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001 0128 mon:0128 mon 135 1/27/19 7:24 PM Page 1

‘GLASS’ BREAKS
INTO TOP SPOT
WALL LINGERS
FUNDING FIGHT MAY BRING BACK SHUTDOWN
EX-GIANTS OWNER
MAGOWAN, 76, DIES
DATEBOOK PAGE 17 NATION PAGE 7 SPORTS PAGE 11

Leading local news coverage on the Peninsula


Monday • Jan 28, 2019 • XIX, Edition 135 www.smdailyjournal.com

San Bruno details plans to ease parking crunch


Permit program offered as solution for congestion
By Austin Walsh quagmire of cars congesting their tion expressing support for the
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF neighborhood near downtown. program, those participating may
Officials though noted the per- be required to pay an estimated
With residents frustrated over mit program is unlikely to be the $35 every two years for a pass
their inability to park on the perfect solution to solve the park- which would allow them to park
street in front of their house, San ing problem, while suggesting overnight on the street.
Bruno officials detailed the there could be unintended conse- The city would limit two park-
process for locals looking to quences invited through its estab- ing passes per unit, in an effort to
launch a parking permit program lishment. assure the streets can accommo-
during a town hall meeting this “There is no silver bullet,” said date the amount of cars left
week. City Manager Jovan Grogan, to overnight. The permits would be
During the meeting Wednesday, the crowd of dozens assembled at available in a pilot program,
Jan. 23, San Bruno officials the Senior Center. which would last two years while
attempted to offer solutions for Should an overwhelming major- officials gauge its success.
ity of area residents sign a peti- AUSTIN WALSH/DAILY JOURNAL
those exhausted by the lingering
See PARKING, Page 17 San Bruno police discuss parking issues with residents.

TEENS TAKE ACTION


Deportation
defense work
taking shape
Legal agencies and community groups
expand services for those without status
By Anna Schuessler deportation proceedings in
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF response to swirling fears in that
community of stepped-up immi-
More than six months after San gration enforcement actions.
Mateo County officials dedicated With bolstered resources at the
nearly $765, 000 toward legal International Institute of the Bay
resources available to immigrants Area, Asian Pacific Islander Legal
living in the country without Outreach and Catholic Charities
proper status, attorneys within a Refugee & Immigrant Services in
network of agencies are represent- San Mateo County, among other
ing 35 individuals in their appli- organizations, agencies operating
cations to stay in the country. in the county have accepted cases
By funding four half-time and ranging from applications for asy-
TOM JUNG/DAILY JOURNAL two full-time attorneys at agencies lum to representation of youth
Ryan Deitsch, who survived the tragedy at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, spoke Saturday, Jan. 26, in operating across the county, offi- seeking legal status in the United
Burlingame during a discussion with fellow students about gun control and his work founding Never Again cials are aiming to expand States following abuse or neglect,
MSD, an advocacy group leading the movement dedicated to preventing further violence. resources for immigrants facing
See DEFENSE, Page 19

San Mateo takes steps toward tenant relocation help


Rules, penalties for landlords offering unsafe units take shape under examination from officials
By Anna Schuessler costs of affected tenants. whose tenants are permanently $10,000 were also weighed. posing the formation of an
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF Among the measures coun- displaced provide them with three One of several tenant protection appeals board, a provision pro-
cilmembers considered at their months of fair-market rent. policies the council considered in hibiting landlords from retaliat-
In an effort to support at-risk Tuesday meeting was requiring Setting aside $50,000 from the September, the set of landlord ing against residents exercising
tenants who find themselves in landlords whose tenants are tem- city’s designated housing fund obligations the council consid- their rights and setting aside city
unsafe housing, San Mateo city porarily displaced by substandard balance to be able to advance ered this week was largely modeled funds to advance relocation pay-
officials are shaping an ordinance living conditions to provide money to tenants in situations in after an ordinance adopted by San ments, the rules officials weighed
aimed at requiring landlords who another unit or hotel room within which landlords are being uncoop- Mateo County officials, explained this week differed from those set
don’t properly maintain their a 10-mile radius. They also con- erative and fining those who don’t Christine Civiletti, the city’s code by the county, she said.
units to pay for the relocation sidered mandating those landlords comply with the rules up to enforcement manager. But in pro-
See HELP, Page 19
002 0128 mon:0128 mon 135 1/27/19 7:25 PM Page 1

2 Monday • Jan 28, 2019 FOR THE RECORD THE DAILY JOURNAL

Thought for the Day


“A self-taught man usually has
a poor teacher and a worse student.”
— Henny Youngman, British-born American comedian

This Day in History


The space shuttle Challenger exploded

1986 73 seconds after liftoff from Cape


Canaveral, killing all seven crew
members, including schoolteacher
Christa McAuliffe.
In 1 5 4 7 , England’s King Henry VIII died; he was succeeded
by his 9-year-old son, Edward VI.
In 1878, the first daily college newspaper, Yale News (now
Yale Daily News), began publication in New Haven,
Connecticut.
In 1 9 11 , the notorious Hope Diamond was sold by jeweler
Pierre Cartier to socialites Edward and Evalyn McLean of
Washington, D.C., for $180,000.
In 1 9 1 5 , the United States Coast Guard was created as
President Woodrow Wilson signed a bill merging the Life-
Saving Service and Revenue Cutter Service.
In 1 9 1 6 , Louis D. Brandeis was nominated by President
Woodrow Wilson to the Supreme Court; Brandeis became the
court’s first Jewish member.
In 1 9 4 5 , during World War II, Allied supplies began reaching
China over the newly reopened Burma Road.
In 1 9 5 6 , Elvis Presley made his first national TV appearance PETER MOOTZ/DAILY JOURNAL
on “Stage Show,” a CBS program hosted by Tommy and San Mateo police respond Saturday, Jan. 26 to a car crash on Alameda de las Pulgas.
Jimmy Dorsey.
In 1 9 6 0 , the National Football League awarded franchises to
Dallas and Minneapolis-St. Paul. In other news ...
In 1 9 7 3 , a cease-fire officially went into effect in the says he’s never been afraid of him. “My wife is in labor! She’s about to
Vietnam War, a day after the signing of the Paris Peace Accords Man says emotional support have a baby!”
Henney’s background also indicates
by the United States, North Vietnam and South Vietnam. alligator helps his depression a comfort with creatures like Wally. Solis found Oswaldo on the phone
In 1 9 7 8 , fire swept through the historic downtown Coates YORK HAVEN, Pa. — A He hosted a show called “Joie with firefighters and Amanda’s baby
House hotel in Kansas City, Missouri, killing 20 people. Pennsylvania man says his emotional Henney’s Outdoors” on ESPN crowning.
In 1 9 8 0 , six U.S. diplomats who had avoided being taken support alligator helps him deal with Outdoors from 1989 to 2000, accord- “When I first saw her in labor, I was
hostage at their embassy in Tehran flew out of Iran with the his depression. ing to the York Daily Record . freaking out and asked my coworkers
help of Canadian diplomats. Joie Henney, 65, said his registered Henney frequently takes Wally out ‘What do we do?”’ Solis said, accord-
emotional support animal named for meet-and-greets at places like sen- ing to the news release.
Birthdays Wally likes to snuggle and give hugs,
despite being a 5-foot-long alligator.
ior centers and minor-league baseball
games. Faraway space snowman
The York Haven man said he received “He’s just like a dog,” Henney told a is pitted and has bright ‘collar’
approval from his doctor to use Wally woman at a recent outing to a senior
as his emotional support animal after center. “He wants to be loved and pet- CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — The
not wanting to go on medication for ted.” space snowman visited by NASA on
depression, he told Philly.com . New Year’s Day is pitted all over and
“I had Wally, and when I came home County employee has a bright “collar” between its two
and was around him, it was all OK,” he fused spheres.
said. “My doctor knew about Wally
helps deliver baby in van These are the newest details to
and figured it works, so why not?” PERRIS — A Southern California emerge about Ultima Thule, the most
Rapper Rick Ross Rapper Rakim is DJ Muggs Wally was rescued from outside couple got some unexpected help distant object ever explored.
is 42. 51. (Cypress Hill) is 51. Orlando at 14 months old and is still delivering their baby. A close-up picture taken by NASA’s
growing; Henney said Wally could be Amanda Tadeo of Perris went into New Horizons spacecraft right before
Actor Nicholas Pryor is 84. Actress Susan Howard is 77. 16 feet long one day. Henney says labor Jan. 16, according to a closest approach on Jan. 1, and
Actress Marthe Keller is 74. Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., is Wally eats chicken wings and shares Riverside County news release about released Thursday, shows lots of little
72. Actress-singer Barbi Benton is 69. Evangelical pastor an indoor plastic pond with a smaller the birth. Amanda and her husband pits on Ultima Thule. They’re less
Rick Warren is 65. Former French President Nicolas Sarkozy rescue alligator named Scrappy. Oswaldo Tadeo were racing to the hos- than a half-mile across. There’s also a
is 64. Actress Harley Jane Kozak is 62. Movie director Frank Wally, who turns 4 this year, is a pital when they realized they didn’t much bigger, circular depression on
Darabont is 60. Rock musician Dave Sharp is 60. Rock singer big teddy bear, in Henney’s words. have enough time, county spokes- the smaller lobe, considered the
Sam Phillips is 57. Rock musician Dan Spitz is 56. Country The cold-blooded reptile likes to rest woman Brooke Federico said. snowman’s head. Scientists don’t
musician Greg Cook (Ricochet) is 54. Gospel singer Marvin his snout on Henney’s, and “he likes So the Tadeos stopped at Riverside know if these are impact craters or
Sapp is 52. Singer Sarah McLachlan is 51. Actress Kathryn to give hugs,” he said. County’s code enforcement office, sinkholes.
Morris is 50. Humorist Mo Rocca is 50. Rock/soul musician The alligator has never bitten any- thinking someone there might be Categorized as a contact binary, the
Jeremy Ruzumna (Fitz and the Tantrums) is 49. Rhythm-and- one and is even afraid of cats, accord- able to help. approximately 20-mile-long (32-
blues singer Anthony Hamilton is 48. Singer Monifah is 47. ing to Henney. Code enforcement employee Angie kilometer-long), reddish Ultima
Actress Gillian Vigman is 47. Rock musician Brandon Bush is Henney acknowledged that Wally is Solis was walking into the office on Thule has both light and dark pat-
46. Retired MLB All-Star Jermaine Dye is 45. Actress Terri still a dangerous wild animal and the cold and rainy day when she heard terns. The brightest spot is where the
Conn is 44. Singer Joey Fatone Jr. (’N Sync) is 42. Actress could probably tear his arm off, but Oswaldo yell from the couple’s van: two lobes connect.
Rosamund Pike is 40. Actress Angelique Cabral is 40.
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
By David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
Lotto Local Weather Forecast
Unscramble these Jumbles, Jan. 26 Powerball Fantasy Five Mo nday : Mostly cloudy. Highs in the
one letter to each square,
Get the free JUST JUMBLE app • Follow us on Twitter @PlayJumble

to form four ordinary words. 8 12 20 21 32 10 3 12 16 26 27 lower 60s. North winds 5 to 10 mph


becoming west in the afternoon.
RAYHI Powerball

Daily Four
Mo nday ni g ht: Mostly cloudy. Lows in
Jan. 25 Mega Millions the lower 50s. West winds 5 to 15 mph.
8 16 30 38 61 10 3 2 6 6 Tues day : Mostly cloudy. Highs in the
lower 60s. West winds 5 to 15 mph.
HTALC Mega number
Daily three midday Tues day ni g ht: Partly cloudy. Lows in
Jan. 26 Super Lotto Plus 0 2 4 the lower 50s.
Wednes day : Mostly cloudy. A slight chance of showers.
10 16 23 31 34 8 Daily three evening Highs around 60.
WLATLE Mega number

0 8 1
Wednes day ni g ht: Mostly cloudy. A chance of showers.
Lows in the lower 50s.
The Daily Derby race winners are Lucky Charms, No. Thurs day and Thurs day ni g ht: Partly cloudy. Highs
12, in first place; Gorgeous George, No. 8, in second around 60. Lows in the lower 50s.
Fri day and Fri day ni g ht: Mostly cloudy. A chance of
CEFOFE place; and Hot Shot, No. 03, in third place. The race
rain. Highs in the upper 50s. Lows in the lower 50s.
time was clocked at 1:45.82.
Now arrange the circled letters
©2019 Tribune Content Agency, LLC to form the surprise answer, as The San Mateo Daily Journal Phone:. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . (650) 344-5200 Fax: (650) 344-5290
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Publisher: Jerry Lee Editor in Chief: Jon Mays Events: . https://www.smdailyjournal.com/users/admin/calendar/event
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here: Delivery: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . distribution@smdailyjournal.com
smdailyjournal.com scribd.com/smdailyjournal
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Jumbles: MODEM HIKER RATIFY REJECT
Saturday’s 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
Answer: William Clement invented the grandfather clock obituaries, email information along with a jpeg photo to news@smdailyjournal.com. Free obituaries are edited for style, clarity, length and grammar. If you would like to have an
because he was able to — MAKE THE TIME obituary printed more than once, longer than 200 words or without editing, please submit an inquiry to our advertising department at ads@smdailyjournal.com.
003 0128 mon:0128 mon 135 1/27/19 7:26 PM Page 1

THE DAILY JOURNAL LOCAL Monday • Jan 28, 2019 3


Main Street Bridge carries a lot of history Police reports
Heated exchange
Someone was threatened by their super-
visor at work saying that he was going
to break his legs and was going to die,
hoping his new car didn’t catch fire like
his old car. It was reported in San Mateo
at 8:37 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 22.

SAN MATEO
Auto burg l ary. A Cadillac Escalade was
stolen on Glendora Drive, it was reported at

H
alf Moon Bay’s Main Street Bridge
3:32 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 19.
is only 80 feet long, long enough
to carry a load of history. Among Wel fare check. A gray Tesla S was going
other things, the two-lane span at the north north on Delaware Street with two children in
end of the coastal town was the first steel- the back without a car seat, it was reported at
reinforced bridge in San Mateo County. The Half Moon Bay’s Main Street Bridge was the first steel-reinforced bridge in San Mateo County. 2:57 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 19.
engineers used cables from San Francisco’s part of a trail that dropped down toward the ing place for citizens. He became a member Sus pi ci o us pers o n. There was a group of
cable car system to build the bridge in 1900, creek and then rose sharply after crossing to of the school board as well as acting post- people loitering the parking garage area on
a time when there were few bridges in the the other side, according to “The Treasures master. He was elected a San Mateo County Catalpa Street and the person calling thinks
world made of concrete interlaced with steel. of Half Moon Bay,” written by David supervisor in 1896. they are drug dealers, it was reported at 12:54
Design work is underway to seismically Cresson of the Half Moon Bay History Debenedetti reached out to bridge designer p.m. Saturday, Jan. 19.
retrofit the bridge, but officials say con- Association. Curtis Tobey and County Surveyor Auto burg l ary. Several vehicles were bro-
struction isn’t expected to start until 2022 The “historical narrative” would certainly Davenport Bromfield, and the Board of ken into on Campus Drive, it was reported at
and will take about 15 months. include San Mateo County Supervisor Supervisors approved plans in 1899, listing 11:41 a.m. Saturday, Jan. 19.
Just about everyone calls the span “The Joseph Debenedetti of Half Moon Bay, the Tobey as the architect and Bromfield as the
Main Street Bridge,” although its official first Italian-American elected to the Board of engineer. In total, three bridges of nearly FOSTER CITY
name is the Pilarcitos Creek Bridge because Supervisors, who played a key role in see- identical design would be completed in San Petty theft. Someone stole a wallet and
it crosses the waterway of that name which ing the bridge become a reality. The Mateo County in 1900-1901. The first and keys on Foster City Boulevard, it was report-
flows to the ocean, according to the Debenedetti Building on Main Street bears the largest was the Pilarcitos Creek Bridge. ed at 11:23 p.m. Sunday, Jan 20.
National Park Services National Register of his name. A native of Genoa, Italy, Second was the El Cerrito or San Mateo Warrant arres t. A South San Francisco resi-
Historic Places. Debenedetti was among the influx of Creek Bridge, and the last the Bear Gulch dent was arrested and transported to San Mateo
“Today the Pilarcitos Creek Bridge is near- European immigrants who came to the Half Bridge. County Jail on a $10,000 misdemeanor war-
ly identical to photographs taken in the Moon Bay area in the latter part of the 19th rant for possession of a controlled substance,
early 1900s,” the register says. The bridge Century. Irish, German, Italian and it was reported at 4:48 p.m. Saturday, Jan.19.
is “a gateway to a more prosaic and reflec- Portuguese made up the majority of newcom- The Rear View Mirror by history columnist Vehi cl e co de v i o l ati o n. A San Mateo res-
tive existence. Nearly every photo taken on ers seeking a better life on the coastside. Jim Clifford appears in the Daily Journal ident was arrested on East Third Avenue and
Main Street over the past 100 years has the Their numbers included merchants, business
ev ery other Monday. Objects in The Mirror Lakeside Drive for false display of vehicle
bridge either front and center or otherwise people, dairy workers and farmers.
are closer than they appear. registration, it was reported at 5:01 p.m.
present, making it a highly relevant and Debenedetti came to the area in the late Friday, Jan. 18.
associated part of Half Moon Bay’s overall 1860s and became a dry goods merchant. He
historical narrative.” traveled on foot down the coastline with a
The bridge, which provided the only heavy pack of goods on his back, selling
access to downtown Half Moon Bay and door to door to farmers. His hard work paid
points south until the construction of the off and, by 1877, he had married, built a
Route 1 bypass that opened in 1955, home and had three stores, including one in
replaced a simple wooden bridge that was Half Moon Bay that became a popular meet-
004 0128 mon:0128 mon 135 1/25/19 11:51 AM Page 1

4 Monday • Jan 28, 2019 LOCAL THE DAILY JOURNAL

t1rescriptions & Home


Medical Supplies Delivered
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29 West 25TH Ave.
(650) 349-1373 (Near El Camino)
San Mateo

You are invited!


