece china cabinet. Pecan finish. Located in SSF. I'll email picture.
650-243-1461

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

FULL SIZED mattress with metal type


frame $35. (650)580-6324

ACROSS
1 __ fit: tantrum
6 Alabama civil
rights march city
11 Muddy farm abode
14 Send to seventh
heaven
15 Earlier
16 Drain-clearing
chemical
17 Sensible
19 Alias, for short
20 Private school
attendee
21 Actor Rob of
90210
23 Actors tryout
27 Padlocked
fasteners
32 Maintained, as
beliefs
33 Extremely
35 Wheel tooth
36 Judges garb
40 Romantic
anniversary
getaway
43 1970s-80s
sketch show
44 Letters of
obligation
45 Took by force
46 Full House
acting twins
49 January, to Juan
50 Concert
memento
54 Irish actor Milo
55 Hopi homes
61 Hard __ rock
62 Perform a
cheerleaders
feat, and a hint to
what 17-, 23-, 40and 50-Across
first words have
in common
66 Pester for
payment
67 Bull on a glue
container
68 Assume as fact
69 Up to now
70 Curbs, with in
71 Sandwich
cheese with ham
DOWN
1 SOS!
2 Robert who
played Anthony
Soprano Jr.
3 Keep in reserve
4 Ladder rung
5 Shrill bark

6 Orators delivery
7 Chapter in history
8 Jar cover
9 Cohort of Curly
and Larry
10 Intensely devoted
11 List of candidates
12 Tricycle riders
13 Bread-baking
need
18 __ Girl Friday:
1940 Cary Grant
comedy
22 Enter angrily
24 Runner-ups
demand
25 North Carolina
university
26 Outer margins
27 Gas brand with
collectible toy
trucks
28 With, in France
29 Breakaway
religious group
30 Egg on
31 ID on an IRS
form
34 Creator of
praiseful poems
37 Move like slime
38 Afrikaans
speaker
39 Prefix with
skeleton

41 Sod-busting
tools
42 __-haw!
47 Orchestra
conductor, e.g.
48 Building
custodians
50 Sycophant
51 Magazine edition
52 Repeated unison
rallying cry
53 Urban transport
56 Omar of House

57 Low __: cheap


shot
58 Italian actress
Virna
59 Elevator pioneer
60 Former Mach 2
fliers, briefly
63 World Cup cry
64 Texters Keep
the details to
yourself
65 One in a coop
group

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

SIX SHELF BOOK CASE - FREE


Good Condition. (650) 283-6997
SOLID WOOD stackable tables, Set of 3
$25. (650)996-0026
TABLE, HD. 2'x4'. pair of folding legs at
each end. Laminate top. Perfect.
$60.(650)591-4141
TEAK CABINET 28"x32", used for stereo equipment $25. (650)726-6429
TEAK-VENEER COMPUTER desk with
single drawer and stacked shelves. $30
obo. 650-465-2344

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


(650)726-6429

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


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

OAK SIX SHELF Book Case 6FT 4FT


$55 (650)458-8280

TWIN SIZED mattress like new with


frame & headboard $45. (650)580-6324

OAK WINE CABINET, beautiful, glass


front, 18 x 25 x 48 5 shelves, grooved
for bottles. 25-bottle capacity. $299.
(360)624-1898

VINTAGE LARGE Marble Coffee Table,


round. $75.(650)458-8280

OUTDOOR WOOD SCREEN - new $80


obo Retail $130 (650)873-8167

WHITE BOOKCASE :H 72" x W 30" x D


12" exc condition $30. (650)756-9516.

PAPASAN CHAIRS (2) -with cushions


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

WHITE WICKER Shelf unit, adjustable.


Excellent condition. 5 ft by 2 ft. $50.
(650)315-6184

PATIO tables, 48 round, detachable


legs; $30. (650) 697-8481
PATIO tables, Oblong green plastic 3x5
detachable legs. $30. (650) 697-8481
RECLINING CHAIR. Good Condition.
FREE (650) 283-6997.

WALNUT CHEST, small (4 drawer with


upper bookcase $50. (650)726-6429

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


17.5" deep. $90. (650)631-9311
WOOD BOOKCASE unit - good condition $65. (650)504-6058
WOOD FURNITURE- one end table and
coffee table. In good condition. $30
OBO. (760)996-0767.
WOODEN MINI bar with 2 bar stools
$75. (415)265-3395

306 Housewares
BBQ UTENSILS, Stainless steel, Grillmark, flippers tongs, baster, winebarrel,
staves, $25. (650) 578 9208.
COFFEE MAKER, Makes 4 cups $12,
(650)368-3037
HOUSEPLANT 7 1/2 ' with large pear
shaped
leaves
in
pot $65, would
cost $150 in flower shop 650-592-2648.
SCALE. 25 lb. capacity counter top model. Very good condition. $15. San Bruno.
650-794-0839
SHEER DRAPES (White) for two glass
sliding doors great condition $50 (650)
692-3260
SOLID TEAK floor model 16 wine rack
with turntable $60. (650)592-7483

307 Jewelry & Clothing


POCKET WATCH 1911 Illinois Gold
Plated. Runs Great $78..
(650)365-1797

xwordeditor@aol.com

By Bruce Venzke and Gail Grabowski


2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

09/07/15

09/07/15

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Monday Sept. 7, 2015

308 Tools

310 Misc. For Sale

316 Clothes

335 Rugs

14 FT Extension Ladder. Extends to 26


FT. $125. Good Cond. (650)368-7537

VASE WITH flowers 2 piece good for the


Holidays, $25., (650) 867-2720

BOSTITCH 16 gage Finish nailer Model


SB 664FN $99 (650)359-9269

PARIS HILTON purse white & silver unused, about 12" long x 9" high $23.00
1-650-592-2648

CARPET RUNNER, new, 30 inches,


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

VINTAGE WHITE Punch Bowl/Serving


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

SUNGLASSSES UNISEX TOMS Lobamba S007 w/ Tortoise Frames. Polarized lenses 100% UVA/UVB NEW
$65.(650)591-6596

335 Garden Equipment

COMMERCIAL PADDLE CONCRETE


MIXER, Electric Driven. $875. (650) 3336275.
COMMERCIAL PADDLE CONCRETE
MIXER, Motor Driven. $1,350. (650) 3336275.
CRAFTMAN RADIAL SAW, with cabinet
stand, $200 Cash Only, (650)851-1045

WICKER PICNIC basket, mint condition,


handles, light weight, pale tan color.
$10. (650)578-9208
WROUGHT IRON Plant/Curio stand, 5
platforms, 5 high x 1.5 wide. Beautiful
designer style, good condition. $25.
(650)588-1946. San Bruno

CRAFTSMAN 3/4 horse power 3,450


RPM $60 (650)347-5373

311 Musical Instruments

CRAFTSMAN 9" Radial Arm Saw with 6"


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

ALVAREZ ACOUSTICAL guitar with


tuning device - excellent to learn on, like
new $95. 925-784-1447

CRAFTSMAN BELT & disc sander $99.


(650)573-5269
CRAFTSMAN JIGSAW 3.9 amp. with
variable speeds $65 (650)359-9269

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


(510)784-2598

CRAFTSMAN RADIAL Arm Saw Stand.


In box. $30. (650)245-7517

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

HEAVY DUTY Mattock/Pick, Less Handle $10. (650)368-0748

HAMMOND B-3 Organ and 122 Leslie


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

PULLEYS- FOUR 2-1/8 to 7 1/4" --all for


$16. 650 341-8342
ROUTER TABLE 25481 and Craftsman
1 & 1 2hp Router- $65. leave message
6505958855
SHOPSMITH MARK V 50th Anniversary
most
attachments.
$1,500/OBO.
(650)504-0585

HOHNER MELODICA Piano 27 w/soft


case $100. (650)367-8146
KIMBALL MAHOGANY Baby Grand
Piano, Bench and Sheet Music. $1,100.
(650)341-2271

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

LEXICON LAMDA desktop recording


studio used, open box $75. Call
(650)367-8146

VINTAGE CRAFTSMAN Jig Saw. Circa


1947. $60. (650)245-7517

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

WILLIAMS #1191 CHROME 2 1/16"


Combination "SuperRrench". Mint. $89.
650-218-7059.

