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RETURN OF REMAINS: U.S. WAR DEAD REPATRIATED FROM N. KOREA > PAGE 8 • SAFE AT HOME: HMB TEAM ALL OUT OF REDDING > PAGE 11
Leading local news coverage on the Peninsula www.smdailyjournal.com
Weekend • July 28-29, 2018 • XVIII, Edition 292
Foster City studies impacts of new housing Pilgrim Triton development winding its way through approval process By Zachary Clark DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
After a recent round of studies, Foster City officials have concluded that a proposed residential development known as Pilgrim Triton Phase C will have a manageable impact on traffic congestion, schools and utilities — three areas of concern expressed
by some residents in the past. And with respect to traffic specifically, officials claim the latest residential proposal will result in significantly fewer car trips than offices, which the city previously entitled developer Sares Regis to construct on the site. Staff presented the findings, outlined in an addendum to the environmental impact
report, at a Planning Commission meeting July 19. The commission postponed its vote on the proposal to a meeting scheduled for August because Commissioner Noemi Avram was absent. The City Council will cast its final vote on the project in August as well. Sares Regis is proposing to construct 70 market-rate townhomes for sale in addition
to a building with 22 below-market-rate units reserved for first responders and other city employees so more of them can live in town. The developer will also finish building a half-complete park located on site as part of the project. Phase C is the last major development in the Pilgrim Triton Master
See STUDY, Page 23
Economy grows at brisk pace GDP has best showing since 2014 with a 4.1 percent rate By Martin Crutsinger THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Inside
WASHINGTON — The U.S. economy accelerated last quarter at an annual rate of 4.1 percent, the government estimated Friday, as conTrump again seemed sumers spent tax-cut money, busi- to preview release of nesses stepped up investment and good economic news exporters rushed to ship their goods See page 7 ahead of retaliatory tariffs. President Donald Trump said he was thrilled with what he called an “amazing” growth rate — the strongest quarterly figure since 2014 — and said it wasn’t “a one-time shot.” But most economists took issue with that forecast, saying the pace of growth in the April-June quarter won’t likely last in the months ahead.
See GDP, Page 18
ZACHARY CLARK/DAILY JOURNAL
Scott Clark assembles burgers with Anthony Keels, who also worked with Clark at Saison. Scott Clark, or ‘Dad’s’ popular burgers, are made with grass-fed beef, soft egg, melty cheese, red onion pickles, red oak lettuce and a mustard-based ‘Dad’s sauce’ on grilled white bread. Below: The intimate and often-packed dining area sits behind the vintage train caboose.
As jobless rate ticks up, Dad’s Luncheonette going strong county rate is still low Half Moon Bay eatery is a worldwide draw
At 2.5 percent, San Mateo County lowest in state; employers try to ease housing, transit
By Zachary Clark
By Anna Schuessler
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
Since Dad’s Luncheonette opened with a bang in Half Moon Bay more than a year ago, the caboose-turnedroadside eatery is still just about always packed with diners. But behind the scenes, things have calmed down for chef and owner Scott
Following months of record-breaking lows, the rise in San Mateo County’s unemployment rate from the 1.9 percent logged by the state’s Employment Development Department in May to the 2.5 percent recorded by the EDD in June marked one of the largest jumps in the county’s jobless rate in recent months. Together with a rise in the number of unemployed people
See DAD’S, Page 18
See JOBS, Page 24
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FOR THE RECORD
Weekend • July 28-29, 2018
THE DAILY JOURNAL
Thought for the Day “It is impossible to write ancient history because we lack source materials, and impossible to write modern history because we have far too many.” — Charles Peguy, French poet and writer
This Day in History
1945
The U.S. Senate ratified the United Nations Charter by a vote of 89-2.
In 1 7 9 4 , Maximilien Robespierre, a leading figure of the French Revolution, was sent to the guillotine. In 1 9 1 4 , World War I began as Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia. In 1 9 3 2 , federal troops forcibly dispersed the so-called “Bonus Army” of World War I veterans who had gathered in Washington to demand payments they weren’t scheduled to receive until 1945. In 1 9 4 3 , President Franklin D. Roosevelt announced the end of coffee rationing, which had limited people to one pound of coffee every five weeks since it began in Nov. 1942. In 1 9 4 5 , a U.S. Army bomber crashed into the 79th floor of New York’s Empire State Building, killing 14 people. In 1 9 5 9 , in preparation for statehood, Hawaiians voted to send the first Chinese-American, Republican Hiram L. Fong, to the U.S. Senate and the first Japanese-American, Democrat Daniel K. Inouye, to the U. S. House of A bride poses for photo during a total lunar eclipse in Brasilia, Brazil. Representatives. property taxes. In 1 9 6 5 , President Lyndon B. Johnson announced he was *** increasing the number of American troops in South Vietnam There are more than 8,000 species of from 75,000 to 125,000 “almost immediately.” ants. In 1 9 7 6 , an earthquake devastated northern China, killing *** at least 242,000 people, according to an official estimate. Prankster Samuel S. Adams (1878In 1 9 8 4 , the Los Angeles Summer Olympics opened. 1963) invented sneezing powder and In 1989, Israeli commandos abducted a pro-Iranian Shiite started the Cachoo Sneezing Powder Muslim cleric, Sheik Abdul-Karim Obeid, from his home in Company in 1904. Adams also created south Lebanon. (He was released in January 2004 as part of us the joy buzzer, the dribble glass and a prisoner swap.) the squirting lapel flower. *** Only about one in 40 babies is born on fter the television music show the actual ‘due date’ estimated by the “Soul Train” (1971-2006) obstetrician. debuted in 1970, the Sears and *** Roebuck department store used the Soul Megalomaniacs are obsessed with the Train name to promote the record play- desire for great power. Pyromaniacs are ers they were selling at the time. obsessed with fire. Do you know what *** chirablutomaniacs, bibliomaniacs and Dolly Parton (born 1946) met her hus- technomaniacs are obsessed with? See band Carl Dean (born 1942) at the answer at end. Wishy-Washy Laundromat in Nashville, *** Tennessee. If you straightened out a French horn it Rapper Soulja Boy “Garfield” creator Actress Sally *** would be 12-feet long. is 28. Jim Davis is 73. Struthers is 71. Most major airlines retire flight num*** bers after a plane crash. It is not superThe cover of the first issue of Ms. Actor Darryl Hickman is 87. Ballet dancer-choreographer stitious. It is done out of respect for fam- Magazine in January 1972 pictured a Jacques d’Amboise is 84. Musical conductor Riccardo Muti is ily so they do not have to be woman juggling a clock, frying pan, 77. Former Senator and NBA Hall of Famer Bill Bradley is 75. reminded of the accident. mirror, iron, steering wheel, typewriter Singer Jonathan Edwards is 72. Actress Linda Kelsey is 72. TV *** producer Dick Ebersol is 71. Actress Georgia Engel is 70. The shoulder t is made up of three and rake. *** Rock musician Simon Kirke (Bad Company) is 69. Rock bones: the clavicle, scapula and Abstract expressionist painter Jackson musician Steve Morse (Deep Purple) is 64. Former CBS humerus. Pollock (1912-1956) died in an automoanchorman Scott Pelley is 61. Alt-country-rock musician *** bile accident at age 44. Marc Perlman is 57. Actor Michael Hayden is 55. Actress Lori Kraft introduced Miracle Whip in 1933 *** Loughlin is 54. Jazz musician-producer Delfeayo Marsalis is with the slogan “Salad Miracles with The first winning word of the National 53. Former hockey player turned general manager Garth Snow Miracle Whip Salad Dressing.” It was Spelling Bee in 1925 was gladiolus. In is 49. Actress Elizabeth Berkley is 46. Singer Afroman is 44. the first ready-to-serve spoonable salad 1975, it was incisor. In 2005, the winCountry musician Todd Anderson (Heartland) is 43. Rock dressing. ning word was appoggiatura. singer Jacoby Shaddix (Papa Roach) is 42. Country singer *** *** Carly Goodwin is 37. Actor Jon Michael Hill is 33. Actor Log cabins in Maine are exempt from Some types of terrestrial salamanders do Dustin Milligan is 33. Actor Nolan Gerard Funk is 32.
Birthdays
A
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.
©2018 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.
VFREE
POYOKS
41
44
64
26
13
18
23
27
38
2
4
8
Powerball
Daily Four
July 27 Mega Millions 1
32
40
49
63
20 Mega number
July 25 Super Lotto Plus 6
16
27
30
40
3
Daily three midday 4
11
7
5
Daily three evening
Mega number
0
4
3
The Daily Derby race winners are Gorgeous George, No. 8, in first place; Solid Gold, No. 10, in second place; and Lucky Star, No. 2, in third place.The race time was clocked at 1:46.63.
SADLIN Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
Yesterday’s
18
(Answers Monday) SHAME PUBLIC OUTAGE Jumbles: ELDER Answer: The archer who scored a bull’s-eye to secure her team’s victory — AIMED TO PLEASE
The San Mateo Daily Journal 1720 S. Amphlett Blvd, Suite 123, San Mateo, CA 94402 Publisher: Jerry Lee Editor in Chief: Jon Mays
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not have lungs. They breathe through their skin. Their skin must remain constantly moist or they lose the ability to transfer oxygen. *** The nickname for St. Stephens Tower in London is Big Ben, but Big Ben refers to the bell, not the clock or the tower. The clock’s hour hand is 9-feet long and the minute hand is 14-feet long. *** Betsy Ross (1752-1836), the seamstress credited with sewing the first American flag, was widowed three times and had nine daughters. *** The Las Vegas icon Vegas Vic, a 40-foot tall neon cowboy sign on Fremont Street, was built in 1951. The cowboy once waved his mechanical arm and said “Howdy podner!” every 15 minutes. *** “Often a bridesmaid but never a bride” was used in the first ad for Listerine mouthwash in 1925. They originated the phrase. *** Gabriel Fahrenheit (1686-1736) was the first person to make a thermometer using mercury. *** Ans wer: A chirablutomaniac ex cessively washes his hands. A bibliomaniac is obsessed with books. A technomaniac is obsessed with technology. Know It All is by Kerry McArdle. It runs in Wednesday editions of the Daily Journal. Questions? Comments? Email knowitall(at)smdailyjournal.com or call 3445200 ext. 128.
Local Weather Forecast Fantasy Five
July 25 Powerball 2
Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app
NOTIX
Lotto
REUTERS
idoub.com/smdailyjournal facebook.com/smdailyjournal
Saturday : Partly cloudy. Breezy. Patchy fog. Highs in the 60s to lower 70s. Lows in the mid 50s. Saturday ni g ht: Mostly clear in the evening then becoming mostly cloudy. Breezy. Patchy fog after midnight. Lows in the mid 50s. West winds 20 to 30 mph decreasing to 10 to 20 mph after midnight. Sunday : Cloudy in the morning then becoming partly cloudy. Breezy. Patchy fog in the morning. Highs in the 60s to lower 70s. Sunday ni g ht: Mostly clear in the evening then becoming partly cloudy. Breezy. Patchy fog. Lows in the mid 50s. Mo nday : Mostly cloudy in the morning then becoming partly cloudy. Patchy fog in the morning. Highs in the 60s to lower 70s. West winds 10 to 20 mph. Mo nday ni g ht: Mostly clear in the evening. Phone:. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . (650) 344-5200 Fax: (650) 344-5290 To : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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As a public service, the Daily Journal prints obituaries of approximately 200 words or less with a photo one time on the date of the family’s choosing if space allows. To submit obituaries, email information along with a jpeg photo to
[email protected].
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THE DAILY JOURNAL
LOCAL
Weekend • July 28-29, 2018
3
New San Mateo Hampton Inn moves ahead Police reports Officials OK hotel planned near interchange, shopping center; to council for review By Anna Schuessler DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
A 182-room Hampton Inn & Suites proposed for the lot behind the Marina Plaza Center will move onto review by the San Mateo City Council after of the city’s Planning Commission this week unanimously approved the project to replace an existing hotel near the near the Highway 101/Hillsdale Boulevard interchange. In their review of the third design presented for the hotel slated to replace the 116room Los Prados Hotel on the 2.28-acre lot, commissioners largely commended the developer, Soloman Tsai of the United Pacific Hotel Group, for addressing previous concerns about how the project would affect nearby traffic and co-exist with the Marina Plaza Shopping Center. Noting other officials wondered whether previous versions of the design made the most of the project’s prominent location at a major city interchange, Vice Chair Mike Etheridge praised the developer’s design, which is set to feature a glass tower with red accents and a covered porch to welcome visitors, both of which will be visible from Highway 101. “I think it is quite a beautiful design and actually makes a powerful statement for that corner,” he said, according to a video of the meeting. Bordered to the west by Highway 101 and bounded by the Marina Plaza Shopping Center to the east and an office building and child care facility to the south, the site
Crime doesn't pay
Someone bought an item for more money than it was worth on East 32nd Avenue in San Mateo, it was reported at 1:40 p.m. Monday, June 25.
REDWOOD CITY Sto l en v ehi cl e. Someone stole a vehicle from Teredo Drive, it was reported at 3:16 p.m. Tuesday, July 24. Sto l en v ehi cl e. Someone stole a gray vehicle from Woodside Road, it was reported at 11:45 a.m. Tuesday, July 24. Battery . A man was seen ramming his vehicle into another on Woodside Road, it was reported at 11:09 a.m. Tuesday, July 24. Reckl es s dri v ers . A vehicle was seen speeding on Beech Street, it was reported at 10:17 p.m. Monday, July 23.
Artist’s rendering of the 182-room Hampton Inn & Suites proposed for the lot behind the Marina Plaza Center in San Mateo. makes for an oddly-shaped lot where one five-story building will replace three Los Prados Hotel buildings. The developer is requesting an increase in the allowable height for the site, where a maximum of two stories is currently permitted, as well as a variance to provide 146 parking spaces on the lot instead of the 184 spots required for the lot, according to a staff report. Noting the site was zoned to allow hotels when it was originally built and that commissioners previously had a long discussion about the height increase proposed by the developer, Commissioner Dianne Whitaker said she had no issue recommending the additional height. She was ed by other commissioners in recommending as
conditions of approval for the project traffic mitigation measures, including a kiosk stationed at the hotel with transit information and incentives for guests to use ridehailing services such as Uber or Lyft. City planner Tricia Schimpp noted a traffic analysis found the reduction in parking requested by the developer could be accom-
See INN, Page 24
SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO Sto l en v ehi cl e. A vehicle was stolen on Julie Lane, it was reported at 11:40 p.m. Monday, July 16. Petty theft. An item was stolen from a grocery store on Hickey Boulevard, it was reported at 4:01 p.m. Monday, July 16. Mal i ci o us mi s chi ef. Someone engaged in malicious mischief on Wexford Avenue, it was reported at 10:12 a.m. Monday, July 16.
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LOCAL
Weekend • July 28-29, 2018
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005 0728 sat:0728 sat 292 7/27/18 9:34 PM Page 1
THE DAILY JOURNAL
STATE/NATION
Weekend • July 28-29, 2018
5
‘Terrifying’ state wildfire burns 500-plus structures By Jonathan J. Cooper and Brian Melley THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
REDDING — A wildfire that roared with little warning into a Northern California city claimed two lives as thousands of people scrambled to escape before the walls of flames descended from forested hills onto their neighborhoods, leaving at least 500 structures destroyed in its wake, officials said Friday. Residents who gathered their belongings in haste described a chaotic and congested getaway as the embers blew up to a mile ahead of flames and the fire leaped across the wide Sacramento River and torched subdivisions in Redding, a city of 92,000 about 100 miles south of the Oregon border. “I’ve never experienced something so terrifying in my life,” said Liz Williams, who loaded up two kids in her car and then found herself locked in bumper-to-bumper traffic with neighbors trying to retreat from Lake Redding Estates. She eventually jumped the curb onto the sidewalk and “booked it.” “I didn’t know if the fire was just going to jump out behind a bush and grab me and suck me in,” Williams said. “I wanted out of here.” The blaze leveled at least 500 structures and was threatening nearly 5,000 more Friday. Entire neighborhoods have been left smoldering, and 37,000 people were under evacuation orders. Redding police chief Roger Moore was among those who lost their homes, the Los Angeles Times reported.
REUTERS
A charred neighborhood destroyed by the Carr Fire is seen west of Redding. The flames moved so fast that firefighters working in oven-like temperatures and bonedry conditions had to drop efforts to battle the blaze at one point to help people escape. The fire, which created at least two flaming tornados that toppled trees, shook firefighting equipment and busted truck windows, took “down everything in its path,” said Scott McLean, a spokesman for Cal Fire, the state agency responsible for fighting wildfires. Fire officials warned that the blaze would
probably burn deeper into urban areas before there was any hope of containing it, though it either changed direction or was stopped before it could burn into the core of the city. Redding sits at the northern end of the agricultural Central Valley, surrounded by a scenic landscape. Rivers channel abundant winter rainfall into massive reservoirs used for boating and fishing. The area’s stunning mountains, including snow-capped Mount Shasta, topping 14,000 feet, are a playground for outdoor enthusiasts.
Lightning and even a lawn mower have sparked devastating fires in the forests that ring the peaks and lakes. The blaze that broke out Monday was caused by a mechanical issue involving a vehicle, officials said. The fire rapidly expanded Thursday when erratic flames swept through the historic Gold Rush town of Shasta and nearby Keswick, then cast the Sacramento River in an orange glow as they jumped the banks into Redding. Steve Hobson, a former firefighter, said flames on the distant hillside looked like solar flares on the sun. He had planned to stay behind to save his house on Lake Redding Drive. But the heat burned his skin, and smoke made it hard to breathe. He could feel the fire sucking the air from around him, whipping up swirling embers in a “fire tornado,” he said. He had to drive through walls of flaming embers on both sides of the street when he finally fled. A tree fell right in front of him. “I didn’t know if I’d make it, so I just got in the middle of the street, went down the middle of the street through the embers and the smoke and made it past,” Hobson said. When he returned Friday, his fence had burned along with a backyard shed and everything inside it — Christmas ornaments, china and old televisions. But his house made it through the harrowing night. Others’ homes in the haphazard path of destruction were not so lucky. Where some houses stood unscathed, single walls or chimneys were all that remained of others. Burned-out skeletons of pickup trucks and VW beetles sat on tireless rims in the ash.
Science says: Record heat, fires worsened by climate change By Seth Borenstein and Frank Jordans THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Heat waves are setting all-time temperature records across the globe, again. Europe suffered its deadliest fire in more than a century, and one of nearly 90 large fires in the U.S. West burned dozens of homes and forced the evacuation of at least 37,000 people near Redding, California. Floodinducing downpours have pounded the U.S. East this week. It’s all part of summer — but it’s all being made worse by human-caused climate change, scientists say. “Weirdness abounds, ” said Rutgers University climate scientist Jennifer Francis. Japan hit 106 degrees on Monday, its hottest temperature ever. Records fell in
parts of Massachusetts, Maine, Wyoming, Colorado, Oregon, New Mexico and Texas. And then there’s crazy heat in Europe, where normally chill Norway, Sweden and Finland all saw temperatures they have never seen before on any date, pushing past 90 degrees. So far this month, at least 118 of these all-time heat records have been set or tied across the globe, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric istration. The explanations should sound as familiar as the crash of broken records. “We now have very strong evidence that global warming has already put a thumb on the scales, upping the odds of extremes like severe heat and heavy rainfall,” Stanford University climate scientist Noah Diffenbaugh said. “We find that global warming has increased the odds of recordsetting hot events over more than 80 per-
cent of the planet, and has increased the odds of record-setting wet events at around half of the planet.” Climate change is making the world warmer because of the build-up of heat-trap-
ping gases from the burning of fossil fuels like coal and oil and other human activities. And experts say the jet stream — which dictates weather in the Northern Hemisphere — is again behaving strangely.