FRIDAY EVENING SOCIAL
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Enjoy great music,
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beverages, and the best
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005 0128 mon:0128 mon 135 1/27/19 7:26 PM Page 1

THE DAILY JOURNAL LOCAL Monday • Jan 28, 2019 5

Clash over Millbrae development continues


Councilwoman prefers original project designs; colleagues hold differing opinions
By Austin Walsh the 2014 drawings.
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF Councilwoman Ann
Schneider said she too
Councilwoman Gina Papan claimed appreciated the current
designs of a sweeping mixed-use develop- design, especially the
ment at the Millbrae BART station grew way the buildings com-
worse over time, despite her fellow coun- prising the project com-
cilmembers suggesting they were largely plement each other and
comfortable with the evolution. their surroundings.
Papan harshly criticized the Gateway at Gina Papan “I think they blend in
Millbrae Station project proposed by well,” she said.
Republic Urban during a study session The feedback from councilmembers
Tuesday, Jan. 22, claiming current designs aligned with the vision of development rep-
are less attractive than renderings initially resentatives, who also disagreed with
offered by the builder. Papan’s claims that the most recent itera-
“I think what is presented here — it looks tion is a betrayal of the visions initially
boxy and if you bring it up compared to offered.
what this developer advertised in 2014, I Republic Urban representative Kelly
think we can do better here as far as the look Erardi said the proposal before officials was
and appearance,” said Papan, according to the product of several years of collaboration
video of the meeting. with city staff, planners and officials, over
Such a perspective is consistent with con- which time plans changed and improved.
cerns raised by Papan during a review a few He said the proposal discussed during the
weeks ago, when she expressed dissatisfac- most recent study session adheres to city
tion with the design of the residential, com- policy and specific elements were finalized
mercial and hotel project. as part of the development agreement
Papan’s fellow councilmembers main- approved by councilmembers last year.
tained a different perspective though, as Portions of the plans, such as building A rendering of the development proposed on BART land at the Millbrae train station.
most expressed relative comfort with the colors, architectural features, artwork, land- this year. For his part, Parks and Recreation
plans for 150,000 square feet of offices, scaping and other amenities, would be Before such an approval is granted, Papan Commission Chair Chris Dal Nagro agreed
nearly 30,000 square feet of retail space, revised according to the preference of coun- expressed an expectation that the develop- that the project was too generic.
400 new housing units and a hotel abutting cilmembers, said Erardi, but essential com- ment design is amended to be more reflec- “It’s not unique. It’s not iconic. The only
the city’s train station. Of the housing ponents would remain. tive of the original vision, which she felt way I know it is Millbrae is that there is a
units, 80 are proposed in a standalone proj- “We’re up to listen to your comments on paid more respect to its surroundings. Papan sign on it,” he said.
ect to be reserved for military veterans. details of the project and do as much of that and the developer have a long history of Ultimately, most councilmembers encour-
Vice Mayor Reuben Holober said he felt as we can,” he said. “But if you’re going to clashes, spanning back as far as her most aged project designers to weave in elements
the plans could be tweaked to include an start changing building shapes, we’ve got recent election campaign when Republic which make the project look more distinct
iconic feature which would help establish big problems.” Urban paid for ads opposing her. without going as far to seek a total overhaul
the development as a landmark for Millbrae, No decision was made at the meeting and “I don’t think the design format that is of the plans.
but suggested he felt the project was not further discussion will continue at upcom- being presented is complementary to the “It needs some enhancement to look more
entirely dissimilar from original render- ing sessions. Ultimately the design must be existing station or even that Chase bank iconic or to add flavor,” said Holober, while
ings. approved by the Planning Commission and across the street,” said Papan, who suggest- suggesting he was generally comfortable
“It’s not dramatically different from what City Council in advance of groundbreaking, ed the design is no different than the many with the larger architectural themes, land-
is being proposed now,” he said, looking at which developers are hopeful will start later other developments under construction scaping and other design elements.
across the Peninsula.

Man arrested for Pescadero stabbing Local brief


Deputies have arrested a man in connec-
tion with a stabbing that occurred Friday in dence.
Pescadero. Arellano-Nevarez was not allowed to be at
the residence due to a current restraining
Christian Uries Arellano-Nevarez, 23, of order.
Pescadero, was arrested on suspicion of The victim confronted Arellano-Nevarez,
assault with a deadly weapon, vandalism and and the suspect grabbed a kitchen knife and
disobeying a court order, according to the stabbed the victim, deputies said.
San Mateo County Sheriff’s Office. Following the stabbing, the suspect
Deputies responded Friday at 10:10 a.m. walked outside and vandalized the victim’s
to a residence in the 200 block of Butano car.
Cutoff on a report of a stabbing. Arellano-Nevarez left the property, was
Deputies said the victim found Arellano- located a short time later by deputies and
Nevarez asleep inside the victim’s resi- arrested.
006 0128 mon:0128 mon 135 1/27/19 7:27 PM Page 1

6 Monday Jan 28, 2019


• STATE THE DAILY JOURNAL

Teachers succeeding by framing


strikes as for the common good
By Carolyn Thompson among others who have proposed increases
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS in teacher pay early in the new year.
“Some state legislators may get wise and
Los Angeles teachers who declared a vic- head this off ahead of time,” said Kenneth
tory after a six-day strike have added Dau-Schmidt, a labor and employment law
momentum to a successful wave of activism professor at Indiana University. “You may
by educators framing their cause as a push to see less strikes just because legislatures get
improve public education, not just get pay out in front of the problem.”
raises. In Los Angeles , 30,000 teachers returned
Teachers in Denver, Oakland, Virginia, to work Wednesday. They settled for the REUTERS
Texas, Washington and Illinois are plan- same 6 percent raise offered early on by the Senator Kamala Harris launches her campaign for President of the United States at a rally at
ning rallies, marches and, in some cases, nation’s second-largest school district, but Frank H. Ogawa Plaza in Oakland.
strikes of their own — actions that have fed they also secured promises for smaller class
off one another since the movement began
last spring in West Virginia.
“Some of this action breeds more action,”
sizes and more nurses and counselors to
benefit students.
Labor historian Joseph McCartin, a pro-
White House hopeful Harris says
said Daniel Montgomery, president of the fessor at Georgetown University, said the
teachers union in Illinois, where the
nation’s first strike against a charter school
network ended last month in Chicago.
recent actions have been more popular
politically than a series of teacher strikes in
the 1970s because of how they are framed.
she is capable of unifying country
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS of unity. She began her career as a prosecu-
“People look around and say, ‘It is possible “What you’re seeing in each of these tor in Oakland and later became California’s
to do this. The teachers walked out in West cases is when teachers did engage in mili- OAKLAND — Democratic presidential attorney general.
Virginia and the walls didn’t cave in.”’ tancy, they did so not just to win raises for candidate Kamala Harris says she’s the kind “My whole life, I’ve only had one client:
In several states, governors and lawmak- themselves, and sometimes not even prima- of leader who can unify the country and The people,” Harris says in her prepared
ers are moving pre-emptively to address rily to win raises for themselves,” he said, would fight for the needs of all Americans. remarks, echoing the words she has used in
teachers’ grievances through proposals to “but to push back against the austerity The first-term California senator, who courtrooms and has adopted as her cam-
increase money for education. regime that was undermining public educa- announced her candidacy on Monday, paign’s slogan.
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott and new House tion.” planned a speech at a rally in Oakland, her Harris, the daughter of immigrants from
Speaker Dennis Bonnen, both Republicans, Montgomery said teachers have made a hometown, later Sunday, as she outlines her Jamaica and India, has drawn deeply from
emphasized more spending on schools as point to discuss things like crowded class- campaign and introduces herself to the symbolism as she has rolled out her cam-
they were sworn in this month. Elected offi- rooms and inadequate supplies, an approach nation. paign.
cials in New Mexico , Georgia , that drew public support for Detroit teachers “I’m running for president because I love She entered the race on Martin Luther
Indiana, Mississippi and Arkansas are during “sickouts” in 2016. my country. I’m running to be a president King Jr. Day. Campaign aides say she has
by the people. Of the people. For all the drawn inspiration from Shirley Chisholm,
people, ” according to prepared remarks who in 1972 became the first black woman
obtained by The Associated Press. to run for president from a major party.
The appearance at a plaza outside City If Harris were to win the White House, she
hall was intended to portray her candidacy would be the first African-American woman
as the latest chapter in a lifetime of advocat- and first person of Asian descent to be pres-
ing for all people and to promote a message ident.
007 0128 mon:0128 mon 135 1/27/19 7:27 PM Page 1

THE DAILY JOURNAL NATION Monday • Jan 28, 2019 7


White House dangles threat of another shutdown over wall
By Deb Riechmann ment,” he said.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The linchpin in the standoff is Trump’s
demand for $5.7 billion for his prized wall
WASHINGTON — Two days after the at the U. S. -Mexico border, a project
record-long shutdown ended, the White Democrats consider an ineffective, wasteful
House made clear Sunday that President monument to a ridiculous Trump campaign
Donald Trump is prepared to shutter the promise.
government again without a border wall California Rep. Kevin McCarthy, the
deal from Congress. leading Republican in the House, said
The president’s standoff with Democrats Democrats have funded border barriers in
on Capitol Hill is far from over and the the past and are refusing this time simply
clock is ticking — the spending bill Trump because Trump is asking for it.
signed on Friday funds the government “The president is the only one who has
agencies that had been shut down for 35 been reasonable in these negotiations,” he
days only until Feb. 15. said.
It’s unclear if the Democrats will budge. Mulvaney wouldn’t directly answer
Trump seemed girded for battle, sending out whether Trump would take less than $5.7
a series of online messages that foreshad- billion, but indicated the president was
owed the upcoming fight with lawmakers. willing to negotiate.
“BUILD A WALL & CRIME WILL FALL!” he REUTERS “The president has already gone to the
tweeted. President Donald Trump speaks to the news media about a deal to end the partial government Democrats and said, look, it’s not a 2,000-
Is Trump prepared to shut down the gov- shutdown in the Rose Garden at the White House in Washington. mile sea-to-shining-sea wall.”
ernment again in three weeks? gency.” member of the Democratic leadership in the Trump has asserted there is a “crisis” at
“Yeah, I think he actually is,” acting But Mulvaney said that at “the end of the House, said his colleagues are looking for the southern border requiring a wall, blam-
White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney day, the president’s commitment is to “evidence-based” legislation. ing previous presidents and Congress for
said. “He doesn’t want to shut the govern- defend the nation and he will do it with or “Shutdowns are not legitimate negotiat- failing to overhaul an immigration system
ment down, let’s make that very clear. He without Congress.” ing tactics when there’s a public policy dis- that has allowed millions of people to live
doesn’t want to declare a national emer- Rep. Hakeem Jeffries of New York, a agreement between two branches of govern- in the U.S. illegally.

‘Weeeee!’ Some national parks open to visitors post-shutdown


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS down could happen in weeks. they were not fully operating due to the posted a video to Twitter that showed the cen-
“You can only be so happy because you lack of appropriations. Calls to several ter’s gates opening with the word: “Weeeee!”
MINNEAPOLIS — Park rangers were once just have to know that it could happen agencies also went unanswered, with voice- The visitor’s center, located in the lobby
again greeting visitors at some national again,” said Rachel Malcom, whose husband mails saying the offices were closed due to of the Science Museum of Minnesota, saw
parks across the United States and flight serves in the Coast Guard in Rhode Island. the shutdown. But many parks — from the 180 visitors in its first hour of operation,
operations at major airports were returning “We’re going to be playing catch up, so I U.S. Virgin Islands to Minnesota — were Anfinson said, and when he stopped by, the
to normal on Saturday, one day after a partial don’t want to overspend.” glad to open their doors to weekend visi- employees had “big smiles on their faces.”
government shutdown came to an end. President Donald Trump signed a short- tors. The National Park Service said it was work-
While there were signs that some govern- term deal Friday to end the partial govern- John Anfinson, superintendent of the ing on reopening all of its parks as quickly
ment machinery was grinding back to life ment shutdown, which caused 800,000 fed- Mississippi National River and Recreation as possible, but some parks may not open
after a record 35 days without funding, many eral employees to miss two paychecks. The Area, said it felt great to tell his employees immediately depending on their staff size and
federal workers and their families approached administration asked department heads to to open the Mississippi River Visitor’s complexity. The Virgin Islands National
the end of the shutdown cautiously, saying reopen offices in a “prompt and orderly Center. He texted his manager and said Park, Cape Hatteras National Seashore, the
they were relieved they would receive pay- manner.” “Roll up the gate!” Wright Brothers National Memorial and the
checks again, but would continue to restrict Many government agencies still had “They were just waiting for the green Great Smoky Mountains National Park were
their spending amid fears that another shut- notices on their websites Saturday saying light,” he said. Park ranger Sharon Stiteler among the parks that reopened Saturday.

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008 0128 mon:0128 mon 135 1/27/19 7:28 PM Page 1

8 Monday Jan 28, 2019 • NATION THE DAILY JOURNAL

In Trump confidant Stone’s case, Conservatives say Trump caved, but sure he’ll get wall
Mueller finds crime in cover-up THE ASSOCIATED PRESS is done, it’s off to the races!”
In California for a meeting of the
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS WASHINGTON — No retreat, no sur- Koch political network, Trump support-
render is how President Donald Trump er and Koch donor Doug Deason of
WASHINGTON — Donald Trump confidant Roger Stone frames his decision to temporarily Texas said he was “severely disappoint-
may be accused of lying and tampering with witnesses, but it’s reopen the government while still pur- ed” that the president agreed to reopen
equally notable what he’s not charged with: colluding with the suing a border wall deal. the federal government. Deason said he
Kremlin in a grand conspiracy to help Trump win the presi- Some of his conservative backers wanted Trump to go “nuclear” and keep
dency in 2016. have a different take: “pathetic” and the government closed as a way to cut
The case is the latest in a series brought “wimp.” the number of federal workers and would
by special counsel Robert Mueller that Other Trump supporters seem willing have preferred if Trump had used emer-
focuses on cover-ups but lays out no under- to give Trump the benefit of the doubt, gency funding to pay essential workers.
lying crime. It’s a familiar pattern in yet they insist that any ultimate govern- “We hired him to go shake up DC. We
Washington, where scandals from ment funding deal the president signs didn’t hire him to maintain the status
Watergate to Iran-Contra and Whitewater must include money for a wall. quo,” said Deason, a member of the
have mushroomed into presidency-imper- Trump defended himself Saturday from finance committee of America First
iling affairs due to efforts to conceal and the conservative backlash to his deci- Action, the only sanctioned pro-Trump
mislead. sion to end the 35-day-old partial gov- announcement on Friday a “short-term super PAC.
Roger Stone In the Russia investigation , one Trump ernment shutdown — the longest in surrender to Democrats.” While some of Trump’s backers have
aide after another has been accused of U.S. history — without money for his Trump insists he didn’t cave to any- lobbed insults at the president, others
lying to investigators, or encouraging others to do so, about promised border wall. He said if he did- one and said the standoff with are willing to give him more time to
Russia-related contacts during the campaign and transition n’t get a fair deal from Congress, the Democrats was far from over. negotiate.
period. government would shut down again on “Negotiations with Democrats will “I’m a pragmatist. I understand when
Mueller may well have evidence of criminal coordination Feb. 15 or he would use his executive start immediately,” Trump tweeted on you’re fighting a battle like this you
between Trump associates and Russia that he has yet to reveal, authority to address what he has termed Saturday. “Will not be easy to make a have to do what’s necessary to keep cer-
but so far, he’s focused repeatedly on those he believes have “the humanitarian and security crisis” deal, both parties very dug in. The case tain parts of the government moving,”
tried to throw federal or congressional investigators off the on the southern U.S. border. for National Security has been greatly said Jerry Falwell Jr., president of
trail. After he announced his decision, a enhanced by what has been happening Liberty University and a Trump confi-
Stone’s indictment charges him with seven felonies, includ- New York newspaper headline dubbed at the Border & through dialogue. We dant. “I think you have to do things like
ing witness tampering, obstruction and false statements, him “CAVE MAN.” will build the Wall!” this to achieve a greater goal in the end.
while leaving open the question of whether his or the Trump’s Conservative commentator Ann Earlier, Trump tweeted: “This was in I believe that’s what he’s doing.”
campaign’s interest in exploiting Russia-hacked emails about Coulter, a big wall supporter, called no way a concession. It was taking care Falwell encouraged Trump to declare a
Democrat Hillary Clinton crossed a legal line. Trump the “biggest wimp” ever to occu- of millions of people who were getting national emergency if Democrats
“There’s sort of two possible ways this investigation could py the Oval Office. A conservative news badly hurt by the Shutdown with the haven’t agreed to wall funding by the
end up. One is he finds this big Russian conspiracy or collu- outlet, Breitbart, dubbed Trump’s understanding that in 21 days, if no deal time the current deal expires.
sion with the Russians to influence the election,” said Randall
Eliason, a George Washington University white-collar crimi-
nal law professor and former federal prosecutor. “The other, I Women make gains in state capitols, but men still rule
think very real possibility, is he just finds a cover-up.” By David Lieb The Associated Press. That’s up sions starting this month, the AP
The Stone case is in some way reminiscent of Mueller pros- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS slightly from 30 top leadership posi- tracked the lawmakers chosen by col-
ecutions that have accused former Trump lawyer Michael tions last year. leagues for the top Democratic and
Cohen of lying to Congress about his role in a Moscow real JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — “The first sort of instinct to hearing Republican positions in each cham-
estate project. Following a record-setting election that number is, ‘Oh, how disappoint- ber. In most states, that’s the speaker

SMOG
for women, state legislatures across ing,”’ said Debbie Walsh, director of and minority leader in the House or
the country are convening this year the Center for American Women and Assembly, and the Senate president
with at least 17 new women in top Politics at Rutgers University in New and minority leader in the upper
leadership roles. Jersey. “But it just totally makes chamber.
But those gains are offset by anoth- sense, given how people obtain those Women comprise a little over 50
Plus Cert. Fee. er reality: At least a dozen women who leadership positions. It’s a process, percent of the U.S. population and
Most Cars & led their legislative chambers or cau- and it’s not going to turn around in one hold an historical high of 28.6 per-
cuses last year will no longer be election cycle with a bunch of new cent of state legislative seats, up from

29
Light Trucks.

$ 75
2000 & Newer doing so because of term-limits and folks at the table.” 25.4 percent last year, according to
With or w/o decisions to seek higher office or Women won election in record num- the Center for American Women and
Models.
Appointment bers to Congress, governorships and Politics. Yet even with those gains,
We do: retire.
The bottom line is that women made state legislatures last November. The women hold less than 18 percent of

AA SMOG
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only modest gains in legislative lead- gains came largely from Democrats, as the top legislative leadership spots.
r)ZCSJE the ranks of Republican female law- “We are constantly fighting up
ership positions despite the wave of
r%JFTFMT successful female candidates last makers declined in states. The surge against the history of having older
869 California Dr. November. was propelled partly by opposition to white men in these positions,” said
El Camino Real
Burlingame They will hold at least 34 of the 195
top spots in House and Senate cham-
President Donald Trump as well as the
(hash)MeToo movement, which drew
Missouri House Minority Leader
Crystal Quade, a 33-year-old social
Burlingame Ave

Official
(650) 340-0492
Palm Dr

Broadway

bers across the country this year, with attention to sexual harassment of worker chosen for the top Democratic
California Dr
Brake & Lamp Mon–Fri 8:30 AM–5:30 PM two spots in the Alaska House still women by men in positions of power. spot this session after serving just
101 Station Sat 8:30 AM–3 PM undecided, according to a review by With most state legislative ses- two years in the House.
009 0128 mon:1030 FRI 64 1/27/19 7:28 PM Page 1

THE DAILY JOURNAL OPINION Monday • Jan 28, 2019 9


A second North Korea summit
on the sequence of actions to be
Who do we need in
The New York Times Other voices taken.
A new report last week about a pre- the White House?
President Trump remains bullish viously secret North Korean missile
their second summit (reportedly next

T
that the North Korea nuclear threat base at Sino-ri, 132 miles (212 kilo- he United States faces an enigma as the stars align
month in Vietnam), the pressure is on for the 2020 presidential election. Donald Trump has
can be contained. Speaking to meters) north of the Demilitarized
the Trump administration to articulate set the bar so low that just about anyone thinks they
reporters on Saturday, the president Zone, is a reminder of how sprawling
a realistic strategy for achieving a can be president and do a better job. And it’s true almost
praised the “incredible meeting” he and hidden the country’s nuclear pro-
mutually agreed upon outcome. anyone, especially the candidates who have announced and
had the day before with a top repre- gram is and how challenging any sort
No such strategy was evident last are expected to announce could. On the other hand, things
sentative of the North Korean leader, June when Mr. Trump broke with of outside inspections regime might
be to carry out. have never been so dire in so many ways. The government
Kim Jong-un, trumpeting the decades of foreign policy precedent is divided and paralyzed. Trump has encouraged chaos and
“tremendous progress” the two sides by meeting directly with Mr. Kim in Publicly, the two sides still hew to
staunch positions: The Trump admin- confusion. Racism and hatred are as alive today as during
had made. Singapore, in the first summit the Civil War. That’s just the home scene.
The optimistic view is that the between American and North Korean istration insists that tough sanctions
will stay in place until North Korea Globally, the United States
White House meeting with Kim Yong- leaders. Mr. Trump deserves credit for under Trump has forfeited its
opening up this dialogue, but it has, completely gives up its nuclear arse-
chol, a former North Korean intelli- place as the leader of the free
so far, yielded few tangible results. nal. North Korean officials insist on
gence chief and now his government’s world. Our allies are deserting
After that meeting, Mr. Trump sanctions relief early in the process.
lead nuclear negotiator, was indeed But small signs of movement led to us and his policies have weak-
productive, and Mr. Trump is on his declared that North Korea, which pos- ened them while strengthening
sesses 20 to 60 nuclear weapons, the plans for the second summit. Mr.
way to resolving one of the world’s Trump backed off his insistence on our enemies. Economically, we
most complex and dangerous nuclear missiles to deliver them and the facil- are on dangerous ground. Our
ities to make even more, was “no immediate disarmament, and his
weapons problems. administration recently eased travel deficit is out of control. Trump
But a path to that outcome isn’t yet longer a nuclear threat.” Saying so pulled out of the Asian trade
didn’t make it so. restrictions so American aid workers
visible to the outside world. North and humanitarian supplies could once accord which was meant to
Korea has forgone nuclear tests, mis- The one concrete product of the form a united front against
Singapore meeting, a concluding again enter the impoverished country.
sile tests and rhetorical attacks for Mr. Kim’s annual New Year’s Day China. Instead, the Chinese
more than 400 days. That’s an impor- statement, was so poorly drafted that entered the vacuum. Our eco-
it laid the groundwork for months of speech presented a somewhat more
tant development. At the same time, positive view of United States-North nomic strength in the growing
stalemate. It committed the two lead- economies of Asia and South Asia is fast declining. As for
however, it continues to produce Korea relations, an encouraging sign.
ers to “work toward complete denu- climate change, Trump is doing his part to destroy the
nuclear fuel, weapons and missiles. It Even if complete denuclearization
clearization of the Korean Peninsula,” planet a well as the health and safety of Americans.
has not denuclearized, as Mr. Trump without even defining “denucleariza- is not possible, negotiators should at
has demanded. least seek a permanent end to testing So while almost any of the people being considered as
tion,” let alone explicitly agreeing presidential contenders are better than Trump, are any of
So, as the two leaders prepare for and the production of fissile material.
them equipped by experience, intelligence and demeanor

Resist 911 fee, water use tax to handle the threats we now face? The problem is these
candidates are judging themselves over who could do a
better job, not whether they are the ones who can meet the
emergency alert system. levies. He’s embraced a call for a first- huge threats to our democracy, our standing in the world,
The San Diego Union-Tribune Both these problems must be ever tax on water consumption and and who can mitigate the severe damage which the Trump
addressed. Luckily, the state govern- wants to add a "911 fee" on phone administration has inflicted on us on all fronts.
Last June, a McClatchy investiga- ment is so flush with revenue that new bills to help pay for an improved ***
tion found that 360,000 California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s proposed emergency communications system. What’s worse, we no longer identify ourselves as
residents were served by unsafe water 2019-20 budget both offers expanded While both levies would initially Americans. We are Republicans or Democrats and some-
systems with high levels of toxins, services and hefty contributions to be small, that doesn’t make them how what is good for the nation as a whole has become
primarily in rural agricultural commu- prepay unfunded pension liabilities. defensible. Here’s hoping enough of less important than what is good for the base.
nities. Last November, as a massive With the unsafe water systems, Newsom’s fellow Democrats grasp the That is why so too many members of the U.S. Congress
wildfire threatened the rural town of already-approved state bonds also incongruity of one of the most heavi- and U.S. Senate are likely to sacrifice what is best for the
Paradise in Northern California, some may be able to help out. ly taxed states increasing taxes while country if it is not a winner back home.
residents may have died because they Instead, Newsom wants to fund running a substantial budget surplus. ***
never got warnings from an outdated needed fixes with regressive new It’s not just a bad look. It’s a bad idea. David Leonhardt wrote a blockbuster Jan. 5 op-ed in The
New York Times which spells it out:
Letters to the editor “The presidential oath of office contains 35 words and
one core promise: to “preserve, protect and defend the
Constitution of the United States.” Since virtually the
Climate crisis researchers, finding that “climatic Gas tax moment Trump took that oath two years ago, he has been
conditions, by affecting drought
Editor, Editor, violating it. He has repeatedly put his own interests
severity and the likelihood of armed
The governor has proposed linking above those of the country. … To shield himself from
While the country’s debate over conflict, played a significant role as
the recently enacted gas tax to hous- accountability for all of this — and for his unscrupulous
immigration policy drags on, Dan an explanatory factor for asylum seek-
ing construction. They are separate presidential campaign — he has set out to undermine the
Coats, Director of National ing in the period 2011-2015.”
issues, and the tax payer once again is American system of checks and balances. He has called for
Intelligence, just released the 2019 If we do not address the climate cri- seeing the goal post moved when all the prosecution of his political enemies and the protec-
National Intelligence Assessment sis, we can expect more migrants, we want is repair and maintenance of tion of his allies. He has attempted to obstruct justice. He
which included an ominous reference refugees and displaced persons strain- our roads.  State Sen. Scott Weiner has tried to shake the public’s confidence in one democrat-
to “growing influxes of migrants, ing already struggling countries said he wishes Gov. Newsom would ic institution after another, including the press, federal
refugees, and internally displaced per- around the world. We can expect strip all road maintenance funds out law enforcement and the federal judiciary.”
sons” that will cause strains on gov- heightened security concerns and a and only fund rapid transit, no road That is why we need someone in the White House who
ernments around the world. proliferation of failed states. If you improvements whatsoever. I voted for cannot only win, but someone who can bridge the gap
The report states that these pres- think our current political turmoil between the coast dwellers and those in between, someone
sures are “likely to result in further the gas and registration tax repeal
over migration is a problem, you exactly because of lack of confidence who can heal and lead, someone who knows and can work
fracturing of societies.” Areas affected haven’t seen anything yet. with Congress, someone well-versed in foreign policy
by climate change are specifically in government to keep their promis-
es, and I have been proven right. and someone who is not going to need training on the
listed among the dangerous “pressure job. Right now only one Democrat meets the criteria.
points” in this trend. Meanwhile, the Alan Mattlage ***
journal Global Environmental Change John Dillon
Joe Biden. He meets all of them while none of the other
just published an article by European San Mateo San Bruno
announced Democrats come even close. He could beat
OUR MISSION:
Trump. He could have beaten him in 2016. Yes, he is not
It is the mission of the Daily Journal to be the most perfect and some of the things he did in the past or didn’t
accurate, fair and relevant local news source for do will come back to haunt him. His conduct in the Anita
those who live, work or play on the MidPeninsula. Hill case is unacceptable by modern standards. But he
By combining local news and sports coverage, knows better now. Remember, he’s the one who publicly
Jerry Lee, Publisher BUSINESS STAFF: analysis and insight with the latest business,
Michael Davis Charles Gould lifestyle, state, national and world news, we seek to endorsed same-sex marriage before President Obama
Jon Mays, Editor in Chief Paul Moisio Jeff Palter would. His foreign policy advice to Obama was right on
provide our readers with the highest quality
Nathan Mollat, Sports Editor Joe Rudino Joy Uganiza information resource in San Mateo County. and, unfortunately, Obama didn’t always take it.
Todd Waibel Our pages belong to you, our readers, and we
Erik Oeverndiek, Copy Editor/Page Designer
choose to reflect the diverse character of this
The Times recently had a hit piece on Biden. It seems he
Dave Newlands, Production Manager INTERNS, CORRESPONDENTS, CONTRACTORS: dynamic and ever-changing community. spoke for a fee at a Michigan college event before a
Robert Armstrong Charlie Chapman Republican-leaning audience. The Upton family was a
Will Nacouzi, Production Assistant Jim Clifford Talia Fine
Brooke Hanshaw Robert Hutchinson SMDAILYJOURNAL.COM major sponsor. During the speech he praised Rep. Fred
Kerry McArdle, Marketing & Events Tom Jung Shavonne Lin Upton’s role in the Century Cancer Act after the death of
Austin Walsh, Senior Reporter Diego Emilio Perez Vishu Prathikanti Follow us on Twitter and Facebook: Biden’s son Beau from cancer. The problem: Upton’s
Nick Rose Joel Snyder facebook.com/smdailyjournal
REPORTERS: Gary Whitman opponent was a Democrat who Biden did not endorse.
Terry Bernal, Zachary Clark, Anna Schuessler twitter.com/smdailyjournal Upton was re-elected and local Democrats were furious.
Susan E. Cohn, Senior Correspondent: Events Online edition at scribd.com/smdailyjournal Bad political decision for Biden. Yes. But sometimes can-
cer gets in the way of politics. He is not the completely
Letters to the Editor • Emailed documents are preferred: Correction Policy different candidate which many young Democrats are look-
Should be no longer than 250 words. letters@smdailyjournal.com The Daily Journal corrects its errors. ing for. But leaders have their moment in history and now
Perspective Columns • Letter writers are limited to two submissions a If you question the accuracy of any article in the Daily
Should be between 500-780 words. month. Journal, please contact the editor at
he’s the right candidate for this time.
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will not be accepted. perspectives are those of the individual writer and do or by phone at: 344-5200, ext. 107
• Please include a city of residence and phone not necessarily represent the views of the Daily Journal Editorials represent the viewpoint of the Daily Journal Sue Lempert is the former mayor of San Mateo. Her column runs
number where we can reach you. staff. editorial board and not any one individual.
every Monday. She can be reached at sue@smdailyjournal.com.
010 0128 mon:0128 mon 135 1/27/19 7:29 PM Page 1

10 Monday • Jan 28, 2019 BUSINESS THE DAILY JOURNAL

Trump rollbacks for fossil fuel industries carry steep cost


By Matthew Brown • Increased risk of water contamination
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS from a drilling technique known as “frack-
ing.”
BILLINGS, Mont. — As the Trump • Fewer safety checks to prevent offshore
administration rolls back environmental oil spills.
and safety rules for the energy sector, gov- For the Trump administration and its sup-
ernment projections show billions of dol- porters, the rule changes examined by AP
lars in savings reaped by companies will mark a much-needed pivot away from heavy
come at a steep cost: more premature deaths regulations that threatened to hold back the
and illnesses from air pollution, a jump in Republican president’s goal of increasing
climate-warming emissions and more U.S. energy production. But the AP’s find-
severe derailments of trains carrying explo- ings also underscore the administration’s
sive fuels. willingness to put company profits ahead of
The Associated Press analyzed 11 major safety considerations and pollution effects.
rules targeted for repeal or relaxation under
Trump, using the administration’s own esti- Siding with industry
mates to tally how its actions would boost The AP found the administration has
businesses and harm society. sought to bolster the changes by emphasiz-
The AP identified up to $11.6 billion in ing, and sometimes exaggerating, econom-
potential future savings for companies that ic gains while minimizing negative
extract, burn and transport fossil fuels. impacts.
Industry windfalls of billions of dollars For example, when calculating future dam-
more could come from a freeze in vehicle ages from greenhouse gas emissions from
efficiency standards that will yield an esti- coal plants, the Trump administration REUTERS
mated 79 billion-gallon increase in fuel looked only at U.S. effects, instead of glob- A maze of crude oil pipes and valves is pictured during a tour by the Department of Energy
consumption. ally. That drastically reduced the benefits of at the Strategic Petroleum Reserve in Texas.
On the opposite side of the government’s emission restrictions and allowed the of installing better brakes on trains carry- in how it defined benefits to society.
ledger, buried in thousands of pages of administration to conclude the Obama-era ing crude oil and ethanol. Transportation Michael Greenstone, a University of
analyses, are the “social costs” of rolling rule was no longer justified, given costs to Department officials acknowledged they Chicago professor who served as chief
back the regulations. Among them: the coal industry. miscalculated potential benefits by up to economist for Obama’s Council of
• Up to 1,400 additional premature deaths In another instance, the Environmental $117 million because they failed to include Economic Advisers, said the Trump admin-
annually due to the pending repeal of a rule Protection Agency wants to stop consider- some projected future derailments. istration was downplaying the health and
to cut coal plant pollution. ing secondary benefits of controlling mer- In explaining its actions, the Trump environmental impacts of its actions.
• An increase in greenhouse gas emissions cury emissions — namely reductions in administration said in some cases that the “When you start fudging the numbers, it’s
by about 1 billion tons from vehicles pro- other pollutants projected to prevent up to previous administration understated the not that the costs just evaporate into thin
duced over the next decade — a figure equiv- 11,000 premature deaths. price tag on new industry restrictions. In air. We will pay,” Greenstone said. “They
alent to annual emissions of almost 200 Last month, the AP revealed that the others, it said President Barack Obama’s are reducing the costs for industries where
million vehicles. administration understated the advantages administration had been overly expansive pollution is a byproduct.”

Economy likely to pick up, though Taylor Morrison CEO Sheryl


pain may keep lingering for some Palmer probes homebuilding THE ASSOCIATED PRESS we’re going to see sig-
By Josh Boak about 3, 000 flights by mid-afternoon nificant rate increases
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS because six of 13 air traffic controllers did- LOS ANGELES — Homebuilders are ramp- this year. I’m not sure I
n’t show up to work at a critical center in ing up for the looming spring homebuying see that. I think the Fed
BALTIMORE — The U.S. economy will Virginia. season, which begins in late February and is taking a slightly dif-
likely resume its steady growth now that the S&P Global Ratings estimates that the sets the pace for residential construction ferent wait-and-see view.
government has reopened, though econo- economy lost $6 billion because of the activity for the year. When we look at our
mists say some scars — for the nation and government closure — a sizable but rela- Higher mortgage rates last year drove up backlog, our consumers
for federal workers — will take time to heal. tively negligible sum in a $19 trillion-plus borrowing costs, stretching the limits of have a lot of room in
Most analysts estimate that the 35-day U.S. economy. affordability for many would-be buyers. Sheryl Palmer what they can afford and
partial shutdown shaved a few tenths of a “If the shutdown had lasted much longer, Sales of new U.S. homes declined 12 per- what they’re buying. So
percentage point from annual economic the economic impacts would have snow- cent in the first 10 months of 2018 from a it’s not as much about affordability as a
growth in the first three month of 2019. balled — travel problems, tax refunds, year earlier. sentiment. So, I do think there’s an adjust-
They say growth should pick up in the com- etc.,” said Stephen Stanley, chief econo- Now mortgage rates are falling, reaching ment period.
ing months, though some of the money fed- mist at Amherst Pierpont Securities. their lowest levels in nine months, driving Q: Are you looking to cater more to first-
eral workers and contractors didn’t spend in Still, the damage isn’t likely to lift imme- home loan applications sharply higher. time buyers this year?
the past five weeks — on such items as diately. And some federal employees had That trend bodes well for homebuilders A: We definitely cater to all buyer groups,
movie tickets, restaurants and travel — will expressed anxiety during the shutdown like Scottsdale, Arizona-based homebuilder but when you look at the first-time buyer, I
never be made up. Having gone without two about the stability and security of their Taylor Morrison Corp., which builds homes would tell you there are some subsets of that
paychecks, many federal workers were jobs. The most skilled or talented among in California, Texas, Florida and six other buyer as well. And with our AV Homes acqui-
forced to visit food banks or to borrow them may be likelier to leave government states. sition they had some very nice, long-
money. Federal workers will now receive service, a potential problem for an econo- CEO Sheryl Palmer recently spoke to The owned land assets that absolutely cater to
backpay, though some contractors might my already facing worker shortages in some Associated Press about the state of the hous- the first-time buyer. Our first-time buyer
not. areas. ing market, the impact of higher mortgage exposure has predominantly been more on
President Donald Trump agreed to reopen Job searches by employees at multiple rates and what she thinks is holding back the professional first-time buyers. New
the government for three weeks after having federal agencies jumped during the shut- more new home construction. The interview job, steady dual income. That could be
forced the shutdown in hopes of compelling down, according to clicks tracked by the has been edited for length and clarity. $200, 000-$350, 000 in Atlanta and
Democrats to approve billions for a wall on jobs site Indeed. Employees who had gone Q: How do you see the housing market $700,000 or $800,000 in the Bay Area.
the Mexico border. Trump failed to secure unpaid at the Department of Homeland shaping up this year? Q: The pace of new home construction
any such money. Security, Census Bureau, the IRS and the A: I wish my crystal ball was clear has been held back for years by a shortage
During the shutdown, a shortage of air- Transportation Safety Administration were enough. The spring is going to be critical of skilled labor, land ready for residential
port security and air traffic controllers dis- much more likely to be hunting for a new in understanding what 2019 looks like. We development and regulatory hurdles. Do
rupted travel at such major hubs as job compared with the past two years of started seeing (slower demand) in our traffic you see that improving in the near term?
LaGuardia Airport in New York and Newark searches. patterns and absorptions about late A: We’re not growing enough new talent
Liberty International Airport in New Jersey. One lingering risk is if Trump chooses to September. There was a psychological in the building industry. I would say on a
The pressure on Trump to reopen the gov- shutter the government again after the impact when rates got over 5 percent. more macro level, the shortage of labor,
ernment intensified Friday after a delay of three-week agreement lapses on Feb. 15. Q: Mortgage rates remain above where given the aging out of America, immigra-
they were a year ago, despite easing in tion changes and the lack of vocational pro-
recent weeks. Do you expect buyers will grams through the school system for the
adjust to the higher rates? last 10 years, this isn’t going to solve itself
A: I do. I haven’t been a believer that overnight. Then there’s a PR job to be done.
011 0128 mon:0128 mon 135 1/27/19 12:05 AM Page 1

SUPER SQUADS TOUCH DOWN: PATRIOTS, RAMS ARRIVE IN ATLANTA TO PREPARE FOR SUPER BOWL LIII >> PAGE 15

<<< Page 13, Djokovic wins seventh


all-time Australian Open championship
Monday • Jan. 28, 2019

Bgame’s Botelho takes 8th at Mid Cals


By Terry Bernal eighth-place finish in the Botelho said. “The past two years I didn’t with Castro, who is currently ranked No. 3
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF 132-pound bracket. The place. … This year I finally placed. That’s in CCS at 132s. Botelho is ranked No. 1,
junior posted a 4-3 record, what I was looking forward to.” though that ranking — issued two weeks
Burlingame junior Kyle Botelho contin- defeating Central-Fresno’s Mid Cals are considered a tester for how the ago — is bound to change. Castro has
ues to prove the best pound-for-pound Juan Flores 9-4 in the state championships will shake out later in defeated Botelho twice in the past two
wrestler in the Peninsula Athletic League. Round of 32. the year. The field of 59 teams draws from the weeks. Prior to Mid Cals, the Gilroy junior
Where Botelho stacks up in the grand Botelho went on to drop national stage, though, with teams from defeated Botelho Jan. 19 at the Overfelt
scheme of the Central Coast Section and the his next match 5-2 to Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico and Oklahoma Classic in San Jose.
state of California is becoming clear as Gilroy junior Noah Castro also competing in the two-day tournament. “I think [Botelho] should be below him
well. And his prospects are looking fairly Kyle Botelho in the Round of 16. Then This marks the second straight year now,” Burlingame head coach Eric Botelho
promising. after a victory to clinch a Botelho has reached the second day of the said. “Noah should go to 1 and Kyle should
Wrestling in the Mid Cal Wrestling medal, he was shut out 14-0 in the seventh- tournament. Last year he posted a 2-2 record go to 2.”
Tournament Friday and Saturday at Gilroy High place match to Milton Reta of Clovis North. in the event.
School, Botelho reached the podium with an “I think I’m happy with what I did,” The critical showdown for Botelho was See MID CALS, Page 15

“During a tenuous period for the franchise, Peter stepped up and led the group
that purchased the Giants and kept them in San Francisco.”
— Rob Manfred, MLB commissioner
Skyline arms
flex muscles
Peter Magowan dies
Former Giants owner
to open2019
By Terry Bernal
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

Skyline’s new pitching coach Marcus


who kept team in SF Pointer has got quite a one-two punch.
After spending four years at Cañada as the
dies of cancer at 76 Colts’ pitching coach, the former Serra and
Skyline hurler has returned to the San Bruno
By Josh Dubow community college donning the same coach-
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ing hat for the Trojans. And as a welcome
back present, the top of Pointer’s starting
SAN FRANCISCO — Peter Magowan, the rotation opened the sea-
lifelong Giants fan who formed the owner- son in midseason form.
ship group that kept the team in San Opening-day starter
Francisco with a sparkling waterfront ball- Paulie Ferrari
park, died Sunday after a battle with cancer. (Burlingame) impressed
He was 76. in his return from Tommy
Magowan was a fan ever since going to John surgery, taking a
games at the Polo Grounds in New York and hard-luck loss Friday at
then played a critical role in the team’s suc- Trojan Diamond as
cess over the last quarter-century. Skyline fell 7-0 to Fresno
“During a tenuous period for the fran- Dylan City College. Ferrari
chise, Peter stepped up and led the group McDonald worked five innings,
that purchased the Giants and kept them in allowing one run on three hits. The freshman
San Francisco, ” commissioner Rob left-hander struck out eight, touching high-
Manfred said. “With groundbreaking 80s on the radar gun, against nothing wild.
vision, he then guided the effort that result- “He throws so effortlessly,” Pointer said.
ed in a ballpark that became a landmark for “It looks like it’s coming out way harder
the city. In his 16 seasons of leadership, than it is. It looks like he’s throwing 95.”
Peter oversaw a winning, civic-minded ball- Saturday, the Trojans avenged the shutout
club that represented the spirit of San behind right-hander Dylan McDonald (Terra
Francisco. The foundation created under his Nova), who threw a shutout of his own.
direction helped make the Giants the model Skyline split the series with Fresno with a 1-
club they remain today.” 0 victory. McDonald, a true freshman, went
Magowan helped form the ownership the distance, allowing just four hits, while
group that bought the franchise for $100 striking out eight and walking two. Five of
million from Bob Lurie in December 1992 his strikeouts came over the final two
to keep the team from moving to Tampa innings.
Bay. One of his first moves was signing “I kind of just felt like I was throwing bet-
Barry Bonds to a six-year, $43.5 million ter” later in the game, McDonald said. “I was
free agent deal even before he formally com- honestly just working to get those last nine
pleted the purchase of the team. outs.”
With the game’s greatest slugger in McDonald settled in through a 1-2-3 first
place, the Giants went on to have great suc- inning thanks in part to a nice running catch
cess and Magowan put together a plan to Peter Magowan rides in the San Francisco Giants World Series parade in 2010. Magowan was
the team’s president and managing general partner when the new downtown ballpark
See GIANTS, Page 14 opened in China Basin. He died Sunday after a battle with cancer at age 76. See SKYLINE, Page 14

New U.S. coach debuts with win


By John Marshall Walker Zimmerman Long in his third international appear-
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS also scored for the ance rather than 31-year-old midfielder
U.S., which used a Michael Bradley in his 143rd.
GLENDALE, Ariz. — Gregg roster of players all Seven U. S. players made debuts,
Berhalter became only the third U.S. from Major League including five starters — the most
coach in the modern era to start with a Soccer and drew just since in the starting lineup since Sept.
win, Djordje Mihailovic and Christian 9,040, its smallest 3, 1992, at Canada.
Ramirez scored in their national team for a home game Mihailovic was joined by fellow new-
debuts and the Americans beat Panama Gregg since October 2016. comers Corey Baird and Jeremy Ebobisse
3-0 Sunday night in an exhibition Berhalter made a in the midfield, and outside backs Nick MARK J. REBILAS/USA TODAY SPORTS
Berhalter USA midfielder Djordje Mihailovic celebrates after scoring his
between nations that started inexperi- surprise pick as
enced lineups. captain, choosing defender Aaron See SOCCER, Page 16 first career goal Sunday against Panama.
012 0128 mon:0128 mon 135 1/27/19 9:55 PM Page 1

12 Monday • Jan 28, 2019 SPORTS THE DAILY JOURNAL

AFC wins 3rd straight in comic Pro Bowl


By Mark Long but fairly fitting considering the yards. “I thought I told everybody
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS effort players provided. It was on the camera. He made some
two-hand touch most of the day, plays out there. For a fullback, we
ORLANDO, Fla. — The Pro with officials blowing plays dead have one of the best in the league
Bowl has long been considered a at the slightest hint of contact. so I’m always happy to try to get
laughable representation of the “Who cares, man?” New York him a little vote like that.”
NFL game. Jets safety Jamal Adams said. “At Adams, who made headlines for
It reached a new level of comedy the end of the day, we’re like little sacking the New England Patriots
Sunday as several players swapped kids out there just playing in the mascot during a Pro Bowl skills
positions during the annual all- mud, playing in the rain.” competition, was named the defen-
star game. Regardless of the elements, the sive MVP thanks to an intercep-
Jacksonville Jaguars cornerback AFC made the plays the NFC did- tion and a sack.
Jalen Ramsey caught a touchdown n’t. “It’s a great achievement, but
pass in the final minute, capping a Kansas City’s Patrick Mahomes the main thing was to come out
dominant performance for the AFC completed an 18-yard touchdown here and get the victory,” Adams
defense in a 26-7 victory over the pass to Indianapolis’ Eric Ebron said. “That was the main thing,
NFC in steady rain. It was the third on the opening possession, help- just to get the money, man. That’s
consecutive victory for the AFC, ing Mahomes earn the offensive what we wanted.”
all of them at Camping World Most Valuable Player award. Mahomes and Adams each got a
Stadium. Mahomes pleaded with voters to luxury vehicle.
The last two were played in slop- give it to Chiefs fullback Anthony AFC players will get $67,000
py weather, with the latest one Sherman, who caught three passes each for the victory, $8,000 more
also coming amid temperatures in for 92 yards and ran for a score. than the guys who lose the Super
KIM KLEMENT/USA TODAY SPORTS the mid-50s. It was far from ideal “Sherman had my vote. Sherman Bowl next week in Atlanta. The
George Kittle, right, tries to evade AFC cornerback Chris Harris Jr. in the conditions, raising speculation had my vote,” said Mahomes, who Pro Bowl losers will get $39,000
second half in the NFL Pro Bowl Sunday at Camping World Stadium. about the game’s future in Orlando, completed 7 of 14 passes for 156 each.

scored 12, Antonio Roussanov


FRIDAY Local sports roundup added 11, and the Colts (3-5 PAL
12 overall) outran Oceana 29-14 in fourth quarter to force overtime, then Carlmont 75, Woodside 34 North, 4-16 overall) outscored
Girls’ basketball the first half and never looked back. outscored pitched a 10-0 shutout in Oceana 23-13 in the final quarter.
Lajuan Nelson and Andrew Elhihi
South City 55, Jefferson 23 Jasmine Pon scored a game-high 16 the extra period to top the Panthers scored 12 points apiece for the
Becca Tasi scored 12 points and points for El Camino. The Sharks (0-7, 5-14). Freshman Mele Afeaki Scots (7-1 PAL South, 17-3 over- Mills 46, Aragon 45
Gabby Naividad added 10 for the (0-8, 8-12) were paced by sopho- scored a game-high 20 points for the all) who remain one game back of Mills (5-3 PAL South, 9-11 over-
Lady Warriors (8-0 PAL North, 13- more Dylan Fulton’s 12 points. Lady Mustangs, including shooting M-A in the PAL South Division all) went on a 16-10 run in the fourth
7 overall), as head coach Paul 10 of 12 from the free-throw line. standings. Dylan Barnwell hit a quarter to overtake Aragon (2-6, 8-
Carion won his second straight Carlmont 48, Woodside 34 pair of 3s to pace the Wildcats (0-8, 12). Colby Vazquez scored a game-
against his daughter, first-year The Lady Scots (7-1 PAL South, Hillsdale 45, San Mateo 34 high 19 points for the Vikings. Sam
5-15) with eight points.
Jefferson (1-6, 5-14) head coach 16-4 overall) Manu paced the Dons with 17.
Marisa Igafo. First-place South Freshman point guard Bailey Carlmont and M-A meet for the
cruised past Fong scored a game-high 12 second time Friday in Belmont.
City maintains a one-game lead Woodside to stay Burlingame 49, Capuchino 44
over Terra Nova in the PAL North points to lead Hillsdale (2-6 PAL M-A won the first meeting
tied for first South, 8-11 overall) to its second Junior center Taylor Clark netted a
Division standings. between the two 65-62.
place in the PAL league win of the year. Akenesi game-high 13 points to lead
South Division Hafoka led San Mateo (3-5, 4-15) Burlingame (5-3 PAL South, 9-11
Terra Nova 46, Westmoor 45 with Sequoia. Jefferson 50, South City 35 overall) to take down Capuchino.
with 10 points. Saif Fara scored a game-high 16
Kennady Armstrong hit the go- Carlmont senior The Mustangs (2-6, 6-14) were led
ahead bucket with 12 seconds to A s h l e y points as the Grizzlies (6-1 PAL by senior Conner Coplin and Dylan
go as second-place Terra Nova (7-1 Tr i e r we i l e r
Boys’ basketball North, 12-8 overall) maintain a Ackerman with 10 points apiece.
Ashley first-place advantage over second-
PAL North, 11-8) survived a Trierweiler scored a game- Menlo-Atherton 58, Sequoia 43
shootout at Westmoor (3-5, 10- high 17 points. Nick Tripaldi scored 17 points and place Terra Nova. Sophomore Hillsdale 55, San Mateo 39
10). Lisa Luhrs knocked down Natalya Hotovec led the Wildcats (0- James Beckwith added 15, including point guard Angelo Abulencia Seth Godtfredsen hit three 3s to
three 3s to score a game-high 21 7, 10-7) with 10 points. three 3s apiece, to keep the first- scored a team-high 10 points for lead Hillsdale (6-2 PAL South, 13-7
points for the Tigers. place Bears (8-0 PAL South, 16-5 the Warriors (1-7, 6-13). overall) with 15 points. Junior
Capuchino 57, Burlingame 47, OT overall) perfect in league play. Cotton added 14 for the Knights,
El Camino 47, Oceana 37 Capuchino (4-4 PAL South, 14-6 Senior Dimitri Trikas led the El Camino 57, Oceana 50 while San Mateo (1-7, 6-14) got 14
The Lady Colts (3-5 PAL North, 5- overall) went on a 12-6 run in the Cherokees (4-4, 8-11) with 14. El Camino’s Jovaughn Williams from Ryan Miles-Ferguson.
013 0128 mon:0128 mon 135 1/27/19 6:08 PM Page 1

THE DAILY JOURNAL SPORTS Monday • Jan 28, 2019 13

Djokovic in 7th heaven


World’s No. 1 sweeps Nadal for seventh career Aussie title
By Howard Fendrich Here’s how “I am aware that making history
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Nadal explained of the sport that I truly love is some-
it: To have a thing special,” the 31-year-old Serb
MELBOURNE, Australia — chance when said. “Of course, it motivates me.”
Novak Djokovic was so good, so Djokovic plays He surprised even himself with
relentless, so flawless, that Rafael that well, some- the way he recovered after prob-
Nadal never stood a chance. thing extra is lems with his right elbow derailed
Djokovic reduced one of the required. Given him.
greats of the game to merely anoth- that he’s coming Djokovic sat out the last half of
er outclassed opponent — just a Rafael Nadal off a series of 2017. He tried to come back at the
guy, really — and one so out of sorts injuries, given start of 2018 but was hampered by
that Nadal even whiffed on one of that he hadn’t played since the U.S. the elbow and lost in the fourth
his famous forehands entirely. Open last September, Nadal couldn’t round in Melbourne. Soon after, he
In a breathtakingly mistake-free raise his game. decided to have surgery.
performance that yielded a remark- Then again, Nadal conceded, All that is in the past.
ably lopsided result, the No. 1- “When the player did almost every- He is once again at an elite level.
ranked Djokovic overwhelmed thing better than you, you can’t If anything, the gap between him
Nadal 6-3, 6-2, 6-3 on Sunday night complain much.” and the rest is growing right now.
So Djokovic added to previous tri- A year ago, could he have envi- EDGAR SU/REUTERS
to win a record seventh Australian
Open championship and a third con- umphs in Melbourne in 2008, sioned being here now? Novak Djokovic celebrates his seventh career championship at the
secutive Grand Slam title, raising 2011, 2012, 2013, 2015 and 2016, “Not impossible, but highly Australian Open with a 6-3, 6-2, 6-3 win Sunday over Rafael Nadal.
his count to 15 overall. along with four titles at Wimbledon, unlikely. I don’t want to sound arro- Djokovic won in 5 hours, 53 min- initial 16 points he served and 25 of
“Under the circumstances,” three at the U.S. Open and one at the gant, but I always believe in utes, the longest Grand Slam final in the first 26.
Djokovic said, “it was truly a perfect French Open. myself,” Djokovic said. “I think history. “One of the most important
match.” He broke his tie with Roger that’s probably the biggest secret of Evenly matched as they were that objectives for the match was to start
No one who saw it would disagree. Federer and Roy Emerson for most my success.” night, this time was no contest. off well and to bring in the right
Djokovic’s coach, Marian Vajda, Australian Open men’s titles. He Djokovic and Nadal know each None whatsoever. It lasted a tad mindset and intensity,” Djokovic
said: “I would describe it as domi- also broke a tie with his idol, Pete other, their styles and their patterns more than 2 hours. said, “and make sure that he also
nance.” Sampras, for third-most Grand Slam all too well. This was their 53rd No ball, no matter how well- feels my presence.”
Nadal’s take? “An amazing level trophies; Djokovic now only trails meeting — more than any other pair struck, was out of Djokovic’s reach. By the end of the second set,
of tennis.” Federer, with 20, and Nadal. of men in the half-century profes- He slid and stretched and occasional- Djokovic had won nearly twice as
“Unbelievable,” said Nadal’s And he is gaining on them. sional era — and record-equaling ly even did the splits, contorting many points (59-30), made more
coach, Carlos Moya. “Novak prob- Then there’s this tidbit: Djokovic 15th at a Grand Slam tournament. It his body to get wherever and when- winners (23-14) and far fewer
ably could have won, no matter who is the only man in tennis history to was also their eighth matchup in a ever he needed. unforced errors (20-4), while taking
the opponent was.” have a trio of three-straight-Slam major final. Djokovic grabbed 13 of the first 14 of 17 points that lasted at least
That Djokovic would produce 34 streaks. So there should not have been any 14 points, including all four that 10 strokes.
winners and only nine unforced So let the talk begin about four mysteries out there on Rod Laver lasted 10 strokes or more. A trend The longest was a 22-shot point,
errors was impressive enough. That majors in a row over two seasons, Arena’s blue court as they began was established. which ended when Nadal netted a
it came against Nadal — who is something Djokovic already man- with the temperature, which had Of most significance, Nadal was backhand to give Djokovic a set
ranked No. 2, owns 17 major tro- aged to do from 2015-16. And, topped 105 degrees (40 Celsius) in broken the very first time he served point at the end of the first.
phies himself and hadn’t dropped a what’s more, about a true Grand recent days, at a manageable 75 (25 Sunday. That gave Djokovic one Djokovic raised his right fist and
set in the tournament — was hard to Slam, winning all four majors in C) and just a hint of wind. more break of Nadal than the zero held it there while staring at his
comprehend. one calendar year, which only has Right from the start, though, this that the Spaniard’s five preceding guest box.
Djokovic left Nadal gritting his been done by two men, Donald shaped up nothing like their only opponents had managed. He was on the right path. Nadal
teeth or punching his racket strings, Budge in 1938 and Rod Laver in previous Australian Open title Nadal could make no headway on could do nothing to stop him.
unable to compete at all. 1962 and 1969. match, back in 2012, which this day. Djokovic won each of the At the moment, no one can.

Stanford falls to Utah, suffers first Pac-12 loss


By John Coon
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Utah 75, Stanford 68
Bean was 5 of from the floor, including 11 of 24
SALT LAKE CITY — Utah shed 8 from 3-point from 3-point range.
its underdog status in the Pac-12 range, and her “They shot the ball well, but
with a big first for the program. final basket put they’re not a one-dimensional
Erika Bean scored a career-high Utah ahead 71- team, ” Stanford coach Tara
23 points and hit a go-ahead 3- 68. VanDerveer said. “It was not a
pointer with a minute left, and the Megan Huff fluke they beat us. They played
21st-ranked Utes beat No. 6 Alanna Smith had 17 points better than us.”
Stanford 75-68 Sunday, their first and 12 rebounds Smith committed an offensive
ever victory over the Cardinal. for the Utes, and Kianna Moore foul after Bean’s 3, and the
“We continued to just chip added 13 points. Utah (18-1, 7-1 Cardinal missed all three shots
away,” Utes coach Lynne Roberts Pac-12) won its sixth straight and they took in the final minute.
said. “This win is so big because remains a game behind first-place Utah sealed the victory after
of who Stanford is and what Oregon in the Pac-12 standings. Huff made a pair of free throws
they’ve done.” Alanna Smith had 19 points and with 18 seconds left.
Utah was active on defense, get- seven rebounds before fouling out “I didn’t see any wavering or
ting into passing lanes and forcing with 50 seconds left for Stanford (17- nervousness, ” Bean said.
Stanford into coughing up the ball 2, 7-1). Dijonai Carrington scored “Everyone was locked in. We had a
or taking rushed low-percentage 13 points, and the Cardinal shot just minute to go and we wanted to get
shots. On offense, the Utes stayed 25 of 65 (.385) from the field and that win.”
patient and turned good looks into went 8 of 28 from the perimeter.
baskets at critical times. Utah finished 24 of 55 (.436) See HOOPS, Page 16
014 0128 mon:0128 mon 135 1/27/19 11:55 PM Page 1

14 Monday • Jan 28, 2019 SPORTS THE DAILY JOURNAL

times in Magowan’s 16-year tenure tribute to the organization’s great-

GIANTS running the Giants, including a trip


to the World Series in 2002 before
losing in seven games to the
est players of the San Francisco era.
Magowan will be added to the
Wall of Fame on Feb. 9.
Continued from page 11 Angels.
Bonds also went on to set the sin- “Peter Magowan has been a part
gle-season and career homer records of my life for a long, long time,
build a privately funded ballpark on first as a fan watching me play in
the water in downtown San during his tenure with the Giants,
hitting 73 homers in 2001 and 762 New York and then, remaining a fan
Francisco. That park, the first in when we moved to San Francisco,”
years built without direct public in his career.
Mays said. “Along the way, he
funding, opened in 2000 and Magowan did significant work in became my friend. Peter would call
became one of the jewels of the the community, making the Giants me often to check in. He and Debby
game. the first professional sports team to cared about me and it was so easy to
dedicate an annual game to the fight care about them in return. It’s hard
Magowan stepped down follow- against AIDS/HIV with the creation
ing the 2008 season but had put in to find the right words just now, but
of “Until There’s A Cure Day” in in losing Peter, I’ve lost a great,
place the management team that 1994. He also formed the Junior
helped bring San Francisco its first great friend. He was like my godfa-
Giants program that provided free ther. No one can replace him.”
World Series title in 2010, followed leagues for kids to play and learn
by championships in 2012 and baseball. He is survived by wife Debby,
‘14. USA TODAY SPORTS Magowan also revered the rich five children and 12 grandchildren.
“Peter’s mark on the Giants and Peter Magowan moved to California in 1958, the same year as the Giants. history of the franchise he started “Our family lost a great man
the San Francisco community can winning culture and to serve our relocated from New York to San following as a child, signing Hall today,” the family said in a state-
be felt throughout the ballpark, in fans and the community. Over the Francisco. He had a successful busi- of Famer Willie Mays to a lifetime ment. “We all know how much Peter
which he was intimately involved past 25 years, we have followed ness, working 37 years for Safeway contract and bringing back Hall of loved his Giants and San Francisco,
in the design and planning and through on his vision and his Inc., including serving as chairman Famers Willie McCovey and and he had that same love and pas-
throughout the daily operations of impact on our community will be and CEO from 1980-93 before step- Orlando Cepeda to the organization sion for his family. He was so
the organization,” Giants president felt for decades to come.” ping down after taking over the to serve as special advisers. In proud of his children and grandchil-
and CEO Larry Baer said. “He set Magowan moved to California in Giants. 2008, he established the Giants dren, and we will forever cherish the
forth a Giants vision to create a 1958, the same year the Giants The Giants made the playoffs four Wall of Fame, which serves as a memories we made together.”

SKYLINE will abide by a strict pitch count to start the


season.
“He would probably tell you he could keep
going (Friday) because he was cruising,”
Continued from page 11 Pointer said. “But we don’t’ need to. We need
him to be healthy all year long. As long as
by right fielder Max Jenkins (Half Moon he’s healthy, he’s going to be giving us qual-
Bay). It was one of the hardest hit balls of the ity starts.”
afternoon by Fresno that, off the bat,
McDonald said he thought was ticketed for Cañada splits with Sac City
extra bases. The Cañada Colts opened their season with
“The way the wind usually carries at an 8-7 loss at home Friday to Sacramento
Skyline, I thought it had a chance,” City College. Starting pitcher Sergio Noriega
McDonald said. “But our right fielder made a departed after five innings with a 7-5 lead, but
nice play. That just gave me the confidence Sac City rallied for three runs in the seventh
that I could do this.” off the Colts’ bullpen to win it.
In the second inning, Skyline produced all Noriega and the Colts bounced back
the offense it would need. After loading the Saturday with a 9-5 win. Cañada banged out
bases against Fresno starter Joel Bustos, des- 14 hits in the game, with Noriega starring at
ignated hitter Tony Masetti (Serra) greeted the plate, going 4 for 5 with three RBIs and a
reliever Eddie Rios with an RBI single to pair of doubles. Leadoff hitter Shane Wallace
score Leo Espinoza (Capuchino). also recorded four hits.
McDonald did the rest. The freshman
induced double-play grounders in each the
fourth and fifth. After setting down the side in CSM falls in extra innings
order in the sixth and seventh, he ran into
trouble in the eighth. After striking out the The College of San Mateo Bulldogs fell 5-4
first two batters, he walked Noah Perez. Pinch in their season opener Saturday at Diablo
runner Chase Rocamora then stole second. Valley College. CSM led 4-1 going into the
McDonald settled in, though, striking out the bottom of the eighth, but DVC rallied to tie it
side to escape the jam. in the bottom of the frame, then walked off in
McDonald extended past 120 pitches, he the 10th on an RBI single by Michael Theisen.
said. The leash was shorter on Ferrari, who The Bulldogs got two hits and two RBIs
has not pitched since his senior year at from cleanup hitter Anthony Flores. Danny
Burlingame in 2017. The redshirt freshman Carnazzo added two hits.
015 0128 mon:0128 mon 135 1/27/19 11:08 PM Page 1

THE DAILY JOURNAL SPORTS Monday • Jan 28, 2019 15


Patriots, Rams arrive in Atlanta
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS overall in the Brady-Bill dollar stadium is rising in Inglewood,
Belichick era. California, fans chanted “Greg! The! Leg!” for
ATLANTA — Tom Brady and the New The Patriots, who beat kicker Greg Zuerlein, who made a 57-yard field
England Patriots have arrived. So have Jared the then-St. Louis Rams goal in overtime to beat New Orleans in the
Goff and the Los Angeles Rams. for their first title after NFC title game.
Now it’s time for them to get to work. the 2001 season, are Zuerlein strained his non-kicking foot at
The teams landed in Atlanta on Sunday and looking to hoist the halftime of that game by slipping on a turf-
will practice this week before squaring off in Lombardi Trophy for the covered metal plate during warmups on the
the Super Bowl next Sunday in the NFL’s main sixth time, which would Superdome field. The injury doesn’t appear to
event. Tom Brady tie the Pittsburgh be serious, and the Rams expect him to kick in
The AFC champion Patriots had a rally at Steelers for the most in the Super Bowl, coach Sean McVay said
Gillette Stadium earlier in the day before head- the Super Bowl era. Thursday.
ing to the airport and boarding their flight. The NFC champion Rams are back in the The Rams are making their first appearance RAJ MEHTA/USA TODAY SPORTS
“We’re not at the end yet,” Brady told the city where they won their only Super Bowl since losing the game in 2002 that launched Nathan Chen in the men’s free skate Sunday
fans in Foxborough, Massachusetts. “We’ve title in the 1999 season, when they beat the Patriots dynasty. at the U.S. Figure Skating Championships.
got one more to go.” Tennessee. The previous time a Los Angeles-based
It’s New England’s third straight Super Bowl
trip and fourth in five years — and the ninth
During the team’s pre-flight rally at the con-
struction site where the Rams’ multibillion-
Rams team was in the Super Bowl was in the
1979 season, where they lost to the Steelers. Chen three-peats
Top-ranked Rose wins Farmers as skating champ
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
By Doug Ferguson Scott at Torrey Pines. It was his 10th
straight year with a victory worldwide, DETROIT — Nathan Chen won his third
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
including his gold medal from the 2016 straight title at the U.S. Figure Skating
Olympics, and his 10th career PGA Tour Championships. The reigning world cham-
SAN DIEGO — Justin Rose missed a short
birdie putt that felt like another bogey. His victory gave him the most of any player pion tamed the final event Sunday with a
three-shot lead was down to one through six from England, breaking a tie with Nick score of 342.22 — over 58 points more
holes of the Farmers Insurance Open, and Faldo. than runner-up Vincent Zhou of Palo Alto.
the biggest battle was trying not to panic. Rose finished at 21-under 267, the lowest Jason Brown was third.
That’s when he scratched a line on his 72-hole score at this event in 20 years, and Chen’s free skate alone earned 228.80
scorecard after six holes, wanting to start the warm, windless weather had a role in points, which was higher than the total
his round from that moment forward. that. score for 14 of the 20 skaters.
And he gave himself a pep talk. Rose became the first winner to post all The 19-year-old Chen landed four quad
“You’re No. 1 for a reason. Just start play- four rounds in the 60s since Peter Jacobsen jumps in his routine, one of which was in
ing like it, please,” he said. in 1995, back when the North and South combination.
And he did. courses were 700 yards shorter. Weather At the Olympics last year, Chen became
Rose followed with a perfect wedge to a aside, this was an exquisite performance, the first man to land six quadruple jumps in
right pin that led to birdie, the first of five especially with his three penalty shots on ORLANDO RAMIREZ/USA TODAY SPORTS program — that wasn’t enough for a medal,
birdies the rest of the way for a 3-under 69 Saturday, and opening the final round with Justin Rose reacts Sunday after winning the but he did win the free skate. He later won
and a two-shot victory Sunday over Adam three bogeys in five holes. Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines. the world title.

Burlingame’s Cian Hennebry reached the

MID CALS Round of 16 in 113s, falling to Tuttle-


Oklahoma’s Garrett Steidley 7-2.
Half Moon Bay’s Bryan Thorne reached
Continued from page 11 the Round of 16 as well, where he fell to
Tuttle’s Luke Surber 7-1 in 154s. Cade
Kyle Botelho showed marked improve- Duncan, a junior for HMB, reached the
ment this time around. He fell to Castro 10- Round of 16 in 195s, falling to the No. 1
5 at Overfelt, and said Saturday’s 5-2 deci- seed Ryan Reyes of Gilroy 4-1.
sion could have gone either way. Serra’s Jack Woods reached the Round of
“It was a close match,” Kyle Botelho said. 16, defeating Carmel’s Aiden Cash 7-0 in
“Closer than the last time we wrestled. I the Round of 32. Woods then fell in the
still need to work on some stuff.” Round of 16 to Gilroy’s Joseph Barnes 5-0.
016 0128 mon:0128 mon 135 1/27/19 12:04 AM Page 1

16 Monday • Jan 28, 2019 SPORTS THE DAILY JOURNAL

Lightning have ‘unfinished business’ after Anigwe lifts Cal over Colorado
BOULDER, Colo. — Kristine
Anigwe played just 20 minutes but
Women’s hoops
Smith scored 14 apiece. Cal, which
picked up its first conference road
All-Star break; Sharks maintaining focus still finished with 16 points and
11 rebounds and
Cal drubbed
win of the season, shot 53 percent
from the floor and 79 percent from 3-
point range (11 of 14). The Golden
By Josh Dubow There is still before the break, while the Predators Colorado 80-60
much to be broke out of a rough patch of four Sunday. Bears shot better from distance than
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
decided in the losses in five games by winning at Anigwe has at the free-throw line where they
final 10 weeks Colorado and Vegas. posted a double- made just 13 of 22 (59 percent).
SAN JOSE — For Steven Stamkos
and the Tampa Bay Lightning, just of the season. “Obviously the big thing for us is double in every Cal led by just four points after
about everything has gone right so There are com- getting guys healthy and trying to game this sea- the first quarter but outscored the
far this season. petitive division get momentum going our way,” son for the Buffs 27-13 in the second period
But as they get ready to return races outside of Nashville goalie Pekka Rinne said. Kristine Anigwe Golden Bears to take a 49 to 31 lead into inter-
from the All-Star break as the NHL’s Tampa Bay’s “We’ve been a little bit inconsistent (13-6, 4-4 Pac- mission. Colorado never made a
top team, the Lightning knows Erik Karlsson runaway pace in the last little while. Before going on 12 Conference). The 6-foot-4 sen- run at the Bears in second half.
there is little they can do before the Atlantic, and the break I felt that we were playing ior came into the game as the Mya Hollingshed topped
April to make this a successful cam- 23 of the 31 teams are within five pretty strong hockey and I hope that nation’s leading rebounder at 15.2 Colorado (10-9, 0-8) with 20
paign. points of a playoff berth. we can continue that and keep build- per game and the sixth-leading points on 8-of-14 shooting. The
Tampa Bay leads the league with Even in a place like Edmonton ing on that.” scorer, averaging 22.6 per game. rest of the Buffaloes sank only 14
76 points so far this season, open- where the Oilers have been in tur- Calgary has built a little more of Asha Thomas connected on all of 43 shots (32.5 percent). Alexis
ing up a 13-point edge over the next moil for much of the season — with an edge in the Pacific with a five- three of her 3-pointers and scored Robinson scored 14, but she hit
best team in the Eastern coach Todd McLellan getting fired point lead over San Jose, but both 15, while Jaelyn Brown and Kianna just 4 of 14 shots.
Conference. But after losing in the in November and general manager the Sharks and defending Western
Stanley Cup Final in 2015 and then Peter Chiarelli losing his job just Conference champion Golden
Perimeter attack
in Game 7 of the conference finals
in 2016 and ‘18, nothing short of
winning it all will be enough for the
before the break — there is still
hope for the stretch run.
Star Connor McDavid was grilled
on media day about the problems,
Knights are poised to push the
Flames down the stretch.
The Sharks finished before the
break with a thrilling, come-from-
HOOPS Bean set new career marks with
her outside shooting. Prior to
Sunday, the senior guard had not
Lightning. Continued from page 13
“There’s still some unfinished but he tried to put a positive light on behind 7-6 overtime win at made more than 3 3-pointers in a
business,” Stamkos said at All-Star it, pointing out that the team is just Washington and hope the preseason game or attempted more than four.
weekend. “We have a chip on our three points out of the playoffs addition of star defenseman Erik The Cardinal opened the first It helped Bean put together the
shoulder. I’m sure there are a lot of despite so much going wrong. Karlsson proves to be the final piece quarter by missing 11 of their first 20-point performance of her
teams that would be happy to go to “What I look forward to coming needed to lead the franchise to its first 12 shots. That opened the collegiate career.
a Stanley Cup Final and three of the back from the break is trying our first championship. door for Utah to charge out to a “Erika Bean hit big shots for
last four Eastern Conference Finals. best to prove everyone wrong,” he After a somewhat slow start, 17-12 lead after scoring baskets them,” VanDerveer said. “We gam-
That’s tough to do. But with the said. “We have an opportunity here, Karlsson has been playing at an on four straight possessions. bled and she made us pay.”
expectations being so high for our where things seem pretty down on elite level the past two months, Moore capped the flurry by drain-
group, we came into this year think- us, there’s a sense of negativity with showing why the Sharks coveted ing a 3-pointer with 1:06 left in Game not televised
ing this was our year, our turn.” the media, with everyone around the him so much. The next big question the quarter. VanDerveer was upset the Pac-12
The Lightning thought that also team, we get to prove people wrong. will be whether they can lock him up Shots fell more consistently for Network decided not to air the
was the case a year ago when they We get to decide how we’re going to with a long-term deal before he can the Cardinal in the second quarter. game.
took a 3-2 lead over Washington in finish the second half. That’s what become a free agent this summer. Stanford used a 15-6 run to take a “The sad thing is this game was-
the conference final. But they were I’m looking forward to.” San Jose can offer Karlsson an 29-26 lead, starting with a layup n’t on television,” she said. “This
outscored 7-0 in the next two games The tightest races are in the eight-year contract — one year from Smith and culminating in a 3- was a great game. It was great for
and it was the Capitals who ended up Metropolitan Division, where the longer than anyone else — after the pointer from Carrington. The the fans, but it’s too bad it wasn’t
winning it all. upstart Islanders are three points Feb. 25 trade deadline, but Karlsson Cardinal scored on seven of eight on TV.”
Nikita Kucherov, who leads the ahead of the defending champion said he is not worried about that just possessions to facilitate their run.
NHL with 78 points, says it’s sim- Capitals and the Central Division yet. Stanford pushed its lead to 42-35 The big picture
ple what needs to be different this where powerhouses Nashville and “I’m enjoying every moment,” he early in the third quarter behind 3-
Winnipeg are tied with 64 points said. “I’m not going to speak about Stanford: The Cardinal’s normal-
time around. pointers from Kiana Williams,
apiece. the future. I’ve enjoyed every sec- ly efficient offense struggled to
“Just make sure we score goals in Smith, and Alyssa Jerome.
The Jets had won six of seven ond. We’ve got a great team, and I’m find consistency. They endured bad
Game 6 and 7 and play well defen-
before dropping the final game excited for the last 30 games.” Bean took over and sparked shooting spells in the first and
sively,” he said.
Utah’s rally to tie it at 44 on back- third quarter that made it possible
to-back layups. Bean scored a pair for Utah to hang around and pull
Mihailovic put the U.S. ahead in Ramirez tapped in a cross from of fast-break layups to fuel an 11-0 away late.

SOCCER
Continued from page 11
the 40th minute from just inside
the penalty area off a cross from
Baird.
Lewis in the 89th.
Thirty Americans players have
spurt that put Utah up 58-50 with
9:38 left in the fourth quarter. The
Cardinal missed seven straight
shots and went four minutes with-
Utah: There’s no question that
the Utes are no mere upstart. Utah
put itself in contention for the
Pac-12 title by playing smart
made debuts in 13 matches since
Zimmerman scored his second goal the October 2017 loss at Trinidad out scoring, enabling the Utes to defense and efficient offense
Lima and Daniel Lovitz also made in five appearances in the 80th and Tobago ended the Americans’ surge back in front. against the Cardinal.
debuts. Jonathan Lewis and Ramirez minute, knocking in a header from streak of seven straight World Cup Stanford tied it up four times in
made debuts in the second half. The about 7 yards after Nick Lima inter- appearances, just six fewer debuts the fourth quarter, the final time at Up next
only veterans were Bradley and 27- cepted a pass after Panama started a than in 62 matches during the 68 on a pair of free throws from Stanford visits Cal on Thursday
year-old forward Gyasi Zardes. counter following a U.S. corner kick. entire 2014-17 World Cup cycle. Lexie Hull with 2:04 remaining. and hosts the Bears on Saturday.
017 0128 mon:0128 mon 135 1/27/19 7:29 PM Page 1

THE DAILY JOURNAL DATEBOOK Monday • Jan 28, 2019 17


‘Glass’ is No. 1 again, McConaughey’s ‘Serenity’ flops The cost of
By Jake Coyle Cornish. In his modern- $5.4 million in its widest
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS day London version of the releases yet (2,430 theaters

NEW YORK — Matthew McConaughey


notched one of the worst debuts of his career,
Oscar nominees saw only modest bumps and
legend, a working-class
boy pulls Excalibur from
a stone.
Though “The Kid Who
in its 11th week of release),
along with $5.7 million
overseas.
“Green Book” was the
a pet’s care
T
M. Night Shyamalan’s “Glass” easily Would Be King” drew only Oscar film to crack o garble the bard, “To pet or not to
remained No. 1 on a quiet weekend in movie good reviews (86 percent the top 10. “Bohemian pet?” Last week, we considered the
theaters. fresh on Rotten Rhapsody,” which has finances of pet care. Yes, econom-
The weekend’s two new wide releases — Bruce Willis Tomatoes) and was large- Matthew already surpassed $600 ics should be considered when contemplat-
McConaughey’s tropic noir “Serenity” and ly pleasing to audiences million internationally, ing living with an animal and, sure, not
McConaughey
the updated King Arthur tale “The Kid Who (who gave it a B-plus CinemaScore), added another $8.7 million everyone should be responsible for another
Would Be King” — both flopped with movie- Cornish’s film came in on the low side of overseas. It also took in $2.5 million domes- life. That said, there is some pretty dumb
goers who instead contin- already undersized expectations. tically. advice out there on the topic. For example,
ued to flock to “Glass” and Smaller still was “Serenity,” from the On Wednesday, an expose published by The referencing a dog’s exercise needs, from the
Kevin Hart’s “The recently launched distributor Aviron Pictures. Atlantic detailed numerous accusations of sex- apparently misnamed
Upside.” Though boasting a respected writer-director ual assault with minors against Bryan Singer, PetHelpful website:
Shyamalan’s sequel to (Steven Knight, the creator of “Peaky the director of the Freddie Mercury biopic. “So if you don’t live
“Unbreakable” and “Split” Blinders” and maker of 2013’s “Locke”) and a Singer, who was fired from the production dur- close to a park, forest,
sold $19 million in tick- starry cast including Anne Hathaway and ing shooting, has denied the claims. or other green area,
ets according to estimates Jason Clarke, “Serenity” made only a minor “The Favourite,” which tied “Roma” with a you should consider
Sunday, a decent 53 per- disturbance at the box office with $4.8 mil- co-leading 10 Oscar nominations, added 517 not getting a dog.”
cent drop from its opening lion in ticket sales. theaters to gross $2.6 million in 1,540 loca- This author clearly
Samuel L. weekend. In 10 days of The film, about a fishing boat captain on a tions. The critical Dick Cheney biopic “Vice” has not heard about
Jackson release, Shyamalan’s self- mysterious island, was lambasted by critics also expanded, drawing $1.8 million from the invention of auto-
financed thriller has made (21 percent fresh on Rotten Tomatoes) and 1,557 theaters. mobiles, or just how
$73.6 million domestically and $162.7 mil- audiences agreed, giving it a D-plus The weekend was quiet even by the low stan- well many dogs’ exer-
lion globally. CinemaScore. The film, made for about $25 dards of January. Tickets sales were down 30 cise needs can be met (along with that of
“The Upside,” starring Hart and Bryan million, is among McConaughey’s weakest percent from the same weekend last year, their people) by a good long walk on leash.
Cranston, also stayed lodged in second place performing wide-release debuts, behind only according to Comscore. After a 2018 of record As for forests, I’m not sure I’ve met the dog
with $12.2 million in its third weekend. 2017’s “Gold” and 1996’s “Larger Than Life.” box office, the slow start to 2019 is putting who can be safely let loose, nor the wildlife
The weekend’s biggest budget new entry, For Hathaway, it’s a new low. Hollywood in a hole. who would appreciate that dog, nor the for-
“The Kid Who Would Be King,” opened poor- Several Oscar contenders added theaters Overall ticket sales are down 12.7 percent est agency that would welcome them.
ly with $7.3 million against a $59 million over the weekend to capitalize on Tuesday’s from the same point last year. While it’s easy to talk about the cost of a
budget. The 20th Century Fox release, pro- nominations. Peter Farrelly’s “Green Book,” “Once Upon a Deadpool,” the PG-13 ver- pet, I wonder about the cost of not living
duced by Working Title, was written and nominated for five awards including best pic- sion of “Deadpool 2,” was the No. 1 film in with animals? It’s certainly harder to assign
directed by “Attack the Block” filmmaker Joe ture, received the biggest bump, taking in China where it opened with $21.4 million. a dollar amount to animal abstinence, but
cost isn’t always measured in shekels. 
a temporary solution Officials are also considering allowing My childhood was lonely. A nerdish kid

PARKING
Continued from page 1
too, as those who vio-
late parking permits
often will pay their tick-
home owners to inset their garage doors a
few feet, which would provide the addition-
al space needed for officials to park a car in
(long before nerds were popular), inner-city
(Brooklyn long before it became chic) and
chock full of people (four of us in a one-
bedroom, one-bath), I so longed for but was
et before eventually the driveway without blocking the side-
assuming the same walk. never allowed a pet. A dog, cat, hamster or
The program could be launched as soon as behavior. Grogan said the proposal comes in recog- parakeet would have meant so much. Cost
this fall, which Public Works Director Furthermore, permits nition of the fact that many homes were factor #1: life without a pet is lonely. Cost
Jimmy Tam will require prompt response by do not address the core built years ago and are not up to current factor #2: animals require our full engage-
city officials. ment, emotionally and (with dogs more
“It is somewhat of an aggressive schedule, Jovan Grogan of the parking issue, code or able to accommodate the size of
obviously than cats but even with cats)
which is that many most modern cars. The issue is compounded
but we will work hard to achieve it,” he said. neighborhood residents own more cars by so many residents using their garages as physically. Life without pets can be less
The program is not intended to be perfect than their property can accommodate, said storage facilities rather than a place to park healthy for body and spirit. Many studies
though, said Grogan, as it cannot assure Grogan, who suggested such programs are their car, he said. document that even just visiting with an
people will be able to park in front of their typically used to deter outsiders from leav- Ultimately, the variety of innovative pro- animal can reduce blood pressure and pro-
homes which will likely invite criticisms ing their car on the street. posals come as officials seek to get as many vide other measurable health benefits. We
from those who pay for a permit but still In an effort to address the source of the cars off the street as possible, said Grogan. are, I believe, most whole, most ourselves,
have to circle the block looking for a issue, officials are considering easing pri- “We just want you to have an appropriate when we share our lives with and, yes, take
space. vate property restrictions which could give sized parking pad,” he said. responsibility for the care of another. The
The initiative will also invite spillover way to development of additional spaces off More broadly, Police Chief Ed Barberini cost of life without a pet is, in my opinion,
into surrounding neighborhoods which do the street. said parking problems have been an issue in a sad life. And that’s just too high a price to
not have permit program, and those who One option is for home owners to estab- San Bruno for years and officials as well as pay. 
pay for permits will also be required to pur- lish another parking space adjacent to their law enforcement personnel are committed to
chase overnight passes for guests. driveway, either by increasing the existing improving the matter. Ken White is the president of the Peninsula
San Bruno police noted the enforcement pad for cars or paving another stretch near- “This is a significant, long-term problem Humane Society & SPCA.
which comes with programs is likely only by. that we are trying to address,” he said.

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018 0128 mon:0128 mon 135 1/27/19 7:30 PM Page 1

18 Monday • Jan 28, 2019 THE DAILY JOURNAL

***
Peng cheng Gao and Yu Li u, of San
Jose, gave birth to a baby girl at Sequoia
Hospital in Redwood City on Jan. 1, 2019.
***
Jame s an d Rac h e l S e rg i , of San
Mateo, gave birth to a baby boy at Sequoia
Hospital in Redwood City on Jan. 2, 2019.
***
Mo hi t Oza and Shruti Ag rawal , of
Gav i n and Ang el a Chen, of Redwood San Jose, gave birth to a baby girl at
City, gave birth to a baby girl at Sequoia Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City on Jan.
Hospital in Redwood City Dec. 22, 2018. 3, 2019.
*** ***
Al v i n Ll abres and Anne Ro s ari o , of Ty l er and Jo rdan Matthews , of Palo
San Jose, gave birth to a baby boy at Alto, gave birth to a baby boy at Sequoia
Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City Dec. 25, Hospital in Redwood City on Jan. 5, 2019.
2018. ***
*** Jo s e p h an d Cl ari c e My s z k a, of
Crai g and Kri s ti na Bri tt, of San Jose, Mountain View, gave birth to a baby boy at
gave birth to a baby girl at Sequoia Hospital Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City on Jan.
Volunteers from the UCSF Flu Crew administered free flu shots to attendees of the Senior in Redwood City Dec. 27, 2018. 6, 2019.
Showcase Health Fair Jan. 19 at the Millbrae Community Center. The UCSF Flu Crew is a *** ***
student run organization composed of medical, pharmacy and nursing students committed Ro hi t and Shal i ni Sri ni v as tav a, of Jo s e p h Mc Farl an e an d Al e n a
to providing free influenza vaccinations and educating the public about the flu. Hundreds of Belmont, gave birth to a baby boy at Chi ang , of Redwood City, gave birth to a
seniors attended the Health Fair, a free community event sponsored by the Daily Journal and Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City Dec. 27, baby girl at Sequoia Hospital in Redwood
the Millbrae Parks and Recreation Department. 2018. City on Jan. 7, 2019.
*** ***
Spare the Air alert issued Ke v i n an d Aman da O’ B ri e n , of
Local briefs Redwood City, gave birth to two baby girls
Ry an and Ji nx Bro wn, of Santa Clara,
gave birth to a baby boy at Sequoia Hospital
A Winter Spare the Air Alert is in place for at Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City Dec. in Redwood City on Jan. 9, 2019.
Monday, air quality officials announced Cow Palace hosts dog show 28, 2018. ***
Sunday. Thousands of dogs, from Dalmatians to *** Juan Carl o s and El i zabeth Rami rez,
dachshunds,strutted their stuff this weekend at Jo el Henders o n and Dana Tran, of of Redwood City, gave birth to a baby boy
The alert bans burning wood, manufactured Fremont, gave birth to a baby girl at
the 2019 Golden Gate Kennel Club Dog at Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City on
fire logs or any other solid fuel, indoors or Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City Dec. 28,
Show. Jan. 10, 2019.
outdoors, for 24 hours. 2018.
The event Saturday and Sunday at the Cow ***
Light winds and cold temperatures Palace showcased more than 175 breeds, with *** Lance and Chel s ea Tho mps o n, of
overnight are expected to trap wood smoke 1,500 entries per day, organizers said. Paul and Kate El s o n, of San Mateo, San Carlos, gave birth to a baby boy at
close to the ground, creating unhealthy air Show dog trials were held in the main arena gave birth to a baby boy at Sequoia Hospital Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City on Jan.
quality, according to the Bay Area Air Quality each day, and a benched show provided in Redwood City Dec. 31, 2018. 10, 2019.
Management District. opportunities to meet the dogs and learn *** ***
During the alert, Bay Area residents and about breeds. Chri s to pher and Emi l y Herrera, of Dav i d an d Re b e k ah B ars h o w, of
businesses are banned from using fireplaces, Dogs were also styled and walked the run- Redwood City, gave birth to a baby girl at Menlo Park, gave birth to a baby boy at
pellet stoves, outdoor fire pits or any other way in an all-breed fashion show with judg- Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City on Dec. Sequoia Hospital in Redwood City on Jan.
wood-burning devices. ing based on originality, style and more. 31, 2018. 11, 2019.
019 0128 mon:0128 mon 135 1/27/19 7:31 PM Page 1

THE DAILY JOURNAL LOCAL Monday • Jan 28, 2019 19


activities and meet with clients, she tract with the legal agencies began in

MONDAY, JAN. 28
Calendar
noon. Foster City Recreation Center,
DEFENSE
Continued from page 1
said.
Hawver noted an ability to discuss
legal options in the languages their
September, Supervisor Dave Pine was
hopeful officials’ support for legal serv-
ices would help meet demand for them.
Mahjong Time. 1:15 p.m. to 3 p.m. 650 Shell Blvd., Foster City. For more clients speak is yet another bonus of “There was considerable demand for
San Mateo Senior Center, 2645 information call 286-2585.
Alameda de las Pulgas, San Mateo. working with legal groups with differ- deportation defense services,” he said.
Learn how to play the famous his- Win the 7 Poker Variations. 11 a.m.
explained Stacey Hawver, executive ent specializations and familiarity with “I think the program is working well
torical Chinese game of Mahjong. to noon San Mateo Senior Center, director of Legal Aid Society of San a variety of cultures, noting the Asian and I’m pleased the way our Office of
Free. For more information call 522- 2645 Alameda de las Pulgas, San Mateo County.
7490. Mateo. Learn the rules of poker vari- Pacific Islander Legal Outreach has been Community Affairs, the Rapid
ation and the appropriate playing For nearly two years, the county had working with the Pilipino Bayanihan Response Network and this attorney
Maturing Gracefully. Noon to 1 strategy. Cost is $85 to $105. For been working with the Legal Aid Resource Center in Daly City to reach network are all working together and
p.m. Monthly talk for seniors. Light more information call 522-7490.
refreshments served courtesy of the Society and its partner agencies to offer some of the Asian communities in they very much have their ear to the
Friends of the Belmont Library. For Meditate And Feel Great. 12 p.m. workshops on how to apply for U.S. cit- northern San Mateo County. She added ground and can respond as needed.”
more information call 591-8286. to 1 p.m. San Mateo Senior Center,
2645 Alameda de las Pulgas, San
izenship or other legal statuses. But in the collaborative has further developed Having held several events such as
Kaiser K nit for a Cause. 1:30 p.m. Mateo. Come learn the benefits of June, officials boosted support for its collective skills through one-on-one “Know Your Rights” forums at churches,
Kaiser Cancer Treatment Center, 220 meditation. Cost is $85 to $105. For immigration attorneys who can take on
Oyster Point Blvd., South San more information call 522-7490. training offered by the San Francisco- schools and other community events in
Francisco. Open to all knitters. Hats, the deportation defense cases. Hawver based Immigration Legal Resource recent months, the collaborative’s
blankets, scarves and other warm, Survive the Next Financial Crisis. 1 said the network of agencies included in
knitted things will be made to p.m. to 2 p.m. San Mateo Senior Center. efforts to spread the word about immi-
donate to radiation and chemother- Center, 2645 Alameda de las Pulgas, the yearlong contract is on track to meet Hawver credited the San Mateo Rapid grant’s rights and resources have been
apy patients. Participation is free. San Mateo. Learn from a stockbro- goals of opening 150 removal defense Response Network, which has also extensive, noted Pine.
For more information call 829-3860. ker with an MBA in statistics from
the Wharton School of Business. cases by August. received a boost from the funds, with In response to concerns about the
Tech Help Desk. 3 p.m. to 4:45 p.m. Cost is $85 to $105. For more infor- “Everybody is staffed up, all the attor- offering a hotline residents can call if resources being used to represent indi-
San Mateo Senior Center, 2645 matio call 522-7490.
Alameda de las Pulgas, San Mateo. neys are on board,” she said. “It’s defi- they see enforcement action so volun- viduals with serious criminal histories,
Weekly drop in Help Desk where Supervised Play. 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. nitely enabled us to accept more defense teers and legal professionals can assist Pine said officials required those con-
tech volunteers will help you get San Mateo Senior Center, 2645 cases … we were really able to expand
past your issue. Cost is $10. For more Alameda de las Pulgas, San Mateo. those who might be taken into custody victed of violent and serious felonies to
information call 522-7490. Join us for a fun and relaxing after- our services.” or face deportation proceedings. Led by obtain consent of the county manager
V inyl Cutting. 4 p.m. to 5 p.m.
noon game. Cost is $135 to $165. For The individuals for whom cases were the nonprofit Faith in Action Bay Area before they can access the services. He
more information call 522-7490.
Belmont Library, 1110 Alameda de opened are residents of Daly City, East and operated largely by volunteers, the said he was somewhat surprised to see
las Pulgas, Belmont. Sign up to use Help your kids become million- Palo Alto, Half Moon Bay, Pescadero, network is now being coordinated by a youth under the age of 18 to make up
the Titan Vinyl Cutter at the Belmont aires. 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Mary Wong
Library for free. Each session will be Insurance, 1838 El Camino Real,
Redwood City, San Bruno and San paid contractor and, for the first time, in such a large portion of the group receiv-
30 minutes in duration. Each patron Suite 180, Burlingame. Bring a note- Mateo and their countries of origin November verified U.S. Immigrations ing the services, but understood some of
will be given a 6’x6’ piece of vinyl to book. Free. For more information
cut their design on. Oracal 631, 651, call (415) 793-7979.
included El Salvador, Guatemala, and Customs Enforcement, or ICE, the legal agencies leveraged existing
and Siser Heat Transfer Vinyl avail- Honduras and Mexico. Some 57 percent activity, said Hawver. ties with young-oriented organizations
able for patrons to choose from. Free Master Class Piano are 18 years old or younger, with some
Free and for all ages. To register or Per formance with Rohan DeSilva. When the network is alerted an indi- or agencies.
for more information call 591-8286. 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Kohl Mansion, 20 percent 5 years old or younger, vidual has been picked up by ICE, an Though Hawver acknowledged the
2750 Adeline Drive, Burlingame. according to a report Legal Aid Society attorney on call typically goes to a U.S. collaborative’s work in recent months
Learn to Play Bridge. 6:30 p.m. to Free for all ages. For more informa-
8:30 p.m. San Mateo Senior Center, tion call (415) 664-5174. prepared of activities Sept. 1 to Dec. 31. Citizenship and Immigration Services has boosted the resources available to
2645 Alameda de las Pulgas, San Hawver said the funds have allowed office in San Francisco to see if the indi- the county’s immigrant community, she
Mateo. Come learn the basics of Sweeney Todd. 8 p.m. to 10:30 p.m.
contract bridge. Cost is $135 to Hillbarn Theatre, 1285 E. Hillsdale
the University of San Francisco Law vidual can be interviewed and either said demand still outpaces the available
$165. For more information call Blvd., Foster City. Cost is $35-$52. For School’s Immigration and Deportation taken out of custody on bond or ensure resources. Legal groups are still not able
522-7490. more information call 349-6411. Defense Clinic to assign half of an they are not moved far from the area, to serve everyone in need of them. For
TUESDAY, JAN. 29 FRIDAY, FEB. 1 attorney’s time to the coast and Asian explained Hawver. If the person is a San those they aren’t able to represent,
IPhone and iPad Basics. 10 a.m. to Spaghetti Dinner and B ingo. 6 Pacific Islander Legal Outreach to reach
noon. San Mateo Senior Center, p.m. to 9 p.m. Foster City Recreation Mateo County resident, the case is for- Hawver said they may refer residents to
2645 Alameda de las Pulgas, San Center, 650 Shell Blvd., Foster City. residents in the northern part of San warded to the collaborative of legal clinics offered by Community Legal
Mateo. Manage devices, stay con- Tickets cost $25. For more informa- Mateo County with deportation defense groups to determine how that person is Services in East Palo Alto or to pro
nected, browse the web and take tion call 627-8038.
photos. $20 for four classes. services. In staffing attorneys trained to best represented in the long term, she bono attorneys, but acknowledged the
Registration is required. For more Peninsula Humane Society PEP handle deportation defense cases in said. difficulty of finding legal representa-
information call 522-7490. Talk: The Beauty of B ees. 7 p.m. to
8 p.m. Peninsula Humane Society
parts of the county farther away from With some 4,000 county residents tion for many.
Memoir Classes. 1 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. and SPCA, 1450 Rollins Road, urban centers, the network of legal facing deportation proceedings and a “That’s a real challenge for a lot of
Little House, 800 Middle Ave., Menlo Burlingame. Register for this event agencies in the county has become
Park. Cost $15. For more information to learn more about supporting fraction of the group receiving legal these folks,” she said. “The resources
call 326-0723. local bee species, and different ways equipped to respond to enforcement representation when the county’s con- aren’t sufficient to represent everyone.”
to protect increasingly fragile bee
Vir tual Reality: Oculus R ift and populations. To register or for more
Medium. 4 p.m. South San information call 340-7022. San Mateo resident Esther Conrad Councilman Rick Bonilla was
Francisco Library, 840 W. Orange
Ave., South San Francisco. Create
unique works of art in virtual reality
with Medium and the Oculus Rift.
Free. For more information call 829-
San Mateo
Per forming
High
Ar ts
Schoool
Presents:
‘Cinderella.’ 7:30 p.m. to 10:30 p.m.
San Mateo Performing Arts Center,
HELP
Continued from page 1
was among several residents who urged
officials to strengthen the rules to pre-
vent living conditions like those resi-
among the councilmembers who
expressed concern that a 10-mile radius
for temporary relocations may allow
3860. 600 N. Delaware St., San Mateo. $20. dents of an apartment building at 314 E. landlords to place tenants too far away
Tickets can be purchased online or
Adult Craft: Clay Medallions. 6 at the door. For more information Poplar Ave. endured as they lived in from the units they were leasing. In
p.m. Millbrae Library, 1 Library Ave., call 558-2375. Noting the rules aimed to support units overrun with bugs and other voicing support for considering a
Millbrae. Ages 16 and up. Space is some of the city’s most vulnerable res- issues, an issue she said came to light requirement that landlords find a unit
limited. Sign up at Astronomy Talk. 8 p.m. to 9 p.m.
https://bit.ly/2R2bx4t. For more College of San Mateo, 1700 W. idents, Deputy Mayor Maureen Freschet in the summer of 2017. Conrad wasn’t within five miles of their original unit
information call 697-7607. Hillsdale Ave., San Mateo. This talk is voiced support for ensuring the policy convinced a 10-mile radius was adequate or in a neighboring city, Bonilla noted
led by Dr. Aaron Roodman. Free for not only protect tenants facing reloca-
Tax Law Changes. 6:30 p.m. San all ages. For more information call in protecting tenants against the effects 10 miles may be a long distance for
Mateo Public Library, Oak Room, 55 862-9602. tion but also deter landlords from allow- of such abuses, and noted that temporar- those who may not have cars. Though
W. Third Ave., San Mateo. A presenta- ing their units to become unsafe.
tion by the Financial Planning Sweeney Todd. 8 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. ily housing a tenant in a hotel or motel Bonilla voiced support for enacting
Association of Silicon Valley. No reg- Hillbarn Theatre, 1285 E. Hillsdale Freschet echoed concerns raised by sev- until a safe unit can be made available many of the proposed rules, he
istration required. For more informa- Blvd., Foster City. Cost is $35-$52. For eral residents at the meeting about relo-
tion call 522-7818. more information call 349-6411. can create other costs for a family. acknowledged they should be commu-
cating tenants even within the pro- “Clearly, this is an ongoing problem nicated clearly with landlords when
Flower Arrangement Work shop. SATURDAY, FEB. 2 posed 10-mile radius, noting the and action is needed to deter such abus- they are adopted.
6:30 p.m. Belmont Library, 1110 Shred Fest. 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Alameda de las Pulgas, Belmont. Belmont Library, 1110 Alameda de
change could take them far away from es and to protect the most vulnerable,” “I think that when or if we do initiate
Workshop in designing floral cen- las Pulgas, Belmont. Shred all types schools and jobs. she said, emphasizing the policies are this policy … that property owners
terpiece. To register or for more of documents for free. For more
information call 591-8286. information call 591-8286.
“This is … a public health and safety aimed at penalizing slumlords, not should be made aware so that they
issue,” she said. “I think we need to cre- landlords. “This is not the kind of know what they need to avoid,” he
WEDNESDAY, JAN. 30 Small Press Expo at PLCAF. 10 a.m. ate penalties that really are a deterrent.”
San Mateo Professional Alliance. to 4 p.m. Foster City Library, 1000 E. behavior we want in our community.” said.
12 p.m. to 1 p.m. Central Park Bistro. Hillsdale Blvd., Foster City. Presented
181 E. Fourth Ave., San Mateo. For by the Peninsula Libraries Comic
more information call 430-6500. Arts Fest. Special guest author Kazu 8=BCAD2C8>=B)5 5X]SPPb\
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relaxed, casual atmosphere for a
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020 0128 mon:0128 mon 135 1/25/19 11:52 AM Page 1

20 Monday • Jan 28, 2019 LOCAL THE DAILY JOURNAL

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021-026 128 mon:Class Master Odd 1/25/19 4:06 PM Page 1

THE DAILY JOURNAL Monday • Jan 28, 2019 21

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: ads@smdailyjournal.com

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021-026 128 mon:Class Master Odd 1/25/19 4:07 PM Page 2

22 Monday • Jan 28, 2019 THE DAILY JOURNAL

104 Training 110 employment 110 employment Tundra Tundra Tundra


TeRms & condiTions cusTomeR seRvice REP Needed.
The San Mateo Daily Journal Classi- Mulberrys Garment Care, Belmont/San
fieds will not be responsible for more Carlos. Weeknights and weekends. neWspApeR inTeRns
than one incorrect insertion, and its lia- (650)594-9921 or (650)834-1472 JouRnAlism
bility shall be limited to the price of one The Daily Journal is looking for in-
insertion. No allowance will be made for terns to do entry level reporting, re-
errors not materially affecting the value search, updates of our ongoing fea-
of the ad. All error claims must be sub- tures and interviews. Photo interns al-
mitted within 30 days. For full advertis- so welcome.
ing conditions, please ask for a Rate
Card. We expect a commitment of four to
eight hours a week for at least four
months. The internship is unpaid, but
106 Tutoring intelligent, aggressive and talented in-
terns have progressed in time into
speAk english beTTeR paid correspondents and full-time re-
english TuToRing porters.
is AvAilAble noW! College students or recent graduates
pRofessionAl educAToR And are encouraged to apply. Newspaper
lAnguAge coAch WiTh experience is preferred but not neces-
yeARs of success - sarily required. over the hedge over the hedge over the hedge
debRA ZogRAfos
open dooRs To beTTeR Please send a cover letter describing
oppoRTuniTies! your interest in newspapers, a resume
cAll foR An AppT: (650) 619-3125 and three recent clips. Before you ap-
ply, you should familiarize yourself
with our publication. Our Web site:
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110 employment Send your information via e-mail to
news@smdailyjournal.com or by reg-
business ular mail to 1900 Alameda de las Pul-
gas #112, San Mateo CA 94403
AUTOTECH Management, LLC is seek-
ing a Director of Strategic Services in
Menlo Park, CA, to build & maintain rela-
tionships with C-suite, prdct, M&A, &
business dvlpmnt executives of fund’s
corporate investors. Res to HR, #AT01,
AutoTech Management, LLC, 525 Mid-
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dlefield Road, Suite 130, Menlo Park, CA full time, benefits, will train.
94025. Clean DMV. Lifting 50 pounds.
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203 public notices 296 Appliances 298 collectibles
sAles/mARkeTing A hearing on the petition will be held in AiR condiTioneR 10000 BTU w/re- collecTAble cAbbAge Patch Kids
cARegiveRs inTeRnships
The San Mateo Daily Journal is looking
this court as follows: FEB. 04, 2019 at
9:00 a.m., Dept. 28, Superior Court of
mote. Slider model fits all windows. LG
brand $199 runs like new. (650)235-
Luncheon Set. Royal Worchester. New
Box. Great Christmas Present. $100
for ambitious interns who are eager to California, County of San Mateo, 400 0898 (650) 572-8895
jump into the business arena with both County Center, Redwood City, CA
2 years experience feet and hands. Learn the ins and outs 94063. fRee WAsheR and 220v dryer, both gAmes of the 23rd Olympiad maga-
of the newspaper and media industries. If you object to the granting of the peti-
required. This position will provide valuable tion, you should appear at the hearing
working. Belmont (415) 902-4484. You
move, stairs.
zine. 1984. $10.00. Leave msg (650)588-
0842
experience for your bright future. and state your objections or file written
Email resume objections with the court before the hear- glAss-pAnel lAmpshAde. Similar lennox Red Rose, Unused, hand
info@smdailyjournal.com ing. Your appearance may be in person
Immediate placement or by your attorney.
to TIFFENEY about16" diameter. multi-
ple tan/white mainly.Hang or lampshade.
painted, porcelain, authenticity papers,
$12.00. (650) 578 9208.
If you are a creditor or a contingent cred-
on all assignments. sTudenT union, inc. itor of the decedent, you must file your
$75 (650)727-7266
milleR liTe Neon sign , work good
claim with the court and mail a copy to hoTpoinT heAvy Duty Dryer excellent $59 call (650)218-6528
sJsu (non-sTATe) the personal representative appointed by working condition Burlingame $50 Call
the court within the later of either (1) four old, AnTique, Bottle Collection: 20
call sAles - Telemarketing and Inside Sales
Representative needed to sell newspa-
PAYROLL/PERSONNEL ASSISTANT
PART-TIME 30 HRS/M-F/9AM-3PM
PAYROLL & HR EXP.
months from the date of first issuance of
letters to a general personal representa-
Dan (408)656-0958
mAyTAg WAsheR excellent working
bottles in total. $40 for all. (650)762-6048
one collecTion of antique Cuban
(650)777-9000 per print and web advertising and event
marketing solutions. To apply, please call
650-344-5200 and send resume to
DESIRED AA PREF
2-3 YRS ADMIN EXP. PREF.
tive, as defined in section 58(b) of the
California Probate Code, or (2) 60 days
from the date of mailing or personal de-
condition Burlingame $50 Call Dan
(408)656-0958 Cigar Bands. $95. (415) 867-6444. No
Texting.
info@smdailyjournal.com livery to you of a notice under sectioin neW, singeR Sewing Machine Univer-
Apply 9052 of the California Probate Code.Oth- sal Carry Case Model 620, Free Arm Ma- smAll Rug beater. $15.00 (650)207-
Applitrack.com/sjsu/onlineapp/ er California statutes and legal authority chine Compatible, $35, (650)483-1222 4162
may affect your rights as a creditor. You
may want to consult with an attorney sTAR WARs R2-D2, original 1998 un-
TiffAny sTyle Lamp shade. Older-

goT Jobs?
knowledgable in California law. opened action figure. $15 in San Carlos.
multiple panels. 17” diameter. $75. (650) Steve 650-518-6614
You may examine the file kept by the 727-7266.
203 public notices court. If you are a person interested in
the estate, you may file with the court a Topps bAsebAll complete set 1987
vAcuum cleAneR (reconditioned) thru 1992, 1998,1999 $99 Rick (415)999-
noTice of peTiTion To Request for Special Notice (form DE- $20 Call Ed (415)298-0645
AdminisTeR esTATe of 154) of the filing of an inventory and ap- 4474
Gordon Henry Bowman-Jones praisal of estate assets or of any petition
Case Number: 19PRO00015 297 bicycles vinTAge sTemWARe: 3 styles, 23
The best career seekers or account as provided in Probate Code
section 1250. A Request for Special No-
AdulT bikes 1 regular and 2 with bal-
pcs. $60, (650)207-4162
To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, con-
read the daily Journal. tingent creditors, and persons who may
tice form is available from the court clerk.
Attorney for Petitioner: loon tires $30 Each (650) 347-2356 299 computers
otherwise be interested in the will or es- Nadine R. Aarsheim
tate, or both, of Gordon Henry Bowman- Aarsheim Law, P.C. child’s schWinn bicycle, blue in 19" coloR Monitor with stand VG con-
We will help you recruit qualified, talented Jones. A Petition for Probate has been 100 Tamal Plaza, Ste. 275 good condition. $20. (650) 355-5189. dition power cord/owners manual includ-
filed by Maria Christina Bowman-Jones
individuals to join your company or organization. Schleicher in the Superior Court of Cali-
CORTE MADERA, CA 94925
(415)322-3023
mountain bike for sale $35. Runs good. ed $60.00 OBO 1-415-279-4857
fornia, County of San Mateo. The Peti- Burlingame. Phone 650-342-5220.
FILED: 1/4/2019 RecoRdAble cd-R 74, Sealed, Unop-
tion for Probate requests that Maria
The daily Journal’s readership covers a wide Christina Bowman-Jones Schleicher be
(Published in the San Mateo Daily Jour-
nal on 1/19/19, 1/26/19, 1/28/19 )
mounTAin bike new 21 gears $100. ened, original packaging, Samsung, 12X,
(650)722-3634 (650) 578 9208
range of qualifications for all types of positions. appointed as personal representative to
administer the estate of the decedent. mounTAin bike. Top brand. Runs
The petition requests authority to admin- good. $39. (660)342-5220 300 Toys
for the best value and the best results, ister the estate under the Independent
Administration of Estates Act. (This au- AmeRicAn flyeR locomotive runs
recruit from the daily Journal... thority will allow the personal representa- 298 collectibles good #21085 $75.00 (650) 867-7433
tive to take many actions without obtain-
ing court approval. Before taking certain
295 Art 1984 Time magazine. Special 1994
contact us for a free consultation Jump And Play Keyboard brand new, in
very important actions, however, the per- Olympics report. $10.00. Leave msg original box. $25.00. (650)454-7580.
oil pAinTing-cAnvAss, Victorian (650)588-0842
sonal representative will be required to Scene, With Frame 56”x44” $350.00
give notice to interested persons unless OBO (650)515-6091 sTAR WARs Celebration 3 Darth Vader
call (650) 344-5200 or they have waived notice or consented to
the proposed action.) The independent
49’eR 1990-1991 calendar. Eddie
deBartolo on cover. Mint condition.
$20 new w/case Dan (650)303-3568

email: ads@smdailyjournal.com administration authority will be granted 296 Appliances $10.00. Leave msg (650)588 0842 302 Antiques
unless an interested person files an ob-
jection to the petition and shows good mfg h20lAbs Model 300 exc cond depRession glAss Dining Plate. 8 Roseville Tulip Pitcher, Ca: 1900.
cause why the court should not grant au- counter top $25 Burl (650)248-3839. 3/4", crows foot pattern, clear ruby red. $45. (650)574-2490.
thority. $12 (650)762-6048

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Leading local news coverage on the Peninsula


021-026 128 mon:Class Master Odd 1/25/19 4:07 PM Page 3

THE DAILY JOURNAL Monday • Jan 28, 2019 23


302 Antiques 304 Furniture 306 Housewares 310 misc. For Sale 316 Clothes 345 medical equipment
ANtIqUe HemINGRAy Glass Tele- eNteRtAINmeNt CAbINet, 42"W x PReSSURe COOkeR-bRANd New RAy-bAN tOP Bar Sunglasses RAIN bOOtS black & white polka dot, RAdIAtION PROteCtION 1/2-apron
graph Pole Insulator. Aqua colored. Pris- 31"H. Two drawers at bottom, dark finish. $50 (650)222-2025 RB31832 BlackFrameSemi rimless semi- size 8, Sloggers brand. $15.00 call Pb free; .5mm Pb equivalent, xl, adjusta-
tine condition. 4.5"X3.25" $15 (650)762- Good condition $75 (650)722-6318 wrap Lens:GreyUV UltraSleek Light- (650)872-2371 ble buckle, gently used; $60; 607-227-
6048 weight New w/case $65.00 (650)591- 7742.
ROyAl- OPeNHAGeN xmAS Wall 6596 SHOeS SIze 5 1/2 and 6 for $50 or less
beeR SteINS-ORIGINAl from Germa- etHAN AlleN sofa and love seat. Blue Plates 7 7/8" dia. 1976, l980,1984 $10 (650)508-8662 WAlkeR/ROlAtOR. NeW. large, bas-
ny, three different $99 ea. Call for info velveteen. Solid construction. Some col- ea. (650)344-4756 SAmSONIte 26" tan hard-sided suit ket, quickly convert to wheelchair. Large
(650)592-7483 or fading in spots. Great sofa for reuphol- case, lt. wt., wheels, used once/like new. tUxedO SIze 40, black, including white size to 400LBS.8" wheels $45.00
stering. Free. (650)593-7001. teA Set-SIlveR Platted, Coffee Pot, $45. (650)328-6709 shirt, excellent cond. $50 (650)355-5189 (650)727-7266
Tea Pot, Water Pot, Cream And Sugar
mAHOGANy ANtIqUe Secretary desk, GeNtly USed coffee table; cherry fin- $175 (650)222-2025 SIlk SARee 6 yards new nice color.for WeddING dReSS-deSIGNeR, Size 12,
72” x 40” , 3 drawers, Display case, bev- ish/traditional $40 (650)722-6318 $35 only. Call(650)515-2605 for more in- Needs Dry Cleaning, Org. $4000.00 Sell
for $500 Call (650)867-1728
Garage Sales
elled glass, $150. (650)766-3024. formation.
GlIdeR rocker and ottoman, oak, excel-
lent condition. $100 (650)345-5644. 307 jewelry & Clothing SINk, 33”x22” Top mount with faucet, WORk bOOtS. Iron Age, size 10-1/2,
303 electronics $15.00 (650)544-5306 brown, with steel metatarsal protection.
GARAGe SAleS
IkeA dReSSeR, black, 3 shelf. 23" x ANNe kleIN silver-tone watch with In box, $45, OBO. (650)594-1494
CANNON COPIeR. $20. 650-342-5220. 15"deep x 50" high. $65. (650)598-9804. Swarovski crystals & mother-of-pearl di-
al. $70.00 call(650)872-2371
SlR leNS Pentax 28-90mm f3.5-5.6
Pentax K Mount $25 (650)436-7171 318 Sports equipment
eStAte SAleS
FRee televISION - Mitsubishi, IkeA tAble, black 58" x 21" x 14" high.
$ 30. (650)598-9804. SlR leNS Sigma 28-105mm f3.8-5.6 make money, make room!
26"W,22"H,18"D Works Great, Not
Flatscreen, Text (650) 333-8323 Local
308 tools Sigma SA Mount $25 (650)436-7171 bIG beRtHA, Golfsmith Titanium Driver
NIAGARA vIbRAtING Adjustable bed ,Mid Driver, Stinger 1 3 5 - $99 Rick
Delivery available.
good condition Burlingame $90 Call Dan 2 CRAFtSmAN 16in Reel Mowers new Stemmed CRyStAl. 3 styles. 13 (415)999-4474 List your upcoming
(408)656-0958 in box $40 each(650)766-4858
ONkyO Av Receiver HT-R570 .Digital pieces. Pattern: "Catherine".
$45. San Bruno.(650)794-0839 bRANd NeW Golf bag with Stand.
garage sale,
Surround, HDMI, Dolby, Sirius Ready,
Cinema Filter.$95/ Offer (650)591-2393 OFFICe tyPe 34"X 60" heavy solid
wood with formica wood grain top $25
ANtIqUe IRON Hand Drills. 3 available
at $30 each. (650)339-3672 Ron
Makes a great gift. $65. 415-867-6444. moving sale,
tIReS-Set OF four P225 45 R18 $80 No Texting.
PHIllIPS-50” COlOR t.v., Heavy, $99 (650) 787-9753 OBO (650)359-2238. estate sale,
bRIGGS & Stratton Lawn Mower with
(650)591-8062
ReClINING CHAIR, wine colored $30, Mulch rear bag-like new- $95.00. tUNtURI ROWING Machine, Good
bRANd NeW golf clubs: 1, 3 Woods;
Irons: 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 pw. Makes a great
yard sale,
304 Furniture
(650)-583-4985 (650)771-6324. Condition, $75, (650)483-1222 gift $95. 415-867-6444. No Texting. rummage sale,
RetRO HUtCH Needs refinishing other-
wise good condition. Top detaches from
CRAFtSmAN 9" Radial Arm Saw with 6"
dado set. No stand. $55 (650)341-6402
UNIdeN HARley Davidson Gas Tank
phone. $100 or best offer. (650)863-8485
eAStON AlUmINUm bat.33 inches, 30 clearance sale, or
ANtIqUe dINING table for six people
with chairs $99. (650)580-6324 bottom $25. (650)712-9962
oz, 2 3/4 barrel. $30. (650)596-0513 whatever sale you
lG CRAFtSmeN shop vac 6.5hp $60 WAlkeR - Good Condition - Like New -
ANtIqUe mOHAGANy Bookcase. Four SOFA-beIGe FAbRIC, Orig. $900, (510)943-9221 $35 (650)341-5347
eveRlASt 80# MMA Heavy Bag and
Stand. Like New. $99 (650)654-9966
have...
feet tall. $75. (415) 282-0966. Rarely used, 7ft long, $350
SHOPSmItH mARk V 50th Anniversary
(650)234-8218
most attachments. $1,500/OBO. 311 musical Instruments GUtHy-ReNkeR POWeR Rider,Ever-
Reach over 83,450 readers
beAUtIFUl dReSSeR, dark wood fin- last 2 1/2 ankle weights, kegel thigh ex-
ish and like new $100 (650)722-6318 SOlId WOOd Dining table with exten- (650)504-0585 erciser $20 (510)770-1976 from South San Francisco
1929 ANtIqUe Alto Selmer, Cigar Cut-
sion great piece great condition black ter, Newly Refurbished $6,000 OBO Call to Palo Alto.
beAUtIFUl HeAdbOARd for a queen $80 (650)364-5263 vINtAGe CRAFtSmAN Jig Saw. Circa kNee RIdeR $ 50.00 joe (650)573-5269
1947. $60. (650)245-7517 (650)742-6776. in your local newspaper.
sized bed. Medium brown finish. Ask for
photo $40 (650)722-6318 SOlId WOOd Entertainment Center- leAtHeR GOlF bag with 23 clubs $90.
310 misc. For Sale CHROmAtIC HARmONICA: Horner
bedSteAd SINGle, poster style, box
TurnTable, Am-Fm, Eight Track, Built In
Speakers, Sony 26’ Smart T.V.(68.75 in. The 64 Chomonica, German Made $180,
(650) 592-2648. Call (650)344-5200
spring, mattress available. $40.00. X 25.5inch X28inch) $500 o.b.o (650)278-5776. meN'S ROSSIGNOl Skis. $95.00,
15 lP ALBUMS including "Sinatra Trilo-
(650)593-7408 (925)482-5742 gy", Ronstadt, Minelli, Streisand, and good condition, (650)341-0282.
more. $40. San Bruno. (650)794-0839 ePIPHONe leS Paul Custom Prophecy ONe dOzeN Official League Diamond
beIGe SOFA $99. Excellent Condition tAble 24"x48" folding legs each end.
(650) 315-2319 Melamine top, 500# capacity. Cost Electric Guitar. Mint. $625.00. Baseballs. Brand New. $45. Call Roger
500-600 bIG Band-era 78's--most mint, (650)421-5469. (650)771-6324. 379 Open Houses
$130. Sell $50. 650-591-4141 no sleeves--$50 for all-(650)574-5459
bROWN lIvING room chair with cush-
ion. Dimensions 38"W, 32"H, 37"D. tIkI bAR - Original from the 60’s,Like eveRett UPRIGHt antique piano. tOtAl Gym XLS, excellent condition.
beSSy SmAll Evening Hand Bag With Lovely sound. $99. 650-365-5718. Paid $2,500. Yours for $900. Call
$80.00. Transport yourself. Call Elvis', made of wood, 68”X22X39, $3500 Beige Cord $75.00 (650)678-5371
(650)872-2371 (650)245-4234.
bIFOld SHUtteRS 2x28”x79 $10.00
HUGe lUdWIG Drum Set Silver Sparkle
(650)588-0828
OPeN HOUSe
& Chrome, Zelgian, Pasite & Sabian
bUNk bedS for sale. Cherry Wood, 2
years old. Includes Mattresses. $600 or tWIN bed frame-black wrought iron
(650)544-5306 Cymbals, 24 in. Timpany $3,500
tReAdmIll-HORIzON lIke New, limit-
ed use, Paid $750-Asking $450 OBO lIStINGS
B/O (650)685-2494 (916)975-4969 (650)508-8662
from Crate & Barrel $65 (650)631-1341 blUe OySteR cult lp signed by donald
r. Eric b. And Wilcox. $40. Cash PIANO-ANdReW kOHleR, Mahogany,
List your Open House
CHINA CAbINet Wallet, $20. Call tWIN bed, mattress, box spring, frame vINtAGe NASH Cruisers Mens/ Wom-
(408)661-6019 Spinet piano, Very Good Condition, $400 ens Roller Skates Blue indoor/outdoor sz in the Daily Journal.
(650)589-1407 $ 50. (650)598-9804.
(415)334-1980 6-8. $60 B/O. (650)574-4439
CANdelAbRA-SIlveR PlAted tar- Reach over 83,450
COmmOde, GOOd condition. $20 obo. tWIN bed- Free you pick up. Call nish resistant,5 light, 11”tall, 11”wide,
Please call (650)745-6309 (650)344-2109 Made in England, $45 (650)222-2025 PlAyeR PIANO 1916 W/Bench 25 mu-
WORkOUt beNCH, weights, bars, for potential home buyers &
flat/incline bench and legs. $100.
COmPUteR deSk (glass) & chair. Like USed bedROOm Furniture, FREE. Call sic rolls $950 Don (415)309-3892 (650)861-2411 renters a day,
new $75 OBO (650)704-4709 or (650)573-7381. CASH ReGISteR Parts; Much Skin Not www.elo.deals from South San Francisco
gtecher@comcast.net Guts $500 (415)269-4784 yAmAHA ROOF RACK, 58 inches $75.
WAll UNIt/ROOm Divider. Simple SPINet PIANO + Bench, $50. Call
to Palo Alto.
(650)458-3255
COmPUteR SWIvel CHAIR. Padded lines. Breaks down for transportation. COmeAlONG 3/4 ton chain $25 (650) (650)589-1407 in your local newspaper.
$25.(650)712-9962 leave message 873-6304
Leather. $80. (650) 455-3409 340 Camera & Photo equip.
COSCO PlAy Pen with travel bag. Used 312 Pets & Animals Call (650)344-5200
COzy ReClINeR in good condition. WAlNUt CHeSt, small (4 drawer with
upper bookcase $50. (650)726-6429 once $35 (650)591-2981 NIkON 18-140 zoom lenses (3), excel-
Purchased one year ago. $90.00
(650)722-6318 ONe keNNel Cab ll one Pet Taxi ani- lent condition. $200 each. (650)592-9044
WHIte WICkeR Armoire, asking $100, CUt GlASS serving bowl 8" diameter mal carriers 26x16. Excellent cond. $60..
great condition, text for picture (650)571- $25. Call 650-921-4016 (650)593-2066 OmeGA b600 Condenser Enlarger, In-
deSk, Gd. cond. $99.99 or b.o.
(650)458-3578 0947 delUxe FOldeR Walker - 5" wheels - struction Manual & 50mm El-Omegar En- 440 Apartments
Never Used - $40 (650)341-5347 PARROt CAGe, Steel, Large - approx larging Lens $95 (415)260-6940
WOOd - wall Unit - 30" long x 6' tall x 4 ft by 4 ft, Excellent condition $300 best belmONt: lARGe -1br, 2br, 3br Apts.;
dINING ROOm Table-Antique,Oak, 17.5" deep. $90. (650)631-9311 dRIve 3-WHeel buggy $45. Call offer. (650)245-4084 vIvItAR v 2000 W/35-70 zoom and Prime Location, Quiet Buildings, Clean &
5chairs, w/ extension $350 (650)290- (650)589-1407 original manual. Like new. $99 SSF Updated units. No Smoking, No Pets, No
306 Housewares (650)583-6636 Housing Vouchers $2100.00 and up
3188
FRee mAGAzINeS. Library discards 316 Clothes (650593-8254.
year old ones. Wide variety. Good for
bReAd mAkeR-zOjIRUSHI $85 Call bROWN SUed boots, fur-lined, size 8, 345 medical equipment
dINING tAble (36"x54") and 4 match- (650)222-2025 crafts, light reading. (650)952-9074
new. $15.00. Call(650)872-2371 470 Rooms
ing chairs, sturdy oak, cost $600, sell for
$250 .(650)-654-1930. HAt, t-SHIRt, sweatshirt and comput- AdjUStAble bAtH shower transfer
COmPlete Set OF CHINA - Windsor erbag $80.00 for all (650)592-2648 FANCy HIGH heel shoes, never worn bench with sidebar $15 (510)770-1976
Garden, Noritake. Four place-settings, HIP HOUSING
size 8 1/2 $20.00 (650)592-2648 Non-Profit Home Sharing Program
dINING tAble - (72”x42”)WITH 2 FT 20-pieces in original box, never used.
Extension, six upholstered chairs, excel- lIONel CHRIStmAS Holiday expan- dRIve 3-IN-1 commode with seat,buck- San Mateo County
$250 per box (3 boxes available). sion Set. New OB $99 (650)368-7537 (650)348-6660
lent condition, $450 (650)692-8012. (650)342-5630 FAUx FUR Coat Woman's brown multi et,cover,splash sheild,armrests $10
lIONel WeSteRN Union Pass car and color in excellent condition 3/4 (510)770-1976
dINING tAble -and six chairs,Antique CRyStAl WINe glasses new (12ea) dining car. New OB $99 (650)368-7537 length $50 (650)692-8012
Duncan Phyfe,78”x42”, with leaf, Perfect $20.00 Call 650-592-2648
Cond. $3600.00 (650)888-2662 dRIve delUxe two button walker $10
mOtley CRUe lp signed by neil lee kAyANO meN’S Running shoes size 11
HUmmel WAll Plate 71/2"dia. 1981 sixx and mars $75 cash (408)661-6019 (510)770-1976
good condition $20 (650)520-7045
dReSSeR 4-dRAWeR in Belmont for Boy w/umbrella $15. (650)344-4756
$75. Good condition; good for children. NeGRINI FeNCING Epee mask size M kNee-HIGH blACk women's boots, HOmedICS dUAl Shiatsu Massage
Call (650)678-8585 mIkASA Set. White. Modern (square) & France Lames 5 epee blade $95 size 7, wide calf & wide width, new. Cushion. 3 Zone. $45.00. (650)207-4162
Setting for 4 $30 (415)734-1152. (415)260-6940 $40.00. Call (650)872-2371
dReSSeR-ANtIqUe vANIty Combo, 3 INveRSION tHeRAPy table back
beveled mirrors, Eight Drawers, $550 NeW "bellA" buffet tripple slow cooker Old b&l Microscope in good condition; lAdIeS SeqUIN dress, blue, size XL, stretcher w/ heat $99.00 joe (650)573-
(650)290-3188 and food warmer $35.00 call (650)592- 35x 100x 430x $50. (650) 588-0842. pure silk lining, $40.00, (650) 578-9208
2648
5269
NeW delUxe Twin Folding Bed, Lin- Old Style Water dispenser-iron stand- meN'S StetSON hat, size large, new,
ens, cover, Cost $618. Sale $250. Must SINk dOUble cast iron. Good condi- clay pot-5gal. glass bottle $75. (650)873- rim, solid black, large, great gift. $40 Omt tAble, excellent condition, fold-
Sell! (650) 875-8159. tion. $99.00. (650)593-7408 6304 (650) 578-9208 ing, $25, (650) 552-9556.
021-026 128 mon:Class Master Odd 1/25/19 4:08 PM Page 4

24 Monday • Jan 28, 2019 THE DAILY JOURNAL

485 residential Care 620 Automobiles 625 Classic Cars 635 Vans 670 Auto Service 680 Autos Wanted
buiCk ‘07 LUCERNE, 103K miles, CAdillAC ‘85 Classic El Dorado toyotA ‘08 SIENNA LE, excellent con- Wanted 62-75 Chevrolets
VorAlto VillAGe
At Menlo PArk
$4,500. (650)302-5523 44,632 original miles. Needs body work
and headliner $2,475 OBO (650)218-
dition, camera, bluetooth, trailer, 94K
miles. $9,000. text (925)786-5545 See AA SMoG Novas, running or not
Parts collection etc.
CheVrolet ‘86 ASTROVAN, 84K 4681. craigslist for pics. Complete Repair & Service So clean out that garage
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Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle


Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis
ACROSS 3 British alphabet 40 Baseball rain 55 Buff suffix
1 Take it easy ender delay cover 56 Footballer’s
5 Cabo’s peninsula 4 Bard’s “before” 43 Like Capone’s shoulder
9 Sheepish smile 5 Title cop played face protection
13 Cabinet dept. by Titus Welliver 46 Up to, informally 57 Hydroxyl
with an oil derrick 6 Came to 48 Partner of compound
on its seal 7 First mo. hearty 58 Axe relative
14 Immortal 8 Rainbow shape 50 Vote out of 62 Happy tail
racehorse Man __ 9 Slots cut with a office movement
15 What kneaded chisel 51 Kiss in a busy 63 Billiards stick
dough should do 10 Fabric flaws store, for short 64 Legendary
16 “360Ý” CNN anchor 11 “Got it” 53 “Sweet!” seasonal helper
19 Bud 12 Bookish type 54 PC drive insert 65 “Holy cow”
20 “How disgusting!” 17 Rock’s Ocasek
21 Gave medicine to
22 “Uncle Vanya”
18 Dumpster
emanation
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:
playwright 19 Sheep bleat
27 Yoga posture 23 Half and half
28 Krypton or xenon 24 Agent on a bust
32 Semester 25 McDonald’s
34 Pea surrounder founder Ray
35 One of about 26 Dove into
268,600 in Tex. vigorously, as
36 You, to Yves work
38 Hipster, and 29 Stylish men’s
based on their monthly
initials, what each 30 Parisian pal
of 16-, 22-, 52- 31 Common dinner
and 61-Across is? hour
41 Blender setting 33 Grass cutter
42 Hubbubs 34 Two-__ tissue
44 Like Letterman’s 36 Restaurant bill
humor 37 Poem of praise
45 “See ya later” 39 Approximately 01/28/19
47 Dugout seats
49 Put together, as
equipment
52 “Appalachian
Spring” composer
56 Lustrous bit of
wisdom
59 Tokyo’s former
name
60 When repeated,
a Gabor
61 19th-century
steel industry
philanthropist
who built an
eponymous
concert hall
66 Nod off
67 Prefix with correct
68 Dunham of “Girls”
69 Snow transport
70 H.S. math subject
71 Clog fillers

DOWN
1 Becomes aware
of
2 Explanatory
comment written By Susan Gelfand
in the margin, say 01/28/19
©2019 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
021-026 128 mon:Class Master Odd 1/25/19 4:08 PM Page 5

THE DAILY JOURNAL Monday • Jan 28, 2019 25

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THE DAILY JOURNAL NATION Monday • Jan 28, 2019 27


Louisiana murder suspect caught at grandma’s home Dems worried about
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS dressed and walk outside,’ “ she recalled

GONZALES, La. — A 21-year-old man suspected of


killing his parents and three other people — including a
girl he was dating — was arrested Sunday when he drove up
them saying.
Mincks and Chastant said Dakota
Theriot had struggled with drugs over the
potential Schultz bid
years, had violent outbursts, and had THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
with a gun to his grandmother’s house in Virginia, a sheriff recently been kicked out of the trailer.
said. “We know he had a drug problem. He SEATTLE — For a businessman who grew a small coffee
On Saturday, Dakota Theriot shot and killed three people got kicked out last Monday because of roaster into an inescapable global chain, who ensured that
— the woman believed to be his girlfriend, her brother and the drug problem. His dad kicked him out even his part-time workers had benefits and who has given
father — in Louisiana’s Livingston Parish before taking her Dakota Theriot of here. He did have a violent streak,” about $150,000 to Democratic campaigns, former Starbucks
father’s truck, driving to neighboring Ascension Parish, Mincks said. Chairman Howard Schultz is generating tepid — or even
and shooting his parents, according to authorities. Theriot’s grandmother in Warsaw, Virginia, had checked hostile — responses within the party as he weighs a presi-
At a trailer where the parents lived, drops of blood trailed into a hotel Saturday night, fearing he might show up there, dential bid in 2020.
out to the front steps from the bedroom where Keith and Richmond County Sheriff Stephan B. Smith said in a phone That’s partly because — as Schultz told “60 Minutes” on
Elizabeth Theriot were shot. In the bedroom, blood soaked interview. The woman asked authorities to check her house Sunday — he’s considering running as an independent, a
pillows were strewn on the bed, and patches of what Sunday morning to make sure it was safe before she prospect many worry could draw support from the eventual
appeared to be dried blood were on the floor. Dozens of returned. Democratic nominee and hand President Donald Trump
stuffed animals decorated the room. While deputies were there, Smith said, Theriot drove up another four years in office. Among those urging him not to
Kim Mincks and Jacob Chastant also lived in the trailer with a firearm pointed out the window of a pickup truck. A run as an independent are David Axelrod, the former adviser
and were friends with the Theriots. Mincks was in the house sheriff’s statement said deputies sought cover and chal- to President Barack Obama, and Tina Podlodowski, the
at the opposite end of the trailer when the shooting hap- lenged Theriot, who then dropped the gun and was arrested Democratic Party chairwoman in Washington state, where
pened but didn’t hear anything. Law enforcement officers without incident. He said the pickup Theriot drove to his Schultz has lived for decades.
came into her room Saturday morning and woke her. grandmother’s house apparently was the one taken in “For somebody who is professing to be a lifelong
“They said something terrible happened here. ‘Get up, get Louisiana. Democrat, I think to be running as in independent in this
particular cycle is not a wise thing to do,” Podlodowski said.
Julian Castro, who announced a bid for the Democratic
Muted political tone at Koch donor network meeting nomination, said he is concerned that if Schultz did run an
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS tudes against perceived adversaries and people with different independent campaign it would help Trump win.
beliefs were tearing the country apart but that his network
INDIAN WELLS — A record-breaking number of wealthy was working to “unite with anybody to do right.”
donors have gathered at conservative billionaire industrial- “This network has taken its effectiveness to a whole new
ist Charles Koch’s private weekend retreat, where leaders of level,” Koch said.
the powerful political network have taken a decidedly differ-
ent, more politically muted tone than in years past.
The meeting held at a luxury resort in the California desert Ask a Professional

?
caters to donors who have committed to giving at least
Though the Kochs as GOP icons have been up front about $100,000 annually to the sprawling Koch Network of polit- If I choose
their strained relationship with Donald Trump, the network’s ical, policy, educational and philanthropic organizations.
latest biannual meeting comes just as the president conceded There are 634 donors attending the retreat, including 181 of cremation,
his immediate border wall demand to reopen the government them as first-timers.
after the longest shutdown in history and Democrats took Prominent Koch donor Doug Deason of Texas said the what are my
control of the U.S. House of Representatives in the after- reported infighting between Koch and Trump was “old news” options for
math of the 2018 election. and that conservatives have united, especially after Rick Riffel
On Saturday night, Charles Koch told the donors that atti- Democrats took control of the House. Managing Funeral Director
burial
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028 0128 mon:0128 mon 135 1/27/19 7:32 PM Page 1

28 Monday • Jan 28, 2019 WORLD THE DAILY JOURNAL

Search for Brazil dam survivors renews as death toll hits 58


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS alarm impossible” in the dam that collapsed.
“I’m angry. There is no way I can stay
BRUMADINHO, Brazil — Brazilian rescue calm,” