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GETTING BY ON CUTENESS

WEEKEND PAGE 18

U.N.BACKS GAY RIGHTS

THE UNITED NATIONS ENDORSES THE RIGHTS OF GAY, LESBIAN AND TRANSGENDER PEOPLE NATION PAGE 5

MISTRIAL FOR AYRES


LOCAL PAGE 4

Weekend June 18-19, 2011 Vol XI, Edition 262

www.smdailyjournal.com

Teen killer gets 50 to life


Judge reluctant,calls him poster boy for life in prison without parole
By Michelle Durand
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

A judge pretty reluctantly sentenced a South San Francisco teenager to 50 years to life in prison for shooting a 21-year-old mechanic in the heart during a drug robbery despite a prosecutor calling him the poster boy for life in prison without parole. Although Jimmy Nabong, 19, was convict-

ed of gun use and murder during a robbery a combination that carries a life term Judge Cliff Cretan exercised discretion to offer him a chance at eventual freedom because he was a juvenile when he killed Shivnesh Jimmy Nabong Reddy on Oct. 29, 2008.

Seventeen is different, said Cretan, although he doubted out loud that Nabong would ever qualify for parole. The sentence means Nabong will be 69 when eligible, a term which defense attorney Jeff Boyarsky said was tantamount to a life sentence but offers a slim opportunity to turn his life around. Neither the family of Nabong nor Reddy addressed the court, although Cretan had

heard from the victims relatives during sentencing of co-defendant Neil Prakash Chand. Chand, who testied in Nabongs trial for the prosecution, received 25 years to life for his role in setting up Reddy to be robbed of $3,000 worth of marijuana. Nabong did not apologize or admit the crime but gave Cretan several reasons why he deserved a dismissal or new trial poor rep-

See NABONG, Page 23

Chamber fined over campaign contributions


BILL SILVERFARB/DAILY JOURNAL

Officials will pay $3,000 for not adequately reporting spending on city measure
By Michelle Durand
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

At the San Mateo County Fair, patrons can enjoy potato chips with melted cheese,turkey legs and deep-fried Oreos.

Food is a family affair at the fair


By Sally Schilling
DAILY JOURNAL CORRESPONDENT

A visit to the fair undoubtedly means being inundated with an array of gluttonous goodies, from funnel cakes to corn dogs to deep-fried Twinkies. At the San Mateo County Fair, patrons can even nd potato chips with melted cheese, turkey legs and deep-fried Oreos. But what is less apparent than the ashy trailers and the over-the-top menus is the longtime family tradition behind many of the food vendors at the San Mateo County Fair. What most people dont realize is that most of us are family-owned businesses that people are born or married into, said Erin Magdaleno, who owns a 33year-old cinnamon roll business with her two sisters. Country Fair Cinnamon Rolls, started by Magdalenos parents in 1978, was awarded this years Best Outdoor Vendor ribbon on Thursday. Their rolls are made with their own blend of specially milled our and a cream cheese

The Redwood City Chamber of Commerce will pay a $3,000 ne for not adequately reporting more than $24,000 spent to defeat a city charter amendment measure that would have given voters approval over development. The chamber and Roman G. Porter, executive director of the Fair Political Practices Commission, stipulated that the former violated the Political Reform Act by failing to le a supplemental independent expenditure for the Oct. 1 through Oct. 18, 2008 period. Reports on expenses greater than $1,000 were due by Oct. 23, 2008.

See FINE, Page 24

KORE CHAN/DAILY JOURNAL

Looking for something to do on Fathers Day? The San Mateo County Fair will remain open through Sunday.

Legal setback for school lawsuit against county


Local districts had sued over Lehman investment losses
By Heather Murtagh
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

Its all about dads


By Heather Murtagh
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

See FOOD, Page 23

Dads are a funny breed. Tough on the outside, always encouraging you to do your best, but there for you when you fell short; fathers are there for it all. This sunny June weekend, its all about the number one man in your

life. Even if you have no plans yet, its not too late to do something special. It just takes a little creativity. Its been said the way to a mans heart is through his stomach. Coordinate a picnic in the park. Put together sandwiches, snacks and drinks along with a football

Thirteen school districts suing San Mateo County and former treasurer-tax collector Lee Bufngton for $20 million in investment losses caused by the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy hit a legal obstacle this week.

See DAD, Page 23

See SUIT, Page 24

Weekend June 18-19, 2011

FOR THE RECORD


Snapshot Inside

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Quote of the Day


What well see now is trench warfare. It may not be a matter of sweeping strategies and sudden grand solutions,but ghts over inches of ground.
Jack Pitney,a political science professor at Claremont McKenna College Browns veto could spark war over state budget, see page 4

City Scene
Kim Nalley performing at the Rrazz Room at Hotel Nikko See page 19

Local Weather Forecast


Saturday: Partly cloudy in the morning then becoming sunny. Highs in the lower 80s. West winds 5 to 10 mph increasing to 10 to 20 mph in the afternoon. Saturday night: Mostly clear. Lows in the mid 50s. Southwest winds 10 to 20 mph. Sunday...Sunny. Highs in the upper 80s. West winds 5 to 10 mph. Sunday night: Mostly clear. Lows around 60. Southwest winds 5 to 10 mph. Monday: Sunny. Highs in the lower 90s.

Wall Street
Stocks have their rst winning week since April See page 10
HEATHER MURTAGH/DAILY JOURNAL

San Mateo police travel north on El Camino Real through San Mateo Friday as the Special Olympic Torch is run through San Mateo County on its way to Aggie Stadium at the University of California at Davis for the Olympic Games.

Lotto
June 15 Super Lotto Plus
6 19 20 21 27 23
Mega number

This Day in History


Daily Four
9 4 2 8

Thought for the Day


Frailty, thy name is no longer woman. Victor Riesel, American labor journalist (1913-1995)

June 17 Mega Millions


12 29 46 47 51 24
Mega number

Daily three midday


4 7 9

Daily three evening


4 3 9

Fantasy Five
24 28 30 33 39

The Daily Derby race winners are No.1 Gold Rush in rst place; No.11 Money Bags in second place; and No.09 Winning Spirit in third place. The race time was clocked at 1:46.62.

State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-5 Nation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5,8 World . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Opinion. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Business . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11-17 Weekend Journal. . . . . . . . . . . . . 18-24 Comics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 Classieds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26-31 Publisher Jerry Lee [email protected] Editor in Chief Jon Mays [email protected]

Astronaut Sally K. Ride became Americas rst woman in space as she and four colleagues blasted off aboard the space shuttle Challenger. In 1778, American forces entered Philadelphia as the British withdrew during the Revolutionary War. In 1812, the United States declared war against Britain. In 1815, Napoleon Bonaparte met his Waterloo as British and Prussian troops defeated the French in Belgium. In 1873, suffragist Susan B. Anthony was found guilty by a judge in Canandaigua, N.Y., of breaking the law by casting a vote in the 1872 presidential election. (The judge ned Anthony $100, but she never paid the penalty.) In 1908, William Howard Taft was nominated for president by the Republican national convention in Chicago. In 1940, during World War II, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill urged his countrymen to conduct themselves in a manner that would prompt future generations to say, This was their nest hour. Charles de Gaulle delivered a speech on the BBC in which he rallied his countrymen after the fall of France to Nazi Germany. In 1945, William Joyce, known as Lord Haw-Haw, was charged in London with high treason for his English-language wartime broadcasts on German radio. (He was hanged the following January.)

1983

Birthdays

Sir Paul McCartney is 69.

Movie critic Roger Ebert is 69.

Actress Renee Olstead is 22.

Columnist Tom Wicker is 85. Actress Constance McCashin is 64. Actress Linda Thorson is 64. Rock musician John Evans (The Box Tops) is 63. Actress Isabella Rossellini is 59. Actress Carol Kane is 59. Actor Brian Benben is 55. Actress Andrea Evans is 54. Rock singer Alison Moyet is 50. Country singermusician Tim Hunt is 44. Rock singer-musician Sice (The Boo Radleys) is 42. Rhythm-and-blues singer Nathan Morris (Boyz II Men) is 40. Actress Mara Hobel is 40. Rapper Silkk the Shocker is 36. Actress Alana de la Garza is 35. Country singer Blake Shelton is 35. the 1930 animated lm Dizzy Dishes. Mae Questel (1908-1998) did the original voice of Betty Boop. Questel was also the voice of Popeyes girlfriend Olive Oyl. *** Shaggys full name is Norville Rogers. Scooby-Doo is Shaggys pet Great Dane. *** Strawberry Shortcake was created as a greeting card character in 1978. *** Pinky and the Brain, (1995-1998) a cartoon series about genetically enhanced lab mice that want to take over the world, won an Emmy in 1996 for Outstanding Achievement in Animation. *** In 1955, Mighty Mouse was the rst cartoon character ever to appear on Saturday morning television. *** Hong Kong Phooeys alter-identity was Penrod Pooch, a janitor at a police station. When Penrod turned into kung-fucrime-ghting Hong Kong Phooey, his sidekick Spot the cat usually got him out of trouble. *** Answer: The modern Stone Age family The Flintstones premiered on ABC in 1960. The Flintstones was loosely based on The Honeymooners (1955-1956) starring Jackie Gleason (1916-1987).
Know It All is by Kerry McArdle. It runs in the weekend and Wednesday editions of the Daily Journal. Questions? Comments? Email [email protected] or call 3445200 ext. 114.

Phone: . . . . . . . . . . . . (650) 344-5200 Fax: (650) 344-5290 To Advertise:. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . [email protected] Classieds: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . [email protected] Events: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . [email protected] News: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . [email protected] Delivery: . . . . . . . . . . . . . [email protected] Career: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . [email protected] 800 S. Claremont St., Ste. 210, San Mateo, Ca. 94402
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

GIHMT
2011 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

USPHL

ONOSIP

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

Ans:
Yesterdays (Answers Monday) Jumbles: CURVE DEPTH LATELY HEALTH Answer: Where the zombies found their new home DEATH VALLEY

Sign Up for the IAFLOFCI (OFFICIAL) Jumble Facebook fan club

Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.

Speedy Gonzalez had a cousin named Slowpoke Rodriguez. He was the slowest mouse in all of Mexico. *** Voice actor Joe Dougherty originally did the voice of Porky Pig. Dougherty really had a stutter, however he couldnt control it and it made production costs too high. Mel Blanc (1908-1989) began doing Porky Pigs voice in 1937. *** Daffy Duck had a wife named Daphne. In the 1955 cartoon short Stork Naked, a stork tries to deliver a duckling to Mr. and Mrs. Daffy Duck, but Daffy tries to stop him. *** George Jetson worked for Spacely Sprockets, owned by Cosmo G. Spacely. Spacelys competitor was W.C. Cogswell, owner of the rival company Cogswell Cogs. *** Bubbles, Blossom and Buttercup are the trio that makes up the Powerpuff Girls. The girls were created in a laboratory by a concoction of sugar, spice, everything nice and Chemical X. The chemical is

the source of the sisters super powers. *** Over 40 million Care Bear stuffed toys were sold between 1983 and 1987. *** Marion Ross (born 1928), of Happy Days fame, was the voice of Grandma Squarepants in a 2001 episode of Spongebob Squarepants. *** Do you know what the rst cartoon series on prime time television was? The year? See answer at end. *** Underdogs alter-identity was Shoeshine Boy. Whenever television reporter Sweet Polly Purebred was in distress, she called for Underdogs help. Underdog aired from 1964 to 1973. *** The Pink Panther cartoons began as opening segments for the Pink Panther series of movies, starring the bumbling Inspector Clouseau. *** Foghorn Leghorn, the obnoxious rooster with a southern accent, was based on Senator Claghorn, a character from the Fred Allen (1894-1956) radio show Allens Alley in the 1940s. *** Pac-Man was a Saturday morning cartoon based on the popular video game. In the cartoon, which aired from 1982 to 1984, Packy and his family were pestered by ghosts who were the minions of Mezmaron, a villain who wanted to rule the world. *** Betty Boop made her rst appearance in

THE DAILY JOURNAL

LOCAL
tribution for the semiconductor company Maxim Integrated Products, was charged May 17 with felony communicating with a minor to commit a lewd act and arranging a meeting with a minor for a lewd act. He was also Scott McKibbin charged with a misdemeanor count of arranging a meeting with a minor for an inappropriate purpose. McKibbin posted $50,000 bail and is due in court for arraignment June 28. Meanwhile, McKibbin is also being sued civilly by the boy and his family. Attorney Robert Allard, who led the lawsuit in Santa Clara County Superior Court, called the alleged Internet solicitation a warning shot to parents of children who use computers. The May 25 suit claims negligence, assault and battery, emotional distress and sexual battery. Prior to Oct. 27, 2010, McKibbin and the boy chatted online and by cellphone, according to the civil suit. On that day, the teen headed to the Victoria International Airport with his passport before his parents awoke and ew to California with a ticket purchased by McKibbin. In 1999, McKibbin was convicted of oral copulation on a minor in Santa Cruz County. He is currently in compliance with sex offender registration requirements, said District Attorney Steve Wagstaffe, although he is not currently listed in the Megans Law database. Allard said McKibbin took the 14-year-old from San Jose to Santa Cruz, plied him with alcohol and took advantage of the boy. the shoulder after making a U-turn on a street in the citys Bayview District around 8:35 a.m. Friday. Investigators say just before he started shooting, the gunman had stepped out of his car and started cursing at the driver.

Weekend June 18-19, 2011

SV exec.charged with luring teen for sex


By Michelle Durand
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

Police reports
You cant see me
A man wearing a green army coat was hiding in a planter box on the rst block of Highland Avenue in Burlingame before 7:32 p.m. Tuesday, June 14.

A Silicon Valley executive and registered sex offender is facing both criminal and civil action for allegedly luring a 16-year-old Canadian teen to a Burlingame hotel for sexual activity. Prosecutors say Scott Del Marshall McKibbin, 40, of San Jose, convinced the Vancouver boy in October to y into San Francisco International Airport and took him to the Peninsula hotel. He was apprehended by Burlingame police and FBI agents when he brought the boy back to the airport to change his ight reservation. The boys parents had contacted authorities once they discovered him missing. McKibbin, who is the director of global dis-

BURLINGAME
Suspicious activity. A woman received a call from a man claiming she owed $800 and would go to jail if she didnt pay on the 100 block of Anza Boulevard before 2:30 p.m. Tuesday, June 14. Burglary. A vehicle window was smashed and papers were stolen from the 800 block of Rollins Road before 10:05 a.m. Tuesday, June 14.

MILLBRAE
Petty theft. A sign was stolen from a sandwich shop on the 100 block of Park Place before 7:10 a.m. Thursday, June 16. Disturbance. A man had a verbal dispute with his neighbor because he suspected that his neighbors dogs had pooped on his property on the 1400 block of Murchison Drive before 1:52 p.m. Wednesday, June 15.

San Francisco city worker shot in road rage attack


SAN FRANCISCO San Francisco police are looking for a suspect who shot and wound-

Around the Bay


ed a city employee in a road rage incident. Police say the driver of a Department of Parking and Trafc painting truck was shot in

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Weekend June 18-19, 2011

LOCAL/STATE
BAY CITY NEWS SERVICE

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Browns veto could spark Mistrial declared in Ayres competency case war over state budget
By Robin Hindery
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SACRAMENTO The warning from Gov. Jerry Brown was ominous: If lawmakers refuse to take the necessary steps to resolve Californias budget crisis, the state would become a battleground a war of all against all. The provocative political sound bite, uttered in a March interview with the Los Angeles Times, seems to be coming true in the wake of Browns veto Thursday of a spending plan from majority Democrats the rst time a California governor has done so since at least 1901, the farthest back state records go. The veto will let Brown keep trying to sell reluctant Republicans on his main proposal for closing the states $9.6 billion decit by extending a series of tax increases set to expire June 30. The GOP will bear full blame if Brown is forced to resort to deeper cuts to education and vital services to make up for lost tax revenue, the governor cautioned Thursday. But six months of previous negotiations with Republicans have failed to produce the four GOP votes needed to put the tax question on a special ballot. And Democrats say Browns alternative scenario

Jerry Brown

an all-cuts budget is a nonstarter for his own party. With lawmakers united only in their anger at Brown, the coming days and weeks wont be pretty, experts

predict. What well see now is trench warfare. It may not be a matter of sweeping strategies and sudden grand solutions, but ghts over inches of ground, said Jack Pitney, a political science professor at Claremont McKenna College. Pitney speculated the veto by the 73-year-old governor a seasoned politician who rst led the state from 1975 to 1983 and later served two terms as mayor of Oakland was calculated to throw lawmakers off balance. Maybe his overall strategy is keep them waiting, keep them guessing, Pitney said. That may give him some leverage over the Legislature, though how he uses that leverage is another matter. Brown alluded to such a strategy Thursday, saying his veto of the Democratic budget was the most productive way to proceed.

A mistrial was declared Friday in the competency trial of a San Mateo psychiatrist accused of molesting seven male patients during the early 1990s, San Mateo County District Attorney Steve Wagstaffe said. William Ayres, 79, suffers from dementia and memory loss, which his attorneys argued prevent him from understanding the nature of the charges against him and cooperating in his defense. Deputy District Attorney Melissa McKowan, however, said the court has built-in protections that allow people with impairments to participate in trials. The jurors deadlocked 8-4, with the majority saying Ayres' dementia rendered him incompetent to stand trial, leading the court to declare a mistrial, Wagstaffe said. The case will continue next week, when the judge and attorneys will decide whether to retry the compe-

tency issue. Otherwise, Ayres is considered competent, Wagstaffe said. "We are very disappointed," he said. "It's another road William Ayres block." Ayres was charged with nine counts of performing lewd acts on seven boys during counseling sessions that took place between 1991 and 1996. A criminal trial in the summer of 2009 ended with a hung jury, but prosecutors decided that August to retry the case. The criminal proceedings were suspended when Ayres' attorney, Jonathan McDougall, questioned his client's competency in light of "an insidious onset of dementia." Ayres' wife of 49 years, Solvig Ayres, testied in the trial that her husband struggled to remember their son's name, their door code

and the meaning of the word "biscuit." McDougall said Thursday that Ayres' current and future cognitive decline would have a "huge impact" on the outcome of a complex criminal trial. He said that the inability to remember details about events that happened during the 1990s or the testimony of other witnesses would severely compromise Ayres' defense. McKowan, however, argued that memory loss does not constitute incompetence. She said Ayres could testify at his own speed, request breaks and keep a personal record throughout the trial of his statements and decisions. She said McDougall also would be allowed to use records and transcripts from the 2009 trial, during which Ayres testied that he had conducted exams in which boys were naked from the waist down but that nothing inappropriate had happened.

Medicare goes high-tech to head off fraud


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON Tired of paying bogus claims, then chasing the scammers, Medicare announced Friday it is deploying screening technology similar to whats widely used by credit card companies to

head off fraud. Up to now, the $500 billion-a-year government health program for seniors has basically paid claims rst and asked questions later in a system dubbed pay and chase. The technology upgrade should help deter agrant abuses such as the

small clinic that suddenly starts billing more for a particular outpatient procedure intravenous infusions, for example than major hospitals in its area. But its not likely to help crack sophisticated schemes that involve outwardly respectable companies with the expertise to cover their tracks.

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THE DAILY JOURNAL

STATE/NATION

Weekend June 18-19, 2011

U.N.backs gay rights for first time ever


By Frank Jordans
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

GENEVA The United Nations endorsed the rights of gay, lesbian and transgender people for the first time ever Friday, passing a resolution hailed as historic by the U.S. and other backers and decried by some African and Muslim countries. The declaration was cautiously worded, expressing grave concern about abuses because of sexual orientation and commissioning a global report on discrimination against gays. But activists called it an important shift on an issue that has divided the global body for decades, and they credited the Obama administrations push for gay rights at home and abroad. This represents a historic moment to highlight the human rights abuses and violations that lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people face around the world based solely on who they are and whom they love, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said

This represents a historic moment to highlight the human rights abuses and violations that lesbian,gay,bisexual and transgender people face around the world.
U.S.Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton

New York marriage bill hits snags on religion questions


By Michael Gormley
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

in a statement. Following tense negotiations, members of the Geneva-based U.N. Human Rights Council narrowly voted in favor of the declaration put forward by South Africa, with 23 votes in favor and 19 against. Backers included the U.S., the European Union, Brazil and other Latin American countries. Those against included Russia, Saudi Arabia, Nigeria and Pakistan. China, Burkina Faso and Zambia abstained, Kyrgyzstan didnt vote and Libya was suspended from the rights body earlier. The resolution expressed grave concern at acts of violence and discrimination, in all regions of the world, committed against individu-

als because of their sexual orientation and gender identity. More important, activists said, it also established a formal U.N. process to document human rights abuses against gays, including discriminatory laws and acts of violence. According to Amnesty International, consensual same-sex relations are illegal in 76 countries worldwide, while harassment and discrimination are common in many more. Todays resolution breaks the silence that has been maintained for far too long, said John Fisher of the gay rights advocacy group ARC International. The White House in a statement strongly backed the declaration.

ALBANY, N.Y. Gov. Andrew Cuomo said he was cautiously optimistic his gay marriage bill will soon become law as he held more one-on-one negotiations Friday with Senate Republicans. The Republicans who hold the critical votes say they worry Cuomos bill doesnt adequately protect religious groups and churches that refuse to preside over same-sex weddings and other services. A third lengthy, closed-door meeting by the GOP majority brought the bill, widely viewed as key to national momentum on the issue, no closer to a oor vote. The Democrat-led Assembly passed the measure Wednesday as expected, and a vote in the Senate had been anticipated this week.

That action could now be days away, after Senate Republicans didnt even discuss Friday whether to take that action. There has been no decision in fact that really was not the discussion as to whether it will come out yet, whos voting for it, whos voting against it, Majority Leader Dean Skelos said immediately after Fridays two-hour conference. The Long Island Republican said senators for and against gay marriage want to make the sure that if the bill gets a oor vote there wont be unintended consequences to this legislation a reference to religious protections. Skelos didnt go into more details but noted that some Catholic adoption agencies closed after a law was passed years ago prohibiting discrimination against gays and lesbians.

Unemployment fell in fewer than half U.S.states


California loses jobs
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

By Christopher S. Rugaber
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SACRAMENTO The unemployment rate in California fell again in May, dropping to 11.7 percent, a state agency reported Friday, but the number of jobs in the state was also down. It was the fifth month in a row with a lower jobless rate, even though a survey of 42,000 California businesses showed the state lost about 29,000 payroll

jobs during May. People who are not seeking work arent counted in the labor force, so the jobless rate can go down even with fewer jobs. Weak and spotty job growth has been common during the economic recovery from the recent recession, and some people have stopped looking for work or have gone back to school, which can lower the calculated unemployment rate.

WASHINGTON Unemployment rates fell in fewer than half of U.S. states, evidence that slower hiring has affected many parts of the country. The unemployment rates in 24 states dropped, the Labor Department said Friday. Rates rose in 13 states and Washington, D.C, and were at in 13. Thats a significant decline from April, when 39 states reported falling unemployment rates. And only 22 states reported a net

gain in jobs in May, while 27 states lost jobs. Thats much worse than April, when 42 states gained jobs. The changing trend in state unemployment rates reect a weaker economy that has been hampered by high gas prices and lower factory output. Nationally, employers added a net gain of only 54,000 jobs in May, compared to an average of 220,000 per month in the previous three months. The U.S. unemployment rate ticked up to 9.1 percent. California, New York and Pennsylvania reported large job losses, partly reversing gains earlier

this year. California said employers cut 29,200 jobs last month, with big losses in professional and business services, which includes accounting, engineering, and temporary services. The construction sector also lost jobs. New York said employers cut 24,700 jobs and Pennsylvania reported a drop of 14,200 jobs. But those drops follow large gains in April and dont represent a longer-term trend, said Marissa DiNatale, a regional economist at Moodys Analytics. New York added 53,000 jobs in April, and Pennsylvania added 23,900.

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Weekend June 18-19, 2011

LOCAL
On Friday, Feb. 4 the Borel Middle School Jazz Band, conducted by Brian Switzer, competed at the annual California Music Educators Association (CMEA) Festival at the College of San Mateo and received a Unanimous Superior rating, the highest possible rating that can be received. At this event, ensembles are rated by three judges on their performance and are scored on the musical standards of intonation, rhythm, style, overall musicality and sight-reading. They were the only middle school at the festival to receive this rating. Additionally, the band was just selected to participate at the Monterey NextGen Jazz Festival on April 3. This festival is by invitation only and participants are selected through a taped audition.

THE DAILY JOURNAL

he Peninsula College Fund, an organization dedicated to helping local minority students succeed in college, will hold its sixth annual awards ceremony honoring 15 scholarship recipients from East Palo Alto, East Menlo Park and Redwood City from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday, June 18 at Sacred Heart Schools, 150 Valparaiso Ave. in Atherton. Five PCF scholars who have recently graduated from college will also be recognized. Featured speaker is Dr. Francisco Jimenez, Santa Clara University literature professor and author. Jimenez is internationally renowned for his books, which depict the migrant experience in America. Scholarship winners from the following high schools will be recognized: East Palo Alto Academy, East Side College Preparatory, MenloAtherton, Sequoia, Summit Prep and Woodside. *** Fusion Academy and Learning Center, operated by American

Local briefs
Tenant pleads not guilty to identity theft

Education Group, is looking to expand to Northern California in early fall. The company is looking to expand in San Francisco and is choosing from a number of Peninsula locations including San Mateo. For more information visit www.fusionacademy.com. *** On Tuesday, Feb. 15, Wells Fargo donated $35,000 to San Mateo Police Chief Susan Manheimer for the San Mateo Police Activities League. ***

A San Mateo renter accused of stealing the former tenants identity to access his E-Trade account and set up numerous new bank accounts pleaded not guilty Friday to 23 felony counts of identity theft and one charge of possessing stolen property. Frederick Joseph Berry Jr., 38, was scheduled for trial Aug. 18. Prosecutors claim Berry used the former tenants mail, which was still being sent to the San Mateo apartment, to open approximately 20 accounts used to oat checks. Frederick Berry The man was alerted to the alleged theft by E-Trade about a month after he moved because there were suspicious transactions on his account like a password change and transfer requests. During a search of Berrys home, police also reported nding property from other people whose vehicles had been burglarized. Berry remains in custody in lieu of $500,000 bail. He returns Class notes is a twice weekly column ded- to court July 19 for a pretrial conference.
icated to school news. It is compiled by education reporter Heather Murtagh. You can contact her at (650) 344-5200, ext. 105 or at [email protected].