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LOCAL
Weekend • July 28-29, 2018
THE DAILY JOURNAL
Boyfriend of woman shot C dead faces new charges Felony and misdemeanor allegations could lead to prison time By Anna Schuessler DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
Months after he pleaded no contest to felony drug charges in April, the boyfriend of a woman found in February with a gunshot wound to the head in Half Moon Bay is facing prison time for four new felony and misdemeanor charges, according to the San Mateo County District Attorney’s Office. Tristan Cecil, 22, was set to be considered this month for intake into the Pathways Program — a mental health court offered through a collaborative effort of county law enforcement agencies and mental health specialists — after a judge decided in May against sending him to state prison for felony convictions of possessing cocaine, Xanax and other controlled substances for the purposes of selling them, according to prosecutors. Believed to have reported the Feb. 22 shooting of his 18-yearold girlfriend, Kimberly Quiroz, Cecil was found in possession of thousands of Xanax pills, hundreds of Adderall pills, 7 ounces of cocaine, 861 grams of illegal mushrooms and 201 ounces of marijuana along with four digital scales, $1, 508 in cash, brass knuckles and sales records after a narcotics task force and Redwood City police officers conducted a search of his home on the 200 block of Poplar Street later that day, according to prosecutors. Found with a single gunshot wound to her head when deputies responded to Cecil’s home at about 5 a.m., Quiroz spent days before her death in critical condition after being taken by medical helicopter to a nearby hospital, sheriff’s officials said previously. San Mateo County sheriff’s Detective Rosemerry Blankswade confirmed an investigation into Quiroz’s death is ongoing. But Cecil’s chances of being considered for mental health court
for his drug conviction may be dimming after new felony and misdemeanor charges were filed against him in recent weeks. Tristan Cecil Including two alleged hit-andrun incidents, one incident in which Cecil is believed to have pointed a gun at someone walking past his house and reports of domestic violence against another woman he started dating after Quiroz’s death, the two misdemeanor hit-and-run and two felony threat charges he now faces could earn him nine years in state prison, according to prosecutors. On the morning of May 15, Cecil is believed to have been driving on Highway 1 when he started tailgating another driver, eventually ing the other car on the shoulder before pulling into the parking lot of a Half Moon Bay Burger King. The driver he ed followed him into the parking lot, and the two allegedly began yelling at each other, ultimately prompting Cecil to allegedly tell the man “I will stick you, I’ve got nothing left to lose,” according to prosecutors. Cecil allegedly got back into his car and side-swiped other man’s car before speeding off, according to prosecutors. In an unrelated incident July 8, Cecil allegedly yelled at a man who was walking past his home on Poplar Street with a friend in the evening. When the man responded saying he didn’t know who Cecil is, Cecil allegedly went into his house, came out with a black Glock handgun and pointed it at the man, who ran away, according to prosecutors. Though sheriff’s deputies responded to his home, Cecil allegedly refused to open the door. On July 17, deputies obtained a search warrant for his home,
which is a studio attached to his father’s house, and found a black Glock handgun there that his father allegedly said he doesn’t have access to, according to prosecutors. At around 1:30 p.m. same day, Cecil was allegedly driving south on Highway 1 when he sideswiped a driver making a left turn onto Filbert Street, causing significant damage to the car. A witness saw Cecil drive away from the scene and followed him until Cecil allegedly stopped the car on the side of the road and said he would call 911. The witness returned to the scene of the accident, as did Cecil, though he was driving the car of his girlfriend of three months, according to prosecutors. Cecil’s girlfriend has also been identified as the victim of an alleged June 24 domestic violence incident at the intersection of Poplar Street and First Avenue. Sheriff’s deputies responding to a dispatch of a domestic disturbance that evening found Cecil and the woman arguing and the driver’s window of her car shattered. Though the couple said everything was OK, a witness said Cecil allegedly argued with the woman while she was sitting in the driver’s seat and kicked the car several times, shattering the driver’s window, according to prosecutors. Jeffrey Hayden, Cecil’s attorney for his drug conviction, said he would still like his client to be considered for the mental health court when the case for his drug conviction comes back to court Aug. 30 and that a closer look at Cecil’s new charges is warranted to determine their validity. “Some charges are probably more solid than others and we’re in the process of evaluating those,” he said. Having pleaded not guilty to his new charges July 19, Cecil will next appear in court July 31 for preliminary hearing and remains in custody on $200, 000 bail, according to prosecutors.
o mpas s Hi g h Scho o l, a San Mateo school for students with learning differences, named Mark Kus hner as the interim head of school for the year. *** Cel i ne Yang was named a finalist for an Oti co n Fo cus o n Peo pl e award, which celebrates the accomplishments of those with hearing loss. Those interested in ing her should visit oticon.com/inside-oticon/we-putp eo p l e-fi rs t / p eo p l e-fi rs t / v o t e2018 to find out more. *** Chri s to pher Ong , of Menlo Park, graduated from the Ro ches ter Ins ti tute of Techno l o g y . *** Ev an Jo hannet, of San Mateo, was named to the dean’s list at Muhl enberg Co l l eg e. *** Max wel l Ware, of Foster City, Lauren Ti erney , of Redwood City, Bro o ke Buckl ey and Jul i a Shray , of San Carlos and
Wanted parolee arrested after police standoff A 31-year-old Pacifica man wanted for a parole violation was spotted by Pacifica police Wednesday and arrested after a brief standoff with officers, police said. About 6 p.m. Wednesday, officers on patrol on the 1000 block of Grand Teton Drive recognized Michael Richard Browning as he stood in front of a residence. When Browning saw the patrol car, he allegedly ran into the home’s garage. Additional officers including a canine unit responded and tried to communicate with Browning for about an hour, encouraging him to surrender. Browning was taken into custody without further incident. He was booked into the main jail in Redwood City on a warrant on suspicion of parole violations and resisting arrest.
San Bruno police to soon carry opioid overdose kits San Bruno police will soon carry Naloxone Hydrochloride, commonly called Narcan, to help treat opi-
Is abel l e and Vi ncent Way , of San Mateo, were named to the president’s list at the Uni v ers i ty o f Al abama. *** Andrew Vo s s , of Menlo Park, Sean Fo h, of Foster City, El i ana Jaco bs , of Redwood City, were named to the dean’s list at the Ro ches ter Ins ti tute of Techno l o g y. Class notes is a column dedicated to school news. It is compiled by education reporter Austin Walsh. You can him at (650) 344-5200, ext. 105 or at
[email protected].
Local briefs oid overdoses. Narcan kits will be issued to all sworn officers in the department within the next few weeks pending completion of training, according to the San Bruno Police Department. The kits’ use by police officers is intended as a “critical bridge” of care until paramedics arrive to begin treatment, Lt. Troy Fry said. Narcan works by reversing the depression of the central nervous system and respiratory system caused by opioids. It can be istered intravenously or injected into muscle. It can also be used as a nasal spray. The use of Narcan by police officers has become more widespread as opioid addiction becomes more common. In 2017, California reported 1,883 opioid overdose deaths, according to the California Opioid Overdose Surveillance Dashboard website. San Mateo County recorded a relatively small number of opioid overdose deaths in 2017, with most occurring in the rural areas in the southwest part of the county.
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THE DAILY JOURNAL
NATION
Weekend • July 28-29, 2018
7
Trump again seemed to preview release of good economic news By Josh Boak THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON — For the second time in two months, President Donald Trump broke with standard White House practices this week and appeared to offer a glowing preview of positive economic news. Past presidents have generally refrained from mentioning any government economic reports the day before they’re publicly released. Among other reasons, the idea is to avoid triggering a hasty or illconsidered response in global financial markets. But just as Trump did before the government’s May jobs report was released in early June, he chose to brag before Friday morning’s release of the government’s estimate of how fast the economy grew during the April-June quarter. “Our numbers are fantastic right now,” Trump declared Thursday.” You’re going to see on Friday what happens with GDP.” He added, referring to predictions for the annual economic growth rate last quarter, “One of the geniuses on Wall Street said, ‘5.3.’ OK, we’ll take anything with a ‘4’ in front. We’ll go nice and slowly, right?” Later Thursday, the president made a similar assertion while speaking at a steel plant in Illinois: “If it has a 4 in front of
REUTERS
White House economic advisor Larry Kudlow shakes hands with Donald Trump who, ed by Mike Pence, made a statement about the economy on the South Lawn at the White House. it,” he said, “we’re happy.” On Friday, the government estimated that the economy did in fact expand at a 4.1 percent annual pace in the second quarter, up from a 2.2 percent rate in the first
three months of the year. The strong gain, fueled in part by temporary factors that aren’t likely to be sustained, was roughly within expectations from economists and investors.
Lindsay Walters, a White House spokeswoman, said the president wasn’t briefed in advance on Friday’s economic report. But Trump had still chosen to boastfully preview economic data ahead of its release, similar to what he did before the May jobs report. Slightly more than an hour before the June 1 release of that report, Trump had tweeted that he was “looking forward to seeing the employment numbers at 8:30 this morning.” The value of the dollar immediately rose and Treasury yields jumped in response. At 8:30 a.m. Eastern time that day, the Bureau of Labor Statistics announced that 223,000 jobs had been added in May, suring expectations, and that the unemployment rate had fallen to 3.8 percent. Trump had been briefed about the jobs numbers ahead of their public release, said Larry Kudlow, director of the White House National Economic Council. The president’s previewing of the jobs report drew criticism as a breach of presidential protocol, though it did not violate any laws. Tony Fratto, a Treasury Department official in George W. Bush’s istration, said that Trump’s hinting at the strong jobs report was problematic because “you want market participants to get their data from their government in predictable, official ways, not haphazard ones.”
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Weekend • July 28-29, 2018
NATION/WORLD
THE DAILY JOURNAL
Return of remains good, but an easy move for N. Korea By Eric Talmadge THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
PYONGYANG, North Korea — North Korea made good on another promise to President Donald Trump by returning dozens of sets of remains of American GIs killed during the Korean War. But it expects something in return — a peace treaty, or something very much like it. Until that’s on the table, real progress toward denuclearization will likely have to wait. North Korean leader Kim Jong Un agreed in his summit in Singapore with Trump last month to resume returning remains. But the North chose the most symbolic day to actually turn over the first batch. Friday was the 65th anniversary of the end of the 1950-53 Korean War, which concluded not in a formal peace treaty but in an armistice agreement that was supposed to be temporary but has stayed in effect ever since. That, to North Korea, says it all. North Korea’s demand all along has been that improved relations between the two countries must begin with the creation of a stable peace on the Korean Peninsula, not with the unilateral abandonment of the North’s nuclear weapons that the Trump istration has been pushing for. North Korea’s logic is that both sides need to take simultaneous action to gradually improve the security climate. Denuclearization, if it will come at all, will only come once that hurdle has been cleared. “The adoption of the declaration on the termination of war is the first and foremost process in the light of ending the extreme hostility and establishing new relations between the DPRK and the U.S.,” the North’s Korean Central News Agency said in a statement on Tuesday, referring to North Korea by its official name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea. “Peace can come only after the declaration of the termination of war,” it said. To keep the ball rolling in the meantime, North Korea has announced a moratorium on nuclear tests and longrange missile launches. It has demolished structures and the entrances to buildings on the site of its underground nuclear testing facility in Punggye-ri, and appears to have begun dismantling some of its missile testing facilities at Sohae. It has also returned three Americans who were being held in jail and has significantly toned down its anti-U.S. propaganda.
REUTERS
A soldier carries a casket containing the remains of a U.S. soldier who was killed in the Korean War during a ceremony at Osan Air Base in Pyeongtaek, South Korea.
Remains said to be U.S. war dead repatriated from North Korea By Ahn Young-Joon, Kim Tong-Hyung and Lolita Baldor THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
PYEONGTAEK, South Korea — North Korea on Friday returned the remains of what are believed to be U.S. servicemen killed during the Korean War, the White House said, with a U.S military plane making a rare trip into North Korea to retrieve 55 cases of remains. The handover follows through on a promise North Korean leader Kim Jong Un made to President Donald Trump when the leaders met in June and is the first tangible result from the muchhyped summit. Trump welcomed the repatriation and thanked Kim in a tweet. The United Nations Command said 55 cases of remains were retrieved from North Korea. The White House earlier confirmed that a U.S. Air Force C-17 aircraft containing remains of fallen service had departed Wonsan, a Northern coastal city, on its way to
the Osan Air Base in Pyeongtaek, near the South Korean capital of Seoul. A formal repatriation ceremony will be held there Wednesday. At the air base, U.S. servicemen and a military honor guard lined up on the tarmac to receive the remains, which were carried in boxes covered in blue U.N. flags. About 7,700 U.S. soldiers are listed as missing from the 1950-53 Korean War, and 5,300 of the remains are believed to still be in North Korea. The war killed millions, including 36,000 American soldiers. U.S. Forces Korea commander Gen. Vincent K. Brooks, in a statement from the U.N. Command, called the retrieval mission successful. “Now, we will prepare to honor our fallen before they continue on their journey home.” Following the honors ceremony on Wednesday, the remains will be flown to Hawaii for scientific testing. A series of forensic examinations will be done to determine if the remains are human
and if the dead were American or allied troops killed in the conflict. Trump late Thursday tweeted the repatriation was occurring and said, “After so many years, this will be a great moment for so many families. Thank you to Kim Jong Un.” Officials in North Korea had no comment on the handover on Friday, the 65th anniversary of the end of the Korean War, which the country celebrated as the day of “victory in the fatherland liberation war.” Despite soaring rhetoric about denuclearization before Kim and Trump met in Singapore, their summit ended with only a vague aspirational goal for a nuclear-free Korean Peninsula without describing when and how that would occur. The repatriation of remains could be followed by stronger North Korean demands for fast-tracked discussions to formally end the war, which was stopped with an armistice and not a peace treaty.
009 0728 sat:0728 sat 292 7/27/18 8:28 PM Page 1
THE DAILY JOURNAL
NATION/WORLD
Weekend • July 28-29, 2018
9
Senators spar over access to Brett Kavanaugh’s staff secretary work By Jessica Gresko THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
REUTERS
Judge Brett Kavanaugh, Donald Trump’s nominee to be associate justice of the Supreme Court, center, arrives to meet with Sen. Rand Paul on Capitol Hill.
WASHINGTON — More than a decade after he served as what’s been called the president’s “inbox and outbox,” Brett Kavanaugh’s role as White House staff secretary to President George W. Bush has become a flashpoint as Republicans push his confirmation to the Supreme Court. Democrats want to see records from the time, portraying the potentially millions of documents as vital to understanding his approach to the law. Republicans disagree and have accused Democrats of using the issue to try to delay Kavanaugh’s confirmation. The debate could interfere with Republicans’ goal of swiftly confirming President Donald Trump’s pick for the court in time for the start of the new term Oct. 1.
With the Senate control slimly held by Republicans 51-49, Democrats can’t block Kavanaugh’s nomination outright if Republicans hold together. Instead, Democrats are trying to delay the proceedings in hopes that time spent reviewing the judge’s record could unearth fresh concerns to sway senators’ opinions and upend voting. Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, the chairman of the Judiciary Committee tasked with holding hearings on Kavanaugh’s nomination, said this week that Democrats’ “bloated demands are an obvious attempt to obstruct the confirmation process.” And on Friday, after negotiations with Democrats failed to produce a consensus on what documents should be sought ahead of a hearing on Kavanaugh’s nomination, Grassley went ahead with a request to the Bush library for documents related to his work for the White House.
Pressure mounting, former Trump ‘fixer’ Michael Cohen turns aggressive THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON — The hiring of a Washington insider to be a public attack dog. Tantalizing leaks to the media. Puzzling allegations of actions that could fell a president. Talk of more to come. What is Michael Cohen up to? President Donald Trump’s ex-lawyer has largely stayed out of the spotlight in the
months since federal agents raided his office and hotel room and seized scores of records about his work for Trump. But this week, he has taken a sharply more aggressive and public turn, seeming to wage Michael Cohen open warfare with the
White House while weighing whether to cooperate with investigators. The moves suggest Cohen is looking for a way out of looming trouble. But his behavior doesn’t quite line up with a clear strategy, legal experts say. And if his signals are aimed at Trump, they’ve largely served to infuriate the president. Three days after Cohen’s new lawyer, Lanny Davis, released a tape of Cohen and
Trump talking about paying for Playboy model Karen McDougal’s silence, the relationship splintered further Friday. That was after a CNN report that Cohen was willing to tell special counsel Robert Mueller that Trump knew in advance of a 2016 meeting at Trump Tower in which the Republican candidate’s eldest son sought damaging information from a Russian lawyer about Hillary Clinton.
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BUSINESS
Weekend • July 28-29, 2018
THE DAILY JOURNAL
Facebook-led tech slump dims broader gains By Alex Veiga
DOW JONES INDUSTRIALS
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
A plunge in Facebook shares erased almost $120 billion of the social media giant’s market value Thursday, snapping a three-day winning streak for the S&P 500 index. Facebook’s tumble was the worst-ever single-day drop in value for a U.S. company, and led a sell-off in technology companies that offset solid gains in other areas of the market, including industrial and energy stocks and consumer goods companies. The broader gains reflect another round of strong company earnings and fresh optimism among investors that trade tensions between the U. S and European Union may be on the mend. “It’s a shock what happened to Facebook, but that little improvement in the trade picture and the continuation of the earnings results have just been spectacular,” said Ted Theodore, portfolio manager at TrimTabs Asset Management.
High: Low: Close: Change:
25,580.22 25,370.07 25,451.06 -76.01
OTHER INDEXES
The huge loss in Facebook’s value weighed on broad market indexes. The S&P 500 index dropped 8.63 points, or 0.3 percent, to 2, 837. 44. The Nasdaq composite index, which is heavily weighted with technology companies, lost 80.05 points, or 1 percent, to 7,852.18. The Dow Jones Industrial Average, whose 30 don’t include Facebook, had a much bet-
S&P 500: NYSE Index: Nasdaq: NYSE MKT: Russell 2000: Wilshire 5000:
2818.82 12,921.34 7737.42 2729.20 1663.34 29,321.74
-18.62 -32.05 -114.7 -37.66 -32.02 -248.98
10-Yr Bond: Oil (per barrel): Gold :
2.96 69.01 1,222.20
-0.01 -0.60 -3.50
ter day, rising 112.97 points, or 0.4 percent, to 25,527.07. The Russell 2000 index of smaller-company stocks gained 10.16 points, or 0.6 percent, to 1,695.36. More stocks rose than fell on the New York Stock Exchange. The S&P 500, the market’s benchmark index, is still on track for its fourth weekly gain in a row. Facebook, which closed at an
all-time high of $217. 50 on Wednesday to $176. 26, after warning investors that it sees slower revenue growth ahead, and that its base and revenue grew more slowly than expected in the second quarter. The 19 percent drop was the biggest decline for the company since it went public in 2012. The slower growth came about as the company grappled with pri-
vacy scandals. All told, $119 billion of its value was wiped out, eclipsing a $91 billion loss for Intel in September 2000, according to Birinyi Associates. “For such a big company to suffer such a significant decrease in price is really amazing to watch,” said Erik Davidson, chief investment officer at Wells Fargo Private Bank. Investors have been focused on the mostly favorable run of company quarterly earnings the past couple of weeks. At the same time, they’re wary of global trade tensions, which have ratcheted up in recent weeks as the U.S. and some of its trading partners imposed tariffs and threatened to impose more. But talks held late Wednesday between President Donald Trump and a European Union delegation gave markets cause for encouragement after both sides agreed to work on a pact to dismantle trade barriers. A number of companies reported positive earnings on an unusually busy day for second-quarter earnings.
Facebook cleanup: Hurt the stock and help the world? By Barbara Ortutay THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK — It’s been a rough year for Facebook and its investors. Questions of data privacy, fake news proliferation and growth have dogged the company. Now, it is investing heavily on fixing those problems. Not everyone is convinced of the solutions — but if you take Facebook at its word, the changes it plans will ultimately make the social media service better for its 2.2 billion s. For Facebook, the investment is not just about catering to s; it’s also an act of self-preservation. If trust in the platform erodes, so too does the company’s base as well as the rs who pay big money to access eyeballs. “If they did nothing, they would be more
Nod for Disney’s $71.3B acquisition of Fox entertainment NEW YORK — Disney’s $71.3 billion acquisition of Twenty-First Century Fox’s entertainment division is one step closer after shareholders approved the deal Friday. The tie-up brings together Marvel’s XMen and Avengers franchises and creates an entertainment behemoth in the digital streaming era. The shareholder vote caps a saga that began in December 2017, when
vulnerable to some kind of backlash,” said Drew Margolin, communications professor at Cornell University. The social media giant’s shares tanked 19 percent on Thursday — its biggest one-day drop in Facebook history — Mark the day after it revealed Zuckerberg that growth has slowed amid swirling questions about how Facebook’s information is used. But CEO Mark Zuckerberg says it’s all for a good cause, even at the expense of short-term profits and stock price. “As I’ve said on past calls, we’re investing so much in security that it will significantly impact our profitability. We’re starting to see that this quarter,” Zuckerberg said.
Business brief Disney made its first offer for part of Rupert Murdoch’s media conglomerate. It kicked off a bidding war with Comcast, which dropped out last week focus on attempted buyout of the European pay-TV operator Sky. The Fox deal will help Disney compete with technology players like Amazon and Netflix. The agreement is not expected to close for several months and still requires regulatory approvals.
REUTERS
The Twitter application is seen on a phone screen.
