Documenti di Didattica
Documenti di Professioni
Documenti di Cultura
Coast to get
prepped for
emergency
Event highlights unique
challenges for the area
By Zachary Clark
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
to form four ordinary words. 6 32 35 36 65 4 9 12 19 22 27 50s. Highs in the 60s to lower 70s.
Thurs day ni g ht: Mostly clear in the
VUGAA April 23 Mega Millions
Powerball
News briefs
Boy Scouts could be
hit with more sex abuse claims
NEW YORK — The lawyers’ ads on the internet aggres-
sively seeking clients to file sexual abuse lawsuits give a
taste of what lies ahead this year for the Boy Scouts of
America: potentially the most fateful chapter in its 109-
year history.
Sexual abuse settlements have already strained the Boy
Scouts’ finances to the point where the organization is
exploring “all available options,” including Chapter 11
bankruptcy. But now the financial threats have intensified.
The reason: States have been moving in recent months to
adjust their statute-of-limitations laws so that victims of
long-ago sexual abuse can sue for damages. New York state
has passed a law that will allow such lawsuits starting in
August. A similar bill in New Jersey has reached the gover-
nor’s desk. Bills also are pending in Pennsylvania and
California.
In New York and elsewhere, lawyers are hard at work
recruiting clients to sue the Boy Scouts, alleging they were
molested as youths by scoutmasters or other volunteers. REUTERS FILE PHOTO
Plaintiffs’ lawyers “recognize that this is a very unique Mexican police raids that grabbed up hundreds of migrants has dissolved a caravan of some 3,000 Central Americans, leading
and lucrative opportunity,” said attorney Karen Bitar of the them to look for other ways to try to get north, including hitching a ride on a freight train known as ‘The Beast.’
Seyfarth Shaw law firm.
ROUNDUP: AFTER A 15-9 WIN TUESDAY, CSM BASEBALL CAN CLINCH CONFERENCE TITLE WITH WIN OVER MISSION TODAY >> PAGE 12
inning, with Carlmont leading 2- ing rightfielder for two more runs
PAL
Continued from page 11
1. The next batter, Thomas
McClure, came up and hit a routine
grounder to third, but the third
and a 5-2 Burlingame lead.
Lopiccolo rounded out the scoring
for the Panthers with a sacrifice fly
baseman booted it, putting a run- to center.
ner on first and giving the Carlmont got two of the runs
“It’s just situational hitting,” Panthers hope. back in the bottom of the inning.
Cilia said. “Just get them (the base And they took advantage of the The Scots loaded the bases with no
runners) in. I think everyone gift. After McClure stole second outs, with Adam Cross and
understands what they need to do and moved to third on a Gino Bedrosian driving in runs with
to help the team win.” Lopiccolo single to left, leadoff groundouts.
It was a tough loss for Carlmont hitter Preston Lau drove him home But Burlingame reliever Tyler
to absorb. The Scots entered play with the tying run on a single to Moniz-Witten got the final out on
Wednesday tied with Menlo right. A strikeout and a groundout a popup to notch the win with
School for second place in the ended the inning, but the Panthers three innings of relief of
Peninsula Athletic League Bay extended the game. Burlingame starter Noah Larkin.
Division standings, two games Another Carlmont error in the
behind the division leading Burlingame took a 1-0 lead in
eighth opened the door for the the top of the second on a Cilia
Panthers. Panthers to win the game. Cleanup
Burlingame (8-1 PAL Bay, 10-4 groundout, but Carlmont tied the
hitter Taylor Clark hit a rou- game with a run in the bottom of
overall) now has a three game lead tine grounder to the shortstop,
over the division after beating the third on a Jack Banoncini dou-
who misplayed it. He recovered ble to drive in Jake Robinson,
Carlmont (5-4, 10-10) and Menlo and fired to first to make the play
falling to Capuchino. who had singled.
close, but the field umpire ruled
“[Burlingame] played the game Robinson went 3 for 3 with two
Clark had beat the throw. Flores
— get ’em on, get ’em over, get runs score for the Scots.