Police arrest man, woman on suspicion of several burglaries


Colma police earlier this week arrested a man and woman suspected of several storage locker burglaries in the area. Joseph Matthew Dowd, 44, and Janette Azadian, 36, were arrested in San Francisco Tuesday afternoon, police said. Colma police detectives determined that a vehicle used in a burglary at a storage facility in their city was located at Dowds residence in San Francisco. While conducting surveillance on the vehicle, Dowd and Azadian entered the car and drove away, according to police. They were later stopped by police and taken into custody at a recycling center in San Francisco, where they had apparently gone to dispose of property taken in various burglaries, police said. Both Dowd and Azadian have since been charged with multiple counts of burglary and identity theft and admitted to being involved in burglaries in Colma, police said. Investigators also believe the pair are responsible for numerous burglaries in San Francisco and Daly City. When she was arrested, Azadian was out on bail for similar crimes she allegedly committed in Southern California. She was also booked on outstanding warrants out of San Francisco. Police were able to recover about $5,000 in stolen property connected to the burglaries in Colma.

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THE DAILY JOURNAL

Weekend June 18-19, 2011

Enjoy fun time with Mom, Dad or your favorite grown-up. The across clues are for kids and the down clues are for adults.

Talk, Talk, Talk...


Kids Across 1. The body part you use to talk (and eat) 3. People who love to go to the theater know that these used to be called talking pictures 6. Its the funny part at the end of a joke 9. What a naysayer almost always says no matter what you ask him 10. To talk 13. To talk online 15. A discussion about little things that dont matter much is just _____ talk 16. Says the same thing over and over again 18. In kindergarten, its fun for everyone: Show and ____ 21. The grownup at school who reminds you to raise your hand before you speak 22. Cat talk 23. You can use it to talk or text a friend Parents Down 1. Silent sidewalk entertainer 2. Sign language essential 4. Speak up: You can raise it without lifting a nger 5. She shouldnt have listened to the serpent 6. Offer an endorsement for a friend: ___ in a good word 7. One who is at home on a talk show stage 8. Hello? These are streetside phone stalls from days gone by 11. Artist Paul Czannes regional verbal air (or the mark in his surname) 12. Lend one your ears 13. Give a ring 14. Message kept mum 17. A great orator has the gift of it 19. Audible reection heard by Grand Canyon visitors 20. Not pre-recorded 21. Minimum number of people needed for a healthy conversation
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Weekend June 18-19, 2011

LOCAL/NATION/WORLD

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Syrian forces open fire on protesters


By Zeina Karam and Elizabeth A. Kennedy
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Sex assault on school field trip


Five Redwood City middle-school students are accused of trying to rape two 12-year-old girls on a school eld trip to a local park March 4. Although the alleged assault took place three months ago in Stulsaft Park in Redwood City, the girls did not report it until the last week of school which led to the boys being taken into custody last Wednesday. The boys, whose names are being withheld because they are juveniles, appeared in juvenile court at the Youth Services Center on Monday. Each boy, ages 13 and 14, are charged with felony counts of intent to commit rape, sexual battery and committing a lewd act on a minor under 14 by force. They were arraigned and set for trial next month.

SM-FC names new superintendent


Cynthia Simms, interim superintendent of the Los Gatos Union School District, was named superintendent of the San MateoFoster City Elementary School District as the Board of Trustees approved a three-year contract Thursday. Simms will take over for Superintendent Pendery Clark next month. Clark will retire June 30 after 10 years with the district. Simms, who prefers to go by Cyndy has had her eye on the San Mateo-Foster City Elementary School District for the last couple of years. Simms was intrigued by the variety of special programs offered at each campus.

BEIRUT Syrian security forces red on thousands of protesters Friday, killing a teenage boy and at least 15 other civilians as accounts emerged of more indiscriminate killing and summary executions by the autocratic regime of President Bashar Assad, activists said. The three-month uprising has proved stunningly resilient despite a relentless crackdown by the military, the pervasive security forces and pro-regime gunmen. Human rights activists say more than 1,400 Syrians have been killed and 10,000 detained as Assad desperately tries to maintain his grip on power. What is our guilt? We just demanded freedom and democracy nothing else, said Mohamed, 27, who spoke to the Associated Press from a refugee camp in neighboring Turkey where nearly 10,000 Syrians have ed. Mohamed, who asked to be identied only by his rst name for fear of reprisals, and other refugees offered harrowing accounts of the regimes bombardment. I saw people who were beheaded with machine-gun re from helicopters and a man tortured to death when security forces poured acid on his body, he said.

REUTERS

Protesters shout slogans during a demonstration against President Bashar al-Assad in the Syrian eastern town of Deir al-Zour.
He said a sugar factory in Jisr al-Shughour was turned into a jail where they hold quick trials and execute anyone who they believe participated in protests. Jisr al-Shughour was a town that was spinning out of government control before the military recaptured it last Sunday. U.N. envoy Angelina Jolie traveled to Turkeys border with Syria on Friday to meet some of the refugees, and she was greeted by a 45-foot-long (15-meter) banner that read: Goodness Angel of the World, Welcome in English and Turkish. Police prevented media coverage of the visit.

Libyan leader Gadhafi says NATO will not win


By Adam Schreck and Hadeel Al-Shalchi
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Council picks new mayor, swears in new member


San Carlos Vice Mayor Andy Klein, who withdrew his mayoral bid after being arrested on suspicion of drunk driving but reconsidered after the case was dropped, was unanimously voted mayor Monday night.

TRIPOLI, Libya Provoked by renewed daylight NATO bombing of his capital, Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi raged against the alliance Friday, screaming his message and daring Western forces to keep it up. Gadha spoke in a telephone call that was piped through loudspeakers to a few thousand

Moammar Gadha

people demonstrating in Tripolis Green Square, at the end of a day when NATO intensified bombing runs across the capital. State television carried the Gadha message live, then repeated it a few minutes later. NATO will be defeated, he yelled in a hoarse, agitated voice. They will

pull out in defeat. The sound of automatic weapons being red deantly into the air echoed through the square for hours as carloads of pro-Gadha supporters many with children in tow crammed the streets leading to the plaza. Although there was a large presence of police and soldiers in the square, many of those popping off rounds wore civilian clothes. Protesters and foreign journalists in the capital said it was one of the biggest such demonstrations since airstrikes began.

Republican candidates jostle over who is toughest


NEW ORLEANS If Republicans meeting in New Orleans are to be believed, entire appeals courts would be dismantled, four years of President Barack Obamas time in power would be undone and the entire economic crisis would end the day the next president takes power. Tough talk from the candidates vying for the 2012 GOP presidential nomination has escalated in recent weeks into a game of one-ups-

Around the nation


manship at a thousands-strong Republican gathering. Their rhetoric doesnt always match with reality. It might not matter. Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich would unleash as many as 200 executive orders on his rst day in ofce to un-do Obamas four years in the White House. Former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum says Barack Obama does not believe in you; he believes in himself.

THE DAILY JOURNAL

OPINION

Weekend June 18-19, 2011

Straight talk on NATO


The Knoxville (Tenn.) News-Sentinel

Other voices
Norway will be contributing a signicantly higher amount next year. Many members are cutting their NATO contributions. ... The U.S. is now bearing 75 percent of that cost, and Gates blasted those Europeans who are willing and eager for American taxpayers to assume the growing security burden left by reductions in European defense budgets. ... The Associated Press described Gates words as unusually harsh and unvarnished.

lanning to step down at the end of June, Defense Secretary Robert Gates feels he can speak freely, and speak freely he did in a valedictory address to NATO at alliance headquarters in Brussels. Speaking to an audience of European military ofcers, government ofcials and diplomats, Gates said that, barring stepped-up support from member nations, NATO faced a dim, if not dismal future. In addition to the United States, only

To which we say, hurray for Robert Gates. NATO is too important an alliance to let collapse from neglect and indifference. Sometimes blunt words are the right tools to get the job done. NATO was formed after World War II as a defensive alliance against any attempt by the Soviet Union to move into Western Europe, and by that standard it was a success. Counterintuitively, NATO, which had 16 members when the Iron Curtain fell, now has 28. One hopes that the Europeans listened to Gates. He does, after all, have their best interests at heart.

Primary care
have a policy of not discussing aspiring political party candidates for the nomination for president of the United States. Thats the business of party voters in the multiple primary state elections in the upcoming months. To the general electorate, it doesnt matter much what they say now, their contradictions or all the negative goodies plumbed up from the sewers in campaign materials, until one wins the nomination. Then it becomes useful to look at what each nal candidate is bringing to the general election in 2012. There are, actually, no provisions in the U.S. Constitution for political parties. But, for better or worse, they did weave tightly into political process by the time of the administration of Andrew Jackson. Summary from Wikipedia: The series of presidential primary elections and caucuses is one of the rst steps in the process of electing a president of the United States. Primaries are run by state and local governments, while caucuses are private events run by the political parties. A state primary election, usually, is an indirect election determining only how many delegates to each partys national convention each candidate will receive from that state. When I was younger, previous national party conventions received heavy criticism because many candidates, eventually, were conrmed in smoke-lled back rooms, to the advantage of the party pros. So more emphasis since has been placed on decisions made closer to the voters in the various state primaries and caucuses. After which, the eventual nominees became known well before the actual conventions took place. The last time a major partys nominee was not clear before the convention was in 1976, when incumbent president Gerald Ford narrowly defeated Ronald Reagan. As I have often written, there is almost always a downside to even the best of intentions. With the power of nomination passing to party voters in the various states, the candidates in each party must spend a lot of money and time to campaign in a number of them. They have two years of time and opportunity to demonize each other before Barack Obama can even get a crack at them. Can that do them irreparable damage? Try this one: In the 2000 primary in South Carolina, Karl Rove, George W. Bushs evil Darth Vader, fearing John McCain was coming up too close in delegates to his boss, circulated a photo of McCain and his family showing a very dark-skinned little girl in front, leaving voters in a state still ying the Confederate ag to draw their own conclusions. Then polls popped up asking: Would you be more likely or less likely to vote for John McCain for president if you knew he had fathered an illegitimate black child? But in hotly contested elections, who really cares about the truth? The child was, actually, adopted from a Bangladesh orphanage by McCain and his wife 1993. Of course, McCain was in a rage, but it was reported that Bush tried to calm him by saying something like: Come on John, you know this is only politics! Maybe it was to him, but not to puritanical little ol me. At this point in time, it appears the other candidates in the Republican Party are ganging up on Mitt Romney, the putative front runner, with his Mormonism, his despised initiating of the health care initiative, called Romney Care when he was governor of Massachusetts and, now, questions of residency when he last voted there. If he nally makes it to the actual nomination, he may have been plucked naked before facing Obama, who has no such fate in store for him as the single candidate in the Democratic Party primaries and caucuses. So, how will this play out in the 2012 general elections? It is my experience that most voters do not rely heavily on negative campaigning or pay much attention to the cable pundits. They tend to vote their own interests, especially in retaining the benets that have accrued in their favor over the years, even those in the welfare and tax breaks for the wealthy, large businesses and corporations. Obamas record of governing is on record. The opponents have only ideology, promises and criticisms to offer. And even if Obama has lost much of his base since the 2008 election, what do the others have to offer as an alternative the 35 million to 50 million who cant get coverage if they can get Obamacare repealed? How angry will the middle class and independent voters be about Republican governors assaults upon such things as unions and the educational systems? History shows the country is now center/right, but the independents still shun extremists. So Mitt Romney would be the closest to a winnable nal candidate if he is able to fend off the assaults from his extreme right ideological colleagues.
Keith Kreitman has been a Foster City resident for 25 years. He is retired with degrees in political science and journalism and advanced studies in law. He is the host of Focus on the Arts on Peninsula TV, Channel 26. His column appears in the weekend edition.

Letters to the editor


Democrats and Republicans: Same party, same agenda
Editor U.S. Rep. Nancy Pelosi is so morally bankrupt, it is she who should resign. She states, Congressman Weiner exercised poor judgment in his actions and poor judgment in his reaction to the revelations. Well, where was Congresswoman Pelosis moral compass when she took impeachment off the table and allowed George W. Bush and his gang of war criminals to escape impeachment for lying us into the Iraqi and Afghanistan wars? Now she sits smugly allowing the other war criminal, Barack Obama, to continue the illegal wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Somalia, Yemen and now our $10 million-a-day fiasco in Libya again without congressional approval. Democrats and Republicans, the same party with the same agenda supporting only corporations and war, or supporting only war and corporations. ahead, set an example, show leadership and make it work. Ill be watching!

Brainwashed
Editor, A bipartisan group of lawmakers has filed a lawsuit accusing the Obama administration of waging unconstitutional military operations in Libya. The suit says President Obama violated the War Powers Act by failing to obtain congressional approval for the Libya attack within 60 days. On Wednesday, the White House issued a lengthy report arguing Obama had the authority to ignore the 60-day window because the U.S. role in Libya was limited, and therefore outside the scope of Congress. Critics have described the hearings as a modern-day form of McCarthyism designed to stoke fear against American Muslims. In a rebuke of Rep. Peter King, Democratic Rep. Laura Richardson of California said the focus on Muslims is an act of racism. Have you noticed the nature of the cartoons now in the right-wing blogs? The Arabs are the villains. Before all wars, they had to have a really good excuse to try to convince the people because, before World War II, most Americans had been involved in one world war and didnt want to get involved in another one. Let them fight it out! So what if Hitler wins? At least hell be the buffer between us and the communists! Before World War I, the United States spent years of antagonistic propaganda against Kaiser Wilhelm of Germany. It was all his fault, it was all the Germans fault! The people are brainwashed for years before a war.

Harry Roussard Foster City

Biblical inaccuracies
Editor, Regarding John Bloomstines letter, Be careful what you preach, in the June 13 edition of the Daily Journal, I would like to point out a few errors. For one thing, atheists dont generally say that there is no god. They say that they dont believe there is a god. Their explanation is a simple one: insufficient evidence. The believer says, What do you mean? The evidence is everywhere. The atheists simply say that what you see is evidence of evolution, not creation. To the question, But what started evolution? the atheist simply asks, What started god? (Incidentally, atheists dont generally capitalize the word god). Of course, a comprehensive argumentation is not possible here, and to the true believer, argumentation is useless in any event. The argument that the New Testament is 99.5 percent free of textual discrepancies is very laughable. A great many volumes have been compiled by biblical scholars that explicitly point out the thousands of New Testament inconsistencies and inaccuracies. The Encyclopedia of Biblical Errancy by Dr. Dennis Mc Kinsey to name just one well-known one. Fables, fantasy and inconsistencies. Be careful what you preach Mr. Bloomstine.

Cynthia Marcopulos South San Francisco

Democrats should take hold of the economy too


Editor, In regards to Robert Stines letter, Republicans should take hold of economy, in the June 17 edition of the Daily Journal, Stine is putting the economic problem firmly in the lap of the Republicans. If all the companies led, owned and managed by Democrats and liberals would support their government and start hiring and spending big money, we would be a great shape. So why wait for the 30 odd percent Republicans we seem to have in California? Please go

Don Havis San Mateo

Ted Rudow III Palo Alto

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10

Weekend June 18-19, 2011

BUSINESS

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Dow 12,004.36 +0.36% 10-Yr Bond 2.9440% +0.0035 Nasdaq 2,616.48 -0.28% Oil (per barrel) 92.91 S&P 500 1,271.50 +0.30% Gold 1,540.20

Stocks eke out gain


By Daniel Wagner and David K. Randall
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Wall Street
struggling to compete with Apple Inc.s iPhone and Android phones. Other technology companies like Intel Corp. and Cisco Systems Inc. fell 0.3 percent, the biggest drop among the 10 industries that make up the S&P index. Among other U.S. companies, credit research firm Moodys Corp. dropped 5 percent after analysts downgraded the company. McGraw-Hill Cos., which owns rival rating agency Standard & Poors, fell nearly 4 percent. And BJs Wholesale Club Inc. dipped nearly 1 percent after two private equity firms made a bid for the warehouse club chain. Germanys softer stance toward assisting Greece pulled the price of lower-risk investments like government bonds lower. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note rose to 2.94 percent early Friday from 2.90 percent Thursday. Bond yields rise when prices fall. The S&P 500 finished the week just 0.04 percent higher than where it started. That tiny gain was enough to break a six-week losing streak that went back to the last week in April. The S&P 500 index hits its high for the year on April 29, and has fallen nearly 7 percent since then. Nearly two stocks rose for every one that fell on the New York Stock Exchange Friday. Consolidated volume came to 4.4 billion shares.

Big movers
Stocks that moved substantially or traded heavily Friday on the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq Stock Market: NYSE BJs Wholesale Club Inc., down 36 cents at $47.50 Private equity rms Leonard Green & Partners and CVC Capital Partners made a joint bid for the warehouse club chain. Lender Processing Services Inc.,down $2.95 at $20.42 The mortgage services company slashed its prot outlook citing fewer loan defaults and higher regulatory and legal expenses. Graham Packaging Co. Inc., down 53 cents at $25.20 Reynolds Group is buying the container maker for about $1.68 billion after rival bidder Silgan failed to deliver a better offer. Moodys Corp.,down $1.92 at $36.35 The Wall Street Journal reported that the SEC may le civil fraud charges related to mortgage deals against credit rating agencies. Flowserve Corp.,up $4.60 at $105.69 A Credit Suisse analyst said worries about project delays for the pump, valve and seal makerany are overblown. Nasdaq Research in Motion Ltd., down $7.58 at $27.75 The BlackBerry maker gave a surprisingly weak forecast for the year as it struggles to compete with Apple and Android phones. Central Garden & Pet Co., up 99 cents at $10.25 The pet supplies and lawn and garden products supplier announced a new $100 million stock buyback program. Zoran Corp.,up $1.09 at $8.29 British chip maker CSR will buy the chip maker for $484 million, lifting shares even though CSR paid less than it bid in February.

Signs that a solution to Greeces debt problems could be near helped the stock market eke out its first week of gains since April. Germany softened its conditions for giving Greece more loans on Friday, putting Greece closer to getting more financial support and avoiding a default. Global financial markets were rattled earlier this week when a default by Greece seemed imminent. Traders worry that a default by Greece could trigger another financial crisis, weakening the euro and leading to widespread losses for banks and governments that hold Greek bonds. A default would also push up the value of lower-risk assets like the dollar and U.S. government bonds. The Dow Jones industrial average closed up 42.84, or 0.4 percent, at 12,004.36. The Standard & Poors 500 index rose 3.86, or 0.3 percent, to 1,271.50. The gains werent widespread. The technology-focused Nasdaq composite index lost 7.22, or 0.3 percent, to 2,616.48 after signs that large companies are faltering. BlackBerry maker Research In Motion Ltd. plummeted 21 percent after giving a surprisingly weak forecast for the current quarter and the remainder of the year. The company is

Airfare doesnt have to be a gamble


Aditional advice
Book on Tuesday,Wednesday and Thursday.Thats when airlines most often offer sales. Buy in advance,but not too early.The best time is four to six weeks before traveling.In general,prices for any given ight are highest eight to 10 weeks and two to three weeks in advance. Embrace social media.Airlines are giving more benets,like exclusive sales, to travelers who interact with them on Twitter and Facebook.Those specials are often gone within hours. The so-called discount airlines JetBlue,AirTran,Southwest and Frontier adjust their fares less frequently than other airlines,so you can feel more condent locking in a price.But their prices arent always the lowest. Researching multiple airlinesfares is the only way to get a good deal.

By Samantha Bomkamp and Scott Mayerowitz


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Business briefs
Put a cork in the Internet bubble talk for now
SAN FRANCISCO Its starting to feel like a 1999 ashback. Internet companies some of them protable, some not sense a golden opportunity and are lining up to go public this year. But heres something to keep in mind as the latest case of Internet fever grips Wall Street: Its still nowhere close to the giddy days of the dot-com boom, when investors bought stocks as impulsively as lottery tickets. Technology stocks today are the cheapest in more than nine years, at least judging by one benchmark for appraising companies. This year could yield the most initial public offerings of technology stocks since 2000. But the venture capitalists who bankroll high-tech startups arent pouring money into the Internet like they once did. And even rapidly growing Internet companies LinkedIn Corp. and Pandora Media Inc. have lost some of their luster after dazzling investors when they went public in recent weeks. All those factors signal that cooler heads are prevailing, especially with the global economy on shaky ground. So far this year, 28 of the 74 IPOs completed in the U.S. have been by technology companies, according to IPO investment advisory firm Renaissance Capital. If, as expected, another 31 tech IPOs are completed by the end this year, it will be the most from the sector since 2000.

NEW YORK Searching for airfares often seems to be a game passengers are set up to lose. Prices change from day to day, even minute to minute. Scouring multiple websites for the best deal can be overwhelming. And after you book, theres no guarantee that you got the best price. You just dont know when to pull the trigger. Its not like buying anything else I can think of, said George Hobica, founder of Airfarewatchdog.com. Harriet Levy paid $179 for a recent round-trip ight on American Airlines between New York and Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Sitting just one row behind her, Shirley Harrison paid $215. A few rows back, Ellis and Dianne Traub paid $317

each. There were at least 12 fares on the ight, ranging from $169 to $360. Theres no rhyme or reason to it, Harrison said. Fares can uctuate signicantly in just a few hours. One Delta ight from New York to Los Angeles jumped from $755 to $1,143 from a Friday to Saturday in late April, then fell to $718 on Sunday. The ight was one of a dozen the Associated Press tracked over three months for a July 16-22 vacation. The No. 1 nding: Avoid booking tickets on weekends. Its the most expensive time to buy. Theres no way to guarantee the best fare. It wasnt always this complicated. Before the airlines were deregulated in 1978, airfares were approved by the government. Prices were consistent and printed in timetables.

AARP slammed for not fighting Social Security cuts


By Stephen Ohlemacher
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

American Airlines begins iPad testing by pilots


FORT WORTH, Texas Some American Airlines Inc. pilots have begun testing iPads in an effort to ease the amount of bulky paperwork they need for ights. The Allied Pilots Association says the iPads have electronic-charting functions. Pilots on two trans-Pacific flights began the test Thursday. The Federal Aviation Administration says pilots must still carry paper documents as backup, items that add to the pounds being hauled as carriers seek to lower weight on airplanes and reduce fuel costs. The six-month test is being done on American ights from Los Angeles to Shanghai and Tokyo Narita.

WASHINGTON AARP, the powerful lobby for older Americans, was hammered Friday by fellow activists for refusing to oppose any and all cuts to Social Security benets, a position the group says it has long held as a way to extend the life of the massive retirement and disability program. The group, which has 37 million Americans as members, adamantly opposes cutting Social Security benets

to help reduce the federal budget decit, said David Certner, the organizations director of legislative policy. But for years AARP has acknowledged that cuts to future benets may be necessary to improve the programs nances, he said. Our policy for decades has always been that we basically support a package that would include revenue enhancements and benet adjustments to get Social Security to long-term solvency, Certner said. That has been our policy stated over and over again for, I mean, literally it has to be two decades, now.

However, the issue gained major notice Friday as White House and congressional leaders continued to negotiate ways to reduce government red ink. Social Security has not been a part of those talks. Instead, negotiators have focused on potential cuts to Medicare, the government health insurance program for older Americans. In the midst of that, The Wall Street Journal quoted AARPs longtime policy chief, John Rother, saying the agency was dropping its longstanding opposition to cutting Social Security benets.

Beyond .com, names for Antarctica, Urdu and more


By Anick Jesdanun
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Unless youre a Luddite, youre bound to know of .com, the Internets most common address sufx. Youve also probably heard of .gov, for U.S. government sites, and .edu, for educational institutions.

Did you know Antarctica has its own sufx, too? Its .aq. The aviation industry has .aero and porn sites have .xxx. Theres .asia for the continent, plus sufxes for individual countries such as Thailand (.th) and South Korea (.kr). Thailand and Korea also have addresses in Thai and Korean. There are currently 310 domain name

sufxes the .com part of Web and email addresses. Now, the organization that oversees the system is poised to accept hundreds or thousands more. Possibilities include .invest and .Canon. In the early days of the Internet, each computer network simply had its own name.