Bad week in social media gets worse; Twitter gets hammered By Barbara Ortutay THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK — Cracking down on hate, abuse and online trolls is also hurting Twitter’s standing with investors. The company’s stock plunged Friday after it reported a decline in its monthly s and warned that the number could fall further in the coming months. The 20. 5 percent plunge comes one day after Facebook lost 19 percent of its value in a single day. Twitter says it’s putting the long-term stability of its platform above growth. That leaves investors seemingly unable to value what the biggest companies in the sector, which rely on their potential reach, are worth. Twitter had 335 million monthly s in the quarter, below the 339 million Wall
Street was expecting, and down slightly from 336 million in the first quarter. That overshadowed a strong monthly growth of 3 percent compared with the previous year. The company said its monthly number could continue to fall in the “mid-singledigit millions” in the third quarter. While Friday was Twitter’s second-worst loss since it went public in November 2013, the stock has still doubled in value over the last 12 months. Long criticized for allowing bad behavior to run rampant on its platform, Twitter has begun to crack down, banning s that violate its and making others less visible. Twitter is now attempting to rein in the worst offenders after years as one of the Wild West corners of the internet.
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A BIG WIN: SERRA GRAD SALINDA CAPTURES PACIFIC AMATEUR TITLE AT THE OLYMPIC CLUB >> PAGE 12
<<< Page 12, Aragon grad Tuivailala traded to Mariners Weekend • July 28, 2018
HMB Little League’s brush with Carr Fire By Terry Bernal DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
CODY MARKHART (LEFT); TOM CLEARY (ABOVE)
Left: A screenshot of the Sundial Bridge area in Redding from a time-lapse video taken by a local resident with the Carr Fire in the distance. Earlier in the week, of the Half Moon Bay Little League team spent an afternoon fishing on the right bank of the featured peninsula. Above: of the Half Moon Bay Little League team during their fishing excursion. From left: Ben Cleary, Liam Harrington, Luca Scatena, Charlie Underwood, Gavin Glynn, Myles Rippberger and Ryan Harrington.
‘Chucky, Part 2’ begins By Josh Dubow THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NAPA — Jon Gruden was antsy at the start of the first training camp practice for the Oakland Raiders as he was mostly a spectator while his assistants worked on fundamentals in position drills. After a nearly 10-year wait to get back into coaching, Gruden was eager to get things going in the first training camp of his second stint as Raiders coach. “I had a hard time standing and watching,” Gruden said Friday. “It’s just awesome to be here. It’s a great responsibility. I know I have a lot to prove and I’m eager to do the best I can to do it.” Gruden is far and away the biggest star and personality on the Raiders in his return to coaching after spending the past nine years as ESPN’s analyst on “Monday Night Football.” He’s adored by the Raiders fans who cheered his every move, and he provided a vocal soundtrack at practice when he barked out at his players and coaches after mistakes. He even ribbed the practice D.J. at one point. “He’s kind of like a player on the field,” linebacker Derrick Johnson said. “He’s very energetic. He’s loud, he’s talking trash. He wants to win. You can see his ion as a player. I can appreciate that. He’s all in. There’s a different kind of sense of urgency that we have going out to practice on the first day. It’s pretty exciting.” There was one important piece missing, however. Star rusher Khalil Mack is holding out while looking for a long-term contract. Mack is entering the final season of his rookie contract that is set to pay him $13.8 million and has not taken part in the offseason program. Gruden said he leaves the negotiations to general manager Reggie McKenzie “Hopefully we get him in here soon because he’s an exciting player,” Gruden said. “He’s one of the best in football.” Getting Mack back will be important for Gruden as he tries to revitalize the Raiders after the team went from 12 wins and a play-
See RAIDERS, Page 14
As the Half Moon Bay Little League Majors All-Stars departed Redding Thursday morning following their elimination for the Northern California baseball tournament the evening prior, the Carr Fire was escalating into a gamechanger in their wake. Had Half Moon Bay not lost to TriCity-Rocklin 6-2 Wednesday night, the team from the Coastside would have stayed in Redding to play in Thursday night’s scheduled championship game at Alta Mesa Park. Due to the air quality index at Alta Mesa Park reaching 156 — suring the dangerous air quality limit of 150 — the Northern California Majors tournament was rescheduled and relocated, with the two finalists TriCity and Petaluma American moving to Sutter Area Little League Park to begin play Friday. “Wednesday night we were concerned with the air quality but it
See FIRE, Page 16
Reid and Kaepernick as camps open
A
s NFL training camps opened this week, complete with interminable speculation about position battles, rookies who might make an impact and what players can or can’t do while “The Star-Spangled Banner” is playing, let’s two players who aren’t suiting up. Colin Kaepernick and Eric Reid are good enough to be playing for someone. That much is beyond debate. But the league has decided to make an example of them, a clear warning to its employees that only so much social activism will be tolerated even while it feigns a sense of respecting their desire to protest during the national anthem. If the NFL were really concerned about its players, it wouldn’t be denying these two their well-earned right to make a living. Rest assured, history won’t be kind when it looks back on the way Kaepernick and Reid were treated by the NFL. “Both of those guys are NFL talents. Both of them are quality players that can contribute to a roster and contribute to a team winning. They’ve proven it,” New Orleans Saints tight end Benjamin Watson said. “I do think that 100 percent of the reason why they’re not on a roster is the other stuff that they’re standing for is outweighing the risk a team wants to take to put them on a roster.” Kaepernick and Reid are following the same path as social warriors who came before them. Muhammad Ali, who was stripped of his heavyweight boxing title and barred from the ring for more than three years after he
PAUL NEWBERRY
USA TODAY SPORTS
Jon Gruden, who coached the Oakland Raiders from 2002 to 2008, returns to the Oakland sideline after 10 years in the broadcast booth.
See NEWBERRY, Page 14
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SPORTS
Weekend • July 28-29, 2018
THE DAILY JOURNAL
Salinda wins Pac Am after record day DAILY JOURNAL STAFF REPORT
CHARLES LECLAIRE/USA TODAY SPORTS
Aragon graduate Sam Tuivailala was traded from the St. Louis Cardinals to the Seattle Mariners Friday for minor leaguer Seth Elledge.
Tuivailala gets thrown in thick of AL West race By Terry Bernal DAILY JOURNAL STAFF
As the Oakland A’s and the Seattle Mariners likely compete for one American League wild card berth, the A’s made a big deadline deal in acquiring relief pitcher Jeurys Familia from the New York Mets. The Mariners countered with a bullpen addition of their own in the person of Sam Tuivailala. A 2010 graduate of Aragon High School, Tuivailala was traded by the St. Louis Cardinals into the thick of the AL Western Division race with the Mariners Friday. In exchange, the Cardinals received minor league right-hander Seth Elledge, a fourthround draft pick out of Dallas Baptist University in 2017. “When I first heard it, it’s weird because I’ve been in the organization for eight years,” Tuivailala said via telephone while packing at his St. Louis apartment Friday. “So, a lot of memories are here. I know a lot of guys here who I’ve come up with through the years. A lot of them are my family. So it’s definitely sad to leave them. But it’s exciting to the Mariners.” As play began Friday, the Cardinals were sitting at the .500 mark and in fourth place in the National League Central Division, nine games back of the first-place Chicago Cubs. With the trade, Tuivailala s a Mariners team that is 61-42, in second place in the AL West, one game ahead of the
See TRADE, Page 16
Stanford golfer Isaiah Salinda picked up the biggest win of his career as he captured the championship at the 52nd Pacific Amateur Championship tournament. Salinda, a 2015 Serra graduate, shot a four-round total of 272 to finish at 12-under par, just holding off Austin Eckroat of Oklahoma, who finished at 11-under at the famed Lake Course at San Francisco’s Olympic Club. Salinda’s Stanford teammate Brandon Wu was third. With former Stanford teammate Bradley Knox, a Sacred Heart Prep grad, as his caddie, the South Isaiah Salinda San Francisco native set a course record during his third round as Salinda rattled off 10 birdies to finish with a 9-under 62. He had four birdies over the first nine holes, shooting 1-under on holes Nos. 1, 6, 7 and 8 to go out with a 35. But Salinda was just warming up. After a birdie on No. 10, Salinda had three pars in a row before finishing the round with five consecutive birdies, just lipping out an eagle putt on the par-5 17th. “I just kind of got hot with my putter,” Salinda said in a press release from Stanford Athletics. Not only was his 62 a new tournament record, it was the lowest round of Salinda’s career. His previous best was a 4-under 66 at the 2017 Western Intercollegiate Tournament at Pasatiempo Golf Club in Santa Cruz. He had shot a 4-under 67 in
JOHN TODD/ISIPHOTOS.COM
Isaiah Salinda, a 2015 Serra graduate and senior-to-be at Stanford, won the Pacific Amateur championship with a four-day score of 12-under 272.
March at The Goodwin tournament at Harding Park Golf Course. Salinda came back to earth a bit during the final round Friday, finishing with a 1-over 72 to claim the title. He was even on the day until he finished with a bogey 5 on the par4 18th. Salinda got off to a slow start to the tournament as he was 4-over after eight holes during his first round Tuesday. After a couple
of pars to start, Salinda bogeyed the third, fourth and fifth holes, and added a fourth bogey at No. 8. He got a stroke back at No. 9 with his first birdie of the day and that seemed to propel him over the back nine, as he picked up birdies at Nos. 11, 16 and 17 to finish at even par. But the end of that first round set the tone for the final three rounds for Salinda. He gave a glimpse of what was to come as he shot a 4-under 67 during the second round Wednesday. He got off to a birdie-birdie start before parring the rest of the front nine to put him at 2-under at the turn. He had three more birdies — along with a bogey at No. 12 — and signed a 67. That set up his record-setting round Thursday. The tournament win is just the latest accomplishment for Salinda, who earlier this week was named a PING All-American honorable mention along with being named an All-Pac-12 honorable mention. The previous week, Salinda earned medalist honors with a 9-under 133 during 36hole sectional qualifying for the U. S. Amateur Championship at Coldstream Country Club in Cincinnati, Ohio. That qualified him for the U.S. Amateur tournament which begins Aug. 13 at Pebble Beach Golf Links. Salinda, who is entering his senior year, is the first Stanford winner of the Pacific Amateur since 1967. Last year, Salinda won the Northern California Amateur Championship at Spyglass Hill Golf Course in Pebble Beach.
Bel-Mateo’s regional run ends DAILY JOURNAL STAFF REPORT
The Bel-Mateo Babe Ruth U15 All Star team, playing in the Pacific Southwest Regional Tournament for the second year in a row, saw its postseason come to an end just short of the Babe Ruth World Series with a 4-1 loss to Hawaii in Surprise, Arizona. The loss snapped a two-game winning streak Bel-Mateo had put together after losing in its second-round game to a still-undefeated Torrance squad. Torrance will meet Hawaii in the first game of the championship round at 4 p.m. Saturday. Torrance, the only undefeated team left in the bracket, needs to be beaten twice to deny it a spot in the Babe Ruth World Series in Longview, Washington next month.
Bel-Mateo finished the tournament in third place. After its loss to Torrance Wednesday, BelMateo rebounded with wins over Yuma Vipers and San Benito to move into the consolation bracket finals against Hawaii. Both teams finished with nine hits for the game, but Hawaii bunched seven of its nine hits during the second and third innings, when it scored all four of its runs — three in the second and one more in the third. Bel-Mateo picked up its only run in the top of the fourth when Frankie Attard singled in Parker Crouse, who had walked earlier in the inning. Bel-Mateo had its chance, but could not convert as it stranded 10 base runners for the game. R.J. Abad was saddled with the loss Friday,
throwing a 67-pitch complete game. Abad, however, was just as dangerous at the plate as he led Bel-Mateo with a .563 batting average ( 9 for 16) during the five games, with a double and six runs scored. Catcher Nik Janke deserves the ironman award as he caught every inning of every game in the 100-plus degree heat in the Arizona desert. He didn’t let that affect him at the plate, however, as he was 6 for 11 (.545 average), with a triple, three RBIs and three runs scored. Second baseman Devin Cuschieri drove in five runs while batting .333. Crouse finished the tournament with a .417 average. Attard led the Bel-Mateo charge from the mound, making three appearances. He pitched a total of seven innings, posting a 3.00 ERA.
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SPORTS
THE DAILY JOURNAL
Weekend • July 28-29, 2018
13
Bum gets no run as Giants fall to Brewers By Janie McCauley THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SAN FRANCISCO — Madison Bumgarner struck out five and walked one in eight strong innings but didn’t get enough as the Giants fell 3-1, losing to the Milwaukee Brewers for the second straight night. Bumgarner allowed three runs on seven hits in his 10th start of the season. The 2014 World Series MVP was coming off a career-high six walks last Saturday at Oakland, going only four-plus innings. “They just got some hits in big spots for them, ” Bumgarner said. “Tough game, tough loss for us.” The contending Brewers made two trades in as many days to bolster their bullpen for all these close games and try to generate more runs so they don’t have to be in so
Brewers 3, Giants 1
Madison Bumgarner
many tight ones. A day after acquiring veteran reliever Joakim Soria from the Chicago White Sox, Milwaukee landed third baseman Mike Moustakas on Friday from the Kansas City Royals as the club chases its first playoff appearance since reaching the 2011 NL champi-
onship series. Moustakas, who will be reunited with former World Series champion teammate Lorenzo Cain, was expected to be at AT&T Park on Saturday and available for the night game. Ryan Braun hit an RBI single and drove in
two runs to back Chase Anderson’s first victory in nearly a month, leading Milwaukee to another late rally. Soria pitched the seventh in his Milwaukee debut. He came in with his team up 2-1 and immediately retired Brandon Crawford on a groundout. Following a walk to Evan Longoria, Soria induced Pablo Sandoval’s inning-ending double play. Anderson (7-7) allowed one run on four hits in six innings with three strikeouts and no walks. He earned his first win in five July starts since beating the Reds on June 29 and Corey Knebel saved his second straight game for 14 on the year. Jeremy Jeffress struck out the first two batters of the eighth before loading the bases on a pair of singles by Steven Duggar and Alen Hanson, then a walk to Andrew McCutchen. Buster Posey grounded out to end the threat.
Milwaukee got RBI groundouts from Braun in the sixth and Orlando Arcia in the seventh as the Brewers made it two straight road victories following a six-game skid away from Miller Park. Braun singled in the eighth a night after a key run-scoring single as the Brewers won 7-5 on Thursday. The Giants grabbed a quick lead in the second on consecutive doubles by Posey and Brandon Crawford, who had just his fourth RBI and extra-base hit this month. A typical Bay Area summer night, it was one degree colder than Thursday with a firstpitch temperature of 58 degrees. Christian Yelich’s first of two doubles in the first extended his hitting streak to 11 games. A moment of silence was held before the national anthem for the victims of deadly, devastating wildfires in Northern California.
Freeland, Arenado help Rockies cool down A’s By Brent W. New THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
DENVER — The Rockies are riding their starting pitching — in the thin air of Coors Field of all places. Kyle Freeland threw six shutout innings, Nolan Arenado homered and Colorado cooled off the A’s with a 3-1 victory Friday night. Freeland (9-6) allowed five hits while striking out five, walking three and hitting a batter. Colorado’s starting pitching is 6-0 with a 1.65 ERA at Coors Field in July. Carlos Gonzalez added three hits, and Ian Desmond and Garrett Hampson drove in runs for the Rockies, who have won 14 of 19 this
MLB briefs Cubs get LHP Cole Hamels in trade with Rangers CHICAGO — The Chicago Cubs are gambling a change of scenery will help Cole Hamels return to form. The Cubs acquired the veteran left-hander in a trade with the Texas Rangers, according to a person with direct knowledge of the deal who spoke Friday to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the teams haven’t announced the move. Texas is reportedly sending cash with Hamels to Chicago for a couple of minor leaguers. Hamels is in the midst of perhaps the worst year of his career, going 5-9 with a 4.72 ERA
Rockies 3, A’s 1 month. Adam Ottavino threw a spotless ninth for his fourth save of the year. Usual closer Wade Davis had pitched in Colorado’s last two games. Sean Manaea Sean Manaea (9-7) allowed three runs on nine hits for the A’s, who had their season high-tying, six-game winning streak snapped. It was Manaea’s first loss since May 30. “We wanted to continue to win,” A’s man-
ager Bob Melvin said. “Obviously we had a nice little win streak going, just didn’t get a big hit. There is no reason for anybody to hang their heads.” The Rockies used small ball to take the lead against Manaea in the second. Noel Cuevas bunted aboard to start the inning and was later brought home on a squeeze bunt from Hampson. Desmond made it 2-0 with an RBI single in the fifth but was thrown out trying to reach second. Arenado followed with his 26th home run of the season and 100th career homer at Coors Field.
in 20 starts with last-place Texas. He is just 1-3 with an 11.12 ERA in four starts in July. But the 34-year-old Hamels is an experienced playoff pitcher with a history of success at Wrigley Field. He was the NL Cole Hamels Championship Series and World Series MVP when Philadelphia won the title in 2008. He is 7-6 with a 3.48 ERA in 16 career postseason starts. Cubs manager Joe Maddon was in Tampa Bay’s dugout when Hamels led the Phillies past the Rays for the championship 10 years ago. Hamels’ locker was cleaned out and his
nameplate was gone when the media entered the Texas clubhouse following the Rangers’ 76 loss to the Athletics on Thursday night.
Phillies get INF Cabrera from Mets for pitching prospect CINCINNATI — The NL East-leading Philadelphia Phillies have acquired infielder Asdrubal Cabrera from the New York Mets for a pitching prospect. The deal was announced Friday night. The Phillies traded Double-A right-hander Franklyn Kilome to get Cabrera. Cabrera was hitting .277 with 18 home runs and 58 RBIs as the Mets’ second baseman. The 32-year-old Cabrera was a twotime All-Star shortstop for Cleveland earlier in his career.
“I think I made three mistakes, two on 02 pitches and the home run to Nolan,” Manaea said. “I have to be better than that.” Freeland, meanwhile, managed to keep Oakland scoreless through six innings despite heavy traffic on the bases. The Denver native forced Matt Olson to line out to second to end a bases-loaded threat in the first, then induced a double play to get out of another bases-loaded jam in the fifth. The A’s finally got on the board as Jed Lowrie hit an RBI double off reliever Bryan Shaw in the seventh. They loaded the bases for the third time in the game in the eighth before Scott Oberg struck out Matt Chapman to end the inning. Cabrera split his time at second base, third base and shortstop last year with the Mets. He has started only at second this season. He had three hits, including a homer, and drove in four runs Thursday night as New York beat the Pirates 12-6. The 23-year-old Kilome was 4-6 with a 4.24 ERA in 19 starts for Reading in the Eastern League. Mets assistant general manager John Ricco said several teams were interested in Cabrera as the July 31 non-waiver trade deadline approached. The Phillies play at Cincinnati this week. The Mets, in the middle of a disappointing season and fresh off trading Jeurys Familia to Oakland over the weekend, are at Pittsburgh.
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Weekend • July 28-29, 2018
NEWBERRY Continued from page 11 refused induction into the military during the Vietnam War. Tommie Smith and John Carlos, who defiantly stood with their fists in the air on the medal podium at the 1968 Mexico City Olympics to protest the way black people were — and still are — being treated in America. Ali, Smith and Carlos were vilified at the time. Now, they’re viewed at heroes — but only after making huge personal, professional and financial sacrifices to stand up for what they believed. Kaepernick and Reid are making those same sacrifices. “I do think it’s sad and I want those guys to be on teams because I know they’re good enough to play,” Watson said. “I hate to see them not be employed in the National Football League, where they should be, simply because they decided to protest and bring attention to systemic oppression, police brutality, injustice — all the things they stated over and over again, which I
RAIDERS Continued from page 11 off berth in 2016 to a 6-10 record last season that led to the firing of coach Jack Del Rio. He has worked relentlessly since getting hired in January. He had to hire a coaching staff, install new systems, adjust to changes in the league since he last coached in Tampa Bay in 2008, and overhaul a roster that had several holes.