followed and hit a single to left,
’em in,” said Carlmont manager with Clark going to third. Carlmont took a 2-1 lead with a
Rich Vallero. “We were two outs He would score on a McMaster run in the bottom of the fifth.
away from beating a team that has high chopper that the Carlmont Again, it was Robinson who
only one loss in league. It was a pitcher got the fingertip of his jump-started the rally with a sin-
tough pill to swallow.” glove on, but it slowed the ball gle and then advanced on a pair of
Burlingame’s late rally made a down enough to allow McMaster wild pitches, scoring on a Mateos
loser of Carlmont starting pitcher to leg out the infield hit, with Melkesian single to center
David Bedrosian, who worked into Clark scoring the go-ahead run on through a drawn-in infield.
the eighth inning. But Carlmont’s the play. But it was the Panthers who ral-
normally solid defense let the That brought up Cilia, who lied for the win late.
NATHAN MOLLAT/DAILY JOURNAL team down when the Scots needed flared an opposite double that “I feel our team is a fighting
Carlmont’s Jake Robinson is fired up after scoring in the bottom of the it the most. Bedrosian got a flyout dropped right in front of the charg- team,” Cilia said. “We’ll ground
fifth inning to give the Scots’ a 2-1 lead. on his first pitch of the seventh out runs when we need them.”
fumes. Hell of a play by Goody man. What a NHL brief McGinn dived to prevent a goal in the
SHARKS
Continued from page 11
play.”
San Jose has the most playoff appear-
ances in the league since general manager
Hurricanes stun defending champ
final minutes of regulation and then scored
11:05 into the second extra period, and Petr
Mrazek made 34 saves to continue an upset-
Doug Wilson’s first season in 2003-04 and
Capitals in double OT in Game 7 heavy first round of the NHL playoffs.
WASHINGTON — Jordan Staal tied it in Carolina had the first nine shots of the first
first comeback from 3-1 down in a series in will be tied for the most playoff series
the third period, Brock McGinn scored in OT and 11 of 15 total.
franchise history with help from 58 saves played during that time when the second
from Martin Jones and the first double-over- round starts. They have also won the third the second overtime and the Carolina Carolina showed the same never-quit atti-
time short-handed goal ever by Tomas Hertl most series in that span. Hurricanes stormed back to stun the tude that helped it end the NHL’s longest
to win Game 6 on the road. Washington Capitals 4-3 in Game 7 on playoff drought after a decade by forcing a
But a Stanley Cup title remains elusive for Wednesday night to eliminate the defending deciding seventh game and erasing a 3-1
That pales in comparison to what the the Sharks, who lost the Cup final to Stanley Cup champions. deficit in it.
Sharks had to overcome Tuesday when they Pittsburgh three years ago, lost three other
trailed 3-0 with 10:47 to play and Pavelski times in the conference finals and painfully time to send the SAP Center into bedlam.
was lying on the ice after a cross-check from
Cody Eakin and bump from Paul Stastny led
to an awkward fall. The referees called a
major penalty.
blew a 3-0 series lead to Los Angeles in
2014.
The ingredients are there this year to
LOUNGE
Continued from page 11
It almost felt as if San Jose had finally
won that elusive Stanley Cup, instead of it
just being the end of the first round of the
“It almost made you cry, because we love make a run now. The forward group is as deep playoffs.
him so much,” said Thornton, who held a as it’s ever been with Couture, Hertl and Sharks staring at a 3-0 deficit with roughly But if the Sharks do go on and do some-
towel to Pavelski’s bleeding head as he Thornton centering three potent lines. The 10 minutes left in the season. With Vegas thing special the rest of the playoffs, many
helped him to the dressing room. “You defense features two former Norris Trophy goalie Marc Andre-Fleury stoning the will look back at Game 7 of the first round
never want to see a teammate get hurt like winners in Brent Burns and Erik Karlsson, Sharks at every turn, it looked as if the as the game that propelled the Sharks to
that. It was a tough break for him.” along with a shutdown player in Marc- Sharks magic had finally run out. the greatest heights. San Jose is the high-
The Sharks rallied around their fallen Edouard Vlasic. But a game misconduct penalty on the est remaining seed in the Western
leader to become the second team in playoff Even Jones showed he can be an asset Golden Knights following an ugly injury Conference, with the top-seeded Calgary
history to score four times on one major after getting pulled before the second period to Sharks captain Joe Pavelski. Given the Flames flaming out in a five games against
power play to take the lead. Fans at the twice in the first five games. He rebounded severity of the penalty and ensuing result eighth-seeded Colorado — the Sharks’ sec-
Shark Tank who have become conditioned with a .946 save percentage in the final of the cross check, the referees ruled a ond-round opponent. Joining the Flames
to postseason failure went crazy. three games. mandatory five-minute power play, which on the sidelines are No. 3 Nashville
Predictably for the Sharks, it still didn’t brought new life to the Sharks’ flagging Predators and No. 4 Winnipeg Jets.