GOOD, BUT NOT FAVORED: DESPITE HAVING A RICH TRADITION, THE U.S. WOMENS SOCCER TEAM IS NO LONGER INVINCIBLE >>> PAGE 12
Weekend, June 18-19, 2011

<< Dont count chickens before lockout ends, page 13 Eskridge leaving Minnesota, page 14

McIlroy roars into record books at U.S Open


By Doug Ferguson
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BETHESDA, Md. In one of those cant-miss moments in sports, thousands of fans covered every inch of space on the hill behind the 10th green at Congressional. They spilled onto the clubhouse veranda, pressed their faces against the windows and

lined up against the balcony railing to watch Rory McIlroy deliver a performance never before seen in the U.S. Open. It was Tiger Woods of 11 years ago, Ian Poulter said. In some respects, it was even better. McIlroy, the sympathetic gure at the Masters, was as close to perfect as golf allows Friday during a stunning

Rory McIlroy

assault on the record book. The 22-year-old from Northern Ireland became the rst player in the 111year history of the U.S. Open to reach 13-under par, and despite a

double bogey into the water on the nal hole, his 5-under 66 was enough set the 36-hole scoring record at 131. He had a six-shot lead over former PGA champion Y.E. Yang (69), matching the U.S. Open record set by Woods in 2000 at Pebble Beach for the largest margin at the halfway point. McIlroy went 17 holes without missing a green. He went 35 holes

without making a bogey. Its very near the best I can play, he said. Not since Woods destroyed his competition at Pebble Beach in 2000 for a record 15-shot victory has anyone made golf look this easy, at least for two rounds.

See GOLF, Page 16

By Nathan Mollat

DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

A marathon sweep Earthquakes see unbeaten


Kansas City 1, Quakes 0

If nothing else, the San Mateo Palomino White Sox should have gotten a good nights sleep Friday following a marathon doubleheader Friday against the visiting Reno Muck Dogs. When San Mateos Nick Davenport singled to center to drive in Marcus Pollard with the winning run in the bottom of the ninth inning, it capped nearly seven hours of baseball between the teams, as the White Sox rallied to tie the score at 11 in their nal at bat of the seventh inning and then beat Reno 12-11 in extra innings in a non-league game. This on the heels of a 9-6 win in the opener, which started at 1 p.m. We were down 5-0 in that one (Game 1), said San Mateo manager Lenny Souza. But I like that. Its good. Weve played a lot of games going down early. Its kinda of our M.O. More importantly for the White Sox, however, is that they tend to rally and win those games in which they trail. They trailed the Muck Dogs for most of the game in Game 2 at Aragon High, but they kept battling. Down 117 going into their nal at bat in the seventh, the White Sox (7-2 overall) scored four times to send the game into extra innings of what was already a marathon game. When Pollard scored, it concluded a threehour, 40-minute affair that the White Sox really had no business winning. San Mateo committed eight errors, which wreaked havoc with the pitching staff. Four different White Sox pitchers toed the rubber, and when the dust settled it was Mitch Labbie who was the winner, with two innings of shutout ball and ve strikeouts against eight Reno batters. It capped a banner day for the former San Mateo High graduate. Not only did Labbie earn the win in the nightcap, he got the save in the rst game. Offensively, he was unstoppable, going 5-for-5 with four RBIs in Game 2. With his team down 3-1 in the fourth following a three-run homer from Renos Kendall Murphy in the top of the third Labbie came to the plate with the bases loaded. On a 1-0

streak ended
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NATHAN MOLLAT / DAILY JOURNAL

San Mateo shortstop Mitch Foley charges a low pop y during the White Soxs come-fromSee PALOMINO, Page 14 behind,nine-inning 12-11 win over the Reno Muck Dogs,completing a double header sweep.

KANSAS CITY, Kan. C.J. Sapong scored the rst Major League Soccer goal at the new Livestrong Sporting Park, and Sporting Kansas City held on for its rst victory in its new home, beating the San Jose Earthquakes 1-0 on Friday night. Kansas City (3-6-4) won consecutive games for the rst time this season and is unbeaten in its last ve matches. Its been just around the corner for a while now for this team, said Sporting keeper Jimmy Nielsen, who earned his rst shutout of the season. Weve been extremely unlucky in some matches. At the end of the day, you have to keep working hard in practice every day to get around that corner. San Jose (5-5-4) had a six-match unbeaten string broken. The crowd of 18,467, while an announced sellout, was noticeably quieter than the standing-room-only 19,925 who saw Sporting play to a scoreless draw with Chicago when the $200 million stadium opened eight days ago. This time out, Kansas City coming off a 4-1 win at FC Dallas on Sunday saw its offensive pressure pay off before halftime. In the 31st minute, after Ramiro Corrales fouled Sportings Davy Arnaud about 45 yards from the goal, Graham Zusi sent a long free kick into the penalty area. Sapong leaped at the edge of the 6-yard box, put out his left foot and deected the ball past Jon Busch. It was just one of those good free kicks, Busch said. It was tough to defend. Maybe on another night, I would have gotten it. Not this night. Sapong, after joking that The soccer gods smiled on me, also gave credit to Zusi for the spot-on delivery. When you have someone who can put the ball where it needs to be, thats half your job, Sapong said. Nielsen, coming off a one-match suspension for a red card against Chicago, made four saves.

Oakland beats GiantsLincecum for the first time


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As 5, Giants 2
under interim manager Bob Melvin. Cody Ross homered for San Francisco but the Giants couldnt overcome Lincecums fourth straight shaky outing and a sputtering offense that continues to misre with runners in scoring position. The As hadnt defeated Lincecum (5-6) in six previous interleague games between the two teams and were shut out by the two-time NL Cy Young Award winner on May 21. Oakland jumped on Lincecum for one run in

OAKLAND Josh Willingham hit an RBI double and also scored on a throwing error, and the Oakland Athletics ended their winless streak against San Francisco ace Tim Lincecum with a 5-2 victory over the Giants on Friday night. Conor Jackson had three hits and an RBI, and Graham Godfrey pitched seven innings to win in just his second major league start for Oakland. The As ended a six-game losing streak against the Giants and have won three straight

the rst and two more in the third. The three runs equaled the total Lincecum gave up to Oakland in his previous ve starts combined. Godfrey (1-0) and two relievers did the rest, combining on the six-hitter. Godfrey, roughed up for ve runs and nine hits in his major league debut against the White Sox on June 10, allowed six hits and gave up both San Francisco runs. He had three strikeouts. That marked the third straight win by an Oakland starting pitcher following a 14-game stretch when the staff went 0-11.

Rookie Jemile Weeks continued his impressive showing since getting called up from the minors 10 days ago to ll in for injured second baseman Mark Ellis. Weeks had two hits to raise his average to .361, including an RBI double in the ninth when the As scored a pair of insurance runs off Giants reliever Guillermo Mota. It was a tough day all around for San Franciscos pitchers and came less than 24 hours after reliever Santiago Casilla gave up a walkoff home run to Arizonas Justin Upton in the 10th inning.

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U.S. women ranked No. 1, but not favored


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Even with their No. 1 ranking and Olympic gold medal, the Americans arent the favorites for the upcoming Womens World Cup. That would be host Germany, winner of the last two World Cups and the team with the most talented roster from top to bottom not to mention home-eld advantage. Or Brazil, which has the best player in the world in Marta and was runnerup at the last three major tournaments. As for the once-mighty United States, well, this hasnt exactly been its best year, forced into a playoff last November just to get to the World Cup and then losing to England for the rst time in 23 years. Yet the Americans sure didnt sound like underdogs as they headed to Germany, where they begin their quest for their rst World Cup title since 1999 on June 28 against North Korea. The Womens World Cup runs June 26 to July 17 in nine cities across Germany. If were at our best, theres not a team in the world that can beat us, Abby Wambach said. The U.S. was, without question, the worlds best back in the days of Mia Hamm, Julie Foudy, Joy Fawcett, Kristine Lilly and Brandi Chastain. The U.S. women won two of the rst three World Cups, along with the rst Olympic gold medal in 1996. But the success of that team inspired other countries to pour resources into their programs, and

the gap between the Americans and everybody else has narrowed considerably. Just look at the recent results. After going years without a single loss, the U.S. has had three since November. After sailing through regional qualifying, the Americans were stunned in the seminals by Mexico, a team that had been 0-24-1 against the United States. The U.S. then had to beat Italy in a home-andhome playoff to earn a spot in the World Cup. The Americans also lost to Sweden in the opener at the Four Nations tournament, which they went on to win, and were beaten by England for the first time since 1988. Thats a sign of how strong the sport has become, captain Christie Rampone said. International teams have more money invested and more of a commitment to womens soccer. The speed of play, the technical side of the game, it all has improved and so has the competition level. Theres not a team out there you can overlook, she added. The game is more demanding. You have to make decisions quicker and read the game faster because of the speed everyone is playing at. If you are not locked in and focused, whoever you are playing, you almost have to be thinking three steps ahead when before you could get away with one or two. As the rest of the world was improving, the Americans were struggling to create their own identi-

REUTERS

American Abby Wambach, left, will have to be on top of her game if the U.S.hopes to win the Womens World Cup.
ty in the post-Golden Generation era. Instability in the head coaching position didnt help, either. Former U.S. player April Heinrichs was not a great tactical coach, and had a poor record of developing young talent. Greg Ryans decision to start Brianna Scurry over Hope Solo in the seminals of the 2007 World Cup probably cost the U.S. a shot at the title and, worse, threatened to destroy the tight bond thats been a trademark of U.S. teams. Solo had posted three shutouts before being benched. Without her, the Americans were routed 4-0. After Solo blasted the decision, Ryan dismissed her from the World Cup. I have no regrets. None. I dont live with regrets, Solo said. You learn and you move on. I have.

Ryan was soon red and replaced by Pia Sundhage. With uninching optimism and a calm temperament, the Swede was quickly able to repair the fractures in the team chemistry. Solo was welcomed back to the team, and was invaluable as the U.S. upset Brazil for the gold medal at the Beijing Olympics. Equally important, Sundhage recognized that the U.S. had to become better tactically. She has put a premium on footwork and positioning, and the Americans are far more balanced under Sundhage. She has also brought on younger players, taking care not to put too many demands on them right away. Alex Morgan, for example, has shown an impressive ability to create chances and score she has seven goals in her rst 16 games, including the game winner in the rst playoff game against Italy. But Sundhage prefers to use Morgan, who turns 22 on July 2, as a late sub so she only has to worry about getting to the goal, not a games worth of strategy. Ive been able to come off the bench and raise the energy level, Morgan said, add something different out there, maybe. While the U.S. has been able to create plenty of chances, it has struggled to nish them, particularly in recent games. Morgans goal against Italy came in added time, and Lauren Cheney also scored in stoppage time to lift the U.S. to a 10 victory over Mexico in a June 5 send-o a history of sorts.

MLS booming in Pacific Northwest


By Anne M. Peterson
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

PORTLAND, Ore. Fans in the Pacic Northwest have done something for Major League Soccer that David Beckham and a million soccer moms couldnt. Theyve made MLS cool. Young urbanites in a region that gave the America grunge music and Starbucks are ocking to see the Seattle Sounders, the Portland Timbers and the Vancouver Whitecaps and the marketing departments for all three teams are wisely tapping into that demographic.

The trend was evident last month when the rst MLS match between the Sounders and the expansion Timbers drew more than 36,000 fans to Qwest Field in Seattle. It played out again recently when the Whitecaps visited Seattle, the second of the fan-created Cascadia Cup rivalry between the teams. The atmosphere at both matches has been called European and thats a big compliment. Is there a reason going to a soccer match in the Pacic Northwest seems like going to a European soccer match more than anywhere else in the United

States? Well, yes. Theres a culture here that was really accepting of it. Its a younger audience; young professionals, that pub culture you talk about, said Paul Swangard, managing director of the Warsaw Sports Marketing Center at University of Oregon. In the early days of MLS, the focus was on families and capitalizing on the legions of kids across the nation who play soccer. In more recent years, stars like Beckham and Landon Donovan have been trumpeted. But teams in the Pacic Northwest

See SOCCER, Page 16

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SPORTS
familiar with those proposals that progress made recently might not lead to an agreement in the next few weeks. Still, according to a person with knowledge of the negotiations, the faction of unhappy owners that exists isnt yet large enough to derail an agreement. That could lead to some heavy lobbying in Chicago at the rst owners meeting specically scheduled to deal with the lockout. The person, speaking on condition of anonymity because details of the negotiations are not supposed to be made public, said a new CBA is not imminent. Owners, Commissioner Roger Goodell and lead negotiator Jeff Pash have been silent about recent developments, citing an agreement with U.S. Magistrate Judge Arthur Boylan not to discuss mediated talks. Players association chief DeMaurice Smith and several players on hand for the negotiations also have avoided comment. Earlier this week, Goodell responded to a letter he and Smith received from two Congressmen calling for the NFL to adopt a thorough testing program for HGH. Goodell said in his reply dated June 13 that testing for HGH is a critical element of an effective and credible drug testing program and the league is insisting on immediate implementation of HGH testing in the negotiations. Whether or not such a provision makes it into the CBA, its clear that deadlines are approaching. Training camps normally would open in about ve weeks, and any lengthy delays in striking a deal will endanger them and the preseason. The rst preseason game is at the Pro Football Hall of Fame inductions; the Bears and Rams are scheduled to play Aug. 7 in Canton, Ohio. I know that weve been talking pretty extensively over the last few weeks, said Saints quarterback Drew Brees, one of 10 players on

Weekend June 18-19, 2011

13

Reaching a deal not a done deal for NFL


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK Reaching a labor deal soon is hardly a done deal in the NFL. Team owners will be updated on recent negotiations with the players when they meet in Chicago on Tuesday. Theyve been told to prepare to stay an extra day because of the complexity of the proposals both sides have discussed in sessions over the last three weeks. Getting the required 24 of 32 owners to agree on anything can be difficult, let alone something as complex as a new collective bargaining agreement. And there has been enough pushback from owners

an antitrust suit brought against the league on March 11, hours before the lockout began. It seems like things are moving in the right direction, which is very positive. Its what we always hoped for as players because obviously were getting to crunch time here. Were nearing July and theres a lot of work that needs to be done (footballwise) between now and when the season will start, and obviously wed love to have a settlement in place. One item of contention likely is the minimum teams can spend on salaries each year and how it is determined, a key for small-market franchises such as Buffalo, Jacksonville and Cincinnati.

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Weekend June 18-19, 2011

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Hybrid race has potential for $1M prize


By John Marshall
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Jeremy McGrath attacked a Supercross course almost with elegance, making his dirt bike seemingly oat through the air off the humps and bumps on his way to seven series championships. Ricky Carmichael is simply known as the GOAT, the Greatest of All-Time whos a master of motocross massive speeds, winner of more races and championships than anyone else. Now these two-wheeled stars get a chance to collaborate in one of the most unique events to hit the dirtbike scene in years: co-designing the course for the Monster Energy Cup, a new open-class race that will feature elements of Supercross and motocross, along with a chance for someone to walk away with $1 million. The Monster Energy Cup is basically a blank piece of paper and itll be a bunch of ideas that will come together and make something really cool, McGrath said. Its something new and unique, which is exciting. The new event, lets call it a Super-motocross race, is Oct. 15 in Las Vegas. Riders will be allowed to hop on any bike they want, from 125cc whiners to the 450cc speed behemoths that top AMA Motocross riders like Ryan Villopoto, Ryan Dungey and Chad Reed trade dirt with. The purse will be $250,000 $100,00 to the winner with an additional $1 million available to anyone who can win all three motos,

A new event that combines Supercross generally held at indoor arenas and motocross generally held on longer,outdoor courses could offer the winner a cool $1 million dollars.
which would make it the richest motocross event ever. Itll all take place on a course unlike any other, created by two icons of two-wheeled sports. We wanted to create something that had never been done before, said Todd Jendro, senior director of two-wheel motor sports at Feld Motor Sports, which is promoting and producing the event. Making a three-stage main event with $1 million on the line, a quarter-of-a-million-dollar purse and a hybrid track thats uniquely different inside a stadium environment was our main goal. The race will be held at Sam Boyd Stadium, where Villopoto wrapped up his rst career Supercross title earlier this year. The course wont look quite the same, though. The stadium oor will feature elements of Supercross: big jumps, hard-banking 180-degree turns on manmade piles of dirt. Being able to judge the jumps and control the bike in the air will be key on this part of the course. Outside on the motocross portion, speed will be the need as the track works through more natural terrain that will likely feature at least one speed-building straightway, along with jumps and humps riders can power through. Charged with creating this hybrid monster will be McGrath and Carmichael, who have combined for more than two dozen dirt-bike championships. Its going to be great, McGrath said. RC and I have been friends for a long time, so sitting down and coming up with ideas with him is going to be fun. But thats going to be the easy part. The hard part is going to be actually building it. The key to the design will not just be about including elements of both Supercross and motocross, but making it so all styles of bikes will have a shot at the checkers.

If the course has too much speed, riders on the more powerful 450s will crush the eld. Make it too tight and the more agile 250s will dart past. One way to even the eld could be to adjust the start, either by putting the 250s up front or shortening the straightaway to the rst corner so the 450s cant power past. Jendro said another possibility could be to create a long whoop section (a series of smaller jumps) made of sand thats not maintained and gets in worse condition as the night goes along. McGrath said he could even envision throwing out a mid-race caution to bunch the eld back up so no one runs away with it. Whatever they do, its going to be like no other dirt-bike race before. Our goal behind this event is to obviously make it different, Jendro said. This isnt just a Supercross or a motocross, its a combination of the two disciplines. The track itself will be designed for a wide variety of riding styles. And at the end, past the third checkered ag, will be the potential for a payday like no other in dirtbike racing, an oversized check with an oversized amount that should draw in the top riders from all disciplines of dirt-bike racing. I wish I was 20 years younger Id like it to be me, McGrath said. Obviously, its quite a big payday and a lot of guys are going to come out for that. Even if no one takes home the million, it gures to be entertaining with McGrath and Carmichael pulling the strings.

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weekend and wound up winning by three. Im not going to chase anyone, Yang said. Im just going to play my game. Sergio Garcia had a 71 and joined Snedeker at 2-under 140 among those who nished the second round. Just his luck and Garcia doesnt have much of that in the majors he is playing solid golf at a major where someone else is playing out of this world. Also at 140 were Matt Kuchar, Robert Garrigus and former Masters champion Zach Johnson. Its only two days, Johnson said. Im not going to give it to him yet. The second round was suspended by darkness, forcing 21 players to return Saturday morning to complete their round. And it left everyone who nished wondering if there was any chance of catching McIlroy. Rory is obviously running away with it, so we are pretty much playing for second unless something crazy happens tomorrow, PGA champion Martin Kaymer said. I hope he wins, though. Hes a nice person and he deserves it, especially after the Masters. Lee Westwood wasnt ready to concede after a 68 left him 12 shots behind, although he made yet another reference to Pebble Beach in 2000 when he said his goal was second place, and added, Well see what Rory does. Hes had leads before, Westwood said. As for what advice he would give McIlroy? Im supposed to beat him over the next two days, Westwood said. Im hardly going to give him advice, am I? It was hard to ignore what felt like a coronation for McIlroy as he eased his way around the golf course. Toward the end of his round, the gallery in the grandstand gave him a standing ovation as the freckle-faced wonder boy with the bounce in his step simply walked onto the green. McIlroy played with four-time major winner Phil Mickelson, one of the biggest crowd-pleasers in golf who simply was along for the ride. Mickelson, who also made double bogey on the 18th, shot a 69 to nish at 1-over 143. Hes striking it awlessly and putted great on the greens, Mickelson said. His rst two rounds larly draw an average of more than 35,000 fans per game, by far best in the MLS. Their gear is also the leagues most popular. Portland and Vancouver jumped into the fray this season as MLS expansion teams. Portland launched the We are Timbers ad campaign that featured everyday fans posing with axes and other logging tools. The word Timbers did not appear in the campaign, just a logo and 2011 for the teams inaugural season. We had a very unique marketing strategy, and it was critical that it reected this city, our fans and really the Timbers brand the authenticity thats unique to Portland, Paulson said. We went with a focused campaign that I think was edgy and attention grabbing. The Whitecaps drew attention not all of it positive with a television spot that featured an attractive young woman and body painting to ethereal music. It didnt have much to do with soccer except that a team jersey was painted on her skin but it cer-

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birdies on the 16th and 17th to reach 13 under. Only four other players have reached 10 under or better at any point in a U.S. Open Morgan, Woods, Jim Furyk at Olympia Fields in 2003 and Ricky Barnes at rain-soaked Bethpage Black in 2009. None of them got there after only two rounds, much less the 26 holes it took McIlroy. As for 13 under? I didnt see 13 under on this golf course after any day, Snedeker said. McIlroys only mistake came on the last hole. From the left rough, McIlroy was aiming for the front right portion of the green away from the water. He turned it over just enough for the ball to bounce off the bank and into the water, and he failed to get up-and-down. He lost two shots, but not his perspective. This was golf at its absolute best, and the scoreboard showed it. Congressional was softened by overnight rain, which was obvious with the splat from balls landing on the green, instead of bouncing hard and into the rough as they so often do in this major. But the measure of great golf not always comes from the leader, but those chasing him. What made Woods record win at Pebble Beach so impressive is that he nished at 12-under 272, and no one else was better than 3-over par. Such was the case at Congressional. Among those who had nished 36 holes, only seven other players had managed to break par, and no one was within nine shots of McIlroy. Hes decimated this U.S. Open golf course, and this is no easy test, defending champion Graeme McDowell said. Its an amazing display of golf. In the last 14 rounds at the majors, McIlroy has been atop the leaderboard six times. He has been in the lead after every round except the one that matters. Ive played two really good rounds of golf, but I know I have to play another two really good rounds of golf if I want to win this tournament, McIlroy said. So thats all I can really think about. home opener, while Sounders supporters have a say whether the teams GM should be red. They gave supporters almost a sense of ownership of the team, something thats getting harder and harder to do with big teams in the NFL and the NBA, Swangard said. But truth be told, fans bristle when the suggestion is made that theyve helped make soccer hip. When you start talking about cool, that implies youre just doing it for the appearance, Timbers fan Nikki Suydam said at a recent match. And nobody is here just because it is cool. Were here because we love the sport, we love the team and we love the city. Fellow Portland fan Seth Hunt, 30, said any popularity the teams have ultimately comes from their fostering a sense of community. We come with our friends. We all like soccer, Hunt said. Were from all walks of life and were drawn together by love of the game and supporting a team.

GOLF
Continued from page 11
As if playing under complete control were not enough, McIlroy hit a wedge from 114 yards some 15 feet behind the ag on No. 8, then watched it roll down a slope and into the cup for eagle. The only time he came close to making bogey was on the par-4 11th, when he blasted out of a bunker to 8 feet and made the putt. He tied the U.S. Open record of 12 under previously held by Woods in 2000 and Gil Morgan in 1992, both at Pebble Beach on the par-5 16th with a 4-iron from 223 yards that settled 8 feet from the cup. I told him, I dont think youll see a better golf shot, his caddie, J.P. Fitzgerald, said. Then came the 17th, when McIlroy hit 7-iron from 175 yards that covered the ag, barely cleared the bunker and left him 15 feet below the hole for yet another birdie to go to 13 under. That number just isnt seen on leaderboards at the U.S. Open. Its crazy, isnt it? Steve Stricker. Pretty incredible what hes done so far. McIlroy knows better than to start the celebration before Sunday. He was buoyed by support coming into the U.S. Open because of the calamity at Augusta National from two months ago, when he led by four shots going into the nal round of the Masters and shot 80, the kind of collapse that isnt easily forgotten. Its been two very, very good days of golf, McIlroy said. I put myself in a great position going into the weekend. But I know more than probably anyone else what can happen. So Ive got to stay really focused and try and nish this thing off. The second round was halted for 42 minutes because of thunderstorms, and Yang held it together on the stronger back nine to at least stay in range. The South Korean is no stranger to big decits in the majors. It was only two years ago, in the 2009 PGA Championship at Hazeltine, that he trailed Woods by six shots going into the

REUTERS

Northern Irelands Rory McIlroy, shown here after a birdie at 17,shot a 5-under 66 and holds a 6-shot lead after two rounds of the U.S.Open.
were very impressive. During one stretch on the front nine, Mickelson made three birdies in four holes and didnt make up any ground. McIlroy laid up from the rough on the par-5 sixth and hit wedge to 5 feet for birdie, then holed out for his eagle on the eighth. The burst of cheers when the ball dropped for eagle was enough to make the group ahead take notice as they stood on the ninth tee. There was Retief Goosen, hands on hips, looking over at the green. Stricker took one last look as he walked off the tee to conrm his suspicions on who hit the shot. Deep down, he knew it all along. We gured it was probably him just the way he was going, Stricker said. McIlroy wasnt nished. From 190 yards, he hit a 6-iron to about 5 feet behind the hole at No. 14 for birdie, then nished with his back-to-back tainly got noticed. All three groups also embraced social media to promote their teams. That is your driving force, Sounders goalkeeper Kasey Keller said. Your driving force is the adults and if you can get that fan base then that is where youre going to win. And then your kids become fans because of it. Keller, who played at the University of Portland, noted that the Pacic Northwest has always been partial to the beautiful game. He joked that the Pilots soccer team always got the hottest girls. But what ultimately made the biggest difference was the teams appeal to their fan groups. Seattle has the Emerald City Supporters, Portland has the Timbers Army and Vancouver has the Southsiders. The groups work tirelessly to make the game-day experience well, European theres that word again with their tireless chants and coordinated displays known as tifos. The Timbers Army was given the honor of singing the national anthem at the teams

SOCCER
Continued from page 11
or the PNW, as it is affectionately known appealed directly to 20- to 30-something techsavvy professionals. The teams already had an added advantage in that all three clubs dated back to 1970s with the old North American Soccer League, so they had a history of sorts. We already had a brand, we already had the young, urban relevancy. And I think we just built on that with MLS. We know who we are, Timbers owner Merritt Paulson said. The Sounders, who joined the MLS in 2009, set the standard. Their fans made match day a ritual, priming in trendy downtown bars before a raucous prematch march to the teams stadium. The sustained buzz surrounding the team which competes in a market that is also home to the NFLs Seahawks and MLBs Mariners has been enough to regu-

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MLS STANDINGS
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Philadelphia New York Houston Columbus D.C. Toronto FC Chicago New England Kansas City W 6 5 4 4 4 2 2 3 2 L 3 2 5 4 5 5 4 7 6 T 4 7 6 6 4 9 8 5 4 Pts 22 22 18 18 16 15 14 14 10 GF 16 21 19 14 18 15 16 11 16 GA 11 13 18 16 24 25 19 18 20

AL STANDINGS
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division Boston New York Tampa Bay Toronto Baltimore Central Division Cleveland Detroit Chicago Kansas City Minnesota West Division Texas Seattle Los Angeles Oakland W 37 36 34 31 L 34 34 37 40 Pct .521 .514 .479 .437 GB 1/2 3 6 W 37 38 33 31 29 L 31 32 38 39 39 Pct .544 .543 .465 .443 .426 GB 5 1/2 7 8 W 42 39 37 35 31 L 27 29 33 35 36 Pct .609 .574 .529 .500 .463 GB 2 1/2 5 1/2 7 1/2 10

NL STANDINGS
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division Philadelphia Atlanta New York Washington Florida Central Division Milwaukee St.Louis Cincinnati Pittsburgh Chicago Houston West Division W L Pct GB San Francisco 39 31 .557 Arizona 39 32 .549 1/2 Colorado 34 35 .493 4 1/2 Los Angeles 31 40 .437 8 1/2 San Diego 30 41 .423 9 1/2 Fridays Games Chicago Cubs 3,N.Y.Yankees 1 Washington 8,Baltimore 4 Cleveland 5,Pittsburgh 1 Tampa Bay 5,Florida 1 L.A.Angels 4,N.Y.Mets 3 Boston 10,Milwaukee 4 Toronto 3,Cincinnati 2 Texas 6,Atlanta 2 Minnesota 6,San Diego 5 Kansas City 5,St.Louis 4 Colorado 13,Detroit 6 Arizona 4,Chicago White Sox 1 Oakland 5,San Francisco 2 Houston 7,L.A.Dodgers 3 Seattle 4,Philadelphia 2 Saturdays Games Baltimore (Matusz 1-1) at Washington (Zimmermann 4-6),10:05 a.m. N.Y. Yankees (A.J.Burnett 6-5) at Chicago Cubs (Dempster 5-5),1:10 p.m. Texas (M.Harrison 5-6) at Atlanta (D.Lowe 3-5),1:10 p.m. Pittsburgh (Maholm 3-7) at Cleveland (C.Carrasco 6-3),1:05 p.m. Florida (Nolasco 4-2) at Tampa Bay (Cobb 1-0),1:10 p.m. L.A. Angels (Haren 6-4) at N.Y. Mets (Pelfrey 3-5), 4:10 p.m. W 39 38 37 35 29 26 L 32 33 34 34 40 45 Pct .549 .535 .521 .507 .420 .366 GB 1 2 3 9 13 W 44 39 34 34 32 L 27 32 36 36 38 Pct .620 .549 .486 .486 .457 GB 5 9 1/2 9 1/2 11 1/2

vs. Twins vs. Indians 12:45 p.m. 7:15 p.m. CSN-BA CSN-BA

vs.Giants 7:05 p.m. CSN-CAL

vs.Giants 7:05 p.m. CSN-CAL

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@ Mets 4:10 p.m. CSN-CAL

@ Mets 4:10 p.m. CSN-CAL

@ Mets 10:10 a.m. CSN-CAL

@ Phillies 4:05 pm. CSN-CAL

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vs.Union 7:30 p.m. CSN-BA

7/12
vs.West Bromwich Albion 7:30 p.m.

7/16
@ Crew 4:30 p.m. CSN-BA

7/20
vs.Van. 7:30 p.m. CSN-BA

WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA Los Angeles 8 2 7 31 22 14 FC Dallas 7 4 4 25 18 16 Seattle 5 4 7 22 18 15 Colorado 5 3 7 22 17 14 Real Salt Lake 6 3 3 21 14 7 San Jose 5 4 4 19 20 16 Chivas USA 4 5 5 17 17 16 Portland 5 6 2 17 15 19 Vancouver 1 6 8 11 16 22 NOTE:Three points for victory, one point for tie. Wednesday, June 15 New England 0,Toronto FC 0, tie Friday, June 17 San Jose at Sporting Kansas City, 5:30 p.m. Saturday, June 18 Seattle FC at Toronto FC, 4 p.m. Chicago at New England, 4:30 p.m. Columbus at Houston, 5:30 p.m. D.C. United at Real Salt Lake, 6 p.m. Los Angeles at Colorado, 6 p.m. Philadelphia at Vancouver, 7 p.m. FC Dallas at Chivas USA, 7:30 p.m. Sunday, June 19 New York at Portland, 7 p.m. Wednesday, June 22 Sporting Kansas City at Philadelphia, 4:30 p.m. Real Salt Lake at Chicago, 5:30 p.m. Thursday, June 23 New York at Seattle FC, 7 p.m. Saturday, June 25 Houston at D.C. United, 3 p.m. Los Angeles at San Jose, 3:30 p.m. Chivas USA at Philadelphia, 7:30 p.m. Vancouver at Sporting Kansas City, 8:30 p.m. Portland at FC Dallas, 8:30 p.m. Toronto FC at Real Salt Lake, 9 p.m.

AL LEADERS
BATTINGAdGonzalez, Boston, .352; Bautista, Toronto, .335; VMartinez, Detroit, .325; MiCabrera, Detroit, .325; Konerko, Chicago, .320; Ortiz, Boston, .320; Joyce,Tampa Bay,.318. RUNSGranderson,New York,59;Bautista,Toronto, 55; MiCabrera, Detroit, 50; Ellsbury, Boston, 50; AdGonzalez,Boston,50;Boesch,Detroit,46;ACabrera, Cleveland,44; Kinsler,Texas,44. RBIAdGonzalez, Boston, 62; Teixeira, New York, 54;Konerko,Chicago,53;Granderson,New York,52; Beltre, Texas, 50; MiCabrera, Detroit, 47; Quentin, Chicago,47;Youkilis,Boston,47. HITSAdGonzalez,Boston,99;Ellsbury,Boston,86; MiYoung,Texas,85;ACabrera,Cleveland,84;MeCabrera, Kansas City, 82; Konerko, Chicago, 82; Ortiz, Boston,80. DOUBLESAdGonzalez, Boston, 24; Ellsbury, Boston,21;Zobrist,Tampa Bay,21;AGordon,Kansas City, 20; Quentin, Chicago, 20; MiCabrera, Detroit, 19;VMartinez,Detroit,19;Ortiz,Boston,19;MiYoung, Texas,19. TRIPLESBourjos, Los Angeles, 6; Crisp, Oakland, 5; Granderson, New York, 5; AJackson, Detroit, 5; CCrawford, Boston, 4; RDavis, Toronto, 4; Gardner, New York,4; Zobrist,Tampa Bay,4. HOME RUNSBautista,Toronto, 21; Granderson, New York, 21; Teixeira, New York, 21; Konerko, Chicago,17;Ortiz,Boston,17;Quentin,Chicago,17; NCruz, Texas, 15; AdGonzalez, Boston, 15STOLEN BASESEllsbury,Boston,24;Crisp,Oakland,20;Andrus,Texas, 19; RDavis,Toronto, 18; ISuzuki, Seattle, 18; BUpton,Tampa Bay, 16; Aybar, Los Angeles, 14; Fuld,Tampa Bay,14; Gardner,New York,14. PITCHINGScherzer, Detroit, 9-2; Lester, Boston, 9-2;Verlander,Detroit,8-3; Sabathia,New York,8-4; Weaver,Los Angeles,8-4;Arrieta,Baltimore,8-4;Tomlin,Cleveland,8-4. STRIKEOUTSVerlander, Detroit, 105; FHernandez,Seattle,103;Shields,Tampa Bay,98;Weaver,Los Angeles,96;Price,Tampa Bay,94;CWilson,Texas,93; RRomero,Toronto,87;Lester,Boston,87;Haren,Los Angeles,87. SAVESLeague,Seattle,20;CPerez,Cleveland,17; Walden, Los Angeles, 16; MaRivera, New York, 16; Valverde,Detroit,16;Farnsworth,Tampa Bay,15;Papelbon,Boston,13; Gregg,Baltimore,13.

NL LEADERS
BATTINGJosReyes, New York, .344; Kemp, Los Angeles,.331;Votto,Cincinnati,.325;Pence,Houston, .321;Wallace,Houston,.318;Helton,Colorado,.317; SCastro,Chicago,.315. RUNSBraun,Milwaukee,53;JosReyes,New York, 51; Pujols, St. Louis, 50; Stubbs, Cincinnati, 50; RWeeks,Milwaukee,50;Votto,Cincinnati,48;Kemp, Los Angeles,47; CYoung,Arizona,47. RBIFielder,Milwaukee,60;Howard,Philadelphia, 57; Kemp, Los Angeles, 57; Berkman, St. Louis, 51; Braun, Milwaukee, 51; Pence, Houston, 51; Bruce, Cincinnati,48. HITSJosReyes, New York, 101; Pence, Houston, 93; SCastro, Chicago, 90; Kemp, Los Angeles, 85; GSanchez,Florida,83;Votto,Cincinnati,83;RWeeks, Milwaukee,83. DOUBLESBeltran,New York,21;SCastro,Chicago, 21; Coghlan, Florida, 20; Headley, San Diego, 20; Montero,Arizona,20;Pence,Houston,20;JosReyes, New York,20; CYoung,Arizona,20. TRIPLESJosReyes,New York,12;Rasmus,St.Louis, 6;Victorino,Philadelphia,6;Bourn,Houston,5;SCastro,Chicago,5;Fowler,Colorado,5;Bonifacio,Florida, 4;SDrew,Arizona,4;Espinosa,Washington,4;SSmith, Colorado,4. HOME RUNSKemp,Los Angeles,20;Fielder,Milwaukee,19;Berkman,St.Louis,17;Bruce,Cincinnati, 17; Pujols, St. Louis, 16; Stanton, Florida, 16; Braun, Milwaukee,15; Howard,Philadelphia,15. STOLEN BASESBourn, Houston, 29; JosReyes, New York, 24; Desmond, Washington, 20; Stubbs, Cincinnati, 20; Bourgeois, Houston, 17; Braun, Milwaukee,16; Kemp,Los Angeles,16. PITCHINGHamels, Philadelphia, 9-2; Halladay, Philadelphia,9-3;Gallardo,Milwaukee,8-3;Jurrjens, Atlanta,8-3;Hanson,Atlanta,8-4;Chacin,Colorado, 8-4;DHudson,Arizona,8-5;Correia,Pittsburgh,8-6. STRIKEOUTSHalladay,Philadelphia,114;ClLee, Philadelphia,111;Kershaw,Los Angeles,106;Lincecum, San Francisco, 101; Hamels, Philadelphia, 97; AniSanchez,Florida,93; Norris,Houston,90. SAVESBrWilson, San Francisco, 20; LNunez, Florida, 19; Hanrahan, Pittsburgh, 19; FrRodriguez, New York, 19; Street, Colorado, 19; Axford, Milwaukee, 18; HBell, San Diego, 18; Putz, Arizona, 18; Kimbrel,Atlanta,18.

Fridays Games Chicago Cubs 3,N.Y.Yankees 1 Washington 8,Baltimore 4 Cleveland 5,Pittsburgh 1 Tampa Bay 5,Florida 1 L.A.Angels 4,N.Y.Mets 3 Boston 10,Milwaukee 4 Toronto 3,Cincinnati 2 Texas 6,Atlanta 2 Minnesota 6,San Diego 5 Kansas City 5,St.Louis 4 Colorado 13,Detroit 6 Arizona 4,Chicago White Sox 1 Oakland 5,San Francisco 2 Seattle 4,Philadelphia 2 Sundays Games Pittsburgh at Cleveland,10:05 a.m. L.A.Angels at N.Y.Mets,10:10 a.m. Toronto at Cincinnati,10:10 a.m. Baltimore at Washington,10:35 a.m. Milwaukee at Boston,10:35 a.m. Texas at Atlanta,10:35 a.m. Florida at Tampa Bay,10:40 a.m. San Diego at Minnesota,11:10 a.m. Kansas City at St.Louis,11:15 a.m. Detroit at Colorado,12:10 p.m. San Francisco at Oakland,1:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox at Arizona,1:10 p.m. Philadelphia at Seattle,1:10 p.m. N.Y.Yankees at Chicago Cubs,5:05 p.m.

McCourt faces obstacles in order to retain Dodgers


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LOS ANGELES To retain ownership of the Los Angeles Dodgers, owner Frank McCourt must overcome two formidable obstacles laid out in a binding settlement he and his ex-wife Jamie reached Friday in their contentious divorce. Frank McCourt must rst receive Major League Baseballs approval of a 17year television contract with Fox reported to be worth up to $3 billion. Under the settlement, McCourt would receive $385 million Frank McCourt upfront, most of which would be used for Dodgerrelated expenses. Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig has given no indication if he would approve the deal, but McCourt said MLB ofcials have asked him to meet select criteria. Baseball has been very clear, McCourt said outside court. They wanted to see this divorce settled, and all this white noise gone, or they wanted Jamies consent for the Fox transaction

or they wanted a judge to give them an order to move forward. Today we have achieved all three. MLB spokesman Pat Courtney declined comment. Dennis Wasser, an attorney for Jamie McCourt, hopes the TV deal will be nalized early next week. If MLB doesnt approve the TV transaction, the settlement is null and void. I am just hoping for resolution, and I hope this is a step in that resolution, Jamie McCourt said. Some observers said the settlement gives Frank McCourt the legal repower he needs to get MLB to sign off on the TV transaction. There are now no impediments and if the TV deal isnt approved, its for other reasons than what (MLB) has stated before, said Los Angeles family law attorney Lisa Helfend Meyer, who is not involved in the McCourts case. The decision to reject the deal would then be personal on MLBs behalf and serves as a springboard for Frank McCourt to sue the league, she added. In addition to the TV deal, the settlement called for a one-day characterization trial Aug. 4 to determine if title to the Dodgers is in Frank McCourts name or if the team should be considered community property and sold.

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Popper
Penguin movie better than you may think SEE PAGE 21

The ultimate success story


Philip Dimaano

heres more to wanting to be successful than just a high annual salary. How much money a person makes seems to serve as the primary indicator of their success in life. Individuals with a yearly income in the six gures or more form the upper echelon of this supposed success scale. It is important to note what exactly motivates somebody to choose and ultimately go through the most demanding of career paths. Those who make it all the way to the end have demonstrated their tremendous passion and dedication through tough times. They viewed their profession as a remarkable way to benet society and help others with the vast knowledge they obtained. For those unable to complete the journey, their refusal to continue could have come about for a multitude of reasons. They might have only seen the income that could be garnered upon completion and failed to realize the sheer magnitude of the endeavor upon which they were about to embark. The amount of commitment and sacrice needed to overcome is signicant and characteristic of only a small percentage of the population. It is understandable how the ever-present factor of yearly income can be a substantial aspect of why a person chooses to pursue such a profession. More disposable income means more opportunities to purchase goods and services that may be considered luxuries by the majority of the population. People always seem to equate a higher salary to a higher quality of life. But, is money the only reason a person would hope to become successful? That seems to be what society and our own conscience always tells us, but the desire to become successful should encompass much more than that. Those who scale the mountain to reach the mountain top should not aunt their success but instead be humble in their accomplishments. This only applies to those in a position of higher status, so only a certain percentage of the population can do this effectively. Such humility goes a long way in garnering the respect of the community as opposed to being inconsiderate toward the less privileged. What a person does with such a considerable amount of monetary wealth is wholly indicative of their character. Oftentimes, peo-

Film gets by with cuteness


By David Germain
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

See SUCCESS, Page 22

The title nicely sums up The Art of Getting By. This triing teen tale of rst love artfully dodges any pretense of substance or authenticity, trying to scrape by on the charms of its almost intolerably cute cast. Theres an ease and playfulness that carries along writer-

director Gavin Wiesens debut lm for a while. Yet the indie production, which premiered under its original title Homework at Januarys Sundance Film Festival, plays out as blandly and predictably as a Hollywood teen romance, the characters articial, the story hollow. As a troubled youth on the verge of throwing his life
personalities who earned this honor.This is a leisurely walk on hilly terrain.Wear comfortable walking shoes and dress appropriately for the unpredictable Colma weather.Start at Nobel Chapel,Cypress Lawn 1370 El Camino Real,Colma.The event takes place at 1:30 p.m.Light refreshments served.Free.

away before its begun, Freddie Highmore behaves weirdly even-keeled, his rebelliousness cloaked in a Zen-like calm, like a heavily sedated cousin of Catcher in the Rye hero Holden Cauleld. As the object of his affection, Emma Roberts is similarly one-dimensional in the opposite direction, a whirlSee ART, Page 22
a.m.to 1 p.m.Sunday at the Wells Fargo Parking Lot,Fifth Avenue and San Mateo Drive,San Mateo.Continues every Sunday until Nov.20.For more information go to urbantable.org. King Center FarmersMarket.9 a.m.to 1 p.m.Saturday at Martin Luther King Park in North Central San Mateo,725 Monte Diablo Ave.Through Oct.29.For more information go to http://www.pcfma.com/market_home.ph p?market_id=78.

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Larkin Street.Folsom Street.Macondray Lane.Ever wonder who gets streets named after them? Walk the Streets of San Francisco at Cypress Lawn Saturday and nd out about the famous historic

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Downtown San Mateo FarmersMarket.9

THE DAILY JOURNAL


By Susan Cohn
DAILY JOURNAL SENIOR CORRESPONDENT

WEEKEND JOURNAL

Weekend June 18-19, 2011

19

SHE PUT A SPELL ON ME: KIM NALLEY SINGS NINA SIMONE. San Franciscos Rrazz Room at Hotel Nikko showcases charismatic chanteuse Kim Nalley in She Put A Spell On Me: Kim Nalley Sings Nina Simone, a mix of history, multimedia and song that deftly incorporates Simone-style monologues and exchanges with the audience. Nalley varies her program nightly, drawing from a song list covering the entire arc of Simones multi-faceted career, including House of the Rising Sun, Mississippi Goddamn!, I Put A Spell On You, Cotton Eyed Joe and Dont Let Me Be Misunderstood. A superb musical accompaniment to Nalleys rich vocal style is provided by Tammy Hall, piano; Greg Skaff, guitar; Kent Bryson, drums; and Michael Zisman, bass.

OH,AND DID YOU KNOW?:


Nina Simones music has been featured in soundtracks of various motion pictures, including The Big Lebowski (1998), Notting Hill (1999), The Thomas Crown Affair (1999), Sex and the City (2008), Revolutionary Road (2008), Watchmen (2009), The Saboteur (2009) and Repo Men (2010). *** Kim Nalleys combination of historical explanations and musical renditions in this tribute show inspired the painting Mississippi Goddam! by Jeremy Sutton, which depicts Nina Simone in the foreground with slain civil right activist Medgar Evers and the four little girls killed in the Alabama church bombing in the background. (This painting is on display during this concert series.)

STAGE DIRECTIONS:
The Rrazz Room is located off a main lobby of the Hotel Nikko at 222 Mason St., two blocks from Union Square. This upscale, intimate (less than 200 seats) nightclub has both chair and banquette seating at small tables set with tea lights. Light Fare served includes Oysters Anzu, Kobe Beef Sliders, Spicy Curry Vegetable Samosas and New York Style Cheesecake. The Mason OFarrell Garage is directly across the street where, with a Rrazz Room validation, parking is $12 for up to ve hours. Bring your ticket to the show and ask the maitred to validate it for you.

Vocalist Kim Nalley stars in She Put A Spell On Me:Kim Nalley Sings Nina Simone,at the Rrazz Room at Hotel Nikko through July 17.
double RR in Rrazz room comes from the rst names of co-owners Kotonly and Rory Paull.) *** CELEBRATE THE FILLMORE. Teatro ZinZannis Midnight Cabaret Lunatique continues Saturday, July 2 with Celebrate The Fillmore, a musical journey through the heart and soul of San Francisco, from the early days of Jazz, through the Classic Soul sounds of the 60s, and ending in a Motown Madness tribute held in the gorgeous, glamorous Spiegeltent on Pier 29. Doors open at 11:15 p.m. Drinks and light food available at an additional cost. The Embarcadero (at Battery Street). Admission is $35 for premium and $25 general. http://cabaretlunatique.org or (415) 4382668. *** LOVELY AT BISCUITS AND BLUES. In just a year, Karen Lovely shot onto the blues scene, capturing the Second Place Band Prize at the 2010 International Blues Challenge followed by 2011 BMA Nominations for Best Contemporary Blues Album and Best Contemporary Blues Female Artist. The title track of her sophomore release, Still The Rain, received a 2011 BMA Nomination for Best Song. Lovely won three Muddy Awards in 2010 including Best Female Vocalist and Best Performance for the second year in a row. Lovely appears in a limited engagement Thursday July 7, 8 p.m. and 10 p.m. at Biscuits and Blues, 401 Mason St., one block from Union Square. Admission: $20. Southern cuisine served nightly, including Andouille gumbo, baby back ribs and fried green tomatoes. Restaurant and bar open at 6 p.m. Biscuitsandblues.com or (415) 292-2583.
Susan Cohn can be reached at [email protected] or www.twitter.com/susancityscene.

COMING ATTRACTIONS:
Summer bookings at the Rrazz Room include Nancy Dussault, Im In Love Again, June 27, 28; Andrea Marcovicci, Blue Champagne: The History of the Torch Song, July 19-31; and Jerry The Iceman Butler, Aug. 24 to 28.

TICKETS:
$35 - $37.50. Tickets to Rrazz Room events are non-refundable. Mandatory two drink minimum per person. Seating is host escorted and assigned on a rst come rst served basis. Dress code is upscale casual. Wednesday through Saturday, 8 p.m. Sunday at 7 p.m. Through July 17. Please arrive no later than 15 minutes prior to showtime, or your party may not be guaranteed seats together. Arrivals after scheduled showtime are subject to standing room only status. For tickets and more information call visit www.therrazzroom.com or call (800) 380-3095.

AN ASIDE:
Rrazz Room Co-owner Robert Kotonly said: A regular patron once said, Why go to New York when you have The RRazz Room?! Intimate and acoustically perfect venue is our brand. On any given night, you can see Oscar, Emmy, Tony and Grammy winners up close and personal. We also support the best of local entertainment from Classic Soul, R&B, Jazz, Musical Theatre, Comedy, Rock, Pop, Gospel to Hip Hop. Expect the unexpected! (The

20

Weekend June 18-19, 2011

WEEKEND JOURNAL

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Sunday news shows


ABCs This Week 8 a.m.
Sen.John McCain,R-Ariz.; Pakistan's ambassador to the U.S.,Husain Haqqani.

Moving look at horse whisperer


By Christy Lemire
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CBSFace the Nation 8:30 a.m.


Sens.Mitch McConnell,R-Ky.,and Chuck Schumer,D-N.Y.; Rep.Mike Rogers,R-Mich.

NBCs Meet the Press 8 a.m.


Sens.Dick Durbin,D-Ill.,and Lindsey Graham,R-S.C.; Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa.

CNNs State of the Union 3 p.m.


Defense Secretary Robert Gates; David Axelrod,top adviser to President Barack Obama's re-election campaign.

Fox News Sunday 8 a.m.


Gates; Jon Stewart.

People in the news


Women in Film honors Bening, Holmes
BEVERLY HILLS Annette Bening, Katie Holmes, CBS President Nina Tassler, director Pamela Fryman and cinematographer Reed Morano have been recognized as leaders in their elds by Women in Film. The nonprot group honored the women Thursday at its annual Crystal and Lucy awards ceremony in Beverly Hills. In accepting her award, Bening said she is entering into a new phase and beginning again and hinted at some interesting projects in the coming year. Holmes thanked her parents, who were in the audience, and husband Tom Cruise, whose commitment to his work and family inspires me daily. Tassler oversees primetime, daytime and late-night programming at CBS. Fryman is a director of How I Met Your Mother. Moranos credits include 2008s Frozen River. Elizabeth Taylor was also recognized for her humanitarian efforts. Her granddaughter Naomi Wilding accepted the award. Women in Film President Cathy Shulman dedicated the evening to Laura Ziskin, the Spider Man producer and Stand Up To Cancer co-founder producer who died earlier this week of breast cancer.

Jack Nicholson has that famous line in As Good As It Gets in which he says to Helen Hunt, You make me want to be a better man. This is going to sound corny, but here goes: Buck will make you want to be a better person. Buck Brannaman, the real-life horse whisperer who inspired the novel and the 1998 Robert Redford lm, just oozes decency, grace and class. And the fact that he doesnt seem to take himself so damn seriously only adds to his allure. He has a charismatic, no-nonsense style and a dry, low-key sense of humor that help him connect with people of all ages and backgrounds as he travels the country giving clinics 40 weeks out of the year. Cindy Meehls documentary about Brannaman does teeter on the brink of deifying him, however. Idyllic shots of the sun-streaked countryside add to the lms warm glow. But then again, its hard to argue with her: He seems like a truly good guy doing truly good work. Among those who can attest to his abilities is Redford himself, who shares an amusing anecdote about how Brannaman became more than just a consultant on his movie. Winner of the documentary audience award at this years Sundance Film Festival, Buck introduces us to the lifelong cowboy who helps trainers and riders of all levels learn to work more patiently and effectively with their horses. His philosophy is that you cant break a horse in a violent way, as others have done for years. Rather, he believes that a

Buck Brannaman, the real-life horse whisperer who inspired the novel and the 1998 Robert Redford lm,just oozes decency,grace and class.
human and a horse should coexist instinctively, and that an animal can be a reection of ones soul. Its an unusually kind and introspective approach, but the fact that Brannaman honed it and reached this point of peace and success in his life, given his horric upbringing, is whats truly remarkable. Brannaman recounts the physical and psychological abuse he and his brother endured as young boys at the hands of their alcoholic father. When their mother was around, she served as a buffer; once she died, their protector was gone, too. (Strangely, theres barely a mention of his brother throughout the rest of the lm.) Decades later, Brannaman is matter-offact in sharing these details; theyre just part of who he is, they gave him an empathy for vulnerable creatures. But the memory of what he suffered through gets childhood friends choked up to this day, and Brannaman still has a close, touching relationship with the foster mother who ultimately raised him. As sweet as Brannaman seems, though and this is a guy who freely quotes Oprah Winfrey he can also be tough. One dramatic segment about an hour into the lm depicts his struggle with a particularly unruly 3-year-old colt; he has no qualms about berating its owner, and suggesting that whatever chaos is going on in her own life is to blame for the animals violent nature. Clearly hitting too close to home, he reduces this woman to tears.

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Weekend June 18-19, 2011

21

Even Carreys camp question Poppers pick


By Mike Cidoni Lennox
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Poppers Penguinstakes flight


By Jake Coyle
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The charming 1938 childrens book Mr. Poppers Penguins, by Richard and Florence Atwater and with wonderful illustrations by Robert Lawson, ends with a No, thank you to Hollywood. Mr. Tom Popper, a poor house painter, is inundated with penguins after being sent one from Admiral Drake in Antarctica. He eventually takes his dozen penguins on tour in a traveling stage act, making him wealthy and famous. When a movie producer comes calling, Popper declines his entreaty, saying, The life in Hollywood would not be good for the penguins. But Hollywood is persistent, particularly when penguins are at stake. Director Mark Waters (Mean Girls, Freaky Friday) has nally gotten Mr. Popper and his ightless gang up on the big screen. The differences are many between the book and the lm, but Mr. Poppers Penguins, thanks in large part to Jim Carreys deft, funny performance, has its own charms. Its a saccharine lm, with predictable story lines and glossy studio veneer, but rather surprisingly it slides enough screwball comedy in between the cracks to avoid becoming the kiddie schmaltz it would seem destined to be. The lm opens in the 1970s with a young Tommy Popper communicating with his traveling father by ham radio. But his dad (radio name Bald Eagle) rarely has time for his son (Tippy Toe) while off on his never-ending adventures.

Mr. Poppers Penguins


Director: Mark Waters Cast: Jim Carrey,Carla Gugino, Madeline Carroll,Angela Lansbury,Ophelia Lovibond Rated: PG for mild rude humor and some language Grade:

Three decades later, the grown Popper (Carrey) has become an elite Manhattan real estate developer. He specializes in buying up city landmarks and has done well enough that hes on the cusp of being made a partner at his rm. His alliterative assistant Pippi (Ophelia Lovibond), trails him everywhere in a torrent of P-words, like a walking, talking tongue twister. In his professional dedication, though, Popper has lost his wife, Amanda (Carla Gugino). His kids (Madeline Carroll, Maxwell Perry Cotton) have become accustomed to his absence, much like Popper had for his father. We have the most magical alternative weekends together, says Popper sarcastically. Poppers world is shook and surely you saw this coming when a package arrives from his father, shortly after his death. He bequeaths Popper a penguin,

who clashes in temper if not color with Poppers sleek Park Avenue apartment. More soon arrive and eventually six of them are honking, pooping and waddling all over Poppers place. He only keeps them because his kids take a shine to them. A lot of atulence, groin gags and slapstick follows. Popper grows closer to the penguins (and thus his family) while he tries to hide them from a poaching zookeeper (Clark Gregg) and a nosey neighbor (David Krumholtz). The penguins a smooth mix of the real deal and CGI effects arent nauseatingly cute (thankfully), but are more endearingly bumbling. Put on The Gold Rush, and the tuxedoed ones can only gaze lovingly at their hero, Charlie Chaplin. All of this would be simply banal if not for Waters surehandedness and Carreys clever inserts. This is staccato Carrey, throwing in lines and rubbery faces in between the kid movie machinations. At one point, he tosses in a Jimmy Stewart impression, which is fitting because Carrey has a similar kind of presence in the lm. Carrey is, of course, more comical, but after an absence from moviemaking, he slides well into the sort of role Stewart once donned: a New Yorker rediscovering his heart. The Big Apple plays heavily far too heavily in the lm. It was shot in the city (far from the country town of the book) and comes off as an obvious travelogue, with stops at Central Park, the Brooklyn Bridge and the Guggenheim whose Frank Lloyd Wright circular interior admittedly turns out to be an excellent penguin slide.

LOS ANGELES Forget art, commerce or even his advisers, Jim Carrey wanted to work with the penguins. The comic-actor returns to movie screens this weekend in the family ick Mr. Poppers Penguins. Yeah, when I was doing it, and even when I chose it, there were people in my camp who where saying, You really want to do a penguin movie? You know, a PENGUIN movie, childrens movie kind of thing? Carrey recalled. Its like, You want that rock-and-roll edge in your life? And is that really to code? But I just went with the instinct of, I love frickin penguins. At rst glance, Poppers looks like a reworking of one of his biggest hits, Liar Liar (1997), another comedy about a wayward dad who nds his lost soul only after going through an extraordinary adventure. It also appears that another onetime hot comic actor is trying to salvage his box-ofce cred by going the family lm route. (Think Steve Martins Cheaper by the Dozen lms or Eddie Murphys Dr. Doolittles.) But look again and see Poppers is none of the above, with eshed-out, shades-of-gray characters (and no less than Angela Lansbury in the supporting cast), offering the sort of substance to keep adults engaged as well as the kids. And while the lead role wasnt tailor-made for Carrey (its based on the Richard and Florence Atwater novel), theres just enough manic, fast-talking Carrey schtick worked into the movie to sate the stars longtime fans. So, this wasnt the approach of, Im an alien in this movie and Im different than everybody else, Carrey noted. It was, I am every man in this movie, every person who is striving for some sort of personal greatness, or trying to (run) away from their actual feelings. That was an important aspect of it. And then the bottom line: I love penguins, people love penguins. I go, Jim Carrey. Penguins. Rumble in the jungle. Im there. Oddly enough, it wasnt the real penguins but the animatronic variety that caused real trouble on the set, thanks to cast and crews array of personal-electronic devices messing with the remote-control signals. With the (real) penguins, my favorite moment was just the mayhem at the dinner table and stuff that went on after the camera was off, Carrey said. Real penguins, real penguins that were supposed to be kept at bay, sitting in their chairs and eating off the plates and they just went nuts and took over. Carrey has alternated between commercial and artier fare since shortly after his star-making role in The Mask (1994). In 1998, he got serious Oscar buzz (though no nomination) for his work in The Truman Show and a year later for Man on the Moon. He also got serious in The Majestic (2001), Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004), The Number 23 (2007) and I Love You Phillip Morris (2009). At 49, Carrey shows no sign of changing that game plan: alternating comic crowd-pleasers with art-house fare. It should be impossible that a guy who talked through his butt is doing a Peter Weir movie (The Truman Show) about such an important topic as blazing your way through the world and being true to yourself. That generally doesnt happen, Carrey said. But I really believe that people are as limited as they believe they are, and that they just have to have the nerve enough to say, Yeah, I know you told me Im not supposed to do this, but Im going to do it and see what happens, he said. You know, Ive gone so far out this way and so far out this way that sometimes its when I do a lm like (Poppers), they kind of meet in the middle, and I get the best of both worlds.

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Weekend June 18-19, 2011

WEEKEND JOURNAL
Jeffrey Deaver
Bond. James Bond. M is for Mystery bookstore in Downtown San Mateo hosts the exclusive Bay Area appearance of author Jeffery Deaver, who was selected by Ian Fleming Publications to write the just-published Carte Blanche: A James Bond Novel. Author of Roadside Crosses, The Bodies Left Behind, The Broken Window, The Sleeping Doll and 21 other suspense novels, Deaver has been nominated for six Edgar Awards, and is a three-time recipient of the Ellery Queen Readers Award for Best Short Story of the Year. His novel The Bone Collector was made into a feature release from Universal Pictures, starring Denzel Washington. 7 p.m. Wednesday, June 22. M is for Mystery bookstore. 86 E. Third Ave.

THE DAILY JOURNAL

New museum dishes the history of Vidalia onions


By Russ Bynum
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

If you go
VIDALIA ONION MUSEUM:100 Vidalia Sweet Onion Drive,Vidalia,Ga.; http://www.vidaliaonion.org; phone: (912) 538-8687.Hours 9 a.m.to 5 p.m. Monday-Friday.No admission fee.
gelatin and cottage cheese. One corner is dedicated to TV clips and other pop-culture curios. Theres Sammy Kershaws country song about a girl with a funky name: Sweet Vidalia/ You always gotta make me cry. And whod have thought knowing that Vidalias come from Georgia was an answer worth $25,000 on Who Wants To Be A Millionaire? For the uninitiated, the museum handily breaks down the basics: Only 20 counties in Georgia can grow and sell onions under the Vidalia name, by order of state and federal law. Each year onion farmers ship about 200 million pounds of Vidalias, valued at $150 million. Still, the museums juicy centerpiece is a collection of photos, newspaper clippings and videotaped interviews that tell the story of how Georgias prized cash crop grew from a few Depression-era farmers who randomly started growing onions to supplement their cotton and tobacco harvests. One of those early stories features a firsthand account from farmer Mose Coleman, who grew his first onions from mail-ordered seeds in the 1930s and sold them out of a trailer made from the back of a Model T Ford. Coleman tells of how he sold his crop to a grocery chains buyer by biting into a raw, ripe onion and eating it like a piece of fruit.

VIDALIA, Ga. Theyve started fistfights and court battles, been romanticized in country songs and counterfeited by bootleggers. Their trademark sweetness has made them a coveted ingredient in recipes from salads and relishes to cookies and muffins. If a museum dedicated to onions sounds rooted in folly, the history behind the famous Vidalia onion can likely hold its own with other veggie shrines such as the Idaho Potato Museum, the Red River Valley Sugarbeet Museum in Minnesota and the tiny Carrot Museum tucked in a Rhode Island bed-andbreakfast. The freshly opened Vidalia Onion Museum digs fairly deep to dish the good, the bad and the yummy on Georgias official state vegetable including the unearthed origin of Vidalias reputation for being so sweet they can be eaten like apples. You go anywhere in the country and you get these crazy, random museums. So naturally people expected we had an onion museum, said Wendy Brannen, who oversaw creation of the museum in her job as executive director of the Vidalia Onion Committee, which handles marketing of the crop. It took five years and $250,000. But the onion museum, which shares space with Brannens committee offices and the local tourism bureau, opened its doors April 29 to coincide with the celebration of the spring harvest. The museum has exhibits on the science behind why onions grown in rural southern Georgia turn out so mild (low-sulfur soil, for starters). Theres a foodie section with recipes for Vidalia onion muffins and congealed salad with chopped onions, lemon

San Mateo. www.MforMystery.com. 4018077.


All events are free unless otherwise noted. Please check before the event in case of schedule changes.

ART
Continued from page 18
wind whose pretty perkiness feels phony and soon grows tiresome. Still, they make for an adorable couple, and Wiesen milks a few enjoyable moments out of his lead actors and some of the supporting cast, particularly Elizabeth Reaser as Roberts amorous mom. Graduating to a more grown-up role after starring in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and Finding Neverland, Highmore plays George Zinavoy, an aimless kid coasting through his senior year at a New York City private school. George is politely disobedient to teachers and school administrators (including Blair Underwood and Alicia Silverstone), who issue stern warnings while inexplicably indulging this spoiled brats behavior. Really, how many educators would put up with a high school student mockingly calling them by their first names? A thin, contrived encounter abruptly makes loner George the new best friend of Sally Howe (Roberts), who by rights should be head cheerleader, class president, prom queen and every other position of school status that looks and smarts can buy. Conveniently, though, Sally has only a few superficial pals. She and George embark on a relationship that has him both falling in love and falling into that dreaded category of, from Sallys viewpoint, just friends. Youre my only real friend, Sally says. Lets not ruin it. How original. Then George picks up a mentor in young painter Dustin (Michael Angarano). George unwisely introduces Sally and Dustin, between whom sparks begin to fly. Again, how original.

Art of Getting By
Director: Gavin Wiesen Cast: Emma Roberts,Freddie Highmore,Michael Angarano, Rita Wilson,Blair Underwood Rated: PG-13 for for thematic elements including sexual content,language,teen drinking,partying Grade:

The other crises in Georges life feel just as false. At home, theres financial trouble with his mom (Rita Wilson) and stepdad (Sam Robards), a 50-year-old guy whose problems are a fabricated reflection of Georges. At school, George digs himself a hole that could keep him from graduating, if it werent for those kindly teachers and administrators willing to cut every corner and bend every rule to let this pretentious slacker make the grade. The Art of Getting By is an adults idealization of teen life and romance, the pieces fitting perfectly, the obstacles arising speciously. The players are not so much teens as miniature adults, dissecting their own natures with insightfulness that typically comes through decades of reflection, if it comes at all. A good little nihilist, George reads Albert Camus and copes with heartache by listening to the same Leonard Cohen song all night long. Maybe filmmaker Wiesen was into Camus and Cohen back in high school, but very few other teenagers are. In that regard and almost every other, The Art of Getting By is a portrait of con artistry that never presents people you can believe in or care about. some time, but it definitely goes a long way in developing model citizens who will exponentially improve society for years to come. The current generation and the generations that follow will consider many things when deciding on what they want to be when they grow up, including grappling with the term success and what it really means. It can be interpreted many different ways, most often with the amount of money that can be made at the end of the road. While it is denitely a factor, never forget the phrase that says what the focus should really be on: A true success story can practice humility and philanthropy to be exemplary.
Philip Dimaano is a recent graduate of Aragon High School. Student News appears in the weekend edition. You can e-mail Student News at [email protected].

SUCCESS
Continued from page 18
ple can become blinded by greed and allow their selfishness to taint their moral compass. Instead, people with so much money to spare are in an even greater position to give back to the community and help their fellow man. No price tag could ever be put on the elation you get from helping others less fortunate than you. Putting principles such as these into practice then make that person an example others can look up to and admire as they also strive to live life in a similar way. Role models such as these can significantly impact the hearts and minds of the people they influence for the better. It may take

THE DAILY JOURNAL

WEEKEND JOURNAL
will cost $8 to $10 per person, but once inside a carnival of wonders awaits. Pair a block of fries you read that right to go along with barbecue beef sandwich dripping with tangy sweet sauce. Dont forget the funnel cake topped with sweet strawberries and powdered sugar. Watch the fastest swine off the line while digesting. Its hard not to smile when watching little piggies with celebrity-inspired names race in hopes of winning a treat. Grab a drink and people watch before catching 70s pop/rock band Pablo Cruise Saturday night or Lupillo Rivera and Vilma Diaz Sunday evening. Its one of those family-friendly outings where you come home with stories about busting balloons, carnival rides and seeing homemade goods that inspire crafts at home. Maybe fried food and farm animals arent your idea of a good time. California each year. It takes a very special breed to travel around, she said. Their next stop is the Marin County Fair. Coral Reef Smoothies, owned by husband and wife Michelle and Chris Conkle, sells smoothies made simply with fresh fruit and ice. My husband wanted to bring a healthy option to fairs, said Michelle Conkle. They are one of two vendors at the San Mateo fair that sells healthy food, she said. The Conkles trailer is hard to miss, with vibrant blue ocean scenes and dolphin and mermaid figurines covering the counters. They dress to the theme, in festive Hawaiian prints. This is only their second year at the San Mateo County Fair, but they have been working California fairs for decades. Displayed in Maybe someday hell prove that, Cretan said, but not now because of the crime itself and his post-conviction behavior. A jury convicted Nabong in February, after little more than a full day of deliberation and following a trial in which they heard from his former girlfriend and Chand. Nabong and Reddy did not know each other prior to their fatal meeting. Reddy thought he was selling a pound of marijuana to his friend, Chand. Instead, Chand plotted to rob him and brought in others to pull off the heist so he would be above suspicion. One of those others If this is an older crowd as is legally able to enjoy the inside of dads liquor cabinet consider enjoying the weekend with a drink. La Honda Winery, located at 2645 Fair Oaks Avenue in Redwood City, is holding a wine and lobster lunch. From noon to 4 p.m., drop in for $10 wine tasting and purchase lobster rolls, scallops or sh and chips being served by the Old Port Lobster Shack. Try your food with different wines and create a mini lesson on pairing. Alternatively, you can enjoy your drink by looking into the sky. HeliFest! will be held from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. all weekend at the Hiller Aviation Museum, 601 Skyway Road in San Carlos. Focusing on helicopters, microbrews, wine, food and kids the event should have something for everyone in the family. Tickets are $15 for adults, $10 for youth 5 to 17 and sentheir window are several Best in Show ribbons from various fairs, including San Mateo, Marin and Santa Cruz counties. Conkle said that her husband grew up around fairs. His grandpa would take him to fairs instead of church, she said. I started working for my husband at the Strawberry Festival in Pebble Beach, she said. We fell in love and here I am 25 years later. The Sleek Greek sells gyros and other Greek dishes. We dont do a lot of items, but what we do, I think we do well, said Mike Bliss, who has run the business with his wife Sandi for 17 years. Bliss said he is a geologist and his wife was a ight attendant, but they decided, while on a vacation in Australia, that they wanted to sell gyros at events. drew in Nabong, who made side plans with another conspirator, John La Pierre, to rob Chand of his money and expensive earrings. When Nabong pulled a gun and told Reddy he was taking the marijuana, the latter reportedly told him hed have to shoot him instead. Nabong shot him once and dumped the dying man on the ground. During closing arguments, Boyarsky called Chands testimony questionable and the evidence proving Nabong was the shooter shakier. Instead, he implied that La Pierre who has since been killed himself was the one

Weekend June 18-19, 2011

23

DAD
Continued from page 1
and soccer ball. Head with a blanket to your favorite park or to the beach. Remember to bring the sunscreen and maybe ll your iPod with tunes from his era for the drive. A barbecue at home could be just as much fun. Remember, he gets control of the tunes regardless of your negative thoughts about Bon Jovi. If a last-minute get together is more work than you care to take on, let someone else make the food. The San Mateo County Fair nishes up its annual stint this weekend. Open 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. both Saturday and Sunday, the fair offers a plethora of fried and grilled food. Getting in

iors and free for children 4 and younger. Get a close-up look at military and commercial helicopters, which will be on display, while enjoying a California pinot and letting the kiddos play. While in San Carlos, take a trip to Domenico Winery, 1697 Industrial Road, which is offering complementary tasting and appetizers for all dads. Its $10 for the rest of us. If its all about the American pastime for your family head to the ballpark. The Battle of the Bay, Oakland As versus the San Francisco Giants, will be taking place Saturday evening and Sunday afternoon on the other side of the Bay. Or, head south and take in a minor league San Jose Giants game. Tickets are a bit cheaper and theres always a possibility a strike out will lead to half-off beers. Then you can afford to join your dad in a frosty brew. The trailer was born in Youngstown, Ohio and weve been turnin and burnin ever since, he said, pointing to the turning spits of juicy lamb and beef in his truck. He realized that they had found a niche because gyros were hard to nd at fairs. Gyros are important to the fair for variety, said Bliss. The Blisses live in Phoenix but tour California for four months of the year, working county fairs including Alameda, Sonoma and Fresno. Bliss said what he enjoys most is the community of vendors, some whom he sees several times a year. San Mateo Countys 4-H groups also contributed to the food options selling homemade cake slices. On Thursday, Pacica 4-H was selling cake to raise money for summer camp scholarships and barn equipment. with a gun and robbery history. Nabong was four months shy of 18 at the time but prosecutor Al Giannini argued during the sentencing hearing that should not automatically give him clemency for the vicious, vicious killing of someone who posed no threat. Nabong is a mean, unrepentant gangmember whose killing of Reddy and subsequent jail house assaults cemented the need for life without parole, he said. This is just really bad even by the standards of murder, Giannini said. This defendant worked hard for that sentence.

FOOD
Continued from page 1
frosting made from scratch. The nuts and raisins are from local farmers, added Magdalenos 8-year-old daughter Maya, as she cut cinnamon rolls and set them in a baking tray. Magdaleno is on the road with her husband Augie and two children from May to October. Its important for our kids to see what mom and dad are doing every day, said Magdaleno pointing to Maya. Being on the road together, she explained, allows her to keep her family as her priority. Magdaleno and her sisters have 10 vending trailers and work 30 events in

NABONG
Continued from page 1
resentation by Boyarsky, an unfair trial due to immunity given witnesses and a sleeping juror who became the foreman. Just prior to Cretans sentencing, Nabong asked to speak again. I understand my behavior is unacceptable, he said, adding that he is not some kind of monster.

Houses of Prayer

Houses of Prayer

Buddhist
SAN MATEO BUDDHIST TEMPLE
Jodo ShinshuBuddhist (Pure Land Buddhism) 2 So. Claremont St. San Mateo

Congregational
THE CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH OF SAN MATEO - UCC 225 Tilton Ave. & San Mateo Dr. (650) 343-3694 Worship and Church School Every Sunday at 10:30 AM Coffee Hour at 11:45 AM Nursery Care Available www.ccsm-ucc.org

Methodist
CRYSTAL SPRINGS UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Sunday Worship 10:00 AM
Sunday School Childcare Drama Choir Handbells Praise Band Sunday October 24, 2010 CSUMC will be starting a new Samoan language ministry which starts at 12:00pm. It will be led by Tapuai Louis Vaili Certied Lay Speaker. Everyone is welcome to join us! 2145 Bunker Hill Drive San Mateo (650)345-2381 www.csumc.org

Synagogues PENINSULA TEMPLE BETH EL


1700 Alameda de las Pulgas San Mateo at Hwy 92 (650) 341-7701
Friday Shabbat Services 6:30 pm Except the last Friday of the Month 7:30 pm We offer Tot Shabbat, Family Services, Adult Education and Innovative Education Programs for Pre-K thru 12th Grade Join Us! Serving the Peninsula for over 50 years A member of the Union for Reform Judaism Visit our website www.ptbe.org

(650) 342-2541
Sunday English Service & Dharma School - 9:30 AM Reverend Ryuta Furumoto www.sanmateobuddhisttemple.org

Church of Christ

Non-Denominational

CHURCH OF CHRIST
525 South Bayshore Blvd. San Mateo

(650) 343-4997
Bible School 9:45 AM Services 11:00 AM and 2:00 PM Wednesday Bible Study 7:00 PM Minister J.S. Oxendine
www.church-of-christ.org/cocsm

Church of the Highlands


A community of caring Christians

Lutheran

HOPE EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH


600 W. 42nd Ave., San Mateo
Pastor Eric Ackerman
Worship Service Sunday School 10:00 AM 11:00 AM

Baptist
PILGRIM BAPTIST CHURCH Dr. Larry Wayne Ellis, Pastor (650) 343-5415 217 North Grant Street, San Mateo Sunday Worship Services at 8 & 11 am Sunday School at 9:30 am Website: www.pilgrimbcsm.org LISTEN TO OUR RADIO BROADCAST! (KFAX 1100 on the AM Dial) Every Sunday at 5:30 PM

Buddhist

Congregational
FOSTER CITY ISLAND UNITED CHURCH
Foster City's only three-denomination Church Methodist, Presbyterian (U.S.A.), and United Church of Christ 1130 Balclutha Drive (at Comet) Worship/Child Care/Sunday School at 10am All are Welcome!

LOTUS BUDDHIST CIRCLE


(Rissho Kosei-kai of SF)
851 N. San Mateo Dr., Suite D San Mateo

Child care provided in the nursery. Hope Lutheran Preschool admits students of any race, color and national or ethnic origin.
License No. 410500322.

1900 Monterey Drive (corner Sneath Lane) San Bruno (650)873-4095 Adult Worship Services: Friday: 7:30 pm (singles) Saturday: 7:00 pm Sun 7, 8:30, 10, & 11:30 am, 5 pm Youth Worship Service: For high school & young college Sunday at 10:00 am Sunday School For adults & children of all ages Sunday at 10:00 am Donald Sheley, Founding Pastor Leighton Sheley, Senior Pastor

Unitarian
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #245121 The following person is doing business as: HIYAAA, 326 Shaw Road, South San Francisco, CA 94080 is hereby registered by the following owner: Hye Chang, 62 McLellan Ave., San Mateo, CA 94403. The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on /s/ Hye Chang / This statement was led with the Assessor-County Clerk on 06/06/2011. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 06/18/11, 06/25/11, 07/02/11, 07/09/11).

650.200.3755
English Service: 4th Sunday at 10 AM Study: Tuesday at 7 PM www.lotusbuddhistcircle.com

REDWOOD CHURCH
Our mission...
To know Christ and make him known.

Call (650) 349-3544

Call (650)349-0100
HopeLutheranSanMateo.org

901 Madison Ave., Redwood City (650)366-1223

Sunday services:
9:00AM & 10:45AM www.redwoodchurch.org

24

Weekend June 18-19, 2011

WEEKEND JOURNAL
Summer Concert Series in Menlo Park. 6:30 p.m. Fremont Park, University and Santa Cruz avenues, Menlo Park. Music by Groove Kings (Classic Covers). Bring a picnic basket, blanket, family and friends and enjoy a fun-lled event at the park. Free. For more information call 3306600. THURSDAY, JUNE 23 Mortgages For Homeowners 3.0. 6:15 p.m. Wells Fargo, 900 Veterans Blvd., Redwood City. Learn all about your mortgage. Have an adjustable mortgage, has the rate gone down? If not, why not? For more information call 888-9268. Hot Harvest Nights San Carlos Farmers Market. 4 p.m. to 8 p.m., Downtown San Carlos. Specialty foods and live entertainment. Shops downtown will be open late. Free. For more information call 593-1068. FRIDAY, JUNE 24 Art Gallery Reception. 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. 1870 Art Gallery, 1870 Ralston Ave., Belmont. Artist Nancy Woods says that most of our lives are spent growing up trying to t in, much later for most we try to distinguish ourselves from everyone else. With life being so serious and a struggle, having some fun in ones house is revitalizing with a connection to the whimsical world. For more information call 347-8367. The Nutcracker. 7 p.m. Bayside Performing Arts Center, 2025 Kehoe Ave., San Mateo. The show features original choreography by Heba and Peninsula Dance Academy instructors to give a contemporary spin to the fabled Nutcracker. $20 adults, $12 Children. For more information call 787-7948. Alan Iglesias and Crossfire: A Tribute to Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble. 8 p.m. Club Fox, 2209 Broadway, Redwood City. $15. For more information visit clubfoxrwc.com. SATURDAY, JUNE 25 Cooking for Health. 10 a.m. Mills High School, 400 Murchison Drive, Millbrae. Join us for a health seminar and nutritional cooking classes for cancer patients and families. Free. To RSVP and for more information call 552-0055. Native Plants, Wildlife Habitat and Pollinators in Your Garden. 10 a.m. to noon. Garden Room, Little House, 800 Middle Ave., Menlo Park. Learn about how to create a habitat for native insects and other wildlife while saving water by planting native California plants. $20. For more information call 726-9059 ext. 107. National Demonstration of Emergency Communications. 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Emergency Operation Center, 490 N. Canal St., South San Francisco. Using only emergency power supplies, ham operators will contruct emergency stations at various locations across the country in the event of a catastrophic commercial power failure. For more information call 829-4336. Thanks for the Memory. 2 p.m. Spangenberg Theater, Gunn High School, 780 Arastradero Road, Palo Alto. The Palo alto Mountain View Chapter of the Barbershop Harmony Society, the Mission Valley Chapter of Sweet Adelines International and the Stanford University Ballroom Dance Team present a special benet performance in celebration of the USOs 70 years of service. $25 in advance, $30 at the door, $20 for active duty personnel and dependents w/advance purchase. For more information call 704-8195. For more events visit smdailyjournal.com, click Calendar.

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Calendar
SATURDAY, JUNE 18 Conference on Mortgage, Credit Card and Other Debt Relief. 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. San Francisco Airport Marriott, 1800 Old Bayshore Highway, Burlingame. Wealth and Health Network presents a conference for anyone who is facing foreclosure, needs principal and interest reduction, have failed loan modication, have an upcoming trustee sale, or needs help saving their home. $20. For more information visit debtreliefconference.eventbrite.com. 2011 Master Gardeners Educational Garden Tour and Plant Sale. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tour seven homes from Burlingame to Redwood City. Learn more about irrigating, composting, plant selection, hillside gardening, alternatives to turf and growing fruit and vegetables. Tickets are $25 in advance and $30 the day of the tour. For more information call 738-0208. Paddle and Play. 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Shell Boulevard, Foster City. Peninsula Aquatics Center will provide families with a safe and fun boating experience. Free. For more information call 286-3380. Helifest. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The Hiller Aviation Museum, 601 Skyway Road, San Carlos. Highlights include helicopters open and available for exploration, food and wine festivals and a kids festival. Event continues Sunday, June 19. $15 for adults, $10 for you (5-17) and seniors, free for children 4 and under. For more information visit hiller.org. Backyard Chickens. 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Common Ground Garden Supply and Education Center, 559 College Ave., Palo Alto. Learn everything you need to raise happy hens, including a hen house and yard setup, nesting boxes, water, feed, local suppliers, caring for your hens and chicks and favorite crops to grow for your chickens. $31 plus $7 materials fee. For more information call 493-6072. San Mateo County Fair. 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. San Mateo County Fairgrounds, 1346 Saratoga Drive, San Mateo. Pig races, kids activities, carnival rides, Alcatraz display, farm animals and petting zoo, fair food and fun. Free concert by Pablo Cruise. General admission $10, kids over 6 and seniors $8, parking $10. For more information visit www.sanmateocountyfair.com or call (888) 7980070. Well Kiddos BBQ Event. 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. New Leaf Community Markets, 150 San Mateo Road, Half Moon Bay. Learn about safe barbecue tips, good meat choices and healthy food alternatives with Manu Hipkins of Well Kiddos. $6. For more information call (831) 466-9060. Support the Troops BBQ. 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Central Park, 50 E. Fifth Ave., San Mateo. Bands, barbecues, kids activities and prizes. Dad & Me @ the Park Picnic. 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Coyote Point Park, 1961 Coyote Point Drive, San Mateo. Join us for kite building and ying, games and prizes, face-painting and a barbecue lunch. For more information call 802-5090. Helifest. 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Hiller Aviation Museum, 601 Skyway Road, San Carlos. Featured Speaker: Jackie Boor will give a presentation on the remarkable life and career of the helicopter pilot who flew President Nixon from the White House to Andrews AFB the day he resigned. For more information call (916) 548-3936. Wine and Lobster Lunch. noon to 4 p.m. La Honda Winery, 2645 Fair Oaks Ave., Redwood City. Wine tasting $10, members free. Annie the Musical. 2 p.m. College of San Mateo, 1700 W. Hillsdale Blvd. San Mateo. Join us for the presentation of Annie, the beloved and timeless musical that now has a local twist! For more information contact ashcarlosn [email protected]. Sparkys Wild Wild West. 4 p.m. to 11 p.m. Featuring bull-riding, barbecue and Louis Van Amstel from Dancing With the Stars. For more information, including event location e m a i l [email protected]. Sophie B. Hawkins Concert. 7 p.m. Club Fox, 2215 Broadway, Redwood City. Sophie, best known for her hit songs As I Lay Me Down and Damn I Wish I Was Your Lover, is a platinum selling recording artist who has sold more than 9 million records worldwide and released ve successful albums. $26 in advance, $32 at the door. For more information call (203) 228-5090. The Odd Couple. 8 p.m. Coastal Repertory Theatre, 1167 Main St., Half Moon Bay. The play is a hilarious tale of two ordinary men who are extraordinarily irreconcilable, filled with acerbic humor and a steady stream of punchy one-liners. Play continues Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 2 p.m. until June 25. For more information call 5693266. Jim Moore & Funktional Soul. 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. The Wine Bar, HMB, 270 Capistrano Road No. 22, Half Moon Bay. $5. For more information call 726-0770. SUNDAY, JUNE 19 Downtown San Mateo Farmers Market. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Wells Fargo Parking Lot, Fifth Ave. and San Mateo Drive, San Mateo. Continues every Sunday until Nov. 20. For more information visit urbantable.org. Helifest. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The Hiller Aviation Museum, 601 Skyway Road, San Carlos. Highlights include helicopters open and available for exploration, food and wine festivals, and a kids festival. $15 for adults, $10 for youth (5-17) and seniors, free for children four and under. For more information visit hiller.org. San Mateo County Fair. 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. San Mateo County Fairgrounds, 1346 Saratoga Drive, San Mateo. Pig races, kids activities, carnival rides, Alcatraz display, farm animals and petting zoo, shopping and fun. Free concert by Dia de la Feria. General admission $10, kids over 6 and seniors $8, parking $10. For more information visit www.sanmateocountyfair.com or call (888) 798-0070. The Distractions. 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Twin Pines Park Meadow, 1225 Ralston Ave., Belmont. Refreshments are available, proceeds of which help make these concerts possible. Free. For more information call 592-3068. Jazz at Filoli. 1:30 p.m. to 4 p.m. Filoli Gardens, 86 Caada Road, Woodside. This Sunday will feature Duke Heitger and Butch Thompsons New Orleans Wanderers. For more information call 364-8300. Annie the Musical. 2 p.m. College of San Mateo, 1700 W. Hillsdale Blvd. San Mateo. Presentation of Annie. For more information contact ashcarlosn [email protected]. The Odd Couple. 2 p.m. Coastal Repertory Theatre, 1167 Main St., Half Moon Bay. The play is a hilarious tale of two ordinary men who are extraordinarily irreconcilable, filled with acerbic humor and a steady stream of punchy one-liners. Play continues Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 2 p.m. until June 25. For more information call 5693266. MONDAY, JUNE 20 Bay Area Shakespeare Camps. 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Odyssey School, 201 Polhemus Road, San Mateo. Designed for anybody ages 7-18 who is interested in acting and performance prior experience welcome but not required. $444 for two weeks. For more information call (415) 5580888. Caring for the Caregiver. 10 a.m. 20 Twin Pines Lane, Belmont. The seminar is offered in cooperation with Always Best Care. Free. For more information call 595-7444. Magic and Juggling Show. 3 p.m. San Mateo Public Library Marina, 1530 Susan Court, San Mateo. Come to an exciting magic and juggling show by Steven Koehler. Free. For more information call 522-7890. TUESDAY, JUNE 21 Cooking Demo and Tasting: Gluten Free Sides and Salads. 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. New Leaf Community Markets, 150 San Mateo Road, Half Moon Bay. A demonstration of three delicious gluten-free dishes for perfect summer solutions. $20. Registration required. For more information or to register visit newleaf.com. Life Guidance Support Group presents Brain Fitness Part 2. 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. 250 Myrtle Road, Burlingame. Neuropsychologist Dr. Charles J. Vella will outline major neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimers disease. For more information or to RSVP call 343-2747. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22 Kiwanis Club of San Mateo Meeting. 12:10 p.m. Poplar Creek Grill Municipal Golf Course, 1700 Coyote Point Drive, San Mateo. Group meets every Wednesday. RSVP required. For more information or to register call (415) 309-6467. City Talk Toastmasters Club Meeting. 12:30 p.m. to 1:30 p.m. Redwood City Main Library Community Room, 1044 Middleeld Road, Redwood City. A friendly and supportive atmosphere to improve communication and leadership skills. Free. For more information email [email protected]. Wellness Lecture: Thyroid Health. 6:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. New Leaf Community Markets, 150 San Mateo Road, Half Moon Bay. Learn a natural approach to optimal thyroid health. Free. Registration required. For more information or to register visit newleaf.com.

Bristol Palin calls her ex the gnat in new book


By Frazier Moore
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK Bristol Palin writes in her new book of losing her virginity to boyfriend Levi Johnston on a camping trip after getting drunk for the rst time on too many wine coolers. She awoke in her tent, alone, with no memories of what had happened as Johnston talked with his friends on the other side of the canvas. She had vowed to wait until marriage. And she had lied to her parents about where she was going. Palin, a 20-year-old single mother and the daughter of former Alaska Republican Gov. Sarah Palin, tells a story of deception and disappointment in the book, Not Afraid of Life: My Journey So Far. The memoir, co-written with Nancy French, is scheduled for publication by William Morrow next week. The Associated Press purchased a copy Friday. Palins book covers growing up with her

family, which she portrays affectionately, and the excitement of her mothers political life as governor and then, in 2008, as the GOP vice presidential candidate. But the main theme is her on-and-off-again relationship with Johnston, Bristol Palin with whom she had a child and was briey engaged while caught in a media spotlight. She blasts him as the gnat named Levi Johnston constantly spreading false accusations against our family and calls him a selfinvolved slacker who cheated on me about as frequently as he sharpened his hockey skates. But Palin, self-described as a good girl and straight-A student, had been drawn to him and his bad-boy manner from the time they met in seventh grade. When she confronted him about their sexual encounter, he said what she wanted to hear: They wouldnt do it again until they were married. penalty of $5,000 but the chamber was ordered to pay only $3,000 because of the cases facts, the FPPC concluded in its decision. The chamber has no prior history of violations, cooperated with the investigation and filed campaign statements disclosing the information. In total, the FPPC found no evidence that the violation was anything more than negligent. The stipulations avoid the need for a full administrative hearing on the complaint. The FPPC would not immediately disclose who brought the matter to its attention for investigation. The chamber is not the rst entity with FPPC violations linked back to the Cargill debate. Last summer, Redwood City Councilwoman Rosanne Foust received a written warning from the FPPC that she cannot ethically vote on Saltworks issues and also head the private San Mateo County Economic Development Association which has proactively supported the potential development. Foust, acting on the advice of the city attorney, maintained her dual roles did not compromise her objectivity but opted not to ght the nding. Instead, she is abstaining from all council matters on the subject.
Michelle Durand can be reached by email: [email protected] or by phone: (650) 344-5200 ext. 102.

FINE
Continued from page 1
During that time, the chamber spent $18,643.36 to produce and mail two mass mailers and $4,906.75 on a brochure that was never sent. The chamber also spent $645 for video production and $875 for a magazine article. None of the $24,784.57 was reported to Redwood City by the deadline, according to the FPPC. Chamber President and CEO Larry Buckmaster did not return phone calls or emails for comment. The mailers and brochure advocated the defeat of Measure W, which proposed voter approval by a two-thirds majority any development on land deemed open space. The initiative was put forward by environmentalists wanting to prevent development of the former Cargill Saltworks site. The city suggested an alternative, changing the city charter so voters only had a say on the Cargill site. That November, both ballot measures failed, returning the city and the interest groups back to square one. The proposal by developer DMB Associates is still pending as the city undergoes an environmental review process. The disclosure violation carries a maximum

SUIT
Continued from page 1
How big of an obstacle is up to interpretation. Those representing the county consider a judges decision to question the legal merits of the lawsuit as a victory. Farley Neuman, the attorney representing the school districts, calls it a delay which will allow the districts to amend the complaint by July 18. Neuman plans to amend the lawsuit by that date. The lawsuit, led in January, claims the county and Bufngton should have pulled its investment pool funds from Lehman before its Sept. 15, 2008 collapse. The high-stakes gamble resulted in $155 million in losses, $20 million to the school districts, which could be used to educate children, the lawsuit argued. On Thursday, Judge Richard Kramer found the suit was not brought in a timely manner and was not specic enough with its claim. The plaintiffs will get another chance, but we think this case will not survive motions practice for two reasons, Stuart Gasner, who is representing the county and Bufngton, wrote in a prepared statement. We remain condent on the merits of the case, which unfairly attacks the county for failing to pre-

dict the collapse of Lehman Brothers. The case should not proceed at all because of these important threshold issues. Neuman describes the delay as the result of technical issues which he is condent will be addressed with the amended paperwork due next month. The county has 24 public school districts, of which 12 are named in the claim along with the San Mateo County superintendent of schools. They seek the losses estimated at $20 million plus interest to date. The districts have questioned what county investment ofcials knew, when they knew it and if they failed to act. According to the claim, the county violated its own policies and state law by purchasing two Lehman bonds with more than ve years remaining to maturity and by buying eight oating rate Lehman notes with maturities in excess of the 270-day maximum. The county investment pool includes 1,050 different accounts from cities, school districts and special agencies. Aside from schools, the losses included hundreds of thousands of dollars to more than $1 million from Peninsula cities and $25 million from the San Mateo County Transportation Authority.
Heather Murtagh can be reached by email: [email protected] or by phone: (650) 344-5200 ext. 105.

THE DAILY JOURNAL

COMICS/GAMES
CrOSSwOrd PuZZLe
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aCrOSS 1 Fishtail 5 Big Apple team 9 IRS employee 12 Memorial Day race 13 Heavy-metal band 14 Droning sound 15 Vanilla source 16 Be embarrassed (2 wds.) 18 Big desert 20 Art-class models 21 Taj Mahal feature 22 Did lunch 23 Bucket of song 26 Nibble 30 Sty matriarch 33 Grassy area 34 Slick 35 vera lotion 37 Rancho hand 39 Mr. Tolstoy 40 Urges 41 He played the Wiz 43 Tijuana Mrs. 45 Marinate

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dOwn 1 Close kin 2 Work, as clay 3 Spud source 4 Forceful person 5 Actress Powers 6 Kind of system 7 NFL scores 8 Hounds track 9 Libya neighbor 10 Eggplant color 11 Iowa city 17 Tierra del 19 Genuine

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Bother Frat letter Big pitcher Less than one Malt beverage Grand Teton st. Voice an opinion Bravo, in Barcelona Took the title Long-answer exam Meddlesome Team list Lassoed Video-game pioneer Military hats Sheet-music symbol Opera by Verdi Clump of dirt Fjord port Smell terrible Catos hello Ill-lit

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S A NG A P A R CO P E T A V A I N N T I E E T C H MA K E F OR A T P O L Y R UM Y E A

T S H I R T A E G I S

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OW RO E R ON I G L O O M A I N

I E ON N E

6-18-11 2011, United Features Syndicate

PreVIOuS SudOku anSwerS

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

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Jumble Page 2 La times Crossword Puzzle Classifieds drabble & Over the Hedge Comics Classifieds kids across/Parents down Puzzle Family Resource Guide

Saturday, June 18, 2011

Do not attempt to do more than you can comfortably handle at any one time in the next year, and a productive, rewarding period could be in store. If you manage your affairs well, you might even be able to do less and get more.
GeMInI (May 21-June 20) -- Know your client before making an appointment to meet an important someone in a social environment. Not everyone wants to do business in a public dining room, even if some might. CanCer (June 21-July 22) -- You might need a quick

wit and a feather-light touch when dealing with family members. If you are too strict or come down too hard, youll make matters worse. LeO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Instead of focusing on mundane issues, look for the bright spots in the world that let the sunshine light up your life. Things get pretty dull when you take events too seriously. VIrGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- It doesnt serve anybodys interests to be extremely hardheaded about material or financial interests. You can handle things well without being a miser or a cheapskate. LIBra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -- There is no reason to buckle under just because you are confronted with a minor, adverse situation. Stiffen your back and dig in -- tenacity might be essential to get past obstacles.

SCOrPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -- Just because something is on your mind doesnt mean you should talk about it with just anybody. If you do, a small issue might get blown way out of proportion. SaGIttarIuS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -- A project on which youve been working for some time shouldnt suffer neglect just because of your enthusiasm for something new. Spread your attention around. CaPrICOrn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- Be expectant, positive and persevering when striving to find a new project to work on. Theres a lot going on outside your limited sphere. Start searching in new places. aQuarIuS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -- Even though your path might be scattered with a lot of unimportant impediments, if youre going after a major objective,

keep it foremost in your mind and you will prevail. PISCeS (Feb. 20-March 20) -- Dont hesitate to speak up if you hope to recoup a long overdue debt. If the tardy party in question hasnt paid up yet, it may be something he or she hopes youll forget. arIeS (March 21-April 19) -- Not everybody is as speedy as you when it comes to doing their work. However, as long as everyone does a quality job in a timely fashion, it should be no concern of yours. tauruS (April 20-May 20) -- Nothing will be handed to you on a silver platter. If you want to make same gains on what youre doing, you had better follow the rules and expend the necessary effort. Copyright 2011, United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

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Weekend June 18-19, 2011

THE DAILY JOURNAL

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

106 Tutoring

110 Employment

110 Employment

110 Employment NEWSPAPER INTERNS JOURNALISM


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

203 Public Notices


FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #245109 The following person is doing business as: Stream Line Construction, 194 Monte Vista Lane, DALY CITY, CA 94015 is hereby registered by the following owner: American Windows Center, Inc., CA. The business is conducted by a Corporation. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on 06/03/11. /s/ Anna Goldfeld / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 6/03/2011. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 06/11/11, 06/18/11, 06/25/11, 07/02/11).

TUTORING
Spanish, French, Italian
Certificated Local Teacher All Ages!

105 Education/Instruction
TENNIS LESSONS - Throughout San Mateo County 60$/Hr. 15 Years experience, Call 650-518-3070 or email [email protected]

CAREGIVERS 2 years experience required. Immediate Placement on all assignments


CALL (650)777-9000
CAREGIVERS Were currently looking for experienced eldercare aides-CNAs, HHAs & Live-ins with excellent references to join our team! Good pay and excellent benefits! Drivers preferred. Call Claudia at (650) 556-9906
www.homesweethomecare.com

(650)573-9718
107 Musical Instruction
Music Lessons Sales Repairs Rentals

Bronstein Music
363 Grand Ave. So. San Francisco

(650)588-2502 bronsteinmusic.com 110 Employment 106 Tutoring

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #244666 The following person is doing business as: Naomi Designs, 1333 Palos Verdes Dr., #304, San Mateo, CA 94403 is hereby registered by the following owner: Kimberly N. Ng, same address. The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on 05/02/2011. /s/ Kimberly N. Ng / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 05/05/2011. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 05/28/11, 06/04/11, 06/11/11, 06/18/11). FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #244996 The following person is doing business as: Miller Properties SM, 15 N. Ellsworth Ave., Ste. 103, San Mateo, CA 94401 is hereby registered by the following owner: Bruce H. Bean, same address. The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on /s/ Bruce H. Bean / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 05/26/2011. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 05/28/11, 06/04/11, 06/11/11, 06/18/11). FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #245004 The following person is doing business as: R.S. Painting Services, 133A No. Grant St., San Mateo, CA 94401 is hereby registered by the following owner: Salvador Rodriguez, same address. The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on 05/26/2011. /s/ Salvador Rodriguez / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 05/27/2011. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 05/28/11, 06/04/11, 06/11/11, 06/18/11).

SALES -

TUTOR
Want to write and sell Non-Fiction? 25 years exp. Credential. Reasonable rates.

HOUSEKEEPER - For retirement community. Full time, understand, write, & speak English. Experience required. $10/hour plus benefits. Apply 201 Chadbourne Ave, Millbrae. HOME CARE AIDES Multiple shifts to meet your needs. Great pay & benefits, Sign-on bonus, 1yr exp required. Matched Caregivers (650)839-2273, (408)280-7039 or (888)340-2273

SALES/MARKETING INTERNSHIPS The San Mateo Daily Journal is looking for ambitious interns who are eager to jump into the business arena with both feet and hands. Learn the ins and outs of the newspaper and media industries. This position will provide valuable experience for your bright future. Fax resume (650)344-5290 email [email protected]

Putnam Auto Group Buick Pontiac GMC


$50,000 Average Expectation a must 5 Men or Women for Career Sales Position Car Allowance Paid insurance w/life & dental 401k plan Five day work week
Top Performers earn $100k Plus!! Bilingual a plus Paid training included Call Mr. Olson 1-866-788-6267

(650)343-2342
110 Employment

110 Employment 110 Employment 110 Employment

127 Elderly Care FAMILY RESOURCE GUIDE


The San Mateo Daily Journals twice-a-week resource guide for children and families.

CAREGIVERS
NOW HIRING
Experienced hourly and live-in caregivers. Competitive pay and flexible hours. Apply online at: www.professionalhc.com Or in person at: 7800 El Camino Real, Suite C, Colma, CA
110 Employment 110 Employment

Every Tuesday & Weekend


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

110 Employment

110 Employment

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

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203 Public Notices
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #244781 The following person is doing business as: Turner Equipment Company, 620 Villa Street #E, DALY CITY, CA 94014 is hereby registered by the following owners: Welimi Organization, 4221 Mission St #D, San Francisco CA 94112; Metro Globe CRS, Ltd, 883 Sneath Lane #C, San Bruno, CA 94066; Real Estate or Charters.com, Inc., 15158 Sylvan St, Van Nuys CA 91411; Hampton Strategic Resources, Inc, 1531 W. Irving Park Rd, #215C, Itasca, IL 60143; Heroz Organization, 7717 Shedhorn Dr, Bozeman, MT 59718; Restorwin Management Corp, 4700 Andrew St, #D, Columbus, IN 47203. The business is conducted by Co-Partners. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on /s/ Bernardino Malasig / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 05/12/2011. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 06/04/11, 06/11/11, 06/18/11, 06/25/11).

Weekend June 18-19, 2011


203 Public Notices
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #245039 The following person is doing business as: 1) Americanom 2)Americano Deli & Grill, 224 E. Hillsdale Blvd., SAN MATEO, CA 94403 is hereby registered by the following owner: Vesna Kahriman, 2995 Woodside Rd, Ste.400, Woodside, CA 94062. The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on /s/ Vesna Kahriman/ This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 5/31/2011. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 06/11/11, 06/18/11, 06/25/11, 07/02/11). FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #245061 The following person is doing business as: 1)TKB Supply, 2)Taraval Kitchen and Bath Supply, 1605 El Camino Real, Milbrae, CA 94030 is hereby registered by the following owner: TKB Group, Inc, CA. The business is conducted by a Corporation. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on 07/01/2011. /s/ Kenneth Yip / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 6/01/2011. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 06/11/11, 06/18/11, 06/25/11, 07/02/11). FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #245320 The following person is doing business as: Yellow Cab Airport Express, 1660 Wolfe Dr., San Mateo, CA 94402 is hereby registered by the following owner: Darwin Gutierrez, same address. The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on /s/ Darwin Gutierrez / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 06/16/2011. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 06/18/11, 06/25/11, 07/02/11, 07/09/11).

27

203 Public Notices


section 1250. A Request for Special Notice form is available from the court clerk. Attorney for Petitioner: Suzan Yee, Esq. Tsao-Wu, Chow & Yee, LLP 685 Market St #460 San Francisco, CA 94105 (415)777-1688 Dated: 06/01/2011 Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal on June 4, 11, 18, 2011.

