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Weekend Oct. 27-28, 2012 Vol XII, Edition 61
CAMPAIGN RIVALS
NATION PAGE 7
CAP GRABS
OCEAN LEAD
SPORTS PAGE 11
MONSTER STORM
GROWING CLOSER
NATION PAGE 8
ROMNEY ON ECONOMY: OBAMA MADE THE PROBLEM
WORSE
By Heather Murtagh
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
Classical music doesnt have to
be stuffy.
In fact, this Saturday, it comes
with a side of costumes, dramatic
performances, a chance for children
to conduct and a colorful visual
background during the Redwood
Symphony Family Halloween con-
cert. Held at Caada College
Saturday afternoon, the annual
event brings together musicians,
children and costumes. Redwood
Symphony is uniquely open to fam-
ilies.
Most orchestras do a family
show. We do one better. The rest of
the year, our concerts are free for
kids, said Music Director Eric
Kujawsky.
Started in 1985, Redwood
Symphony is an all-volunteer
orchestra dedicated to the perform-
ance of ambitious, contemporary
repertoire, as well as the orchestral
classics. The family concert has
been a staple for about 10 years.
Each year, a different music selec-
tion comes into play with the
Halloween concert. Its also an
opportunity for everyone
Kujawsky, musicians, kids and par-
ents to don costumes and have a
bit of fun.
This year features Robert
Rodriguezs A Colorful
Symphony, narrated by Valerie
Sarfaty. Based on a chapter of the
same name from Norton Justers
childrens book, The Phantom
Tollbooth, the story takes up where
Milo comes across an immense
orchestra in the middle of the forest
whose job it is to conduct the colors
of the morning, noon and night. But
things go particularly wild when
A musical Halloween celebration
By Heather Murtagh
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
Two 42-year-old former employ-
ees of the San Mateo County
Community College District are fac-
ing multiple felonies after working
together to misuse the agencys
credit cards resulting in about a
$150,000 loss, according to District
Attorney Steve Wagstaffe.
Bradley John Witham, who lists
his residence as Gardnerville, Nev.,
faces seven felonies including for-
gery, embezzlement, both general
and of government funds, conspira-
cy and identity theft related to more
than 70 transactions using district
credit cards from June 2006 through
June 2012, said Wagstaffe. Witham
faces an additional enhancement
since the theft was more than
$100,000 that makes him eligible to
be sentenced to
state prison.
Mark Anthony
Bustos, from
San Mateo, faces
12 felony counts
including con-
spiracy, embez-
zlement, embez-
zlement of pub-
lic funds, identi-
ty theft and com-
puter theft. Both
have entered not
guilty pleas.
The district
was tremendous
in working with
us, said
Wa g s t a f f e ,
adding that the
Two arrested
for stealing
from college
Employees face embezzlement charges for
inappropriate use of districts credit cards
Bradley Witham
Mark Bustos
See CAUGHT, Page 18
By Garance Burke
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SAN FRANCISCO Former
U.S. Sen. George Mitchell has
stepped down from overseeing pri-
vate settlement talks over a deadly
Northern California pipeline explo-
sion after state regulators set up a
mediation process criticized by sev-
eral parties as an unfair, backroom
deal.
The California Public Utilities
Commission appointed the former
Senate Majority Leader earlier this
month to mediate a settlement
aimed at determining how much
Pacic Gas & Electric Co. should be
ned for the blast.
George Mitchell wont mediate
San Brunofire settlement talks
See FUN, Page 24
SAMANTHA WEIGEL (BELOW)/DAILY JOURNAL
Jonny Weston plays Jay Moriarity in this weekends release of Chasing Mavericks.
See MITCHELL, Page 18
By Samantha Weigel
DAILY JOURNAL CORRESPONDENT
The extreme exertion of riding
40-foot waves is known to few, yet
for those who
brave the
exper i ence,
surfing is
inherent to
their being.
The breaks
at Mavericks
beach in Half
Moon Bay lay
dormant for
much of the year, but when the win-
ter swells pick up on the Northern
California coast, giants emerge from
Chasing Mavericks
Film portrays the life of notorious surfer Jay Moriarity
See page 19
Inside
Chasing Mavericks
feels formulaic, safe
See MAVERICKS, Page 18
FOR THE RECORD 2 Weekend Oct. 27-28, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
The San Mateo Daily Journal
800 S. Claremont St., Suite 210, San Mateo, CA 94402
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Actor-director
Roberto Benigni is
60.
This Day in History
Thought for the Day
1787
the rst of the Federalist Papers, a series
of essays calling for ratication of the
United States Constitution, was pub-
lished under the pseudonym Publius
(the essays were a collaborative effort
by Alexander Hamilton, James
Madison and John Jay).
In any moment of decision,
the best thing you can do is the right
thing, the next best thing is the wrong thing,
and the worst thing you can do is nothing.
Theodore Roosevelt, American president (1858-1919)
Actor-comedian
John Cleese is 73.
Actress-singer
Kelly Osbourne is
28.
Birthdays
PHOTO COURTESY OF THE OFFICE OF JACKIE SPEIER
U.S. Rep. Jackie Speier, D-San Mateo, does yoga with seniors at the Seniors on the Move conference in South San Francisco
Friday. It was the conference's 25th year and featured special guest Chesley B.Sully Sullenberger, who famously landed US
Airways Flight 1549 with 155 passengers on the Hudson River after it was disabled by a ock of geese.
Saturday: Partly cloudy. Highs in the upper
60s. Northwest winds 5 to 15 mph.
Saturday night: Partly cloudy in the
evening then becoming mostly cloudy.
Lows in the lower 50s. North winds 5 to 10
mph.
Sunday: Partly cloudy in the morning then
becoming sunny. Highs in the upper 60s.
Northwest winds 5 to 10 mph.
Sunday night: Partly cloudy. Lows in the lower 50s.
Northwest winds 5 to 10 mph.
Monday: Mostly cloudy. Highs in the mid 60s.
Monday night: Partly cloudy. Lows in the lower 50s.
Tuesday and Tuesday night: Mostly cloudy. Highs in the mid
60s. Lows in the lower 50s.
Wednesday: Mostly cloudy. A chance of rain.
Local Weather Forecast
Lotto
The Daily Derby race winners are No. 01 Gold
Rush in rst place;No.07 Eureka in second place;
and No. 08 Gorgeous George in third place.The
race time was clocked at 1:42.17.
(Answers Monday)
GRIME TWINE BESTOW WHIMSY
Yesterdays
Jumbles:
Answer: Looking for the perfect new outfit can be
A TRYING TIME
Now arrange the circled letters
to form the surprise answer, as
suggested by the above cartoon.
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square,
to form four ordinary words.
SERPS
SALCH
PENTUU
RXTEPE
2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
All Rights Reserved.
F
in
d

u
s

o
n

F
a
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k

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t
t
p
:
/
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Print your
answer here:
9 8 9
4 15 24 36 40 44
Mega number
Oct. 26 Mega Millions
1 26 30 36 38
Fantasy Five
Daily three midday
4 9 9 7
Daily Four
9.. 4 0
Daily three evening
In 1795, the United States and Spain signed the Treaty of San
Lorenzo (also known as Pinckneys Treaty), which provided
for free navigation of the Mississippi River.
In 1858, the 26th president of the United States, Theodore
Roosevelt, was born in New York City.
In 1880, Theodore Roosevelt married his rst wife, Alice Lee.
In 1886 (New Style date), the musical fantasy A Night on
Bald Mountain, written by Modest Mussorgsky and revised
after his death by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, was performed in
St. Petersburg, Russia.
In 1904, the rst rapid transit subway, the IRT, was inaugurat-
ed in New York City.
In 1922, the rst annual celebration of Navy Day took place.
In 1938, Du Pont announced a name for its new synthetic yarn:
nylon.
In 1947, You Bet Your Life, starring Groucho Marx, pre-
miered on ABC Radio. (It later became a television show on
NBC.)
In 1962, during the Cuban Missile Crisis, a U-2 reconnais-
sance aircraft was shot down while ying over Cuba, killing
the pilot, U.S. Air Force Maj. Rudolf Anderson Jr.
In 1971, the Democratic Republic of Congo was renamed the
Republic of Zaire (but it went back to its previous name in
1997).
In 1978, Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime
Minister Menachem Begin were named winners of the Nobel
Peace Prize for their progress toward achieving a Middle East
accord.
Actress Nanette Fabray is 92. Baseball Hall-of-Famer and
sportscaster Ralph Kiner is 90. Actress Ruby Dee is 88. Author
Maxine Hong Kingston is 72. Country singer Lee Greenwood is
70. Producer-director Ivan Reitman is 66. Country singer-musi-
cian Jack Daniels is 63. Rock musician Garry Tallent (Bruce
Springsteen & the E Street Band) is 63. Author Fran Lebowitz is
62. Rock musician K.K. Downing is 61. TV personality Jayne
Kennedy is 61. Actor Peter Firth is 59. Actor Robert Picardo is
59. World Golf Hall of Famer Patty Sheehan is 56. Singer Simon
Le Bon is 54. Country musician Jerry Dale McFadden (The
Mavericks) is 48. Internet news editor Matt Drudge is 46.
A habanero pepper is up to 100 times
hotter than a jalapeno pepper.
***
The Washington Monument in
Washington, D.C. stands 555 feet tall.
The monument, built in honor of George
Washington (1732-1799), was complet-
ed on Dec. 6, 1884.
***
In the story of Cinderella, a royal ball is
held to nd a wife for the kings only
son. If the prince did not marry, the royal
bloodline would end.
***
The word dandelion comes from an Old
French word dentdelion, meaning tooth
of the lion, in reference to the jagged
edges on the leaves of the plant.
***
Lestor Maddox (1915-2003) got
national attention in 1964 when he
refused to allow African-Americans
into his Atlanta restaurant, the
Pickrick Cafeteria. Under protest of
government interference with small
business, Maddox sold his restaurant
rather than integrate it.
***
In the history of baseball, there have
been over 16,000 major league baseball
players. Of those, 40 percent have hit
home runs.
***
Since 1978, there have been 37 recorded
incidents of people getting killed by
vending machines. In all of the cases,
people shook the machines to get free
merchandise or money, and the
machines fell on them.
***
Do you know what product had the
advertising slogan A Little Dabll Do
Ya? See answer at end.
***
One way to control poison oak and poi-
son ivy growing wild is to get a goat.
Goats can eat the plants with no ill
effect.
***
The tree that grows the tallest is the
California redwood tree, which grows
up to 370 feet tall. The roots of the huge
conifers spread as far as 250 feet.
***
The 17-foot tall statue of David, on dis-
play at the Accademia Gallery in
Florence, Italy, was damaged by a van-
dal in 1991. Davids toe was broken
after being hit with a hammer.
***
The three original commentators on
Monday Night Football (1970-pres-
ent) were Keith Jackson (born 1928),
Don Meredith (born 1938) and Howard
Cosell (1918-1995).
***
When American explorer Donald
MacMillan (1874-1970) went on an
Arctic expedition in 1913 he brought
NECCO wafer candies with him. He
gave the candy to the Eskimo children.
***
Casper the Friendly Ghost had a friend
named Wendy. She was a young witch
who lived with her aunts Thelma, Velma,
and Zelma in an enchanted forest.
***
At weddings in the Czech Republic peo-
ple throw peas, not rice, at the bride and
groom.
***
The town of Churchill Manitoba,
Canada is known as the Polar Bear
Capital of the World. Every October and
November the bears gather along the
shore of the Hudson Bay, waiting for the
bay to freeze over so they can hunt for
seal. Thousands of tourists travel to the
town to see the polar bears in their natu-
ral habitat.
***
Answer: It was the advertising slogan
for Brylcreem. Introduced in 1929,
Brylcreem was the rst mass-marketed
mens hair care product. Fred
Flintstones exclamation of Yabba
Dabba Doo comes from Brylcreems
slogan.
Know It All is by Kerry McArdle. It runs in
the weekend and Wednesday editions of the
Daily Journal. Questions? Comments? Email
knowitall@smdailyjournal.com or call 344-
5200 ext. 114.
20 26 36 41 42 16
Mega number
Oct. 24 Super Lotto Plus
3
Weekend Oct. 27-28, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
LOCAL
SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO
Disturbance. Two women were involved in a
physical ght at the Silver Hotel on Grand
Avenue before 2:08 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 13.
Disturbance. A woman was pushed by a tow
truck driver on Marcie Circle before 10:28 a.m.
on Saturday, Oct. 13.
Burglary. Five units were broken into at Public
Storage on South Spruce Avenue before 9:48
a.m. on Saturday, Oct. 13.
Trafc law. A vehicle was reported for block-
ing a driveway on Valverde Drive before 8:36
a.m. on Saturday, Oct. 12.
Petty theft. A gray Toyota Camry was broken
into on Commercial Avenue before 7:12 a.m.
Friday, Oct. 12.
Narcotics. A narcotics arrest was made on San
Mateo Avenue before 10:28 p.m. Thursday,
Oct. 11.
UNINCORPORATED SAN MATEO COUNTY
Prowling. A man was arrested for peaking into
homes and being under the inuence of a con-
trolled substance on the 300 block of California
Avenue in Moss Beach before 8:08 p.m. on
Wednesday, Oct. 10.
Suspicious circumstances. Two female juve-
niles were seen stealing from a car parked on
the 500 block of Cabrillo Avenue in El Granada
before 1:09 a.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 10.
Police reports
En garde
A person attempting to climb over a fence
got his leg pinned between the fence and
a cement pillar on Manzantia Street in
Redwood City before 8:38 a.m. on
Thursday, Oct. 18.
By Michelle Durand
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
The once-renowned San Mateo child psy-
chiatrist committed to a mental hospital as
incompetent for a second trial on charges he
molested boys in his care is not using his med-
ical expertise to fake dementia and avoid pros-
ecution, according to two hospital doctors
who treated him.
The Napa State Hospital psychiatrist and
psychologist testied in the latest competency
trial of William Hamilton Ayres on behalf of
the defense which has the burden of proving
the 80-year-old man is still mentally unt to
aid in his own defense. If it fails, criminal pro-
ceedings will be reinstated and Ayres will
stand trial on several counts of child molesta-
tion under the guise of medical exams
between 1988 and 1996. An earlier jury hung
in 2009 and he was declared incompetent
before a second trial could begin.
But Ayres returned to San Mateo County
last spring after a hospital report concluded
Ayres had been exaggerating his condition
and refusing to participate in treatment and
medication aimed at restoring his competency.
The defense witnesses yesterday agreed Ayres
may have declined but pointed out that was his
right to do so and said, if anything, the former
psychiatrist accustomed to possessing a high-
level of skill and accolades worked hard to
convince people he was not falling victim to
loss of memory and cognitive ability.
Memory loss is usually the easiest condition
to fake and even a person with Ayres medical
background cant feign incompetence inde-
nitely, said Dr. Scott Sutherland.
Theres nobody good enough to do
this 24/7, month after month, year after
year, he said.
Sutherland said he still
stands by his original con-
clusion that he is not like-
ly to regain competence in
the foreseeable future.
Dr. Erin Warnick, a sen-
ior psychologist specializ-
ing in neuropsychology,
tested Ayres for several
hours and met with him
on three occasions. She testied that Ayres
tends to overinate his memory decits but
is not feigning dementia.
Dementia is a consistent condition and not
curable, but patients do have bad and good
days, so it is possible Ayres did have lucid
conversations with hospital staff, said psy-
chologist Dr. Thomas Knoblauch.
Knoblauch said he had no reason to believe
Ayres was malingering and often observed
him from afar looking quite confused and
disoriented.
Knoblauch treated Ayres beginning in
December 2011, a few months after Ayres
arrival at the hospital when he was transferred
to a unit specializing in elder and conserved
patients what prosecutor Melissa
McKowan described as the old folks home of
Napa State Hospital while making the point
that restoration to competency was no longer
the goal for patients in that wing.
Knoblauch agreed that tests used to conrm
malingering could be found on the Internet or
from other sources by patients looking to fool
evaluators but said Ayres was not such a case.
Dr. Ayres did not have the mental capacity
to research such articles as this and create a
strategy, Knoblauch said.
McKowan, however, is expected to argue
that Ayres did just that in hopes of avoiding
prosecution and eventually leaving Napa State
Hospital for home or a nursing facility.
Under cross-examination, Knoblauch
agreed Ayres was consistent in drawing atten-
tion to his decits like memory loss and said
he thought hed be convicted if tried again
because society is currently less tolerant of
child molestation.
Knoblauch, who found Ayres sufciently
understood several legal areas required for
competency such as plea bargains and listen-
ing to his attorneys advice, concluded he was
impaired in his ability to cope with incarcer-
ation pending trial.
Ayres is currently in custody because he has
not yet been declared legally competent but
prior to his commitment last year had been
free on bail since shortly after his 2007 arrest.
Authorities had rst began looking at Ayres,
the former president of the American
Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry,
ve years before his arrest when a former
patient claimed the doctor molested him at
age 13 during the 1970s. After a U.S. Supreme
Court ruling on the statute of limitations nixed
criminal prosecution, the victim and Ayres
reached a condential settlement in July 2005.
In a deposition for the lawsuit, Ayres report-
edly admitted conducting physical exams of
patients as part of his care. His practice
included private clients and referrals from
both the juvenile justice system and school
districts.
The 2009 jury hung in various splits on all
counts. A jury in his competency trial similar-
ly hung and prosecutors agreed not to seek a
retrial if he went to a locked facility.
The competency trial continues Monday
morning.
Defense claims Ayres still mentally unfit
William Ayres
4
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CITY GOVERNMENT
The Redwood City Planning
Commission will continue a public
hearing on the proposed develop-
ment of Petes Harbor marina. The
project, to be located on the north
side of Highway 101 between Bair
Island Road and Redwood Creek,
calls for 411 multi-family housing units in buildings
between three and five stories, 805 parking spaces, a com-
munity pool and approximately 263 slips in a private mari-
na. All existing commercial operations at the marina will
cease and any future boat mooring limited to apartment
tenants.
A crowd of tenants and supports attended the last com-
mission meeting but the hearing was cut short because of
the time.
The Planning Commission meets 7 p.m. Tuesday, Oct.
30 at City Hall, 1017 Middlefield Road, Redwood City.
Teens arrested in slaying
of Castro Valley woman
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
CASTRO VALLEY Authorities have arrested two
teenagers in the slaying of a woman who was brutally beat-
en before her Castro Valley home was set on fire.
Alameda County Sheriffs officials identified the male
suspects on Friday as 18-year-old Cody Nicosia and a 16-
year-old, both of Hayward. The Associated Press is not nam-
ing the 16-year-old because he is a juvenile.
The teens were arrested on suspicion of murder in the
death of 58-year-old Barbara Latiolais.
Latiolais body was found inside the burning home last
week.
Sheriffs officials have said there were valuables missing
from the home, and Latiolais Volvo station wagon was
gone.
It was found several hours after the fire.
By Juliet Wiliams
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SACRAMENTO Charles Munger
Sr. is best known as Warren Buffetts
right-hand man, an investor who has
turned his skill at picking winning com-
panies into a billion-dollar fortune.
He has passed some of his passion on
to his children, two of whom are using
their considerable fortune to transform
Californias political landscape this year.
While Molly Munger and her half
brother, Charles Jr., are on opposite ends
of the political spectrum, both have
thrown up signicant roadblocks to Gov.
Jerry Browns ballot initiative seeking to
balance the state budget through raising
taxes.
Republican Charles Munger Jr., a
Stanford physicist, has given $35 million
to defeat Browns initiative, which
would raise the state sales tax and
increase income taxes on the wealthy,
and to support a ballot measure that
would undercut pub-
lic employee unions.
His sister has also
attacked Browns ini-
tiative, pushing her
own ballot measure
that would increase
income tax rates for
nearly all taxpayers
and send the money
directly to school
districts, bypassing the Legislature. She
has spent more than $33 million.
A poll released this week shows her
Proposition 38 and Browns Proposition
30 without majority support.
Both Mungers are relative newcomers
to Californias political scene. They have
generally shied away from the spotlight,
even as Browns supporters labeled them
the billionaire bullies seeking to
destroy Californias public schools. If
voters reject his initiative, Brown has
said the state will enact $6 billion in
automatic cuts, mostly to K-12.
The siblings are almost universally
described by those
who have worked
with them as driven
and intensely focused
millionaires who
ask a lot of questions
before they commit
to a cause.
C a l i f o r n i a
Common Cause, a
good- gover nment
group, partnered
with Charles Munger Jr. on its success-
ful effort to create an independent citi-
zens redistricting commission that
would draw state legislative and con-
gressional districts based on the once-a-
decade census.
The groups president, Kathay Feng,
called it an excruciatingly long
process answering the detailed, method-
ical questions he had before agreeing to
commit.
He was so thorough he eventually
became an expert on the myriad intrica-
cies of redistricting law, she said.
Wealthy siblings change
states political landscape
By Michelle Durand
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
A Pacica man accused of stabbing
and beating his friend with a hammer
more than 50 times at his fathers home
delayed entering a plea Friday to murder
and two weapons charges.
Marc Anthony Furlan, 24, appeared
with a court-appointed attorney Cristina
Mazzei but did little more than put the
matter over until Nov. 28 to enter a plea
in the death of Keith Coffey, 24. Coffey
was killed at Furlans fathers home on
Dell Road in Pacica.
Authorities are still
investigating a possi-
ble motive but prose-
cutors say Furlan was
previously enrolled in
the countys mental
health court so they
cannot rule out those
type of issues.
Furlan and Coffey
were acquaintances and reportedly
argued before the fatal altercation.
Prosecutors say Furlan killed Coffey in
the house and dragged the body outside
before trying to clean the scene. Two
tenants ed the scene and contacted
police who found Coffey in front of the
home around 5:15 a.m. Furlan was
reportedly trying to dispose of the body
when police arrived and had left a wide
swath of blood from the house to out-
side.
Furlans father was not home at the
time of the incident.
Furlan remains in custody without bail.
Mazzei could not be reached for com-
ment.
Accused Pacifica murderer delays plea
Marc Furlan
Charles
Munger Jr.
Molly Munger
6
Weekend Oct. 27-28, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
LOCAL
702 Marshall St., Ste. 400, Redwood City
650.369.8900
Fighting for victims
and their families
FREE CONSULTATION
(800) 308-0870
Motor Vehicle
Accidents

Wrongful Death

Traumatic Brain
Injuries

Spinal Cord Injuries

Survivors of
Domestic Violence
and Rape

Uninsured Motorist
Claims

Insurance Bad Faith


Led by former prosecutor
Todd Emanuel, Emanuel
Law Group fghts for
victims and their families.
RECENT RESULTS
$6.35 million: Settlement
afer Motor Vehicle Accident
$1.00 million: Judgment for
rape victim
$1.00 million: Settlement for
Uninsured Motorist Claim
$405,000: Judgment for
Domestic Violence Survivor
Spree burglary
suspect pleads not guilty
A 27-year-old woman who prosecutors say
led two San Francisco teens on a spree of res-
idential burglaries on the
Peninsula will stand trial
in February after pleading
not guilty to eight
felonies.
Nyzeina Shameka
Eberhart pleaded not
guilty to seven counts of
residential burglary and
one count of attempted
burglary before being
scheduled for trial Feb. 4
Eberhart and two teenage boys, ages 15 and
16, are accused of residential burglaries
between Sept. 18 and 20 including one in
Belmont, two in San Mateo and three in unin-
corporated San Mateo. A neighbor of a San
Mateo burglary victim saw a vehicle in front
of the home carrying three people later identi-
ed as Eberhart and the boys in a photo line-
up. On Sept. 20, Belmont police spotted the
car in the lookout bulletin and reported nd-
ing the defendants inside along with property
from burglaries in San Mateo County and
another in Pleasant Hill. A crowbar was also
inside and a search of her residence turned up
other stolen property, according to the District
Attorneys Ofce.
The two juveniles were booked into the
Youth Services Center. Details on their case
remain condential because they are minors.
Eberhart remains in custody in lieu of
$175,000. She returns to court Nov. 8 for a
pretrial conference.
Care home worker to trial for theft
An 18-year-old food service worker
accused of stealing more than $400 worth of
jewelry from a resident at a Redwood City
assisted living home will stand trial on felony
charges of burglary,
receiving stolen property
and elder abuse.
Luis Hermelindo
Cebrero, of unincorporat-
ed San Mateo County, has
pleaded not guilty but a
judge found sufcient evi-
dence to hold him to
answer on all counts. The
judge also denied
Cebreros request to reduce or eliminate his
$100,000 bail and he remains in custody.
Cebrero had worked at the Woodside
Terrace Senior Living Complex for six
months, during which time prosecutors say he
had admitted committing at least six previ-
ously unsolved thefts. On Oct. 8, another
employee reported finding approximately
$425 worth of jewelry hidden in a food tray
Cebrero had removed from a room. Police
reported finding several items of jewelry
stolen from other facility residents inside
Cebreros apartment
Cebrero returns to court Nov. 8 to enter a
Superior Court plea and potentially set a trial
date.
T
ri-School Productions
will present Carlo
Goldonis The
Servant of Two Masters,
beginning this weekend.
The classic comedia play
will electrify the stage.
Truffuldino is a humble servant
from Turin, who nds himself in
search of a master to take care
of him. Not only does he nd
one master, he nds two. The show is a hilar-
ious tale of mistaken identity.
Performances will be held at
7:30 p.m. in the Serra Gellert
Auditorium on Fridays and
Saturdays, Oct. 26 through Nov.
3. Tickets are $15 for adults and
$10 for students and seniors. To
purchase visit www.trischool-
productions.com.
Class notes is a column dedicated
to school news. It is compiled by
education reporter Heather Murtagh. You can con-
tact her at (650) 344-5200, ext. 105 or at
heather@smdailyjournal.com.
Nyzeina
Eberhart
Local briefs
Luis Cebrero
PAT ZURCHER
Meaghan Uhl (NDB), left to right, Amanda Odasz (Mercy), Robert Letters, Nate Zaslove and
Logan Jaeb are participating in The Servant of Two Masters, beginning this weekend.
NATION 7
Weekend Oct. 27-28, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
advertisment
By David Espo
and Steve Peoples
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
AMES, Iowa Seizing on fresh
evidence of economic sluggishness,
Republican challenger Mitt
Romney said
Friday that
P r e s i d e n t
Barack Obama
inherited a bad
situation when
he took office
and then made
the problem
worse. Obama
looked ahead to
the second term hes hoping to win.
Referring to the two top
Republicans in Congress, the presi-
dent said he was prepared to wash
John Boehners car or walk Mitch
McConnells dog if it would help
complete an elusive deal to cut
future decits by trillions of dollars.
The two campaign rivals faced a
common danger as the end of their
race came into view: a large and
dangerous storm threatening to bar-
rel up the East Coast. Romney and
Vice President Joe Biden each can-
celed planned weekend appearances
in Virginia Beach, Va.
Romney was unsparing in his crit-
icism of the man he hopes to unseat.
Despite all that he inherited,
President Obama did not repair our
economy, he did not save Medicare
and Social Security, he did not tame
the spending and borrowing, he did
not reach across the aisle to bring us
together, the former Massachusetts
governor said.
Four years ago, America voted
for a post-partisan president, but
they have seen the most political of
presidents, and a Washington in
gridlock because of it, he added.
The Republican challenger bor-
rowed a theme from Obamas suc-
cessful 2008 campaign, saying he
and running mate Paul Ryan can
bring real change to this country.
And he tweaked a line that former
President Bill Clinton unveiled at
this summers Democratic National
Convention, saying, This is not the
time to double-down on trickle-
down government policies that have
failed us.
Democrats delighted in pointing
out that Romney spoke outside
Kinzler Construction Services,
which benetted from more than
$650,000 in stimulus funding from
the 2009 package Obama that
signed into law and the
Republican nominee often criti-
cizes.
Romney on economy: Obamamade problem worse
By Christopher S. Rugaber
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON The latest
snapshot of economic growth
shows the U.S. recovery remains
tepid.
Growth in the July-September
quarter climbed slightly but was
still too weak to stir signicantly
more hiring. The pace of expansion
rose to a 2 percent annual rate from
1.3 percent in the April-June quar-
ter, led by more consumer and gov-
ernment spending.
Voters who are still undecided
about the presidential election
arent likely to be swayed by
Fridays mixed report from the
Commerce Department.
For the average American, I
dont think changes in quarterly
GDP make a big difference in
their perception of the economy,
said Andrew Kohut, president of
the Pew Research Center. Its cer-
tainly good for the president that
the number is not bad because that
would resonate.
With 11 days until the election,
the economy is being kept aoat by
a revitalized consumer and the
early stages of a housing recovery.