WURLITZER PIANO, console, 40 high,


light brown, good condition. $490.
(650)593-7001

WILLIAMS #40251, 4 PC. Tool Set


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

YAMAHA PIANO, Upright, Model M-305,


$750. Call (650)572-2337

WIZARD STAINED Glass Grinder, extra


bit, good condition, shield included,
$50. Jack @348-6310

309 Office Equipment


STAND WITH shelves, 29" high. Can be
used for TV, computer, printer. $10. Pacifica (650)355-0266

310 Misc. For Sale


GAME "BEAT THE EXPERTS" never
used $8., (408)249-3858
HARLEY DAVIDSON black phone, perfect condition, $65., (650) 867-2720
INCUBATOR, $99, (650)678-5133
OVAL MIRROR $10 (650)766-4858
SAMSONITE 26" tan hard-sided suit
case, lt. wt., wheels, used once/like new.
$60. 650-328-6709
STAR TREK VCR tape Colombia House,
Complete set 79 episodes $50
(650)355-2167
TASCO LUMINOVA Telescope.with tripod stand, And extra Lenses. Good condition.$90. call 650-591-2393
TELESCOPE. CSTAR 600 power refractor telescope including tripod. $25.
Very good condition. 650-871-1778.
ULTRASONIC JEWELRY Cleaning Machine Cleans jewelry, eyeglasses, dentures, keys. Concentrate included. $30
OBO. (650)580-4763

Cabinetry

312 Pets & Animals


AQUARIUM 30 gal sexagonal , complete
with stand $75. (415)265-3395
BAMBOO BIRD Cage - very intricate design - 21"x15"x16". $50 (650)341-6402
FRENCH BULLDOG puppies. Many
colors.
AKC Registration. Call
(415)596-0538.
ONE KENNEL Cab ll one Pet Taxi animal carriers 26x16. Excellent cond. $60..
650-593-2066
PARROT CAGE, Steel, Large - approx
4 ft by 4 ft, Excellent condition $300 best
offer. (650)245-4084

314 Tickets
49ER SEASON TICKETS PACKAGE.
Save $1000 buying from season ticket
holder. Section 143 - 2 seats. $2,908.
(650) 948-2054.

VINTAGE 1970S Grecian made dress,


size 6-8, $35 (650)873-8167
XXL HARLEY Davidson Racing Team
Shirt. $90. 310-889-4850. Text Only. Will
send pictures upon request.

317 Building Materials


32 PAVING/EDGING bricks, 12 x 5x1
Brown, smooth surface, good clean condition. $32. (650)588-1946 San Bruno
BATHROOM VANITY, antique, with top
and sink, $65. (650)348-6955
CULTURED MARBLE 2 tone BR vanity
counter top. New toe skin/ scribe. 29 x
19 $300 (408)744-1041
FREE, 3 interior solid core paneled doors
with hardware. Reply
tmckay1@sbcglobal.net
INTERIOR DOORS, 8, free.
call 573-7381.
MEDICINE CABINET - 18 X 24, almost
new, mirror, $20., (650)515-2605
WHITE DOUBLE pane window for $29
or Best offer. Call Halim @ (650) 6785133.

318 Sports Equipment


AB CIRCLE machine. $55. 310-8894850. Text Only. Will send pictures upon
request.
BB GUN. $29 (650)678-5133
GOLF BALLS-15 dozen. All Brands: Titeslist, Taylor Made, Callaway. $5 per
dozen. (650)345-3840.
GOLF CLUBS, 2 sets of $30 & $60.
(415)265-3395
GOLF SET for $95. 310-889-4850. Text
Only. Will send pictures upon request.
IN-GROUND BASKETBALL hoop, fiberglass backboard, adjustable height, $80
obo 650-364-1270
LEFTY O'DOUL miniature souvenir
baseball bat, $10, 650-591-9769, San
Carlos

POWER PLUS Exercise Machine


(650)368-3037

$99

TREADMILL BY PRO-FORM. (Hardly


Used). 10% incline, 2.5 HP motor, 300lb
weight capacity. $329 (650)598-9804
TWO SETS of 10lb barbell weights @
$10 each set. (650)593-0893
VINTAGE ENGLISH ladies ice skates up to size 7-8, $40., (650)873-8167
WET SUIT - medium size, $95., call for
info (650)851-0878