Drabble

Drabble

Drabble

210 Lost & Found


LOST - 1 gray cockatiel birds (bright orange cheeks) Mills Estate/Burlingame area. (650)678-4097. LOST - 2 silver rings and silver watch, May 7th in Burlingame between Park Rd. & Walgreens, Sentimental value. Call Gen @ (650)344-8790 LOST - DUFFEL bag. Dark red on wheels filled with workout clothes. De Anza Blvd. San Mateo April 14. Generous reward! 650-345-1700 LOST - iPhone in Millbrae, on June 4th. Reward! (650)222-5361 LOST: Center cap from wheel of Cadillac. Around Christmas time. Chrome with multi-colored Cadillac emblem in center. Small hole near edge for locking device. Belmont or San Carlos area. Joel 650-592-1111.

Over the Hedge

Over the Hedge

Over the Hedge

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #245044 The following persons are doing business as: F & S Marine, 1235 31st Ave, SAN MATEO, CA 94403, is hereby registered by the following owners: Frank and Shirley Winter, same address. The business is conducted by husband and wife. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on 5/19/11. /s/ Shirley A. Winter / /s/ Frank N. Winter / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 06/01/2011. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 06/04/11, 06/11/11, 06/18/11, 06/25/11). FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #245045 The following person is doing business as: Skyline Broadband Service, 17287 Skyline Blvd #102, WOODSIDE, CA 94062, is hereby registered by the following owner: Coastal Sierra Inc, CA. The business is conducted by a Corporation. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on 2/1/04. /s/ William F. Prince / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 06/01/2011. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 06/04/11, 06/11/11, 06/18/11, 06/25/11). FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #245104 The following person is doing business as: Nahums Janitorial & Cleaing Service, 303 Vintage Park Dr #130, FOSTER CITY, CA 94404, is hereby registered by the following owners: Alicia M. Boutin, 552 Geneva Ave #3, Redwood City CA 94061 and Dora Sanchez, same address. The business is conducted by Co-partners. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on /s/ Alicia Boutin / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 06/03/2011. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 06/04/11, 06/11/11, 06/18/11, 06/25/11). FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #245038 The following person is doing business as: Rejoyces List, 275 Morton Dr, DALY CITY, CA 94015, is hereby registered by the following owner: Joyce Holman, same address. The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on /s/ Joyce Holman / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 05/31/2011. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 06/04/11, 06/11/11, 06/18/11, 06/25/11). FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #245064 The following person is doing business as: Cartegis,10 Greenbrier Court, HALF MOON BAY, CA 94019 is hereby registered by the following owner: Randy Kinghorn, same address. The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on /s/ Randy Kinghorn / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 6/02/2011. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 06/11/11, 06/18/11, 06/25/11, 07/02/11).

298 Collectibles 295 Art


AUSTRALIAN ABORIGINAL Bark Painting 12"X16" signed, paper bark, gebung, lichens, $100 650-595-3933 49ER REPORT issues '85-'87 $35/all, (650)592-2648 Army shirtl, long sleeves, with pockets. XL $15 each (408)249-3858 BAY MEADOWS UMBRELLA - Colorful, large-size, can fit two people underneath. $20 (650)867-2720 BAY MEADOWS bag & umbrella $15.each, (650)345-1111 BIBLES - (2), 163 years old, dated 1848, $50.each,SOLD COLORIZED TERRITORIAL Quarters uncirculated with Holder $15/all, (408)249-3858 GLASSES 6 sets redskins, good condition never used $12./all. (650)345-1111 JACK TASHNER signed ball $25. Richard (650)834-4926 JOE MONTANA retirement book signed authenticated $39. (650)692-3260 MERCHANT MARINE, framed forecastle card, signed by Captain Angrick '70. 13 x 17 inches $35 cash. (650)755-8238 POSTER - framed photo of President Wilson and Chinese Junk $25 cash, (650)755-8238 SPORTS CARDS over 10k some stars and old cards $100/all. (650)207-2712 VASE - with tray, grey with red flowers, perfect condition, $25., (650)345-1111

303 Electronics
46 MITSUBISHI Projector TV, great condition. $400. (650)261-1541. COLOR TV - Apex digital, 13, perfect condition, manual, remote, $70., (650)867-2720 COMSWITCH 3500 - used for fax, computer modem, telephone answering machine, never used, SOLD! DEWALT HEAVY duty work site radio charger in box $100. (650)756-7878 MAGNAVOX PORTABLE 10 inch color TV, excellent working condition, easily portable, only $19, call 650-595-3933 PANASONIC TV 21 inch $25., (650)6378244 TV 25 inch color with remote $25. Sony 12 inch color TV, $10 Excellent condition. (650)520-0619 TV SET Philips 21 inch with remote $40., (650)692-3260 VHF PORTABLE MARINE Radio New Condition. Uses 8AA Batteries. SOLD! VINTAGE SEARS 8465 aluminum photo tripod + bag. Sturdy! $25 See: http://tinyurl.com/3v9oxrk 650-204-0587

304 Furniture
BLACK TV stand 15 inches H 28 inches W with glass doors FREE with pickup 650-871-5078 BREAKFAST NOOK DINETTE TABLEsolid oak, 55 X 54, $49., SSF, (650)583-8069 CHANDELIER WITH 5 lights/ candelabre base with glass shades $20. (650)504-3621 CHEST OF drawers - SOLD COFFEE TABLE - brown, perfect condition, nice design, with storage, $50., (650)345-1111 COFFEE TABLE light brown lots of storage good condition $45. (650)867-2720 DINING SET glass table with rod iron & 4 blue chairs $100/all 650-520-7921/650-245-3661 DISPLAY CASE wood & glass 31 x 19 inches $30. (650)873-4030 DRAFTING TABLE 30 x 42' with side tray. excellent cond $75. (650)949-2134 END TABLE marble top with drawer with matching table $70/all. (650)520-0619 ENTERTAINMENT CENTER - Oak wood, great condition, glass doors, fits large TV, 2 drawers, shelves , $100/obo. (650)261-9681 FOAM INCLINER for twin bed $40 650-692-1942 FOLDING PICNIC TABLE - 96 x 30 with 7 folding, padded chairs, $100., (650)364-0902 FUTON - full size excellent condition $95. Eddie 650-218-1118. HOSPITAL BED, new $1,100/OBO. Call 650-595-1931 LOUNGE CHAIRS - 2 new, with cover & plastic carring case & headrest, $35. each, (650)592-7483 LOVE SEAT - one year old, excellent condition, $85., (650)583-4874 LOVE SEAT beige color good condition $55., SOLD! LOVE SEATS, 2 beautiful Bassett, brown sofas-/ love seats, 1 opens to a full size bed, like new. $400. San Mateo, (954)907-0100 MATTRESS TOPPER chrome full size $15., (650)368-3037 MIRROR - Scuplted edge, dark walnut wood. Made in Italy, $140., (650) 692-1942 NIGHT STAND (650)692-3260 2 drawers $20.

296 Appliances
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #245333 The following persons are doing business as: FLA Limo Service, 909 Rollins Road, #2, Burlingame, CA 94010 is hereby registered by the following owners: Fernando Lampos Aguilar & Jessica Esguerra Aguilar, same address. The business is conducted by Husband & Wife. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on /s/ Fernando Aguilar / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 06/17/2011. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 06/18/11, 06/25/11, 07/02/11, 07/09/11). AIR CONDITIONER - slider model for narrow windows, 10k BTU, excellent condition, $100., SOLD AIR CONDITIONER- GE 10K BTU excellent cond., used only 1 month. $90. (650)591-6283 AIR CONDITIONER- Panasonic 5K BTU. excellent cond. $40. (650)591-6283 CHANDELIER (650)878-9542 NEW 4 lights $30.

CHOPPERS (4) with instructions $7/all. (650)368-3037 ELECTRIC HEATER - Oil filled electric heater, 1500 watts, $30., (650)504-3621 GAS STOVE - great condition, clean ready to use. $99., (650)583-4874 GEORGE FOREMAN Grill hardly used $20. (650)692-3260 HOOVER PORTABLE VACUUM CLEANER with attachments, good condition, $35., San Mateo, (650)341-5347 RADIATOR HEATER, oil filled, electric, 1500 watts $25. (650)504-3621 RCA VACUUM tube manual '42 $25. (650)593-8880 SANYO MICROWAVE - white, many features, SOLD! SHOP VACUUM rigid brand 3.5 horse power 9 gal wet/dry $40. (650)591-2393 SUNBEAM TOASTER -Automatic, excellent condition, $30., (415)346-6038 VACUUM CLEANER excellent condition $40. (650)878-9542 VACUUM CLEANER Oreck-cannister type $40., (650)637-8244 VACUUM CLEANER small with all attachments for cars, SOLD! WASHING MACHINE- Admiral, lightly used. $75/obo. Call (650)728-5831.

NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF ALEXANDER CHI-HSING HSUAN Case Number 121237 To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both, of: Alexander Chi-Hsing Hsuan. A Petition for Probate has been filed by: Tung-Ming Hsuan Ling in the Superior Court of California, County of San Mateo. The Petition of Probate requests that Tung-Ming Hsuan Ling be appointed as personal representative to administer the estate of the decedent. The petition requests authority to administer the estate under the Independent Administration of Estates Act. (This authority will allow the personal representative to take many actions without obtaining court approval. Before taking certain very important actions, however, the personal representative will be required to give notice to interested persons unless they have waived notice or consented to the proposed action.) The independent administration authority will be granted unless an interested person files an objection of the petition and shows good cause why the court should not grant the authority. A hearing on the petition will be held in this court as follows: August 24, 2011 at 9:00 a.m., Dept: 28, Room: 2F, Superior Court of California, County of San Mateo, 400 County Center Drive, Redwood City, CA 94063. If you object to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney. If you are a creditor or a contingent creditor of the decedent, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within four months from the date of first issuance of letters as provided in Probate Code section 9100. The time for filing claims will not expire before four months from the hearing date noticed above. You may examine the file kept by the court. If you are a person interested in the estate, you may file with the court a Request for Special Notice (form DE154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code

304 Furniture
2 END Tables solid maple '60's era $40/both. (650)670-7545 2 MIRRORED chest of drawers, SOLD

302 Antiques
1912 COFFEE Perculater Urn. perfect condition includes electric cord $85. (415)565-6719 ANTIQUE STOOL - Rust color cushion with lions feet, antique, $50.obo, (650)525-1410 CHINA CABINET - Vintage, 6 foot, solid mahogany. $300/obo. (650)867-0379

4 DRAWER FILE CABINET -27, dark beige, $99., (650)364-0902 42" ROUND Oak Table (with 12") leaf. Clean/Great Cond. $40. 650-766-9553. 62" X 32" Oak (Dark Stain) Coffee Table w/ 24" Sq. side Table, Leaded Beveled Glass top/Like New - $90. 650-766-9553 ARMOIRE CABINET - $90., (415)3751617 BANQUET DINING chairs $29/all. (650)692-3260 padded

303 Electronics
FLIP CAMCORDER $50. (650)583-2767

BASSET LOVE Seat Hide-a-Bed, Beige, Good Cond. Only $30! 650-766-9553 BLACK LEATHER office chair with 5 rollers $25. (650)871-5078

297 Bicycles
BICYCLE - Sundancer Jr., 26, $75. obo (650)676-0732 GIRL'S BIKE HUFFY Purple 6-speed good cond. $35 - Angela (650)269-3712

203 Public Notices

203 Public Notices

PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Planning Commission of the City of Half Moon Bay will hold a public hearing at 7:30 PM on Tuesday, June 28, 2011, at their regular meeting place in the Adcock Senior/Community Center at 535 Kelly Avenue to consider the following application: City File #: Location: APN: Applicant: Description: PDP-023-11 537 Kelly Avenue (Police Station) 056-150-230 City of Half Moon Bay/ City Engineer Review of Coastal Development Permit to modify the existing Half Moon Bay Police Station and construct an Emergency Operations Center (EOC) located within a Public Service (P-S) Zoning District.

298 Collectibles
1982 PRINT "A Tune Off The Top Of My Head" See: http://tinyurl.com/4y38xld 650-204-0587 $75 28 RECORDS - 78 RPMS, Bing Crosby, Frankie Laine, Al Jolson, many others, all in book albums, SOLD!

OFFICE DESK and secretary chairs with rollers, $40. obo, (650)583-4874 PINE BEDROOM SET - triple dresser, 7 drawers, plus 2 night stands, 2 drawer apiece, excellent condition. San Mateo, $350 (954)907-0100. PLANT TABLE - 22X16, beautiful design, $20., (650)867-2720 ROCKING CHAIR - Traditional, full size Rocking chair. Excellent condition $100., (650)504-3621 ROCKING CHAIR - White, wooden, $100., (650)321-4325 SOFA- BROWN, Beautiful, New $250 650-207-0897 STOOL - Warming, with heating devise foot stool, tapestry floral design, $50., (650)321-4325. TV STAND with shelves $20 (650)6923260 TWIN BEDS - good condition, OBO, (650)583-4874 $98.

203 Public Notices

203 Public Notices

203 Public Notices

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the City Council and the Redevelopment Agency of the City of San Bruno, California (the City) at its regular meeting on, Tuesday, June 28, 2011, at the Senior Center starting at 7:00 p.m., 1555 Crystal Springs Road, San Bruno, will hold a Public Hearing to introduce and consider the following item: Resolution Approving the City Manager's Recommended General Fund, Special Revenue Funds, Enterprise Funds, and five-year Capital Improvement Program Budget for 2011-12. To comply with notice requirements of Government Code Section 66016 et seq, the City Manager's Recommended Budget is available for review in the City Clerk's office located at 567 El Camino Real San Bruno City Hall. The public is invited to attend and comment. For more information call the City Clerk's Office at (650) 616-7058. Certification and Posting: A certified copy of the full text of the proposed ordinance is posted in the City Clerk's Office, 567 El Camino Real, in San Bruno, California. /s/ Carol Bonner, San Bruno City Clerk June 17, 2011

For More Information: More information is on file at City Hall, 501 Main Street, and may be examined during regular business hours. Comments, written or oral, must be received before the decision date. Please send comments to: City of Half Moon Bay Planning Department, 501 Main Street, Half Moon Bay, CA 94019. Right of Appeal: Any aggrieved person may appeal the decision of the Planning Commission within ten (10) calendar days of the date of the decision. This project is not located within the Coastal Appeal Zone; therefore, local approval is final. Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, June 18, 2011.

VANITY LIGHT fixture 3 bolts Nickle Finish still in box $25. (650)692-3260

306 Housewares
"PRINCESS HOUSE decorator urn "Vase" cream with blue flower 13 inch H $25., (650)868-0436 CANDLEHOLDER - Gold, angel on it, tall, purchased from Brueners, originally $100., selling for $25.,(650)867-2720

28

Weekend June 18-19, 2011


306 Housewares 308 Tools
SOCKET SET - New, 40 Piece 3/8" drive reversible ratchet, metric/SAE, extension, case, $19., (650) 595-3933 SPEEDAIR AIR COMPRESSOR - 4 gallon stack tank air compressor $100., (650)591-4710 TABLE SAW 10", very good condition $85. (650) 787-8219

THE DAILY JOURNAL


310 Misc. For Sale
ART BOOKS hard Cover, full color (10) Norman Rockwell and others $10 each 650-364-7777 BARBIE BEACH vacation & Barbie princess bride computer games $15 each, (650)367-8949 BATHROOM WINDOW- OX slider 44 x 24 5/8 inches H. New $39 650-494-1687 BATMAN AND James Bond Hard cover and paperback 10 inch x 12 inch $7.50 each 650-364-7777 BBQ SMOKER BBQ Grill, LP Coleman, Alaskan Cookin Machine, cost $140 sell $75. 650-344-8549 BBQ SMOKER, w/propane tank, wheels, shelf, sears model $86 650-344-8549 BEADS - Glass beads for jewelry making, $75. all, (650)676-0732 BEAUTIFUL VINTAGE PICTURE - colorful hot air balloons, 25 x 19 enclosed in glass wooden frame, very good condition, Burl., $11.,(650)347-5104 BOOK "LIFETIME" (408)249-3858 WW1 $12.,

310 Misc. For Sale


DOOM (3) computer games $15/each 2 total, (650)367-8949

312 Pets & Animals


BIRD CAGE 14x14x8 ecellent condition $25 Daly City, (650)755-9833 DOG CAGE/GORILLA folding large dog cage good condition, 2 door with tray, $75.,(650)355-8949 DOG CARRIER KENNEL BOX - brand name Furrarri Petmate, 31 X 21, $35., SSF, SOLD

322 Garage Sales

CHEFMATE COUNTERTOP MICROWAVE - .7 cu ft. , white, like new condition, SOLD! DINNERWARE - 30 piece set white, like new condition, $30., (808)271-3183 PERSIAN TEA set for 8. Including spoon, candy dish, and tray. Gold Plated. $90. (650) 867-2720 SOLID TEAK floor model 16 wine rack with turntable $60. (650)592-7483

DUFFEL BAGS - 1 Large Duffel Bag ,1 Xtra Lg. Duffel w Wheels, 1 Leather week-ender Satchel, All 3 at $75., (650)871-7211 ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER Smithcorona $60 650-878-9542 ELECTRONIC TYPEWRITER good condition $50., (650)878-9542 FIREPLACE SCREEN - 36"wide, 29"high, antique brass, folding doors, sliding mesh screen, damper controls. Like new. $100., (650)592-2047 GAME "BEAT THE EXPERTS" never used $8., (408)249-3858 GEORGE FOREMAN Grill good condition $15. 650-592-3327 HAIR BLOWERS (2) - One Conair, one Andis Hang Up Turbo, $15. both, (650)525-1410 JANET EVANOVICH BOOKS - 4 hardback @$3. each, 3 paperback @$1. each, (650)341-1861 KITCHEN HOOD - Black, under mount, 3 different fan speeds, $95., (650)3154465 MASSAGE DEVICE with batteries $8 in box, SOLD! METAL CABINET - 4 drawers, beige 16.5 inches W x 27 3/4 H x 27 inches D. $40., San Mateo, (650)341-5347 NEW LIVING Yoga Tape for Beginners $8. 650-578-8306 NEW WOOL AFGHAN, colorful, handmade, 4x6 ft.. $25. SOLD! PACHIRA PLANT 3ft. H. (Money plant) with decorative Pot $30. (650)592-2648 PERSIAN KLIN CARPET - 66x39, pink and burgandy, good condition, $90., (650)867-2720 SF GREETING Cards (300 w/envelopes) factory sealed $20/all. (650)207-2712 SHEEPSKIN SEAT COVERS - high quality, cream color, SOLD! SHOWER DOORS custom made 48 x 69 $70., (650)692-3260 SLUMBER REST blue heated throw, electric, remote, $15., (650)525-1410 SONY 13 tv. Not LCD. $40 (808)2713183 SPORTS BOOKS, Full of Facts, All Sports, Beautiful Collection 5 Volumes, $25. 650 871-7211 STRIDE RITE Toddler Sandals, Brown, outsole, Velcro closures, Size 6W. Excellent cond, $20. (650)525-0875 STUART WOODS HARDBACK BOOKS - 4 @$2.50 each, (650)341-1861 TOWELS FULL size bath towels $3 / each (8 total) SOLD! TRIPOD SEARS 8465 aluminum photo tripod plus bag $25. 650-204-0587 VIDEO CENTER 38 inches H 21 inches W still in box $45., (408)249-3858 VINTAGE SINGER SEWING MACHINE in cabinet. Straight stitch with reverse, $100., SOLD VR3 BACK UP CAMERA & VR3 backup sensor $100.00 all, (650) 270-6637 after 6 p.m. only. WHITE MARBLE piece - all natural stone, polished face, smooth cut edges, 21 x 41 x 3/4 thick, $75., (650)3475104

REDWOOD CITY
1049 Silver Hill Rd.

309 Office Equipment


CALCULATOR - (2) heavy duty, tape Casio & Sharp, $30/ea, (650)344-8549 OFFICE LAMP new $7. (650)345-1111

315 Wanted to Buy GO GREEN! We Buy GOLD You Get The $ Green $
Millbrae Jewelers Est. 1957 400 Broadway - Millbrae

June 18th Sat. 9am-4pm 4 years worth of STUFF! Furniture, decorations, kitchenware and more!

307 Jewelry & Clothing


49ER'S JACKET (650)871-7200 Child size $50.

LADIES BRACELET, Murano glass. Various shades of red and blue $100 Daly City, no return calls. (650)991-2353 LADIES GOLD Lame' elbow lengthgloves sz 7.5 $15 New. (650)868-0436

310 Misc. For Sale


(15) GEORGE Magazines all intact $50/all OBO. (650)574-3229, Foster City 10 PIECE fiberware mellennium stainless steel cookware set. Like new! SOLD! 10 PLANTS (assorted) for $3.00 each, (650)349-6059 13 PIECE paint and pad set for home use $25., (650)589-2893 2 MATCHING blankets - full/queen size, solid cream color, vellux, hyproallergenic, offers warmth without weight, great condition, $38., (650)347-5104 4 IN 1 stero unit. CD player broken.$20 650-834-4926 5 NEEDLEPOINT sets still in package $10/each, (650)592-2648 7 UNDERBED STORAGE BINS - Vinyl with metal frame, 42 X 18 X 6, zipper closure, $10. ea., (650)364-0902 9 CARRY-ON bags (assorted) - extra large, good condition, $10. each obo, (650)349-6059 ANGEL WITH lights 12 inches High $12. (650)368-3037 ARTIFICIAL FICUS Tree 6 ft. life like, full branches. in basket $55. (650)269-3712

650-697-2685

308 Tools
CHAIN HOISTS- 1-TON $25. 3-Ton $50. Both new/unused. 650 591 6283 CIRCULAR SAW, Craftsman-brand, 10, 4 long x 20 wide. Comes w/ stand - $70. (650)678-1018 CLASSIC CRAFTSMAN jig saw, cast iron base needs work $85 best offer. 650-703-9644 ENGINE ANALYZER & TIMING LITE Sears Penske USA, for older cars, like new, $60., (650)344-8549 leave msg. GENERATOR - new! In box, 3,500 watts. SOLD LUMBER RACK for long bed & diamond plated toolbox, good condition, $500. each or $800 all, SOLD! PRESSURE WASHER 2500 PSI, good condition, $350., (650)926-9841 RIDGED WET AND DRY VACUUM -16 gallons 5 horse power in box accessories included $65., (650)756-7878

SAN CARLOS
316 Clothes
49 SWEATSHIRT with hood size 8 extra large $100 obo. (650)346-9992 AUTHENTIC MEXICAN SOMBRERO, $40., (650)364-0902 BLACK Leather pants Mrs. size made in France size 40 $99. (650)558-1975 BLACK LEATHER tap shoes 9M great condition $99. (650)558-1975 BOOTS - purple leather, size 8, ankle length, $50.obo, (650)592-9141 DENIM JACKETS Ladies (2) Small/Medium, like new, $15/each, (650)577-0604 Please leave message

891 Sunset Dr. Saturday June 18th 9am-3pm


Household, computer parts, equipment and more!

BOOK NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC NATIONAL AIR MUSEUMS $15 (480)249-3858 BROTHERS ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER - excellent condition, $55., (808)2713183 CAESAR STONE - Beautiful polished gray, smooth cut edges, 26 X 36 X 3/4 thick, great piece for many uses, $65., (650)347-5104 CANDLE HOLDER with angel design, tall, gold, includes candle. Purchased for $100, now $30. (650)345-1111 DAHLIAS BEAUTIFUL hybrodized $4 / each (20 total) SOLD DANIELLE STEELE newer books - 1 hardback $3., one paperback $1., (650)341-1861

FINO FINO
A Place For Fine Hats Sharon Heights
325 Sharon Heights Drive Menlo Park

SAN MATEO
146 13th Ave. (Between Palm and South B St.)

610 Crossword Puzzle

610 Crossword Puzzle

610 Crossword Puzzle

650-854-8030
JACKET (LARGE) Pants (small) black Velvet good cond. $25/all (650)589-2893 LADIES DOWN jacket light yellow with dark brown lining $35. (650)868-0436 LADIES JACKET size 3x 70% wool 30% nylon never worn $50 650-592-2648 LADIES SHOES- size 5, $10., (650)756-6778 LANE BRYANT assorted clothing. Sizes 2x-3x. 22-23, $10-$20. ea., brand new with tags. (650)290-1960 MANS SUEDE-LIKE jacket, New, XXLg. $25. 650 871-7211 MEN'S SHOES (650)756-6778 Brown.