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think are things that we all should be concerned about.” As of Friday, Kaepernick has gone 572 days since his last snap in the NFL. Tellingly enough, he turned in one of his better performances in what might go Colin down as his final game. Kaepernick On New Year’s Day 2017, playing behind a leaky offensive line that left him running for his life (he was sacked five times), Kaepernick completed 17 of 22 es for 215 yards and a touchdown in San Francisco’s 25-23 loss to Seattle. His 122.3 rating was the seventh highest of his 69 career games. But the NFL would have you believe he’s not good enough to play in a league that will employ just under 100 quarterbacks this season, many of them older than Kaepernick (who is still more than three months shy of his 31st birthday, presumably just entering what should be his prime years) and lacking a resume that includes leading his team to the Super Bowl. Of course, we all know the real reason Kaepernick has effectively been blacklisted from the league — his decision to first sit,
then kneel during the national anthem throughout the 2016 season, sparking a debate that carried all the way to the White House. Reid bravely ed Kaepernick in his stoic, symbolic gesture, and carried on the kneeling Eric Reid when his former teammate was sidelined for the entire 2016 season. For that, he’s now paying the price. Despite being beyond qualified for a spot in the NFL — 26 years old, a former firstround pick, a starter in 69 of 70 games over five years with the 49ers, 10 career interceptions, an average of 65 tackles per season, a Pro Bowler in 2013 — Reid has been deemed unworthy of employment by each and every one of the league’s 32 teams. What makes the treatment of Kaepernick and Reid even more perplexing: The owners and their non-blacklisted players continue to be locked in a back-and-forth squabble over whether protesting during the anthem is a legitimate way to address social injustice in this country. (Spoiler alert: It is.) The issue remains a thorn in the league’s
side, even after Kaepernick and Reid were cast aside. “Nothing lasts forever, and this is coming close to lasting way too long, ” Cincinnati Bengals owner Mike Brown groaned. Before there’s any more discussion about sitting or kneeling or staying in the locker room, the players — all of them, black and white — should demand justice for Kaepernick and Reid. While both have filed collusion grievances, the NFL has lots of highly paid lawyers who will surely try to drag this thing out as long as possible, soaking up prime seasons they’ll never get back. But all those players who are lucky enough to have a job, some of whom were just as visible and vocal in their calls for social justice, should be pondering what they can do to help get Kaepernick and Reid back on the field. Maybe a one-day sickout during training camp. Or kneeling en masse before the first game. Perhaps, as a last resort, they should consider an actual strike. Like Kaepernick and Reid, they need to be willing to make some huge sacrifices. After all, they could be next.
Getting quarterback Derek Carr back to the level he played at when he was an MVP candidate in 2016 is one of the top tasks. After a breakthrough year in his third NFL season, Carr struggled last year as he dealt with an injured back. He matched his career high with 13 interceptions and recorded his worst totals in yards, touchdowns and er rating since his rookie year in 2014. Carr said he feels revitalized under the tutelage of Gruden, whom he first met at a TV quarterback camp before the 2014 draft. “I don’t know if anything with him surprises you,” Carr said. “He has not changed
one bit since the first time I met him at Gruden’s QB camp to the first day of actual training camp practice. He is the same person. That says a lot. That doesn’t change. He is always fiery, he loves football, he wants to win, he loves his players, he loves his coaches, and he demands from you.” Gruden is loved in Oakland and feels the same way about the Raiders fans who have pined for his return ever since he was traded to Tampa Bay following the 2001 season. He even hosted a fan appreciation night last week at a local bar, Ricky’s Sports Theatre and Grill, which serves as a hangout for Raiders fans. More than 500 fans
showed up for the event, getting treated by Gruden to a free meal and a pep rally. “I don’t go out very often and when I do I like to be with people who are like-minded,” Gruden said. “To associate with the real Raiders fans who you through thick and thin, that’s good stuff.” NOTES: Gruden said LT Donald Penn is getting close to returning from foot surgery that ended his 2017 season but still needs to prove he can move explosively. ... Rookie P.J. Hall is sidelined for the start of camp with a strained pectoral muscle.
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Weekend • July 28-29, 2018
15
Surfer takes an epic ride into history By Eddie Pells THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
lucky handful of surfers share space with hundreds of aggressive seal colonies, thousands of jackals and, once in the water, the occasional great white shark. “When you’re out there, you’re really out there, and you’re kind of on your own,” Smith said. “But when you’re out there, you’re not thinking about it. You know you’re sacrificing your life for this.” Smith grew up on Kauai and said he got into surfing the way many Hawaii kids do. “There’s not much to do there,” he said. “My parents would drop us off at the beach. You start playing in the sand, playing in the ocean, body surfing, boogie boarding and it keeps evolving. I started surfing when I was 3. My brother is four years older. When he
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grateful for their seeing the truth, (that) Michael Williams is not guilty and has never been guilty of this crime,” Eldridge said. “He’s looking forward to moving on with his life.”
Johnson, 26, embraced friends and relatives as soon as the jury departed. The 25year-old Williams gave a big hug to his lawyer, David Eldridge. The woman who said both men raped her left the courtroom as the not-guilty verdicts for Johnson were announced and before the jury foreman had even read the decision on Williams. “I am so grateful to the jury for their work and their service to our community, and I’m
Johnson and Williams were indicted on February 2015 after a woman said both men raped her during a party at Johnson’s apartment in the early morning hours of Nov. 16, 2014. Johnson and Williams were suspended from the team less than 48 hours after the party and never played for Tennessee again.
Johnson had been a star linebacker, while Williams was a part-time starter in the secondary. Prosecutors made the Tennessee football program’s clout and Johnson’s local celebrity status major elements of their case. During her closing argument Friday afternoon, Knox County Assistant District Attorney General Leslie Nassios described the defendants as “entitled men, used to getting their way, coddled, idolized men who weren’t used to hearing the word, ‘No.”’
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KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Two former University of Tennessee football players were acquitted Friday of the aggravated rape charges they had been indicted on nearly 3 1/2 years ago. A jury of seven women and five men deliberated for almost 1 1/2 hours Friday afternoon before finding A.J. Johnson and Michael Williams not guilty on all counts.
is, and Smith is more than willing to drop everything in search of the perfect wave. “He can be in one place one day, and you call him and he says, ‘I’m taking off for Africa tomorrow,”’ says Smith’s publicist, Ryan Runke. The locale of his greatest triumph is called Skeleton Bay — a mystic stretch of beach fronting the South Atlantic on the western coast of Africa. Don’t bother trying to go unless you know someone who knows the area. It’s a two-day plane ride from Hawaii, followed by a car ride through the desert, culminating with a journey down a stretch of sandy, unmarked roads that lead to the ocean. The final stop is at a stretch of beach where a
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Jurors acquit ex-Tennessee football players in rape trial
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Koa Smith, a 23-year-old surfer from Hawaii, rode one of the longest waves ever recorded, spending two minutes on his board as he surfed through eight sections of tubes over the nearly mile-long ride.
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To say Koa Smith was at the right place at the right time is perfectly accurate. To say he got lucky — that’s missing the point. Perched precariously on his surfboard, the 23-year-old from Hawaii rode a wave off the coast of Namibia, on the western shore of Africa, for 120 straight seconds. He stayed upright for nearly a mile (1.5 kilometers) as he traveled through an unheard-of eight barrels — the hollow formed by the curve of the wave as it breaks Koa Smith over the rider’s head. Almost as amazing — Smith and videographer Chris Rogers filmed the entire ride using both a drone that hovered overhead, and a GoPro attached to a mouthpiece that Smith wore while he rode. “I’d like to think that everything I’ve done my whole life led up to that moment,” Smith said of his masterpiece over a one-ofa-kind wave last month, the likes of which has never been documented before. Smith owes his success to being every bit as much a calculated scientist as a devilmay-care risktaker. Much as a meteorologist tracks storms several days before they hit, Smith and many world-class surfers have mastered the art of reading weather charts to predict when and where the greatest sized ocean swells will hit. It’s one thing to know they’re coming, quite another to get to where the action
started, it was, ‘If he can do this, I can do this.”’ Smith qualified for 10-and-under nationals when he was 6; he had his first Nike contract by age 12. Though surfing has been around much longer than its distant action-sports cousin of snowboarding, athletes in the ocean sport are now faced with some of the same questions the snowboarders dealt with 20 years ago. Surfing is making its debut at the Olympics in 2020 and there figures to be a divide between those who want to keep it as a lifestyle sport — chasing waves and footage — and those who see a more lucrative path on a competitive side, which, in surfing’s case, already has a well-established history. Though the Olympics are not his immediate goal, Smith does surf in plenty of contests — “If you compete, you have to be really good at riding bad waves,” he says — and has not ruled them out. “There’s something about performance pressure that allows you to dig deep and feel something you couldn’t real feel any other way,” he said. In a way, though, he’s won his gold medal. That day on Skeleton Bay will live on, both in his mind and on the video, for a very long time. “There was a point where I was at four barrels and I was already like, ‘This is amazing,”’ he said. “It looked like the wave was over, but it formed again. I figured, the drone’s there, I might as well stay on. And I was like, ‘Whoa!’ This went from a good wave to like a life-changing wave.”
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TRADE Continued from page 12 surging A’s in the standings. If the season ended today, the Mariners would be in line for the second of two AL wild card berths. At present, the A’s are the only other contender within striking range. “Looking at the [Mariners], it’s just like, wow, there’s a reason they’re playing great baseball,” Tuivailala said. “… They have great arms in the pen as well. I’m going to do whatever I can and whatever they want me to do to help them as a team.” Tuivailala, though, isn’t the typical deadline acquisition for a contending team. He is in his first full major league season, with a 3-3 record and a 3.69 ERA through 31 appearances. He picked up consecutive wins in his last two
FIRE Continued from page 11 was OK to play,” said Korrie McMahan, the District 1 safety officer for the Northern California tournament. “By Thursday it was up at 156.” All of Half Moon Bay’s players and coaches had departed by Thursday morning, according to Half Moon Bay manager Don Scatena. After the team became the first from HMB to win District 52 and Section 3 championships, the team opened play in the Northern California tournament Monday, the day the Carr Fire started. The flames were visible from Alta Mesa Park in the distance, with several HMB fans
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appearances with the Cardinals — last Saturday in one inning of scoreless work against the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field, then Tuesday in 1 2/3 scoreless innings in Cincinnati. In 14 interleague games against AL oppoSam Tuivailala nents throughout his career, Tuivailala is 0-2 with a 3.68 ERA. In that time, he has never faced an AL West team. Just in reaching the major leagues — Tuivailala made his big league debut Sept. 9, 2014 — the 6-3 fireballing right-hander is a true developmental success story. While Tuivailala was a standout two-way player in high school, the Cardinals selected him as an infielder in the third round of the 2010 draft. He spent his first two professional seasons patrolling the left side of the infield for the Rookie-Class Gulf Coast
League Cardinals, compiling a .220 batting average in that time, before the Cardinals put a toe plate on him. He made his professional pitching debut July 9, 2012 with the Rookie-Class Johnson City Cardinals. “I never thought I’d throw a slider, never thought I’d throw a sinker, and now I have four pitches,” Tuivailala said. “I never thought I’d be able to do this ... but now because of the Cardinals, and the people they brought in, it’s allowed me to maximize my potential.” It has been a season of upheaval in St. Louis though, particularly this month. On July 14, seventh-year manager Mike Matheny was fired. “It’s always sad to see a guy you respect — and obviously I came up and debuted with Matheny as my manger — it’s always a little bit of a sour taste to see him walk away,” Tuivailala said. “But the environment (in the clubhouse) was good. We wanted to play hard. … We had to take care of business.” Then Friday, St. Louis gutted its bullpen.
The organization designated for assignment right-handers Greg Holland and Tyler Lyons, in addition to trading Tuivailala. “I can’t say I saw it coming,” Tuivailala said. “It kind of took me by surprise. But I’ve got to say I’m grateful for the opportunity.” Tuivailala is set to report to Anaheim this weekend to the Mariners in their threegame series against the Angels. Seattle’s bullpen took a hit Friday, as the Angels walked off in the 10th inning for a 4-3 win on a Kole Calhoun home run against reliever Juan Nicasio. It won’t be a complete culture shock for Tuivailala in ing his new team, though, as there will be several familiar faces to greet him. Nicasio, right-hander Mike Leake and left-hander Marco Gonzales all previously pitched for the Cardinals. Tuivailala and Gonzales each broke into the big leagues with St. Louis in 2014, and played parts of two seasons together between the majors and minors.
in attendance posting photos of the glowing red haze emanating from the opposite side of the Sacramento River. “You could see the smoke and the red in the hills from the field,” Scatena said. “The clouds were just bright red. You couldn’t see the flames just yet but you could see the red in the hills.” By late Thursday night, the nearby Sundial Bridge, where the HMB Little Leaguers stayed at the Sheraton Redding Hotel at the Sundial Bridge, was engulfed in ash and soot from the blaze just 10 minutes away. “The boys were there (at the Sundial Bridge) fishing, and right now … it’s almost completely engulfed in flames,” Scatena said. Scatena, in particular, was cognizant of the air quality index. Following the North Bay fires last October, a majority of sports programs in San Mateo County were suspended for more than a week due to the AQI suring 150. Scatena, the director of student serv-
ices for the San Mateo Union High School District, was integral to the day-to-day monitoring and decision-making as to the status of sports operations during the crisis. At the tournament outset, it wasn’t the fire that worried Scatena, but the heat, he said. “We saw it as just a small little fire,” Scatena said. “And every game we played, at first pitch it was at least 108 degrees.” By Tuesday, the smoke drifts were noticeable at Alta Mesa Park, though the AQI was below 90, according to Scatena. “Then Wednesday it started getting a little ashy and we started questioning the air quality,” Scatena said. “And the wind started to shift … and by Wednesday night, when we were done with our game it was black and ashy behind our hotel.” Some of the HMB players and families departed Redding Wednesday night. Five of the players — Ben Cleary, Liam Harrington,
Ryan Harrington, Ian Armstrong and Aidan Vazquez — are readying to play in Cooperstown, New York with their West Coast Federals travel team this week. It was a tentative trip for the five players, who would have had to skip it had the HMB Little League All-Stars advanced to the West Region Tournament in San Bernardino. Come Thursday morning, when the rest of the team left Redding, the Sundial Bridge area was looking grim. “By Thursday morning we woke up and [the ash] was like snow,” Scatena said. As of Friday afternoon, the Sheraton Redding Hotel at the Sundial Bridge was still operating and booked at full capacity. Staff at the hotel was monitoring the Carr Fire in the event of evacuation. More than 37,000 residents have been evacuated from the city of 92,000, according to figures published by the Associated Press.
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Rams listen to fans, will wear classic uniforms in five games THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
IRVINE — Ever since the Rams came home to Los Angeles two seasons ago, a big segment of their long-faithful local fan base has pleaded with them to dress better. The Rams have listened to their fans’ pleas, and now the NFL is allowing them to wear their classic blue-and-yellow uniforms five times at the Coliseum this season. The Rams will don the franchise’s traditional uniforms in their final five home games this season, chief operating officer Kevin Demoff announced Friday to a thrilled throng of Rams ers at training camp. “I’m excited for our fans, because their voice was heard in the NFL office,” Demoff said. “We’re glad that we were able to deliver for them.” The Rams’ uniform choices have attracted uncommon scrutiny since mere days after the team announced its return to California in 2016. Most local fans fondly the Rams in their royal blue jerseys with yellow pants, which the Rams wore from 1973 until 1999. The St. Louis Rams won the Super Bowl in the white version of that uniform, but swapped out that color scheme the next season in favor of a navy-and-gold look. The Rams tweaked their look when they moved back to LA, and the Rams wore a hybrid look last season that resembled the blue-and-white look worn by the Los Angeles Rams from
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Since moving back to Los Angeles, fans have clamored for the Rams to return to the blue-and-yellow uniform they wore from 1973 to 1999. The Rams will wear them in five games this season. 1964-72, but with accents of the St. Louis gold. The Rams adopted the classic blueand-yellow look as their throwback uniform when they moved home, and they’ve worn it in two home games apiece over their first two seasons in the Coliseum. Their fans wanted more, and they’re getting it. “(The NFL) understood our fans’ requests about why we wanted to wear throwbacks more,” Demoff said. “They saw the ion. We sent them all the letters, all the discussion from last year.” The Rams essentially were allowed to swap out their current navy-blue jerseys for their throwbacks for four games during the season. The team spent
several games last season wearing what appeared to be mismatched navy jerseys and pants, and fans were fed up. They’ll also swap their current white-horned helmets for gold horns while wearing the throwbacks. The Rams’ headgear also is historic: they have the first NFL helmets ever to feature a logo, after halfback Fred Gehrke painted the horns onto the leather helmets in 1948. After the NFL agreed to the switch this week, the Rams will wear the royal blue jerseys with yellow ram horns around the shoulders in five of their seven home games. Their eighth “home” game is in Mexico City, where the Rams will wear their yellow “Color Rush” alternate uniforms. The Rams will wear their current white home jerseys in their two preseason home games and their first two regular-season games at the Coliseum in September. That decision will force their opponents to wear colored jerseys in the hottest temperatures of the season. The team also will wear the blueand-yellow gear with roughly the same frequency in 2019, Demoff said. But this franchise’s uniform saga is far from over. The Rams have long planned to unveil new uniforms when they move into their palatial new stadium in Inglewood for the 2020 season. Demoff indicated the new look is likely to be “a blend” of the classic and the new.
17
Weekend • July 28-29, 2018
AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division
NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division
W 72 65 53 47 30
L 33 36 51 55 74
Pct .686 .644 .510 .461 .288
GB — 5 18 1/2 23 1/2 41 1/2
Philadelphia Atlanta Washington New York Miami
W 58 54 52 43 44
L 45 46 51 58 61
Pct .563 .540 .505 .426 .419
GB — 2 1/2 6 14 15
Central Division Cleveland 56 Minnesota 48 44 Detroit Chicago 36 Kansas City 31
46 54 61 67 71
.549 .471 .419 .350 .304
— 8 13 1/2 20 1/2 25
Central Division 60 Chicago Milwaukee 60 54 Pittsburgh St. Louis 52 46 Cincinnati
43 46 51 51 58
.583 .566 .514 .505 .442
— 1 1/2 7 8 14 1/2
West Division Houston Seattle A’s Angels Texas
38 42 44 52 62
.638 .592 .581 .505 .410
— 5 6 14 24
West Division Los Angeles Arizona Colorado Giants San Diego
46 48 47 53 64
.558 .543 .539 .495 .396
— 1 1/2 2 6 1/2 17
Boston New York Tampa Bay Toronto Baltimore
67 61 61 53 43
Friday’s Games Kansas City at N.Y.Yankees,ppd. Baltimore 15,Tampa Bay 5 Boston 4,Minnesota 3,10 innings Cleveland 8,Detroit 3 Toronto 10,Chicago White Sox 5 Texas 11,Houston 2 Colorado 3,Oakland 1 Angels 4,Seattle 3,10 innings Saturday’s Games KC (Fillmyer 0-1) at N.Y.Yankees (Severino 14-3),10:05 a.m. Cleveland (Clevinger 7-6) at Detroit (Liriano 3-5),3:10 p.m. Tampa Bay (TBD) at Baltimore (Gausman 4-8),4:05 p.m. Minnesota(Odorizzi4-6)atBoston(Porcello12-4),4:10p.m. Texas (Hamels 5-9) at Houston (Verlander 10-5),4:10 p.m. Toronto (TBD) at ChicagoWhite Sox (Giolito 7-8),4:10 p.m. A’s (Anderson 2-2) at Colorado (Senzatela 3-3),5:10 p.m. Seattle (Hernandez 8-8) at Angels (Barria 5-7),6:07 p.m. Sunday’s Games Kansas City at N.Y.Yankees,10:05 a.m. Minnesota at Boston,10:05 a.m. Tampa Bay at Baltimore,10:05 a.m. Cleveland at Detroit,10:10 a.m. Texas at Houston,11:10 a.m. Toronto at Chicago White Sox,11:10 a.m. Oakland at Colorado,12:10 p.m. Seattle at Angels,1:07 p.m.
58 57 55 52 42
Friday’s Games Pittsburgh 5, N.Y. Mets 4 Cincinnati 6, Philadelphia 4 Washington 9, Miami 1 L.A. Dodgers 4, Atlanta 1 St. Louis 5, Chicago Cubs 2 Colorado 3, Oakland 1 Arizona 6, San Diego 2 Milwaukee 3, San Francisco 1 Saturday’s Games Cubs (Quintana 9-6) at St.Louis (Mikolas 10-3),1:05 p.m. Philly (Velasquez 7-8) at Cincinnati (Harvey 5-6),3:40 p.m. Mets (deGrom 5-5) at Pitt (Williams 8-7), 4:05 p.m. Dodgers (Wood 6-5) at Atlanta (Fried 1-3), 4:10 p.m. Washington(Gonzalez6-7)atMiami(Richards3-5),4:10p.m. A’s (Anderson 2-2) at Colorado (Senzatela 3-3),5:10 p.m. Arizona (Corbin 7-4) at San Diego (Ross 6-8),5:40 p.m. Milwaukee (Chacin 9-3) at Giants (Cueto 3-1),6:05 p.m. Sunday’s Games Philadelphia at Cincinnati, 10:10 a.m. Washington at Miami, 10:10 a.m. L.A. Dodgers at Atlanta, 10:35 a.m. N.Y. Mets at Pittsburgh, 10:35 a.m. Oakland at Colorado, 12:10 p.m. Milwaukee at San Francisco, 1:05 p.m. Arizona at San Diego, 1:10 p.m. Chicago Cubs at St. Louis, 5:05 p.m.
TRANSACTIONS NFL NFL — Suspended New York Jets WR ArDarius Stewart without pay for the first two games of the regular season for violating the league’s policy on performance-enhancing substances. ARIZONA CARDINALS — Released DE Moubarek Djeri. Signed S Tre Boston to a one-year contract.
LOS ANGELES CHARGERS — Placed TE Hunter Henry, G Forest Lamp and CB Jason Verrett on the PUP list. Placed G Brett Boyko and S Derwin James on active-NFI list. OAKLAND RAIDERS —Placed G-OT Vadal Alexander and DE Khalil Mack on the reserve-did not report list.
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DAD’S Continued from page 1 Clark. “The first year is a blur, it was crazy. I was a chicken with my head cut off,” he said. “But this half-year I feel more organized, more well prepared.” Much has been written about Clark’s fine dining background — he was a threeMichelin star chef de cuisine at Saison in San Francisco before opening Dad’s Luncheonette with his partner, Alexis Liu. It’s the first restaurant he’s owned. “We didn’t know what to expect at first. We were getting pummeled every day,” he said. “It’s hard to gauge in a new restaurant how much of something you need and it was always a game of catch-up. There were so many people and we had no idea — we didn’t even have water cups [when we opened].” Dad’s is open four days a week — Thursday through Sunday— as Clark transitioned out of fine dining, in part, to spend more time with his family: he and Liu have a 2-year-old daughter. His new life at Dad’s has meant a relative-
GDP Continued from page 1 The Commerce Department said the gross domestic product — the total output of goods and services produced in the United States — posted its best showing since a 4.9 percent annual increase in the third quarter of 2014. Trump, who has repeatedly attacked the Obama istration’s economic record, had pledged during the 2016 presidential race to double annual economic growth to 4 percent or more. And at a White House appearance Friday with his top economic advisers and Vice President Mike Pence, the president boasted that “we’ve accomplished an economic turnaround of historic proportions.” He predicted that the economy would fare “extraordinarily well” in the current JulySeptember quarter and that growth for 2018
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ly relaxed schedule, but the cafe — with just three people working in the kitchen and 18 seats — serves about 250 to 300 people on a typical Saturday. Father’s Day drew 400 people. And they come from all over. On that day, the first guests were from China and said they heard about Dad’s Luncheonette there and had to try it. Clark warmly engages everyone who walks in, bantering with them as if they were all close friends. And many of them are. He is at once host, server and chef, with Liu providing backup on weekends. She runs a cafe of her own in San Francisco the rest of the week. Clark said Dad’s, which is located along Highway 1, was inspired, in part, by road trips and Americana. “And the train car also brings it’s own life,” he said. “It has a lot of soul, another nostalgia thing that hopefully transports you to a place where you forget about pretty much anything. You’re just beside the road having a good time.” Clark described the menu offerings as American roadside classics with a California focus, so hamburgers were an obvious choice. Dad’s offers a beef as well
as a mushroom burger — the two top sellers. Both include a soft egg, melted cheese, red onion pickles and lettuce sandwiched between two slices of locally baked white bread. “We were a white bread family growing up,” he said. For Clark, proportions are crucial to a sandwich, and both feature Dad’s sauce — a mix of mustard, Meyer lemon, black pepper, honey and salt — but not ketchup. Clark hates ketchup. Moving forward, he said he’d like to experiment and offer new items like fish tacos, and lately he’s taken to firing up a smoker on weekends to prepare meat. Dad’s did offer cocktails for a short while, but the small kitchen within a train car was too small to keep that up. A few collaborations with friends are also in the works that could result in new specials before long. And while everything offered at Dad’s is under $15 — a far cry from the $400 tasting menu at Saison — Clark said there’s plenty in common between the meals he’s prepared at both spots, for example “simplicity” and “not doing a number” on dishes. “Understanding flavor is understanding
ingredients,” he said. Clark grew up in Virginia and was always interested in cooking and fascinated by the lifestyle of chefs. But it wasn’t until after he dropped out of college and moved back in with his mom that he seriously pursued the profession. “[When I moved in with her] she said get a job, so I just Googled the best restaurant in Washington, D.C.,” he said. “I lied to them and said I was a chef. They hired me and quickly realized I was full of shit, but they still kept me on and put me on the path to righteousness.” He learned on the job and said it “started off pretty rocky,” but worked his way up in the fine dining world and landed his first Bay Area job at Benu in San Francisco. He still lives in San Francisco, but said Half Moon Bay and the coast were always a draw. “The coast has always called me and my family, we’re outdoors people and we drive up and down Highway 1 constantly,” he said. “Something that was alluring about Half Moon Bay is we’d always go to the farmers’ market and everything you’re buying is from down here. Instead of being in the city and searching it out, be in the place where it grows.”
as a whole would be the best in 13 years. But forecasters cautioned that the AprilJune pace was due mainly, though not entirely, to temporary factors. Most analysts are forecasting that growth this year could reach 3 percent, which would be the best since a 3.5 percent gain in 2005. But many think the annual 4.1 percent growth rate last quarter is likely the high point for any one quarter. Many think annual growth in the second half of this year will be 2.5 percent to 3 percent. “We believe quarter two will represent a growth peak as the boost from tax cuts fades, global growth moderates, inflation rises, the Fed tightens monetary policy and trade protectionism looms over the economy,” said Gregory Daco, chief U.S. economist at Oxford Economics. The latest GDP figure was nearly double the 2.2 percent growth rate in the first quarter, which was revised up from a previous estimate of 2 percent annual growth. Consumer spending, which s for about 70 percent of economic activity,
reached a 4 percent annual growth rate after a lackluster 0.5 percent rate in the first quarter. Consumers began spending their higher take-home pay on autos and other big-ticket items, spurred by the $1.5 trillion tax cut Trump pushed through Congress in December. Another key factor that bolstered growth was a rush by exporters of soybeans and other products to move their shipments to other countries before retaliatory tariffs in response to Trump’s tariffs on imports took effect. Exports surged at a 9.3 percent annual rate in the second quarter, while imports grew at a scant 0.5 percent rate. Trump called the narrowing of the trade deficit “one of the biggest wins in the report.” The narrowing trade deficit added a full percentage point to growth last quarter, though economists have expressed concern that a full-blown trade war between the United States and China, the world’ s two biggest economies, will hurt growth in both countries. Business investment grew at a solid 7.3 percent annual rate. Government spending also posted a solid gain, rising at a 2.1 percent annual rate. The result was boosted by a budget deal at the start of the year that added billions to defense and domestic spending.
But housing, which has struggled this year, shrank at a 1.1 percent annual rate after an even sharper 3.4 percent annual decline in the first quarter. “The second quarter was a strong quarter, but it was juiced up by the tax cuts and higher government spending,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist Moody’s Analytics. Zandi forecast that growth for 2018 will reach 3 percent, which would be the best rate since before the Great Recession. In 2019, he expects solid 2.6 percent growth. But in 2020 — a presidential election year — Zandi is forecasting growth of just 0.9 percent, a pace so slow it will raise the threat of a recession. “We will come pretty close to stalling out in 2020 because the growth we are seeing now is not sustainable,” Zandi said. The GDP report released Friday included a revision of previous years’ figures. The revisions showed that growth in 2017 came in at 2.2 percent, slightly below the 2.3 percent previously reported. The current economic expansion, which began in June 2009, is now the secondlongest on record but also the weakest. The GDP revisions didn’t change that narrative. Annual growth has averaged just 2.2 percent since mid-2009 through the end of last year, the same as previously reported.
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Smile, pardner: ‘Deadwood’ movie gets HBO greenlight THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
BEVERLY HILLS — A roundup of news from the Television Critics Association summer meeting, at which TV networks and streaming services are presenting details on programs.
BACK TO THE BLACK HILLS “Deadwood” exhale.
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HBO says it’s greenlighted a long-discussed movie based on the Western drama that ended a dozen years ago. HBO programming chief Casey Bloys said Wednesday that production is scheduled to begin in October. An air date has yet to be set but it could debut in spring 2019, he said. Bloys told a TV critics’ meeting it was a logistical
“nightmare” getting the ensemble cast’s schedules to align, but it finally worked out. The critically acclaimed, award-winning “Deadwood” was set in the rough-and-tumble South Dakota mining town of the title. The series aired from 200406 with stars including Timothy Olyphant, Ian McShane and Molly Parker.
It was created by David Milch, known for his work on the contemporary police dramas “NYPD Blue” and “Hill Street Blues.”
UNDER NEW OWNERSHIP HBO’s programming chief pushed back Wednesday against the possibility that the cable channel will suffer under new owner AT&T. See HBO, Page 22
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Next ‘Star Wars’ film to have unreleased Carrie Fisher footage THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
LOS ANGELES — Carrie Fisher is not done with “Star Wars” after all — Lucasfilm says unreleased footage of the actress will be used in the next installment of the “Star Wars” saga to draw her character’s story to an end. The studio and writer-director J. J. Abrams announced Friday that footage of Fisher shot for 2015’s “Star Wars: The Force Awakens” will be used in the ninth film in the space opera’s core trilogies about the Skywalker family that includes Carrie Fisher Fisher’s character, Leia. Filming is scheduled to begin Wednesday at London’s Pinewood Studios. Mark Hamill, who plays Luke Skywalker, will also appear in the film, which for the moment is simply called “Episode IX.” It is scheduled to be released in December 2019. Fisher died in December 2016 after she finished work on the middle installment in the trilogy, “The Last Jedi.” Director Rian Johnson opted not alter her storyline, leaving Leia’s fate to be handled by Abrams. “We desperately loved Carrie Fisher,” Abrams said in a statement. “Finding a truly satisfying conclusion to the Skywalker saga without her eluded us.” He said recasting Fisher or recreating her using computer graphics, as was done in a spinoff film “Rogue One,” was not an option. “With the and blessing from her daughter, Billie, we have found a way to honor Carrie’s legacy and role as Leia in Episode IX by using unseen footage we shot together in Episode VII.” Friday’s announcement also confirmed that Billy Dee Williams will be returning to the franchise as Lando Calrissian, a hero of the rebellion who hasn’t been seen in the latest trilogy. Also returning to the film are Daisy Ridley, Oscar Isaac, John Boyega and Kelly Marie Tran, who all play heroes. Adam Driver and Domhnall Gleeson, who play villains in the latest films, are also returning.
DAVID ALLEN
Maria (center, Jillian Bader) comforts the von Trapp children (from left, Wesley Stewart, Charlotte Kearns, Sofia Oberg, Alyssa Kim, Austin Oberg) during a thunderstorm in Foothill Music Theatre’s ‘The Sound of Music.’
Foothill treats audience to ‘The Sound of Music’ By Judy Richter DAILY JOURNAL CORRESPONDENT
Foothill Music Theatre is staging the timeless and timely “The Sound of Music” and doing a fine job. Based on the von Trapp family singers, who made their way to the United States from Austria in 1938, the book by Howard Lindsay and Russel Crouse tells a story of love, the pursuit of one’s dreams and the refusal to compromise one’s principles. To most people, however, it’s a captivating show filled with memorable characters and even more memorable music, thanks to composer Richard Rodgers and lyricist Oscar Hammerstein II. It’s hard to resist humming along to the title song and classics like “My Favorite Things, ” “Do-Re-Mi, ” “Climb Ev’ry Mountain” and “Edelweiss.” The central character is Maria Rainer (Jillian Bader), a would-be nun who loves to sing. Despite her eagerness for the religious life, the Mother Abbess (Rachel Michelberg) sends Maria to the home of retired navy captain Georg von Trapp (Scott
Solomon), a widower whose seven children need a governess. She finds a household with lots of military precision and little fun. She soon changes all that, mainly through music and the belief that children should be children, not martinets. Before long, she also softens Georg’s heart and helps him to see how much the children need a loving father. They’re eventually married, much to the children’s delight. Their happiness is short-lived because fascist is a growing threat. When local Nazis ask Georg to take command of a German ship, he has little choice even though he despises fascism. However, a singing contest managed by his friend Max Detweiler (Aaron Hurley) offers a chance for the family to escape across the Alps to Switzerland. The show is ably directed by Milissa Carey, who does especially well with the youngsters, who are double cast except for Madison Colgate as 16year-old Liesl, the oldest. Choreography is by Brett and C.J. Blankenship. Music director William Liberatore
leads the excellent orchestra and some outstanding choral singing by the nuns and the von Trapp children. As Maria, Bader combines charm and a likable stage presence with fine singing. Acting is good throughout the cast, especially the other principals, including Elizabeth Claire Lawrence as Elsa Schraeder, Georg’s former fiancée. Extra kudos go to the entire cast for maintaining composure at the first Sunday matinee, when the audience was filled with children, some very young. Hence there were distractions like crying, leaving for the bathroom, talking and fidgeting. Although seeing a great show like this could benefit children, parents should make sure they know how to behave. Running about two hours and 45 minutes with one intermission, “The Sound of Music” will continue through Aug. 5 in Foothill College’s Smithwick Theatre, Interstate 280 and El Monte Road Los Altos Hills. For tickets and information including parking restrictions call (650) 949-7360 or visit foothill.edu/theatre.
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McQuarrie talks action, Cruise, ‘Mission: Impossible’ By Lindsey Bahr THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
LOS ANGELES — In previous “Mission: Impossible” movies, action often came first, and story second. It’s almost ironic then that when writerdirector Christopher McQuarrie and Tom Cruise decided to focus on character for the sixth movie, “Fallout, ” now playing nationwide, they’d end up with the most exciting “Mission” ever — wall-to-wall with stunning set pieces in helicopters, trucks, motorcycles. Even a three-man fight in a public restroom is a standout sequence that rivals the very real danger Cruise put himself in (106 times) to do a parachute jump from 25,000 feet. McQuarrie, 50, a Hollywood journeyman who won an Oscar 22 years ago for writing “The Usual Suspects,” has been one of Cruise’s go-to guys for a decade, writing “Valkyrie” and “Edge of Tomorrow” and directing “Jack Reacher” and 2015’s “Mission: Impossible — Rogue Nation.” He spoke to the Associated Press recently from Seoul about his crazy feat, and making the sixth, and best-reviewed, “Mission” movie. Remarks have been edited for clarity and brevity. AP: Ho w di d y o u do thi s ? McQUARRIE: We did not set out to make you know the biggest, giant-est, craziest, most outrageous “Mission” ever. I said to Tom I want to make a more emotional movie, a more character-driven movie that’s more about Ethan. By keeping our heads down and focusing on that it didn’t really occur to us just how big (“Fallout”) was until we were well into it. As we started to take stock as the movie started to take shape we realized, “Oh my God we’ve got
REUTERS
Actor Tom Cruise, left, and film director Christopher McQuarrie pose for photographers on the red carpet at the premiere of ‘Mission: Impossible-Fallout.’ this sequence, that sequence, this other sequence. ” In a previous “Mission: Impossible” any one of those stunts would have been The Stunt. AP: That’s s urpri s i ng that i t’s no t al l mapped o ut meti cul o us l y. McQUARRIE: Tom said with “Rogue Nation,” ‘’I want the audience to experience what it’s like for us to make movies.” There’s very little difference between watching a “Mission: Impossible” movie and making a “Mission: Impossible” movie. A lot of these things we’re making up as we go along. There’s very seldom a finished script when we go into production. We come up with big crazy ideas in the middle
of the movie, so people are forced to scramble to put them together and it’s always a race against the clock. The vibe of what you’re feeling when you’re watching the movie is what we feel every day when we go to work. AP: And y et y o ur acti o n s equences are no tabl y co herent — no s haky cam, no co ntri v ances . Why do y o u do i t that way ? McQUARRIE: I’m obsessed with clarity and geography. Those are the first two rules of any action sequence ... For me it’s important that you sit back and the movie comes at you and requires nothing from you in of comprehension. What that
demands of the actors is that they bring the energy. And when you look at that bathroom fight, it’s very straightforward: Three guys fighting in a bathroom. But the actors were all so focused and so rehearsed and so dedicated to what they were doing, the energy is on screen, not in the camera work. And I don’t get inside the fight. I stay outside of it. Just over one character’s shoulder. What I’m doing is essentially making you a bystander. I’m putting you right in the action. AP: Is there a s et-pi ece y o u’re mo s t pro ud o f? Mc QUARRIE: The things I’m most proud of are the emotional moments. Ilsa (Rebecca Ferguson) following Ethan is the definition of what we call shoe leather. And it cannot survive the “get to the next moment right now” process of filmmaking. That survived four test screenings. Never got a studio note. The fact that I cut two giant stunts out that were in the first trailer, and yet that scene stayed? That’s something I’m immensely proud of. AP: What was g o i ng thro ug h y o ur mi nd when To m Crui s e g o t i njured duri ng fi l mi ng ? McQUARRIE: Disaster is the opportunity to excel. When you make enough movies, you realize that setbacks are a natural part of the creative process and if you don’t panic, they almost always turn to your benefit. So as soon as he broke his ankle, my first concern was, “Is he OK” not, “Oh no this is going to ruin the movie.” I knew this was going to in some way benefit the film. And it did. We shut production down. Tom went right into physical therapy. And I went into the editing room and started to assemble the movie. I was able to make the discoveries I normally wouldn’t have made until well after the film was finished.
John Waters, others celebrate the anniversary of ‘Hairspray’ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
LOS ANGELES — Ricki Lake never in her wildest dreams thought she’d be celebrating the 30th anniversary of the film “Hairspray” at the lofty Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. “I never thought the movie was going to come out, let alone have this life span. And for me to be alive 30 years later, for me to be turning 50 in two months ... you know, it’s all kind of surreal,” she said. Most of the film’s surviving stars, as well as its writer-director John Waters, gathered Monday at the Academy for a special screening of the film, hosted by Oscar-winning Barry Jenkins, the writer-director of “Moonlight.” Jenkins was just age 8 when the film was released, but he said his parents were big fans of the period comedy, set in 1962 Baltimore. It’s about a teen-dance TV show
that is rocked when a short, plump dynamo — the adorable Tracy Turnblad — unseats Amber Von Tussle, the nasty blond beauty who long has been the reigning queen. Turmoil ensues when Tracy sugJohn Waters gests producers stop limiting black dancers’ appearances and pushes for the show to be fully integrated. Jenkins noted that Waters’ script is loosely based on real events. At a 30th anniversary screening for comedy “Hairspray,” director John Waters talks about the film’s radical message, while stars Ricki Lake and Debbie Harry reminisce about the shoot. (July 24) “In real life, that show never integrated. It just went off the air rather than integrate,”
Jenkins said. “I think John gives us this very happy, hopeful ending, by having the show integrate at the end of his version of the film. So I think, even in that, you see that he was trying to say that it is possible for us to come together.” As for the film’s pro-integration message, Waters noted: “It was a sneak attack. It was a Trojan horse. It was the only radical movie I ever made, because it snuck in middle America. And they didn’t notice. I mean, they didn’t notice the message. Well, they did notice the message. But I’ve said that even racists like ‘Hairspray.’” Before “Hairspray, ” Waters had directed just a handful of features that earned him a cult following.
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But “Hairspray” was his breakthrough, marking his introduction to mainstream audiences. It also marked a breakthrough for American actor, singer and drag queen Divine, who portrayed Tracy’s mother Edna. Divine died of complications from an enlarged heart just a little more than a week after the film’s wide release.
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Will Smith, Kirsten Dunst add new YouTube Originals fare BEVERLY HILLS — Will Smith, Jordan Peele, Kirsten Dunst and Robert Downey Jr. are part of YouTube Original’s new series line-up. YouTube said Friday that in “Will Smith: The Jump, ” the star will bungee jump from a helicopter over the Grand Canyon. The live broadcast will Will Smith take place on Sept. 25, Smith’s 50th birthday. Smith’s bravado is in response to a challenge from the Yes Theory channel on YouTube. “Get Out” filmmaker Peele is the co-creator (with “Key & Peele” writer Charlie Sanders)
Jordan Peele
HBO Continued from page 19 Casey Bloys, speaking to a meeting of TV critics, said there are no plans to choose volume over quality for its shows. “No one is asking us to take pitches of a ‘Love Boat’ reboot or anything like that,” he said. As , Bloys cited comments made during an earnings call Tuesday by John Stankey, who manages the new AT&T division that includes HBO and other Time Warner media assets. AT&T acquired Time Warner in an $85 billion deal concluded earlier this month. Stankey said that the aim was to invest more in content at HBO, home to “Game of Thrones, ” “Big Little Lies” and “Westworld. ” In contrast, he reportedly told HBO staff recently to prepare
WEEKEND JOURNAL of “Weird City, ” described by YouTube as a comedic sci-fi anthology series with six episodes. Guest stars will include Rosario Dawson, Michael Cera and LaVerne Cox. Dunst stars in “On Kirsten Dunst Becoming a God in Central Florida,” a dark comedy about a minimum-wage worker who schemes her way into a company that ruined her family. The 10-episode series, produced by Dunst, is set in the early 1990s. Downey will host and Robert narrate a series that Downey Jr. explores the world of artificial intelligence through the perspectives of researchers and experts. The stilluntitled series will look at the impact of for a difficult year. Bloys called Tuesday’s remarks “music to our ears.” Time Warner had curtailed programming investment as it readied itself for sale “so this is the first time in a long time we’ve heard anybody talking about investing in programming,” he said. HBO has long held the high ground in acclaimed shows but is facing challenges from big-spending newcomers including streaming services Netflix and Amazon. In the recently announced Emmy nominations, Netflix ended HBO’s 17-year streak as the most-nominated outlet by snagging 112 bids to HBO’s 108. The outcome was unsurprising given the overall volume of programming, Bloys said, a reference to the phenomenon dubbed “peak TV” that has given viewers nearly 500 series. Getting four fewer nominations “is not going to change the type of programs that we develop and produce at all,” he said, but
People in the news A.I. and how it’s changing people’s lives and the change yet to come. The 2019 debut dates for it and the other new series were not provided.
Anne Hathaway dedicates post to slain woman NEW YORK — Anne Hathaway calls the fatal stabbing of a young black woman at a subway station in Oakland, California, unspeakable while condemning white privilege. Authorities say a white 27-year-old parolee faces charges in the July 22 death of Nia Wilson. Prosecutors are still investigating if John Cowell was motivated by hate. Hat h away wro t e o n h er In s t ag ram : “White people — including me, including you — must take into the marrow of our privileged bones the truth that ALL black people fear for their lives added that HBO does face the challenge of creating more programming without changing its approach. “So that’s what we’re in discussion now. What’s the right level for us with this increased funding?” he said.
FONDA STILL HEARS FROM CRITICS Jane Fonda says she’s still confronted by Vietnam War veterans over her 1970s antiwar activism and welcomes the encounters. Such moments provide an opportunity to talk, she said, which needs to be done with what Fonda called “an open mind and a soft heart.” The actress drew bitter criticism after being photographed atop an anti-aircraft gun during a controversial 1972 visit to North Vietnam. Meeting with TV critics Wednesday to discuss a new HBO documentary on her life, she expressed regret for that moment. She said it was thoughtless to perch on
THE DAILY JOURNAL DAILY in America. ” The Academy Awardwinning actress wrote white people don’t have the “equivalence for this fear of violence. ” She says they must ask themselves how “decent” they are in their actions. Cowell’s family says Anne he has suffered from Hathaway mental illness and failed to receive proper treatment.
Kristen Stewart to lead Elizabeth Banks’ ‘Charlie’s Angels’ LOS ANGELES — Kristen Stewart is set to star in Elizabeth Banks’ reboot of “Charlie’s Angels. ” Sony Pictures on Thursday says Stewart’s fellow Angels will be played by Naomi Scott and Ella Balinska. Banks is directing, producing, co-writing and starring as Bosley in the new incarnation of the Angels saga. the gun and called it “horrible” to think about the message her action sent to soldiers and their families, she said. It was an earlier meeting with U.S. soldiers in Paris that sparked her activism, Fonda said. Her belief that America always fought on “the side of the angels” was shaken by what she heard and later read. Her late father, the famed actor Henry Fonda, was a World War II veteran and Jane Fonda had served as “Miss Army Recruiter” in 1954. She felt betrayed and lied to by America’s leadership over the war and decided she would do everything possible to help stop it as part of a movement, Fonda said. At age 80, Fonda looks back at her life in HBO’s “Jane Fonda in Five Acts,” from director-producer Susan Lacy and debuting this fall. Fonda continues to work, starring opposite Lily Tomlin on the Netflix series “Grace and Frankie” and working with Tomlin and Dolly Parton on a sequel to their hit 1980 movie “9 to 5.”
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STUDY Continued from page 1 Plan area located south of State Route 92 near Costco. Fourteen of the 22 workforce housing units would rented at very low-, low- and moderateincome levels and the other eight units would be rented at below-market rates that are higher than the moderate-income level. In other words, all 22 units would be restricted up to 130 percent of area median income, while market-rate rents today are closer to 175 percent to 200 percent of median income, said David Hopkins, Sares Regis’ chief operating officer, residential development.
Concerns Bob Cushman, of the group Foster City Residents for Responsible Development, has been an outspoken critic of the latest housing proposal and its impacts. He said the previous plan to build mostly commercial space in Phase C would allow the Pilgrim Triton area to be a “self-contained and balanced economic unit,” as residents living in the other phases would work and shop in Phase C. With only residences and no commercial or retail in Phase C, he is worried about the impacts of Pilgrim Triton residents traveling off site to work and shop. “It will make our traffic problems worse than planned. And, it will add more school children and pressure other aspects of our city infrastructure,” he wrote in an email.
Cushman is also less than thrilled with the workforce housing component, in part because it “deprives the general community of 22 affordable units.” He doubts enough first responders would be interested in renting the units and said those workers make too much money to qualify for them. During the meeting, Chair Dan Dyckman did request staff survey just how many city employees would be interested in the workforce units. “It would be interesting to know what we’re approving and whether it’s affordable housing or workforce housing,” he said. Later in the meeting, one prospective renter employed by the city praised the proposal and said workforce housing would greatly improve his quality of life. Brandon Basa said he’s been a Foster City first responder for 12 years. Basa used to commute four hours from Manteca and later moved to Livermore, which is much closer than Manteca, but increasingly congested highways meant Basas’ commute time hardly improved. He also said his wife is a teacher for the city and commutes with their 1-yearold child from Livermore. “[Workforce housing] would solve a lot of problems, not only take cars off the road, but would solve the teacher shortage as well and I just think if you guys were to do this for us it would mean so much for your employees and would ease traffic for residents,” he said.
Traffic According to the traffic analysis prepared by Kittleson & Associates, the existing entitlement for Phase C, which entails 225,943
square feet of commercial space and 17 townhome units, would generate almost 3,000 more daily and peak hour car trips than the latest, 92-unit proposal. Consulting Planner Leslie Carmichael listed a number of nearby intersections where delays would be worse with the office entitlement compared to the housing proposal. Only the State Route 92 westbound ramps in the morning would be less congested with offices in Phase C rather than housing, she said. “The main source of the city’s worst traffic congestion problems is not local housing development, but it’s really the impact that congestion on adjacent regional highways has on our local streets,” she said. “Affordable housing is one part of a solution to address the traffic congestion issue by making it possible for people to live closer to their jobs and not have to commute long distances on the region’s highways.” She also said the housing that has been added to the Pilgrim Triton area over the past 11 years has “not increased traffic coming in or out of the neighborhood.” As for impacts on schools, Carmichael said studies suggest Phase C will bring 19 additional elementary students, which can be accommodated in the new school being constructed in Charter Square, and 19 high school students. The school district confirmed there’s sufficient capacity to handle them.
Water, other impacts She also said impacts on water were studied based on consumption at comparable devel-
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Weekend • July 28-29, 2018
23
opments within Foster City. The study concludes that the residential proposal would consume less water than the office entitlement. And, according to a staff report, analysis revealed sufficient water supply under “both normal and drought conditions to serve the proposed project.” There was some concern about the loss of space for small businesses if the latest proposal were to move forward, but Hopkins said they wouldn’t be able to benefit from the current entitlement anyway. “You can’t finance new construction of office and charge below market rents. It would be Gilead, IBM or a big corporate office that would probably occupy the entire building,” he said. Hopkins also said it’s a “sub optimal” area for retail, in part, because of a lack of visibility. “The retail that’s there is and will always be neighborhood retail,” he said. “It will never be national retailers that depend on high-volume sales. We felt adding more retail is not the priority there; it’s taking care of the existing retail that’s there.” Sares Regis built that existing retail and Hopkins said it was challenging to find businesses to rent those spaces. Speaking generally about the need for housing, Hopkins noted the last housing ownership unit added in Foster City was in 1999. “This project is substituting office, which is causing a regional issue, with housing, which is a solution to a regional issue,” he said.
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WEEKEND JOURNAL
Weekend • July 28-29, 2018
For months, San Mateo County has had the lowest unemployment rate in the state. At 2.5 percent, the county’s June unemployment rate brought it closer in line with the range of rates recorded in the course of the last year, said Rosanne Foust, president and CEO of the San Mateo County Economic Development Association, who said she’s seen the county’s unemployment rate hover between 2.1 percent and 2.5 percent in recent months. Though Foust wasn’t shocked by the June numbers, she said they spark questions about whether those included in the count of unemployed individuals month after month are the same individuals or if they’re moving on and off the list. She said she has also wondered what kinds of skills those workers have since she often hears from small businesses that it’s harder and harder to find workers. How companies located in the county can play a role in easing regional traffic congestion and demand for the county’s housing stock have long been among the questions Foust has explored with employers. She said seeing interest build among private companies to fund the Highway 101 Managed Lanes project — which will build a new lane in each direction on
Highway 101 between Interstate 380 and Whipple Road to create express lanes with potential tolls — and seek office space closer to where their employees live are signs they are paying attention to how these regional issues affect their ability to attract and retain talent. Foust cited the relocation of the Box headquarters from Los Altos to a downtown Redwood City building on Middlefield Road near the city’s Caltrain station as well as SurveyMonkey’s move to San Mateo’s Bay Meadows from Palo Alto in recent years as signs major employers are factoring where their workers live into their decisions to relocate or expand. “They’re actually reacting to their workforce,” she said. “I think they’re hiring, too, but I also think that they’re looking at ‘well, where do our folks live and how can we make our work environment better.’” Haveman looked to modest growth in the number of county employees working in tech — to the tune of an annualized growth rate of 2.3 percent last month — as an indication other industries could remain relatively steady in the coming months. Because the county’s data is grouped with San Francisco’s employment data, Haveman thought a nearly 16 percent drop in the annualized growth in financial services last month could likely be attributed to a steady movement of banks and investment firms out of San Francisco. Though he acknowledged other parts of the state may be seeing slightly more dramatic increases in unemployment, Haveman didn’t expect major metropolitan areas like the Bay Area to experience major fluctuations any time soon. “It’s certainly nothing to worry about yet,” he said. “It’s an interesting trend to keep an eye on, but I wouldn’t find it troubling.”
borhood traffic mitigation efforts, and asked the developer what steps would be taken to ensure hotel guests enter and exit the site efficiently. Nathan Tsai, a representative of the developer, said they have been working with the shopping center owner to find ways to direct hotel guests to the site. Tsai added the hotel’s design, which situates the glass tower and hotel entrance so they are visible from Highway 101 and as guests travel on the Hillsdale Boulevard off-ramp, and routing guests so they enter from South Norfolk Street and through the shopping center and exit onto La Selva Street on the other side of the site are also aimed at ensuring guests know where to go and not adding to traffic congestion. “It’s just a straight shot out and it
also reduces the traffic impact as well,” he said, of the hotel exit onto La Selva Street. Commissioners also asked how a plan to build a pedestrian and bicycle bridge spanning Highway 101 just south of the Hillsdale Boulevard interchange and north of the project would intersect with plans for the site. Though an environmental analysis of the bridge project is currently being conducted, staff from the city’s Public Works Department said they are currently pursuing a grant to fund the design of the project and will coordinate with the hotel and other projects planned nearby as the bridge project progresses. Chief of Planning Ron Munekawa said the project is slated to go before the City Council for review Aug. 20.
JOBS Continued from page 1 in the county to 11,300 from 8,600 estimated to be unemployed in May as well as a drop in the number of nonfarm jobs created in the state to 800 in June from the 5,500 created in May, the downshifts in job growth depicted by the EDD’s June data may have been enough to curb the optimism some have had about the local economy. But the changes recorded in the county’s jobs performance in June didn’t signal alarm for those tracking the region’s job market. Based on his analysis of the June data, economist Jon Haveman of Marin Economic Consulting said the 1.8 percent annualized growth in the county’s unemployment rate last month was on pace with the growth logged in the county’s rate over the last year or so. He added it was also largely reflective of the 1. 4 percent annualized growth recorded for the Bay Area’s unemployment rate, and noted that even with the increase, the rates recorded in the region are still quite low. Haveman said slight increases in the region’s unemployment rates may have something to do with an uptick in workers entering the labor force across the country since more individuals actively searching for jobs may temporarily increase the number of unemployed people in a given region. The county’s labor force grew to 449,900 last month, some 500 more than was recorded in May and some 1,500 more workers than were included in the county’s labor force in June of 2017, according to the EDD. “People seem to be coming back into the labor force,” he said. “That the unemployment rate is going up is not a sign that anything is bad.”
INN Continued from page 3 modated at the site since many of the guests would be traveling for business and there is no restaurant planned. She added current traffic mitigation measures already implemented at the site, such as transit ticket reimbursement for employees, a free airport shuttle for hotel guests and employees and a contract with airlines to host pilots and flight attendants at the hotel, would remain in place at the Hampton Inn & Suites. Whitaker also expressed appreciation to the developer for voluntarily contributing $125,000 toward neighA
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THE DAILY JOURNAL
Calendar SATURDAY, JULY 28 Cars in the Park. Washington Park Burlingame, 850 Burlingame Ave., Burlingame. Burlingame Lions 14th annual Cars in the Park. Over 200 show cars will be parked in the park. Free. For more information call 3445200. Last Saturday of the Month Breakfast. 8:30 a.m. to 11 a.m. The American Legion Post 409, 757 San Mateo Ave., San Bruno. Breakfast with drinks is $10 for adults and $6 for children 12 years old and under. For more information call 589-3102. Foster City Citywide Yard Sale! 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Recreation Center, 650 Shell Blvd., Foster City. For a map of selling locations and a detailed list of what items are being sold, visit fostercity.org/parksrec/page/city-wideyard-sale-2018. For more information call 283-3285. Peninsula Hills Women’s Club Annual Garage and Bake Sale. 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Veterans Memorial Building, 1455 Madison Ave., Redwood City. Donated items and homemade goodies will be sold. For more information call 752-9206. Guided Walking Tour of San Bruno Mountain hosted by San Mateo County Supervisor David J. Canepa. 9 a.m. to noon. San Bruno Mountain Main Entrance, 555 Canyon Parkway, Guadalupe Brisbane. Refreshments will be provided. Limited space available and RSVP necessary. Free. To RSVP call Mike Richardson at 363-4247 or email
[email protected]. Foothill Music Theatre Presents ‘ The Sound of Music.’ 8 p.m. Smithwick Theatre at Foothill College, 12345 El Monte Road, Los Altos Hills. Cost is $12-$32. For more information call 949-7360. Equivocation By Bill Cain. 8 p.m. Dragon Productions Theatre Co., 2120 Broadway, Redwood City. A tribute to art, politics and the perils of negotiating both, Equivocation is a high-stakes political comedy with contemporary resonances. Cost is $15-$35. For more information call 493-2006. SUNDAY, JULY 29 FREE Burlingame Center Flea Market. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Burlingame Center, 1400 Floribunda Ave., Burlingame. Furniture, household goods, jewelry, clothes, paintings, art supplies, books, etc. For more infor-
mation call 483-7840. TheatreWork s Silicon Valley Presents ‘Native Gardens.’ 2 p.m. Mountain View Center for the Performing Arts, 500 Castro St., Mountain View. Cost $40 to $100, savings available for educators, seniors and patrons 35 and under. For more information
[email protected]. For more events visit smdailyjournal.com, click Calendar.
025 0728 sat:0728 sat 292 7/27/18 11:54 AM Page 1
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THE DAILY JOURNAL
Weekend • July 28-29, 2018
25
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
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026-031 0728 sat:Class Master Even 7/27/18 3:03 PM Page 1
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Weekend • July 28-29, 2018
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104 training
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Tundra
27
FICTITIoUS BUSIneSS nAme STATemenT #277938 The following person is doing business as: Bay Area Martial Arts Academy, 617 Mt. View Ave., Suite 8, BELMONT, CA 94002. ed Owners: Michael Agoff and Patricia Agoff, 2341 Kehoe Ave., San Mateo, CA 94403. The business is conducted by a Married Couple. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on 2009. /s/Patricia Agoff/ This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 6/7/18. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 7/7/18, 7/14/18, 7/21/18, 7/28/18). FICTITIoUS BUSIneSS nAme STATemenT #278269 The following person is doing business as: Morning Glory, 1436 Burlingame Ave., BURLINGAME, CA 94010. ed Owner: Paulette Munroe, 1240 Bellevue Ave., Burlingame, CA 94010. The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on July 1, 1970. /s/Paulette Munroe/ This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 7/12/18. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 7/14/18, 7/21/18, 7/28/18, 8/4/18).
203 public notices
203 public notices
203 public notices
FICTITIoUS BUSIneSS nAme STATemenT #278112 The following person is doing business as European Facials By Clara, #15 43 Ave, SAN MATEO, CA 94403. ed Owner: Clara Slipak, 2830 Key Court, Rocklin, CA 95765. The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on April 1, 2018. /s/Clara Slipak/ This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 6/22/18. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 7/21/18, 7/28/18, 8/4/18, 8/11/18).
oRDeR To ShoW CAUSe FoR ChAnge oF nAme CASE# 18CIV03606 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SAN MATEO, 400 COUNTY CENTER RD, REDWOOD CITY CA 94063 PETITION OF Anna Leah Logan TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner: Anna Leah Logan filed a petition with this court for a decree changing name as follows: Present Name: Anna Leah Logan Proposed Name: AnnaLeah Winokur Logan
the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation: San Mateo Daily Journal Filed: 6/25/2018 /s/Susan Irene Etezadi/ Judge of the Superior Court Dated: 6/22/2018 (Published 7/7/18, 7/14/18, 7/21/18, 7/28/18).
FICTITIoUS BUSIneSS nAme STATemenT #278180 The following person is doing business as Dumpling Era, 354 El Camino Real, SAN BRUNO, CA 94066. ed Owner: Dumpling Era LLC, CA. The business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on N/A. /s/Yao Li/ This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 6/29/18. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 7/21/18, 7/28/18, 8/4/18, 8/11/18). FICTITIoUS BUSIneSS nAme STATemenT #278160 The following person is doing business as ing for TAX. 951 Mariners Island Blvd Suite 344, SAN MATEO, CA 94404. ed Owner: Tax and Book Consultants Inc., CA. The business is conducted by a Corporation. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on 1-1-2018. /s/John G. Miller/ This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 6/27/18. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 7/21/18, 7/28/18, 8/4/18, 8/11/18). FICTITIoUS BUSIneSS nAme STATemenT #278331 The following person is doing business as By Bonnie, 330 Primrose Road, Ste #509, BURLINGAME, CA 94010. ed Owner: Bonnie’s Fine Jewelry, LLC, CA. The business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on N/A. /s/Michael Sarkissian/ This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 7/19/18. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 7/21/18, 7/28/18, 8/4/18, 8/11/18). oRDeR To ShoW CAUSe FoR ChAnge oF nAme CASE# 18CIV03790 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SAN MATEO, 400 COUNTY CENTER RD, REDWOOD CITY CA 94063 PETITION OF Salvador Hernandez and Maria Gonzalez TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner: Salvador Hernandez and Maria Gonzalez filed a petition with this court for a decree changing name as follows: Present Name: Rachel Hernandez Gonzalez Proposed Name: Rachel Hernandez-Gonzalez THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition 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 reasons 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 petition without a hearing. A hearing on the petition shall be held on 09/05/18 at 9 a.m., Dept. PJ 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 prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation: San Mateo Daily Journal Filed: 7/20/2018 /s/Susan Irene Etezadi/ Judge of the Superior Court Dated: 7/20/2018 (Published 7/28/18, 8/4/18, 8/11/18, 8/18/18)
THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition 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 reasons 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 petition without a hearing. A hearing on the petition shall be held on 09/06/18 at 9 a.m., Dept. PJ 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 prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation: San Mateo Daily Journal Filed: 7/25/2018 /s/Susan Irene Etezadi/ Judge of the Superior Court Dated: 7/25/2018 (Published 7/28/18, 8/4/18, 8/11/18, 8/18/18)
oRDeR To ShoW CAUSe FoR ChAnge oF nAme CASE# 18CIV03111 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SAN MATEO, 400 COUNTY CENTER RD, REDWOOD CITY CA 94063 PETITION OF Waraporn Doubinski TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner: Waraporn Doubinski filed a petition with this court for a decree changing name as follows: Present name: Waraporn Doubinski Proposed Name: Winnie Waraporn Doubinski THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition 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 reasons 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 petition without a hearing. A hearing on the petition shall be held on 8/7/18 at 9 a.m., Dept. PJ, 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 prior to the date set for hearing on
oRDeR To ShoW CAUSe FoR ChAnge oF nAme CASE# 18CIV03132 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SAN MATEO, 400 COUNTY CENTER RD, REDWOOD CITY CA 94063 PETITION OF Jonda Laurán Farris TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner: Jonda Laurán Farris filed a petition with this court for a decree changing name as follows: Present name: Jonda Laurán Farris Proposed Name: Jonda Laurán Farris De Gámez THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition 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 reasons 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 petition without a hearing. A hearing on the petition shall be held on 8/7/18 at 9 a.m., Dept. PJ, 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 prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation: San Mateo Daily Journal Filed: 6/25/2018 /s/Susan Irene Etezadi/ Judge of the Superior Court Dated: 6/22/2018 (Published 7/7/18, 7/14/18, 7/21/18, 7/28/18)
210 Lost & Found LoST CAT. Black and White. Black patch on right eye. REWARD. Call (323) 439-7713.
Books JAmeS pATTeRSon hardback books. 2 @ $3.00 each. (650)341-1861 nIChoLAS SpARkS hardback books. 2 @ $3.00 each. Call (650)341-1861 QUALITY BookS used and rare. World & US History and classic American novels. $5 each obo (650)345-5502 The hALo Forerunner saga. 3 books. Like new. Great gift! $25. (650) 204-0587 V.LogVInoV, UnUSUAL Journey to the Country of Cyclic Arithmetic, 2017, Russian, 104p $25 (650)638-1695
294 Baby Stuff BABY CRIB, "Dream on Me", like new with mattress, pad and 2 sheets. $80.00. (650)592-3540
LegAL noTICeS Fictitious Business Name Statements, Trustee Sale Notice, Name Change, Probate, Notice of Adoption, Divorce Summons, Notice of Public Sales and More. Published in the Daily Journal for San Mateo County.
Fax your request to: 650-344-5290 Email them to:
[email protected]
026-031 0728 sat:Class Master Even 7/27/18 3:04 PM Page 3
28
Weekend • July 28-29, 2018
THE DAILY JOURNAL
295 art
302 antiques
304 Furniture
311 Musical instruments
318 Sports Equipment
bRuShEd FiNiSh, 15" X 20" frame holds 18 various size photos. Never used. $20. 650-369-2486.
100 Y/O family heirloom, hand sewn, hexagon pieced quilt. 8ft. sq. $99. (650)556-9708
tablE 24"x48" folding legs each end. Melamine top, 500# capacity. Cost $130. Sell $50. 650-591-4141
1929 aNtiquE Alto Selmer, Cigar Cutter, Newly Refurbished $6,000 OBO Call (650)742-6776.
GOlF ClubS, used set with Cart for $50. (650)593-4490
296 appliances
MahOGaNY aNtiquE Secretary desk, 72” x 40” , 3 drawers, Display case, bevelled glass, $150. (650)766-3024.
thREE iNCh egg crate foam twin bed mattress for sound sleep, perfect condition, $20, 650-595-3933
baldWiN babY GRAND 1928 vintage in walnut. $7500.00 w/bench (415)6081214
ROSEVillE tuliP Pitcher, Ca: 1900. $45. (650)574-2490.
tWiN bEd, mattress, box spring, frame $ 50. (650)598-9804.
Horner ChROMatiC haRMONiCa: The 64 Chomonica, German Made $180, (650)278-5776.
aiR CONditiONER 10000 BTU w/remote. Slider model fits all windows. LG brand $199 runs like new. (650)2350898 COFFEE MaKER $15.00 white, Kitchen Gourmet, makes up to 12 cups (650)5330907 hOtPOiNt hEaVY Duty Dryer excellent working condition Burlingame $50 Call Dan (408)656-0958 MaYtaG WaShER excellent working condition Burlingame $50 Call Dan (408)656-0958
tWiN bEd- Free you pick up. Call (650)344-2109
303 Electronics blauPuNKt aM/FM/Cd Radio and Receiver with Detachable Face asking $100. (650)593-4490 tElEViSiON Mitsubishi, FREE 26"W,22"H,18"D Works Great, Not Flatscreen, Text (650) 333-8323 Local Delivery available.
MFG h20labS Model 300 exc cond counter top $25 Burl (650)248-3839.
MOtOROla bRaVO MB 520 (android 4.1 upgrade) smart phone 35$ 8GB SD card Belmont (650)595-8855
ROOM hEatER Electric 1320 Watts, Arvin Air Fan Forced Automatic $5. (650)952-3500
ONKYO aV Receiver HT-R570 .Digital Surround, HDMI, Dolby, Sirius Ready, Cinema Filter.$95/ Offer (650)591-2393
SEWiNG MaChiNE-ROYal XL 6000 Dressmaker Sewing Machine. $150. (650)342-8436.
304 Furniture
ShOWtiME ROtiSSERiE used once $90. Call (650)347-1458 no ans/eave message. uNitaP StaNdaRd centerset bathroom chrome faucet, complete, $10, (650)595-3933 VaCuuM ClEaNER (reconditioned) $20 Call Ed (415)298-0645 WEStERN WaShbOaRd Sales made of brass and wood, Golden Beam #25-C. $75. phone 650-369-2486.
Wall uNit/ROOM Divider. Simple lines. Breaks down for transportation. $25.(650)712-9962 leave message WalNut ChESt, small (4 drawer with upper bookcase $50. (650)726-6429 WhitE WiCKER Armoire, asking $100, great condition, text for picture (650)5710947 WOOd - wall Unit - 30" long x 6' tall x 17.5" deep. $90. (650)631-9311
306 housewares
2 WalNut 3-drawer nitestands. Tops need work but very good cond. $20/ea (650)952-3466. aNtiquE diNiNG table for six people with chairs $99. (650)580-6324 aNtiquE MOhaGaNY Bookcase. Four feet tall. $75. (415) 282-0966. aRMChaiR GOOd (650)266-3184
uSEd bEdROOM Furniture, FREE. Call (650)573-7381.
condition
$55.
bEdStEad SiNGlE, poster style, box spring, mattress available. $40.00. (650)593-7408
COMPlEtE SEt OF CHINA - Windsor Garden, Noritake. Four place-settings, 20-pieces in original box, never used. (3 boxes available). $250 per box (650)342-5630 CRYStal (lEadEd glass) lamp $30. Can send picture. (650)464-7860
COMPutER dESK (650)520-4650
$99
ShOPSMith MaRK V 50th Anniversary attachments. $1,500/OBO. most (650)504-0585
COMPutER SWiVEl CHAIR. Padded Leather. $80. (650) 455-3409
ViNtaGE CRaFtSMaN Jig Saw. Circa 1947. $60. (650)245-7517
dESK, Gd. cond. (650)458-3578
ViNtaGE ShOPSMith and baNd SaW, good shape. $300/obo. Call (650)342-6993
PEuGEut tOuRiNG Bicycles. Pair of adult size bikes $50.00 for both. 415467-7353 in Brisbane.
[email protected].
298 Collectibles 80’S tOPS Complete Factory Set All Years $99 Call Rick (415) 999-4474. GiNNY dOll 8" Carhop, uniform & apron,cap, skates & tray. Original box.$15. (650)712-1070 lENNOx REd Rose, Unused, hand painted, porcelain, authenticity papers, $12.00. (650) 578 9208. MillER litE Neon sign , work good $59 call (650)218-6528 SMall RuG beater. $15.00 (650)2074162 StaR WaRS Action figure: Qui-Gon Jinn (Jedi Knight), mint-in package. $10 Steve (650)518-6614. tablE MOuNtEd, metal, Economy $10, meat grinder (650)207-4162
299 Computers 19" COlOR Monitor with stand VG condition power cord/owners manual included $60.00 OBO 1-415-279-4857 i-Pad KEYbOaRd. $25.00. (650)5880842 RECORdablE Cd-R 74, Sealed, Unopened, original packaging, Samsung, 12X, (650) 578 9208
300 toys 100 thiNGS for little children to do on a trip. 4"X6" cards with instructions. Used. FREE (650)595-3933 aMERiCaN FlYER locomotive runs good #21085 $75.00 (650) 867-7433 laRGE StuFFEd ANIMALS - $3 each Great for Kids (650) 952-3500 StaR WaRS Celebration 3 Darth Vader $20 new w/case Dan (650)303-3568
diNiNG tablE (36"x54") and 4 matching chairs, sturdy oak, cost $600, sell for $250 .(650)-654-1930. dRESSER 4-dRaWER in Belmont for $75. Good condition; good for children. Call (650)678-8585 ENtERtaiNMENt CENtER for $50. Good shape, blonde, about 5' high. (650)726-4102 GlidER rocker and ottoman, oak, excellent condition. $100 (650)345-5644. iKEa dRESSER, black, 3 shelf. 23" x 15"deep x 50" high. $65. (650)598-9804. iKEa tablE, black 58" x 21" x 14" high. $ 30. (650)598-9804. lOVE ChaiR, velour, tan. $45. (808)631-1365.
WEldER- liNCOlN AC 220 amps 240 volts $199.00 (650)948-4895
309 Office Equipment laPtOP CaSE or bag. Black. Like new. Hardly used. $25. (650)697-1564.
310 Misc. For Sale 500-600 biG Band-era 78's--most mint, no sleeves--$50 for all-(650)574-5459 78 RPM records in four albums and nine sleeves. $25. San Bruno. (650)794-0839 bESSY SMall Evening Hand Bag With Beige Cord $75.00 (650)678-5371
YaMaha aCOuStiC Guitar, model FG830 electric. $400.00 (650)421-5469 zilJiaN CYMbalS with stands, 21” ride, 18” crash. Paistie 18” crash - $99 (916)826-5964
312 Pets & animals aiRliNE CaRRiER for cats, pur. from Southwest Airlines, $25, 2 available. Call (505)228-1480 local. ONE KENNEl Cab ll one Pet Taxi animal carriers 26x16. Excellent cond. $60.. (650)593-2066 PaRROt CaGE, Steel, Large - approx 4 ft by 4 ft, Excellent condition $300 best offer. (650)245-4084 PEt CaRRiER for small dog or cat in excellent condition $30. Claudia (650) 3496059 PEt taxi Animal Carrier. Brand: Delux Nature Miracle - Excellent Condition for $25. Call (650)349-6059. YORKiES aKC Dews and Tails, Ready to Go, Call for Details, Must leave Message (209)663-1215.
316 Clothes 5 bOxES male & female square dance clothing. Excellent Condition. As a bunch $200 Maryann (650)574-4439.
biFOld ShuttERS 2x28”x79 $10.00 (650)544-5306
bOx OF used men's Levi's and misc. jeans $99.00 or best offer fair condition (650)589-0764
blaCK FRaME Semi rimless semiwrap; Lens:GreyUV; UltraSleek; Lightweight ; New w/case; $65.00.
[email protected]
daWGS bRaNd Kaymann black and white snake print loafers size 7 (9.3”) $25 (650)369-2486
NiaGaRa VibRatiNG Adjustable bed good condition Burlingame $90 Call Dan (408)656-0958
bluE OYStER cult lp signed by donald r. Eric b. And Wilcox. $40. Cash (408)661-6019
Faux FuR Coat Woman's brown multi color in excellent condition 3/4 length $50 (650)692-8012
OFFiCE tYPE 34"X 60" heavy solid wood with formica wood grain top $25 (650) 787-9753
CaSh Parts; Much Skin Not Guts $500 (415)269-4784
GENuiNE ladiES Mink Fur Jacket, $50.00 Call: (650)368-0748.
ClaY POtS 6- 1 gal, 4- 1/2 gal, 3- 2 gal plastic pots. All free. (650)871-8907
KaYaNO MEN’S Running shoes size 11 good condition $20 (650)520-7045
COStCO PlaY Pen with travel bag. Used once $35 (650)591-2981
ladiES ClOthiNG, some w/tags. $99.00 (650)589-0764.
liONEl ChRiStMaS Holiday expansion Set. New OB $99 (650)368-7537
ladiES SEquiN dress, blue, size XL, pure silk lining, $40.00, (650) 578-9208
liONEl WEStERN Union car and dining car. New OB $99 (650)368-7537
MEN'S StEtSON hat, size large, new, rim, solid black, large, great gift. $40 (650) 578-9208
NEW dEluxE Twin Folding Bed, Linens, cover, Cost $618. Sale $250. Must Sell! (650) 875-8159. NEW tWiN Mattress set plus frame $30.00 (650) 347-2356
REtRO hutCh Needs refinishing otherwise good condition. Top detaches from bottom $25. (650)712-9962 SEWiNG StORaGE cabinet, Custom perfect condition $75. made wood (650)483-1222 SOFabEd, VElOuR, tan, Excellent condition. $75. (808)631-1365. SOlid WOOd Dining table with extension great piece great condition black $80 (650)364-5263 SOlid WOOd Entertainment CenterTurnTable, Am-Fm, Eight Track, Built In Speakers, Sony 26’ Smart T.V.(68.75 in. X 25.5inch X28inch) $500 o.b.o (925)482-5742 tWiN bEd frame-black wrought iron from Crate & Barrel $65 (650)631-1341
lOREx 14” B&W Surveillance System Model SG14S1042C-A $75 (415)4072360 RWC loction. luGGaGE, REd, 21" NEW Samsonite Spinner,$50.00. (650)729-3000
NEW With tags Wool or cotton Men's pullover sweaters (XL) $15/each (650)952-3466 tuxEdO SizE 40, black, including white shirt, excellent cond. $50 (650)355-5189
MaKES 6"x6" potholders, frame and loops included. FREE. 650-595-3933
WilSON lEathER Lady Jacket. Small, like new. $45. (808)863-1136.
MEiliNK SaFE-FiRE Proof, 50”x31”X31”, 2200lbs $1200 www.elo.deals (415)309-3892
WilSON lEathER, burgundy lady jacket, Small, like new $45 (808)863-1136
MOtlEY CRuE lp signed by neil lee sixx and mars $75 cash (408)661-6019
15 SF Giants Posters -- Barry Bonds, Jeff Kent, JT Snow. 6' x 2.5' Unused. $4 each. $35 all. (650)588-1946 San Bruno
NEGRiNi FENCiNG Epee mask size M & Lames 5 epee blade $95 (415)260-6940 NEW laWN SWING 5'1/2" W x 5 '6" H $100 (650) 678-6428 aft. 6pm
318 Sports Equipment
baRS WEiGhtS 4-5#, 4-10#, 4-25# $30.00 Address: 15 Azalea Ln, San Carlos, CA (650)592-4155
SaMSONitE 26" tan hard-sided suit case, lt. wt., wheels, used once/like new. $45. (650)328-6709
bOW FlEx Max Trainer M-3-Very Good Condition, Like New, Assembled, Paid $1200 asking $800 Call Michael (650)784-1061.
SilK SaREE 6 yards new nice color.for $35 only. Call(650)515-2605 for more information.
bRaNd NEW Golf bag with Stand. Makes a great gift. $70. 415-867-6444.
SiNK, 33”x22” Top mount with faucet, $15.00 (650)544-5306
bRaNd NEW golf clubs: 1, 3 Woods; Irons: 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 pw. Makes a great gift $99. 415-867-6444.
SlR lENS Pentax 28-90mm f3.5-5.6 Pentax K Mount $25 (650)436-7171
COMPEtitOR WEiGht BenchNever used Still in box. $35.00 (650)593-1261
SlR lENS Sigma 28-105mm f3.8-5.6 Sigma SA Mount $25 (650)436-7171
EaStON aluMiNuM bat.33 inches, 30 oz, 2 3/4 barrel. $30. (650)596-0513
uNidEN haRlEY Davidson Gas Tank phone. $100 or best offer. (650)863-8485
ElliPtiCal-NORdiC tRaCK Like new Barely Used, Paid $600, Asking $300 obo. (650)235-0066.
311 Musical instruments EVEREtt uPRiGht antique piano. Lovely sound. $99. 650-365-5718.
MOViNG SalE One Day Only! Sunday July 29 8am to 4pm 14 years of household items, furniture, pictures, knickknacks, plants, tools, collectibles and many other great items. Everything must go! Must press 301 for access and you will be let in.
1396 El Camino Real
MillbRaE
tREill iN very good condition. Picture available on request. $50 obo. 650 322 9598. tREill-hORizON liKE New, limited use, Paid $750-Asking $450 OBO (650)508-8662
YaMaha ROOF RACK, 58 inches $75. (650)458-3255
lG CRaFtSMEN shop vac 6.5hp $60 (510)943-9221
b.o.
tOuREdGE REaCtiON ii uniflex system 8 irons 3-9 and pitch irons new $75. Call May (650)349-0430
ViNtaGE liNGERiE Washboard circa 1920’s The Zinc King #703. Suitable for strumming $50 (650)369-2486
COMPutER dESK (glass) & chair. Like new $75 OBO (650)704-4709 or
[email protected]
or
tOtal GYM XLS, excellent condition. Paid $2,500. Yours for $900. Call (650)588-0828
WOMaN’S SKi Boots, Nordica, size 8 $30 (650)592-2047.
CRaFtSMaN 9" Radial Arm Saw with 6" dado set. No stand. $55 (650)341-6402
$99.99
PRiNCE tENNiS 2 section nylon black Bag with Prince Pro Graphite Racket$55.(650)341-8342
uPRiGht PiaNO. In tune. Fair condition. FREE. (650) 533-4886.
COMMOdE, GOOd condition. $20 obo. Please call (650)745-6309
NEW 12" girls bike w/ training wheels $75.00 (650) 347-1458 no ans/leave mes
PiaNO-1955 baldWiN Acrosonic 36” High, Free for anyone to pick-up (650)295-9121.
POP uP tent. Sleeps. 2-3. Like new. Inflatable camping bed. Sleeping bag. $50.00. (650)588-0842.
308 tools
bRiGGS & Stratton Lawn Mower with Mulch rear bag-like new- $95.00. (650)771-6324.
sale
PiaNO, uPRiGht, in excellent condition. Asking $345. (650)366-4769
ONE dOzEN Official League Diamond Baseballs. Brand New. $35. Call Roger (650)771-6324.
ViNtaGE NaSh Cruisers Mens/ Womens Roller Skates Blue indoor/outdoor sz 6-8. $60 B/O. (650)574-4439
buNK bEdS for sale. Cherry Wood, 2 years old. Includes Mattresses. $600 or B/O (650)685-2494
For
huGE ludWiG Drum Set Silver Sparkle & Chrome, Zelgian, Pasite & Sabian Cymbals, 24 in. Timpany $3,500 (916)975-4969
$95.00,
SaxOPhONE- altO Silver with Case $250.00 (650)948-4895
297 bicycles
GiRl'S 24" Schwinn bicycle. Good condition. $20 (650) 387-8121
FOR SalE: Epiphone Les Paul Custom Prophecy Electric Guitar. Mint. $625.00. (650)421-5469.
MEN'S ROSSiGNOl Skis. good condition, (650)341-0282.
SiNK dOublE cast iron. Good condition. $99.00. (650)593-7408
aNtiquE iRON Hand Drills. 3 available at $30 each. (650)339-3672 Ron
Child’S SChWiNN biCYClE, bluE in good condition. $20. (650) 355-5189.
FENdER MuStaNG ll guitar amplifier 110 watts 8-guitar settings, with cover. $130.00 (650)421-5469
KNEE RidER $ 50.00 joe (650)573-5269
MiKaSa SEt. White. Modern (square) Setting for 4 $30 (415)734-1152.
bEiGE SOFa $99. Excellent Condition (650) 315-2319
bMx MONGOOSE Outer Limit Bike, looks almost new, $29 (650)595-3933
FENdER MuStaNG I guitar amplifier 70 watts 8-guitar settings.with cover. $80. (650)421-5469
hEalthRidER (ORiGiNal 90's equipment). Good condition. FREE (650) 3878121
PlaYER PiaNO 1916 W/Bench 25 music rolls $950 Don (415)309-3892 www.elo.deals
WhiRlPOOl WaShER DRYER, GE Refrigerator all working and in good condition all for $99.00 (650)315-3240.
adult biKES 1 regular and 2 with balloon tires $30 Each (650) 347-2356
EPiPhONE lES Paul 100th Anniversary Custom Electric Guitar. Mint. $600.00 650 421 5469
GuthY-RENKER POWER Rider,Everlast 2 1/2 ankle weights, kegel thigh exerciser $20 (510)770-1976
Garage Sales
335 Garden Equipment tORO ElECtRiC Super Blower Yard Vac. 2 speed velocity 180 MPH. $20.00 (650)207-4162
340 Camera & Photo Equip. NiKON 18-140 zoom lenses (3), excellent condition. $200 each. (650)592-9044 OMEGa b600 Condenser Enlarger, Instruction Manual & 50mm El-Omegar Enlarging Lens $95 (415)260-6940 ViVitaR V 2000 W/35-70 zoom and original manual. Like new. $99 SSF (650)583-6636
GaRaGE SalES EStatE SalES Make money, make room!
List your garage sale, moving sale, estate sale, yard sale, rummage sale, clearance sale, or whatever sale you have... Reach over 83,450 readers from South San Francisco to Palo Alto. in your local newspaper.