come easy as they allowed the tying goal to Before gearing up for Colorado, they must playoff hopes. In the Eastern Conference, Tampa Bay,
Jonathan Marchessault with 47 seconds to recover from the emotional roller coaster As the Sharks lineup for the power-play which had a record-setting regular season
play in regulation before fourth-liner that was the first round. Then they must faceoff, the announcers on television were and the overall No. 1 seed, was swept out
Barclay Goodrow provided the game-winner hope Pavelski can get back on the ice after saying now the team has to score three of the first round by Columbus.
18:19 into overtime, making San Jose just his second bloody injury of the playoffs. He goals, to which I quipped, “They haven’t
was also hit in the mouth by a puck in Game Suddenly, the path to the Stanley Cup is
the second team ever to overcome a three- done anything all night. Now they’re wide open and following that emotional
goal deficit in the third period to win a Game 1 and lost four teeth. This injury was more going to score in bushels?”
serious since he blacked out briefly, win over Vegas, the Sharks could live up to
7. Apparently so. Logan Couture’s goal less the preseason expectations.
although he was able to talk to teammates than a minute into the man-advantage made
“That’s a once in a lifetime game,” said How about that?
after the game. me perk up. Goals two and three came in
Logan Couture, who scored twice on the
quick succession as the Daily Journal ***
power play. “Knock on wood. I don’t think “He’s strong,” Hertl said. “I believe he’ll
my heart can take another one like that. Up be back and help us again in the next round. sports department started to ramp up the South City has a number of coaching
and down. By the 10 minute mark in the He took it for the boys. Sometimes it’s bru- excitement. openings for the 2019-20 season. The
overtime there was nothing left for a lot of tal. Actually twice. First game he had the When Kevin Lebanc fired home the Warriors need a varsity football assistant
us after a double-overtime game. After 10 face and now this. He’s really tough and fourth goal of the power play, the Shark coach, girls’ varsity tennis, and head
seconds on each shift you’re running on he’ll come back for sure.” Tank and Daily Journal office exploded. coaches for the girls’ varsity and JV vol-
In less than five minutes, the Sharks leyball teams.
turned an almost-certain 3-0 defeat into a 4- For more information, contact athletic
3 advantage with just over six minutes to director Noelle Nelson at
iSmile Implant Center play. Some of the excitement wore off
when the Knights netted the equalizer with
less than a minute to play in regulation,
nnelson@ssfusd.org.
but a spectacular rush from Barclay Nathan Mollat can be reached by email:
DR. KIM IMPLANT
Goodrow resulted in the game winner with
less than two minutes left in the first over-
nathan@smdailyjournal.com or by phone: 344-
5200 ext. 117.
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NBA
PAL individual championships
Colorado 0 6 2 2 12 23 singles and doubles finals/third-place matches at
ward Draymond session, but since Beverley — Burlingame, 3:45 p.m.
Green from who’d been bleeding from a knock NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie.
playing Game 5 by Curry — stayed in the game the ——— Track and field
Continued from page 11 — even his
Wednesday’s Games WBAL championships at Menlo School, noon
referees ruled McKinnie must New York City FC 1, Chicago 0
t r o ub l e s o m e return to the floor. D.C. United 1, Columbus 0 College baseball
Durant shot 14 for 26 in his right wrist. An Montreal 3, New England 0 Mission-Santa Clara at San Mateo, Cañada at
LA Galaxy 0, Minnesota United 0, tie Cabrillo-Aptos, Hartnell-Salinas at Skyline, 2:30
third performance of at least 30 MRI showed no San Jose 2, Seattle 2 p.m.
points in the series and ninth 40- serious issues TIP-INS Saturday’s Games
FRIDAY
point postseason effort. Orlando City at New York City FC, 9 a.m.
