Documenti di Didattica
Documenti di Professioni
Documenti di Cultura
WINS OPEN
BP,FEDS CLASH
SIDES DIFFER ON WHETHER CAP
‘INCEPTION’
IS TOP FLICK
SPORTS PAGE 11 SHOULD BE REOPENED NATION PAGE 7 DATEBOOK PAGE 17
to form four ordinary words. shown during the brand’s runway show
CARTT on Friday night as part of the The Kardashian sisters Hardy. A strapless one-piece had see-
Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week Swim through bands of material in the front
2011. shows, which preview the 2011 collec- and back, giving a peek-a-boo effect.
©2010 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
All Rights Reserved. “Even though Beach Bunny has its tions for retailers, editors and stylists, There was a bikini in white and gold. A
KUFLE own established collection, we each end Monday night. lime green bandeau bikini had hard-
wanted to make sure we put our own Beach Bunny Swimwear’s themes ware on the sides. Colors included hot
twist on it and each were separated by were old Hollywood, nautical and pink and turquoise along with the
our own personalities,” Kim safari. There were many bikinis and brand’s signature tiger and rose tattoo
QUILOR Kardashian said before the show. cutout one-pieces. A turquoise bikini prints. A black bustier with studs
She said her designs were more was embellished with beige lace. A topped black bikini bottoms.
glamorous, with jewels. Her sister champagne-colored cover-up was “I think the common theme within the
Kourtney Kardashian went with the embellished with hardware. A white whole line is shine, metallic,” said
YURELS bikini was decorated with lace. A Angela Avanesyan, one of the designers.
Now arrange the circled letters nautical look, while Khloe Kardashian
to form the surprise answer, as Odom said she wanted “fun, but a lot of model strutted down the runway in a “Ed Hardy is all about embellishment.
suggested by the above cartoon.
coverage but still really young and purple snakeskin print cutout one- It’s loud. It’s out there. That’s the brand.”
Print answer here: sexy.” piece. A short orange shirt with a Swiss designer Naila Chbib said her
(Answers tomorrow) Her favorite was a gun metal one- smocked waist was paired with a navy men’s collection was all about nature.
Saturday’s
Jumbles: MUSIC RANCH TEACUP NIBBLE piece that looked like it had been shred- zig-zag-patterned bikini bottom. There She had geometric prints along with
Answer: When the storm hit, the pilot’s decision to
land was — “UP IN THE AIR” ded. was also a navy zig-zag print dress. solid colors on her men’s suits. Pink
Gold hardware, hot pink and Another look was a black cutout one- swimming shorts with a geometric pat-
turquoise were all over the runways at piece dubbed the “bondage” swimsuit. tern were paired with a white shirt with
the Raleigh Hotel in South Beach. White Sands designed suits with the sleeves rolled up to reveal the same
There were also many bikinis and high-waisted bottoms and halter tops, pink pattern on the cuffs. She said her
cutout one-pieces. inspired by the 1950s. But cutouts client is “a sporty guy. Very interna-
Other shows included Ed Hardy, reigned supreme at this line. A one- tional. Well-educated.” Her lengths
White Sands and a men’s group with piece with straps that crisscrossed at the included long shorts, briefs and
Naila, Olasul and Parke & Ronen. The neck had a black and white animal culottes.
THE DAILY JOURNAL LOCAL Monday• July 19, 2010 3
‘Sand’Franciscans create Golden Gate Park of transportation for the public. A system of
trolleys, cable cars and trains would later be
put in place to take people farther into the
park.
While many of the dunes were anchored by
deep-rooted native species, the plans called
for stabilizing the whole area and planting
new and varied species. The first seeds plant-
ed did not have time to root before being
blown away by the wind. Then they tried
planting seeds and weighting them down with
I
n the beginning, it wasn’t golden and it
wasn’t green either. It was more like topsoil and organic material, including
your basic beige. And it certainly didn’t manure from the city’s many horses. This was
look like a park. On an 1853 map, the area better, but the erection of board fences and
was labeled the “Great Sand Bank.” piles of brush to shelter the plantings until
Exploding from a population of about 1,000 they rooted was even more successful.
in 1848 to over 150,000 by 1870, San The next challenge was fresh water. The
Francisco itself became a colorful and rowdy Spring Valley Water Co. contributed the liquid
city thanks to the Gold Rush. When women gold for the first seven years, but the park
and children began arriving, they brought a commission needed to find a source within the
mitigating influence. They wanted a more park. They drilled wells over in the western
respectable environment for their families: area and used windmills to pump the water
schools, churches, museums, playgrounds and up.
parks. Many had come from the East Coast In 1887, Hall hired the legendary horticul-
where there were village greens and commons turist John McLaren as assistant superintend-
available for everyone. The more crowded the ent, giving him the job of landscaping the area
cities became, the more the citizenry yearned called the Children’s Quarters. McLaren
to breathe free, to relax and commune with PHOTO COURTESY OF THE SAN MATEO COUNTY HISTORY MUSEUM (1846-1943) was born in Scotland and had
nature. New York City had Central Park, a Park planners knew that kids and carousels just naturally go together. considerable experience working on estates
magnificent green oasis designed by the great and in botanical gardens. He settled in San
they would put on a first-class world expo in first park planner, and in 1871 he was named Mateo County and was soon in demand by the
Frederick Law Olmstead. 1915. Fast forward a few years more, and they first superintendent. Hall (1846-1934), a civil
The idea for such a park in San Francisco owners of the grand estates for his landscape
would build one of the most extraordinary engineer, had already studied the sand dunes designs. He would become park superintend-
began in the 1860s. When Olmstead was con- bridges in the world across the Golden Gate. and readily produced a topographical survey
sulted about the feasibility, his advice was to ent in 1890 and keep the job for 53 years.
The sand dunes were another mission of the area. It had been decided early on that the eastern
forget about it. San Francisco had two big impossible, always shifting and drifting. It was decided to begin work on the eastern
problems. The proposed park area, called the and most accessible section of the park would
Trying to stabilize them was like nailing down 270 acres first, in particular the “Panhandle”- be dedicated to mothers and children. With a
“Outside Lands,” was one big sand pile and, Jell-O. The sand had accumulated over thou- shaped section closest to the city, and gradu-
although it was surrounded by ocean and Bay sands of years from erosion of the Sierra ally move westward. One primary reason for
waters, there was very little fresh water readi- Nevada with the sediment working its way beginning at the eastern end was the problem See PARK, Page 4
ly available. Green-growing things need dirt downhill and into the Bay, and from the action
and water. of the Pacific surf against the cliffs and shore.
But San Franciscans have never been afraid The westerly winds blew the sand inland and
to tackle the difficult, with the impossible tak- rearranged the dunes daily. It was on that sea
ing just a little longer. After the total devasta- of sand that William Hammond Hall came on
tion from the 1906 earthquake, not only the scene in 1870 to chart the course as the
would they rebuild the city in record time, but
4 Monday• July 19, 2010 LOCAL THE DAILY JOURNAL
PARK
Continued from page 3
The building was badly damaged in
the 1906 earthquake, but was
restored and is still in use today as
the Sharon Art Studio, a nonprofit
restored as needed. There is still a
carousel here today for kids who
like to get around.
Ironically, the dynamic duo of
Hall and McLaren disagreed and
worked up and over and around the
natural topography as much as they
could. They left the depressions and
beauty and a joy ever since. There
were 747 more acres to go. There
would be more, so much more, as
Golden Gate Park evolved toward
group that offers classes in arts and Hall and McLaren wanted to turn made them into courts and sunken the west. There would be the glass-
crafts for all ages. the barren sand dunes into a lush gardens. cased Conservatory of Flowers, the
$50,000 legacy from William
The park planners wanted to do it garden, one that would look like They preserved Strawberry Hill, park’s oldest structure, the 1894
Sharon for the park commission to
up right for the city’s children, Mother Nature herself had invested the highest point in the park. California Midwinter Fair which
use as it saw fit, the money was
many of whom had limited hand and heart. It was ironic The park was enthusiastically left us the Japanese Tea Garden, the
soon invested here. McLaren
resources or opportunities for fun. because the two believed philosoph- embraced by the public. By the end music concourses, science and art
designed a playground area known
The first carousel, which also ically that nature knows best and of the first year, some 15,000 people museums, gardens and groves and
as Sharon Quarters for Children. It
opened in 1888, was rather primi- should for the most part be left had come calling. In 1883, crowd lakes. Maybe all that beige sand was
opened in 1888 with a boys’ ball-
tive. It had been built by a man alone. control was handled by the newly- golden after all.
ground and a girl’s croquet court.
named Tyler, reportedly a sea cap- They had to reconcile these diver- formed mounted patrol which con-
The Sharon Building, located on a
tain, and had fixed wooden horses, gent views to create a park. Some sisted of one officer and one horse.
rise in Sharon Meadow, was intend-
all painted gray and housed under a people argued that the whole area Of the 1,017 acres set aside for Rediscovering the Peninsula by Darold
ed as an indoor play space for kids
tent. Through the years, the should be leveled out, flatten the the park, 270 on the eastern section Fredricks appears in the Monday edi-
and moms on bad-weather days.
carousels evolved, to be replaced or dunes and fill in the depressions. had been transformed into a thing of tion of the Daily Journal.
THE DAILY JOURNAL BAY AREA Monday• July 19, 2010 5
“Nobody wants to see the McDonald’s-ization of cannabis.”
— Dan Scully,one of the 400 “patient-growers”who supply Oakland’s largest retail medical marijuana dispensary
Police reports
Narcotics evidence analysis slowed
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS the LA County Board of sate for a $128 million budget cut. been affected by the backlog.
What happened?
A drunk man struck a woman and then a
Supervisors. Last month the Times reported A detective with the Monrovia valet but was on the ground bleeding from
LOS ANGELES — Overtime Baca said trained analysts used the sheriff’s department is col- Police Department said results his head when police arrived on the 1400
reductions as a result of budget to handle the heavy load of nar- lecting fewer fingerprints because used to come back in a week or block of Bayshore Highway in
cuts have significantly slowed the cotics cases by working overtime. of budget cuts, leading to delays two but now take, on average, up Burlingame before 9:47 p.m. Thursday,
analysis of narcotics evidence by Last year the average backlog, in scores of criminal investiga- to a month. The agency submits July 15.
the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s before the cuts, was 256 cases, tions. There was a backlog of evidence such as pills or suspect-
Department, according the sher- The Los Angeles Times reported more than 100 prints waiting to ed cocaine to determine its con-
iff. Sunday. That number has more be analyzed and compared tents. FOSTER CITY
“The department continues to than tripled, sheriff’s officials against a statewide database. “It’d be nice if it was quicker,” Warrant arrest. A juvenile was arrested at
experience operational impacts, said, growing to 920 unanalyzed Other law enforcement agen- said Monrovia police Detective the intersection of Catamaran Street and Shell
especially within critical support cases. cies in LA County that outsource Alex Perenishko. “We’d be able Boulevard on a no-bail warrant for violating a
and investigative units,” Sheriff Baca recently cut overtime their narcotics analysis to the to answer the courts’ questions court order before 10:11 p.m. Sunday, July 4.
Lee Baca wrote in a report to expenses in an effort to compen- sheriff’s department say they’ve faster. Warrant arrest. A 22-year-old woman was
arrested on East Third Avenue for a $20,000
misdemeanor warrant for traffic violations out
Suspect hospitalized in freeway shootout of Merced County before 2:50 a.m. Saturday,
July 3.
Accident. A motorcyclist was transported to
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Interstate 580, said CHP Sgt. The suspect, identified only as Sunday afternoon while the Stanford hospital after a collision with a car
Trent Cross. a 45-year-old Groveland man, investigation continued. on Port Royal Avenue before 9:08 a.m.
OAKLAND — Authorities say Cross said the driver, who was was hospitalized in stable condi- The freeway shootout came
a man who was armed and wear- Saturday, July 3.
armed with a high-powered rifle, tion at a local hospital. less than a day after Oakland Theft. A man was arrested after shoplifting
ing a bulletproof vest was hospi- a shotgun and a handgun, opened The two officers, who have not and Bay Area Rapid Transit
talized Sunday after he opened from the Costco on Metro Center Boulevard
fire on the officers. been identified, suffered minor police officers shot and killed before 1:30 p.m. Saturday, July 3.
fire on two California Highway The officers returned fire, hit- injuries from flying glass. a man after they said he ran
Patrol officers during a traffic ting the suspect multiple times. The shooting prompted the clo- from officers and then charged SAN CARLOS
stop on an Oakland freeway. Investigators on Sunday were sure of Interstate 580 around 1 at them while holding two
The trouble began early still trying to determine the num- a.m. while police investigated. knives Suspicious circumstances. A loud explosion
Sunday when the officers pulled ber of shots fired, though Cross CHP said all westbound lanes of Both incidents are being inves- was heard during the night and debris found
over the driver of a car that was said the exchange “lasted for a Interstate 580 near Grand Avenue tigated by Oakland police and in a schoolyard on 800 Tamarack Avenue
speeding and weaving on few minutes.” in Oakland remained closed early additional agencies. before 8:12 a.m. Thursday, July 8.
Burglary. One or more thieves entered
through an unlocked patio window and stole a
laptop and a camera from a residence on the
Zsa Zsa Gabor to have hip replacement surgery 100 block of Elm Street before 7:33 p.m.
Thursday, July 8.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Monday. floor, according to Blanchette. Auto burglary. A vehicle’s passenger-side
Gabor remained in a Los Angeles “She was watching her favorite window was smashed and a laptop stolen on
LOS ANGELES — Zsa Zsa Gabor hospital Sunday with her husband, show, ’Jeopardy,’ when the phone Kirkwood Way before 11:43 a.m. Wednesday,
will have surgery to replace the hip she Prince Frederic von Anhalt, and other rang,” he said. “She reached over to July 7.
broke when she fell out of bed in her family members by her side. pick it up and fell.” Noise ordinance violation. The loud singing
Bel Air home, her publicist said Sunday. She was watching television in her He said several bones were broken, coming from two people on the 500 block of
John Blanchette said the 93-year-old Bel Air home when she reached to but said he didn’t know any other Chestnut Street was generating complaints
Zsa Zsa Gabor actress will undergo the procedure before 11:03 p.m. Wednesday, July 7.
answer the phone and tumbled to the details of her injuries.
THE DAILY JOURNAL NATION Monday• July 19, 2010 7
World briefs
Suicide bombing at Pakistani mosque wounds 8
ISLAMABAD — A suicide bomber ran past guards at a
minority Shiite mosque in eastern Pakistan then blew himself up
Sunday, wounding eight worshippers, officials said. The attack
appeared to be the latest in a string by Sunni extremists against
other Muslims they consider infidels. It took place in Sargodha
city, which is in Punjab, Pakistan’s most populous province.
Letters to the editor Our pages belong to you, our readers, and we
choose to reflect the diverse character of this
dynamic and ever-changing community.
Publisher
Jerry Lee
Keeping an eye First, is there enough money that I wrote a poem titled, “The was the illegal funding of the Editor in Chief
allocated to pay for the complete Ghosts of Coyote Point”: Contras leading to the Iran-Contra Jon Mays
out for seniors project from San Francisco to Los There are silent monuments at scandal, something that should Sports Editor
Nathan Mollat
Editor, Angeles. If the project runs out of Coyote Point; Where restless have resulted in the impeachment
of Ronald Reagan. Predictably, Copy Editor/Page Designer
My thanks to Jack Kirkpatrick money and the project has not been ghosts yearn to be heard. Erik Oeverndiek
for his informative and helpful let- completed, what then? The ‘20s Pacific City packed ‘em Shultz tip-toed around the issue.
Production Manager
ter, “Fill out the forms” in the July Second, based upon the estimat- in; With flappers, flivvers and boot- According to The New York Times Nicola Zeuzem
9 edition of the Daily Journal. I did ed cost of completion, what is the leg gin. — undisclosed by PBS — the doc- Production Assistant
the necessary and copied the infor- anticipated inflation figure, hence The waves at the half-moon umentary was partially sponsored Julio Lara
mation for four of my senior neigh- the true cost of the project? We just beach reach the knees; A lure in by corporations directly linked to Marketing & Events
Shultz’s career, most prominently Kerry McArdle
bors who otherwise might have need to look in our own backyard heat, but not fog and breeze.
missed the deadline for the senior and look at the Bay Bridge project The roller coaster, the dance the Bechtel Corporation. Another Senior Reporter
noted omission was Shultz’s role in Michelle Durand
tax exemption. I am grateful that to see cost overruns and misman- floor, and pier; All gone without a
supporting the disastrous invasion Reporters
Kirkpatrick and others are also agement of taxpayers’ money. tear. Emanuel Lee, Heather Murtagh, Bill Silverfarb
watching our politicians and offi- Third, what is the estimated con- There are other ghosts. Indian, of Iraq. Coincidently, Bechtel won
cials as they try to scheme their struction cost difference per linear missionaries, farmers. But most huge construction contracts during Senior Correspondent: Events
Susan E. Cohn
way around Proposition 13 and mile for above ground, at grade, wore the blue; Of the merchant Shultz’s tenure as director.
avoid living within their means. open trench, and tunneling and marine of World War II. Granting the ‘no-bid exclusive’ Business Staff
Charlotte Andersen Anthony Aspillera
how does that figure for the They trained here after Pacific contracts to Bechtel was severely Mark Aspillera Jennifer Bishop
Peninsula? City’s fun; And died at faraway castigated by the special inspector Keith Blake Gloria Brickman
general for Iraq reconstruction. Gale Divver Robert O’Leary
David Jonson Fourth, has there been a compar- places, like the Murmansk run. Jeff Palter Kris Skarston
Burlingame ison between union and non-union Today there’s a Coyote Point PBS has unwittingly been used for
Museum; but don’t look for any of political gain. The company that
labor and if not, why? Interns • Correspondents • Contractors
the above. It’s dedicated to animals produced the film — Free to Michael Almonte Diana Clock
Questions for Caltrain and plants. Can’t you feel the love? Choose Media — has received Michael Costa Philip Dimaano
Darold Fredricks Miles Freeborn
Rich Grogan funding from the conservative Brian Grabianowski William Jeske
Editor, Bradley Foundation which is part Cheri Lucas April May
In regards to “City criticizes Burlingame Nick Rose Theresa Seiger
high-speed rail alternative” in the James O.Clifford, Sr. of the “Palmer R. Chitester Fund.” Andrew Scheiner Alex Shamis
“Turmoil and Triumph” falls far Eliot Storch Jeremy Venook
June 19 edition of the Daily Redwood City short of PBS’s general guidelines
Journal, I, too, have funding ques- An ode to Coyote Point insisting that producers adhere to Correction Policy
tions. Editor, the highest professional standards The Daily Journal corrects its errors.