WE BUY

WOMEN'S LADY Cougar gold iron set


set - $25. (650)348-6955

Millbrae Jewelers
Est. 1957

400 Broadway - Millbrae

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

Cleaning

Concrete

Gold, Silver, Platinum


Always True & Honest values

650-697-2685

340 Camera & Photo Equip.


CAMERA MINOLTA 35 mm Maxxum
7000 with accessories and Tamrac Bag.
$35. 650-794-0839. San Bruno.
CANON CAMERA SD1100IS accessories, battery charger, cable chargers
CD all for only $10 650 520-7045

345 Medical Equipment


ADULT DIAPERS, disposable, 10 bags,
20 diapers per bag, $10 each. (650)3420935
BATH CHAIR LIFT. Peterman battery
operated bath chair lift. Stainless steel
frame. Accepts up to 350lbs. Easily inserted I/O tub.$250 OBO.
(650) 739-6489.
BATH TRANSFER bench, back rest and
side arm, suction cups for the floor.
$75/obo. (650)757-0149
NEW CPAP mask, hose, strap sealed
packs $50, 650-595-3933

Garage Sales

GARAGE SALES
ESTATE SALES
Make money, make room!

List your upcoming garage


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

NEW AB Lounger $39 (650) 692-3260

315 Wanted to Buy

Cleaning

321 Hunting/Fishing

379 Open Houses

OPEN HOUSE
LISTINGS
List your Open House
in the Daily Journal.
Reach over 76,500
potential home buyers &
renters a day,
from South San Francisco
to Palo Alto.
in your local newspaper.

380 Real Estate Services

625 Classic Cars

HOMES & PROPERTIES

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


$5,400. /OBO (650)364-1374

Look for it
every Friday and Weekend
to find information on fine homes
and properties throughout
the local area.

DODGE 01 DURANGO, V-8 SUV, 1


owner, dark blue, CLEAN! $5,000/obo.
Call (650)492-1298

The San Mateo Daily Journals


weekly Real Estate Section.

440 Apartments
BELMONT - LARGE Renovated 1BR, 2
BR, & 3BR Apts. Clean, Quite Bldgs in
Great Neighborhood. No Pets, No smoking, No Housing Assistance. Phone 650591-4046

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

630 Trucks & SUVs

640 Motorcycles/Scooters
BMW 03 F650 GS, $3899 OBO. Call
650-995-0003
DAINESE BOOTS Zipper & Velcro Closure, Cushioned Ankle, Excellent Condition Unisex EU40 $65 (650)357-7484
DUCATI 01 750 Monster, 15K miles,
very clean. $4,100. (650)455-1699
MOTORCYCLE GMAX helmet and all
leather jacket, both black, Large, new,
never used. $85. 305-283-5291
MOTORCYCLE SADDLEBAGS, with
mounting hardware and other parts $35.
Call (650)670-2888

620 Automobiles

670 Auto Parts

1978 CLASSIC Mercedes Benz, 240D,


136k miles, 2nd owner, all scheduled
maintenance & records available. Good
condition. All original. Always garaged.
New tires. 4 speed manual. Runs &
drives great. Sunroof. Clean interior.
Good leather and carpets. AM/FM radio.
$4500. Call (650)375-1929

BRIDGESTONE TURANZA RFT (Run


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

AA SMOG

Complete Repair& Service


$29.75 plus certificate & fee
869 California Drive .
Burlingame

(650) 340-0492
Dont lose money
on a trade-in or
consignment!
Sell your vehicle in the
Daily Journals
Auto Classifieds.
Just $42!
Well run it
til you sell it!

BRIDGESTONE TURANZA RFT (Run


Flat) 205/55/16 EL 42 All Season Like
New $100. (650)483-1222
NEVER
MOUNTED
new Metzeler
120/70ZR-18 tire $50, 650-595-3933
NEW CONTINENTAL Temporary tire
mounted on 5 lug rim Size T125/70/R1798M $100. (650)483-1222
OIL/FILTER CHANGING, pan, wrench,
funnels ++ all $10, 650-595-3933
SHOP MANUALS for GM Suv's
Year 2002 all for $40 (650)948-0912
THE CLUB-USED for locking car steering wheel, $5, 650-591-9769, San Carlos
THE CLUB-USED for locking car steering wheel, $5, 650-591-9769, San Carlos

680 Autos Wanted


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

Reach 76,500 drivers


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

CHEVY 10 HHR . 68K. EXCELLENT


CONDITION. $8888. (650)274-8284.
CHEVY HHR 08 - Grey, spunky car
loaded, even seat warmers, $9,500.
(408)807-6529.
DODGE
99 Van, Good Condition,
$4,200 OBO (650)481-5296

Call (650)344-5200

FORD 98 Mustang. GT Convertible.


Summer fun car. Green, Tan, Leather interior, Excellent Condition. 128,000
Miles. $3700. (650) 440-4697.

Concrete

Construction

Construction

OSULLIVAN
CONSTRUCTION

LEMUS CONSTRUCTION

Construction

ANGIES CLEANING &


POWERWASHING

MENA
PLASTERING

Move in/out; Post Construction;


Commercial & Residential;
Carpet Cleaning; Powerwashing

INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR


LATH AND PLASTER/STUCCO
ALL KINDS OF TEXTURES
35+ YEARS EXPERIENCE

650.918.0354

www.MyErrandServicesCA.com

VELVET DRAPE, 100% cotton, new


beautiful burgundy 82"X52" W/6"hems:
$45 (415)585-3622

AMES CLIPPERS, fan rake, shovel, all


only $15, 650-595-3933

25

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

Quality Workmanship,
Free Estimates

(650)533-0187
Lic# 947476

415-420-6362
CA LIC #625577

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

(650)271-3955

Dryrot & Termite Repair


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

Free Estimates
Lic. #913461

26

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Monday Sept. 7, 2015

Construction

Housecleaning

Hauling

WRIGHT BROTHERS
We do it all!

CONSUELOS HOUSE
CLEANING

CHAINEY HAULING

Kitchens, Baths, Remodel, Plumbing,


Electrical, Decks, Bricks, Pavers,
Roofs, Painting, Stucco, Drywall,
Windows, Patios, Tile, and more!

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

FREE ESTIMATES!
10% OFF Labor 1st time customers

Free Estimates, 15% off First Visit

www.gowrightbrothers.com

Lic#1211534

(650)630-0664

Decks & Fences

MARSH FENCE
& DECK CO.

State License #377047


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

Electricians

ALL ELECTRICAL
SERVICE

650-322-9288

(650)278-0157

PENINSULA
CLEANING

RESIDENTIAL AND COMMERICAL

BONDED
FREE ESTIMATES

1-800-344-7771

Hauling

Gardening
CALL NOW FOR
FALL LAWN
PREPARATION

Drought Tolerant Planting


Drip Systems, Rock Gardens
Pressure Washing,
and lots more!
Call Robert
STERLING GARDENS
650-703-3831
Lic #751832

Furniture / Appliance / Disposal


Tree / Bush / Dirt / Concrete Demo

CHEAP
HAULING!

LEMUS PAINTING
(650)271-3955

(650)368-8861
Lic #514269

kaprizhardwoodfloors.com

650-560-8119

Serving the entire Bay Area


Residential & Commercial
License #931457

Call for Free Estimate

(650) 591-8291

Interior & Exterior


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

Light moving!
Haul Debris!
650-583-6700

Handy Help
SOS PAINTING

DISCOUNT HANDYMAN
& PLUMBING

Interior/Exterior
Wall Paper Installation/Removal

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

Free Estimates Senior discounts

(650)738-9295
(415)269-0446
www.sospainting.com

(650)296-0568

Free Estimates

Lic# 526818

Lic.#834170

SUNNY BAY PAINTING CO.

SENIOR HANDYMAN

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

Specializing in any size project

Painting Electrical
Carpentry Dry Rot
40 Yrs. Experience

Retired Licensed Contractor

650-201-6854
THE VILLAGE
CONTRACTOR

Plumbing

Licensed General and


Painting Contractor

CLEAN DRAINS PLUMBING


$89 TO CLEAN ANY CLOGGED
DRAINS! with proper access
Installation of: Water Heaters
Faucets Toilets Sinks Gas Water
& Sewer Lines. Trenchless
Replacement.