Draymond and he practiced Portland at Toronto FC, noon Baseball
Curry, already the NBA’s career fully Tuesday. Cl i ppers : Gallinari missed his San Jose at FC Dallas, 12:30 p.m. Carlmont at Burlingame, Capuchino at Menlo
playoff leader for made 3-pointers, Green initial four 3-point tries before Philadelphia at Vancouver, 2 p.m. School, Terra Nova at Sacred Heart Prep, 4 p.m.
The wrist has Colorado at Atlanta, 3 p.m.
reached 400 postseason 3s. been bothering him since the connecting late in the first and fin- Cincinnati at New York, 4 p.m. Softball
Golden State trailed 71-63 at beginning of Game 3 when “I got a ished 3 of 11 from deep. ... The Columbus at Houston, 5:30 p.m. Terra Nova at Mills, South City at Sequoia, 4 p.m.
halftime despite making 10 of 16 New England at Sporting Kansas City, 5:30 p.m.
pretty good whack on it.” Clippers outrebounded the Sunday’s Games Track and field
3s but allowed Los Angeles to “It’s still sore,” Green said at Warriors 42-39. Chicago at Montreal, 9:30 a.m. PAL trials at Menlo-Atherton, 4 p.m.
shoot 56%, and the Clippers fin- shootaround. “If the MRI said it D.C. United at Minnesota United, 10:30 a.m.
Boys’ volleyball
Warri o rs : Golden State scored Los Angeles FC at Seattle, 12:30 p.m.
ished at 54.1%. was broken by the way I was still Real Salt Lake at LA Galaxy, 5 p.m. Sequoia at Carlmont, 6 p.m.
Gallinari hit a 3 out of the break going to play. So it really didn’t 41 points in the first for its third
Girls’ lacrosse
then a free throw following matter.” 40-point quarter of the series — Woodside at Sequoia, Woodside Priory at Sacred
Draymond Green’s technical and the first time in the shot clock era WARRIORS PLAYOFF SCHEDULE Heart Cathedral, Carlmont at Harker, 4 p.m.
Los Angeles made it 81-66 on (1954-55) the Warriors have done Warriors 3, L.A. Clippers 2 Boys’ lacrosse
JaMychal Green’s 3 at the 9:09 NO SUBSTITUTION so in one playoff series. ... Durant Saturday, April 13: Warriors 121, L.A. Clippers 104 Piedmont at Menlo School, Urban-SF at Serra, 4
p.m.
mark and the Warriors called time- (3, 816) passed John Havlicek
out.
NECESSARY (3, 776) for 12th place on the
Monday, April 15: L.A. Clippers 135, Warriors 131
College baseball
Thursday, April 18: Warriors 132, Clippers 105
Alfonzo McKinnie knocked NBA’s career postseason scoring Sunday, April 21: Warriors 113, Clippers 105
Skyline at Hartnell-Salinas, 2:30 p.m.
GREEN’S WRIST down a 3 to end the first moments list. ... The Warriors are 9-3 in x-Wednesday, April 24: Clippers 129, Warriors 121 SATURDAY
Nothing was going to keep after he had left the court with Game 5s dating to their title run in x-Friday, April 26: Warriors at L.A. Clippers, 7 p.m.
Swimming
PAL championships
Steve Kerr trying to sub in 2015. x-Sunday, April 28: L.A. Clippers at Warriors TBD Bay Division at Menlo-Atherton, 1 p.m.
016 0425 thu:0425 thu 209 4/24/19 1:33 PM Page 1
constrain the level of activity we can serve,” he said, account for the noise to accompany the uptick of expected
SFO
Continued from page 1
according to a video of the meeting. “This airport develop-
ment plan is really designed to maintain an acceptable level
of facilities as we ramp up to that maximum number of pas-
use was a priority.
“I know it’s difficult, I understand that newer planes are
being made in a way that they produce less noise,” he said.
sengers our airport can serve.” “But on the other hand, changing over that fleet is really
Acknowledging the plan does not include any changes to expensive.”
development plan, which Doug Yakel, the airport’s public runway configurations or an expansion of the airport, Yakel Yakel said airport officials have been in talks with the
information officer, explained will help airport officials said it will include potential projects to improve parking, Federal Aviation Administration to consider distributing
weigh improvement projects needed to help its facilities support facilities and its heating and cooling systems. flight routes across a wider swath of air space, noting the
keep pace with the growing number of travelers passing Creating a centralized security checkpoint in the airport’s FAA’s shift toward more precise routes in recent years has
through it. international terminal so travelers can move from con- concentrated the noise above residents living under them.
In providing an update to the San Mateo County Board of course to concourse without having to go through security He added the airport is also planning to work with an esti-
Supervisors Tuesday, Yakel noted the airport employing again is among the changes Yakel expected would be an mated 300 eligible residents to insulate their homes and has
43,000 people and generating more than $8.4 billion in upgrade for passengers and also afford airlines greater flex- been working on an effort to develop new landing technol-
annual revenue is set to benefit from several large projects ibility in the gates they use. ogy routing planes offshore or at higher elevations as they
included in a previous master plan for the airport. Including A project to replace a 40-year-old, multi-level parking descend for landing.
the 350-room Grand Hyatt at SFO set to open at the end of garage currently standing in the center of the airport with a
the summer and a long-term parking garage providing mixed-use facility serving as a hub for commercial pickups Maximum capacity, regional coordination
3,500 additional parking spaces at the airport, several proj- and dropoffs is expected to help the airport respond to the
ects included in the airport’s 1989 master plan have been In response to Supervisor Dave Pine’s question about how
increasing use of ride-hailing companies at SFO, said Yakel. the number of flights would be affected by more passengers,
taking shape in the years since it was approved, said Yakel. He said officials are hoping to have a draft environmental
Though the airport currently has no plans in place to Yakel noted the airport will continue encouraging airlines
impact report on the plan by the end of the year and adopt a to use larger aircraft and avoid increasing the number of
expand the number of runways at SFO beyond the four the final report by mid-2020, and added projects would only
airport has today, Yakel said officials are predicting the air- flights coming in and out. Though the average aircraft used
break ground as needed as the airport reaches its capacity. at SFO holds 158 seats, Yakel said officials are estimating
port that served nearly 58 million annual passengers in
the average aircraft will hold some 170 seats by the time the
2018 will reach its maximum capacity of 71 million annual Noise concerns airport reaches capacity. He added the airport currently
passengers in about 12 years.
“Eventually we’ll reach a point where those runways will For Supervisor Don Horsley, how the airport would serves some 1,250 flights daily and the maximum number
of flights that can be accommodated on SFO’s four runways
daily is estimated at 1,500.
Pine also asked Yakel what might happen when the air-
port reaches maximum capacity, and Yakel said the airport
has started conversations with officials at Oakland and San
Jose international airports to scope the possibility of coor-
dinating on the types of flights they serve. He said the three
Bay Area airports could consider an arrangement used by
other metropolitan areas served by multiple airports where-
by one specializes in cross-continental and cross-country
flights and others make regional trips.
Pine voiced support for the three airports in the region to
coordinate as travel ramps up at SFO, and also encouraged
airport officials to engage the community as they scope
new projects.
“It’s hard to envision expanding these airports or build-
ing a fourth airport,” he said. “I think that’s the only way
we’re going to be able to accommodate things in the long
term.”
In other business: County officials also voted unani-
mously to approve reduced fines for fines for those found to
violate rules for dog access at San Mateo County parks.
Previously set at a $100 base fine for a first violation with-
in a one-year period and a $200 base fine for a second vio-
lation within the same time period, the fines previously in
place were associated with an additional $385 and $695 in
fees, respectively. Under the new fine schedule, someone
found to have violated one of the rules would be responsible
for a base fine of $5 for a first violation and a $30 base fine
for a second violation and would have to pay a total of $110
and $198, respectively, including fees.
019 0425 thu:0425 thu 209 4/24/19 8:13 PM Page 1
H>DA1 1>66;4
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Sharon Heights Golf and Country Free. For more information call 522- “A lot is crammed into two ?>8=CB B20;4 A0C8=6
Club Inc., 2900 Sand Hill Road, Menlo
Park. Guest speaker David Sheff.
7818. blocks,” said Emergency "[[TccTab, , _ _^X]c $ , 2W WP\_
Free. For more information call 513- Cat and K itten Adoption Fair. 11 Preparedness Specialist #[[TccTab, ,! !_ _^X]cb $ , 4 g_Tac
1509. a.m. to 2 p.m. Forster City Library, Kevin Rose, adding that he 1h3 3PeXS; ;77^hcPP]S99TUU: :]daTZ $[[TccTab, ," "_ _^X]cb % , ? a^
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1000 E. Hillsdale Blvd., Foster City. expects hundreds of people to %[[TccTab, ,# #_ _^X]cb " % %, , 6 6P\Ta
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3 p.m. to 9 p.m. San Mateo County attend the event if the weather
Events Center, 2495 S. Delaware St.,
Network of San Mateo. For more
information call 574-4842. cooperates. '[[TccTab, , _ _^X]cb !
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San Mateo. New Living Expo places a ([[TccTab, , $_ _^X]cb , , Caah PV VPX]
sharp focus on holistic and sustain- Rose’s agency plans to
The 18th Annual New Living Expo.
organize a handful of these
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able living, and provides an educa- A
11 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. San Mateo
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Delaware St., San Mateo. New Living paredness events in addition
creation, wellness education and ^U[[TccTab2 2P]h h^dUUX]SccWT\.
positive social transformation. Cost Expo places a sharp focus on holistic
to the countywide one typi-
is $20. For more information call 574- and sustainable living, and provides
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cultural heritage, spiritual expres- “These geographic prepara-
NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN
Tween Night: Animal Style. 5 p.m. sion, artistic creation, wellness edu-
to 7 p.m. San Mateo Public Library, cation and positive social transfor- tion days have local flavor
not just in where they’re held
NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN
55 W. Third Ave., San Mateo. A fun mation. Cost is $20. For more infor-
night of crafts, games and pizza. mation call 574-3247. but to highlight what’s going
NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN
Free. Registration required. For more
A E 2 E
information call 522-7818. Peninsula Ballet Theatre presents on in an individual’s commu-
Carnival of the Animals. 11:30 a.m. nity and to get to know the
‘The Odd Couple.‘ 7 p.m. San Mateo
Performing Arts Center, 600 N.
to 12:30 p.m. Peninsula Ballet
Theatre, 1880 S. Grant St., San Mateo.
resources that are out there,”
NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN
Delaware St., San Mateo. San Mateo
High School Drama presents ‘The
Odd Couple,’ by Neil Simon. This
Cost $30-$35. For more information
call 342-322.
Rose said. “All disasters are
local. First responders are
also normal folks and it 1>66;4XXbPPccaPST\PaZ^^U7 7PbQa^88]R #!$ (
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020 0425 thu:0425 thu 209 4/24/19 1:05 PM Page 1
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Continued from page 1
to radio, Brooke Dunbar said her father did a
5 a.m. television newscast on ABC for sev-
eral years in the 1970s. Though he enjoyed
excited to engage with her father, who
enjoyed fostering relationships with oth-
ers in his community.
both media equally, Brooke Dunbar said her Brooke Dunbar, who lives in Foster City,
father liked that he could arrive at the radio said her father was often stopped at grocery
Dunbar had a way of handling the mercurial station in a sports jacket, jeans and loafers stores and restaurants by appreciative lis-
flow of daily news. with no socks. teners, and said the outpouring of support
Known for pioneering morning talk Brooke Dunbar said her father majored in from the Bay Area community has been
shows in the Bay Area, Dunbar died April journalism when he attended Michigan heartwarming. She noted it gave her hope
22 at the age of 89, leaving his listeners State University and got his first try at his listeners are following his advice to
and viewers with much to remember him by, radio when he acted on a friend’s suggestion “keep the faith,” a sign-off he liked to use
including a 37-year run at KGO Radio and a and tried out to be a broadcaster for the in his morning shows.
place in the National Radio Hall of Fame. school’s basketball team. Though he had “The outpouring from the KGO family as
Acknowledging many jobs in the radio envisioned himself working for a newspa- well as the ABC family as well as friends
world don’t last for long, Dunbar’s daughter per, Brooke Dunbar said her father’s child- and family has just been so heartwarming,”
Brooke Dunbar reflected on the length of hood hobby of reading the dictionary fueled she said. “I’m not surprised.”
her father’s career at KGO and his impact on his precise wording on air. Jim Dunbar was born Oct. 9, 1929, in
countless listeners and viewers in his She said her father served for two years in Dearborn, Michigan, and attended
decadeslong career. Well known for his the Army and was a broadcaster while sta- Michigan State University. He served in
didn’t think the job would last long.
ability to improvise, Jim Dunbar was both tioned at Fort Riley, Kansas. In 1956, he the U.S. Army between 1954 and 1956 in
“He prepared my mother because that’s
capable of delivering news at a moment’s moved to New Orleans and became a broad- Fort Riley, Kansas, and moved to New
the nature of radio broadcast,” she said.
notice and apt to research a topic thorough- caster for the WDSU radio station based in Orleans, where he lived from 1956 to 1960,
“People don’t stay, they are transferred
ly to ensure both sides of every story were the French Quarter, where he replaced Dick was a broadcaster for the WDSU radio sta-
around and around.”
represented, said Brooke Dunbar. Van Dyke after the actor moved to tion and met his wife, Beth Monroe. He was
Brooke Dunbar remembered her father
“He had a very calming effect on the San Broadway. a disc jockey for the Chicago radio station
would be home at 9:30 a.m. most days and
Francisco Bay Area,” she said. “He had an In the four years Jim Dunbar spent in New WLS, where he was able to explore his pas-
then take a nap, play tennis and eat lunch
inner calm given all of the cacophony and Orleans, he met his future wife Beth sion for jazz music. His family moved to
before tending his garden with her mother,
chaos when delivering news.” Monroe in her final year at Newcomb San Francisco in 1963 and he served as a
with whom he celebrated their 60th wed-
Beginning with a morning KGO talk College and was immediately smitten with broadcaster for KGO for 37 years before
ding anniversary in December. She said he
show the 1960s, Jim Dunbar’s broadcasts her, said Brooke Dunbar. The two were mar- retiring in 2000. Dunbar was inducted into
was very engaged with her activities while
featuring national and local news started ried within a year of meeting each other and the National Radio Hall of Fame in 1999
she was growing up, though he tried to get
the days of many in the Bay Area. Expected moved to Chicago in 1960, where they and the Bay Area Radio Hall of Fame in
to sleep at a reasonable hour.
to be on air at 5:05 a.m. each morning for a lived for three years while Jim Dunbar was a 2006. He is survived by his wife Beth
After years of waking up early, Jim
talk show he co-hosted with the late Ted disc jockey and broadcaster for the WLS Dunbar and his daughter Brooke Dunbar.
Dunbar retired in 2000 and continued to do
Wygant, Jim Dunbar was always ready to radio station.
commentary until 2004,
start the day with humor, even when the day Beth Dunbar’s encouragement that the
said Brooke Dunbar, who
called for the pair to discuss weighty family, which at the time included the cou-
ple’s only daughter, leave Chicago and its added her father also liked to
issues, said Brooke Dunbar, who added he
harsh winters was behind Jim Dunbar’s pur- visit senior centers to dis-
had an ability to take one sentence written
suit of a job at KGO radio station in San cuss current events. She said
by producers and talk for 10 minutes on the
Francisco, said Brooke Dunbar, who said he she attended some of the
topic.
028 0425 thu:0425 thu 209 4/24/19 1:04 PM Page 1