Call (650)344-5200
345 Medical Equipment adJuStablE bath shower transfer bench with sidebar $15 (510)770-1976 dRiVE 3-iN-1 commode with seat,bucksheild,armrests $10 et,cover,splash (510)770-1976 dRiVE dEluxE two button walker $10 (510)770-1976 hOMEdiCS dual Shiatsu Massage Cushion. 3 Zone. $45.00. (650)207-4162 iNVERSiON thERaPY table back stretcher w/ heat $99.00 joe (650)5735269 MEdliNE ExCEl K1 Wheelchair folddown back 18” desk length elevating leg rests $50 (510)770-1976 RadiatiON PROtECtiON 1/2-apron Pb free; .5mm Pb equivalent, xl, adjustable buckle, gently used; $60; 607-2277742.
Garage Sales huGE thREE FaMilY
Garage Sale Saturday, July 28 9 a.m. - 5 p.m Items for Sale Include: Windsurfing Equipment: Board and two sails, Minolta Camera, Clay pots for Plants, Small Refrigerator for College 42" Panasonic Plasma TV Designer Clothes, Jewelry, Shoes and Purses Picnic Table and Folding Chairs Oil Painting and Easel Bow and Arrows Dart Board Kohler Toilet and Sinks Other Miscellaneous Items
822 Crossway Rd, Burlingame
379 Open houses
OPEN hOuSE liStiNGS List your Open House in the Daily Journal. Reach over 83,450 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
515 Office Space -ViRtual OFFiCES$59 - $150 *Business Internet *Phone Answering *Conference Rooms *Offices *Complete IT Services * Mail (650) 373-2000 bay area Executive Offices www.bayareaoffices.com
620 automobiles 1994 MitSubiShi 3000 GT- VR4 Twin Turbo Perfect Cont. Asking $30,000 (650)315-2959 (650)558-8555 1999 CadillaC DeVille Contour-Paid $6,000 Sell $3,000 Good Condition (650)315-2954 or (650)558-8555
don’t lose money on a trade-in or consignment! Sell your vehicle in the daily Journal’s auto Classifieds. Just $45 We’ll run it ‘til you sell it! Reach 83,450 drivers from South SF to Palo alto Call (650)344-5200
[email protected]
EVERlaSt 80# MMA Heavy Bag and Stand. Like New. $99 (650)654-9966
GOlF ClubS {13}, Bag, & Pull Cart all-$90.00 (650)341-8342
CadillaC ’90 El Dorado Runs Great, 128,000 miles, $2000 (650)922-9114
026-031 0728 sat:Class Master Even 7/27/18 3:07 PM Page 1
Weekend • July 28-29, 2018
THE DAILY JOURNAL 620 Automobiles CheVrolet ‘86 ASTROVAN, miles, $3000 (650)481-5296
640 motorcycles/Scooters 84K
bmW ‘03 F650 GS, $3899 OBO. Call (650) 995-0003
CheVY ‘10 HHR . 68K. EXCELLENT CONDITION. $8888. (650)274-8284.
motorCYCle SAddlebAgS, with mounting hardware and other parts $35. Call (650)670-2888
CheVY hhr ‘08 - Grey, spunky car loaded, even seat warmers, $9,500. (408)807-6529.
645 boats
dodge ‘99 mAintenAnCe Van, , $2,500 OBO Good condition. Call (650)481-5296
boAt- 7 FT Livingston Fiber Glass., 2.5 HP. $800. NIssan Outboard Motor. (650) 591-5404.
got An older CAr, boAt, or rV?
boAt-rACing C-ClASS, 40 hp Tohatsu Engine, Spare Parts included $2,000 obo Call Vince (650)515-6091
Do the humane thing. Donate it to the Humane Society. Call 1- 800-943-8412
mAlibu 24 ft with tower. Completely rebuilt and re-finished. Boat and Motor. 20K obo. (650)851-0878. SeA rAY 16 ft . I/B. $1,200. Needs Upholstery. Call (650)898-5732.
hYundAi 2013 Tucson Limited Edition White, Automatic 6-cyl, navigation, heated front seats, panoramic roof, leather interior 79k miles excellent condition $11,950 OBO. Text or leave msg (650)533-0671.
mAzdA ‘12 CX-7 SUV Excellent condition One owner Fully loaded Low miles reduced $16,995 obo (650)5204650 mAzdA 2016 Sky Active one owner perfect condition 4DR Silver Low miles $19,995 OBO (650)520-4650 PontiAC 1997 enger Van. Aluminum Rims with good tires. Needs engine work! $900. Call (650)365-8287 or cell 9650)714-3865. toYotA ‘13 Corolla - Black, Excellent condition Like new, Automatic, One owner, $7,995.00 (650)212-6666.
625 Classic Cars CAdillAC ‘85 Classic El Dorado 44,632 original miles. Needs body work and headliner $2,975 OBO (650)2184681. CheVY ‘55 BEL AIR 2 door, Standard Transmission V8 Motor, non-op $22,000 obo. (650)952-4036. CheVY ‘86 CorVette. Automatic. 93,000 miles. Sports Package.$6,800 obo. (650) 952-4036. CorVette ‘69 350 4-SPeed. 50K mileS. $19,000 OBO or trade for ‘50 Oldsmobile e.. (650)481-5296.
650 rVs gulf StreAm, Sun Voyager ‘04. 36 ft, Excellent Condition. $39,500. 650-349-3087. rV toW bar blue ox 2" ball model b330 $90 (650)948-4895
670 Auto Service
AA Smog Complete Repair & Service $39.75 plus certificate fee (most cars)
869 California Drive . Burlingame
(650) 340-0492
WeSt CoASt Auto Services Cash discounts, DMV Services 786 El Camino Real South San Francisco, CA 94080
(415)588-8993
670 Auto Parts 1960S CAdillAC (650)592-3887
hub
caps
$40
bridgeStone AlenzA 235/65R17, $50. Excellent condition, 80k warranty, used less than 10k. (650)593-4490 mini CooPer- Hood Best offerwww.elo.deals Call Don(415)309-3892 PeerleSS tire Chains, used a few times. Fits several sizes P165-225. $20 obo. (650)745-6309 rimS-Chrome, 17” Set of 4 with caps, Off ’02 GMC Truck $200.00 (650)3330303 the Club steering wheel locks 2 each new. $ 20.00 (650)871-8907 White StAr Tire Chains, never used. P195/75R14. $25 obo. (650)745-6309.
680 Autos Wanted Wanted 62-75 Chevrolets Novas, running or not Parts collection etc. So clean out that garage Give me a call Joe 650 342-2483
merCedeS 300e. ’89, Low Miles, Excel. Condition, Good Engine, Needs paint, $13,900 (650)355-0259 Leave msg. merCedeS ‘74 450 SEL, One owner, No Accidents, Needs engine work, Pale Yellow, $3,000 OBO (650)375-1350. merCedeS ‘79 450 SL with hard top. Completely rebuilt. 20K obo. (650)8510878
630 trucks & SuV’s toYotA ‘05 TACOMA pickup, automatic, 174K miles, $7500. (650)302-5523
635 Vans toYotA ‘08 SIENNA LE, excellent condition, camera, bluetooth, trailer, 94K miles. $9,000. text (925)786-5545 See craigslist for pics.
29
Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis
ACROSS Torn __ drop Shakes on it Andean cash crop 16 Parents often limit it 17 GPS displays 18 Worn 19 Dog in the Reagan White House 20 Try 21 __ strength 23 Northern cruise destination 25 Yeshiva reference 28 Works like Beethoven’s “Ah! perfido” 29 Lean, to sailors 33 1988 self-titled C&W album 34 “Wanna bet?” 35 “My mistake” 38 Mark 39 Cheek, in slang 40 Zipped (through) 41 Comedic honker 42 Jam 44 Western range 46 Uncompromising types 51 Mideast carrier 52 Took in 55 Written creation of Michelangelo 56 __ lives 57 Unlikely to inherit the crown soon 59 1860s-’70s Black Hawk War combatants 60 Station 61 Basilica bench 62 Some squirts 1 11 14 15
DOWN 1 “Ready?” response 2 Mother-of-pearl 3 Ohio university 4 Exploits 5 “Over there!” 6 Super superior 7 WV summer hours 8 ’70s Mideast prime minister 9 Jerry Herman musical 10 Amazon assistant 11 Makes one’s residence 12 Rockefeller Center holiday visitor 13 Discard 15 Large falls 22 Raises 24 Spike 26 Roughly 27 Strapped 29 “Chill out!”
30 Ancient Semitic language speaker 31 Begin again 32 Polliwogs 36 Vegas’ __ Museum 37 Declining 43 Palm parts 45 Off-color
47 48 49 50
Coastal feature Wading bird Purport Marks in margins 53 Leaf used in the dish laulau 54 Genesis character 58 Begin to type?
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:
By Craig Stowe ©2018 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
07/28/18
07/28/18
026-031 0728 sat:Class Master Even 7/27/18 3:04 PM Page 5
30
Weekend • July 28-29, 2018
THE DAILY JOURNAL
Cabinetry
Construction
Construction
BEST BUY CABINETS
CALEDONIAN MASONRY INC
WOODSMYTH CONSTRUCTION CO.
Landscape Design!
Lic#789093 Bonded and Insured
We can design your outdoor living experience.
Call Bill (415)420-4853 woodsmythconstruction.com
Decks & Fences
(650)294-3360
*BBQ’s *Pizza ovens *Patios *Flagstone *Concrete/Foundation
Contractors welcome
Call For Free Estimate:
FREE SHoWRooM DESIGn ConSULTATIon AnD QUoTE 1328 El Camino Real BELMonT, CA 94002
www.bestbuycabinets.com
(650) 525-9154
Drafting
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
PLANS & PERMITS
Hauling
Landscaping
Plumbing
AAA RATED!
LANDSCAPE DESIGN & LAWN MAINTENANCE
MEYER PLUMBING SUPPLY
Drought Tolerant Planting Drip Systems, Rock Gardens and lots more!
Toilets, Sinks, Vanities, Faucets, Water heaters, Whirlpools and more! Wholesale Pricing & Closeout Specials.
INDEPENDENT HAULERS
$40 & UP HAUL Since 1988/Licensed & Insured Monthly Specials Fast, Dependable Service
Free Estimates A+ BBB Rating
(650)350-1960 CHAINEY HAULING Junk & Debris Clean Up
(408) 455-2866 Text me
SPILLANE Fence and DECK
www.drafting-room.com
Wood Retaining Walls, Fences & Stairs Lic.# 742961 Free Estimates
Since 1978
John (650)291-4303
Construction
Electricians
ALL ELECTRICAL SERVICE
(650)322-9288
2030 S Delaware St San Mateo
(650)341-7482
Furniture / Appliance / Disposal Tree / Bush / Dirt / Concrete Demo
Starting at $40 & Up www.chaineyhauling.com Free Estimates (650)207-6592
CHEAP HAULING! Light moving! Haul Debris! (650)583-6700
NATE LANDSCAPING * Tree Service * Fence * Deck * Pavers * Pruning & Removal * New Lawn * Irrigation * All Concrete * Ret. Wall * Sprinkler System * Stamp Concrete * Yard Clean-Up, Haul & Maintenance
Roofing
Free Estimate
650.353.6554 Lic. #973081
Painting CORDERO PAINTING
for all your electrical needs
Commercial & Residential Exterior & Interior Free Estimates
ELECTRIC SERVICE GRoUP
(650) 348-7164; (650) 372-8361
[email protected] www.corderopaintingca.com Lic# 35740 Insured
Gardening LAWN MAINTENANCE LANDSCAPE DESIGN
Solar
JON LA MOTTE
Drought Tolerant Planting Drip Systems, Rock Gardens Landscaping Design and lots more!
PAINTING
Interior & Exterior Quality Work, Reasonable Rates, Free Estimates
Call Robert STERLING GARDENS Lic #751832 (650)703-3831
(650)368-8861 Lic #514269
279 Chimney Sweep Plumbing
MISTER CHIMNEY dba Nova Fireplaces Call Mister Chimney: (650) 631-4531 Monday-Friday 8:00am to 4:00pm Closed Saturday & Sunday 1336 El Camino Real Belmont, CA 94002
[email protected]
Housecleaning
O’SULLIVAN CONSTRUCTION new Construction Remodeling Kitchen/Bathrooms Decks/Fences
(650)589-0372
CONSUELO’S HOUSE CLEANING Providing quality cleaning services for over 33 years to Bay Area families! Call for your free estimate and 15% off your first service!
Tree Service
JON’S HAULING Serving the peninsula since 1976
Hillside Tree
Junk and debris removal, yard/house clearing, furniture, appliance hauling www.jonshauling.com
Service
FREE ESTIMATES
(650)393-4233
LOCALLY OWNED Family Owned Since 2000 • Trimming Pruning
(650)278-0157 Lic#1211534
• Shaping
Licensed and Insured Lic. #589596
THE VILLAGE CONTRACTOR ASP CONCRETE All kinds of Concrete, Brick, Tile, Fencing, Decking etc. Call George for a Free Estimate
(650)544-1435 20 years of experience
Licensed General and Painting Contractor • Int/Ext Painting • Carpentry • Sheetrock, Dryrot & Stucco Repairs Lic#979435 CALL FOR GREAT RATES!
(650)701-6072
• Large Removal
PENINSULA CLEANING
• Stump Grinding
RESIDEnTIAL AnD CoMMERICAL
bondEd FREE ESTIMATES
1-800-344-7771
LEO’S PLUMBING SERVICE
Handy Help
PAINTING & Lawn Aeration
Lawn Aeration
HANDYMAN Services
Independent Contractor with 20 years of exp.
Reasonable prices. Honest and dependable. Free estimates.
Call Kevin
(650)240-3482
SENIOR HANDYMAN “Specializing in any size project”
• Painting • Electrical • Carpentry • Dry Rot 40 Yrs. Experience
Retired Licensed Contractor
(650)201-6854
Kitchens
KNIVES SHARPENED
Perfect Edge Cutlery 1640 Palm Avenue San Mateo
Phone: (650)349-2665
Drain and plumbing service, gas repairs, waterline repairs. All around San Mateo & neighboring area. Lic.#1034873
Call Leo
(650)868-8059
Free Estimates Mention
The Daily Journal to get 10% off for new customers Call Luis (650) 704-9635 Notices NOTICE TO READERS: California law requires that contractors taking jobs that total $500 or more (labor or materials) be licensed by the Contractor’s State License Board. State law also requires that contractors include their license number in their advertising. You can check the status of your licensed contractor at www.cslb.ca.gov or 800321-CSLB. Unlicensed contractors taking jobs that total less than $500 must state in their ments that they are not licensed by the Contractors State License Board.
026-031 0728 sat:Class Master Even 7/27/18 3:04 PM Page 6
Weekend • July 28-29, 2018
THE DAILY JOURNAL
art
Computer
Food
Jewelers
Pet Services
tax Preparation
trattoria da vittorio Southern Italian Restaurant and Pizzeria Now Open in San Carlos
JaCkSon SqUare Fine Jewelers
Sage CenterS
tax ProbLeMS??
We buy sterling silver, gold, diamonds, rolex watches, silver & gold coins, platinum. 2890 El Camino Real, Redwood City
(650) 417-7243
617 Laurel Street San Carlos, Ca 94070 (650)591-5700
health & Medical
dentaL iMPLantS dental Services CoMPLete iMPLant dentistry Under one roof
Save $500 on implant abutment & Crown Package. Call Millbrae Dental for details (650)583-5880
Caregiver
Care indeed 890 Santa Cruz Ave Menlo Park
Peninsula Dental Implant Center 1201 St Francis Way, San Carlos (650)232-7650
i - SMiLe Implant & Orthodontict Center 1702 Miramonte Ave. Suite B Mountain View
exceptional. reliable. innovative (650)282-5555
Cemetery
LaSting iMPreSSionS ARE OUR FIRST PRIORITY Cypress Lawn 1370 El Camino Real Colma (650)755-0580 www.cypresslawn.com
bLaCk PePPer reStaUrant A mixture of Authentic and modern cuisine 1029 El Camino Real Menlo Park, CA 94025 (650)485-2345
PanCho viLLa taqUeria Because Flavor Still Matters 365 B Street San Mateo (650) 343-4123 www.smpanchovilla.com
Redwood City always here when you need us
Legal Services
www.deitaandlowe.com
ALL CREDIT ACCEPTED Since 1979
free consultation
WACHTER INVESTMENTS, INC.
348-7191
LegaL
CLU, RHU, REBC, CLTC, LUTCF President Barrett Insurance Services
[email protected] www.barrettinsuranceservices.net (650)619-0370 CA. Insurance License #0737226
Non-Attorney document preparation: Divorce, Pre-Nup, Adoption, Living Trust, Conservatorship, Probate, Notary Public. Response to Lawsuits: Credit Card Issues, Breach of Contract
rateS too high?
reFinanCe hard MoneY at LoWer rate direCt Private Lender
doCUMentS PLUS
Eric L. Barrett,
real estate Loans
inJUred at Work? Call us (800) 675-5353
LiFe inSUranCe
(650) 328-1001 Food
(650)365-3000
insurance
aFFordabLe
Emergency Veterinary Care 24/7
www.jacksonsquare.com
Hablamos Español
Same day treatment Evening & Saturday appts available
31
Jeri blatt, Lda #11 ed & Bonded
Real Estate Broker CA BRE#746683 NMLS #348288
real estate Services
legaldocumentsplus.com
650 343 6521
"I am not an attorney. I can only provide self help services at your specific direction."
FarMerS inSUranCe
2332 S El Camino Real, San Mateo, CA 94403
650-295-0772 travel
Figone traveL groUP (650) 595-7750 www.cruisemarketplace.com Cruises • Land & Family vacations Personalized & Experienced Family Owned & Operated Since 1939 1495 Laurel St. SAN CARLOS CST#100209-10
greg terrY aLain PineL Greg has over 29 years of success in Real Estate; Top Eschelon of Production; will serve you with the highest degree of professionalism.
training
(650) 678-1110
MartiaL artS instruction
r.e. UnLiMited
Grand Master Frank Croaro now accepting new serious students
(650)574-2087
brian ForneSi
We can help !! IRS problem ?? We can help !! Open all year round Liberty Tax in San Mateo is your answer !!
FOR SALE: 3BR 2BA 1 car; reduced by 100K to 850K. WE do SALES and RENTALS; discount fee
www.shinyongdo.com Call 650-759-5425 or email
[email protected]
(415)-585-2233
State FarM CALL JIM DWYER
650-592-3957
[email protected] 1501 El Camino Real, Belmont
Marketing
groW YoUr SMaLL bUSineSS Get free help from The Growth Coach Go to www.buildandbalance.com Sign up for the free newsletter
thinking aboUt bUYing or SeLLing YoUr hoMe? Call Mitch Wong of Intero Real Estate Residential and/or Commercial Real Estate
(650)483-8573
United StUdioS of SeLF deFenSe 1086 Foster City Blvd., FOSTER CITY, CA 94404
(650)577-9234
[email protected] http://www.ussdfostercity.com
032 0728 sat:0728 sat 292 7/27/18 7:45 PM Page 1
32
Weekend • July 28-29, 2018
NATION/WORLD
THE DAILY JOURNAL
Trump and Putin’s RSVP’s: Yes, for sure, if, if if. ... By Matthew Lee THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Ask a Professional
Rick Riffel Managing Funeral Director
?
If I choose cremation, what are my options for burial
Cremation offers many options for final disposition such as burial in a cemetery plot, preservation in a columbarium niche, or scattering at sea or in a place of meaning. We are happy to explain all the choices that accompany cremation. We hope you will allow us to assist.
866-211-2443
©2012 MKJ Marketing
REUTERS FILE PHOTO
Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin after their meeting in Helsinki.
WASHINGTON — Rarely has an RSVP been so complicated. President Donald Trump is open to visiting Moscow — if he gets a formal invitation from Vladimir Putin, the White House said Friday. Russian President Putin said he’s game for a trip to Washington — but his answer came only after Trump retracted his invitation for a fall sit-down. The awkward back and forth is the latest round of summit drama flowing from the two leaders’ controversial first meeting in Helsinki this month. It underscores Trump’s eagerness to forge a warmer relationship with Putin, though the Russian does not appear to share the urgency and Trump’s allies in Washington are watching with frustration. Trump’s tentative yes to a Moscow trip comes even as lawmakers are still pushing for details about what he and Putin discussed
in Helsinki. The president has been widely criticized for failing to publicly denounce Russia’s interference in the 2016 U.S. election and appearing to accept Putin’s denials of such activity. Trump’s response to the criticism — an abruptly announced invitation for a second meeting in Washington in the fall — got an ice-cold reception from Republicans in Congress facing tough elections in November. Moscow was lukewarm and did not immediately accept. Then National Security Adviser John Bolton said Wednesday that plans for a fall visit would be delayed until 2019. He cited special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into Russian election meddling as the reason, using Trump’s favorite term for the probe: “witch hunt.” But the possibility of a Trump trip to Moscow emerged Friday after Putin said he was ready to invite Trump — or to visit Washington if conditions are right.
4&M$BNJOP3FBMr4BO.BUFP $" FD230 www.ssofunerals.com