Remodels Carpentry
Drywall Tile Painting

Flooring

See website for more info.

REED
ROOFERS

Interior & Exterior


Quality Work, Reasonable
Rates, Free Estimates

Lic#979435

Mention this ad for


Free Delivery

JON LA MOTTE

Starting at $40 & Up


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

(650)701-6072
SPECIALS
AS LOW AS $2.50/sf.

Roofing

PAINTING

Junk & Debris Clean Up

for all your electrical needs


ELECTRIC SERVICE GROUP

Painting

(650)461-0326 or
(650)226-3762

Hauling
AAA RATED!

INDEPENDENT
HAULERS

$40 & UP
HAUL

Since 1988/Licensed & Insured


Monthly Specials
Fast, Dependable Service

Free Estimates
A+ BBB Rating

(650)341-7482

Lic.# 983312

Landscaping
SERVANDO ARRELLIN
The Garden Doctor
Landscaping & Demolition
Fences Interlocking Pavers
Clean-Ups Hauling
Retaining Walls
(650)771-2276
sarrellin14@yahoo.com

MEYER PLUMBING SUPPLY


Toilets, Sinks, Vanities,
Faucets, Water heaters,
Whirlpools and more!
Wholesale Pricing &
Closeout Specials.
2030 S Delaware St
San Mateo
650-350-1960

Tree Service

Hillside Tree

Service

LOCALLY OWNED
Family Owned Since 2000
Trimming

Pruning

Shaping
Large

Removal
Grinding

Stump

Free
Estimates
Mention

The Daily Journal


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

Lic# 36267

NATE LANDSCAPING
* Tree Service * Paint
* Fence Deck * Pavers
* Pruning & Removal
* New Lawn * Irrigation
* All Concrete * Ret. Wall
* Sprinkler System
* Yard Clean-Up, Haul
& Maintenance

Free Estimate

650.353.6554
Lic. #973081

AUTUMN LAWN

PREPARATION!
Drought Tolerant Planting
Drip Systems, Rock Gardens
Pressure Washing,
and lots more!

Painting

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

ADVERTISE
YOUR SERVICE
in the
HOME & GARDEN SECTION

CRAIGS PAINTING

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


Palo Alto to South San Francisco
and all points between!

Free Estimates

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

Residential & Commercial


Interior & Exterior
10-year guarantee
craigspainting.com

(650) 553-9653
Lic#857741

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Attorneys
Law Office of Jason Honaker

BANKRUPTCY
Chapter 7 &13
Call us for a consultation

650-259-9200
www.honakerlegal.com
Cemetery

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

$5 CHARLEY'S

Sporting apparel from your


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

(650)771-6564

Dental Services
Do you want a White,Brighter
Smile?
Safe, Painless, Long Lasting

Maui Whitening
650.508.8669

1217 Laurel St., San Carlos


(Between Greenwood & Howard)
www.mauiwhitening.com

I - SMILE

Implant & Orthodontict Center


1702 Miramonte Ave. Suite B
Mountain View

Exceptional.
Reliable. Inovative
650-282-5555

Monday Sept. 7, 2015

Dental Services

Food

Health & Medical

MILLBRAE SMILE CENTER

THE CAKERY

EYE EXAMINATIONS

Valerie de Leon, DDS


Implant, Cosmetic and
Family Dentistry
Spanish and Tagalog Spoken

A touch of Europe

15 El Camino Real,
MILLBRAE, CA

1308 Burlingame Ave


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

RUSSO DENTAL CARE

Financial

(650)697-9000

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

(650)583-2273

www.russodentalcare.com

Food

BRUNCH EVERY
SUNDAY

Omelette Station, Carving Station


$24.95 / adult $9.95 /Child

Houlihans

& Holiday Inn SFO Airport


275 So Airport blvd.
South San Francisco

CROWNE PLAZA
Foster City-San Mateo

UNITED AMERICAN BANK


San Mateo , Redwood City,
Half Moon Bay

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

Fitness
LOSE WEIGHT
In Just 10 Weeks !
with the ultimate body shaping course
contact us today.