Caltrain has demonstrated the Thanks to the “Rediscovering the If you question the accuracy of any article in
including “real or perceived con-
ability to alter the facts to create a Peninsula” column on the Pacific George Shultz’s ties flicts of interest.” I urge concerned
the Daily Journal, please contact the editor at
news@smdailyjournal.com
reality that does not exist, in that it City amusement park written by Editor, readers to write to PBS ombuds- or by phone at: 344-5200, ext. 107
has not addressed the below ques- Darold Fredericks in the July 12, It is regrettable that PBS allowed man Michael Getler, and ask him
tions with straight-forward 2010 issue of the San Mateo Daily its reputation to be marred and to investigate the relationship SMDAILYJOURNAL.COM
answers. Also, it seems to me that Journal, I learned another chapter compromised by airing the docu- between George Shultz and the Follow us on Twitter and Facebook:
Caltrain’s spokespeople have in the history of Coyote Point. I mentary “Turmoil and Triumph”— corporate sponsors of “Turmoil and facebook.com/smdailyjournal
adopted the attitude that they do certainly would not have learned it an uncritical, distorted and flatter- Triumph” (ombudsman@pbs.org,
not want to address any questions at the Coyote Point Museum, a ing history of the Reagan era. 703- 739-5290). twitter.com/smdailyjournal
that contradict their preconceived museum that would be better Secretary of State George Shultz Jagjit Singh Visit our community forum at:
opinions and push forward with served if it featured more human was gushingly self-aggrandizing.
this “Albatross” of a rail program. history. I felt so strongly about this Glaringly omitted from the film Los Altos www.smdailyjournal.com/forum
10 Monday• July 19, 2010 BUSINESS THE DAILY JOURNAL
Business brief
Developer scaling back ski resort plans
MINTURN, Colo. — The company developing a private
ski resort in Minturn has scaled back the original develop-
BP’s future in doubt
By Chris Kahn and Jane Wardell will likely make it a smaller company with quantify other potential costs and liabilities
er’s plans in response to the recession and concerns about THE ASSOCIATED PRESS reduced cash flow. associated with the incident.”
how much water it would use. “We still don’t have any way of gauging” Those include:
Canada-based Crave Real Estate removed Ginn Co.’s NEW YORK — The future of BP PLC how much BP could eventually spend on • Possible civil fines of up to $1,000 for
plans for a golf course, hotel and two-thirds of the com- has shifted in recent days from a death- the spill, Macquarie Research analyst Jason every barrel of oil spilled. With the govern-
mercial space from designs for Battle Mountain. The new watch discussion to a debate about how Gammel said. “We’re certainly not buying ment’s estimate of the spill ranging from
plan envisions the town providing most of the restaurants valuable the British oil giant will be after it the stock.” 2.15 million to 4.3 million barrels, the fine
and businesses for the resort community. It also is reducing finishes paying for the worst offshore oil Others are more encouraged. “People are could be from $2.15 billion to $4.3 billion.
the number of planned ski lifts from 13 to four or five. spill in U.S. history. relatively optimistic about the situation for • The government also wants BP to pay
BP gained temporary control of its bro- the first time since this started,” said royalties at a rate of 18.75 percent on the oil
ken well in the Gulf of Mexico on Dougie Youngson, an analyst with it collected from the well. BP put that fig-
Thursday and is counting on shutting it off Arbuthnot Securities in London. ure at 826,800 barrels. However, the com-
permanently within weeks. Its shares have BP shares traded in the U.S. were worth pany could also owe royalties on the oil
regained more than a quarter of the value $60.48 on April 20, hours before the explo- spillled into the Gulf if investigators deter-
lost in the wake of the April 20 explosion sion of the drilling rig triggered the oil spill. mine that the spill was the result of BP’s
on the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig. Talk They then spiraled downward to as low as negligence.
of a possible bankruptcy or takeover of the $26.75 during trading on June 28. That • BP has vowed to stay in the Gulf until
company has mostly faded. slide wiped out $105 billion in market cap- the oil is cleaned up, which will take years.
But the company still faces the daunting italization. It’s hired thousands of people to clean
task of paying huge government fines and The stock began to rebound this month beaches and marshes and skim oil off the
royalty payments, cleanup costs, damage as details emerged about the possible sale water. It also has to pay cleanup costs
claims and legal expenses for years. of $10 billion or more in assets to help incurred by the government.
Analysts estimate BP’s final tab for the cover BP’s liabilities. The temporary cap- • Anadarko Petroleum Corp. and MOEX
Gulf oil spill will be anywhere from $50 ping of the well helped send the stock 9 LLC, BP’s partners in the blown-out well,
billion to $100 billion. percent higher last week to $37.10. are contractually obligated to pay 25 per-
Many analysts feel BP can cover the BP promised the Obama administration cent and 10 percent of the costs, respec-
costs if they’re spread out over years or it will set aside $20 billion over four years tively. But they have refused to pay BP’s
even decades. But others don’t like the to pay spill-related claims along the Gulf initial bills totaling $388 million because
uncertainty. They note that the asset sales and has spent $3.5 billion so far. But they claim BP was negligent in its manage-
needed to offset at least part of those costs beyond that, BP says “it is too early to ment of the well.
Jobless in Cuba?
Communism faces
the unthinkable
By Anne-Marie Garcia
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
San Mateo wins baseball title in style Washington Park. San Mateo, Sunday’s play; they also lost to the Johnny Lloyd, who allowed just take-all contest, taking a 4-0 lead
By Emanuel Lee
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF which advances to the state tourna- Tribe twice in the regular-season. three hits and two runs over 6 2/3 after three innings. San Carlos did
ment in Yountville later this week, However, in typical San Mateo innings in Sunday’s second game. make things plenty interesting at the
When the going gets tough, the captured its latest Area 2 title in fashion, it played its best when the “All the guys were pumped up end, scoring two runs in the top of
San Mateo Post 82 baseball team style. The Shockers needed to beat stakes were highest. The Shockers because this team is used to win- the seventh inning and two more in
gets going. the Tribe twice on Sunday after los- steamrolled San Carlos 12-0 in ning, but you still have to go out on the eighth to make it 4-4.
The Shockers won their eighth ing to the regular-season Peninsula Sunday’s first game, which ended the field and do it.” However, San Mateo responded
American Legion Area 2 champi- League champions Saturday in the after five innings due to the mercy And the Shockers have proved with two in the bottom half before
onship in the last nine years on winner’s bracket semifinal. rule. they’re the cream of the American closing things out in the ninth. It
Sunday, defeating San Carlos 6-4 in That made the Shockers 0-3 “It’s a great feeling to get the job Legion crop time and again. They
the winner-take-all title game at against San Carlos entering done again,” said San Mateo pitcher never trailed in the decisive winner- See TITLE, Page 15
S
T. ANDREWS — His day was effective- believe he’s become Perhaps more important, though, he’s most of
ly over by the fourth hole, where Tiger Samson in golf spikes — the way back to being regarded as a golfer instead “Phil and I disagreed,” Ishikawa
Woods needed two tries to get out of a pot after the haircut. of a pariah — at least on the course. As his com- said. “To be so sure of something
bunker. What followed was something rarer still: But Woods is going to fort level rises, so does his confidence. The and I guess I was wrong. I saw the
Woods simply playing out the string in a major. make them look foolish tabloids here did their best all week daring fans to replay and it was closer than I
It’s been a half-dozen years since he came soon enough. give Woods the English version of a Bronx cheer. thought it was initially. I didn’t think
down the back nine on Sunday in a grand slam Only he knows where his Instead, he drew applause from every corner of it was anywhere near close, but I
event with absolutely nothing at stake. With good head is at and his game St. Andrews and saw nothing more provocative still think like I had made it.”
pal Lucas Glover in tow, Woods played fast, remains a work in progress. than three woman who shed their jackets on one Giants closer Brian Wilson (2-1)
casually and laughed a lot, looking to all the Woods still can’t putt, he’s tee to reveal matching Tiger-print blouses — they got the first two outs of the 10th
world like a guy resigned to his fate. Scolds no so-so with his irons and were hired by an Irish bookie looking for public- before giving up Bay’s third single
doubt will point to his performance here as more most troubling, he’s back to ity — yet even they turned out to be on his side. of the game. Davis, who also drove
evidence that all those romps off the course
JIM LITKE making the big mistakes Not long ago, with Woods in the middle of a in a run in the eighth, doubled high
sapped nearly all of his strength and resolve on it. that produce momentum- winning streak that positively spooked his rivals, off the right field wall for the go-
Woods won the last two times the Open killing double-bogeys, as he did at No. 4 Sunday. Stewart Cink wondered what they’d find if they ahead run.
stopped off at St. Andrews, once by a record mar- Yet he hasn’t hit so many tee shots this sweetly in sliced him open. “I was scoring regardless,” Bay
gin, and the best he could muster this time around years. “Maybe,” Cink mused, “nuts and bolts.” said. “I was not going to be
was a tie for 23rd. Coming on the heels of fourth- “It’s ironic that as soon as I start driving it on a But you only had to see Woods talking about stopped.”
place finishes at the Masters and the U.S. Open, string, I miss everything,” he said. “Maybe I his reception on this chilly, wind-swept coast to Mets closer Francisco Rodriguez
two other major championship venues where he should go back to spraying it all over the lot and know how relieved he was. (3-2) blew his fourth save in 26
also won by record margins, they’d have you make everything.”
See LITKE, Page 12 See GIANTS, Page 14
12 Monday• July 19, 2010 SPORTS THE DAILY JOURNAL
played the final seven holes in 1 over par. He the chief executive of the Southern Africa
Sports brief
Bettencourt wins Reno-Tahoe Open
also bogeyed the par-4 14th at Montreux Golf
& Country Club.
Heintz (69) missed a three-foot birdie putt
OPEN
Continued from page 11
PGA. “And there was a great sense of satis-
faction in having a South African caddie with
him, too.”
It was the fifth major for the Springboks
RENO, Nev. — Matt Bettencourt eagled on on the 18 that would have forced a playoff.
the 11th hole, then held off Bob Heintz by a He started the week trying to qualify for a dating to Retief Goosen winning the U.S.
stroke to win for the first time on the PGA Nationwide Tour event in Ohio before he was with a 1-under 71 for a seven-shot victory Open in 2001, and the first at the British Open
Tour. Bettencourt capped his 4-under 68 with notified he’d qualified for Reno and hopped over Lee Westwood, who was never in the since Els won at Muirfield in 2002, a victory
a bogey on No. 18 after a birdie on 17, finish- plane to Nevada on Tuesday. game. that inspired Oosthuizen.
ing the Reno-Tahoe Open at 11-under 277 John Merrick and Mathias Gronberg each The only challenge came from Paul Casey, “Shrek is on the move,” Goosen said. “I
Sunday. After his eagle on the par-5 11th, he shot 69 and tied for third at 9-under. who got within three shots after the eighth knew he had a lot of talent. He grew up in an
hole, then drove the green on the par-4 ninth. area (Mossel Bay) that’s very windy, so for
Oosthuizen answered by hitting driver onto him, these conditions are normal. The guy’s
dedicated, hard-working golfer. But then the green and knocking in a 50-foot eagle putt got one of the best swings on tour. I think he’ll
LITKE
Continued from page 11
again, I always said you have to do it. It’s not
just gimme. You have got to go do it,”
Nicklaus said. “We’ll watch.”
to restore his cushion.
Three holes later, Casey hit into a gorse
bush and made triple bogey, while Oosthuizen
be around for many years to come.”
Some 45 miles away, Player was returning
from a golf outing and listening to every shot
The scene shifts first to Firestone, where holed an 18-foot birdie putt. on the radio, proud as can be. He saw the
Woods has won the tour event seven times, Oosthuizen spent the final hour soaking up potential during a practice round they played
“Unfortunately, I wasn’t in the lead, but still and then to Wisconsin and Whistling Straits, an atmosphere unlike any other in golf with at the Masters this year.
it was very warm. ... For them to be as warm site of next month’s PGA Championship and his caddie, Zack Rasego. He finished at 16- Player called Oosthuizen on Sunday morn-
as they were,” Woods said, then let his voice the season’s final major. The last time Woods under 272 and became the first player since ing and gave him a pep talk.
trail off for a moment. played in the PGA there, he finished tied for Tony Lema in 1964 to win his first major at St. “I told him he’s got to realize that lots of
The question is how long the galleries will 24th. Andrews. people are hitting bad shots,” Player said, not
feel that way, considering how much ground “This week I kept having long putts, and I Just as Lema did when he won, Oosthuizen knowing how few of those the kid would hit.
he’s already given up. wasn’t real steady in the wind out there,” he ordered bottles of champagne for the press. “And I told him the crowd was naturally going
This, after all, was supposed to be his year. said. “Where we’re going to be playing from Never mind that everyone struggled to pro- to show a bias. But I reminded him when I
He was shut out of the majors in 2009, but the here on in, it’s not going to blow like this, so I nounce his name. All that mattered was the played Arnold Palmer in 1961 at the Masters,
first three grand slam events were at courses won’t have that problem.” spelling on the bottom of that claret jug. And only my wife and my dog was pulling for me.
where Woods had won seven of his career Maybe. yes, the engraver used the abbreviated version I told him he’s got to get in there and be more
total of 14 — Augusta, Pebble Beach and the Whistling Straits sits along the bluffs of — Louis — not his given name of Lodewicus determined to win.”
Old Course. Lake Michigan, a breezy spot to be sure. But Theodorus Oosthuizen. Oosthuizen was relaxed as he could be, put-
Few doubted he’d be a step or two closer to it’s nothing like St. Andrews, where stiff gusts With the fifth victory of his career, ting his arm around Rasego after hitting off
Jack Nicklaus’ record of 18 by the time his jet off the North Sea toss around almost anything Oosthuizen moved to No. 15 in the world. the 18th tee and walking over the Swilcan
left Scotland in the distance. Then his SUV that isn’t tied down. For all his fond memories And as a sign of just how global golf has Bridge, thousands of fans packed into the
went pin-balling down the driveway hours of the place, Woods was already focusing become, it’s the second time this decade that grandstands, along the road and peering out
after what must have been a tense somewhere down the road. the four major championship trophies reside the shop windows.
Thanksgiving dinner and changed everything. “You’ve won half your majors at venues on four continents. “It’s a proud moment for us, especially with
In January, while Woods was still in hiding that we’ve seen this year,” a reporter began. “Nobody was going to stop him,” said the Old Man, winning on his birthday,”
and on what he called an “indefinite break,” “How disappointed are you to be walking Casey, whose adventures in the gorse sent him Rosega said. “Winning at St. Andrews, it’s
Nicklaus said, “If Tiger is going to pass my away with none this year?” to a 75 and a tie for third with Rory McIlroy unbelievable. He deserves what he’s just
record, this is a big year for him.” By June, Woods cracked a smile. (68) and Henrik Stenson (71). “He didn’t miss done.”
Jack had changed his tune only slightly. “The good news,” he said, “is I’ve won half a shot today. I don’t know if he missed one all The 150th anniversary of golf’s oldest
“Do I still think Tiger will break my record? of them not on these venues, too.” week. That was four days of tremendous golf. championship was memorable in so many
Yeah, I think he probably will. He is a very He didn’t flinch today.” ways.
No, there was only that gap-tooth smile that It began with Rory McIlroy tying the major
earned him the nickname “Shrek” from his championship record with a 63 in some of the
friends. And there was amazement across his calmest conditions at the course. It ended with
face when he cradled the oldest trophy in golf, someone other than Woods hoisting the claret
a silver claret jug with his name etched along- jug in front of the R&A clubhouse.
side Woods, Jack Nicklaus, Ben Hogan, and Woods tapped in on the final hole and
the other South African winners — Gary removed his cap to salute the gallery, just as
Player, Bobby Locke and Ernie Els, his men- he did the last two Opens at St. Andrews.
tor. Only this time, the tournament was still two
Without the Ernie Els & Fancourt hours from finishing. Woods made two dou-
Foundation in South Africa, the son of a ble bogeys on his way to a 72 and tied for
farmer could not have afforded the travel 23rd.
required to reach the game’s highest level. It was his seventh tournament of the year
“It was great to have a South African win- without a victory, matching the longest
ning it on Mandela Day,” said Dennis Bruyns, drought of his career.
THE DAILY JOURNAL SPORTS Monday• July 19, 2010 13
World Series of Poker finalists eye Nov.showdown where he seemed unstoppable at the from the University of California,
By Oskar Garcia
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS series. He won the series’ first open San Diego, shook his head and
event, a $50,000 buy-in mixed game shrugged at the result, which
LAS VEGAS — A weary group championship entered only by dropped him from the chip lead to
of card sharks, exhausted by a no- poker’s biggest heavyweights and the middle of the hunt.
limit Texas Hold ’em session that wealthy — very wealthy — hope- “It was a bummer,” Cheong said.
ended nearly 18 hours after its first fuls. “But that’s why you build up a big
hand, scored nearly $812,000 each “I feel like Phil Ivey last year,” stack early — so you can take these
at the World Series of Poker on said Mizrachi, referring to poker’s beats later on and still survive. So I
Sunday and a ticket for a November most famous player who made the felt fine. I was just going to work
finale worth $8.94 million to the main event final table last year and my way back up.”
winner. finished seventh. Matt Affleck, a 23-year-old poker
“My brain is barely functioning Mizrachi was among those who professional from Mill Creek,
— it’s hard for me to even form sen- stayed patient with 10 players left, Wash., didn’t get a second chance
tences right now,” said Joseph during a run where aggression was after going from fifth in chips to
Cheong, 24, of La Mirada, Calif., sparse and some players simply busting in 15th place, winning
after the eighth card session that refused to gamble. $500,165.
morphed from a chaotic free-for-all Others, like 24-year-old John Jonathan Duhamel, who had the
to a 10-man game of chicken. Dolan of Bonita Springs, Fla., took second biggest stack in the tourna-
Cheong and eight others, includ- advantage to pick up chips without ment at the time, called an all-in bet
ing two Canadians, three Floridians, a fight. from Affleck with pocket jacks and
and an Italian, now have 111 days “Honestly, when I got to the final
REUTERS the board showing a 10, nine, seven
before meeting again at the Rio All- German poker professional Sandra Naujoks competes during the first day table, I picked up some pretty awe-
and queen. Affleck turned up pocket
Suite Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas of the 41st annual World Series of Poker no-limit Texas Hold ‘em main event some hands,” Dolan said.
aces, but an eight on the river gave
to play for additional prize money at the Rio hotel-casino in Las Vegas,Nevada July 5.The nine finalists in the Dolan began 10-handed play with
24.55 million chips, and less than Duhamel a queen-high straight and
held in an interest-bearing account. tourney will compete in November.
two hours later had the second- a commanding 51 million chip lead.
“I tried to be the best,” said
Filippo Candio, 26, of Cagliari, biggest stack at the table with 46.3 “Don’t have any words to explain
burst a bubble worth far more than Cheong said. “It just gives good what just happened,” Affleck wrote
Italy, who doubled his chips with the nearly $177,000 difference in players an edge over the rest of the million chips.
pocket aces shortly before the ses- Chips have no actual monetary on Twitter after being eliminated.
pay between 10th and ninth place. It field.”
sion ended and took a big bite from value. Each player must lose all his “Eighty percent favorite on turn to
cemented the latest final table for But this final table has weeded
Cheong earlier Saturday. chips to be eliminated. be chip leader at final table of ...
poker’s richest tournament — a new out the one-in-a-million dreamers,
“I tried to use all my skill with the group in a new scenario for poker leaving nine skilled players who Cheong started session Saturday main event.”
best players in the world,” he said. fans to dissect, follow and analyze battled against bad beats, roller- with the chip lead among 27 play- Duhamel, 22, of Boucherville,
Poker fate finally gave way after before they return Nov. 6 for a ninth coaster chip swings and each other. ers, but took a big hit early after Quebec, finished the night with the
more than 12 hours at the tables session. “I’ve never folded so many hands Candio called an all-in bet with chip lead with nearly 66 million
when Kansas auto dealer Brandon They emerged from a field of in my life,” said Michael “Grinder” about a 13 percent chance to win. chips.
Steven was eliminated with an ace- 7,319 players that plunked down Mizrachi, a 29-year-old poker pro- Candio’s two pair, fives and sixes, When asked whether he was
king against 25-year-old Matthew $10,000 to enter, the first wave fessional from Miami who finished were behind Cheong’s aces and aware he made a grown man cry
Jarvis’ pocket queens. Steven didn’t starting July 5. the session sixth in chips. sixes. But running cards saved because of poker, Duhamel said: “I
improve his hand and Jarvis, a busi- Cheong said he bought in despite “It felt like a satellite,” he said, Candio’s tournament with a straight am. It’s part of the game.”
ness student from Surrey, British not having a large enough bankroll referring to a type of tournament and sent the Italian into a frenzy as The remaining finalists were
Columbia, took the rest of his chips. to warrant it. used to award a seat in a larger he scurried around tableside press Cuong “Soi” Nguyen, 37, of Santa
Steven, 36, of Wichita, won “There’s no other tournament event. and kneeled and pointed upward in Ana, Calif.; John Racener, 24, of
$635,011 for 10th place. that’s worth this much, with a field Mizrachi is the most well-known celebration. Port Richey, Fla.; and Jason Senti,
The elimination after sunrise this soft and a structure this good,” player left, finishing a summer Cheong, who has two degrees 25, of St. Louis Park, Minn.
14 Monday• July 19, 2010 SPORTS THE DAILY JOURNAL
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16 Monday• July 19, 2010 SPORTS THE DAILY JOURNAL
D
that sneaks into people’s dreams is DiCaprio’s o you provide identification for
biggest opening weekend, topping his previ- your cat? I realize I just lost
ous best of $41.1 million for last winter’s more than half our readers —
“Shutter Island.” the dog people — but that’s OK. When it
“Inception” falls far short of director comes to this particular subject, dog peo-
Christopher Nolan’s best, though. Nolan is ple rule and cat people drool. Sorry, it’s
the man who directed the Batman blockbuster just the way it is. Of course, there are
“The Dark Knight,” which opened over the many owners who buck this trend and
same weekend two years ago with a record microchip their feline friend or provide a
$158.4 million. collar and ID tag. I’m simply going on a
Warner Bros. has carved out a niche with dozen years of experience at PHS/SPCA
this particular mid-July weekend. The studio and a few more decades of shelter statis-
followed “The Dark Knight” with a $77.8 tics which say that only about 3 percent
million opening for “Harry Potter and the of all the stray cats received each year are
Half-Blood Prince” over the same weekend reunited with their owners, and that lack
last year. of identification is the overwhelmingly
“We like this spot. Not to sound supersti- primary reason. When owners with miss-
tious, but stay away from this weekend. I own ing cats visit our shelter, we are sensitive
it,” said Dan Fellman, head of distribution for to their awful predicament but try to edu-
Warner Bros. cate nonetheless. Most say that they don’t
The final “Harry Potter” movie debuts on provide a collar and tag because their cat
the same weekend next summer. Warner plans is an indoor cat and never gets out —
to open Nolan’s third “Batman” movie over except this one time. If we had a dollar
that weekend two years from now, though for every time we heard that, we could
Fellman said the studio could move it to an buy cat collars and ID tags for every cat
earlier date that summer. in our county. Hey, that’s not a bad idea
Strong reviews helped “Inception,” which ... more on that thought later. Other cat
“Inception”was the weekend’s top movie,earning more than $60 million. owners fear that their indoor/outdoor
stars DiCaprio as leader of a team that nor-
cat’s collar could become entangled on a
mally breaks into people’s dreams to steal office, following “Prince of Persia: The Sands tree branch or fence. Our shelter’s offi-
their secrets but now has been hired to do the of Time,” which was unable to crack the $100 cers respond to all kinds of animal res-
opposite — plant an idea in a wealthy heir’s Top ten movies million mark. cues but have never had that particular
subconscious. “Jerry’s working on ’Pirates 4’ as we call. We can say with great confidence
Slipping to second place with $32.7 million 1.“Inception,”$60.4 million. speak,” Viane said of the Johnny Depp sequel that this concern is overblown. Still, pet
was the previous weekend’s No. 1 movie, 2.“Despicable Me,”$32.7 million.
due out next summer. “I’ll go to bat with Jerry neckwear manufacturers make elastic
Steve Carell’s animated hit “Despicable Me.” 3.“The Sorcerer’s Apprentice,”
any day, because his track record is pretty collars or breakaway collars to address
The Universal release raised its 10-day total $17.4 million.
darn good.” this very concern and ensure cats’ safety.
to $118.4 million. 4.“The Twilight Saga:Eclipse,”$13.5 million.
With “Inception” and “Despicable Me,” the It’s high time to change the dress code
Disney’s family adventure “The Sorcerer’s 5.“Toy Story 3,”$11.7 million.
weekend marked a rare instance when two for cats in our county. We’re going to be
Apprentice” was a dud, opening at No. 3 with 6.“Grown Ups,”$10 million.
original stories — not sequels, spinoffs or pushing microchips and collars with ID
$17.4 million, lifting its total to $24.5 million 7.“The Last Airbender,”$7.5 million.
adaptations of comic books, best-sellers or tags and will do so in a way that makes it
since premiering Wednesday. 8.“Predators,”$6.8 million.
other properties — led the box office. difficult to say no. Stay tuned for details
“It’s disappointing to say the least,” said 9.“Knight and Day,”$3.7 million.
and keep the 3 percent figure in mind.
Chuck Viane, head of distribution for Disney, 10.“The Karate Kid,”$2.2 million. Hollywood relies on familiar titles such as
which had high hopes for the movie. “I’m “Iron Man 2,” “The Twilight Saga: Eclipse”
perplexed. I have no response, because I hon- ceress in modern Manhattan. and “Toy Story 3” for most of its big summer
estly don’t know what went wrong.” Bruckheimer has been a blockbuster pro- releases, though the occasional fresh idea Scott oversees PHS/SPCA’s Customer
The movie reunites the team behind the hit ducer for Disney with such hits as “The manages to score with audiences. Service, Behavior and Training,
“National Treasure” movies — Nicolas Cage, Rock,” “Armageddon” and the “Pirates of the “We let all of the sequels and popcorn films Education, Outreach, Field Services,
producer Jerry Bruckheimer and director Jon Caribbean” franchise. come out and get the summer rolling, then we Humane Investigation, Volunteer, and
Turteltaub — for an action comedy about an But “The Sorcerer’s Apprentice” was the come in here with this original concept,” Media/PR program areas and staff.
ancient wizard training an awkward appren- summer’s second Disney-Bruckheimer pro- Fellman said of “Inception.” “We’re in a good Murray, pictured above, oversees Scott.
tice (Jay Baruchel) to take down an evil sor- duction to come up short at the domestic box place to run now for the rest of the summer.”
18 Monday• July 19, 2010 THE DAILY JOURNAL
Matthew and Ireland Willinger, of San Jeffrey and Bein Dorey-White, of San
Mateo, gave birth to a baby girl at Sequoia Mateo, gave birth to a baby girl at Sequoia
Hospital June 27. Hospital July 8.
THE DAILY JOURNAL LOCAL/CALENDAR Monday• July 19, 2010 19
Calendar
MONDAY, JULY 19 WEDNESDAY, JULY 21
AARP Driver Safety Classes. 9 a.m. Bye, Pain! 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Ye’s
to 1 p.m. South San Francisco Senior Chi Clinic, 105 N. San Mateo Dr.,
Center, 33 Arroyo Drive, South San San Mateo. Reduce pain by acupunc-
Francisco. Upon completion, partici- ture on the reflex and trigger points on
pants will receive a DMV certificate the ears. Free. Suggested $5 donation
for a 3-year discount on their auto to Leukemia and Lymphoma Society.
insurance. $12 for AARP members, For more information call 558-8118.
$14 for non-members. For more
information and to make reservations Introduction to Progressive Bridge.
call 829-3820. 9:30 a.m. to 11 a.m. Fitness Center of
Little House Auditorium, 800 Middle
Movies at Little House. Little House Ave., Menlo Park. $2 members, $3
Auditorium, 800 Middlefield Ave., non-members.
Menlo Park. 1p.m. Featuring
“Hopscotch”. $2 members, $3 non- Community Forums at Little
members. For more information call House. 11 a.m. Little House, 800
326-2025. Middle Avenue, Menlo Park. ‘OK!
I’ve Had a Heart Attack. Now What?’.
The Story of the Mills Family. 2 Guest speaker, Robin Weddell. Free.
p.m. to 3:30 p.m. Cimino Senior Day For more information call 326-2025.
Center, 755 California Drive,
Burlingame. Hosted by Joanne Magic of Chin Chin. 1 p.m. to 2 p.m.
Garrison, Burlingame Historical The Shops at Tanforan, Lower Level,
Society. Free. For more information in front of Old Navy, 1150 El Camino
call 344-4900. Real, San Bruno. See an exciting
magic show by international champi-
Venture Finance SIG: Raising on magician Chin-Chin. Also learn a
Venture Funding vs. Early cool magic trick. You won’t want to
Acquisition. 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. miss this fun event, part of Summer
DLA Piper, 2000 University Ave., Mall Camp, with free events all sum-
East Palo Alto. Join us with two insid- mer. Free. For more information call
ers who help guide entrepreneurs 873-2001.
Athena Kim paints cantaloupes with Hasani,who was at the time unnamed,at the San Francisco Zoo in March 2009.Hasani daily. $10 for SDForum members,
$25 for non-members. For more Paws and Claws Wildlife Show.
was named after entries from an international contest were lowered to five names. Cantaloupes were painted five colors, information call (408) 414-5950. 1:30 p.m. Coyote Point Museum,
representing the potential names.Hasani’s father chose the green cantaloupe,giving the young gorilla a name. 1651 Coyote Point Drive, San Mateo.
Senior Ballroom Dancing. 6:45 to Learn about Coyote Point’s museum’s
10 p.m. Burlingame Women’s Club, non-releasable animals. For more
beat his chest; it’s so natural for the other “[It taught me] a lot of patience,” she
KIM
Continued from page 1
gorillas. It was interesting to see how the
other gorillas, even the birth mother,
reacted [to him],” she said.
said with a laugh. “And they develop at
their own pace. It’s different with
Hasani; I knew he’d be a lot easier than
241 Park Rd., Burlingame. Free danc-
ing lessons 6:40 to 7:30 open dance to
follow. Live music by Nob Hill
Sounds. $8 members, $10 guests.
Light refreshments. For more infor-
information
coyotepmuseum.org.
visit
TREE
Continued from page 1
store selling a variety of goods, includ-
ing food products.
However, the 13.1 acre property is
Planning Commission Monday night to
amend the permit to allow different uses
in the future.
Facebook, Myspace and Twitter
Class. Noon. Brisbane Library, 250
Visitacion Ave. Learn about popular
social networking sites, including
how to create your own account, find
wine and cheese tasting with pairings
from a representative from Whole
Foods. Free. For more information
call 378-3000.
zoned for a planned community and Doing so gives the property owner far helpful applications and stay safe. Water-Wise Ways: Stopping the
requires a conditional use permit for greater flexibility because he won’t need Previous computer basics and word Drain on your Wallet. 6:30 p.m. to
processing or equivalent suggested. 8:30 p.m. Foster City Council
Laurel Street but residents successfully retail. to return to the Planning Commission Chambers, 620 Foster City Blvd.,
Free. For more information call 415-
fought against what they felt would The specific building was constructed every time the use changes, according to 467-2060. Foster City. This seminar will help
detract from the downtown feel. attendees learn about the most ineffi-
for Hollywood Video which occupied it Associate Planner Jill Lewis. Learn to Play Mah Jong. 1:30 p.m. cient sources of indoor water use,
Dollar Tree stores are also located in until recently. In February, the chain’s to 3:30 p.m. Fitness Center of Little what products are available to
Belmont and South San Francisco. owner, Movie Gallery, Inc. filed for The San Carlos Planning Commission House, 800 Middle Ave., Menlo Park. improve efficiency, and what rebates
Free. for more information call 326- are available to save money and
The 7,500-square-foot property needs bankruptcy and closed approximately meets 7 p.m. Monday, July 19 at City 2025. water. Free. For more information go
minimal facade work and only minor one third of its 2,600 stores. Hall, 600 Elm St., San Carlos. to www.fostercity.org/news/go-
Tuesday Tea at Little House. 2 p.m. green.cfm.
to 3 p.m. Little House Auditorium,
800 Middlefield Ave., Menlo Park.
State Champion singers and dancers
The Sierra Club contends the bond Since the 2002 legislation that created
WATER
from the Priscilla Stanford Studio will
and a series of water-related bills signed BAWSCA, voters and legislators have perform their exciting show.
Refreshments will be served. $1
into law earlier this year, will provide $3 enacted additional laws that mandate members, $2 non-members. For more
billion to build environmentally harmful regional planning and conservation, information call 326-2025.
Continued from page 1
dams and will create debt service of according to Ruskin’s office. The KidsWorld Under the Sea. 5:30
$800 million a year for 30 years. Legislature set water conservation tar- p.m. 3 Serramonte Ctr., Daly City.
Currently, the state Legislature is con- There is not a single earmark in the gets of 10 percent by 2015 and 20 per-
Including interactive performances
with singing, dancing, games, crafts
sidering removing the bond from the bond package for projects or conserva- cent by 2020. AB 2488 allows and fun learning opportunities. Free.
2010 ballot and putting it on the 2012 tion efforts in San Mateo County, a fact BAWSCA to help its member agencies, Fore more information e-mail shel-
bi@spinpr.com
ballot, an idea supported by that caused state Assemblyman Jerry at their request, meet urban water use
Schwarzenegger in consideration of the Hill, D-San Mateo, to vote against put- targets and receive financial assistance Dancing on the Square. 6 p.m. to 8
p.m. Courthouse Square, 2200
state’s $19 billion current deficit. ting the bond on the November ballot. for that purpose. Broadway, Redwood City. Show off
The Legislature may delay the bond Ruskin did vote to put the bond on the AB 2488 also updates code to reflect your salsa dancing with instructors
until November 2012, leave it on the bal- from Vera. Free. For more informa-
November ballot so California voters changes in member agencies and their tion visit
lot this year, renegotiate the scope of the could decide whether to incur more debt water allotments and simplifies proce- redwoodcity.org/events/dancing.
bond and shift the lineup of projects, cut to keep water safely flowing in dures related to administering the Birth of Impressionism. 7 p.m.
the dollar amount or ditch the entire California. BAWSCA board member oath of office Belmont Library, 1110 Alameda de
package and start over from scratch. las Pulgas. Slide talk about the cur-
Ruskin’s Assembly Bill 2488 received and voting. rent deYoung exhibition. For more
Some environmental groups, including unanimous support in the Legislature. The bill creates a nonexclusive list of information call 591-8286.
the Sierra Club, see the bond as a collec- “The possibility of the bond passing the state bonds that BAWSCA may Meeting on Sustainability. 7 p.m. to
tion of pork projects and favor scrapping gave greater impetus to this legislation,” receive, including any future financing 9 p.m. San Mateo City Council
the bond. Ruskin said. “This bill is important for water management. It also removes Chambers, 330 West 20th Avenue,
San Mateo. Join fellow residents in
“The Sierra Club officially opposes because it clarifies the purposes for the Skyline County Water District from learning about and discussing sustain-
the bond,” said Jim Metropulos, Sierra which BAWSCA was designed.” BAWSCA’s board. The Skyline County ability efforts in our city. Free with
gifts for the first 50 in attendance. For
Club California’s senior advocate. “We The Legislature created BAWSCA in Water District sold its water system to more information visit http://lomapri-
fought against the bad elements of the 2002 under a bill authored by the late the California Water Service Company eta.sierraclub.org/bcfc_events.asp.
bond.” assemblyman Lou Papan. and then dissolved in 2009.
20 Monday • July 19, 2010 COMICS/GAMES THE DAILY JOURNAL
Monday, July 19, 2010 your memory to recall every little detail. Put things to paper
before trying to pass things on.
That special trip or vacation you’ve always dreamed of taking
has some chance of becoming a reality in the year ahead. If CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - You aren’t likely to func-
things don’t fall in place for you, replace it with another big tion too well playing second fiddle today, so don’t get involved
desire you know can be fulfilled. in any situation where the control is totally in the hands of
another. Make sure you have a say in things.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - It’s likely to be the little unno-
ticeable things that determine whether or not you can suc- AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Nobody is likely to find fault
cessfully handle a serious situation or problem. Know what with the way you manage a major assignment, as long as you
you’re getting into before jumping in. don’t have to handle the details. It’ll be the small, insignificant
factors that’ll trip you up.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Volunteering to take on something
for which you’re ill equipped to handle is just plain dumb, PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Guard against talking out of
especially if there’s a chance it might be more intricate than it turn and revealing more than you should to the wrong people.
initially looks. Let an expert handle things. The way to qualify your listeners is if there is a possibility one
among them could misuse the information.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Think before you open your
mouth today or you’re likely to let something out of the bag ARIES (March 21-April 19) - Don’t be such a stickler for all
that is meant to be confidential. You wouldn’t want to be the rules and details when engaged in a friendly game today
blamed for spreading a private matter around. with your pals or family. Relax and enjoy the sport just for the
fun of playing it.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) - In order to fulfill your hopes and
expectations today, you will have to be extremely methodical TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - That person you were depend-
and careful about how you go about doing so. It’ll take practi- ing upon to assist you with a project that requires help might
cality to fulfill your dream. not be available today. You’re going to have to either fly solo
or put it off until another day.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - It might take multiple stages Previous
to fulfill something that is important to you, so don’t try to GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Before jumping in and volun-
rush things along. Making numerous small mistakes could teering to untangle a mess another has made, assess the Sudoku
add up to one big failure. situation more thoroughly. The complexities might be far more
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14
15 16 17
18 19 20
21 22 23
24 25 26 27 28 29
30 31 32 33
34 35 36
37 38 39
40 41
42 43 44 45 46 47 48
49 50 51 52 53
54 55 56
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104 Training 110 Employment 110 Employment 110 Employment 110 Employment 203 Public Notices
TERMS & CONDITIONS HOME CARE AIDES FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
The San Mateo Daily Journal Classi- DELIVERY DRIVER Multiple shifts to meet your needs. Great STATEMENT #239922
fieds will not be responsible for more CAREGIVERS pay & benefits, Sign-on bonus, 1yr exp The following person is doing business
than one incorrect insertion, and its lia- Wanted: Independent Contractor required. as: Michelle Russell, 110 Crestwood
bility shall be limited to the price of one 2 years to provide service of delivery of Matched Caregivers (650)839-2273, Drive, DALY CITY, CA 94015 is hereby
insertion. No allowance will be made for (408)280-7039 or (888)340-2273 registered by the following owner: Mayuri
errors not materially affecting the value experience the Daily Journal six days per
week, Monday through Satur-
Mandel, same address. The business is
of the ad. All error claims must be sub- conducted by an Individual. The regis-
mitted within 30 days. For full advertis- required. day. Experience with newspa- SALES -
trants commenced to transact business
ing conditions, please ask for a Rate per delivery required. Must under the FBN on N/A.
Card. Immediate have valid licenses and appro- Putnam Auto Group /s/ Mayuri Mandel /
Placement priate insurance coverage to Buick Pontiac GMC This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk-Recorder of San Mateo
provide this service in order to $50,000 Average Expectation
106 Tutoring on all assignments be eligible. a must…
County on 07/14/10. (Published in the
San Mateo Daily Journal, 07/19/10,
5 Men or Women for 07/26/10, 08/02/10, 08/09/10).
CALL (650)777-9000 Papers are available for pickup Career Sales Position
TUTORING in San Mateo at 3:00 a.m.
• Car Allowance
Please apply in person Monday- • Paid insurance w/life & dental NOTICE OF APPLICATION
Spanish, French, CAREGIVERS Friday only, 10am to 4pm at The • 401k plan
• Five day work week
TO SELL ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES
Date of Filing Application: 06/25/2010
Daily Journal, 800 S. Claremont
Italian Elder Care Aides, CNA's live in. St #210, San Mateo.
To Whom It May Concern:
The Name(s) of the applicant(s) is/are:
Great Jobs, competitive pay. Top Performers earn $100k Plus!! TOTTENHAM WINES & SPIRITS
Hourly and live in available. Two Bilingual a plus
Certificated Local years experience with excellent
There are currently no openings, Paid training included
INTERNATIONAL LLC
The applicant(s) listed above are apply-
but we will store your application
Teacher references. Great Benefits! on file for the next opening.
Call Mr. Olson
1-866-788-6267
ing to Department of Alcoholic Beverage
Control to sell alcoholic beverages at:
All Ages! Home Sweet Home Care 1300 BURLINGAME AVE
(650)556-9906 BURLINGAME, CA 94010
(650)573-9718 claudia@homesweethomecare.com
NEWSPAPER INTERNS
Type of license applied for:
42 - On-Sale Beer And Wine - Public
Premises
110 Employment 110 Employment JOURNALISM San Mateo Daily Journal
July 5, 12, 19, 2010
The Daily Journal is looking for in-
110 Employment NOW HIRING for Live-in Caregiver terns to do entry level reporting, re-
SIGN ON BONUS!!! search, updates of our ongoing fea-
Recruiting for San Mateo, San Francisco tures and interviews. Photo interns al- SAN BRUNO PARK
AVON and Santa Clara areas. We offer excel- so welcome. SCHOOL DISTRICT
SELL OR BUY lent benefits!
*Medical / Vision / Dental / Life Ins. We expect a commitment of four to SURPLUS PROPERTY-BID SALE
Earn up 50% + bonuses * 401K/Credit Union * Direct Deposit eight hours a week for at least four
Hablamos Espanol REQUIREMENTS: months. The internship is unpaid, but CONTACT:
intelligent, aggressive and talented in- San Bruno Park District Office
1(866)440-5795 * 1 yrs experience * Own Vehicle 500 Acacia Avenue
Independent Sales Rep * Car Insurance * Valid Drivers terns have progressed in time into
paid correspondents and full-time re- San Bruno
* Good Communication skills. Ph-650-624-3100
Call today to set up an interview: porters. 8:00am – 4:00pm
DRIVER - 1-800-417-1897 or 650-558-8848
Taxi Driver, clean record, clean back- or send Resume to College students or recent graduates 2 upright Pianos estimated value is
ground, all shifts. (650)222-4080. Dedward@LivHOME.com are encouraged to apply. Newspaper $300. each
experience is preferred but not neces-
sarily required. 2002 Ford Van E-150 (vehicle #3) es-
timated value is $5000.
Please send a cover letter describing
110 Employment 110 Employment your interest in newspapers, a resume
and three recent clips. Before you ap-
ply, you should familiarize yourself
with our publication. Our Web site: 210 Lost & Found
www.smdailyjournal.com.
FOUND SONY Power Shot digital cam-
era, July 14th at Fox School in Belmont.
Send your information via e-mail to (650)593-9294
news@smdailyjournal.com or by reg-
ular mail to 800 S. Claremont St #210,
San Mateo CA 94402. 294 Baby Stuff
DELUXE BABY STROLLER - good con-
dition & ready to use, $25., (650)278-
2702
SALES/MARKETING
INTERNSHIPS 295 Art
The San Mateo Daily Journal is looking
for ambitious interns who are eager to PICTURE PAINTING "jack vettriano"
jump into the business arena with both Portland gallery 26 x 33. $65. (650)345-
110 Employment 110 Employment feet and hands. Learn the ins and outs 1111.
of the newspaper and media industries.
This position will provide valuable PICTURE WITH Frame Jack Vettriano
experience for your bright future. with light attached $100. (650)867-2720
Fax resume (650)344-5290
email info@smdailyjournal.com 296 Appliances
EMERSON MICROWAVE - Like new,
110 Employment 110 Employment 180 Businesses For Sale
$15.,SOLD!
FOOD PROCESSOR
BURLINGAME HAIR STATION for rent. Sumbeam, dual head. slices, chops,
Free 1st Month! Call Hellen @ grinds, liquifies, etc. perfect condition,
(650)520-4474 only $19 650-595-3933
KENMORE DISHWASHER, almond,
SAN BRUNO - Busy Liquor Store. works great. $ 50. Please call 650-961-
Good lease. Asking $280K. (650)817- 9652
5890
MAYTAG WASHER & DRYER - $350.,
(650)341-2813
SAN MATEO - Famous BBQ Restau-
rant, very low rent. Asking $149,000 MINI FRIDGE - 34 inches high, runs well,
(650)817-5890. $85., (650)355-2996
GOT JOBS?
RADIATOR HEATER, oil filled, electric,
Affectionate guy a +. 1500 watts $25. (650)504-3621
Lets talk soon.
Call me NOW!
650.288.4271 TOASTER "PROCTOR Silex" one slice,
Must be 18+. works fine $5. (650)345-1111
UPRIGHT FREEZER - like new, $100 .,
The best career seekers (650)257-7562
read the Daily Journal. 203 Public Notices VACUUM CLEANER heavy duty like
new $45. (650)878-9542
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
We will help you recruit qualified, talented STATEMENT #239638 WEBER GRILL - Never used! Porcelain
individuals to join your company or organization. The following person is doing business
as: Foster Capital Partners, 122 Second
enamel bowl and lid, 22-1/2” with ash
catcher. $50. (650)588-5991
Avenue, Ste. 210, SAN MATEO, CA
The Daily Journal’s readership covers a wide 94401 is hereby registered by the follow-
ing owner: Barton Foster, 601 Chiltern WHIRPOOL FRIDGE side by side $100.,
range of qualifications for all types of positions. Road, HILLSBOROUGH, CA 94010. The (650)756-6778
business is conducted by an Individual.
The registrants commenced to transact
For the best value and the best results, business under the FBN on 05/01/2010. 297 Bicycles
recruit from the Daily Journal... /s/ Barton Foster /
This statement was filed with the Asses- BICYCLE - womens, made in Austria
sor-County Clerk-Recorder of San Mateo $50., (650)483-3693
Contact us for a free consultation County on 06/24/10. (Published in the
San Mateo Daily Journal, 07/12/10, BICYCLE WICKER BASKET -quality
07/19/10, 07/26/10, 08/02/10). thick weave, never used, $25. obo,
(650)260-2664
Call (650) 344-5200 or MENS MOUNTAIN bike 26 inch new 18
Email: ads@smdailyjournal.com THE VENVERLOH Family Foundation's
annual tax return is available for public
speed $99
919-740-4336 San Mateo
inspection. Contact Steven Sui, CPA at
1534 Plaza Lane #180, Burlingame, CA TRAINING BICYCLE 20 inch wheel
94010. 650-697-4888. hooks to larger bicycle like new. SOLD!
22 Monday • July 19, 2010 THE DAILY JOURNAL
298 Collectibles 203 Public Notices 203 Public Notices Drabble Drabble Drabble
5 COLORIZED territorial quarters uncir-
culated $7/all. (408)249-3858
17 Won a game 12 “I approve,” ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE: FORD ‘08 Focus, SE, silver, #9770P,
TOYOTA ‘06 Highlander hybrid,
#9751T, $29,888. Toyota 101. Please
without knocking Tarzan-style 440 Apartments $11,588. Toyota 101. Please mention mention the Daily Journal. (650)365-
the Daily Journal. (650)365-5000 5000
18 Sure thing 13 Often twisted
BELMONT - prime, quiet location, view,
20 Slim fish body part 1 bedroom $1275, 2 bedrooms $1375. FORD ‘85 VICTORIA - Original owner,
43K miles, automatic, all powered. Very TOYOTA ‘06 Tacoma, basic, #9800T,
19 Rocket scientist New carpets, dishwasher, balcony, cov- $7,999 Toyota 101. Please mention the
good condition. $4K, (650)515-5023.
21 Salary ered carports, storage, pool, no pets. Daily Journal. (650)365-5000
22 Devil’s work Von Braun (650)344-8418 or (650)595-0805.
FORD ‘95 Mustang Convertible - V6,
23 Official political 21 Add lanes to REDWOOD CITY - 1 bedroom, full ga-
automatic. Make offer. (650)697-0596 TOYOTA ‘07 FJ Crusier, basic, blue,
#9799T, $24,988. Toyota 101. Please
philosophy 23 Note taker’s need rage, hardwood floors, $1050./mo., INFINITI ‘07 G35 sedan, blue, #9777P mention the Daily Journal. (650)365-
(650)701-0541 5000
24 “We’ll tak __ o’ $23,488. Toyota 101. Please mention
26 Donald Duck, the Daily Journal. (650)365-5000
kindness yet”: TOYOTA ‘07 Tacoma, basic, white,
e.g.
27 Blackjack need
Burns
25 French cosmetics
REDWOOD KIA ‘09 Rondo, LX Base, White,
#9695P, $11,795. Toyota 101. Please
#9609P $15,988. Toyota 101. Please
mention the Daily Journal. (650)365-
5000
28 Mute assent
29 Jeanne d’Arc, par
giant CITY mention the Daily Journal. (650)365-
5000
TOYOTA ‘08 Tundra 2WD truck, white,
26 Circle meas.
exemple 30 On deck
1 bedroom, 1 bath MAZDA ‘08 Mazda3, Sport Ltd Avail,
blue, #9699P, $11,588. Toyota 101.
#9774T, $26,988, AND TOYOTA ‘08
Tundra 2WD truck, blue, #9727T,
31 __-purpose: 32 VIP’s aircraft in senior complex Please mention the Daily Journal.
(650)365-5000
$27,588. Toyota 101. Please mention
the Daily Journal. (650)365-5000
serving two 34 Busy co. on (over 55).
functions MERCEDES BENZ ‘02 C-Class, basic, TOYOTA ‘09 Venza V6, white, $26,988,
33 Penalty caller
Mother’s Day Close to black, #9868T, $9,998. Toyota 101. #9536P. Toyota 101. Please mention
the Daily Journal. (650)365-5000
37 Galsworthy’s Please mention the Daily Journal.
35 “__, humbug!” “The Forsyte __” xwordeditor@aol.com 07/19/10 downtown. (650)365-5000
TOYOTA ‘10 Venza V6, white, $29,588,
36 Now, with “the” Gated entry. NISSAN ‘08 SENTRA, 2.0, white, #9743P. Toyota 101. Please mention
41 Energizer size #9754P, $12,888.Toyota 101. Please the Daily Journal. (650)365-5000
42 Record needles
43 Civil rights icon
Move in mention the Daily Journal. (650)365-
5000 TOYOTA ‘10, Tundra 2WD truck, grade,
silver, #9493T, $24,580. Toyota 101.
Parks
45 Use Listerine,
Special. NISSAN ‘08, Altima, 2.5S, grey,
#9776P, $17,588. Toyota 101. Please
mention the Daily Journal. (650)365-
Please mention the Daily Journal.
(650)365-5000
640 Motorcycles/Scooters 670 Auto Service 670 Auto Parts 680 Autos Wanted
HONDA ‘01 Reflex Scooter - Silver, CHROME AIR horns double trumpets,
$1,999., Call Jesse (650)593-6763 MB GARAGE, INC. compressor for a car $40 in box, Don’t lose money
(650)595-3933
Repair • Restore • Sales on a trade-in or
645 Boats Mercedes-Benz Specialists
consignment!
2165 Palm Ave. FORD ‘73 Maverick/Mercury GT Comet,
Drive Train 302 V8, C4 Auto Trans.
EVINRUDE MOTOR, for Boat, 25 San Mateo Complete, needs assembly, includes ra-
horsepower, $1,500. (415)337-6364. diator and drive line, call for details, Sell your vehicle in
(650)349-2744 $1250., (650)726-9733.
the
PROSPORT ‘97 - 17 ft. CC 80 Yamaha
Pacific, loaded, like new, $9,500 or trade, 672 Auto Stereos Daily Journal’s
(650)583-7946.
Auto Classifieds.
SMART CARE MONNEY CAR AUDIO
650 RVs 400 El Camino Real
We Repair All Brands of Car Just $3 per day.
(1 block north of Holly St.)
REXHALL ‘00 VISION - 53K mi., Ford San Carlos Stereos! iPod & iPhone Wired
Triton V-10 engine. 29 feet long, no pop to Any Car for Music! Quieter
outs. Excellent condition. (650)593-7873 Reach 82,500 drivers
$28,000 OBO, (650)670-7545 Car Ride! Sound Proof Your
Hours: M-F, 8a-4p, Sat. 8a-5p
Car! 31 Years Experience! from South SF to
See Our Coupons & Save!
WHISPER KING RV WATER PUMP- 2001 Middlefield Road Palo Alto
new, 100 PSI 12 volt 2 GPM $70.,
(650)347-5104 Redwood City
670 Auto Parts (650)299-9991 Call
CHEVY TAHOE 3rd row seats like new
$75 obo, (650)367-8949
(650)344-5200
ads@smdailyjournal.com
680 Autos Wanted
CHEVY TRANSMISSION 4L60E Semi Wanted 62-75 Chevrolets
used $800. (650)921-1033 DONATE YOUR CAR Novas, running or not
Tax Deduction, We do the Paperwork, Parts collection etc.
FORD EXTERIOR FENDER HORNS - Free Pickup, Running or Not - in most So clean out that garage
1933-34 original, pair, black and chrome, cases. Help yourself and the Polly Klaas Give me a call
$35. SOLD! Foundation. Call (800)380-5257. Joe 650 342-2483
A+ CONSTRUCTION LEAVER
Retaining Walls, Additions,
Concrete, Driveways CONSTRUCTION
• Remodeling
in
HOME & GARDEN
for as low as
$93.60-$143/month!
Offer your services to over 82,000
Concrete
readers a day, from Decks & Fences
Palo Alto to South San Francisco MARSH FENCE
and all points between! & DECK CO.
State License #377047
Licensed • Insured • Bonded
Fences - Gates - Decks
Stairs - Retaining Walls
10-year guarantee
Call (650)344-5200 Quality work with reasonable prices
Call for free estimate (650)571-1500
ads@smdailyjournal.com
MORALES
HANDYMAN
Fences • Decks • Arbors
•Retaining Walls • Concrete Work
Bath Cabinetry Cleaning • French Drains • Concrete Walls
•Any damaged wood repair
BATHROOM REMODELS
TAUFA CONCRETE •Powerwash • Driveways • Patios
30 Years Experience
QUESCO CABINETRY * BLANCA’S CLEANING ALL CONCRETE SERVICES • Sidewalk • Stairs
Wholesale cabinets Driveways, Patio, Walkways, • $25. Hr./Min. 2 hrs.
Free Design Assistance SERVICES Retaining Walls, Pavers, Stamped & Free Estimates
and Estimates Since 1966 $25 OFF First Cleaning More! 30 Yrs Experience! Free Est.,
Large Showroom • Commercial - Residential Affordable Prices, Liability Insurance,
20 Years Experience
Excellent References
K.A.Mattson 151 Old County Rd., (we also clean windows) Bonded, Lic.#917401 (650)921-3341
Call 650-652-9664 San Carlos • Good References • 15 Years Exp. (650)295-9102 (650)347-5316
• FREE Estimates
CA Lic # 839815 (650)593-1888 (650)270-8549 (650)346-7582
(650) 867-9969 www.moralesfences.com
CABINET OAK, fits over toilet water
tank, like new $25. (650)341-5347 Carpets Construction
DORA CLEANING
SERVICES Electricians
E. L. SHORT ALL ABOUT CARPETS! RESIDENTIAL, COMMERCIAL
Bath Remodeler Carpet/Vinyl MOVE INS / OUTS
ALL ELECTRICAL
WINDOW CLEANING
Lic.#406081 Replace or Reface EXC. REF. 14 YRS. EXP.,LOW RATE SERVICE
Free Design Assistance Call Christopher Stowe (650)906-7064
Serving Locally 30+ Years Best Rates in Town, Since ‘84
Honest, Dependable
doralr2484@yahoo.com 650-322-9288
BBB Honor Roll LICENSED - BONDED
Cell (918)457-6501
(650)591-8378 Home Msg (650)871-5525 for all your electrical needs
ELECTRIC SERVICE GROUP
LEADING
RENOVATIONS
Cleaning
ORANGE ELECTRICAL SERVICES
1 Day Bath Remodel! ROSES
Bay Area’s exclusive HOUSE CLEANING
Affordable & Professional
OIL Call Carlos (650)576-1991
• Recessed Lighting
• Panels, Jacuzzie, A/C
installer of House Cleaning
Luxury Bath Systems Discount First Time Cleaning Direct, many many uses, • Residential in general
products Commerical & Residential all sizes • Troubleshooting
with Microban. Free Estimates All services Up To Code
(650) 847-1990/(650)784-8472 (650)347-8242 Lic.#874972
(888)270-0007 roseshousecleaning.com www.aldranchemical.com
THE DAILY JOURNAL Monday • July 19, 2010 25
SMALL JOBS PREFERRED SAME DAY SERVICE LAURELWOOD KITCHEN & BATH
Steve’s Refuse Removal Design and Technical
Handyman Service Installation Expertise
Free estimates 1224 W. Hillsdale Blvd
Prompt, Tidy, Friendly Reasonable rates
Stephen Pizzi San Mateo
No job too large or small
(650)533-3737 Call Rob (650)242-4102
Lic.#888484 Next to Piazza in Laurelwood
Insured & Bonded (650)995-3064 hopping Center off Hwy 92
26 Monday • July 19, 2010 THE DAILY JOURNAL
www.dojousa.net
Graphics Graphics Graphics 731 Kains Ave, San Bruno
(650)589-9148
Glasswares
CUT CRYSTAL Glasses
Set of six, perfect, no chips/cracks or im-
perfections, only $15 650-595-3933
WINE GLASSES
Two hourglass shaped sets, one plain
(6), one etched (5), $15 each 650-595-
3933
FOOT PAIN?
We offer
PILLOWS FOR THE FEET
San Carlos podiatrist has
solutions for pain-free walking after
surgery.
Video Video
Call (650)595-4148
www.sancarlospodiatry.com
REDWOOD CITY
LOTUS SPA
You Can Lose 6-20 Inches in
1-Hour! Go to www.baybody-
wraps.com/Special For Your $300.
Off Coupon!
903 Main Street, RWC
(650)368-9727
THE DAILY JOURNAL WORLD Monday• July 19, 2010 27
PROFESSIONAL
MASSAGE THERAPY
LUV2 Real Estate Loans
Seniors
Cimino Senior
Tranquil Massage STITCH.COM Day Center
Clean and Nice Environment Needlepoint! REAL ESTATE LOANS
Open 7 days 9am-10pm
951 Old County Rd., Ste #1
Fiesta Shopping Center Direct Private Lender AEGIS LIVING A Senior Adult
Day Program
Belmont 747 Bermuda Dr., San Mateo Common Sense Underwriting Aegis Operating M-F
Based primarily on equity of South San Francisco
(650) 637-8047 (650)571-9999 7:30 am-5:30 pm
Homes• Mixed-Use
Commercial 2280 Gellert Blvd.
All Credit Accepted • Owner or (650)952-6100 8 hours of FREE* care
SUNFLOWER MASSAGE Non-Owner Occupied aegisofsanfrancisco.com (required paperwork, a
Grand Opening! Salaried, Self-Emp, or Retired
prerequisite, offer ends
$10. Off 1-Hour Session! PURCHASE OR REFINANCE
5/31/10)
1482 Laurel St. Investors welcome since 1979
San Carlos 650-348-7191 755 California Drive
(Behind Trader Joe’s) Wachter Investments, Inc. Burlingame
Open 7 Days/Week, 10am-10pm Real Estate Broker #746683
(650)508-8758
CA Dept. of Real Estate (650)344-4900
28 Monday• July 19, 2010 THE DAILY JOURNAL
Cash
4 Gold
Instant Cash for We make loans
l y & Diamonds on Jewelry & Coins
Jewelr
We buy all diamonds
can offer you top dolla
r
less
and jewelry items regard all antique
for Every Day We Are
of their condition. We e of our experts
ing your items in to on
BUYING
and period jewelry. Br
sh offer.
for an appraisal and ca
or
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la
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USED
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To Our Customers:
Numis International Inc.
Foreign Coins
is a second
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& family owned
of coins!
Paying more for pro business here in
Millbrae since 1963.
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Note: We also buy n
t to market fluctuatio Our top priority has
All prices are subjec rs paying
ed la rg e qu an tit ie s of old silver dolla been the complete
We especially ne buy
Do no t cl ea n coins. Note: We also satisfaction of our
more for rare da te s! ctuation.
in s. Al l pr ic es are subject to market flu customers.
foreign silver co