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle


Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis
ACROSS 1 Old Eurasian letters 5 Bean counter 15 Home of H. Rousseaus The Sleeping Gypsy 16 How travelers bags are screened 17 Top 10 single on the 1970 album Abraxas 19 Old-style street show 20 Tub contents 21 Depend 22 Affected 23 A, B or C, perhaps: Abbr. 24 Like an alias 25 Writ word 27 Wane 28 1992 gold medalwinning Dream Team coach Chuck 29 Theyre not near the action 35 Some six-pack contents 36 Six-pack alternative? 37 Its best if its well-seasoned 38 Party stipulation 40 Gentle way to go 41 Picker-uppers concern: Abbr. 42 Shuts out, in slang 44 Takes it slow 47 Eastern way 49 70s toothpaste with green sparkles 51 Call, in a way 52 Pot user 53 Language that gives us shampoo 54 Didnt just go 57 Very loud 58 Wood fastener 59 Certain tax determinant 60 They may be first class: Abbr. DOWN 1 Sunspot center 2 Phenomenon caused by ice crystals between the Earth and sun 3 One making cracks 4 Happens quickly 5 Camus, for one 6 Brazen 7 Kid-lit Judy Moody series author McDonald 8 Entices 9 Permanently mark 10 Word with deal or nerves 11 Possible reason for folding 12 Letter on a dreidel 13 Sch. with a Lowell campus 14 Fiddler on the Roof matchmaker 18 __ Luke of Charlie Chan films 24 Ritual abstinence 26 Rapid Northeast train 27 Moxie 28 Castellaneta who voices Homer Simpson 30 Transpose digits, say 31 Golden, Silver, Bronze and Iron, to Ovid 32 One may be rude 33 Ejected 34 Diving milieu 36 Smithereens 39 Athens native 40 Volunteers 43 Disgusted chorus 44 High capital 45 Hops driers 46 Fancies 47 100,000 BTU 48 John Denver album with an eagles silhouette on the cover 50 Cashiers counter bowlful 52 Naval noncoms 55 AA issue 56 QBs miscue

Saturday, June 18 9am-4pm


Furniture, plants, & lots of household goods THE THRIFT SHOP

- New, size 10, $10.,

All Clothing SALE 50%off


Thursday & Friday 10:00-2:00 Saturdays 10:00-3:00 Episcopal Church 1 South El Camino Real San Mateo 94401

MEN'S SUIT almost new $25. 650-573-6981 MENS SLACKS - 8 pairs, $50., Size 36/32, (408)420-5646 NEW BROWN LEATHER JACKET- XL $25., 650-364-0902 PROM TUXEDOS. Size 36 - 38. all 3 sets for $85 obo 650-344-8549

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

(650)344-0921

317 Building Materials


CORRIGATED DRAINAGE pipe perforated, 4 in. X 100 ft., Good as new $35., Redwood City, (650)367-8146

318 Sports Equipment


"EVERLAST FOR HER" Machine to help lose weight $40., (650)368-3037 13 ASSORTED GOLF CLUBS- Good Quality $3.50 each. Call (650) 349-6059. 2 GOLF CLUBS - Ladies, right handed, putter & driver $5/each (650)755-8238 BASKETBALL RIM, net & backboard $35/all 650-345-7132 Leave message. CLASSIC PING IRONS complete set, excellent condition, number 3 to sandwedge, $100. (650) 345-5446. MORRELL TODD Richards 75 Snowboard (Good Condition) with Burton Boots (size 6 1/2) - $50. 650-766-9553 SPEEDO OPTIMUS Training Fins size 10-11. Perfect for your training. $25 call jeff 650-208-5758

GARAGE SALES ESTATE SALES Make money, make room!


List your upcoming garage sale, moving sale, estate sale, yard sale, rummage sale, clearance sale, or whatever sale you have... in the Daily Journal. Reach over 82,500 readers from South San Francisco to Palo Alto. in your local newspaper.

311 Musical Instruments


2 ORGANS, antique tramp, $500 for both. (650)342-4537 BALDWIN C-630 ORGAN. Very clean $30., (650)872-6767 KEYBOARD CASIO 3 ft long SOLD KIDS GUITAR for 6 years and Up $40, call (650)375-1550

[email protected]

06/18/11

PIANO VINTAGE - Upright, Davis & Sons, just tuned, $600., (650)678-9007 SPANISH GUITAR 6 strings good condition $80. Call (650)375-1550. WHITNEY PIANO - Good condition, $1,000.obo, (650)583-4874

Call (650)344-5200

335 Rugs
KARASTAN RUG - 4 x 6, wool, moth resistant, green with floral, $100., (650)321-4325

315 Wanted to Buy

315 Wanted to Buy

335 Garden Equipment


TABLE - for plant, $25., perfect condition, (650)345-1111 WHEELBARROW - like new, $40., (650)364-0902

345 Medical Equipment


CRUTCHES - adult, aluminium, for tall person, $30., (650)341-1861

379 Open Houses

LOS ALTOS 25560 Fernhill Dr. Open Sat & Sun 1:30pm-4:30pm Barbara Williams 650-209-1519
By Peter A. Collins (c)2011 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

06/18/11

[email protected]

THE DAILY JOURNAL


379 Open Houses 470 Rooms 620 Automobiles Dont lose money on a trade-in or consignment! Sell your vehicle in the Daily Journals Auto Classifieds. Just $3 per day. 510 Commercial for Rent Reach 82,500 drivers from South SF to Palo Alto
Call (650)344-5200 [email protected]

Weekend June 18-19, 2011


620 Automobiles SUTTON AUTO SALES Cash for Cars
Call 650-595-DEAL (3325) Or Stop By Our Lot 1659 El Camino Real San Carols
XLT FORD Ranger 02 126k miles. One owner NEW 15x8 wheels, radial tires, 5 speed, new clutch. Best offer. $3,800 650- 481-5296

29

670 Auto Service

672 Auto Stereos

OPEN HOUSE LISTINGS


List your Open House in the Daily Journal. Reach over 82,500 potential home buyers & renters a day, from South San Francisco to Palo Alto. in your local newspaper. Call (650)344-5200

Room For Rent


Travel Inn, San Carlos

MB GARAGE, INC.
Repair Restore Sales
Mercedes-Benz Specialists

$49 daily + tax $294-$322 weekly + tax


Clean Quiet Convenient Cable TV, WiFi & Private Bathroom Microwave and Refrigerator 950 El Camino Real San Carlos

2165 Palm Ave. San Mateo

MONNEY CAR AUDIO


We Sell, Install and Repair All Brands of Car Stereos
iPod & iPhone Wired to Any Car for Music Quieter Car Ride Sound Proof Your Car 31 Years Experience

(650) 593-3136
Mention Daily Journal

(650)349-2744
SAN CARLOS AUTO SERVICE & TUNE UP
A Full Service Auto Repair Facility

380 Real Estate Services

WAREHOUSE/ OFFICE AVAILABLE


Belmont/San Carlos
440 sq. ft. to 5,000 sq. ft. Starting from $664/mo. Units include rollup doors, 3 phase power, water, space heater, restrooms Great access to Hwy 101
WILLIAMS BUSINESS PARK 299 OLD COUNTY ROAD, UNIT 13 SAN CARLOS, CA 94070

625 Classic Cars


DATSUN 72 - 240Z with Chevy 350, automatic, custom, $5800 or trade. (650)588-9196 PLYMOUTH 72 CUDA - Runs and drives good, needs body, interior and paint, $12k obo, serious inquiries only. (650)873-8623

760 El Camino Real San Carlos (650)593-8085 670 Auto Parts


2 SNOW/CABLE chains good condition fits 13-15 inch rims $10/both San Bruno 650-588-1946

2001 Middlefield Road Redwood City (650)299-9991

CALL (650) 631-1151


www.williamsbusinesspark.com

AUTO AUCTION The following repossessed vehicles are being sold by Meriwest Credit Union---2010 Mazda 3 #204057. The following repossessed vehicles are being sold by SafeAmerica Credit Union---2007 Nissan Altima #477621, 2007 Infiniti G35 #723147, 2004 Cadillac Deville #231599, 2006 Ford Freestar #A48062. Plus over 100 late model Sport Utilities, Pick Ups, Mini Vans, and luxury cars ---INDOORS---Charity donations sold. Sealed bids will be taken from 8am-8pm on 06/20/2011 and 8am - 5pm on 6/21/2011. Sale held at Forrest Faulknor & Sons Auction Company, 175 Sylvester Road, South San Francisco. For more information please visit our web site at www.ffsons.com.

630 Trucks & SUVs


FORD 05 350 Super Duty, 4x4 Crewcab, fully loaded, 125K miles, $26,500., (650)281-4750 or (650)492-0184 NISSAN 03 Frontier Extended Cab. 66K miles, no damage, garaged. $8,000/obo. (650)851-7505

680 Autos Wanted Dont lose money on a trade-in or consignment! Sell your vehicle in the Daily Journals Auto Classifieds. Just $3 per day. Reach 82,500 drivers from South SF to Palo Alto
Call (650)344-5200 [email protected]

880 AUTO WORKS


Dealership Quality Affordable Prices Complete Auto Service Foreign & Domestic Autos 880 El Camino Real San Carlos 650-598-9288 www.880autoworks.com CAMPER/TRAILER/TRUCK OUTSIDE backup mirror 8 diameter fixture. $30. 650-588-1946 CHEVY TRANSMISSION 4L60E Semi used $800. (650)921-1033 EL CAMINO '67 - parts (Protecto top) $95., (650)367-8949 EXPLORER 02 Ford 20 inch wheel & Tire $99/all 650-669-0049

635 Vans
NISSAN 01 Quest - GLE, leather seats, sun roof, TV/DVR equipment. Looks new, $15,500. (650)219-6008

640 Motorcycles/Scooters 440 Apartments


BELMONT - prime, quiet location, view, 1 bedroom $1350, 2 bedrooms $1650. New carpets, new granite counters, dishwasher, balcony, covered carports, storage, pool, no pets. (650)344-8418 or (650591-4046 REDWOOD CITY- 1 bedroom with kitchen and bath, $995.mo plus $600 deposit, (650)361-1200

620 Automobiles
HONDA 10 ACCORD LX - 4 door sedan, low miles, $19K, (650)573-6981 AUTO AUCTION The following repossessed vehicles are being sold by Patelco Credit Union on June 21st, 2011 starting at 8am ---2003 Chevrolet Corvette #132444, 2005 Nissan Titan #503833, 2002 Mercedes Benz S430 #305508, 2005 Mercedes Benz C230 #779828. Sealed bids will be taken starting at 8am on 6/21/2011. Sale held at Forrest Faulknor & Sons Auction Company, 175 Sylvester Road, South San Francisco. For more information please visit our web site at www.ffsons.com.

CHRYSLER 06 300 Sedan, 28k mi., sun roof, excellent condition. $18k. (650)590-1194 FORD 93 250 flat bed, diesel, 100-gallon gas tanks, completely rebuilt, $2800. 650-481-5296 HONDA CIVIC 99 EX sedan 4-door, excellent mechanically, very good body, SOLD! MERCEDES 05 C230 - 40K miles, 4 cylinder, black, $15,000, (650)455-7461 MERCEDES 06 C230 - 6 cylinder, navy blue, 60K miles, 2 year warranty, $18,000, (650)455-7461 MERCEDES BENZ 04 E320 - Excellent condition, leather interior, navigation, 77K mi., $15,500 obo, (650)574-1198

BMW 03 F650 GS, $3899 OBO. Call 650-771-4407 HARLEY DAVIDSON 83 Shovelhead special construction, 1340 ccs, Awesome!, $5,950/obo. Rob (415)602-4535.

645 Boats
MOTOR - Evinrude for boat, 25 HP, $1000., (415)337-6364 PROSPORT 97 - 17 ft. CC 80 Yamaha Pacific, loaded, like new, $9,500 or trade, (650)583-7946.

DONATE YOUR CAR Tax Deduction, We do the Paperwork, Free Pickup, Running or Not - in most cases. Help yourself and the Polly Klaas Foundation. Call (800)380-5257. Wanted 62-75 Chevrolets Novas, running or not Parts collection etc. So clean out that garage Give me a call Joe 650 342-2483

FORD 73 Maverick/Mercury GT Comet, Drive Train 302 V8, C4 Auto Trans. Complete, needs assembly, includes radiator and drive line, call for details, $1250., (650)726-9733. HEAVY DUTY jack stand for camper or SUV $15. (650)949-2134 TRUCK RADIATOR - fits older Ford, never used, $100., (650)504-3621

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

655 Trailers
PROWLER 01 Toy carrier, 25 ft., fully self contained, $5k OBO, Trade (650)589-8765 will deliver

Cabinetry

Cleaning

Cleaning

Concrete

Construction

Construction

MENAS Cleaning Services (650)704-2496


Great Service at a Reasonable Price

RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL


16+ Years in Business

Carpet Windows Move in/out


LICENSED & INSURED
Professional | Reliable | Trustworthy

Construction

BELMONT CONSTRUCTION
Concrete
Residential & Commercial Carpentry & Plumbing Remodeling & New Construction Kitchen, Bath, Structural Repairs Additions, Decks, Stairs, Railings Lic#836489, Ins. & Bonded All work guaranteed Call now for a free estimate

Decks & Fences

CONCRETE CONSTRUCTION
Driveways, Walkways, Patios, Stamped Concrete

800-977-6477
License #589723

650-766-1244
[email protected]

30

Weekend June 18-19, 2011

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Decks & Fences

Handy Help HONEST HANDYMAN


Remodeling, Plumbing New Construction, General Home Repair, Demolish No Job Too Small
Lic.# 891766

Hardwood Floors

Hardwood Floors

Landscaping

Painting

MARSH FENCE & DECK CO.


State License #377047 Licensed Insured Bonded Fences - Gates - Decks Stairs - Retaining Walls 10-year guarantee Quality work w/reasonable prices Call for free estimate (650)571-1500

MTP
Painting/Waterproofing Drywall Repair/Tape/Texture Power Washing-Decks, Fences No Job Too Big or Small
Lic.# 896174

(650)740-8602
RDS HOME REPAIRS
Hauling Hauling Quality, Dependable Handyman Service
General Home Repairs Improvements Routine Maintenance

Call Mike the Painter

(650)271-1320 Tile

MORALES
HANDYMAN
Fences Decks Arbors Retaining Walls Concrete Work French Drains Concrete Walls Any damaged wood repair Powerwash Driveways Patios Sidewalk Stairs Hauling $25. Hr./Min. 2 hrs.

LOW RATE HAULING


Same Day Service Available Any household junk/misc. items, garage clean-up, leftover items from garage sales, backyard clean-up We recycle! Free estimates!

CUBIAS TILE
Marble, Stone & porcelain Kitchens, bathrooms, floors, fireplaces, entryways, decks, tile repair, grout repair Free Estimates Lic.# 955492

(650)573-9734
www.rdshomerepairs.com

(650)518-1187 SAME DAY SERVICE


Refuse Removal Free estimates Reasonable rates No job too large or small

Mario Cubias (650)784-3079

SENIOR HANDYMAN
Specializing in Any Size Projects

Free Estimates 20 Years Experience

Painting Electrical Carpentry Dry Rot


40 Yrs. Experience Retired Licensed Contractor

Window Washing LUNAS POWER WASHING & SEALING

(650)921-3341
NORTH FENCE CO. - Specializing in: Redwood Fences, Decks & Retaining Walls. www.northfenceco.com (650)756-0694. Lic.#733213

(650)201-6854
SMALL JOBS PREFERRED Steves Handyman Service
Prompt, Tidy, Friendly Stephen Pizzi

Call Rob (650)995-3064


HVAC Moving ARMANDOS MOVING
Specializing in: Homes, Apts., Storages Professional, friendly, careful. Peninsulas Personal Mover Commercial/Residential
Fully Lic. & Bonded CAL -T190632

Window Cleaning Gutters Cleaning Handyman Services

(650)669-0710

Electricians

ALL ELECTRICAL SERVICE

650-322-9288
for all your electrical needs
ELECTRIC SERVICE GROUP

(650)533-3737
Lic.#888484 Insured & Bonded

Hardwood Floors

Call Armando (650) 630-0424

E A J ELECTRIC
Residential/Commercial

KO-AM
HARDWOOD FLOORING
Hardwood & Laminate Installation & Repair Refinish High Quality @ Low Prices Call 24/7 for Free Estimate

Painting

650-302-0728
Lic # 840752 Gardening
(2) GALVANIZED planter with boxed liners 94 x 10 x 9 $20/all, (415)346-6038 (30) BAMBOO poles 6 to 8 Ft $15/all, (415)346-6038 FLOWER POTS many size (50 pieces) $15/all, (415)346-6038

800-300-3218 408-979-9665
Lic. #794899

GOLDEN WEST PAINTING


Since 1975 Commercial & Residential Excellent References Free Estimates

(415)722-9281
Hauling Kitchens
Lic #321586

KEANE KITCHENS
1091 Industrial Road Suite 185 - San Carlos
[email protected] 10% Off and guaranteed completion for the holidays.

JON LA MOTTE

JOSES COMPLETE GARDENING


and Landscaping Full Service Includes: Also Tree Trimming Free Estimates (650)315-4011
POTTED PLANTS (7) $5/each 650-207-0897

PAINTING
Interior & Exterior Pressure Washing Free Estimates

Call now 650-631-0330

(650)368-8861
Lic #514269

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

X PRESS KITCHEN & BATH


We Carry a Large Selection of * Cabinetry * Countertops * Flooring * Tile/Deco Free Estimate/Design 755 Old County Rd., San Carlos 650-817-5452

L.C PAINTING
650.271.3955 Interiors and Exteriors Residential / Commercial Free Estimates Reasonable Rates.
Lic# 913961

Handy Help

ALL HOME REPAIRS


Carpentry, Cabinets, Wainscot Paneling, Moulding, Painting, Drywall Repair, Dry Rot, Minor Plumbing & Electrical & More! Contractors Lic# 931633/Insured

CALL DAVE (650)302-0379

Attorneys

Attorneys

Beauty

* BANKRUPTCY *
Huge credit card debt? Job loss? Foreclosure? Medical bills?

AUTO ACCIDENT?
Know your rights.
Free consultation Serving the entire Bay Area Law Offices of Timothy J. Kodani Since 1985

KAYS HEALTH & BEAUTY


Facials, Waxing, Fitness Body Fat Reduction Pure Organic Facial $48. 1 Hillcrest Blvd, Millbrae

YOU HAVE OPTIONS


Call for a free consultation

(650)363-2600
This law firm is a debt relief agency

1-800-LAW-WISE (1-800-529-9473)

www.800LawWise.com

(650)697-6868

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Weekend June 18-19, 2011

31

Food

Health & Medical


Blurry Vision? Eye Infections? Cataracts? For all your eyecare needs.

Insurance GOUGH INSURANCE & FINANCIAL SERVICES


www.goughinsurance.com

Massage Therapy
SUNFLOWER MASSAGE
Grand Opening! $10. Off 1-Hour Session!

HOUSE OF BAGELS SAN MATEO


OPEN EVERYDAY 6:30AM-3PM Bagels,Santa Cruz Coffee, Sandwiches, Wifi, Kids Corner Easy Parking

PENINSULA OPHTHALMOLOGY GROUP


1720 El Camino Real #225 Burlingame 94010

1482 Laurel St. San Carlos


(Behind Trader Joes) Open 7 Days/Week, 10am-10pm

680 E. 3rd Ave & Delaware

(650)342-7744
CA insurance lic. 0561021

(650)548-1100 NOW OPEN!

(650) 697-3200

(650)508-8758 Pet Services

EXAMINATIONS & TREATMENT

Burlingame Farmers Market


Rich Mans QualityPoor Mans Prices

1236 Broadway Ave., Burl.


burlingamefarmersmarket.com

(650)242-1011 SHANGHAI CLUB


Chinese Restraunt & Lounge We Serve Dim Sum

of Diseases and Disorders of the Eye Dr. Andrew C Soss O.D., F.A.A.O. 1159 Broadway Burlingame (650)579-7774 GREEN ISLAND HEALTH CENTER
Asian Massage & Bodywork Salon Open 7 Days a Week 10am - 9pm Grand Opening $10 off 1 Hour Session

Jewelers

MAYERS JEWELERS
We Buy Gold! Bring your old gold in and redesign to something new or cash it in!
Watch Battery Replacement $9.00 Most Watches. Must present ad.

BOOMERANG PET EXPRESS


All natural, byproduct free pet foods! Home Delivery
www.boomerangpetexpress.com

(650)989-8983
Real Estate Loans
REAL ESTATE LOANS
We Fund Bank Turndowns!
Direct Private Lender Homes Mixed-Use Commercial Based primarily on equity FICO Credit Score Not a Factor PURCHASE, REFINANCE, INVESTOR, & REO FINANCING Investors welcome Loan servicing since 1979

1107 Howard Ave. Burlingame

(650)342-9888
shanghaiclunsfo.com SIXTEEN MILE HOUSE
Millbraes Finest Dining Restaurant

390 El Camino Real Suite U, Belmont. X St Davy Glen Rd (650)508-1168

Jewelry & Watch Repair 2323 Broadway Redwood City

Come Sing Karaoke Sat. Night 9 pm-12 am


Closed Mondays! www.sixteenmilehouse.net

HAPPY FEET MASSAGE


2608 S. El Camino Real & 25th Ave., San Mateo

(650)364-4030

448 Broadway (650)697-6118

(650)638-9399
$30.00/Hr Foot Massage $50.00/Hr Full Body Massage

650-348-7191
Wachter Investments, Inc. Real Estate Broker #746683 Nationwide Mortgage Licensing System ID #348268 CA Dept. of Real Estate

SUNDAY CHAMPAGNE

BRUNCH

Crowne Plaza
Beauty Divorce
1221 Chess Dr., Hwy. 92 at Foster City Blvd. Exit Foster City

REVIV
MEDICAL SPA
www.revivmedspa.com 31 S. El Camino Real Millbrae

Legal Services LEGAL DOCUMENTS


Affordable non-attorney document preparation service Registered & Bonded Divorces, Living Trusts, Corporations, Notary Public

Let the beautiful you be reborn at PerfectMe by Laser


A fantastic body contouring spa featuring treatments with Zerona, VelaShape II and VASERShape. To find out more and make an appointment

(650)570-5700

Seniors

(650)697-3339
THAI TIME Restaurant & Bar

(650)574-2087
legaldocumentsplus.com
I am not an attorney. I can only provide self help services at your specific direction

DIVORCE CENTERS OF CALIFORNIA


Low-cost non-attorney service for Uncontested Divorce. Caring and experienced staff will prepare and le your forms at the court. Registered and Bonded Se habla Espaol.

Try Our Lunch Special Just $7.95!


1240 El Camino Real San Carlos (650)596-8400

STOP SMOKING IN ONE HOUR Hypnosis Makes it Easy Guaranteed Call now for an appointment or consultation 888-659-7766

Burlingame Villa & Mills Estate Villa


- Assisted Living - Dementia Care - Respite, Hospice - Post-Op/Vacation Care 1733 California Drive Burlingame

Marketing

CALL 650-375-8884 BURLINGAME perfectmebylaser.com

THE AMERICAN BULL BAR & GRILL


14 large screen HD TVs Full Bar & Restaurant

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

TOENAIL FUNGUS?
FREE Consultation for Laser Treatment

(650)692-0600
Lic.#4105088251/ 415600633

Dental Services
Center for Dental Medicine Bradley L. Parker DDS
750 Kains Avenue, San Bruno 650-588-4255
www.sanbrunocosmeticdentist.com ------------------

650.347.2500
The Bay Areas very best Since 1972
www.divorcecenters.com
We are not a law rm. We can only provide self help services at your specic direction.

www.theamericanbull.com
1819 El Camino, in Burlingame Plaza

(650)347-0761
Dr. Richard Woo, DPM 400 S. El Camino Real San Mateo

(650)652-4908
THE SWINGIN DOOR PUB
Happy Hour Mon.-Fri. 4-6 pm 1/2 Price Food Specials Premium Imported Beers only $3.00 106 East 25th Ave. San Mateo (650)522-9800 www.TheSwinginDoor.com

Massage Therapy

Hairstylist

ASIAN MASSAGE
$48. per Hour
Open 7 days, 10 am -10 pm Walk-ins welcome! 633 Veterans Blvd., #C Redwood City

Call Now To Get Your Free Initial Implant Consultation

Food

SUPERCUTS
Every Time
1250 El Camino Real -- Belmont 945 El Camino Real -South San Francisco 15 24th Avenue -- San Mateo 1222 Broadway -- Burlingame

CAFE GRILLADES FREE DENTURE Consultation


Dental Lab Technician On-Site Dentures Made In One Day Free Follow-up Advisement (650)366-3812 Roos Dental Care

Breakfast Lunch Dinner 2009 1st Place Winner Best Crepes

(650)556-9888

851 Cherry Ave., #16 San Bruno (650)589-3778


www.cafegrillades.com

Fitness

DOJO USA
World Training Center
Martial Arts & Tae Bo Training

MASSAGE
119 Park Blvd. Millbrae -- El Camino Open 10 am-9:30 pm Daily

GODFATHERS Burger Lounge


Gourmet American meets the European elegance ....have you experienced it yet? Reservations & take out

www.dojousa.net
731 Kains Ave, San Bruno

(650)871-8083
Video Video

General Dentistry for Adults & Children


DR. ANNA P. LIVIZ, DDS
324 N. San Mateo Drive, #2 San Mateo 94401

(650)589-9148

(650) 637-9257
1500 El Camino Real Belmont, CA 94002

Furniture Insurance

Bedroom Express GOT BEER? We Do!


Join us for Happy Hour $3. Pints M-F, 4-6 pm Where Dreams Begin
2833 El Camino Real San Mateo - (650)458-8881 184 El Camino Real So. S. Francisco -(650)583-2221 www.bedroomexpress.com

(650)343-5555
---------------------------------------------------

$65.Exam/Cleaning
(Reg. $189.)

BARRETT INSURANCE
www.barrettinsuranceservices.net Eric L. Barrett, CLU, RHU, REBC, CLTC, LUTCF President Barrett Insurance Services (650)513-5690 CA. Insurance License #0737226

$65. Exam/FMX
(Reg. $228.)
New Patients without Insurance

Steelhead Brewing Co. 333 California Dr. Burlingame (650)344-6050


www.steelheadbrewery.com

Health & Medical

GULLIVERS RESTAURANT
Early Bird Special Prime Rib Complete Dinner Mon-Thu
1699 Old Bayshore Blvd. Burlingame

BAY AREA LASER THERAPY


GOT PAIN? GET LASER! CALL NOW FOR 1 FREE TREATMENT

Video

Video

Video

(650)692-6060

(650)212-1000 (415)730-5795

32

Weekend June 18-19, 2011

THE DAILY JOURNAL

34
2011 Prius 2011 Camry Hybrid

45

25

2011 Highlander Hybrid

2011 Y i S d 2011 Yaris Sedan

2011 Matri 2011 Matrix

707492

2011 RAV-4

2011 Tacoma Double Cab

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