(650) 490-4414
www. SanBrunoMartialArts.com

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

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

381 El Camino Real


Millbrae

(650)697-6868

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

650-583-5880
Millbrae Dental

Furniture

Insurance

Bedroom Express

LIFE INSURANCE
America's Lowest Cost!

Hwy 92 at Foster City Blvd. Exit

2833 El Camino Real


San Mateo - (650)458-8881

(510)282.2466

GET HAPPY!
Happy Hour 4-6 M-F

184 El Camino Real


So. S. Francisco -(650)583-2221
www.bedroomexpress.com

The Clubhouse Bistro


Wedding, Event &
Meeting Facilities

(650) 295-6123

1221 Chess Drive Foster City

Steelhead Brewing Co.


333 California Dr.
Burlingame
(650)344-6050
www.steelheadbrewery.com

NOTHING BUNDTCAKES
Make Life Sweeter
*864 Laurel Street, San Carlos

650.592.1600

Where Dreams Begin

Health & Medical

BACK, LEG PAIN OR


NUMBNESS?

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

PANCHO VILLA
TAQUERIA

Because Flavor Still Matters


365 B Street
San Mateo
www.sfpanchovillia.com

DENTAL
IMPLANTS

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

Legal Services

Music

LEGAL

Music Lessons
Sales Repairs Rentals

DOCUMENTS PLUS

363 Grand Ave, So. San Francisco

Jeri Blatt, LDA #11

Real Estate Loans

Registered & Bonded

(650)574-2087

legaldocumentsplus.com

REAL ESTATE LOANS

We Fund Bank Turndowns!

Loans

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

Equity based direct lender


Homes Multi-family
Mixed-use Commercial
All Credit Accepted

REVERSE MORTGAGE
Are you age 62+ & own your
home?
Call for a free, easy to read
brochure or quote
650-453-3244
Carol Bertocchini, CPA

650-348-7191

Wachter Investments, Inc.


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

Marketing

Seniors

GROW

Sign up for the free newsletter

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

Massage Therapy

Travel

BEST ASIAN BODY


MASSAGE

FIGONE TRAVEL
GROUP

$39.99/hr Current Clients

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

YOUR SMALL BUSINESS


Get free help from
The Growth Coach
Go to
www.buildandbalance.com

www.barrettinsuranceservices.net

Eric L. Barrett,

CLU, RHU, REBC, CLTC, LUTCF


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

$35/hr First time visitors


Home Care Assistance
Health Care Consultant

(650)692-1989

1838 El Camino #103, Burlingame

COMFORT PRO
MASSAGE
Foot Massage $24.99

Body Massage $44.99/hr

(650) 595-7750

PRIVATE SIGHTSEEING
Luxury SUV / Town Car
Napa / Sonoma/Casino
& More

10 am - 10 pm
1115 California Dr. Burlingame

(650)389-2468

Door to Door pick up


Bay Area
650-834-2011 Nick

FULL BODY MASSAGE

Wills & Trusts

$48

Belbien Day Spa

GRAND
OPENING

Asian Massage
$5 OFF W/THIS AD
(650)556-9888
633 Veterans Blvd #C
Redwood City

GRAND
OPENING
L & R WELLNESS
CENTER
Relaxing & healing massage
$50 per hour
$5 off with this ad!
39 N. San Mateo Dr. #1
San Mateo

(650)557-2286

Open 7 days 10am - 9pm


Free parking behind bldg

Sandpiper Community Center


3FEXPPE4IPSFT1LXZt38$
sbjazzercise@comcast.net

(650)588-2502

bronsteinmusic.com

"I am not an attorney. I can only


provide self help services at your
specific direction."