But more than three years after the
Great Recession ended, the nation
continues to struggle because busi-
nesses are reluctant to invest, and
slower global growth has cut
demand for American exports.
Republican nominee Mitt
Romney is telling voters that
President Barack Obamas policies
have kept the economy from accel-
erating and have even slowed
growth in the past two years. The
1.7 percent annual growth rate for
the first nine months of 2012
remains slightly behind last years
1.8 percent growth. And both are
below 2010s growth of 2.4 per-
cent.
The economy contracted at a 5.3
percent annual rate in the rst three
months of 2009, just as Obama
took ofce during the worst down-
turn since the Great Depression.
Obama says his policies stabilized
the economy later that year and
argues that the stimulus package
and auto bailout helped it grow in
2010.
U.S. economy expanding
at modest 2 percent pace
Barack Obama
REUTERS
Mitt Romney gestures as he delivers a speech on the economy while
campaigning in Ames, Iowa.
NATION/WORLD 8
Weekend Oct. 27-28, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
By Karin Laub
and Zeina Karam
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
BEIRUT Two deadly car
bombs and sporadic fighting
marred a shaky holiday truce
Friday in Syria, although thousands
of protesters used the brief respite
in the civil war to pour into the
streets and demand President
Bashar Assads ouster.
Chants of Syria wants free-
dom! rang out in the streets in the
largest demonstrations in months,
suggesting that a 19-month-old
crackdown and sustained violence
has not broken the spirit of those
trying to rid the country of Assads
rule.
But even if a cease-fire holds for
the intended four-day Muslim holi-
day of Eid al-Adha, its unlikely to
be a springboard for ending the
conflict that has already claimed
more than 35,000 lives.
Syria mediator Lakhdar Brahimi,
the U.N.-Arab League envoy, has
not charted a way forward or said
how he would bridge the deep
divide between Assad and his
opponents. The Syrian president
wont resign and the opposition
says it wont negotiate a transition
deal until he does.
Brahimis plan marks the first
attempt by the international com-
munity in six months to scale back
the violence that has displaced hun-
dreds of thousands of people and
devastated entire neighborhoods. A
more comprehensive U.N. cease-
fire plan in April quickly collapsed.
Brahimi did not set clear terms
for the truce, perhaps to reduce the
possibility of failure.
Car bombs, violence
mar Syrias shaky truce
By Brock Vergakis
and Wayne Perry
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
DUCK, N.C. A year after
being walloped by Hurricane Irene,
residents rushed to put away boats,
harvest crops and sandbag board-
walks Friday as the Eastern
Seaboard braced for a rare megas-
torm that experts said would cause
much greater havoc.
Hurricane Sandy, moving north
from the Caribbean, was expected to
make landfall Monday night near
the Delaware coast, then hit two
winter weather systems as it moves
inland, creating a hybrid monster
storm that could bring nearly a foot
of rain, high winds and up to 2 feet
of snow.
Experts said the storm would be
wider and stronger than last years
Irene, which caused more than $15
billion in damage, and could rival
the worst East Coast storm on
record.
Ofcials did not mince words,
telling people to be prepared for
several days without electricity.
Jersey Shore beach towns began
issuing voluntary evacuations and
protecting boardwalks. Atlantic
Beach casinos made contingency
plans to close, and ofcials advised
residents of ood-prone areas to
stay with family or be ready to
leave. Airlines said to expect can-
cellations and waived change fees
for passengers who want to resched-
ule.
Be forewarned, said
Connecticut Gov. Dannel P. Malloy.
Assume that you will be in the
midst of ooding conditions, the
likes of which you may not have
seen at any of the major storms that
have occurred over the last 30
years.
Many storm-seasoned residents
had not begun to panic. Along North
Carolinas fragile Outer Banks, no
evacuations had been ordered and
ferries hadnt yet been closed.
Plenty of stores remained open and
houses still featured Halloween dec-
orations outside, as rain started to
roll in.
Silvio Berlusconi convicted
in Italy of tax fraud
MILAN Just two days after
announcing he wont run in spring
elections, former Italian Premier
Silvio Berlusconi was convicted of
tax fraud and sentenced to four
years in prison Friday in a verdict
that could see him barred from pub-
lic ofce for ve years.
Berlusconi, after dominating
Italian politics for nearly two
decades, has seen his power weak-
ening in the last year as a sex scan-
dal tarnished his image and he was
forced to resign as premier after
failing to convince nancial markets
that he could come up with convinc-
ing reforms to shield Italy from
Europes debt woes.
A year after Irene, U.S.
prepares for superstorm
Oct.22: Tropical Depression 18 forms over
the southwestern Caribbean, about 320
miles (515 kilometers) south-southwest of
Kingston, Jamaica. Six hours later, the U.S.
National Hurricane Center says it has
grown to tropical storm force and names
it Sandy.
Oct. 23: Jamaica and Cuba begin making
preparations for the strengthening storm.
Oct. 24: Sandy becomes a hurricane with
winds of 80 mph (130 kph) just before
slamming into Jamaica west of the capital,
Kingston,at about 3 p.m.EDT (1900 GMT).
The fast-moving storm crosses the island
within ve hours, killing one person,
blowing off roofs and cutting power to half
the country.Forecasters begin warning that
Sandy could combine with two other
weather fronts in the U.S.to create a super
storm.
Oct. 25: Sandy grows into a Category 2
hurricane with winds of 115 mph (185 kph)
and blasts across eastern Cuba in less than
seven hours without losing force. Ofcials
say 11 people are killed, 5,000 houses are
at least partially collapsed and 30,000 lose
their roofs. Crops are badly damaged. But
the greatest damage is in nearby Haiti, hit
by the storms outer bands. Ofcials say at
least 26 people die over two days, most in
ooded rivers or collapsed houses. U.S.
authorities at the Guantanamo Bay naval
base are forced to suspend a hearing for a
suspect in the 2000 bombing of the USS
Cole.By early afternoon,the hurricane rolls
into the Bahamas and begins to weaken
as winds fall to 90 mph (150 kph).
Oct. 26: Sandys center emerges from
Bahamas after killing at least one person
and causing widespread power outages.
It weakens to winds of 75 mph (120 kph).
A Puerto Rico man dies in a river swollen by
the storms rains. Forecasters say it is likely
to hit the U.S.Eastern Seaboard as a tropical
storm early Tuesday.
Hurricane Sandy timeline
Around the world
REUTERS
A member of the Free Syrian Army res at a sniper as he runs for cover
during clashes with pro-government forces in Harem town, Syria.
OPINION 9
Weekend Oct. 27-28, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
No on Measure B
Editor,
San Mateo County is carved into 20
separate cities, two dozen school dis-
tricts and dozens of special districts.
Everyone, regardless of where they
live, benefits by having a Board of
Supervisors that looks out for the
interests of the entire county.
In San Mateo County voters directly
elect all five of their Supervisors, not
just one. At the same time each region
of the county is ensured representa-
tion because supervisors must live
within a separate geographic district.
Its the best of both worlds.
Critics want to change our system:
Measure B on the Nov. 6 ballot
would take away your right to pick all
five of your representatives.
San Mateo County is the best gov-
erned county in California. If you find
this hard to believe, take a trip to the
state Capitol and ask around. Or look
at our bond rating, which is the high-
est in the state.
Our award-winning innovations in
health care delivery, childrens health
coverage and environmental health
earn us the admiration of state and
federal legislators and administrators
alike. These services, like so many
others provided by the county, are
regional in scope. They should be
governed by a body that is regional in
its perspective, not parochial.
A change to the way we elect our
supervisors is a solution in search of a
problem. Its not worth risking our
collaborative and consensus-driven
approach to governing. Its not worth
diminishing your voice and your
influence as a voter.
Vote no on Measure B.
Carole Groom
Rose Jacobs Gibson
The letter writers are members of
the San Mateo County Board of
Supervisors.
Final debate
Editor,
I was fortunate enough to watch the
real debate online this week (which
included Green Party candidate Jill
Stein and Justice Party candidate
Rocky Anderson) on Democracy Now.
It became painfully obvious why the
Democrats and Republicans conspired
to keep all other candidates from par-
ticipating in the televised debates. It
seemed Stein and Anderson answered
the hard questions including ones on
drone warfare, the job-killing Trans-
Pacific Partnership, developing a
green economy by moving us away
from fossil fuel and protecting our
civil liberties by abolishing the
National Defense Authorization Act
(which allows the president to murder
American citizens right here on our
own soil).
Without open and honest debates,
the only thing Americans are getting
is the old dog and pony show spon-
sored by the one-party system of war
and corporations.
Frank Scafani
San Bruno
Rest in peace, Dr. Griffin
Editor,
I would like to note with great sad-
ness the passing of Veterinarian Dr.
Donald Griffin of the Spruce Avenue
(SSF) Pet Hospital. The hospital is
currently covered with hundreds of
notes and signatures, and the very
large crowd at his memorial last
Friday was a testament to the esteem
the local community held for Dr.
Griffin. His extraordinary efforts to
care for our pets, his kindness and his
seeming lack of concern about charg-
ing the going rate for his services are
a huge loss for this community.
John and Laurie Dillon
San Bruno
Letters to the editor
Torrance Daily Breeze
L
ast week, when Gov. Jerry
Brown called for a shadowy
group of campaign contributors
to take your mask off and let the
people of California see who you are,
some listeners might have thought his
colorful language was hyperbole. If
only it was.
Brown conjured up an all-too-accu-
rate image of unseen, unidentied and
untouchable political operators seeking
to inuence California policy from out-
side the state.
The governor and others who support
Proposition 30 and oppose Proposition
32 have been right to complain since
the revelation last week that an
Arizona-based group with anonymous
members has donated $11 million to
the other sides in two of Californias
biggest initiative campaigns.
Liberals have led a complaint with
the Fair Political Practices Commission,
contending the donation violates state
regulations of political expenditures.
But even if the donation is determined
to be legal, voters should resent the
inuence of such secret cash in our
elections. This is an example of now-
familiar excesses by groups taking
advantage of court rulings such as
Citizens United and policies that pro-
tect the identities of donors to nonprot
groups operating as social welfare
organizations under IRS code 501(c)4.
The Arizona group calls itself
Americans for Responsible Leadership.
(Youd think individuals would want to
stand up and take credit for a nice idea
like responsible leadership.) Campaign
nance reports show ARL gave $11
million to a California group, known as
the Small Business Action Committee,
that has been mounting TV and radio
campaigns against Proposition 30 and
for Proposition 32.
Proposition 30 is the initiative that
would temporarily raise state sales
taxes as well as income taxes on high
earners to stave off education budget
cuts, and Proposition 32 is the one that
seeks to restrict labor unions political
contributions.
This is about the groups methods.
Those methods should especially trou-
ble supporters of the yes-on-32 cam-
paign, which is accepting millions of
dollars from a special-interest group
even as it aims to reduce the inuence
of wealthy special interests.
It may be impossible to rid elections
of big money. But voters should be able
to judge big donors motives. Thats
possible only when donors are known
individuals, such as Republican activist
Charles Munger Jr., who has given $20
million to SBAC, and his sister,
Democratic attorney Molly Munger,
who has bankrolled the tax-hike meas-
ure Proposition 38.
In the world of charity, the anony-
mous donor is admirable. In the world
of politics, he or she is not so laudable.
People who support their points of view
with campaign cash should be willing
to accept the plaudits or stand up to the
complaints.
When donors hide in the shadows,
voters should be suspicious.
Donors hiding in the shadows
Keep Petes Harbor
open for the public
By Alison Madden
D
enver-based developer the Pauls Corporation is try-
ing to buy Petes Harbor in Redwood City, at 1
Uccelli Blvd. east of Highway 101. A pending pro-
posed development requires ejection of
the liveaboard boaters, closure of the
commercial marina and harbor and clo-
sure and destruction of the Waterfront
Restaurant, a beloved space for weddings,
quinceaeras and other private events. If
approved, the land use will be 100 per-
cent residential with no commercial
amenities or liveaboards. The Save Petes
Harbor 2012 coalition is not opposed to
some development at 1 Uccelli Blvd. In fact, SPH 2012
endorses using the existing zoning but with a mixed use-
marina land use designation. It should be noted that SPH
2012 is not just current tenants who dont want to be ejected,
and who want to keep their boat-homes. Although that is true,
hundreds of local citizens have expressed support through
petitions and other activities, and are saying high-density lux-
ury housing is not what they want, and they want to keep a
harbor and marina at Petes.
The city should develop its Inner Harbor Precise Plan, as
the General Plan contemplates and like it has for other impor-
tant developing locations. This proposed development should
be phase one in that Precise Plan, which was begun in June
of this year but left idle at the same time the Pauls Corp. led
its permit application in July 2012. All stakeholders should be
involved in the Precise Plan, and at a minimum a study ses-
sion should be undertaken (the Costco gas pumps had one).
The citys suggestion otherwise ignores the no vote on
Measure Q rejecting large development on this inlet. In addi-
tion, no development has been proposed at 1 Uccelli since the
last withdrawn proposal in 2008 (and all prior proposals and
communications from the ofce suggested no change to the
marina/harbor and liveaboards staying). There has been no
discussion since 2004 involving the general public.
Much like the Save Petes Harbor drive in the late 70s and
early 80s, the locals want to have a say. In addition, the state
of California owns the outer harbor under the public trust
doctrine and the people of the state of California, through the
Legislature, stepped in to secure title for Pete to the land
because of its commercial use, and the outer harbor is under
commercial lease by the State Lands Commission. The
commission has not yet weighed in on privatizing the outer
harbor for non-commercial purposes, but could well oppose it
due to lack of such use. The legislation assumed signicant
public access via the restaurant and commercial harbor and
marina. We also would like clarication into whether, when
and why the land use was changed from mixed use-marina to
mixed use-waterfront as various parts of the plan and propos-
al suggest.
Specically, a marina land use designation would allow
buildings no more than three stories high, along with com-
mercial use and a commercial marina. However, the city is
using a mixed use-waterfront designation that allows building
411 residences for 100 percent residential use, and ejecting
the restaurant and marina liveaboards, with private slips only
available for buyers or renters of the complex. No commer-
cial activity will be available to the public at all, no restau-
rants or shops and no commercial liveaboards. This is irre-
sponsible development that displaces a community without
local remediation (a violation of the environmental impact
report) and that violates the citys own policies on encourag-
ing alternative and affordable housing via liveaboards. In
addition, with the closure of Peninsula Marina, this same
developer has eviscerated the charm of the marine lifestyle on
this inlet in Redwood City. Redwood City should want a
commercial marina like Pillar Point in Half Moon Bay, and it
has that opportunity here.
It is important to refocus the conversation away from ten-
ants and to voters, who are saying that this is the kind of
development they voted down, that they do not want it and
that this is how Redwood City is doing it now. The woman
who said that was referring to a lengthy investment of private
time with developers, then the Planning Commission quickly
approving nal plans with very limited lead time for the pub-
lic to be involved. Many voters are rolling their eyes, and one
person viewing the plans described it as looking like San
Quentin. Voters are angry that the city appears to be attempt-
ing piecemeal to get to similar high-density, irresponsible
development versus a single planned community that was
revealed all at once (and voted down) in a very public process
(Measure Q in 2004).
Alison Madden is a current tenant at Petes Harbor, who moved
to the site to buy a boat and live on the water. She is a practic-
ing in-house technology attorney and is interested in the right
thing for all of Redwood City and the Bay Area respecting
development on this historic and sensitive lands-end spot.
Other voices
Guest perspective
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BUSINESS 10
Weekend Oct. 27-28, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
Dow 13,107.21 +3.53 10-Yr Bond 1.75 -0.078
Nasdaq 2,987.95 +1.83 Oil (per barrel) 88.30
S&P 500 1,411.939 -1.03 Gold 1,716.10
By Joshua Freed
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Stocks closed mostly lower Friday
after investors found little to like in weak
corporate earnings reports and news of
only tepid growth in the U.S. economy
in the third quarter.
The Dow Jones industrial average
managed a gain of 3.53 points to close at
13,107.21 after spending much of the
day in the red.
The Standard & Poors 500 index fell
1.03 points to 1,411.94 and the Nasdaq
composite rose 1.83 points to 2,987.95.
Stocks rose in the morning before a
mild midday sell-off, then recovered
somewhat in the afternoon.
The morning gains came after the
Commerce Department estimated that
the U.S. economy expanded at a 2 per-
cent annual rate from July through
September. That was better than the pre-
vious quarter, and better than analysts
expected, but not strong enough to bring
down the unemployment rate.
Even economic data that is mixed or
positive wont outweigh weak earnings,
said Lawrence Creatura, a portfolio
manager with Federated Investors.
Reports like the one on Friday that
measure gross domestic product tend to
be backwards-looking, while companies
are offering forecasts about the months
ahead, he said.
Company earnings trump macro data.
Because investors own Apple, they dont
own GDP, Creatura said.
Apple fell $5.54 to $604 after saying
its prot will decline this holiday season.
Even with Fridays rise, stocks lost
ground this week, inecting a sort of
death-by-a-thousand-cuts on the rally
that began in September. The Dow was
down 236.30 points for the week, or 1.8
percent. The S&P has fallen 21.25
points, or 1.5 percent.
Goodyear Tire & Rubber sank 10 per-
cent after a steep dropoff in sales in
Europe delivered a blow to its earnings.
The stock fell $1.28 to $11.02.
The advertising conglomerate
Interpublic also turned in results that
fell short of analysts forecasts, and its
stock fell 2.5 percent, or 26 cents, to
$10.29.
Amazon rose $15.32, or 7 percent, to
$238.24 despite a smaller-than-expected
quarterly profit and a prediction for
smaller-than-expected holiday revenue.
Among other companies making big
moves, cable TV provider Comcast
jumped $1.20, or 3.3 percent, to $37.56
after reporting that its income more than
doubled in the latest quarter.
Stocks mostly lower
Wall Street
Stocks that moved substantially or traded
heavily Friday on the New York Stock Exchange
and Nasdaq Stock Market:
NYSE
Arch Coal Inc., up 78 cents at $8.09
Cost-cutting efforts helped the St.Louis-based
coal company boost its third-quarter earnings
well above Wall Street expectations.
Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., down $1.28 at
$11.02
The tire maker said its net income fell by nearly
one-third during the third quarter,due to lower
tire sales in Europe.
Pilgrims Pride Corp., up 75 cents at $5.32
The chicken producer said it returned to a prot
in its third quarter as it cut expenses.The results
topped expectations.
BJs Restaurants Inc., down $6.01 at $32.27
The restaurant chain said its net income rose 8
percent in the third quarter, but the results still
missed expectations.
DeVry Inc., up $5.19 at $26.01
The for-prot education company said its scal
rst-quarter prot fell 44 percent, but it beat
market expectations.
Nasdaq
Columbia Sportswear Co., up $2.31 at $56.01
The outdoor clothing maker said its third-
quarter net income fell 5 percent,but the results
beat Wall Street expectations.
Deckers Outdoor Corp., down $6 at $29.49
Lower demand for Uggs, the sheepskin boots,
pushed the footwear makers prot down 31
percent in its most recent quarter.
Expedia Inc., up $7.81 at $59.06
A boom in hotel bookings pushed the online
travel agencys third-quarter results past Wall
Streets expectations.
Big movers
Windows 8 inspires
computer makers to creativity
NEW YORK Cant decide if you want a PC or tablet?
Now you wont have to. With the release of Windows 8,
computer makers are doing their best to blur the bound-
aries with an array of devices that mash keyboards and
touch screens together in different ways.
Some of these congurations are new, while others have
appeared and disappeared on the market since at least
2002, when Microsoft Corp. released Windows XP Tablet
PC Edition. Microsoft says it has certied 1,000 devices
for use with Windows 8 and its sibling operating system,
Windows RT. The two systems look the same, but under
the hood, theyre quite different.
Windows RT runs only on machines with the type of
lower-energy, phone-style chips used in iPad and Kindle
tablets. That makes for cheap, thin and light devices with
very long battery lives more than 10 hours. But those
devices wont run any programs written for other versions
of Windows. In fact, they can run only applications down-
loaded directly from Microsofts online store, in a setup
borrowed from Apple and its iPhone.
United Airlines troubles
mostly wipe out 3Q profit
It was a rough third quarter for United Airlines.
Travelers stayed away, frustrated by technology glitches
from Uniteds merger with Continental. And a huge
accounting charge wiped out most of its prot.
Uniteds performance weakened by every measure
important to airlines: Per-passenger revenue fell 2.6 per-
cent, and was down in every part of the world except for
the Pacic. Trafc fell 1.5 percent. Yield, which measures
fares paid, slipped 1.2 percent.
Particularly damaging was the defection of corporate
travelers, who booked elsewhere and hurt revenue.
We recognize that some of our customers chose to y
other airlines during the summer, when our operational
performance degraded, CEO Jeff Smisek said on a con-
ference call.
Business briefs
By Tom Krisher and Yuri Kageya
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
DETROIT Toyota has widened its
global sales lead over General Motors
after bouncing back from a series of nat-
ural disasters.
The company said Friday it sold 7.4
million vehicles globally in the rst nine
months of this year 450,000 more than
General Motors. While Toyotas sales
rose 28 percent in that period, GMs rose
2.5 percent, to 6.95 million cars and light-
duty trucks.
Toyotas factories were hobbled by an
earthquake and tsunami in early 2011,
leaving it short of cars in the U.S. and
other regions. But now the company has
recovered, and is building and selling
more vehicles globally. Germanys
Volkswagen AG is also seeing strong
global sales.
GM is more concerned with protable
growth than the global sales race,
spokesman Jim Cain said. Toyota has
made similar statements, but executives
concede privately that the crown is a mat-
ter of corporate pride for both companies.
GM was the top-selling automaker for
more than seven decades before losing
the title to Toyota in 2008.
But Toyota faces a challenge in keeping
its lead this year. Sales are falling in
China because of a territorial dispute with
Japan. Japan nationalized islands in the
East China Sea that are also claimed by
China and Taiwan. The move set off vio-
lent protests in China and a widespread
call to boycott Japanese goods.
Toyota, which makes the Prius hybrid,
Camry sedan and Lexus luxury models,
had planned to sell 1 million vehicles in
China this year. But the company no
longer expects to reach that number. It
has not given a new target.
In September, Toyotas vehicle sales in
China dropped to 44,100 vehicles, from
86,000 a year earlier. In August, Toyota
sold 75,280 vehicles in China, down 15
percent from the same month last year.
Toyota widens global lead over GM
TOYOTA LEADS:
Toyota Motor Corp. has widened its
global sales lead over General Motors
after bouncing back from a series of
natural disasters.
THE NUMBERS:
Toyota said Friday it sold 7.4 million
vehicles globally during the rst nine
months of the year. Thats 450,000
more than General Motors. While
Toyotas sales rose 28 percent in that
period, GMs rose 2.5 percent, to 6.95
million cars and light-duty trucks.
THE RESULTS:
The Japanese automaker still has
challenges in China, but it looks like
GM wont be able to catch up this year.
Volkswagen, on the other hand, is
closing in on GM for the No. 2 spot.
Big movers
By Peter Svensson
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK Apples stock fell
below $600 Friday for the rst time in
three months, after the consumer elec-
tronics behemoth warned that costs of
making new products will cut into prof-
its in the holiday quarter.
Apples earnings for the latest quarter
also missed expectations.
Apple shares fell as low as $591 dur-
ing the session but recovered some loss-
es to close at $604, down $5.54.
Late Thursday, Apple said prots for
the rest of the year would fall from last
year because its launching so many new
products. Its expecting mammoth sales,
but new products are more expensive to
make than older ones.
Apple launched the iPhone 5 a month
ago and announced two new iPads and
three new Macs this week. In addition,
its shipping new iPods.
Wall Street analysts took the adjust-
ment in stride, knowing that Apple near-
ly always lowballs its estimates, but sev-
eral cut their earnings estimates for the
scal year that started this month. Stuart
Jeffrey noted that Apples prot margins
should be back to normal in the quarter
that starts in April, but that will be too
late to fully make up for the earnings hit
in the holiday quarter. He cut his earn-
ings estimate for the year by 10 percent
and his price target on the shares from
$710 to $660.
Apple shares have now lost more than
$100 from their all-time peak of
$705.07, hit on Sept. 21, the day the lat-
est iPhone went on sale in the U.S. and
eight other countries.
Apple stock falls under $600 after warning
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK Two U.S. senators on
Friday again called on federal regulators
to close what they say are loopholes that
allow energy-drink makers to sell prod-
ucts with additives and high levels of caf-
feine that the lawmakers say have not
been proven safe.
The letter to the Food and Drug
Administration from Sens. Dick Durbin,
D-Ill., and Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn.,
comes after the agency said this week that
it is investigating reports of ve deaths in
which the consumption of Monster drinks
was cited.
Those claims say that people suffered
adverse reactions after consuming
Monster Energy Drink, which comes in
24-ounce cans and contains 240 mil-
ligrams of caffeine, seven times the caf-
feine in a 12-ounce can of traditional cola.
The FDA noted that the allegations,
which date back to 2004, dont necessari-
ly prove the drinks are linked to the
deaths.
In a letter Friday, Durbin and
Blumenthal also cited a recent study in
Consumer Reports that found several pop-
ular energy drinks contained signicantly
more caffeine than the listed amount,
while others did not disclose the amount
of caffeine they had.
U.S. senators call on FDA to act on energy drinks
<< Stanford faces Washington State, page 13
El Camino records fth shut out of the season, page 12
Weekend, Oct. 27-28, 2012
BURLINGAME WINS CAT FIGHT: PANTHERS PICK UP FIRST BAY DIVISION WITH 31-7 VICTORY OVER HALF MOON BAY >>> PAGE 12
By Antonio Gonzalez
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SAN FRANCISCO Ryan
Vogelsong stood on the cut grass at
AT&T Park in his crisp San
Francisco Giants uniform, giving an
interview for Japanese broadcaster
NHK in English. No need for an
interpreter.
The backdrop on the scoreboard
said it all: World Series.
Halfway around the world and
back, Vogelsongs journey is ready
to go global. The resilient right-han-
der will start Game 3 in Detroit
opposite Anibal Sanchez on
Saturday night looking to pitch the
Giants one win away from another
championship and cap a comeback
that has become more improbable
each time out.
A lot of faith. A lot of hard
work, said Vogelsong, who will
take the mound with San Francisco
ahead 2-0 in the best-of-seven
series. You also have to have some
things go your way to get opportu-
nities.
For so many years, they so often
didnt.
Vogelsong was drafted in the fth
round by the Giants in 1998 and
became the primary piece of a trade
to get future ace Jason Schmidt
from the Pittsburgh Pirates in 2001.
The promising prospect later under-
went elbow ligament replacement
surgery, failed in the big leagues,
bounced out of the minors, had
mixed results in Japan, then strug-
gled with the Phillies and Angels
minor-league afliates and at age 33
gured his career might be over.
One last chance came a year ago
from the most unlikely team: the
defending World Series champion
Giants.
Vogelsong, now 35, didnt make
the club out of spring training. He
went back to riding buses and stay-
ing in motels for Triple-A Fresno,
not an easy decision with his wife,
Nicole, and son, Ryder, then 20
months old, left to share the burden.
While Vogelsong was sitting in
the stands at a game in Las Vegas
charting pitches between starts, his
Vogelsong took long journey to World Series start
REUTERS
Ryan Vogelsong,originally drafted by SanFrancisco,bounced around the
majors and minors, including a stint inJapan, before landing back with
the Giants. He is scheduled start Game 3 of the World Series Saturday.
Capuchino in control
By Julio Lara
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
From the students manning the snack shack
to the people watching just outside the chain-
linked fence, from the dance team selling cup-
cakes at 50 cents a piece to those in actual foot-
ball colors on the eld with 38 seconds left
on the scoreboard and the game hanging in the
balance on 4th and 17, everyone at Aragon
High School knew the do-or-die play was going
to Dons wide receiver Aldo Severson.
Most importantly, the Terra Nova defense
knew and yet, one snap and 31 yards later, No.
11 showed why on this particular Friday, there
wasnt a defense in San Mateo County that
could cover him.
On a perfectly thrown ball by Nat Blood,
Severson caught and scored the eventual game-
winning touchdown to stun the Tigers, giving
Aragon a 32-31 win over the three-time reign-
ing Peninsula Athletic League Bay Division
champions. It is Aragons rst win over Terra
Nova since 2008.
I just looked the ball in, Severson said of
the play. I really wasnt paying much attention
to the safety because I knew I couldnt jump up
for it. It was just going to land in the bread bas-
ket. It was a perfectly thrown ball by Nat. It
couldnt have been any better.
There was nothing about the play call, said
Aragon head coach Steve Sell, who celebrated
his birthday in victorious fashion. Everyone in
the stadium knew what we were doing with it
and it was just a quarterback and a wide receiv-
er making a great play. Every now and then you
get an athlete like Aldo Severson [who] just
makes plays.
Severson had an afternoon full of great plays.
The wide receiver caught 11 passes for 187 and
four touchdowns three in the fourth quarter
alone. With the extra points that No. 11 kicked,
Severson scored the games nal 18 points
Dons stun
Terra Nova
See GIANTS, Page 15
By Dave Skretta
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
KANSAS CITY, Mo. Two
teams oundering near the bottom
of the standings, meeting in late
October, shouldnt be enough to
stoke the passions of fan bases
weary of losing.
Unless its the Chiefs and Raiders.
There are few ercer rivalries than
this AFC West matchup of teams
with proud traditions that have fallen
on the hardest of times. This will be
their 107th meeting, and so rarely
has so little been on the line when
theyve met this early in a season.
The Raiders are 2-4 after rallying
for an overtime win over the Jaguars
last Sunday, while the Chiefs got a
much needed week off following a
miserable 1-5 start.
Any game, youre always desper-
ate to get a win, Raiders defensive
tackle Richard Seymour said, and
you can throw the records out in this
game, when you look at the Raiders
and Chiefs. Its always hard-fought
football and I dont expect anything
less this Sunday.
Hard-fought might be a relative
description this time, though.
The Raiders have won ve straight
at Arrowhead Stadium, but they
havent won on the road since the
last time they visited Kansas City
last December. That includes a 35-
13 rout at Miami and a 37-6 spank-
ing by Peyton Manning and the
Broncos earlier this season.
Of course, the Chiefs havent
exactly been defending the home
turf.
Kansas City is 3-10 over its last 13
games at Arrowhead, once regarded
as the loudest and most intimidating
venue in the NFL. That includes
blowout losses to Atlanta and San
Raiders, Chiefs set to renew rivalry at Arrowhead
See RAIDERS, Page 15
NATHAN MOLLAT/DAILY JOURNAL
Capuchinos Royal Ale, right, stops SanMateos Line Latu on fourth down to lock up a 30-20 win for the win Friday night inSanBruno.
By Nathan Mollat
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
At this point, Capuchino football coach
Adam Hyndman would just as soon skip the
third quarter.
For the second week in a row, the Mustangs
held a commanding lead at halftime, only to
see the opposition capitalize on Capuchino
mistakes to get back in the game.
Friday night during Capuchinos homecom-
ing, the Mustangs held a 17-0 lead at halftime
over San Mateo. But a big drive to start the
second half from the Bearcats, coupled with a
boneheaded mistake by the Mustangs,
allowed the Bearcats to cut their decit to just
four points, 17-13 late in the third quarter. A
San Mateo touchdown early in the fourth
quarter gave the Bearcats a 20-17 lead and
they had the Mustangs on their heels.
But if Hyndman has learned anything about
his team, its that the Mustangs know how to
nish. Capuchino used a 12-play, 82-yard
drive to score the go-ahead touchdown, a drive
that took nearly six minutes off the clock in
the fourth quarter. Capuchino running back
Justin Ewing then capped another monster
night with his third touchdown of the game
and the Mustangs escaped with a 30-20 win
over the Bearcats.
I need an EKG (heart test). Thats what I
need, said a relieved Hyndman after the
See CAP, Page 14 See ARAGON, Page 15
SPORTS 12
Weekend Oct. 27-28, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
By Nathan Mollat
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
For the rst 24 minutes, the Mills and El Camino football
teams were locked in a defensive battle, save for a Taj Childs
23-yard touchdown run late in the second quarter that gave El
Camino a 6-0 lead at halftime.
We just didnt execute (on offense), said El Camino
coach Mark Turner.
While the Colts offense may have struggled, their defense
was ring on all cylinders all game long. It was their defense
that kept them in the game until the offense could gure
things out. When they nally did, the Colts ran away from the
Vikings, posting a 32-0 win
Its the fth shutout of the season for El Camino.
Im just impressed with our defense, Turner said.
Putting up another shutout, its hard to do. I dont care who
youre playing. Its hard to shut people out. It takes a lot of
discipline.
The El Camino defense came up with four Mills turnovers
and sacked quarterback Harshal Lal four times.
Despite a second straight lopsided loss, Mills coach Mike
Krieger was satised with the way his team competed.
Playing without their best player in Antonio Jeffrey, who suf-
fered a knee injury in last weeks loss to San Mateo, as well
as several other starters, the Vikings were down to just 19
players. But Mills played with a lot of determination, which
is all Krieger asks of his team.
Last week, (we played) with little heart, Krieger said.
When you go 100 percent, you dont worry about the score-
board. Heart and effort were on display (Friday afternoon). It
was our best performance of the year (in that regard).
The tide turned early in the second half for El Camino, as
the Colts defense gave them some breathing room. Mills
took the second-half kickoff and was putting a nice drive
together. But El Caminos Brandon Gip stripped the ball from
a Mills ball carrier and went 50 yards the other way to put El
Camino up 12-0.
Mills next drive stalled out at Colts 29-yard line, where El
Camino took over on downs. Two plays later, the Colts had a
Colts pull away from Mills
By Julio Lara
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
The Burlingame football team is still breathing.
A week after suffering an embarrassing loss to Terra Nova,
coach John Philipopoulos and the rest of the Panthers knew it
was gut-check time one more loss, and the season was all but
over.
These kids are pretty resilient, Philipopoulos said. They
came out and I think there was a little embarrassment factor for
the players and the coaches. What I like about that is this pro-
gram is not accustomed to losing games like that. We dont like
that around here. And our kids responded, Monday through
Thursday, and it paid off today on Friday night.
The hard work paid off to the tune of a 31-7 victory over Half
Moon Bay that sets up a winner-take-all scenario next Friday
against Aragon High School. With the Dons beating Terra Nova,
Aragon in 2-2 and in temporarily control of the last Central
Coast Section automatic bid from the Peninsula Athletic League
Bay Division. At 1-3, the Panthers have to beat the Dons next
Friday on their home turf. So, while the mountain to climb is
steep, Burlingame is still alive.
Were seniors, said Burlingame running back Joe Mahe,
who rushed for 69 of the Panthers 282 yards Friday night. We
play with no regrets. We play around and have some fun. Thats
what we do every game. Thats going to be a tough game, but
were going to give them a challenge.
Leading 10-0 at halftime, Burlingame weathered the Half
Moon Bay storm in the third quarter. Despite being outgained
106 to 12 in that period, the Panthers used a huge 76-yard kick-
off return for a touchdown by Robby Baumgarten after the
Cougars had trimmed that lead to three points to seize the
momentum right back.
Everyone contributed, Philipopoulos said. I dont think we
played poorly. We just have to get off to a better start and capi-
talize on some opportunities. I felt like we moved the ball up
and down the eld. Dominated the time of possession. We held
on to the ball. Mistakes here and there kept us out of the end-
zone but credit [Half Moon Bay]. But Im really happy with the
effort coming out the second half.
The Panthers were also the beneciaries of four Half Moon
Bay turnovers.
Turnovers will kill you, said Cougars head coach Keith
Holden. Everyone knows that. I also think they hurt your
momentum. Everytime we got a bit of momentum, we turned
the ball over. So, they did hurt. They had some big plays that
hurt us, too.
Big plays were Burlingames theme in the second half actual-
ly.
After an early Mahe touchdown, it took a 20-yard eld goal
to make it 10-0 at recess.
Half Moon Bay cut into that lead on their rst second-half
possession when John Bali scored from four yards out.
From there, it was Baumgarten on the kickoff return and then
a 36-yard touchdown throw from Kevin Navas.
Burlingame put the nail in the cofn with 6:16 left in the
game on a 65-yard touchdown fun run courtesy of Manase Palu
to make it 31-7.
Hard practice, Palu said, this whole week was hard prac-
tice. Starting Monday, everyone came to lm. Everyone was
paying attention. Just hard work. Coach taught us well, they
taught us how to work hard.
Burlingame nished with 396 yards on offense and held Half
Moon Bay to 294 despite a third quarter when the Cougars
owned the football. Navas was 8 of 12 passing for 114 yards.
Carlmont 30, Hillsdale 14
Hillsdale quarterback Cole Carrithers was on point Friday
night as the Hillsdale Knights beat the Carlmont Scots 30-14.
The Scots started off the game quickly, with a powerful 44-
yard touchdown run by Jesse Gifford.
However, the Knights responded with Carrithers throwing for
176 yards and three touchdowns, two of them to wide receiver
John Paran (5 and 14 yards).
At the beginning of the fourth, Carlmont quarterback Derek
Gomez threw a 21-yard touchdown pass to Tevita Takitaki to
make it 23-14. But Hillsdales A.J. Bernal sealed the game with
a 24-yard touchdown run.
The win is the rst on the season for Hillsdale (1-6, 1-3 PAL
Lake).
Carlmont is now 1-6 overall but is still without a win in
league.
Daniel Wang of Carlmont High contributed to this report.
Burlingame
overwhelms
the Cougars
NATHAN MOLLAT/DAILY JOURNAL
El Caminos Anthony Hines cant get away from Mills Justin
Huang on this play, but Hines ended up with 216 yards
rushing on 18 carries.
See COLTS, Page 14
SPORTS 13
Weekend Oct. 27-28, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
By Antonio Gonzalez
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
STANFORD A power running
game and a dominant defense
against an Air Raid offense that has
yet to take ight.
The styles of Stanford and
Washington State couldnt be more
different. As of now, neither are their
places in the Pac-12 North Division
race.
The No. 19 Cardinal (5-2, 3-1)
look to stay in control of their league
title hopes when they host the
Cougars on Saturday, beginning two
straight games against far inferior
opponents than theyve faced in
recent weeks. Washington State (2-
5, 0-4) is still winless in Pac-12 play
under new coach Mike Leach and
has four lousy losses in a row.
With no margin for error in the
conference, thats all the motivation
Stanford needs starting a stretch
against cellar dwellers Washington
State and Colorado (1-6, 1-3) before
matchups with seventh-ranked
Oregon State and at No. 2 Oregon.
Were still able to meet all our
goals, Stanford quarterback Josh
Nunes said. We just need to keep
winning. Every game is going to be
a big game from here on out.
If Stanford sought anything extra
to stay focused, all it has to do is
look at how the team fared against a
similar spread offense last time.
The Cardinal defense has been
dominant for all but one game this
season: a 54-48 overtime victory
against Arizona on Oct. 6, when
Nunes rallied Stanford from a two-
touchdown decit in the fourth quar-
ter. They allowed 617 total yards
including 491 yards passing
against Rich Rodriguezs aerial
offense and struggled to keep up
with the fast pace.
The offense still has been mistake-
prone, too.
Stanfords 21-3 win at rival
California last week could have been
and perhaps should have been
even more one-sided after the
Cardinal outrushed the Golden
Bears 252 to 3 yards. Nunes threw
an interception and lost a fumble,
and Jordan Williamson missed two
eld goals.
Were not nearly as good as we
can be, Stanford fullback Ryan
Hewitt said. That alone is what
should drive us. We havent put
together a game thats even close to
four quarters of good football.
The Cougars have not been good
for most of the season.
At one point, Leach likened his
seniors to an empty corpse. He
saw an improved attitude in a 31-17
home loss to Cal two weeks ago,
saying we werent very corpselike
on the sideline.
Coming off a bye and getting
ready to play in Silicon Valley, the
never-afraid-to-say-anything Leach
even banned his players from post-
ing on Twitter. He declined to say
what prompted the decision.
For a team that relies so heavily on
the pass, there still is not a clear-cut
choice at starting quarterback either.
Jeff Tuel is back on top in a com-
petition that seems to change by the
possession. Leach had settled on
Connor Halliday as the starting
quarterback the past ve games until
the sophomore threw two rst-quar-
ter interceptions in a 31-17 home
loss to Cal and got benched.
Tuel entered the game and threw
for 320 yards and two touchdowns.
He took the majority of snaps with
the rst-team offense in practice and
is expected to start at Stanford
Stadium, where the Cardinal have
won six straight and 17 of the last 18
games.
Were not very consistent,
Leach said. We need to get good
everywhere. I dont think its any
one thing. Its a combination of not
being as sharp or experienced as we
could be in a number of positions.
Stanford coach David Shaw
praised Leach and Rodriguez for
their innovative offenses when they
rst joined the Pac-12 this season.
After what Rodriguezs Arizona
team did during Stanfords last
home game, Shaw only has more
respect for Leachs schemes. The
architect of the Air Raid at Texas
Tech just hasnt had the same con-
sistent production at Washington
State.
Theyve had some spots where
they are just dynamic, Shaw said.
Stanford tries to stay focused on Washington State
By Lynn DeBruin
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SALT LAKE CITY The jump
to the Pac-12 Conference isnt look-
ing so good right now for Utah,
which instead of contending for the
South Division title has started 0-4 in
league play for the second straight
season.
The question is whether the Utes
can turn it around, starting at home
against a Cal team that has seen its
own ups and downs.
We all know weve got to win,
said Utah freshman quarterback
Travis Wilson, who makes his third
start of the season Saturday night.
Everyone on this team wants to
make it to a bowl game. . I think one
win will turn it around.
One loss, that one to Cal, jump-
started the Utes last season as they
bounced back to win four straight and
ve of six, including a Sun Bowl vic-
tory.
Injuries to the offensive line could
make it tougher this year for Utah (2-
5, 0-4).
Plus, Cal (3-5, 2-3) still has its
share of playmakers, even if they
have struggled at times.
Theyve got talent across the
board, they just havent been able to
put it together, Utah coach Kyle
Whittingham said.
Case in point, Cal beat then-No. 25
UCLA and won at Washington State,
only to lose 21-3 last week against
Stanford, now No. 19.
We came off two big wins and an
emotional loss, Cal coach Jeff
Tedford said. It puts a knot in my
stomach to talk about last week. . We
took our lumps; now its time to
move forward.
While Utah is on its third quarter-
back, Cal senior Zach Maynard is in
his second year starting.
But it hasnt been easy. He has
been sacked 33 times, intercepted
eight and lost two of eight fumbles.
Maynard still has one of the Pac-
12s top receivers in junior Keenan
Allen, who needs just three catches to
become Cals all-time receptions
leader. Allens electrifying style is
evidenced by two of his touchdowns
this season being nominated for Play
of the Year.
Like Utahs offense (last in the
Pac-12), Cals needs a spark after
being held to a season-low 3 yards
rushing against Stanford.
Its not just one guy getting beat
every single play. Its right tackle
here, left guard there, quarterback
here ... the whole offense, said left
guard Jordan Rigsbee.
A year ago, Utah native Isi Sofele
rushed for 84 yards and a touchdown
in the 34-10 Cal win at Berkeley.
This season, the Golden Bears top
three rushers, C.J. Anderson, Sofele
and Brendan Bigelow, have com-
bined for 1,210 yards nearly dou-
ble that of Utahs top trio.
That said, Whittingham is expected
to give running back Kelvin York
more opportunities after he averaged
5.2 yards a carry in a 21-7 loss to
Oregon State.
Also indicative of Utahs offensive
struggles is the fact that a tight end,
sophomore Jake Murphy, is the Utes
leading receiver with 22 catches for
239 yards. It is the rst time a tight
end has led Utah in receiving since
1989.
Murphy, son of former Atlanta
Braves All-Star outfielder Dale
Murphy, scored Utahs only touch-
down on an 18-yard pass from
Wilson last week against the Beavers.
Cal, Utah both look to shake offensive woes
SPORTS 14
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game. I dont know if its being too complacent (to start the
second half) or what, but well look at it. When the fourth
quarter came around, when we needed our horses, they came
through.
Ewing had a second straight 300-plus yard game, nishing
with 303 yards on 42 carries, which puts him over the 2,000-
yard mark for the season. On the drive that gave the Mustangs
what turned out to be the game-winning touchdown, Ewing
carried the ball nine times on that 12-play drive.
Hes a different kind of back, Hyndman said.
You wont get any argument from San Mateo coach Jeff
Scheller. He and the Bearcats knew exactly what the Mustangs
would do hand the ball the Ewing early and often and
it was up to the Bearcat defense to stop him. While Ewing did
not break off one of his patented big runs, he gained six, seven
and eight yards consistently all night.
I think the mystique (of Ewing) and how hard he runs had
us on our heels, Scheller said. You cant simulate him in
practice. [Ewing] is the best player in the league.
With the win, the Peninsula Athletic Leagues Ocean
Division now becomes Capuchinos to lose. Both the
Mustangs and the Bearcats came into the game undefeated in
division play and the win leaves the Mustangs as the only
unbeaten team left in the ve-team division.
Early on, it appeared Capuchino (3-0 PAL Lake, 4-4 overall)
could do whatever it wanted against San Mateo (3-1, 4-4).
Ewing was basically unstoppable and the Mustangs defense
was shutting down a potent Bearcats attack, holding them to
just 48 yards of offense in the rst half.
After forcing San Mateo to punt on the rst possession of the
game, the Mustangs took over at the San Mateo 27-yard line
and needed just three plays to take a 7-0 lead with Ewing going
in from ve yards out.
The Capuchino defense stopped the Bearcats on downs on
their next possession, with the Mustangs taking over at their
own 34. They proceeded to march 66 yards on seven plays,
converting a fourth-and-2 when quarterback Paea Dauwe
faked a handoff to Ewing and raced around left end for a 10-
yard game. Ewing then scored from 10 yards out to give
Capuchino a 14-0 with 1:26 left in the rst quarter.
San Mateo couldnt take advantage when Capuchino fum-
bled a punt and when the Mustangs got the ball back, they
drove from their own 11 to the San Mateo 16 before settling
for a Jamie Vaquiz 40-yard eld goal to give Capuchino a 17-
0 lead at halftime.
And then it nearly all fell apart in the third quarter. After the
Bearcats defense stopped Capuchino on fourth down deep in
San Mateo territory, the Bearcats offense nally found a
rhythm. They drove 75 yards on 12 plays with Line Latu going
into the end zone from eight yards out to get San Mateo on the
board.
The Bearcats then got lucky when Capuchino forgot what to
do on kickoffs. San Mateo kicked deep and the Capuchino
deep man slipped as went to catch the ball. Instead of jumping
on the loose ball, he backed away, as if it were a punt. San
Mateo recovered arguably the deepest onside kick in the histo-
ry of football and took possession at the Mustangs 8-yard line.
Quarterback Taylor Sanft wasted little time in hooking up with
Larry Campbell for an 8-yard touchdown pass, giving San
Mateo back-to-back touchdowns over a nine-second span to
cut the Capuchino lead to 17-13.
Scheller knew, despite being down 17 at halftime, the
Bearcats had a chance to get back in the game.
Wed seen in lm, [the Mustangs] get tired or complacent
in the second half, Scheller said.
When Ewing had the ball stripped from him early in the
fourth quarter, San Mateo recovered and needed just three
plays to cover 46 yards, getting a defensive pass interference
penalty in the process. When Latu scored from 12 yards out,
San Mateo had a 20-17 lead.
Capuchino responded with its biggest drive of the night.
Facing second down at the San Mateo 4-yard line and every-
one expecting the ball to go to Ewing, the Mustangs dialed up
a pass play with Dauwe rolling to his left and hitting Zack
Kohtz for a 4-yard scoring strike to give Capuchino the lead
for good.
While Capuchino is now in the drivers seat for the Ocean
Division title, the Mustangs still have work to do. They still
have Carlmont and rival Mills on the schedule and as Scheller
said, Anything can happen.
Continued from page 11
CAPUCHINO
three-touchdown lead.
Following a Mills punt on its next possession, the Colts,
again, needed just two plays to nd the end zone. Starting
from his own 15, Hines took a handoff and was eventually
tripped up 84 yards later at the Mills 1-yard line. Josh Paed
punched it from a yard out and El Camino led 25-0 with
11:54 to play.
The Colts capped the scoring on a Jarrod Goff 1-yard run
to culminate a nine-play, 67-yard drive with 4:38 left in the
game.
We did run the ball well in the second half, Turner said.
Hines had a big game, rushing for 216 yards on 18 carries.
He had 55 yards at halftime. Mills got a strong performance
from Jaime Alfaro, who nished with 110 yards rushing on
22 carries.
For the last few weeks, hes shown he can run, Krieger
said. He can run and hes tenacious.
Said Turner: That (Mills) team came out ready. At the
end, we just had too many athletes. At the end, our athletes
took over.
Continued from page 11
COLTS
NHL players hit ice before 12,000 in Chicago
ROSEMONT, Ill. Nearly 12,000 Chicago Blackhawks
fans were treated to a high-scoring charity hockey x Friday
night, while the real game was the posturing between the
NHL and its locked-out players.
Members of the Blackhawks 2010 Stanley Cup team
skated against a squad made up of a grab bag of other NHL
players, including Anaheims Bobby Ryan, Carolinas
Jordan Staal and Minnesota defenseman Ryan Suter.
For the record, the Blackhawks lost 16-15 in a shootout,
but Chicago star Patrick Kane had ve goals.
But after the NHL canceled games through November ear-
lier Friday, much of the buzz at the Allstate Arena home
of the AHLs Chicago Wolves focused on the work stop-
page.
The lockout has claimed 326-regular-season contests and
the NHL maintains playing a full 82-game schedule is no
longer possible after a league-imposed deadline for a deal
with the NHLPA passed.
Leading the conversation was NHLPA executive director
Donald Fehr, who met with players earlier in the day. Fehr
and players say the NHLs primary negotiation tactic seems
to be stall and follow a scripted timetable.
Sports brief
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manager asked for his cell phone number.
Barry Zito had been placed on the disabled list
with a sprained right foot and the Giants were
looking for a replacement.
Sure enough, just before Vogelsong boarded
the bus, his phone rang. Giants Vice President
Bobby Evans was on the other end with news
that set Vogelsong on a path to this World
Series: he was heading back to the big leagues
to make a ll-in start for San Francisco
against who else? the Pirates.
He held the Pirates to four hits and two runs
in 5 2-3 innings for his rst major league vic-
tory in almost ve years.
I just believe that God had a plan for me
this whole time, Vogelsong said. I feel like
all the stuff that I went through going to
Japan and going to winter ball at 33 years old,
and getting back here last year, is stuff that He
was doing for me to get me prepared for this
moment.
Now Vogelsong is living in one of
Americas most scenic cities amid a reshaped
reality.
No more eating sh guts as he did to bond
with Japanese teammates. Instead, hes spray-
ing sparkling wine from Napa Valley with the
rest of his Giants teammates after every series
victory.
The minors are long behind him, and so is
the silence at the end of some starts in Japan.
The San Francisco sunsets have held some of
his most shining moments, with fans chanting
Vogey! Vogey! louder than they ever had in
his Game 6 victory in the NL championship
series against St. Louis starting in the
California twilight.
He pitches with conviction, reliever
Jeremy Affeldt said.
Vogelsong earned All-Star honors last sea-
son and was the NL ERA leader as late as
Aug. 12 at 2.27 this year. His last 10 regular-
season starts lifted that gure to 3.37, but just
like Vogelsong had so many times before, he
rallied.
Vogelsong became the rst Giants starter to
complete at least six innings this postseason
when he allowed four hits over seven innings
in a 7-1 victory in Game 2 of the NL champi-
onship series against St. Louis. Then he struck
out a career-best nine on his biggest stage yet,
allowing only four hits and one run in San
Franciscos 6-1 win in Game 6.
Hes throwing the ball as well as anybody
on the staff, said Giants manager Bruce
Bochy, who had no problem putting
Vogelsong in line for a Game 7 start.
With San Francisco winning 8-3 and 2-0 in
the rst two games, Vogelsong has a chance to
help end the series far sooner.
He earned himself a shot to be the latest
Giants pitcher to shut down Triple Crown
winner Miguel Cabrera, slugger Prince
Fielder and the hard-hitting Tigers.
Its great to be here with everything Ive
been through, but Ive got to pitch my next
game, Vogelsong said. The two starts before
really mean nothing right now. Its about
pitching the game on Saturday.
Continued from page 11
GIANTS
Diego and a 9-6 defeat to Baltimore that only
Bronko Nagurski could have loved.
Things have been so bad that Chiefs fans
hired an airplane to tow a banner at their last
home game asking for the general manager to
be red and the quarterback to be benched.
Well, they got at least half of what they
wanted.
Scott Pioli is still calling the shots in Kansas
City, but Matt Cassel has become one of the
NFLs most highly paid backups. Brady Quinn
started in his place two weeks ago at Tampa
Bay when Cassel wasnt cleared to play fol-
lowing a concussion, and over the off week,
coach Romeo Crennel made the decision to
stick with the former rst-round draft pick
under center.
Look, theyre a division opponent. Its a big
game for us. Our focus is purely on the task at
hand, and the objectives were trying to
accomplish, said Quinn, no stranger to intense
AFC West rivalries after spending last season
in Denver.
We need every single person rooting for us
and cheering for us, come good or bad.
Theres been no shortage of bad this season,
though Cassels a big part of that.
He was completing about 58 percent of his
passes for 230 yards of game, most of that
when games were out of hand. And his nine
interceptions and ve fumbles lost made him
more turnover prone than just about any other
TEAM in the NFL through their rst ve
games.
Quinn was 22 of 38 for 180 yards with two
interceptions both on tipped passes at
Tampa Bay. It was his rst start since 2009,
when he was with the Browns.
We havent seen him in a while, so what we
saw last game in Tampa, I thought he managed
the game well, Crennel said. He showed
some poise in the course of the game, and as I
mentioned, he was rusty. I think that he will
get better with more reps and also more play-
ing time.
Quinn could hear a lot of boos from the
hometown fans when he takes the field
Sunday.
Call it collateral damage.
His big right tackle, Eric Winston, will be
playing at Arrowhead for the rst since his
inammatory comments following a loss to
Baltimore. Winston called some fans who
cheered when Cassel was hurt over the course
of that game disgraceful, a stance on which
hes never wavered although he has clari-
ed to say it was only a small percentage of
fans cheering.
So in many ways, the crowd on Sunday has
the potential to be hostile toward everyone.
Its certainly going to be difcult on the
Raiders, if for no other reason than the Chiefs
hated rivals havent lost in Kansas City since
Nov. 19, 2006.
I dont know theres any advantage to be
had, said rst-year Raiders coach Dennis
Allen. When we kick the ball off on Sunday,
itll be our players trying to execute against the
chiefs players, and whoever executes best will
probably win the game.
Continued from page 11
RAIDERS
The deciding moment of the game was the
opening drive of the second half where they
rushed the ball and just knocked the holy crap
out of us, said Terra Nova head coach Bill
Gray. And that took a little of our heart away.
The Tigers led 21-6 at recess behind the
superb play of Kren Spain, who sprayed the
ball around the Aragon football eld to the tune
of 226 yards on 17 completions. He threw
touchdown passes of 45, 2 and 15 yards to
Dominic Ortisi, Matt Motylewski and Jaylen
James, respectively.
Sandwiched between those scores was a rst-
quarter touchdown from Blood to David
Manoa of 23 yards that made it 7-6 at the time.
But Terra Nova looked very much in control
for the rst 24 minutes.
I told them from the beginning that it was
going to be up to the defense if we wanted this,
Manoa, who doubles as a defensive end, said.
We were struggling in the rst half but perse-
vered. I think it was just keeping our heads in
the game keep ghting. It was a great effort
by the guys. We gave our hearts.
Aragon sure dug deep. Grays aforemen-
tioned deciding moment arrived in the form
of an 11-play, 73-yard drive to start the second
half that made it a 21-14 game. Terra Nova got
a large dose of Marcel Jackson, who carried
most of the load in the absence of J.D. Elzie.
Jordan Crisologo ran the ball hard for Aragon
as well.
We rebounded a little, Gray said, talking
specically about another Spain touchdown
pass, this one to Joe Sherry from 17 yards with
4:32 left in the third and then a 37-yard eld
goal that made it 31-14 with 15 seconds left in
the period.
But it was then that Severson took over.
Having only caught three balls in the rst half,
No. 11 went off. With 9:24 left, he caught an 8-
yard touchdown pass: 30-21 Terra Nova. Then,
after a what Sell called a critical Isiah Atchan
interception, Blood hooked up with No. 11
again on a 54-yard long-distance call that came
on a 4th-and-6 with 6:28 to go in the game: 30-
26 Terra Nova.
The Aragon defense followed that with a stop
that left 4:11 on the clock. Some tough running
by Jackson, plus a huge pass interference on
third down, set the Dons up with 1st-and-10 at
the Tiger 24-yard line.
Terra Nova got a sack to back Aragon up to
the 31 and following two incompletions, the
stage was set for Severson.
Everyone in San Mateo county knows
theyre going to throw the ball to No. 11, Gray
said. We knew they were going to throw the
ball to No. 11 and the kid makes great catches.