1204 West Hillsdale Blvd.


SAN MATEO
(650)403-1400

Jazzercise San Carlos


&M$BNJOP3FBMt4$
650.888.6129

Bronstein Music

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

Lic #OJ11250

NEW YORK LIFE

*140 So. El Camino Real, Millbrae

650.552.9625

Larry Hutcherson
Belmont, CA

27

ESTATE PLANNING
TrustandEstatePlan.com

San Mateo Office


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

28

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Monday Sept. 7 2015

Sciatica and Herniated Discs May Be to


Blame for Pain in Your Back and Neck
LOCAL CLINICS OFFER FREE CONSULTATION TO THOSE SUFFERING FROM BACK AND NECK PAIN

JEZPVLOPXUIBUNJMMJPO"NFSJDBOT
TVGGFSGSPNCBDLBOEOFDLQBJOFWFSZEBZ
Sciatica and herniated discs are PGUFONJTVOEFSTUPPE

Whiplash
Neck Pain

They can cause pain and numbness in the back, neck, legs, and feet.
This pain affects everything that you do, from work to play, and
ultimately your quality of life.We are here to tell you that there is
hope.We have the technology and experience to help you nd relief
from sciatica and back pain. At Bay Area Disc Centers, we have
helped thousands of pain sufferers just like you. We offer only the
most advanced non-surgical treatments.

Bulged Disc
Herniated Disc
Sciatica
Pinched /FSWFT
Stenosis

Is Surgery the Answer?


It is true that surgery may be the answer for certain types of back injuries.
When considering your options, ask yourself this question ...If there is a
solution to back pain that doesnt require surgery, is it worth exploring?

Before you consider surgery consider these points


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t3FDPWFSZDBOCFWFSZQBJOGVMBOEDBOUBLFNPOUITPSZFBST
t4VSHFSZNBZPSNBZOPUSFMJFWFZPVSQBJO
t%FQFOEFODFPOQSFTDSJQUJPOESVHTNBZPDDVSBGUFSTVSHFSZ
t.JTTFEXPSLDBOBNPVOUUPTJOMPTUXBHFT
t0VUDPNFTNBZCFVODFSUBJO BOETVSHFSZJTOPUSFWFSTJCMF

The Solution: The DRT Method, (Disc Restoration Therapy)


The DRT Method is a 5 Step S.P.I.N.E. approach to healing & restoring
function to bulging and degenerative discs.
Spinal Decompression, Physiotherapy, Inter-Segmental Mobilization, Nutritional
Support, Exercise Rehabilitation.
The DRT Method allows for a much higher success rate by increasing hydration
and restoring health to your discs. This results in a more effective and lasting
solution to your pain. There are no side effects and no recovery time is required.
This gentle and relaxing treatment has proven to be effective... even when drugs,
epidurals, traditional chiropractic, physical therapy and surgery have failed....
Disc Restoration Therapy has shown dramatic results.

Who is a Candidate for Disc Restoration Therapy


Disc Restoration Therapy has been found to relieve the pain associated with disc
degeneration, herniated and bulging disc, facet syndrome and sciatica. It is our
opinion that patients should exhaust all non surgical/non-invasive treatments rst
before considering surgery.

Why Bay Area Disc Centers?


Dr. Thomas Ferrigno, DC and his team have vast experience in treating
patients suffering from moderate to severe disc disease.
Dr. Thomas Ferrigno, DC is Certied by and is also part of the Disc
Centers of America Team who are a national group of doctors that
have gone through extensive training that follow the protocols set up
by The International Medical Advisory Board on Spinal Decompression, and follows the protocols set forward by Dr. Norman Shealy the
Honorary Chairman, former Harvard professor, and probably the most
published doctor in the world on spinal decompression therapy.

Get Your Life Back, Today!


If you suffer from sciatica, severe back or neck pain, you can nd
relief! If you are serious about getting your life back and eliminating
your back and neck pain, my staff and I are serious about helping you
and providing how our technology and experience can help.We are
extending this offer to the rst 30 callers. These spaces ll up quickly,
so call today to reserve your spot.

INCLUDES:
1. Free Consultation with Dr. Thomas Ferrigno
2. Complete Orthopedic and Neurologic Eval.
3. MRI/X-Ray Review
4. Report of Findings

Dr.Thomas Ferrigno, D.C.


Member, DCOA Disc Centers of America
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Campbell:
855-240-3472

Palo Alto:
855-322-3472

San Mateo:
650-231-4754

www.BayAreaBackPain.com
Space Is Limited To The First 30 Callers! Call Today To ScheduleYour Consultation

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