Blood threw the ball to a spot near the 15-
yard line and even with two defenders in near-
perfect position, Severson was still able to
come up with the ball and stroll into the end
zone to make it 32-31 Aragon.
Very rarely when he caught ball today was
he wide open, Sell said. Every catch that he
made was highly contested. Our quarterback
made great, clutch throws.
I try not to think about it, Severson said
about being in a zone. I just try to play foot-
ball. Keep calm. Im just trying to have fun. I
love it.
Blood nished the afternoon with 234 yards
passing. Jackson rushed for 117 and Aragon
racked up 412 yards of offense. They were out-
gained by Terra Nova, who tallied 476. After a
big rst half, Spain was held to just 98 yards
passing in the second half.
Continued from page 11
ARAGON
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SPORTS 17
Weekend Oct. 27-28, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SANTA CLARA The San
Francisco 49ers are beating up oppo-
nents with a power rushing attack, and
nobodys enjoying it more than the big
bodies leading the way up front.
A physical offensive line featuring
2010 rst-round draft picks Mike Iupati
and Anthony Davis has established itself
as a force in the trenches, opening holes
for a ground game that ranks second in
the NFL in yards rushing and rst in
rushing average.
Seattle entered last weeks game with
the NFLs second-ranked rushing
defense, but the 49ers blasted through
the Seahawks for 175 yards to highlight
a 13-6 slugfest victory that put San
Francisco alone atop the NFC West at 5-
2.
That kind of performance has become
typical for the 49ers, who have rushed
for 175 yards or more four times already
this season and look to do it again
Monday night at Arizona in another key
divisional game.
San Franciscos line is expecting
another physical battle against an
Arizona defensive front that features
Darnell Dockett and Calais Campbell,
who said earlier this week that the 49ers
are a team that both he and Dockett
really hate with a passion.
The Niners have held the upper hand
in several of those kinds of battles this
season. San Franciscos ve offensive
line starters average 6-foot-5 and 317
pounds, and they pack a punch.
Were big guys leaning on you all
game, Davis said Friday. We just do
our job, and it wears you out. Its just
natural it happens like that. Its just one
will against another, and some guys are
tougher than other guys.
Davis and Iupati have started every
game for the 49ers since they were draft-
ed, becoming in 2010 just the third pair
of rookie offensive linemen to start every
game since the NFL went to a 16-game
schedule in 1978. Since then, they have
set the tone of physicality for San
Franciscos line particularly Iupati.
49ers pounding opponents with ground game
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct PF PA
New England 4 3 0 .571 217 163
Miami 3 3 0 .500 120 117
N.Y. Jets 3 4 0 .429 159 170
Buffalo 3 4 0 .429 171 227
South
W L T Pct PF PA
Houston 6 1 0 .857 216 128
Indianapolis 3 3 0 .500 117 158
Tennessee 3 4 0 .429 149 238
Jacksonville 1 5 0 .167 88 164
North
W L T Pct PF PA
Baltimore 5 2 0 .714 174 161
Pittsburgh 3 3 0 .500 140 132
Cincinnati 3 4 0 .429 166 187
Cleveland 1 6 0 .143 147 180
West
W L T Pct PF PA
Denver 3 3 0 .500 170 138
San Diego 3 3 0 .500 148 137
Oakland 2 4 0 .333 113 171
Kansas City 1 5 0 .167 104 183
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct PF PA
N.Y. Giants 5 2 0 .714 205 137
Philadelphia 3 3 0 .500 103 125
Dallas 3 3 0 .500 113 133
Washington 3 4 0 .429 201 200
South
W L T Pct PF PA
Atlanta 6 0 0 1.000 171 113
New Orleans 2 4 0 .333 176 182
Tampa Bay 2 4 0 .333 148 136
Carolina 1 5 0 .167 106 144
North
W L T Pct PF PA
Chicago 4 1 0 .800 149 71
Minnesota 5 2 0 .714 167 131
Green Bay 4 3 0 .571 184 155
Detroit 2 3 0 .400 126 137
West
W L T Pct PF PA
San Francisco 5 2 0 .714 165 100
Arizona 4 3 0 .571 124 118
Seattle 4 3 0 .571 116 106
St. Louis 3 4 0 .429 130 141
ThursdaysGame
Tampa Bay at Minnesota, 5:20 p.m.
NFL STANDINGS
@Portland
3:30p.m.
NBC
10/27
End
Regular
Season
Playoffs
TBA
vs.Miami
1:05p.m.
CBS
12/9
@Arizona
5:30p.m.
FOX
10/29
@Rams
10 a.m.
FOX
12/2
vs.Bears
5:00p.m.
ESPN
11/19
@Saints
1:20p.m.
FOX
11/25
vs.Rams
1:25p.m.
FOX
11/11
Bye
vs.Broncos
5:20p.m.
NFL-NET
12/6
@Chiefs
1:15p.m.
CBS
10/28
vs.Browns
1:25p.m.
CBS
12/2
vs.Tampa
1:05p.m.
FOX
11/4
@Ravens
10a.m.
CBS
11/11
vs.Saints
1:05p.m.
FOX
11/18
@Bengals
10a.m.
CBS
11/25
@Detroit
5:07p.m.
FOX
Oct. 27
@Detroit
5:07p.m.
FOX
Oct. 28
@Detroit
5:07p.m.
if necessary
Oct. 29
vs. Detroit
5:07p.m.
if necessary
Oct. 31
vs.Detroit
5:07p.m.
if necessary
Nov. 1
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA
y-Kansas City 18 7 9 63 42 27
x-D.C. 17 10 6 57 52 42
x-Chicago 17 11 5 56 45 40
x-New York 15 9 9 54 54 46
x-Houston 14 8 11 53 48 39
Columbus 14 12 7 49 42 43
Montreal 12 15 6 42 45 50
Philadelphia 10 17 6 36 37 42
New England 8 17 8 32 38 44
Toronto FC 5 20 8 23 35 60
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA
y-San Jose 19 6 8 65 71 42
x-Seattle 15 7 11 56 51 32
x-Real Salt Lake 17 11 5 56 46 35
x-Los Angeles 15 12 6 51 58 47
x-Vancouver 11 13 9 42 35 41
FC Dallas 9 13 11 38 40 45
Colorado 10 19 4 34 42 50
Portland 8 16 9 33 33 55
Chivas USA 7 18 8 29 22 56
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie.
x- clinched playoff berth
y- clinched conference
Wednesdays Games
Sporting Kansas City 2, Philadelphia 1
Saturdays Games
New York at Philadelphia, 10:30 a.m.
New England at Montreal, 11 a.m.
D.C. United at Chicago, 1 p.m.
San Jose at Portland, 3:30 p.m.
Houston at Colorado, 6 p.m.
Vancouver at Real Salt Lake, 6 p.m.
Sundays Games
Toronto FC at Columbus, 1 p.m.
Chivas USA at FC Dallas, 4 p.m.
Seattle FC at Los Angeles, 6 p.m.
MLS STANDINGS
THURSDAY
GIRLSVOLLEYBALL
Carlmont def. Mills 25-19, 25-17, 25-14 (High-
lights:C Jackman 13 kills,4 aces,3 digs,2 blocks;
Lay 4 kills, 2 digs, block; Espiritu 4 kills, 4 digs, ace).
Records Carlmont 10-2 PAL Bay, 15-10 overall;
Mills 0-12, 4-20.
Crystal Springs def. Mercy-Burlingame 20-25,
26-24, 25-20, 25-22 (Highlights: CS Kaiser 22
kills, Nora 11 kills; Du 27 digs; Gold 40 assists).
Records Crystal Springs 9-1 WBAL Skyline, 20-
5 overall.
Westmoor def. Capuchino 25-13, 25-10, 25-12
(Highlights:W Marinel Alcantara 6 kills;Tom 15
assists; Marlene Alcantara 16 digs; Lin 3 aces).
Records Westmoor 7-5 PAL Ocean,19-13 over-
all.
Sacred Heart Prep def. Notre Dame-Belmont
25-15, 25-18, 25-21(Highlights: SHP Shannon
12 kills,5 blocks; Merten 18 assists,10 digs; Smith 7
kills, 6 blocks). Records Sacred Heart Prep 26-4
overall.
BOYSWATERPOLO
Serra20, Mitty9
Serra654520
Mitty3114 9
Serra goal scorers Buljan, Kmak 4; Bradley, Za-
mecki 3; Yee 2; Mirt, Gordon, Villar, Blais. Serra
goaltender saves Olujic 17.
GIRLSTENNIS
MenloSchool 7, SacredHeart Prep0
SINGLES Yao (MS) d. Nordman 6-2, 6-3; G. Ong
(MS) d. Schuman 6-1, 6-1; Eliazo (MS) d. Parsons 6-
0, 6-0; H. Ong (MS) d. Lynch 6-1, 6-0. DOUBLES
Bronk-Gradiska (MS) d. Westereld-Ackley 6-3, 6-
4; Hoag-Kvamme (MS) d. Casey-Harman 6-0, 6-1;
Lacob-Tran (MS) d. Reed-Pluvinage 7-5, 7-6(2).
Records Menlo School 10-0 WBAL Foothill, 15-
7 overall.
LOCAL SCOREBOARD
Sunday, Oct. 28
Jacksonville at Green Bay, 10 a.m.
Indianapolis at Tennessee, 10 a.m.
Carolina at Chicago, 10 a.m.
Miami at N.Y. Jets, 10 a.m.
San Diego at Cleveland, 10 a.m.
Atlanta at Philadelphia, 10 a.m.
Seattle at Detroit, 10 a.m.
Washington at Pittsburgh, 10 a.m.
New England vs. St. Louis at London, 10 a.m.
Oakland at Kansas City, 1:05 p.m.
N.Y. Giants at Dallas, 1:25 p.m.
New Orleans at Denver, 5:20 p.m.
Monday, Oct. 29
San Francisco at Arizona, 5:30 p.m.
NFL SCHEDULE
NFL
NFLFined the Baltimore Ravens $20,000 for not
listing S Ed Reed on the teams injury report with a
torn labrum in his right shoulder, a violation of the
leagues procedures for reporting injury informa-
tion.
ATLANTAFALCONSActivated DT Corey Peters
from the reserve injured list. Waived CB Terrence
Johnson.
JACKSONVILLEJAGUARSSigned CB Kevin Rut-
land. Placed LB Daryl Smith on injured reserve.
MINNESOTAVIKINGSPlaced CB Chris Cook on
the injured reserve/return list.
NEWENGLANDPATRIOTSPlacedCBRas-I Dowl-
ing on injured reserve.
TENNESSEETITANSSigned S Tracy Wilson from
the practice squad. Placed RB Javon Ringer on in-
jured reserve.
BASEBALL
AmericanLeague
BOSTONREDSOXNamed Torey Lovullo bench
coach.
CHICAGOWHITE SOXPromoted Rick Hahn to
senior vice president/general manager; Howard
Pizer to senior executive vice president, and Ken
Williams to executive vice president.
KANSAS CITYROYALSClaimed RHP Chris Vol-
stad off waivers from the Chicago Cubs.
OAKLAND ATHLETICSNamed Darren Bush
bullpen coach.
National League
HOUSTONASTROSClaimed OF Che-Hsuan Lin
off waivers from the Boston Red Sox. Designated
RHP Enerio Del Rosario for assignment.
SAN DIEGO PADRESAnnounced RHP Dustin
Moseley and RHP Tim Stauffer have become free
agents after clearing outright waivers.
NBA
NEWYORKKNICKSWaived G Chris Smith.
SACRAMENTOKINGSWaived F Tony Mitchell,F
Willie Reed and C Hamady Ndiaye.
MLS
MLSFinedFCDallasDJair Benitezanundisclosed
amount for hisact of embellishment whichbrought
the game into disrepute in the 65th minute of an
Oct. 21 game against Seattle. Fined LA Galaxy MF
Robbie Keane an undisclosed amount for public
criticismof theofcialsafter anOct.21gameagainst
San Jose.
COLLEGE
IOWASTATEAnnounced G Maurice Jones trans-
ferredfromSouthernCal andwill beeligiblestarting
with the 2013-14 season.
MISSOURISuspended mens basketball senior
G Michael Dixon and mens basketball freshman G
Dominique Bull, indenitely for undisclosed viola-
tions of team rules.
TRANSACTIONS
18
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Friday
Night
Rock on
Broadway
Saturday
Night
Dutch Uncle
with Daylight
the untamable vast of the ocean.
In 1994, 16-year-old Jay Moriarity was
caught on camera suffering one of the craziest
wipeouts the world had seen. Tumbling down
a wave standing nearly four stories tall, the
teen experienced what all big wave surfers
experience; the washing machine effect of
being held down and tossed around below the
massive waves above. Wiping out is cardinal
to big wave surng, and those who brave
Mavericks are no exception.
The story of Santa Cruz native Moriarity is
one of bravery, endearment and soul. The lm
Chasing Mavericks hits the big screen this
weekend in a re-creation of Moriaritys inspir-
ing legend. The Santa Cruz and Half Moon
Bay surf communities revere the young surfer
who had an untimely death while free diving
in the Maldives a day before his 23rd birthday.
Up-and-coming actor Jonny Weston, 24,
plays the role of Moriarity. After reading the
script, he felt compelled by the chronicle fol-
lowing a young man struggling with familial
relationships and nding solace in his mentor,
avid Mavericks surfer Frosty Hesson, played
by Gerard Butler. Amidst the struggles of
love, loss and the attempts of his peers to lead
him astray, Moriarity determines to stay true
to his values.
When approached by Moriarity, Hesson is
initially hesitant as the training to conquer
Mavericks is reliant on mental, emotional and
physical trials. The pinnacle of the lms emo-
tion relies on the bond between Moriarity and
Hesson. Started as a pupil and mentor rela-
tionship, the kinship morphs into a father and
son supporting one another in their quest.
The land-bound scenes likely came with
ease in comparison to the perils of swimming
in 48 degree water facing 40-foot waves,
Weston said. Preliminary examination of the
waves compares to looking into the eyes of a
beast; after initial shock and fear comes
recognition of an underlying beauty, Weston
said.
Jeff Clark was the rst man to ride the
momentous waves once known to few. His
years of experience and deduction of the
seemingly irrational modulation of the waves
allowed him to create the annual surf compe-
tition Mavericks Invitational thats attended
by 30,000 people, Clark said.
[Mavericks] is really dangerous and its
really big. People come here from all over the
world to challenge it, Clark said.
The cinematography in the lm is second to
none; surng scenes in Chasing Mavericks
are engrossing and viewers are left to postu-
late the labor of the cameramen. The lms
production crew set Clark up with a boat from
which he lmed most of the surng scenes,
Clark said. In the climactic portrayal of
Moriaritys hallowing wipeout, numerous wit-
nesses, including surfers, are shown strug-
gling to maintain their composure.
At the time of Moriaritys death, Clark
signed a poster. On it, he wrote playing at
Mavericks will never be the same without you
Jay, Clark said. The young surfer is gravely
missed by those who knew him, yet his life is
inspirational to all.
I want them to know that Jay was the most
goal-oriented, most aggressive, powerful per-
son that I think anybody had ever met, and he
didnt allow that to stop him from being in the
moment and connecting with people every
single day, Weston said.
Creating the big-budget Hollywood movie
is meant to entertain and Westons guileless
demeanor has led him to notoriety; yet it is
Jay who he praises.
All the respect and attention and love thats
being directed toward me is misdirected,
because its really about the project and about
Jay and its about the story, Weston said.
Although he was unable to meet the man he
embodied in the lm, he made lasting connec-
tions with Hesson and Moriaritys widow
Kim, Weston said. The involvement of Jays
closest condants allowed Weston to immerse
himself in a character he reveres, and he ded-
icates the lm to Hesson and Kim Moriarity.
Weston is obliged for his authenticity and
delity to Jay.
Jonny Weston was the perfect cast for the
Jay movie. Its about as perfect of a character
and he portrays Jay as he was; kind, humble,
quiet, erce when he got in the ocean, Clark
said.
Chasing Mavericks is spectacled by the
surf cinematography and captivates viewers
with sentiments of bravery and conviction.
The local surf communities on the Northern
California coast abide by the saying live like
Jay. It is the admiration of the young man and
his impressive ability toward positivity in
times of trial that make him legendary.
I just want people to look at the lm and
say that the most important thing in life is to
get to know yourself better and then share it
with people, Weston said.
Continued from page 1
MAVERICKS
district acted quickly and conducted a full
audit. They truly played a major role. They
really did a good job in helping us build a
strong case.
Over six years, Witham, who worked in
the information technology department at
the College of San Mateo, is accused of
using district credit cards to make many pur-
chases. Mostly, Witham bought electronics
computers, hard drives, iPhones but
also a bunk bed. Products were often then
sold online for a profit, said Wagstaffe. In
the process, receipts were falsified and com-
puters of other employees were used.
Bustos, a former district technology employ-
ee, is thought to have been an accessory.
On Thursday, Ron Galatolo, San Mateo
County Community College District chan-
cellor, sent an email to all employees
explaining that unauthorized transactions
had been discovered about a month ago. A
forensic investigation uncovered a history of
such purchases and involvement of a second
employee, Galatolo wrote. Both men are
facing charges for accessing the computers
of other employees, he wrote before encour-
aging all to change network passwords fre-
quently.
This has been a deplorable and discon-
certing affair; however, the district acted
swiftly to address the misappropriation and
to seek restitution, Galatolo wrote. In
addition, we engaged the District Attorneys
Office early in the process to ensure that all
evidence was preserved to support prosecu-
tion of the individuals involved to the fullest
extent possible under the law.
Witham appeared in court Friday and
pleaded not guilty. He remains in custody on
$1 million bail and is due back in court Nov.
14 for a Superior Court review. Bustos
entered a not guilty plea Oct. 12. Hes out on
$250,000 bail and due back in court Nov. 2
to set a preliminary hearing date.
Heather Murtagh can be reached by email:
heather@smdailyjournal.com or by phone: (650)
344-5200 ext. 105.
Continued from page 1
CAUGHT
But the cities of San Bruno and San
Francisco as well as the commissions
own consumer advocacy branch said
Mitchell should not preside over talks
because the commission had given
PG&E advance notice of his hiring.
The organizations did not question the
talents of Mitchell who brokered the
1998 Northern Ireland treaty but were
concerned that he and his law rm, DLA
Piper, previously had represented public
utilities.
What seemed to prompt the concern
was simply the way we decided to
appoint him, without prior consultation
with the parties, said Commissioner
Mike Florio, who chairs one of the pro-
ceedings intended to determine the level
of nes for PG&E.
Over the past two years, the company
has faced grueling public hearings over
potential malfeasance leading up to the
2010 blast, which killed eight people
and destroyed 38 homes in San Bruno, a
bedroom community just south of San
Francisco.
Commission staff said in an internal
letter that settlement talks could restart
Monday, now without a mediator.
Were looking forward getting back
to the negotiating table, said San Bruno
City Manager Connie Jackson. It was
forced mediation and a forced mediator
that we objected to.
Continued from page 1
MITCHELL
By Rachel Feder
T
o whom it may concern (Mr. Obama
or Mr. Romney):
In my rst week of beginning journalism, I
learned the importance of telling the truth. To
write a sound article, I learned that facts must
rst be checked and then
supported by actual evi-
dence. This process,
while annoying and at
times tedious, is what
makes newspapers a
trustworthy source of
news. It is this extremely
important process that I
think you two ought to
relearn.
Opinions are not facts. No matter how
much you wish something to be true, simply
stating it on live television will not make it
into truth. When Cinderella wanted to go to
the ball, she didnt stand in front of a camera
repeating the mantra, I have a pumpkin
coach. That would be stupid.
Cinderella just sang a few songs and wait-
ed for her fairy godmother to come and do
the dirty work for her. I think you could all
learn a lesson from Cinderella. A dream is a
wish your heart makes, but stating that wish
that your heart made on live television in
front of thousands of people doesnt magical-
ly make it true. You need a fairy godmother
for that luckily, Cinderella had one.
And while Hillary Clinton may be the clos-
est thing America currently has to a fairy
godmother, Im still doubtful of her magical
Open letter to the
future president
Honoring
Ephron
Ten of
her best lines
SEE PAGE 20
Halloween Fun Fest
Pumpkin patch, face painting, jump
houses, treats and music will be at Third
Avenue and San Mateo Drive in San Mateo
from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday with trick-
or-treating along Third Avenue from 1 p.m.
to 2 p.m. Costumes recommended. Free.
Redwood Citys 16th Annual
Halloween Spooktakular
Carnival games, a monster maze, festive
crafts and treats. Best for children ages 10
and under.The Spooktakular will take place
at noon to 3 p.m. Saturday with a costume
parade at 1:30 p.m. Red Morton
Community Center, 1120 Roosevelt Ave.,
Redwood City. $5.
Mr. Nobles Neighborhood
Hamden Holmes Noble (1844-1929), the
creator of Cypress Lawn Cemetery,
contemplated a memorial park of
distinction. Join historian Michael Svanevik
for a walk through Mr. Nobles
Neighborhood 1:30 p.m. Saturday at
Cypress Lawns East Gardens.The walk
takes place at 1370 El Camino Real in
Colma. It is a leisurely walk on hilly terrain.
Wear comfortable walking shoes and dress
appropriately for the unpredictable Colma
weather. Free.
Royally, Diabolically, Dastardly
Fun Halloween Book Party
A coven of childrens book authors and
illustrators celebrate ghosts, dastardly
dames and real princesses. See 3-D ghosts
come to life, including the Flying
Dutchman and Bloody Mary.The party
takes place 4 p.m. Saturday at the Dove &
Olive Works Building, 178 South Blvd. in
San Mateo. Free.
Oktoberfest: Beer Tasting and Music
Cicerone Certied Beer Server Jason Senior
explains the brewing process and teaches
audiences about the different styles of
beer. Small samples of different styles of
lagers and ales provided for tasting.The
event takes place 3 p.m. Sunday at the
Belmont Library, 1110 Alameda de las
Pulgas in Belmont.
Best bets
By Christy Lemire
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Given that its based on the true story of a
man with polio who spends most of his time
in an iron lung, The Sessions is not as
painfully heavy-handed as it might sound.
And given that its about this mans nervous
attempts to lose his virginity at age 38, its
also not as obnoxiously wacky as it might
sound.
Instead, The Sessions occupies a safe
gray area somewhere in the middle. It has
some difcult and heartfelt performances as
well as moments of uncomfortable honesty,
but ultimately writer-director Ben Lewins
lm feels too slight, too pat, and too wildly
overhyped out of its festival showings. It is, in
short, a nice story but not one thats told
with any particular stylistic panache or emo-
tional power.
Still, the hugely versatile John Hawkes
gives a subtly funny, impressive performance
which must have been a massive physical
challenge. The lanky but intimidating co-star
of Winters Bone and Martha Marcy May
Marlene is called upon here to act entirely
with his face and voice, frequently having to
keep his torso still while lying down in a con-
torted posture.
Hawkes stars as Mark OBrien, the
Berkeley-based poet and journalist whose
1990 article, On Seeing a Sex Surrogate,
inspired the script. Lewin who also con-
Sessions tells feel-good, low-key tale
Cloyingly family-friendly
Chasing Mavericks comes across formulaic and safe
By Christy Lemire
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
By all accounts, Jay Moriarity was a lovely young man:
a talented, dedicated surfer whose enthusiasm and opti-
mism were infectious throughout the Santa Cruz com-
munity where he was well known and loved.
But that doesnt exactly make him the most com-
pelling gure to place at the center of a lm, at least
not in the one-note way in which hes depicted in
Chasing Mavericks.
This cloyingly family-friendly production tells the
story of the late surfer (played by newcomer Jonny
Weston) in 1994, when hes only 15 years old and
dares to take on the dangerous and potentially deadly
Mavericks surf break just up the coast from his home.
Jay wants to conquer these waves ... well, because theyre
there. And he enlists a gruff, reluctant local legend,
Frosty (Gerard Butler, struggling to hide his Scottish
accent), to help him train.
This sets up a Karate Kid-style, mentor-stu-
dent, father-son formula in which the plucky
underdog awakens early each day to complete a
series of arduous tasks in preparation for a once-
in-a-decade, ve-story-tall wall of water. Every
step of the way is accompanied by the plainly
spelled-out reasons why it matters. Nothing is left
to our imagination or interpretation.
Not a single character or moment rings true in
the script from Kario Salem, based on a story by
Jim Meenaghan and Brandon Hooper. No one
feels like a fully eshed-out human being, from
Jays alcoholic mother (Elisabeth Shue, doing
the best she can with an underwritten role) to
the pretty childhood friend who would
become the love of his life (Leven Rambin)
to the tough kid who arbitrarily bullies
him. They are all coming-of-age-
See CHASING, Page 22
The Sessions is a nice story but not one thats told with any particular emotional power.
See SESSIONS, Page 22
See STUDENT Page 22
WEEKEND JOURNAL 20
Weekend Oct. 27-28, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
Sports Teams, Clinics, Camps, Classes & Training
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Basketball Classes, Clinics & Private Lessons
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650-654-4444
595 Industrial Road, San Carlos 94070
(Mid-Peninsula at Hwy 101 & Holly Street)
By Christy Lemire
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
LOS ANGELES Nora
Ephrons characters were
highly verbal and hyper-
analytical. They had a
head for the absurd
and a heart for
romance. But
above all, they
were funny.
To honor the
writer and director,
who died of
leukemia Tuesday
at 71, were devot-
ing the Five Most
space to her this
week. But Ephron
wrote so many
classic and
q u o t a b l e
lines, were
choosing 10
instead of five.
We probably
could have cho-
sen 10 from
When Harry Met
Sally ... alone.
1. Still the funni-
est line from any
movie Ephron wrote:
from 1989s When
Harry Met Sally ...:
Ill have what
shes hav-
ing. Its delivered by an onlooker (director
Rob Reiners mother) after Ryan launches
into a raucous fake orgasm at a packed
Katzs Delicatessen after Billy Crystal
insists that no woman has ever faked it with
him. Crystal actually came up with the line,
according to lore, but its such a crucial piece
in Ephrons canon that we have to include it.
***
2. Also from When Harry Met Sally ....
In a different restaurant, before the fake
orgasm scene, Ryan insists shes had great
sex with a guy named Sheldon.
Crystal: Shel? Sheldon? No, no, you did
not have great sex with Sheldon.
Ryan: I did too.
Crystal: No you didnt. A Sheldon can do
your income taxes, if you need a root canal,
Sheldons your man. But humpin and
pumpin is not Sheldons strong suit. Its the
name: Do it to me Sheldon, youre an ani-
mal Sheldon, ride me big Shel-don. Doesnt
work.
***
3. The big New Years Eve speech Crystal
delivers to Ryan at the end of When Harry
Met Sally .... This is vintage Ephron in a
nutshell.
I love that you get cold when its 71
degrees out. I love that it takes you an hour
and a half to order a sandwich. I love that
you get a little crinkle above your nose when
youre looking at me like Im nuts. I love that
after I spend the day with you, I can still
smell your perfume on my clothes. And I
love that you are the last person I want to talk
to before I go to sleep at night. And its not
because Im lonely, and its not because its
New Years Eve. I came here tonight because
when you realize you want to spend the rest
of your life with somebody, you want the rest
of your life to start as soon as possible.
***
4. From 1998s Youve Got Mail, which
Ephron wrote and directed, when Tom Hanks
and Meg Ryan are walking through a
farmers market ruling out the people they
wont date.
Hanks: I could never be with someone
who likes Joni Mitchell. Its clouds illusions
I recall/I really dont know clouds at all.
What does that mean? Is she a pilot? Is she
taking flying lessons? It must be a metaphor
for something but I dont know what it is.
***
5. The last lines of Youve Got Mail,
after all the gesturing and posturing, the sab-
otage and mistaken identity, they meet in
Riverside Park and each realizes who the
other is.
Hanks: Dont cry, Shopgirl. Dont cry.
Ryan: I wanted it to be you. I wanted it to
be you so badly.
***
6. From 1993s Sleepless in Seattle,
which Ephron also wrote and directed. Tom
Hanks son has called into a late-night talk
radio show for him. As he explains what was
so special about his late wife, Ryan is listen-
ing in her car across the country.
Well, how long is your program? Well, it
was a million tiny little things that, when you
added them all up, they just meant we were
supposed to be together. And I knew it. And I
Honoring Ephron: 10 of her best lines
See EPHRON, Page 22
WEEKEND JOURNAL 21
Weekend Oct. 27-28, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
HOPE EVANGELICAL
LUTHERAN CHURCH
600 W. 42nd Ave., San Mateo
Pastor Eric Ackerman
Worship Service 10:00 AM
Sunday School 11:00 AM
Hope Lutheran Preschool
admits students of any race, color and national or ethnic origin.
License No. 410500322.
Call (650) 349-0100
HopeLutheranSanMateo.org 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
SAN MATEO
BUDDHIST TEMPLE
Jodo ShinshuBuddhist
(Pure Land Buddhism)
2 So. Claremont St.
San Mateo
(650) 342-2541
Sunday English Service &
Dharma School - 9:30 AM
Reverend Ryuta Furumoto
www.sanmateobuddhisttemple.org
Church of Christ
CHURCH OF CHRIST
525 South Bayshore Blvd. SM
650-343-4997
Bible School 9:45am
Services 11:00am and 2:00pm
Wednesday Bible Study 7:00pm
Minister J.S. Oxendine
Clases de Biblicas Y Servicio de
Adoracion
En Espanol, Si UD. Lo Solicita
www.church-of-christ.org/cocsm
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
Non-Denominational
Church of the
Highlands
A community of caring Christians
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
REDWOOD CHURCH
Our mission...
To know Christ and make him known.
901 Madison Ave., Redwood City
(650)366-1223
Sunday services:
9:00AM & 10:45AM
www.redwoodchurch.org
By Derrik J. Lang
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
When the Kinect system was
unleashed two years ago for the
Xbox 360, there were promises that
the camera-based, gesture-detecting
gadget could turn users bodies into
paintbrushes, allow them to chat
with a virtual lad named Milo,
transform real-world skateboards
into digital ones and transport
wannabe Jedis to a galaxy far, far
away.
The reality has been far less won-
drous, setting an extremely low bar
for Fable: The Journey, one that
this spinoff in the popular Fable
fantasy role-playing series from
Lionhead Studios easily gallops
over with an enchanting gameplay
mechanic that virtually outts play-
ers hands with a pair of magical
gauntlets and the reins to a powerful
horse.
Fable: The Journey (Microsoft,
for the Xbox 360, $49.99) is set 50
years following the revolutionary
events of Fable III. The heroic
bloodline has dried up and evil has
returned to the realm of Albion.
Unlike its wide-open predecessors,
Fable: The Journey is a linear
adventure where players serve as a
daydreaming gypsy named Gabriel.
After hes separated from his car-
avan, Gabriel and his trusty steed,
Seren, encounter blind seer Thersea,
a staple in the Fable series who is
again voiced by deliciously raspy
Harry Potter actress Zoe
Wanamaker. She guides Gabriel on
a sweeping quest to reunite with his
tribe and harness powers capable of
taking down any foes that stand in
his path.
The hand-based controls are
assigned to a variety of actions that
include spinning a crank to engage
an elevator, cracking reigns to force
Seren to trot faster, reaching up to a
tree to pick an apple for her to eat,
lifting a treasure chest lid up and
wielding a Force-like spell to tug
enemies across the landscape and
thrust open closed passageways.
Other than the frustratingly slow
rst hour or so of the game, Fable:
The Journey is impressively paced,
seamlessly alternating between
guiding Gabriels horse-drawn car-
riage through picturesque vistas,
leading him on intense high-speed
chases and blasting magic out of his
hands in ground-based, on-the-rails
confrontations. There are a few puz-
zles, too.
The controls arent perfect.
Neither is sorcery, right?
Sometimes an electric bolt or re-
ball goes ying off in the wrong
direction on the screen. Such an
issue would be unforgivable in a
shooting game. It feels less severe
here. The developers included an
aftertouch ability that allows most
spells to be redirected after theyre
cast.
The controls are certainly a
departure from the other Fable
titles, but Fable: The Journey
retains the series colorful aesthetic,
rich storytelling and unexpected
humor. The game nally answers
several questions about the mysteri-
ous Theresa, who is far more fasci-
nating than new protagonist,
Gabriel, a paint-by-numbers reluc-
tant hero.
As the game unfolds, Gabriel
earns new powers that require more
complex gestures to cast, and he can
unlock stronger renditions of spells.
He must also tend to Seren by feed-
ing and watering her, plucking
arrows from her coat and healing
her wounds. It all helps to establish
a bond of Black Beauty and War
Horse-like proportions with the
virtual stallion.
While there are a few stellar
Kinect games Dance Central,
Fruit Ninja Kinect and Child of
Eden come to mind but Fable:
The Journey is the rst to success-
fully mix motion with emotion. It
doesnt feel like its ghting the
technology and makes for an expe-
rience that, unlike most silly Kinect
diversions, is truly complete. Three
and a half stars out of four.
Fable: The Journey casts Kinect magic
Fable:The Journey is a linear adventure where players serve as a daydreaming gypsy named Gabriel.
By Lou Kesten
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
When I was a kid, my favorite toy
was the Bag of Animals, an assort-
ment of plastic critters gathered
from various discount stores in my
neighborhood. It was an unlikely
mix of farm animals, wild beasts
and the occasional monster, but I
had the kind of imagination in
which cows, lions and dragons all
played for the same team.
Skylanders Giants (Activision,
for the Xbox 360, PlayStation 3,
Wii, $74.99) brought back memo-
ries of Bag of Animals, turning my
coffee table into a menagerie of
birds, sh, lizards and even some
sentient plants. Two differences:
The Skylanders gurines are much
prettier and you dont have to make
up your own adventures.
For those of you who missed its
debut last year: Skylanders
comes with a Portal of Power that
plugs into your game console.
When you place a gurine on the
portal, the character appears on
your TV screen, inside the
Skylanders video game. The
original release offered 32 playable
characters, and the new edition
adds 16 more including eight
giant-size creatures.
You dont need all 48 toys to play
Skylanders Giants. The starter kit
comes with the game software, the
portal and three creatures one
giant and two regular-size. You can
complete the game with just one
Skylander, but to get the full expe-
rience, youll want to spring for ve
more (which cost $10 each).
See, each Skylander controls one
of eight elements water, tech,
earth, magic, re, undead, life and
air. Bonus areas of the game are
accessible only by creatures of a
particular element, so if you want
to see the entire game world, youll
need one of each. And on occasion
youll need the brute strength of a
giant to break through an obstacle.
So were talking about $125 to
get the complete Skylanders
Giants experience although, if
you bought last years edition, you
can use the same portal and g-
urines. Of course, hardcore collec-
tors will want all the new characters
as well as the updated versions of
last years favorites.
Is it worth it? Well, the video
game itself is solid and at times
delightful. The story is paper-thin
youre out to save the Skylands
from a high-strung lunatic named
Kaos but provides adequate
motivation to explore the airborne
islands and battle a succession of
wittily designed monsters. On the
default difculty level, its quite
easy, but just right for kids who
arent ready to take on Call of
Duty. (And even grown-ups need a
break sometimes.)
However, obsessive collectors
say, the kind of people who need to
round up all 48 Skylanders will
nd Giants much more time-con-
suming. Toys for Bob, the develop-
ment studio, has crammed the
Skylands with treasure chests,
scrolls and goofy hats.
Skylanders Giants bigger in every way
WEEKEND JOURNAL
22
Weekend Oct. 27-28, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
powers. Thus far, she hasnt been able to
bring peace to the Middle East, cure cancer
or any of the other wishes my heart has
made. Ive also noticed a suspicious lack of
glitter in her wardrobe, and never have I
heard her sing to the press.
Id like a fairy godfather, though. He does-
nt need to wear tights or have a good
singing voice. In fact, he doesnt even need
to be a fairy. He just needs to be able to lead,
listen and he must value honesty. I know that
in many ways, a fairy godfather would be
easier to nd than a politician like this, but I
have faith that although you two may have
forgotten what properties the truth possesses,
you will soon learn that it is far more magi-
cal and powerful than any lies.
So as a roughly Cinderella-aged girl, I
would like to request from my fairy godfa-
ther the truth. I want to know the truth about
foreign policy, tax programs, the state of the
economy, equal and civil rights and whether
the environmental movement has a future. I
want to know my choices, and I want to
know that my options are backed with facts.
Its easy to blindly choose to follow an ide-
ology one knows nothing about, accepting
lies as facts and never thinking twice. But
this generation of young voters wants the
truth. We want to know that our vote will
count for something, and that the man we
vote for stands for something. The only way
to ensure this is cold, hard facts.
Although, in the spirit of truthfulness, I
wouldnt mind if he sang a little song. As
long as it was a truthful one, that is.
Rachel Feder is a senior at Burlingame High
School. Student News appears in the weekend edi-
tion. You can email Student News at news@smdai-
lyjournal.com.
Continued from page 19
STUDENT
movie types.
But this is most troublingly the case with
Jay himself who, in the hands of the angelic
Weston, comes off as singularly sweet and
upbeat, without an ounce of complexity or
even garden-variety teen angst. (Jay
Moriarity died in 2001, the day before his
23rd birthday, in a free-diving accident in
the Maldives.) With his curly blonde locks
and big blue eyes, hes consistently eager
and guileless and actually a little boring, as
is the film itself.
Chasing Mavericks is credited to two
longtime directors, Curtis Hanson and
Michael Apted, because Apted had to step in
to complete the picture when Hanson was
suffering from some health issues.
Some of the surfing footage is spectacular
but the film as a whole lacks the kind of
tonal and aesthetic imprimatur youd want
to see from a respected veteran, much less
two.
The film features some well-known names
from the world of surfing but that doesnt
add much authenticity; despite the inherent
peril involved in the sport, and in this partic-
ular location, everything feels very clean and
safe.
The surfer dudes dont go around spouting
stereotypically idiotic bro slang to each
other, but they dont feel like real people,
either.
Chasing Mavericks, a Fox 2000 release,
is rated PG for thematic elements and some
perilous action. Running time: 115 minutes.
One and a half stars out of four.
Continued from page 19
CHASING
tracted polio as a child lays out the details
of Marks daily existence in matter-of-fact
fashion, and with zero condescension. He can
breathe on his own for a few hours at a time,
he can turn the pages of a book or dial a phone
with a stick in his mouth, and while he cant
move anything from the neck down, he can
still feel sensation.
Hence, his interest in visiting Cheryl Cohen
Greene, a married sex therapist played with an
appealing directness (and a great deal of nudity)
by Helen Hunt. Their body language sometimes
literally reveals everything about them in the
rst of their six scheduled meetings, making
The Sessions the rare lm to address sexual-
ity in such an unadorned, judgment-free way.
While the suggestion of a deeper romantic
connection between the two feels forced, their
shared sense of humanity and self-deprecating
humor always make their meetings com-
pelling. Hunt radiates a kindness and decency
that helps keep the lm grounded.
William H. Macy gets some laughs, as well,
as the Catholic priest who helps Mark recon-
cile his curiosity with his deep faith. Macys
portrayal dees some of the expectations that
viewers might have of the clergy: I know in
my heart that God will give you a free pass on
this one, he says in giving his blessing to
Mark to pay a stranger for sex.
Afterward, the priest will bring over a six-
pack of beer to hear all the juicy details. The
Sessions similarly has a fascination with inti-
macy and similarly, it means well.
The Sessions, a Fox Searchlight release, is
rated R for strong sexuality including graphic
nudity and frank dialogue. Running time: 95
minutes. Two and a half stars out of four
Continued from page 19
SESSIONS
knew it the very first time I touched her. It
was like coming home, only to no home Id
ever known. I was just taking her hand to
help her out of a car and I knew. It was like
... magic.
***
7. Also from Sleepless in Seattle. Rob
Reiner explains to Hanks that dating is dif-
ferent now than it was the last time he was
out there.
Hanks: What is tiramisu?
Reiner: Youll find out.
Hanks: Well, what is it?
Reiner: Youll see.
Hanks: Some woman is gonna want me to
do it to her and Im not gonna know what it
is!
***
8. From Heartburn (1986), directed by
Mike Nichols, which Ephron wrote based on
her own marriage to Carl Bernstein. Meryl
Streep confronts Jack Nicholson about the
affair hes been having with a drawer full of
telltale receipts.
I know about you and Thelma Rice. I
know everything, its all here. You didnt
even have the decency to hide the evidence,
you just threw it in a drawer. Hotels, motels.
You couldnt even pay cash like a normal
philanderer. You charged everything. I mean
look at this flowers, look at all these flow-
ers that you bought her! And you occasional-
ly brought me home a bunch of wilted zin-
nias.
***
9. Also from Heartburn: Streep and
Nicholson are bickering over a chicken leg
during a picnic with friends.
Streep: You know, this is not your moth-
ers house where you do something like that
and everybody thinks its cute.
Nicholson: If its not my mothers house,
then why are you talking to me like Im your
kid?
***
10. From 2009s Julie & Julia, which
Ephron wrote and directed. Amy Adams, as
blogger Julie Powell, explains why the Julia
Child cookbook has been important to her
since childhood.
When I was 8, my fathers boss came to
dinner and it was a really big deal. And my
mother made boeuf bourguignon. But it was-
nt just boeuf bourguignon. It was Julias
boeuf bourguignon. And it was like she was
there, like Julia was there in the room on our
side, like some great, big, good fairy. And
everything was going to be all right.
Continued from page 20
EPHRON
WEEKEND JOURNAL 23
Weekend Oct. 27-28, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
By Susan Cohn
DAILY JOURNAL
SENIOR CORRESPONDENT
SAN FRANCISCO OPERA FREE
NOV. 10 COMMUNITY OPEN
HOUSE WELCOMES FAMILIES.
San Francisco Opera hosts a Community
Open House at the War Memorial Opera
House on Saturday, Nov. 10, from 10:30
a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Celebrating the
Companys 90th Season, the Open
House is free to the public and features
events and activities for individuals and
families who have a curiosity about
opera and are interested in learning more
about the world of opera and stage pro-
duction. Family activities in the opera
house lobbies include prop-making, a
scavenger hunt and two screenings with
a live introduction of Carmen for
Families The Movie! at 11 a.m. and
1:05 p.m.
Musical presentations at 11:35 a.m.
and 1:05 p.m. feature music from Tosca
and Lohengrin with San Francisco
Opera Music Director Nicola Luisotti,
the San Francisco Opera Orchestra and
Chorus, soprano Melody Moore and
tenor Brian Jagde who stars in the
role of Mario Cavaradossi in Tosca.
Technical demonstrations at 11 a.m.,
12:30 p.m. and 2 p.m. highlight set-
building and lighting elements of the
Tosca production.
The home of the San Francisco Opera
is the 1932 War Memorial Opera House
at 301 Van Ness Ave. at Grove Street,
across from the rear facade of San
Francisco City Hall. The Opera House is
one of the last Beaux-Arts structures
erected in the United States and has
3,146 seats plus 200 standing room
places. The Performing Arts Garage is
on Grove between Franklin and Gough
streets. BART lines serve the Civic
Center station three blocks away at
Market and Eighth streets. The War
Memorial Opera House food and
refreshment concessions, as well as the
San Francisco Opera Shop, are open
during the Community Open House. For
more information visit
sfopera.com/openhouse or call San
Francisco Opera at (415) 864-3330.
While tickets are not required to the
Community Open House, registering
online at sfopera.com/openhouse enters
you in a random drawing to win four
tickets to San Francisco Operas The
Secret Garden, the world-premiere fam-
ily opera co-presented with Cal
Performances March 2 and 9, 2013.
WORLD PREMIERE FAMILY
OPERA OF THE SECRET GAR-
DEN. Frances Hodgson Burnetts
beloved classic of childrens literature
comes alive in a new opera created for
the entire family. A pampered young girl
born to privilege nds herself alone in a
bleak and unfamiliar land, until she dis-
covers the hidden wonder of an aban-
doned secret garden. Unexpected friend-
ships and a new life blossom as she
makes the garden ourish again, leading
both young and old toward a path of
healing and understanding. Sung in
English with English supertitles. Music
by Nolan Gasser and Libretto by Carety
Harrison. Workshops take place before
the March 2 and March 9, 2013 per-
formances at Zellerbach Hall, UC
Berkeley. For more information visit
sfopera.com/gardenworkshop.
FREE OPERA-IN-AN-HOUR
DVDS FOR SCHOOLS. One-hour ver-
sions of San Francisco Opera perform-
ances of The Magic Flute, The Elixir of
Love and Girl of the Golden West are
available for teachers in the San
Francisco Bay Area to use in their class-
rooms. Take your students on a magical
journey with a 60-minute version of The
Magic Flute, Mozarts famous opera,
perfect for all ages. The Magic Flute is
the charming story of Prince Tamino and
bird catcher Papagenos journey to res-
cue Pamina, a beautiful princess who
has been kidnapped by the magician
Sarastro. Along the way they nd their
true loves and discover the virtues of
wisdom and forgiveness. This produc-
tion was presented for families at San
Francisco Opera in 2007 and is in
English. A perfect introduction to the
magic of opera, the Elixir of Love for
Schools DVD is a condensed one-hour
version of composer Gaetano
Donizettis delightful comedy about the
course of true love made smooth by a
magic potion. This charming produc-
tion, set in Napa Valley circa 1915, was
performed in English at San Francisco
Opera in 2008. Puccinis Girl of the
Golden West is set during the Gold Rush
and has it all: a superb soprano, a dra-
matic love triangle and connections to
California state history curriculum. This
new production was performed in Italian
at San Francisco Opera in 2009. The
DVDs for Schools come equipped with
subtitles and cast interviews, and con-
nect to K-12 educational materials at
www.sfopera.com/edmaterials. If you
work with students in the San Francisco
Bay Area, and would like to receive a
free DVD, contact San Francisco
Operas Education Department at educa-
tion@sfopera.com or (415) 551-6296.
Please note, these DVDs are to be used
for educational purposes only.
Admission fees cannot be charged for
viewing the DVDs.
Susan Cohn is a member of San Francisco
Bay Area Theatre Critics Circle and the
American Theatre Critics Association.
D. ROSS CAMERON / SAN FRANCISCO OPERA
San Francisco Opera presents Carmen for Families The Movie! at its Community
Open House on Saturday, Nov. 10 at the War Memorial Opera House.
Richard North Patterson and Lenny Mendonca
Brews and Views: Richard North Patterson and Lenny
Mendonca. Patterson discusses his latest novel Fall from
Grace as well as the impending election with Mendonca,
director of global management consulting firm McKinsey
and Company and founder of the Half Moon Bay Brewing
Company. Snacks provided. Beer, wine and other bever-
ages for sale. 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 1. Half
Moon Bay Brewing Company, 390 Capistrano Road, Half
Moon Bay. 728-2739 or hmbbrewingco.com.
Sim Van der Ryn
Architect Sim Van der Ryn is acknowledged as a leader
in sustainable architecture whose driving professional
interest has been applying principles of physical and social
ecology to architecture and environmental design. He
appears as part of the Fall Lecture Series presented by the
American Institute of Architects San Mateo Chapter. 7
p.m. Friday, Nov. 2. San Mateo Public Library. 55 W.
Third Ave. San Mateo. Free parking in the Librarys
Garage.
Bill Van Horbec
Learn to Manage Young Trees. Bill Van Horbec of
Bartlett Trees talks about the importance of managing and
structurally pruning young established trees to promote
the desired shapes and forms and to help minimize struc-
tural defects as the tree matures. 1 p.m. 3 p.m. Sunday,
Nov. 4. Kohl Pumphouse in San Mateo Central Park. Ninth
and Palm avenues in San Mateo.
www.SanMateoArboretum.org. 579-0536.
Frank Damon
College of San Mateo Political Science professor Frank
Damon discusses the results of the presidential election. 7
p.m. Thursday, Nov. 8. Burlingame Library. Lane Room,
Burlingame Public Library, 480 Primrose Road,
Burlingame. 558-7444, ext. 2.
Sidhartha Jandill
Stay Fit Where You Sit: Stretching Your Way to Better
Health. Sidhartha Jandill shares exercise tips as part of the
Free Health and Wellness Lecture Series for Active Adults
and Seniors. For ages 55 and older. 10:15 a.m. to 11:15
a.m. Tuesday, Nov. 13. Burlingame Recreation Center, 850
Burlingame Ave., Burlingame. 558-7300.
All events are free unless otherwise noted. Please check before
the event in case of schedule changes.
ABCs This Week 8 a.m.
Stephanie Cutter, deputy campaign manager for
President Barack Obamas re-election campaign; former
House Speaker Newt Gingrich.
NBCs Meet the Press 8 a.m.
Govs. John Kasich, R-Ohio; John Hickenlooper, D-Colo.;
Scott Walker, R-Wis.
CBS Face the Nation 8:30 a.m.
Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel; Sen. John McCain, R-
Ariz.; former Govs. Haley Barbour, R-Miss., and Jennifer
Granholm, D-Mich.
CNNs State of the Union 3 p.m.
David Axelrod, adviser to the Obama campaign; Reince
Priebus, Republican National Committee chairman; Gov.
Bob McDonnell, R-Va., and former Gov.Ted Strickland, D-
Ohio.
Fox News Sunday 8 a.m.
Sens. Mark Warner, D-Va.; Mark Udall, D-Colo.; Rob
Portman, R-Ohio; and Ron Johnson, R-Wis.
Sunday news shows
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Its tough to improve a video game that
has been so excellent for the past several
years, but 2K Sports has found ways to
make NBA 2K13 (for the Xbox 360 and
PlayStation 3, $59.99) even better with
some help from the leagues most famous
owner.
Along with uid gameplay, enhanced
graphics and a smoother control scheme,
this years edition of the best-selling bas-
ketball franchise welcomes rapper and
minority owner of the Brooklyn Nets
Jay-Z as executive producer.
From the start, Jay-Z makes his pres-
ence known. The introduction is like the
opening of one of his electrifying con-
certs, with his Public Service
Announcement serving as the sound-
track to a medley of highlights, from
Russell Westbrooks thunderous one-
handed dunk to Josh Smiths soaring
alley-oop slam. Jay-Z selected 24 songs
for the games soundtrack, and they fea-
ture some of musics top acts, including
himself, Kanye West, Coldplay, U2, Nas
and Roy Ayers.
But Mr. Beyonces star power isnt the
only thing elevating this franchises game.
One of the new elements in NBA 2K13
is signature skills, which assigns star play-
ers a variety of traits that make them spe-
cial commodities. For example, LeBron
James has ve different traits, including
Chasedown Artist, which allows the reign-
ing NBA Finals MVP to chase opponents
down to negate shots on fast breaks.
Another improvement is the integration
of the MyPlayer and MyCareer
modes. In MyPlayer, you are able to
build a player from scratch and purchase
everything from game-day accessories to
casual clothing with virtual currency.
From there, you can take your created
player and insert him into MyCareer,
where your player is chosen as the No. 1
overall pick in the NBA draft.
Jay-Z scores as NBA 2K13 delivers again
WEEKEND JOURNAL
24
Weekend Oct. 27-28, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
SATURDAY, OCT. 27
Museum Docents Training. 8 a.m. to
5 p.m. Learn how to lead and assist
hands-on school programs on
different themes of local history. Free.
For more information call 299-0104
ext. 231.
San Bruno American Legion Post
No. 409 Community Breakfast. 8:30
a.m. to 11 a.m. The American Legion
San Bruno Post No. 409, 757 San
Mateo Ave., San Bruno. Scrambled
eggs, pancakes, bacon, ham or
sausage and French toast will be
served. There will also be juice, coffee
or tea. $8. $5 for children under 10.
For more information call 583-1740.
Burpies for Boobies. 9 a.m. to 10 a.m.
Gunn High School, 780 Arastradero
Road, Palo Alto. Run two miles and
complete 100 burpies along the way.
Winner gets $100 cash prize. $40
suggested entry fee. All proceeds go
to the American Cancer Society. For
more information visit
thepsti.com/burpees-for-boobies.
Electronic Recycling, Paper
shredding and Clothing Drive. 9
a.m. to 1 p.m. Beresford Park, 2720
Alameda de las Pulgas. There will be
electronic recycling and document
shredding as well as a clothing drive.
Free. For more information visit
tinyurl.com/smrecycle.
Fall San Bruno Mountain Native
Plant Sale. 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Mission
Blue Nursery, 3435 Bayshore Blvd.,
Brisbane. Help celebrate San Bruno
Mountain and native plants. For more
information call (415) 467-6631.
Alzheimer Association: Circle of
Care Education Conference. 9 a.m.
to 3 p.m. Crowne Plaza Hotel, 1221
Chess Drive, Foster City. Opportunity
for families caring for loved ones with
Alzheimers or dementia to learn
more about the disease, common
challenges and hope for the future.
$40. To register visit
conference.kintera.org/COC2012. For
more information call 962-8111.
Preschool Family 29th Annual Fun
Day. 9:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. 4120
Middlefield Road, Palo Alto. Raffle,
train rides, carnival games, magic
shows, live music, food and bake sale,
used book sale and much more. Free
admission. For more information call
856-0833.
23rd Annual Burlingame High
School Play-A-Thon. 9:30 a.m. to 4
p.m. Burlingame Train Station, 200
Burlingame Ave., Burlingame. Enjoy
continuous musical entertainment as
the Burlingame High School bands
and choirs perform all day. Watch the
parades down Burlingame Avenue at
11 a.m. and 3 p.m. Enjoy homemade
goods and purchase raffle tickets to
win prizes donated by music families
and local merchants. Free. For more
information email
batesmeow@gmail.com.
Halloween Event and Helicopter
Pumpkin Drop. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Hiller Aviation Museum, 601 Skyway
Road, San Carlos. Creepy Crafts.
Games and prizes. Join the fun. Come
in costume. Helicopter pumpkin drop
at noon. Event included with
museum admission. Adult $12,
seniors and kids $8, under 4 free. For
more information call 654-0200.
St. Matthews Catholic Grammar
School Class of 1962 Celebrates 50
Years Since Graduation. 10:30 a.m.
910 S. El Camino Real, San Mateo.
There will be a tour of the campus at
10:30 a.m. and a luncheon at the
Poplar Creek Golf Course at noon. For
more information visit
www.stmatthewcath.org.
San Brunos Second Annual Trick or
Treating Up and Down The
Avenue. 11 a.m. Costume judging
starts at noon at 445 San Mateo Ave.
Trick-or-treat the south end of San
Mateo Ave. with participating
merchants. Participating merchants
will have an orange pumpkin on their
door or in their window. For more
information call 228-4698.
Halloween Fun Fest. 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Third Avenue and San Mateo Drive,
San Mateo. There will be a pumpkin
patch, face painting, jump houses,
treats, music and trick-or-treating
along Third Avenue. Trick-or-treating
will take place from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m.
Costumes recommended. Presented
by the Downtown San Mateo
Association. Free. For more
information call 342-5520.
Apple Tasting. Noon to 3 p.m. New
Leaf Community Markets, 150 San
Mateo Road, Half Moon Bay. Come by
and sample some delicious varieties
of apples during peak season. For
more information contact
patti@bondmarcom.com.
Redwood Citys 16th Annual
Halloween Spooktakular. Noon to 3
p.m. Red Morton Community Center,
1120 Roosevelt Ave., Redwood City.
There will be carnival games, a monster
maze, festive crafts, treats, activities and
more. There will also be a costume
parade at 1:30 p.m. Best for children
ages 10 and under. $5. For more
information call 780-7311 or visit
redwoodcityevents.com.
Pumpkin Carving with Pacific Art
League.Noon to 3 p.m. 668 Ramon St.,
Palo Alto. Bring your imaginations,
pumpkins are provided. For more
information contact Karen Kambe at
marketing@pacicartleague.org.
Millbrae Lions Halloween Carnival
andMosterMarch. Magnolita Avenue,
Millbrae. Free carnival games, prizes,
kids activities, Halloween photo set and
family-friendly entertainment. Monster
march costume parade at 2 p.m. Trick-
or-treating in Broadway after the
parade. For more information call 697-
7324.
Common Brights Fall Art Showcase.
1 p.m. to 4 p.m. San Mateo County
Library, Laurel Room, 55 W. Third Ave.,
San Mateo. Come enjoy live acoustic
music by local musicians curated by
Mark Fish of Hillsdale High School and
CSM and a silent auction. For more
information call 388-4933.
The Golden Gate Radio Orchestra. 3
p.m. Crystal Springs UMC, 2145 Bunker
Hill Drive, San Mateo. Come enjoy great
music from the American Songbook.
$15. For more information call 871-
7464.
Phantom Tollbooth Halloween
Symphony Party. 3 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Canada College Main Theater, 4200
Farm Hill Blvd., Redwood City. $25, $20
or $10 for children. For more
information visit
redwoodsymphony.org.
Royally, Diabolically, Dastardly Fun
Halloween BookParty.4 p.m. Dove &
Olive Works Building, 178 South Blvd.
San Mateo. A coven of childrens book
authors and illustrators will celebrate
Ghosts, Dastardly Dames and Real
Princesses. See 3-D ghosts come to life,
including the Flying Dutchman and
Bloody Mary. Free. For more
information email
craig@reachandteach.com.
Haunting at the Union Cemetery. 5
p.m. to 8 p.m. Union Cemetery, El
Camino and Woodside Road, Redwood
City. Adults only.There will be ashlight
tours, ghost stories, tarot card reading,
a rafe and a costume contest. $30 per
person. For more information visit
eventbrite.com/hauntingat.
Cha Cha and East Coast Swing
HalloweenFundraiser DanceParty. 5
p.m. to 11:30 p.m. Boogie Woogie
Ballroom, 551 Foster City Blvd., Suite G,
Foster City. International Cha Cha Class,
5 p.m. to 6 p.m. East Coast Swing Lesson
and Dance Party, 8 p.m. Halloween
Fundraiser Dance Party, 9 p.m. $25 for
lesson and dance party, $20 for dance
party. For more information visit
www.boogiewoogieballroom.com.
13th Annual San Carlos Lions Club
Tri-tip Dinner. 5:30 p.m. 1336 Arroyo
St., San Carlos. All proceeds go to San
Carlos Youth and Community Services.
$30. For more information contact
lakshmlyokoyama@yahoo.com.
Eric Van James and Stuart Yasaki.
6:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. Broadway Grill,
1400 Broadway, Burlingame. Jazz, R&B
and Adult-Contemporary music. For
more information call 343-9333.
California Dreamin Concert. 7 p.m.
Calvary Lutheran Church, 401 Santa
Lucia Ave., Millbrae. Free, but
donations are appreciated to support
the music ministry at calvary. For more
information call 588-2840 or visit
www.calvarylutheran-millbrae.org.
Cabaret. 7 p.m. Little Theatre at
Hillsdale High School, 3115 Del Monte
St., San Mateo. Director Allison
Gamlen and musical director Kevin
Gallagher are leading the Hillsdale
High School cast in sharing this
tumultuous story in the newly
renovated Hillsdale Little Theater.
Adults $15. Students and seniors $10.To
purchase tickets visit
http://hillsdalehigh.com/drama.
Notre Dame de Namur University
presents:HayFever. 7:30 p.m. NDNU
Theatre, 1500 Ralston Ave., Belmont.
The NDNU Theatre Department
presents Noel Cowards play,Hay Fever.
$10. For more information call 508-
3456.
Notre Dame de Namur University
presents ShowGirls. 7:30 p.m. Club
Fox, 2209 Broadway, Redwood City.The
Department of Music and Vocal Arts
presents,ShowGirls, a showcase of the
music and lyrics by the much-sung
heroines of Broadway and lm.The all-
female cast will perform songs from
the 1920s to the 1970s. 21+. $25
general. $15 seniors.To purchase tickets
visit BrownPaperTickets.com or call
(800) 838-3006.
Deathtrap. 8 p.m. Hillbarn Theatre,
1285 E. Hillsdale Blvd., Foster City.
Tickets available 60 minutes prior to
curtain at Hillbarn Theatre. Adults and
seniors $34. Students ages 17 and
under with current student ID should
call 349-6411 for pricing. To purchase
tickets and for more information visit
hillbarntheatre.org.
Peninsula Ballet Theater Presents:
Dracula A Ballet toDie For.8 p.m. Fox
Theatre, 2223 Broadway, Redwood City.
This ballet is set to haunting music and
will feature sumptuous sets and
costumes as well as exciting drama and
dancing. $35 seniors, $40 adults. For
more information call 369-7770 visit
www.peninsulaballet.org to buy tickets.
SUNDAY, OCT. 28
San Mateo Rotary Fun Run. 9 a.m.
Seal Point Park, J Hart Clinton Drive, San
Mateo. 5K/10K and Kids Run.T-shirt and
goody bag for 5K/10K runners. Rain or
shine. 5K $25, 10K $30, Kids Run $5
(does not include shirt). For more
information visit
www.sanmateorotaryfunrun.com.
Halloween Dog Costume Contest at
SerramonteCenter. 10 a.m. and 2 p.m.
Serramonte Center, Serramonte and
Gellert boulevards, Daly City.
Registration for the Dog Costume
Contest at the Information Center is at
10 a.m. Dog Costume Contest at the
Grand Court will take place at 2 p.m.
Enter for the chance to win a $300
Serramonte Center shopping spree. For
more information visit
serramontecenter.com.
Last Sunday Ballroom Tea Dance
withtheBobGuttierezBand.1 p.m. to
3 p.m. San Bruno Senior Center, 1555
Crystal Springs Road, San Bruno. $4. For
more information call 616-7150.
Notre Dame de Namur University
Presents: Hay Fever. 2 p.m. and 7:30
p.m. NDNU Theatre, 1500 Ralston Ave.,
Belmont. The NDNU Theatre
Department presents Noel Cowards
play, Hay Fever. $10. For more
information call 508-3456.
Deathtrap. 2 p.m. Hillbarn Theatre,
1285 E. Hillsdale Blvd., Foster City.
Tickets available 60 minutes prior to
curtain at Hillbarn Theatre. Adults and
seniors $34. Students ages 17 and
under with current student ID should
call 349-6411 for pricing. To purchase
tickets and for more information visit
hillbarntheatre.org.
Oktoberfest: Beer TastingandMusic.
3 p.m. Belmont Library, 1110 Alameda
de las Pulgas, Belmont. Cicerone
Certied Beer Server, Jason Senior, will
explain the brewing process and teach
audiences about the different styles of
beer. Small samples of different styles of
lagers and ales will be provided for
tasting. For more information contact
the Belmont Library at
conrad@smcl.org.
Family Fun and SafeHalloween. 3:30
p.m. to 6 p.m. Twin Pines Senior and
Community Center and the Lodge, 20
and 40 Twin Pines Lane, Belmont.There
will be carnival games, face painting,
craft projects, a haunted house, food
and more. $5 for those over 2 years of
age if paid in advance. $7.50 at the door.
Free for children 23 months of age and
under. For more information visit
footstepschildcare.org.
Notre Dame de Namur University
presents ShowGirls. 7:30 p.m. Club
Fox, 2209 Broadway, Redwood City.The
Department of Music and Vocal Arts
presents,ShowGirls, a showcase of the
music and lyrics by the much-sung
heroines of Broadway and lm.The all-
female cast will perform songs from
the 1920s to the 1970s. 21+. $25
general. $15 seniors. To purchase
tickets visit BrownPaperTickets.com or
call (800) 838-3006.
Peninsula Ballet Theater Presents:
Dracula A Ballet toDie For.8 p.m. Fox
Theater, 2223 Broadway, Redwood City.
This ballet is set to haunting music and
will feature sumptuous sets and
costumes as well as exciting drama
and dancing. $35 seniors, $40 adults.
For more information call 369-7770 or
visit www.peninsulaballet.org to buy
tickets.
Calendar
For more events visit
smdailyjournal.com, click Calendar.
Milo suddenly nds himself holding the con-
ductors baton, with an out-of-control orchestra
and a world spinning with crazy colors.
The choice is special for Kujawsky who said
its one of his favorite childrens book which
features a kid-friendly topsy-turvy logic. Extra
special this year will be lighting effects show
by Matthew Bain.
Bain, who moved to the Bay Area in 2008,
started creating visualizations to music about
eight years ago. He had always enjoyed both
music and art. It wasnt until he was in college
that Bain got the idea to put the two together.
His work features an algorithm that reacts to
the music as its played, essentially creating
digital art with the music.
Every performance is ever so slightly differ-
ent. Theres no way to prepare with a prepared
piece, Bain said.
A preview of his work for Redwood
Symphony was posted on Bains website.
Rainbows of colors ood the screen to match
the music.
The afternoon outing will also include
excerpts from Beethovens Seventh
Symphony and also Michael Daughertys
Hells Angels, a concerto for bassoon quartet
in full chopper regalia.
The Redwood Symphony Family Halloween
concert will be held at 3 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 27
at the Caada College Main Theatre, 4200
Farm Hill Blvd., Redwood City. Adults and
children are encouraged to wear costumes.
Rafe tickets are available for purchase at the
concert. Ten lucky children will be chosen to
conduct a Sousa march. Tickets are $25, $10
for students and children. For more information
visit www.redwoodsymphony.org.
Continued from page 1
FUN
Looking for other reasons to get dressed up this year?
Here are other local events to consider leading up to
Halloween.
Redwood Citys 16th annual Halloween Spooktakular
event from noon to 3 p.m. Saturday at Red Morton
Community Center, 1120 Roosevelt Ave., Redwood
City. Redwood Citys Halloween Spooktakular is
suitable for kids up to age 10 admission is just $5
per child. Kids will thrill to carnival games, proudly
show off their Halloween attire in a Costume Parade
at 1:30 p.m.,explore their way through the mysterious
monster maze, create festive fall crafts, indulge in
Transylvania treats, enjoy lots of other fun activities
and win prizes. For more information visit
www.redwoodcityevents.com or call 780-7311.
Haunted Hallsa haunted house will be at the San
Bruno Park Pool, Crystal Springs and Oak Avenues in
San Bruno City Park from 6:30 p.m.to 10 p.m.Saturday.
Tickets are $5 at the door.Recommended for children
7 and older. Individual ticket holders are entitled to
walk through twice. For more information call 616-
7180 or visit www.bayareahauntedhouse.com.
PreSchool Family 29th annual Fun Day. 9:30 a.m. to
2 p.m. Saturday at 4120 Middleeld Road, Palo Alto.
Rafe, train rides, carnival games, magic shows, live
music, food and bake sale, used book sale and much
more. Free. For more information call 856-0833.
San Brunos second annual Trick or Treating Up and
Down The Avenue.11 a.m.Saturday.Costume judging
starts at noon at 445 San Mateo Ave.Trick-or-treat the
south end of San Mateo Avenue with participating
merchants. Participating merchants will have an
orange pumpkin on their door or in their window.For
more information call 228-4698.
Halloween Fun Fest. 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday at
Third Avenue and San Mateo Drive, San Mateo.There
will be a pumpkin patch, face painting, jump houses,
treats,music and trick-or-treating along Third Avenue.
Trick-or-treating will take place from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m.
Costumes recommended. Presented by the
Downtown San Mateo Association. Free. For more
information call 342-5520.
Pumpkin Carving with Pacic Art League.Noon to 3
p.m. Saturday at 668 Ramon St., Palo Alto. Bring your
imaginations, pumpkins are provided. For more
information contact Karen Kambe at
marketing@pacicartleague.org.
Royally, Diabolically, Dastardly Fun Halloween Book
Party.4 p.m.Saturday at Dove & Olive Works Building,
178 South Blvd.,San Mateo.A coven of childrens book
authors and illustrators will celebrate ghosts,dastardly
dames, and real princesses. See 3-D ghosts come to
life, including the Flying Dutchman and Bloody Mary.
Free. For more information email
craig@reachandteach.com.
Halloween dog costume contest.10 a.m.and 2 p.m.
Sunday at the Serramonte Center, Serramonte and
Gellert Boulevard, Daly City. Registration for the Dog
Costume Contest at the Information Center is at 10
a.m.Dog Costume Contest at the Grand Court will take
place at 2 p.m. Enter for the chance to win a $300
Serramonte Center shopping spree. For more
information visit serramontecenter.com.
Family Fun and Safe Halloween. 3:30 p.m. to 6 p.m.
Sunday at the Twin Pines Senior and Community
Center and the Lodge, 20 and 40 Twin Pines Lane,
Belmont. There will be carnival games, face painting,
craft projects, a haunted house, food and more.$5 for
those over 2 if paid in advance. $7.50 at the door. For
more information visit footstepschildcare.org.
Halloween cupcake decorating contest. 3:30 p.m.
Monday at the Belmont Library, 1110 Alameda de las
Pulgas. Prizes awarded to the best cupcake. Materials
will be provided. Ages 13 to 19. Free. For more
information email conrad@smcl.org.
Seventh Annual Its Not A Trick ... Sweet Treats on
Broadway. Noon to 4 p.m. Wednesday on Broadway
in Burlingame.For costumed children to trick-or-treat
at participating stores.Free.For more information call
867-3449.
Teen Halloween Party. 3:30 p.m. Wednesday at the
Belmont Library, 1110 Alameda de las Pulgas,.
Halloween party and movie at the library.
Refreshments will be served.Best costume will receive
a prize. Ages 13 to 19. Free. For more information
contact conrad@smcl.org.
Halloween at Serramonte Center. 3:30 p.m. to 7:30
p.m. Wednesday at the Serramonte Center, 3
Serramonte Center, Daly City.There will be a costume
contest for children 12 and under, indoor trick-or-
treating for costumed children and more. Free. For
more information call 992-8686.
Halloween at the library: Stories and crafts.
Wednesday from 4 p.m. to 4:45 p.m. at the San Mateo
Main Library, 55 W. Third Ave., San Mateo. Costumed
kids welcome. Great stories and a simple craft for
children ages 4 to 8. Free. For more information visit
http://www.cityofsanmateo.org/calender.aspx.
Halloween at the library:Books,Babies and Rhymes.
10:15 a.m.to 10:40 a.m.Hillsdale Library,205 W.Hillsdale
Blvd., San Mateo. Rhymes, songs and short books for
the infant through 23 months,with parent or caregiver.
From 11 a.m. to 11:30 a.m., the focus will turn to
children ages 2 to 4.Both are free.For more information
visit http://www.cityofsanmateo.org/calender.aspx.
Halloween Spooktacular.5 p.m.to 7 p.m.Wednesday
at the Hillsdale Shopping Center, 60 31st Ave., San
Mateo. Participating stores will hand out treats to
costumed children ages 12 and under.There will also
be performances from Captain Jack Spareribs and
comedy magician Timothy James, as well as face
painting, crafts, balloon twisting, cookie decoration
and slimy science. Free. For more information visit
www.hillsdale.com.
Halloween Happenings at the King Center.6 p.m.to
8 p.m.Wednesday at the King Community Center,725
Diablo Ave.,San Mateo.Bring the entire family to enjoy
crafts, enchanted forest, games and prizes. Be sure to
enter costume contest.Free.For more information call
522-7470.
Halloween fun
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2012
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -- You have the tenacity to
fnish what you start and, as such, are likely to see all
your endeavors through to their conclusions in ways
that will please both you and others.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -- Because you
appreciate the lighter side of life and know what to
say or do to take other peoples minds off of their
problems, youll be in demand among your friends.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- Something
important you have been unable to fnalize can be
concluded. It will prove to be a good thing that you
had to wait, because conditions are far more favor-
able now.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -- Certain conditions
you arent deliberately manipulating will be trending
in your favor. If and when you sense youre on a win-
ning streak, dont hesitate to fow with events.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -- Your probabilities for
accumulating some type of fnancial or material
gains look to be exceptionally good. This will be
especially true for those of you who have initiated
matters yourself.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) -- Leadership, initia-
tive and sound judgment are your most dominating
attributes today. You have a wonderful faculty for
knowing how to make good things better.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -- There are likely to
be some stirrings behind the scenes of which you
might not be aware. When they do surface, however,
chances are theyll contribute to your material well-
being.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -- Any dealings you have
with large corporations or huge groups should work
out to your satisfaction. If you have anything that is
worthy of promoting, do it now.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) -- Instead of intimidating
you, challenges are more likely to arouse your will to win.
One of your secrets to success is your positive vision.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- In order to convince a group
to do what you want, it pays to frst make an ally of
the person who has the most clout. This individual
will be able to sell others what you cant.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- There is some kind
of special expertise you possess that could be of
enormous value to others, and because of this, youre
likely to be included in a promising joint endeavor.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -- Whereas certain business
alliances might be somewhat testy, teaming up with
them in noncommercial venture could produce a
delightful time.
COPYRIGHT 2012 United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
COMICS/GAMES
10-27-12
fRIDAYS PUZZLE SOLVED
PREVIOUS
SUDOkU
ANSwERS
Want More Fun
and Games?
Jumble Page 2 La Times Crossword Puzzle Classifeds
Tundra & Over the Hedge Comics Classifeds
kids Across/Parents Down Puzzle Family Resource Guide


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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ACROSS
1 Faucets
5 Hokey
10 Traffc mishap
12 Conifer
13 Bowl or ship
14 Diamond, to a chemist
15 Gator kin
16 Cry of discovery
18 Slalom run
19 Caught fre
23 Set a price
26 Cheerful color
27 Oater showdown
30 Candy bar flling
32 Panoramic views
34 Checks for fraud
35 Fasten
36 Racing sled
37 Environmental prefx
38 Have a look
39 In -- (behind)
42 Every
45 Thither and --
46 Pith helmet
50 Saffron dish
53 Din
55 Urban nuisance
56 Hayseeds
57 Go crowding in
58 Nota --
DOwN
1 Row of seats
2 In addition
3 GoodFellas actor
4 Prefer charges
5 Ernst & Young staffer
6 Ice hockey great
7 Cartoonist -- Goldberg
8 PFC superiors
9 Longings
10 Garden hose plastic
11 Jupiter and Mercury
12 Vamoose
17 Kept secret
20 Cheddar shredder
21 Publishing VIP
22 Do housework
23 Santa -- winds
24 Psyche
25 Striped antelope
28 LAX guesses
29 Sneaker string
31 Billion, in combos
32 Motel sign
33 Yacht pronoun
37 Want-ad abbr.
40 Meg or Nolan
41 Property marker
42 Dr.s visit
43 Cave, maybe
44 Block brand
47 Bad or good sign
48 Guide a raft
49 Returns org.
51 Tolstoys name
52 -- -eared bunny
54 Easy toss
DILBERT CROSSwORD PUZZLE
fUTURE SHOCk
PEARLS BEfORE SwINE
GET fUZZY
Weekend Oct. 27-28, 2012 27
THE DAILY JOURNAL
26
Weekend Oct. 27-28, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
DELIVERY DRIVER
ALL ROUTES
Wanted: Independent Contractor to provide deliv-
ery of the Daily Journal six days per week, Mon-
day thru Saturday, early morning. Experience
with newspaper delivery required.
Must have valid license and appropriate insurance
coverage to provide this service in order to be eli-
gible. Papers are available for pickup in San Ma-
teo at 3:00 a.m. or San Francisco earlier.
Please apply in person Monday-Friday only, 10am
to 4pm at The Daily Journal, 800 S. Claremont St
#210, San Mateo.
GARAGE DOOR
INSTALLER/
SERVICE TECHNICIAN
Experienced Garage Door Installer/Service
Technician needed. Installation and repair of
residential wood and steel garage doors, garage
opener installation and repair. Must be motivat-
ed, hard working, professional, customer service
oriented and a team player. Company truck pro-
vided. Apply at 1457 El Camino Real, Belmont,
email resume to:
econodoormaster@yahoo.com
or fax (650)594-1549
GOT JOBS?
The best career seekers
read the Daily Journal.
We will help you recruit qualified, talented
individuals to join your company or organization.
The Daily Journals readership covers a wide
range of qualifications for all types of positions.
For the best value and the best results,
recruit from the Daily Journal...
Contact us for a free consultation
Call (650) 344-5200 or
Email: ads@smdailyjournal.com
NOW HIRING
Caregivers/CNAs
Experience working with individuals who have
Alzheimers or dementia strongly preferred.
We are currently offering a hiring bonus
for our Caregivers!
$250: $125 upon hire and $125 after 90 days.
Please apply in person at:
1301 Ralston Avenue, Belmont, CA 94002
104 Training
TERMS & CONDITIONS
The San Mateo Daily Journal Classi-
fieds will not be responsible for more
than one incorrect insertion, and its lia-
bility 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 sub-
mitted within 30 days. For full advertis-
ing conditions, please ask for a Rate
Card.
105 Education/Instruction
TENNIS LESSONS
Top 50 Mens Open Player
Call 650-518-1987
Email info@adsoncraigslist.com
110 Employment
RESTAURANT -
Cooks, Cashiers, Avanti Pizza. Menlo
Park. (650)854-1222.
110 Employment
CAREGIVER -
FT/PT Live-In caregiver on the Penin-
sula and in the South Bay. Valid driv-
ers license and car a must.Must have
exp. and refs. Call 415-683-3171 or
visit www.sageeldercare.com.
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.
Email resume
info@smdailyjournal.com
110 Employment 110 Employment
LANDSCAPE MAINTENANCE
FOREMAN -Seeking experinced long
term employee. Must be Knowledgeable
in general landscape maintenance with
strong background in pruning, fertilizing,
irrigation and controllers. Must have
clean DMV and speak English. 32-36
hrs. per week (Tuesday - Friday). $15.00
per hour. Maintenance laborer: $9.00 per
hour. (650)347-3914
NEWSPAPER INTERNS
JOURNALISM
The Daily Journal is looking for in-
terns to do entry level reporting, re-
search, updates of our ongoing fea-
tures and interviews. Photo interns al-
so 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 in-
terns have progressed in time into
paid correspondents and full-time re-
porters.
College students or recent graduates
are encouraged to apply. Newspaper
experience is preferred but not neces-
sarily required.
Please send a cover letter describing
your interest in newspapers, a resume
and three recent clips. Before you ap-
ply, you should familiarize yourself
with our publication. Our Web site:
www.smdailyjournal.com.
Send your information via e-mail to
news@smdailyjournal.com or by reg-
ular mail to 800 S. Claremont St #210,
San Mateo CA 94402.
RETAIL JEWELRY SALES
Full + Part-time + Seasonal
Start up to $13 Exp up to $20
Benefits-Bonus-No Nights!
650-367-6500 FX 367-6400
jobs@jewelryexchange.com
STYLIST/BARBER AND Assistant
Managers Built-in clientele. Hourly +
commissions + bonuses + Sign-on
Bonus $. Call Juan (650)387-3179
110 Employment
YOURE INVITED
Are you: Dependable
Friendly
Detail Oriented
Willing to learn new skills
Do you have: Good English skills
A Desire for steady employment
A desire for employment benefits
If the above items describe you,
please call (650)342-6978.
Immediate opening available in
Customer Service position.
Call for an appointment.
Crystal Cleaning Center
San Mateo, CA 94402
120 Child Care Services
AGAPE VILLAGES
Foster Family Agency
Become a Foster Parent!
We Need Loving Homes for
Disadvantaged Children
Entrusted to Our Care.
Monthly Compensation Provided.
Call 1-800-566-2225
Lic #397001741
127 Elderly Care
FAMILY RESOURCE
GUIDE
The San Mateo Daily Journals
twice-a-week resource guide for
children and families.
Every Tuesday & Weekend
Look for it in todays paper to
find information on family
resources in the local area,
including childcare.
27 Weekend Oct. 27-28, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
Tundra Tundra Tundra
Over the Hedge Over the Hedge Over the Hedge
LEGAL NOTICES
Fictitious Business Name Statements, Trustee
Sale Notice, Alcohol Beverage License, Name
Change, Probate, Notice of Adoption, Divorce
Summons, Notice of Public Sales, and More.
Published in the Daily Journal for San Mateo County.
Fax your request to: 650-344-5290
Email them to: ads@smdailyjournal.com
203 Public Notices
CASE# CIV 516992
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR
CHANGE OF NAME
SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA,
COUNTY OF SAN MATEO,
400 COUNTY CENTER RD,
REDWOOD CITY CA 94063
PETITION OF
Augusto Giovanni Gonzalez
TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS:
Petitioner, Augusto Giovanni Gonzalez
filed a petition with this court for a decree
changing name as follows:
Present name: Augusto Giovanni Gonza-
lez, aka Augusto G. Gonzalez, aka Gio-
vanni Gonzalez
Proposed name: Giovanni Dubois
THE COURT ORDERS that all persons
interested in this matter shall appear be-
fore this court at the hearing indicated
below to show cause, if any, why the pe-
tition for change of name should not be
granted. Any person objecting to the
name changes described above must file
a written objection that includes the rea-
sons for the objection at least two court
days before the matter is scheduled to
be heard and must appear at the hearing
to show cause why the petition should
not be granted. If no written objection is
timely filed, the court may grant the peti-
tion without a hearing. A HEARING on
the petition shall be held on November
27, 2012 at 9 a.m., Dept. PJ, Room 2E,
at 400 County Center, Redwood City, CA
94063. A copy of this Order to Show
Cause shall be published at least once
each week for four successive weeks pri-
or to the date set for hearing on the peti-
tion in the following newspaper of gener-
al circulation: Daily Journal
Filed: 10/03/2012
/s/ Beth Freeman/
Judge of the Superior Court
Dated: 10/01/2012
(Published, 10/13/12, 10/20/12,
10/27/12, 11/03/12)
CASE# CIV 517228
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR
CHANGE OF NAME
SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA,
COUNTY OF SAN MATEO,
400 COUNTY CENTER RD,
REDWOOD CITY CA 94063
PETITION OF
Cynthia Flynn
TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS:
Petitioner, Cynthia Flynn filed a petition
with this court for a decree changing
name as follows:
Present name: Cynthia Flynn, aka Cyn-
thia MaCay
Proposed name: Cynthia MaCay
THE COURT ORDERS that all persons
interested in this matter shall appear be-
fore this court at the hearing indicated
below to show cause, if any, why the pe-
tition for change of name should not be
granted. Any person objecting to the
name changes described above must file
a written objection that includes the rea-
sons for the objection at least two court
days before the matter is scheduled to
be heard and must appear at the hearing
to show cause why the petition should
not be granted. If no written objection is
timely filed, the court may grant the peti-
tion without a hearing. A HEARING on
the petition shall be held on December
13, 2012 at 9 a.m., Dept. PJ, Room 2E,
at 400 County Center, Redwood City, CA
94063. A copy of this Order to Show
Cause shall be published at least once
each week for four successive weeks pri-
or to the date set for hearing on the peti-
tion in the following newspaper of gener-
al circulation: Daily Journal
Filed: 10/19/2012
/s/ Joseph C. Scott/
Judge of the Superior Court
Dated: 10/19/2012
(Published, 10/27/12, 11/03/12,
11/10/12, 11/17/12)
203 Public Notices
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #252543
The following person is doing business
as: Dragon Financial Group, 1700 S. El
Camino Real, #501, SAN MATEO, CA
94402 is hereby registered by the follow-
ing owner: Dragon Financial & Invest-
ment Group, INC. The business is con-
ducted by a Corporation. The registrants
commenced to transact business under
the FBN on 01/01/2011
/s/ Walter Chao /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 09/28/2012. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
10/06/12, 10/13/12, 10/20/12, 10/27/12).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #252911
The following person is doing business
as: cFares Tickets, 400 East Third Ave.
Ste 650, FOSTER CITY, CA 94404 is
hereby registered by the following owner:
Mondee Acquisition Company, INC, DE.
The business is conducted by a Corpora-
tion. The registrants commenced to
transact business under the FBN on
Spetember 2012
/s/ Vajid Jafri /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 10/2/2012. (Publish-
ed in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
10/06/12, 10/13/12, 10/20/12, 10/27/12).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #252653
The following person is doing business
as: Woodcraft Cabinetry, 111 Pine Ave.,
SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94080 is
hereby registered by the following owner:
David M. Bao, 18 Luis Ln., San Francis-
co, CA 94134 The business is conducted
by an Individual. The registrants com-
menced to transact business under the
FBN on
/s/ David Bao /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 10/5/2012. (Publish-
ed in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
10/06/12, 10/13/12, 10/20/12, 10/27/12).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #252410
The following person is doing business
as: Spotted Dog Publishing, 26 Hayward
Ave #207, SAN MATEO, CA 94401 is
hereby registered by the following owner:
Janice Wolfe, same address. The busi-
ness is conducted by an Individual. The
registrants commenced to transact busi-
ness under the FBN on
/s/ Janice Wolfe /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 09/20/2012. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
10/13/12, 10/20/12, 10/27/12, 11/03/12).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #252618
The following person is doing business
as: Masonic Music Inc., 130 Newton
Drive, BURLINGAME, CA 94010 is here-
by registered by the following owner: Ma-
sonic Music Inc., CA. The business is
conducted by a Corporation. The regis-
trants commenced to transact business
under the FBN on 10/01/2012.
/s/ Mason Bates /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 10/04/2012. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
10/20/12, 10/27/12, 11/03/12, 11/10/12).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #252721
The following person is doing business
as: Queens Comb, 1662 Holly Avenue,
SAN BRUNO, CA 94066 is hereby regis-
tered by the following owner: Richard
Watkins, same address. The business is
conducted by an Individual. The regis-
trants commenced to transact business
under the FBN on
/s/ Richard Watkins /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 10/11/2012. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
10/20/12, 10/27/12, 11/03/12, 11/10/12).
203 Public Notices
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #252824
The following person is doing business
as: Glass Plus Film, 1255 Annette Ave.,
REDWOOD CITY, CA 94063 is hereby
registered by the following owner: Chad
W. Weston, same address. The business
is conducted by an Individual. The regis-
trants commenced to transact business
under the FBN on 08/01/2012.
/s/ Chad Weston /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 10/18/2012. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
10/20/12, 10/27/12, 11/03/12, 11/10/12).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #252919
The following person is doing business
as: Nowras Consulting, 124 Barneson
Ave, SAN MATEO, CA 94402 is hereby
registered by the following owner: Ayman
Asfour, same address. The business is
conducted by an Individual. The regis-
trants commenced to transact business
under the FBN on N/A
/s/ Ayman Asfour /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 10/26/2012. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
10/27/12, 11/03/12, 11/10/12, 11/17/12).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #252688
The following person is doing business
as: 1) Flocchini Wines, 2) Flocchini
Winery, 3) Flocchini Wine, 1001 Wash-
ington St., SAN CARLOS, CA 94070 is
hereby registered by the following owner:
Flo Enterprise, LLC. The business is
conducted by a Limited Liability Compa-
ny. The registrants commenced to trans-
act business under the FBN on
03/17/2011
/s/ Drea Helfer /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk on 10/09/2012. (Pub-
lished in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
10/27/12, 11/03/12, 11/10/12, 11/17/12).
STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT of
USE of FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT # M-243111
The following persons have abandoned
the use of the fictitious business name:
Dragon Financial Group, 1700 S. El Ca-
mino Real, #501, SAN MATEO, CA
94402. The fictitious business name re-
ferred to above was filed in County on
1/31/11. The business was conducted
by: Walter Chao, 205 Atherwood Ave.,
Redwood City, CA 94061.
/s/ Walter Chao /
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk-Recorder of San Mateo
County on 09/28/2012. (Published in the
San Mateo Daily Journal, 10/6/12,
10/13/12, 10/20/12, 10/27/12).
STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT of
USE of FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT # M-247699
The following persons have abandoned
the use of the fictitious business name:
Canyon Cleaners, 3207A Oak-Knoll Dr.,
REDWOOD CITY, CA 94062. The ficti-
tious business name referred to above
was filed in County on 11/18/11. The
business was conducted by: Gun Noh
and Sook Noh, 954 Glennan Dr., Red-
wood City, CA 94061.
/s/ Gun Noh/
This statement was filed with the Asses-
sor-County Clerk-Recorder of San Mateo
County on 09/28/2012. (Published in the
San Mateo Daily Journal, 10/13/12,
10/20/12, 10/27/12, 11/3/12).
203 Public Notices
SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA
COUNTY OF SAN MATEO
Case No. 122790
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
In re the Estate :
JOSEPH P. ORDONEZ, Deceased
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to the cred-
itors and contingent beneficiaries of the
above-named decedent that all persons
having claims against the decedent are
required to file them with the San Mateo
County Superior Court at 400 County
Center, Redwood City, California 94063,
and mail a copy to Michael J. Kallis,
Esq., Attorney for TED ORDONEZ and
JEFFREY ORDONEZ, Successors
Trustees of the Joseph P. Ordonez and
Louise M. Ordonez Revocable Trust, dat-
ed December 14, 1998, wherein the de-
cedent and his deceased wife, Lousie M.
Ordonez, were the Trustors, within the
latter of four months after October 22,
2012, or, if notice is mailed or personally
delivered to you, 30 days after the date
this notice is mailed or personally deliv-
ered to you. A claim form may be ob-
tained from the court clerk. For your pro-
tection, you are encouraged to file you
claim by certified mail, with return receipt
requested.
DATED: October 16, 2012
/s/ Micheal J. Kallis, ESQ. /
Attorney for Successor Trustees
TED ORDONEZ and JEFFREY ORDO-
NEZ
FILED: October 12, 2012
Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal
on October 20, 27, November 5, 2012.
210 Lost & Found
FOUND - Evan - I found your iPod, call
(650)261-9656
FOUND- LITTLE tan male chihuahua,
Found on Davit Street in Redwood
Shores Tuesday, August 28th. Please
call (650)533-9942
LOST - Small Love Bird, birght green
with orange breast. Adeline Dr. & Bernal
Ave., Burlingame. Escaped Labor Day
weekend. REWARD! (650)343-6922
LOST CHIHUAHUA/TERRIER mix in
SSF, tan color, 12 lbs., scar on stomach
from being spade, $300. REWARD!
(650)303-2550
LOST: SMALL diamond cross, silver
necklace with VERY sentimental
meaning. Lost in San Mateo 2/6/12
(650)578-0323.
RING FOUND Tue. Oct 23 2012 in Mill-
brae call (650)464-9359
294 Baby Stuff
B.O.B. DUALLIE STROLLER, for two.
Excellent condition. Blue. $300.
Call 650-303-8727.
BABY CAR SEAT AND CARRIER $20
(650)458-8280
295 Art
WALL ART, from Pier 1, indoor/outdoor,
$15. Very nice! (650)290-1960
296 Appliances
HAIR DRYER, Salon Master, $10.
(650)854-4109
HUNTER OSCILLATING FAN, excellent
condition. 3 speed. $35. (650)854-4109
MIROMATIC PRESSURE cooker flash
canner 4qt. $25. 415 333-8540
RADIATOR HEATER, oil filled, electric,
1500 watts $25. (650)504-3621
296 Appliances
ROTISSERIE GE, US Made, IN-door or
out door, Holds large turkey 24 wide,
Like new, $80, OBO (650)344-8549
SHOP VACUUM rigid brand 3.5 horse
power 9 gal wet/dry $40. (650)591-2393
SMALL SLOW cooker. Used once, $12
(650)368-3037
SUNBEAM TOASTER -Automatic, ex-
cellent condition, $30., (415)346-6038
VACUUM CLEANER excellent condition
$45. (650)878-9542
WATER HEATER $75, (650)333-4400
297 Bicycles
BIKE RACK Roof mounted, holds up to
4 bikes, $65 (650)594-1494
298 Collectibles
1 BAG of Hot Wheels and Matchbox
Cars, from the 70s, Appx 40, $30
(650)589-8348
15 HARDCOVERS WWII - new condi-
tion, $80.obo, (650)345-5502
1937 LOS ANGELES SID GRAUMANS
Chinese Theatre, playgoer August pro-
gram, featuring Gloria Stuart, George
Sanders, Paul Muni, Louise Rainer, $20.,
San Mateo, (650)341-8342
1969 LIFE MAGAZINE - Special Issue,
Off to the Moon, featuring Armstrong,
Aldrin, and Collins, and a special article
by Charles Lindburgh, $25., San Mateo,
(650)341-8342
1982 PRINT 'A Tune Off The Top Of My
Head' 82/125 $80 (650) 204-0587
2 FIGURINES - 1 dancing couple, 1
clown face. both $15. (650)364-0902
62 USED European Postage Stamps.
Many issued in the early 1900s. All dif-
ferent and detached from envelopes.
$5.00 (650)787-8600
67 OLD Used U.S. Postage Stamps.
Many issued before World War II. All
different. $4.00, (650)787-8600
ARMY SHIRT, long sleeves, with pock-
ets. XL $15 each (408)249-3858
BAY MEADOWS bag - $30.each,
(650)345-1111
BAY MEADOWS BAG - mint condition,
original package, $20., (650)365-3987
BEAUTIFUL RUSTIE doll Winter Bliss w/
stole & muffs, 23, $90. OBO, (650)754-
3597
CASINO CHIP Collection Original Chips
from various casinos $99 obo
(650)315-3240
CHILDHOOD COMIC book collection
many titles from the 70's & 80's whole
collection, SOLD!
COLORIZED TERRITORIAL Quarters
uncirculated with Holder $15/all,
(408)249-3858
FIVE RARE Non-Mint 1954 Dan Dee
Baseball Cards (Lemon, Wynn, Schoen-
dienst, Mitchell, Hegan), Each $20, All
$95, SOLD!
GAYLORD PERRY 8x10 signed photo
$10 (650)692-3260
JOE MONTANA signed authentic retire-
ment book, $39., (650)692-3260
MARK MCGUIRE hats, cards, beanie
babies, all for $98., (650)520-8558
MICHAEL JORDAN POSTER - 1994,
World Cup, $10., (650)365-3987
POSTER - New Kids On The Block
1980s, $12., call Maria, (650)873-8167
298 Collectibles
NHL SPORTS Figures, (20) new, un-
used, original packaging, collectible su-
perstars, Gretzki, Messier, more, OK
sold separately, SOLD!
NHL SPORTS Figures, (20) new, un-
used, original packaging, SOLD!
ORIGINAL SMURF FIGURES - 1979-
1981, 18+ mushroom hut, 1 1/2 x 3 1/2,
all $40., (650)518-0813
SPORTS CARDS - 3200 lots of stars
and rookies, $40. all, (650)365-3987
SPORTS CARDS - 50 Authentic Signa-
tures, SOLD!
STACKING MINI-KETTLES - 3
Pots/cover: ea. 6 diam. Brown speckle
enamelware, $20., (650)375-8044
SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY Alums! Want
a "Bill Orange" SU flag for Game Day
displays? $3., 650-375-8044
VINTAGE 1970S Grecian Made Size 6-7
Dresses $35 each, Royal Pink 1980s
Ruffled Dress size 7ish $30, 1880s Re-
production White Lace Gown $150 Size
6-7 Petite, (650)873-8167
VINTAGE HOLLIE HOBBIE LUNCH-
BOX with Thermos, 1980s, $25., Call
Maria 650-873-8167
VINTAGE TEEN BEAT MAGAZINES
(20) 1980s $2 each, Call Maria 650-873-
8167
WANTED:
OLDER PLASTIC MODEL KITS.
Aurora, Revell, Monogram.
Immediate cash.
Pat 650-759-0793.
YUGIOH CARD - 2,000, some rare, 1st
Edition, $60 all, SOLD!
299 Computers
HP PRINTER Deskjet 970c color printer.
Excellent condition. Software & accesso-
ries included. $30. 650-574-3865
300 Toys
2 MODEL ships in box $30
(650)589-8348
ANTIQUE ELECTRIC train set with steel
engine full set from the 50's, SOLD!
PLASTIC TOY army set from the 70's
many pieces, SOLD!
302 Antiques
1912 COFFEE Percolator Urn. perfect
condition includes electric cord $85.
(415)565-6719
1920 MAYTAG wringer washer - electric,
gray color, $100., (650)851-0878
ANTIQUE BEVEL MIRROR - framed,
14 x 21, carved top, $45.,
(650)341-7890
ANTIQUE ITALIAN lamp 18 high, $70
(650)387-4002
ANTIQUE WASHING machine, some
rust on legs, rust free drum and ringer.
$45/obo, (650)574-4439
BREADBOX, METAL with shelf and cut-
ting board, $30 (650)365-3987
J&J HOPKINSON 1890-1900's walnut
piano with daffodil inlay on the front. Ivo-
ries in great condition. Can be played as
is, but will benefit from a good tuning.
$600.00 includes stool. Email
frisz@comcast.net for photos
303 Electronics
3 SHELF SPEAKERS - 8 OM, $15.
each, (650)364-0902
32 TOSHIBA Flat screen TV like new,
bought 9/9/11 with box. $300 Firm.
(415)264-6605
46 MITSUBISHI Projector TV, great
condition. $400. (650)261-1541.
BIG SONY TV 37" - Excellent Condition
Worth $2300 will Sacrifice for only $95.,
(650)878-9542
FLIP CAMCORDER $50. (650)583-2767
HOME THEATRE SYSTEM - 3 speak-
ers, woofer, DVD player, USB connec-
tion, $80., (714)818-8782
28
Weekend Oct. 27-28, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
ACROSS
1 Visit
7 Cleaned, in a way
15 Ronald Reagans
alma mater
16 Guess again
17 Windy
18 Voice of Buzz
Lightyear
19 Wearing one can
block a mind
reader, some
believe
21 Modest
profession
22 Four quarters, in
Quito
23 See 47-Down
25 Hotel amenity
30 One often seen
from behind?
34 Its GTS model
can get 70 miles
per gallon
35 Fate of some old
ways
36 Treats with
malice
37 Operation
Crossroads
event, 1946
38 Vintage player
40 Unlikely place for
his-and-hers
towels
43 Bench order
44 One often
sleeping on the
floor
47 Free of charge
51 Centipede, e.g.
54 I Caint Say No
singer
56 1805 musical
premiere
57 It may include gas
masks and
shields
58 2002 Best
Original Song
Oscar winner
59 Chickens named
for an Italian city
60 Port on the Loire
DOWN
1 Anatomical walls
2 2006 Winter
Olympics host
3 Eponymous chief
of the Penobscot
nation
4 Crooked gains
5 Japanese
magnate Morita
6 Way across town
7 1970s military-
style German
import
8 Audreys Love in
the Afternoon
role
9 Ancien Rgime
nobles
10 Seoritas a
11 Hybrid edible
12 Slough off
13 Cabinet dept.
formed in
response to the
1973 oil crisis
14 Shoot down
20 Actor Jared
24 Offered regrets,
perhaps
25 Fix
26 Criminal Minds
genius Dr.
Spencer __
27 Bone: Pref.
28 Org. that Angola
joined in 2007
29 Pretense
30 Not much at all
31 Kiss Me
Deadly rocker
Ford
32 Very brief time,
briefly
33 Quiet
36 Stickball ball,
familiarly
38 Radioisotopes
used in medicine
39 Island capital near
Robert Louis
Stevensons
burial site
41 Repair shop offer
42 Master and
Commander
novelist Patrick
44 Body shop
supply
45 Function runner
46 Sides
47 With 23-Across,
actor/director/
writer with nine
Emmys
48 Comics dog
49 Switched-On
Bach instrument
50 Course
52 Forever, __: 1996
humor collection
53 Get past the
bouncer
55 Vietnams __
Dinh Diem
By John Farmer
(c)2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
10/27/12
10/27/12
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:
Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis
xwordeditor@aol.com
303 Electronics
LEFT-HAND ERGONOMIC keyboard
with 'A-shape' key layout Num pad, $20
(650)204-0587
LSI SCSI Ultra320 Controller + (2) 10k
RPM 36GB SCSI II hard drives $40
(650)204-0587
304 Furniture
2 DINETTE Chairs both for $29
(650)692-3260
2 END Tables solid maple '60's era
$40/both. (650)670-7545
4 DRAWER metal file cabinet, black, no
lock model, like new $50 SOLD!
AFGAN PRAYER rug beautiful original
very ornate $100 (650)348-6428
ALASKAN SEEN painting 40" high 53"
wide includes matching frame $99 firm
(650)592-2648
ARMOIRE CABINET - $90., Call
(415)375-1617
CHAIR MODERN light wood made in Ita-
ly $99 (415)334-1980
CHANDELIER WITH 5 lights/ candela-
bre base with glass shades $20.
(650)504-3621
COMPUTER DESK from Ikea, $40
(650)348-5169
COUCH & LOVE SEAT- Floral Design.
Great Condition, $350.00, (650)266-8025
COUCH-FREE. OLD world pattern, soft
fabric. Some cat scratch damage-not too
noticeable. 650-303-6002
DINET TABLE walnut with chrome legs.
36x58 with one leaf 11 1/2. $50, San
Mateo (650)341-5347
DINING ROOM SET - table, four chairs,
lighted hutch, $500. all, (650)296-3189
DISPLAY CASE wood & glass 31 x 19
inches $30. (650)873-4030
DRESSER SET - 3 pieces, wood, $50.,
(650)589-8348
DRUM TABLE - brown, perfect condi-
tion, nice design, with storage, $45.,
(650)345-1111
304 Furniture
END TABLES (2) - One for $5. hand
carved, other table is antique white mar-
ble top with drawer $40., (650)308-6381
END TABLES (2)- Cherry finish, still in
box, need to assemble, 26L x 21W x
21H, $100. for both, (650)592-2648
FOLDING PICNIC table - 8 x 30, 7 fold-
ing, padded chairs, $80. (650)364-0902
FUTON DELUXE plus other items all for
$90 650 341-2397 (U haul away)
HAND MADE portable jewelry display
case wood and see through lid $45. 25 x
20 x 4 inches. (650)592-2648.
LOUNGE CHAIRS - 2 new, with cover &
plastic carring case & headrest, $35.
each, (650)592-7483
LOVE SEAT. Like New. Olive/green.
33" High, 60" wide, 42" deep. Very com-
fortable. $20.00 or B/O SOLD!
MODULAR DESK/BOOKCASE/STOR-
AGE unit - Cherry veneer, white lami-
nate, $75., (650)888-0039
OAK ROUND CLAW FOOTED TABLE
Six Matching Oak chairs and Leaf. $350,
Cash Only, (650)857-1045
OFFICE LAMP, small. Black & white with
pen holder and paper holder. Brand new,
in the box. $10 (650)867-2720
PAPASAN CHAIRS (2) -with cushions
$45. each set, (650)347-8061
PEDESTAL DINETTE 36 Square Table
- $65., (650)347-8061
RATTAN PAPASAN Chair with Brown
cushion excellent shape $45 (650)592-
2648
RECLINER CHAIR very comfortable vi-
nyl medium brown $70, (650)368-3037
ROCKING CHAIR - Beautiful light wood
rocking chair, very good condition, $65.,
OBO, (650)952-3063
ROCKING CHAIR - excellent condition,
oak, with pads, $85.obo, (650)369-9762
ROCKING CHAIR - Traditional, full size
Rocking chair. Excellent condition $100.,
(650)504-3621
304 Furniture
SMALL STORAGE/ HUTCH - Stained
green, pretty. $40, (650)290-1960
STEREO CABINET walnut w/3 black
shelves 16x 22x42. $30, 650-341-5347
STORAGE TABLE light brown lots of
storage good cond. $45. (650)867-2720
TEA CHEST , Bombay, burgundy, glass
top, perfect cond. $35 (650)345-1111
TRUNDLE BED - Single with wheels,
$40., (650)347-8061
VANITY ETHAN Allen maple w/drawer
and liftup mirror like new $95
(650)349-2195
VINTAGE UPHOLSTERED wooden
chairs, $25 each or both for $40. nice
set. (650)583-8069
VINTAGE WINGBACK CHAIR $75,
(650)583-8069
306 Housewares
"PRINCESS HOUSE decorator urn
"Vase" cream with blue flower 13 inch H
$25., (650)868-0436
28" by 15" by 1/4" thick glass shelves,
cost $35 each sell at $15 ea. Five availa-
ble, Call (650)345-5502
6 BOXES of Victorian lights ceiling & wall
$90., (650)340-9644
AS NEW Bar-B-Q electric outdoor/in-
door, easy clean, no scrubbing./brushing,
as new, $15., SOLD!
AUTO WINE OPENER - mint condition,
one-touch, rechargeable, adapter, foil
cutter, built-in light, easy open, great gift,
$12.00, SOLD!
BATTERY CHARGER, holds 4 AA/AAA,
Panasonic, $5, (650)595-3933
BEDSPREAD - queen size maroon &
pink bedspread - Fairly new, $50. obo,
(650)834-2583
BUFFET SERVER, stainless, cook &
serve same dish, $20 (650)595-3933
306 Housewares
CANDLEHOLDER - Gold, angel on it,
tall, purchased from Brueners, originally
$100., selling for $30.,(650)867-2720
DINING ROOM Victorian Chandelier
seven light, $90., (650)340-9644
DRIVE MEDICAL design locking elevat-
ed toilet seat. New. $45. (650)343-4461
PERSIAN TEA set for 8. Including
spoon, candy dish, and tray. Gold Plated.
$100. (650) 867-2720
RIVAL "CUTABOVE": Small task quik-
food chopper, electric, under cabinet
model; includes beverage mixer attach-
ment, $ 20., 650-375-8044
SOLID TEAK floor model 16 wine rack
with turntable $60. (650)592-7483
SUNBEAN TOASTER excellent condi-
tion (415)346-6038
307 Jewelry & Clothing
BRACELET - Ladies authentic Murano
glass from Italy, vibrant colors, like new,
$100., (650)991-2353 Daly City
GALLON SIZE bag of costume jewelry -
various sizes, colors, $100. for bag,
(650)589-2893
LADIES GOLD Lame' elbow length-
gloves sz 7.5 $15 New. (650)868-0436
LORUS WATCH- date, sweep second
hand, new battery, stainless steel adjust-
able band, perfect, $19., SOLD!
WATCHES (21) - original packaging,
stainless steel, need batteries, $60. all,
(650)365-3987
308 Tools
71 1/4" WORM drive skill saw $80
(650)521-3542
CIRCULAR SAW, Craftsman-brand, 10,
4 long x 20 wide. Comes w/ stand - $70.
(650)678-1018
CRAFTMAN 3X20 1 BELT SANDER -
with extra belts, $35., (650)521-3542
CRAFTMAN RADIAL SAW, with cabinet
stand, $200 Cash Only, (650)857-1045
CRAFTSMAN 3/4 horse power 3,450
RPM $60 (650)347-5373
CRAFTSMAN ARC-WELDER - 30-250
amp, and accessories, $275., (650)341-
0282
CRAFTSMAN HEAVY DUTY JIGSAW -
extra blades, $35., (650)521-3542
DAYTON ELECTRIC 1 1/2 horse power
1,725 RPM $60 (650)347-5373
FMC TIRE changer Machine, $650
(650)333-4400
GENERATOR 13,000 WATTS Brand
New 20hp Honda $2800 (650)333-4400
LAWN MOWER reel type push with
height adjustments. Just sharpened $45
650-591-2144 San Carlos
RYOBI TRIM ROUTER - with butt tem-
plate, $40., (650)521-3542
TABLE SAW 10", very good condition
$85. (650) 787-8219
309 Office Equipment
DESK - 7 drawer wood desk, 5X2X2.5'
$25., (650)726-9658
309 Office Equipment
ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER Smith Corona
$60. (650)878-9542
310 Misc. For Sale
1 CUSTOM Medicine Cabinet, White
with Mirror $25 obo, (650)589-8348
1 PAIR of matching outdoor planting pots
$20., (650)871-7200
10 PLANTS (assorted) for $3.00 each,
(650)349-6059
14 PLAYBOY magazines all for $80
(650)592-4529
300 HOME LIBRARY BOOKS - $3. or
$5. each obo, World & US History and
American Novel Classic, must see to ap-
preciate, (650)345-5502
4 IN 1 STERO UNIT. CD player broken.
$20., (650)834-4926
40 ADULT VHS Tapes - $100.,
(650)361-1148
5 PHOTOGRAPHIC CIVIL WAR
BOOKS plus 4 volumes of Abraham Lin-
coln books, SOLD!
6 BASKETS assorted sizes and different
shapes very good condition $13 for all
(650)347-5104
7 UNDERBED STORAGE BINS - Vinyl
with metal frame, 42 X 18 X 6, zipper
closure, $5. ea., (650)364-0902
9 CARRY-ON bags (assorted) - extra
large, good condition, $10. each obo,
(650)349-6059
ADJUSTABLE WALKER - 2 front
wheels, new, $50., (650)345-5446
ADULT VIDEOS - (3) DVDs classics fea-
turing older women, $25. each,
(650)212-7020
AFGHAN PRAYER RUG - very ornate,
2 1/2' by 5,' $99., (650)348-6428
ALUMINUM WINDOWS - (10)double
pane, different sizes, $10. each,
(415)819-3835
AMERICAN HERITAGE books 107 Vol-
umes Dec.'54-March '81 $99/all
(650)345-5502
ARTIFICIAL FICUS Tree 6 ft. life like, full
branches. in basket $55. (650)269-3712
ARTS & CRAFTS variety, $50
(650)368-3037
BABY BJORN potty & toilet trainer, in
perfect cond., $15 each (650)595-3933
BARBIE BEACH vacation & Barbie prin-
cess bride computer games $15 each,
(650)367-8949
BEADS - Glass beads for jewelry mak-
ing, $75. all, (650)676-0732
BLANKET- Double bed size, dusty rose,
satin bindings, warm, like new, washa-
ble. $8., 650-375-8044
BLUETOOTH WITH CHARGER - like
new, $20., (415)410-5937
BOOK "LIFETIME" WW1 $12.,
(408)249-3858
BOOK NATIONAL Geographic Nation-
al Air Museums, $15 (408)249-3858
BOOK SELECTION, Mystery, Romance,
Biography, SOLD!
CARRY ON suitcase, wheels, many
compartments, exel,Only $20,
(650)595-3933
310 Misc. For Sale
COMFORTER - King size, like new, $30
SSF, (650)871-7200
DOOM (3) computer games $15/each 2
total, (650)367-8949
DVD'S TV programs 24 4 seasons $20
ea. (650)952-3466
ELECTRONIC TYPEWRITER good con-
dition $50., (650)878-9542
EXOTIC EROTIC Ball SF & Mardi gras 2
dvd's $25 ea. (415)971-7555
FOLDING LEG table 6' by 21/2' $25
(415)346-6038
GAME "BEAT THE EXPERTS" never
used $8., (408)249-3858
GEORGE Magazines, 30, all intact
$50/all OBO. (650)574-3229, Foster City
HALLOWEEN DECORATIONS Pump-
kins, Lights, Large spiders, ect. all for
$20 D.C. SOLD!
HARDCOVER MYSTERY BOOKS -
Current authors, $2. each (10), (650)364-
7777
HARLEY DAVIDSON black phone, per-
fect condition, $65., (650) 867-2720
HARMON/KANDON SPEAKERS (2)
mint condition, work great for small of-
fice/room, extra speakers, 4 1/2 in. high,
includes cords. $8.00, SOLD!
ICE CHEST $15 (650)347-8061
INFLATED 4'6" in diameter swimming
pool float $12 (415)346-6038
JAMES PATTERSON books 2 Hard
backs at $3 ea. (650)341-1861
JAMES PATTERSON books 5 paper
backs at $1 ea. (650)341-1861
KITCHEN FAUCET / single handle with
sprayer (never used) $19, (650)494-1687
Palo Alto
MENU FROM Steam Ship Lurline Aug.
20 1967 $10 (650)755-8238
METAL COWBOY STATUE - $50.,
SOLD!
MIRROR, ETHAN ALLEN - 57-in. high x
21-in. wide, maple frame and floor base,
like new, $95., (650)349-2195
NATURAL GRAVITY WATER SYSTEM
- Alkaline, PH Balance water, with anti-
oxident properties, good for home or of-
fice, brand new, $100., (650)619-9203.
NELSON DE MILLE -Hardback books 5
@ $3 each, (650)341-1861
NEW CEADER shake shingles, enough
for a Medium size dog house. $20,
(650)341-8342 San Mateo
NEW LIVING Yoga Tape for Beginners
$8. 650-578-8306
OBLONG SECURITY mirror 24" by 15"
$75 (650)341-7079
OUTDOOR SCREEN - New 4 Panel
Outdoor Screen, Retail $130 With Metal
Supports, $80/obo. (650)873-8167
PICTORIAL WORLD History Books
$80/all (650)345-5502
PROFESSIONAL BEAUTY STYLING
STATION - Complete with mirrors, draw-
ers, and styling chair, $99. obo,
(650)315-3240
PUNCH BOWL - 10 cup plus one extra
nice white color, $25., (650)873-8167
ROCKING HORSE- solid hardwood,
perfect condition ideal gift, Only $30.,
650-595-3933
SESAME STREET toilet seat excellent
condition $12 650 349-6059
SF GREETING CARDS -(300 with enve-
lopes), factory sealed, $10. (650)365-
3987
SHOWER DOOR custom made 48 x 69
$70 (650)692-3260
SPECIAL EDITION 3 DVD Set of The
Freeze. English Subtitles, new $10.
(650)871-7200
STEP 2 sandbox Large with cover $25
(650)343-4329
STUART WOODS Hardback Books
4 @ $3.00 each. (650)341-1861
TIRE CHAINS - brand new, in box, never
used, multiple tire sizes, $25., (650)594-
1494
TOILET SINK - like new with all of the
accessories ready to be installed, $55.
obo, (650)369-9762
TRAVEL GARMENT BAG - High quali-
ty, 50"length, zipper close, all-weather,
wrap-around hangar, $15., 650-375-8044
VAN ROOF rack 3 piece. clamp-on, $75
(650)948-4895
VASE WITH flowers 2 piece good for the
Holidays, $25., (650) 867-2720
VIDEO CENTER 38 inches H 21 inches
W still in box $45., (408)249-3858
VOLVO STATION Wagon car cover $50
650 888-9624
WALKER - brand new, $20., SSF,
(415)410-5937
WALKER - never used, $85.,
(415)239-9063
WALL LIGHT FIXTURE - 2 lamp with
frosted fluted shades, gold metal, never
used, $15., Burl, (650)347-5104
WEATHER STATION, temp., barometer
and humidity, only $10 (650)595-3933
311 Musical Instruments
2 ORGANS, antique tramp, $100 each.
(650)376-3762
3 ACCORDIONS $110/ea. 1 Small
Accordion $82. (650)376-3762.
ANTIQUE COLLECTIBLE Bongo's $65.,
(650)348-6428
29 Weekend Oct. 27-28, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
311 Musical Instruments
HAMMOND B-3 Organ and 122 Leslie
Speaker. Excellent condition. $8,500. pri-
vate owner, (650)349-1172
HOHNER CUE stick guitar HW 300 G
Handcrafted $75 650 771-8513
PIANO ORGAN, good condition. $110.
(650)376-3762
YAMAHA KEYBOARD with stand $75,
(650)631-8902
312 Pets & Animals
PET MATE Vari Kennel 38" length by 24"
wide and 26" high $90 SSF
(650)871-7200
REPTILE CAGE - Medium size, $20.,
(650)348-0372
SMALL DOG wire cage; pink, two doors
with divider $50. (650) 743-9534.
315 Wanted to Buy
GO GREEN!
We Buy GOLD
You Get The
$ Green $
Millbrae Jewelers
Est. 1957
400 Broadway - Millbrae
650-697-2685
316 Clothes
2 SAN Francisco Giants Jackets 1 is
made by (Starter) LG/XLG excellent con-
dition $99 for both (650)571-5790
2. WOMEN'S Pink & White Motocycle
Helmet KBC $50 (415)375-1617
A BAG of Summer ties $15 OBO
(650)245-3661
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
BLOUSES SWEATERS and tops. Many
different styles & colors, med. to lrg., ex-
cellent condition $5 ea., have 20,
(650)592-2648
COWBOY SHIRTS - pearl snaps, pock-
ets, XL/XXL, perfect $15 each, cowboy
boots, 9D, black, $45., SOLD!
EUROPEAN STYLE nubek leather la-
dies winter coat - tan colored with green
lapel & hoodie, $100., (650)888-0129
GEORGE STRAIT Collection Resistol
oval shape, off white Hat size 7 1/8 $40
SOLD!
HALLOWEEN COSTUME "Little miss
Muffet" outfit with blonde braided wig
never warn Fredrick of Hollywood $35
D.C. SOLD!
HALLOWEEN COSTUME 1950's Poodle
skirt Black & Pink from Fredrick of Holly-
wood $35 D.C. SOLD!
HALLOWEEN COSTUME Tony Martin
size 40 warn only once from Selix $25
D.C SOLD!
HARDING PARK mens golf dress shirts
(new) asking $25 (650)871-7200
LADIES BOOTS, thigh high, fold down
brown, leather, and beige suede leather
pair, tassels on back excellent, Condition
$40 ea. (650)592-2648
LADIES COAT Medium, dark lavender
$25 (650)368-3037
LADIES FAUX FUR COAT - Satin lining,
size M/L, $100. obo, (650)525-1990
LADIES JACKET size 3x 70% wool 30%
nylon never worn $50. (650)592-2648
316 Clothes
LEATHER COAT - 3/4 length, black,
never worn, $85., (650)345-7352
LEATHER COAT medium size (snake
skin design) $25 (650)755-8238
LEATHER JACKET, mans XL, black, 5
pockets, storm flap, $39 (650)595-3933
MEN'S SUIT almost new $25.
650-573-6981
MENS JEANS (8) Brand names verious
sizes 32,33,34 waist 30,32 length $99 for
all (650)347-5104
NEW BROWN LEATHER JACKET- XL
$25., 650-364-0902
SNOW BOOTS, MEN'S size 12. Brand
New, Thermolite brand,(with zippers),
black, $18. (510) 527-6602
TUXEDOS, FORMAL, 3, Black, White,
Maroon Silk brocade, Like new. Size 36,
$100 All OBO (650)344-8549
VINTAGE 1930 Ermine fur coat Black full
length $35 SOLD!
317 Building Materials
(1) 2" FAUX WOOD WINDOW BLIND,
with 50" and 71" height, still in box, $50
obo (650)345-5502
DRAIN PIPE - flexible, 3 & 4, approx.
20 of 3, 40 ft. of 4, $25.all, (650)851-
0878
FLOOR BASEBOARDS - Professionally
walnut finished, 6 room house, longest
13- 3/8 x 1 3/8, excellent condition,
$30.all, San Bruno, (650)588-1946
PVC - 1, 100 feet, 20 ft. lengths, $25.,
(650)851-0878
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.
BACKPACK - Large for overnight camp-
ing, excellent condition, $65., (650)212-
7020
BASKETBALL RIM, net & backboard
$35/all 650-345-7132 Leave message.
COLEMAN "GLO-MASTER" 1- burner
camp stove for boaters or camping. Mint
condition. $35.00 (650)375-8044
DARTBOARD - New, regulation 18 di-
meter, Halex brand w/mounting hard-
ware, 6 brass darts, $16., (650)681-7358
DL1000 BOAT Winch Rope & More,
$50., (650)726-9658
EXERCISE MAT used once, lavender
$12, (650)368-3037
FISHING EQUPMENT 3 rods with reels,
2 Tackle boxes full fo supplies, SOLD!
GIRLS BIKE, Princess 16 wheels with
helmet, $50 San Mateo (650)341-5347
GOLF BALLS Many brands 150 total,
$30 Or best offer, (650)341-5347
GOLF CLUBS Driver, 7 wood, putter, 9
irons, bag, & pull cart. $99
(650)952-0620
PING CRAZ-E Putter w/ cover. 35in.
Like New $75 call(650)208-5758
SHIMANO 4500 Bait runner real with 6'
white rhino fishing pole $45
(650)521-3542
THULE BIKE RACK - Fits rectangular
load bars. Holds bike upright. $100.
(650)594-1494
TREADMILL PROFORM 75 EKG incline
an Staionery Bike, both $400. Or sepa-
rate: $150 for the bike, $350 for the
treadmill. Call (650)992-8757
YOGA VIDEOS (2) - Never used, one
with Patrisha Walden, one by Rebok with
booklet. Both $6 (650)755-8238
322 Garage Sales
GARAGE
SALE
Saturday,
October 27
Between
9:00 & 2:00
1132 Cortez Ave.,
Burlingame
Antique Dining
Chairs, Collectible
Dolls, China, and
Much More!
HUGE
YARD
SALE
SAN MATEO
426 Costa Rica Ave.
(between W. Poplar
& Clark Dr.)
Friday &
Saturday
Oct. 26 & 27
10 am - 3 pm
GARAGE SALES
ESTATE SALES
Make money, make room!
List your upcoming garage
sale, moving sale, estate
sale, yard sale, rummage
sale, clearance sale, or
whatever sale you have...
in the Daily Journal.
Reach over 76,500 readers
from South San Francisco
to Palo Alto.
in your local newspaper.
Call (650)344-5200
335 Garden Equipment
CRAFTSMAN 4 HP ROTARY LAWN-
MOWER - 20 rear discharge, extra new
grasscatcher, $85., (650)368-0748
340 Camera & Photo Equip.
SONY CYBERSHOT DSC-T-50 - 7.2 MP
digital camera (black) with case, $175.,
(650)208-5598
340 Camera & Photo Equip.
YASAHICA 108 model 35mm SLR Cam-
era with flash and 2 zoom lenses $99
(415)971-7555
379 Open Houses
OPEN HOUSE
LISTINGS
List your Open House
in the Daily Journal.
Reach over 76,500
potential home buyers &
renters a day,
from South San Francisco
to Palo Alto.
in your local newspaper.
Call (650)344-5200
470 Rooms
HIP HOUSING
Non-Profit Home Sharing Program
San Mateo County
(650)348-6660
Rooms For Rent
Travel Inn, San Carlos
$49-59 daily + tax
$294-$322 weekly + tax
Clean Quiet Convenient
Cable TV, WiFi & Private Bathroom
Microwave and Refrigerator
950 El Camino Real San Carlos
(650) 593-3136
Mention Daily Journal
620 Automobiles
Dont lose money
on a trade-in or
consignment!
Sell your vehicle in the
Daily Journals
Auto Classifieds.
Just $3 per day.
Reach 76,500 drivers
from South SF to
Palo Alto
Call (650)344-5200
ads@smdailyjournal.com
CHEVY HHR 08 - Grey, spunky car
loaded, even seat warmers, $9,500.
(408)807-6529.
HONDA 10 ACCORD LX - 4 door se-
dan, low miles, $19K, (650)573-6981
MERCEDES 06 C230 - 6 cylinder, navy
blue, 60K miles, 2 year warranty,
$18,000, (650)455-7461
625 Classic Cars
DATSUN 72 - 240Z with Chevy 350, au-
tomatic, custom, $3,600 or trade.
(415) 412-7030
635 Vans
FORD 97 Arrowstar Van XLT - 130K
miles, $3500. obo, SOLD!
635 Vans
NISSAN 01 Quest - GLE, leather seats,
sun roof, TV/DVR equipment. Looks
new, $15,500. (650)219-6008
640 Motorcycles/Scooters
BMW 03 F650 GS, $3899 OBO. Call
650-995-0003
HARLEY DAVIDSON 01 - Softail Blue
and Cream, low mileage, extras, $7,400.,
Call Greg @ (650)574-2012
HARLEY DAVIDSON 83 Shovelhead
special construction, 1340 ccs,
Awesome! $5,950/obo
Rob (415)602-4535.
645 Boats
BANSHEE SAILBOAT - 13 ft. with ex-
tras, $750., (650)343-6563
650 RVs
73 Chevy Model 30 Van, Runs
good, Rebuilt Transmission, Fiber-
glass Bubble Top $1,795. Owner
financing.
Call for appointments. (650)364-1374.
CHEVROLET RV 91 Model 30 Van,
Good Condition $9,500., (650)591-1707
or (650)644-5179
655 Trailers
TENT TRAILER - Good Condition
Sleeps 6. Electric, Water Hook-ups,
Stove, SOLD!
670 Auto Service
MB GARAGE, INC.
Repair Restore Sales
Mercedes-Benz Specialists
2165 Palm Ave.
San Mateo
(650)349-2744
ON TRACK
AUTOMOTIVE
Complete Auto Repair
foreign & domestic
www.ontrackautomotive.com
1129 California Dr.
Burlingame
(650)343-4594
People you can trust;
service you can trust
NORDIC MOTORS, INC.
Specializing in Volvo, Saab,
Subaru
65 Winslow Road
Redwood City
(650) 595-0170
www.nordicmotors.com
SAN CARLOS AUTO
SERVICE & TUNE UP
A Full Service Auto Repair
Facility
760 El Camino Real
San Carlos
(650)593-8085
670 Auto Parts
'91 TOYOTA COROLLA RADIATOR.
Original equipment. Excellent cond. Cop-
per fins. $60. San Bruno, (415)999-4947
1974 OWNERS MANUAL - Mercedes
280, 230 - like new condition, $20., San
Bruno, (650)588-1946
2 SNOW/CABLE chains good condition
fits 13-15 inch rims, SOLD!
5 HUBCAPS for 1966 Alfa Romeo $50.,
(650)580-3316
67-68 CAMERO PARTS - $85.,
(650)592-3887
CAMPER/TRAILER/TRUCK OUTSIDE
backup mirror 8 diameter fixture. SOLD!
MAZDA 3 2010 CAR COVER - Cover-
kraft multibond inside & outside cover,
like new, $50., (650)678-3557
MERCEDES TOOL KIT - 1974, 10
piece, original, like new condition, $20.,
San Bruno, (650)588-1946
SHOP MANUALS 2 1955 Pontiac
manual, 4 1984 Ford/Lincoln manuals, &
1 gray marine diesel manual $40 or B/O
(650)583-5208
TRUCK RADIATOR - fits older Ford,
never used, $100., (650)504-3621
672 Auto Stereos
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
2001 Middlefield Road
Redwood City
(650)299-9991
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
ads@smdailyjournal.com
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
Cabinetry Cleaning Concrete Construction Construction Construction
650 868 - 8492
PATRICK BRADY PATRICK BRADY
GENERAL CONTRACTOR
ADDITIONS WALL REMOVAL
BATHS KITCHENS AND MORE!
PATBRADY1957@SBCGLOBAL.NET
License # 479385
Frame
Structural
Foundation
Roots & ALL
I make your
life better!
LARGE OR SMALL
I do them all!
30
Weekend Oct. 27-28, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
Pictures on Yelp
Qualing
Special
at & low
slope roofs
650-594-1717
ADVERTISE
YOUR SERVICE
in the
HOME & GARDEN SECTION
Offer your services to 76,500 readers a day, from
Palo Alto to South San Francisco
and all points between!
Call (650)344-5200
ads@smdailyjournal.com
Decks & Fences
MARSH FENCE
& DECK CO.
State License #377047
Licensed Insured Bonded
Fences - Gates - Decks
Stairs - Retaining Walls
10-year guarantee
Quality work w/reasonable prices
Call for free estimate
(650)571-1500
Electricians
ALL ELECTRICAL
SERVICE
650-322-9288
for all your electrical needs
ELECTRIC SERVICE GROUP
ELECTRICIAN
For all your
electrical needs
Residential, Commercial,
Troubleshooting,
Wiring & Repairing
Call Ben at (650)685-6617
Lic # 427952
Gutters
O.K.S RAINGUTTER
New Rain Gutters
Down Spouts
Gutter Cleaning & Screening,
Roof & Gutter Repairs
Friendly Service
10% Senior Discount
CA Lic# 794353/Bonded
(650)556-9780
Handy Help
CONTRERAS
HANDYMAN
Fences Decks Patios
Power Washes Concrete
Work Maintenance Clean
Ups Arbors
Free Estimates!
Call us Today!
(650)350-9968
contreras1270@yahoo.com
FLORES HANDYMAN
Serving you is a privilege.
Painting-Interior & Exterior Roof Re-
pair Base Boards New Fence
Hardwood Floors Plumbing Tile
Mirrors Chain Link Fence Windows
Bus Lic# 41942
Call today for free estimate.
(650)274-6133
Handy Help
DISCOUNT HANDYMAN
& PLUMBING
Carpentry Plumbing Drain
Cleaning Kitchens Bathrooms
Dry Rot Decks
Priced for You! Call John
(650)296-0568
Free Estimates
Lic.#834170
HONEST HANDYMAN
Remodeling, Plumbing.
Electrical, Carpentry,
General Home Repair,
Maintenance,
New Construction
No Job Too Small
Lic.# 891766
(650)740-8602
SENIOR HANDYMAN
Specializing in Any Size Projects
Painting Electrical
Carpentry Dry Rot
Carpet Installation
40 Yrs. Experience
Retired Licensed Contractor
(650)201-6854
Hardwood Floors
KO-AM
HARDWOOD FLOORING
Hardwood & Laminate
Installation & Repair
Refinish
High Quality @ Low Prices
Call 24/7 for Free Estimate
800-300-3218
408-979-9665
Lic. #794899
Hauling
CHEAP
HAULING!
Light moving!
Haul Debris!
650-583-6700
HAULING
Low Rates
Residential and Commercial
Free Estimates,
General Clean-Ups, Garage
Clean-Outs, Construction Clean-Ups
Call (650)630-0116
or (650)636-6016
Hauling
INDEPENDENT HAULERS
$50 & Up HAUL
Since 1988 Free Estimates
Licensed/Insured
A+ BBB rating
(650)341-7482
JUNK HAULING
AND DEMOLITION
Clean up and Haul away all Junk
We also do Demolition
Call George
(650)384-1894
Landscaping
Moving
Bay Area
Relocation Services
Specializing in:
Homes, Apts., Storages
Professional, friendly, careful.
Peninsulas Personal Mover
Commercial/Residential
Fully Lic. & Bonded CAL -T190632
Call Armando (650) 630-0424
Painting
BEST RATES
PRO PAINTING
Residential/Commercial
Interior/Exterior, Pressure Washing
Professional/Courteous/Punctual
FREE ESTIMATES
Sean (415)707-9127
seanmcvey@mcveypaint.com
CSL# 752943
CRAIGS PAINTING
Interior & Exterior
Quality Work w/
Reasonable Rates
Free Estimates
(650)553-9653
Lic# 857741
GOLDEN WEST
PAINTING
Since 1975
Interior/Exterior,
Complete Preparation.
Will Beat any
Professional Estimate!
CSL#321586
(415)722-9281
JON LA MOTTE
PAINTING
Interior & Exterior
Pressure Washing
Free Estimates
(650)368-8861
Lic #514269
MTP
Painting/Waterproofing
Drywall Repair/Tape/Texture
Power Washing-Decks, Fences
No Job Too Big or Small
Lic.# 896174
Call Mike the Painter
(650)271-1320
Plumbing
$89 TO CLEAN
ANY CLOGGED DRAIN!
Installation of
Trenchless Pipes,
Water Heaters & Faucets
(650) 461-0326
Lic#933572
Remodeling
CORNERSTONE HOME DESIGN
Complete Kitchen & Bath Resource
Showroom: Countertops Cabinets
Plumbing Fixtures Fine Tile
Open M-F 8:30-5:30 SAT 10-4
168 Marco Way
South San Francisco, 94080
(650)866-3222
www.cornerstoneHD.com
CA License #94260
KITCHEN & BATH
REMODELING
50% off cabinets
(manufacturers list price)
CABINET WORLD
1501 Laurel St.
San Carlos
(650)592-8020
Home Improvement
CINNABAR HOME
Making Peninsula homes
more beautiful since 1996
* Home furnishings & accessories
* Drapery & window treatments:
blinds & shades
* Free in-home consultation
853 Industrial Rd. Ste E San Carlos
Wed Sat 12:00- 5:30pm, or by appt.
650-388-8836
www.cinnabarhome.com
Tile
CUBIAS TILE
Marble, Stone & porcelain
Kitchens, bathrooms, floors,
fireplaces, entryways, decks,
tile, ceramic tile
repair, grout repair
Free Estimates Lic.# 955492
Mario Cubias
(650)784-3079
JZ TILE
Installation and Design
Portfolio and References,
Great Prices
Free Estimates
Lic. 670794
Call John Zerille
(650)245-8212
Window Coverings
RUDOLPHS INTERIORS
Satisfying customers with world-
class service and products since
1952. Let us help you create the
home of your dreams. Please
phone for an appointment.
(650)227-4882
Window Coverings
Window Fashions
247 California Dr
Burlingame 650-348-1268
990 Industrial Rd Ste 106
San Carlos 650-508-8518
www.rebarts.com
BLINDS, SHADES, SHUTTERS, DRAPERIES
Free estimates Free installation
Window Washing
Notices
NOTICE TO READERS:
California law requires that contractors
taking jobs that total $500 or more (labor
or materials) be licensed by the Contrac-
tors State License Board. State law also
requires that contractors include their li-
cense number in their advertising. You
can check the status of your licensed
contractor at www.cslb.ca.gov or 800-
321-CSLB. Unlicensed contractors taking
jobs that total less than $500 must state
in their advertisements that they are not
licensed by the Contractors State Li-
cense Board.
31 Weekend Oct. 27-28, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
Attorneys
* BANKRUPTCY *
Huge credit card debt?
Job loss? Foreclosure?
Medical bills?
YOU HAVE OPTIONS
Call for a free consultation
(650)363-2600
This law firm is a debt relief agency
Law Office of Jason Honaker
BANKRUPTCY
Chapter 7 &13
Call us for a consultation
650-259-9200
www.honakerlegal.com
TRUSTS & ESTATE PLANNING
Top Attorney With Masters
In Tax Law Offers Reduced
Fees For New October Clients.
(650)342-3777
Ira Harris Zelnigher, Esq.
(Ira Harris)
1840 Gateway Dr., Ste. 200
San Mateo
Beauty
GRAND OPENING SPECIALS:
Facials , Eyebrow Waxing ,
Microdermabrasion
Full Body Salt Scrub &
Seaweed Wrap
Le Juin Day Spa & Clinic
155 E. 5th Avenue
Downtown San Mateo
(650) 347-6668
KAYS
HEALTH & BEAUTY
Facials, Waxing, Fitness
Body Fat Reduction
Pure Organic Facial $48.
1 Hillcrest Blvd, Millbrae
(650)697-6868
Business Services
PUT YOUR
BUSINESS INFO
ON THE
INTERNET
FREE
Link the phone number
in your classified ad
directly to online details
about your business
ZypPages.com
Barbara@ZypPages.com
Dental Services
DR. SAMIR NANJAPA DDS
Family Dentistry &
Smile Restoration
UCSF Dentistry Faculty
Cantonese, Mandarin &
Hindi Spoken
650-477-6920
320 N. San Mateo Dr. Ste 2
San Mateo
MILLBRAE SMILE CENTER
Valerie de Leon, DDS
Implant, Cosmetic and
Family Dentistry
Spanish and Tagalog Spoken
(650)697-9000
15 El Camino Real,
MILLBRAE, CA
Food
BROADWAY GRILL
Express Lunch
Special $8.00
1400 Broadway
Burlingame
(650)343-9733
www.bwgrill.com
GOT BEER?
We Do!
Steelhead Brewing Co.
333 California Dr.
Burlingame
(650)344-6050
www.steelheadbrewery.com
JACKS
RESTAURANT
Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
1050 Admiral Ct., #A
San Bruno
(650)589-2222
JacksRestaurants.com
NEALS COFFEE
SHOP
Breakfast Lunch Dinner
Senior Meals, Kids Menu
www.nealscoffeeshop.com
1845 El Camino Real
Burlingame
(650)692-4281
NEW ENGLAND
LOBSTER CO.
Market & Eatery
Now Open in Burlingame
824 Cowan Road
newenglandlobster.net
LIve Lobster ,Lobster Tail,
Lobster meat & Dungeness Crab
SUNDAY CHAMPAGNE
BRUNCH
Crowne Plaza
1221 Chess Dr., Hwy. 92 at
Foster City Blvd. Exit
Foster City
(650)570-5700
Food
SUNSHINE CAFE
Breakfast Lunch Dinner
1750 El Camino Real
San Mateo
(Borel Square)
(650)357-8383
THE AMERICAN BULL
BAR & GRILL
19 large screen HD TVs
Full Bar & Restaurant
www.theamericanbull.com
1819 El Camino, in
Burlingame Plaza
(650)652-4908
Financial
RELATIONSHIP BANKING
Partnership. Service. Trust.
UNITED AMERICAN BANK
Half Moon Bay, Redwood City,
Sunnyvale
unitedamericanbank.com
San Mateo
(650)579-1500
Fitness
DOJO USA
World Training Center
Martial Arts & Tae Bo Training
www.dojousa.net
731 Kains Ave, San Bruno
(650)589-9148
Furniture
Bedroom Express
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
Health & Medical
BACK, LEG PAIN OR
NUMBNESS?
Non-Surgical
Spinal Decompression
Dr. Thomas Ferrigno D.C.
650-231-4754
177 Bovet Rd. #150 San Mateo
BayAreaBackPain.com
General Dentistry
for Adults & Children
DR. ANNA P. LIVIZ, DDS
324 N. San Mateo Drive, #2
San Mateo 94401
(650)343-5555
JANET R. STEELE, LMFT
MFC31794
Counseling for relationship
difficulties; chronic illness/
disabilities; trauma/PTSD
Individuals, couples, families,
teens and veterans welcome!
(650)380-4459
Health & Medical
SLEEP APNEA
We can treat it
without CPAP!
Call for a free
sleep apnea screening
650-583-5880
Millbrae Dental
STRESSED OUT?
IN PAIN?
I CAN HELP YOU
Sessions start from $20
Call 650-235-6761
Will Chen ACUPUNCTURE
12220 6th Ave, Belmont
www. willchenacupuncture.com
TOENAIL FUNGUS?
FREE Consultation for
Laser Treatment
(650)347-0761
Dr. Richard Woo, DPM
400 S. El Camino Real
San Mateo
Home Care
CALIFORNIA HOARDING
REMEDIATION
Free Estimates
Whole House & Office
Cleanup Too!
Serving SF Bay Area
(650)762-8183
Call Karen Now!
Insurance
AANTHEM BLUE
CROSS
www.ericbarrettinsurance.com
Eric L. Barrett,
CLU, RHU, REBC, CLTC, LUTCF
President
Barrett Insurance Services
(650)513-5690
CA. Insurance License #0737226
Jewelers
KUPFER JEWELRY
We Buy
Coins, Jewelry,
Watches, Platinum,
& Diamonds.
Expert fine watch
& jewelry repair.
Deal with experts.
1211 Burlingame Ave.
Burlingame
www.kupferjewelry.com
(650) 347-7007
Legal Services
LEGAL
DOCUMENTS PLUS
Non-Attorney document
preparation: Divorce,
Pre-Nup, Adoption, Living Trust,
Conservatorship, Probate,
Notary Public. Response to
Lawsuits: Credit Card
Issues,Breach of Contract
Jeri Blatt, LDA #11
Registered & Bonded
(650)574-2087
legaldocumentsplus.com
"I am not an attorney. I can only
provide self help services at your
specific direction."
Loans
REVERSE MORTGAGE
Are you age 62+ & own your
home?
Call for a free, easy to read
brochure or quote
650-453-3244
Carol Bertocchini, CPA
Marketing
GROW
YOUR SMALL BUSINESS
Get free help from
The Growth Coach
Go to
www.buildandbalance.com
Sign up for the free newsletter
Massage Therapy
ASIAN MASSAGE
$48 per Hour
New Customers Only
For First 20 Visits
Open 7 days, 10 am -10 pm
633 Veterans Blvd., #C
Redwood City
(650)556-9888
ENJOY THE BEST
ASIAN MASSAGE
$40 for 1/2 hour
Angel Spa
667 El Camino Real, Redwood City
(650)363-8806
7 days a week, 9:30am-9:30pm
GRAND OPENING
$45 ONE HOUR
HEALING MASSAGE
2305-A Carlos Street
Moss Beach
(On Hwy 1 next to Post office)
(650)563-9771
GRAND OPENING!
CRYSTAL WAVE SPA
Body & Foot Massage
Facial Treatment
1205 Capuchino Ave.
Burlingame
(650)558-1199
SUNFLOWER MASSAGE
Grand Opening!
$10. Off 1-Hour Session!
1482 Laurel St.
San Carlos
(Behind Trader Joes)
Open 7 Days/Week, 10am-10pm
(650)508-8758
TRANQUIL
MASSAGE
951 Old County Road
Suite 1
Belmont
650-654-2829
YOU HAVE IT-
WELL BUY IT
We buy and pawn:
Gold Jewelry
Art Watches
Musical Instrument
Paintings Diamonds
Silverware Electronics
Antique Furniture
Computers TVs Cars
Open 7 days
Buy *Sell*Loan
590 Veterans Blvd.
Redwood City
(650)368-6855
Needlework
LUV2
STITCH.COM
Needlepoint!
Fiesta Shopping Center
747 Bermuda Dr., San Mateo
(650)571-9999
Real Estate Loans
REAL ESTATE LOANS
We Fund Bank Turndowns!
Direct Private Lender
Homes Multi-family
Mixed-Use Commercial
WE BUY TRUST DEED NOTES
FICO Credit Score Not a Factor
PURCHASE, REFINANCE,
CASH OUT
Investors welcome
Loan servicing since 1979
650-348-7191
Wachter Investments, Inc.
Real Estate Broker #746683
Nationwide Mortgage
Licensing System ID #348268
CA Dept. of Real Estate
Real Estate Services
ODOWD ESTATES
Representing Buyers
& Sellers
Commission Negotiable
odowdestates.com
(650)794-9858
Seniors
AFFORDABLE
24-hour Assisted Living
Care located in
Burlingame
Mills Estate Villa
&
Burlingame Villa
- Short Term Stays
- Dementia & Alzheimers
Care
- Hospice Care
(650)692-0600
Lic.#4105088251/
415600633
LASTING IMPRESSIONS
ARE OUR FIRST PRIORITY
Cypress Lawn
1370 El Camino Real
Colma
(650)755-0580
www.cypresslawn.com
MANUFACTURED
HOME COMMUNITY
For Ages 55+
Canada Cove,
Half Moon Bay
(650) 726-5503
www.theaccenthome.com
Walk to the Beach
STERLING COURT
ACTIVE INDEPENDENT &
ASSISTED LIVING
Tours 10AM-4PM
2 BR,1BR & Studio
Luxury Rental
650-344-8200
850 N. El Camino Real San Mateo
sterlingcourt.com
32 Weekend Oct. 27-28, 2012 THEDAILYJOURNAL
Coins Dental Jewelry Silver Watches Diamonds
1Z11 80fll808M0 90 0J400
Expert Fine Watch
& Jewelry Repair
Not afliated with any watch company.
Only Authentic ROLEX Factory Parts Are Used
t%FBMWJUI&YQFSUTt2VJDL4FSWJDF
t6OFRVBM$VTUPNFS$BSF
XXX#FTU3BUFE(PME#VZFSTDPN
Tuesday - Saturday
11:00am to 4:00pm
www.BestRatedGoldBuyers.com
KUPFER JEWELRYsBURLINGAME
(650) 347-7007
ROLEX SERVICE
OR REPAIR
MUST PRESENT COUPON.
EXPIRES 10/31/12
WEBUY
$0
OFF ANY
$0
OFF ANY

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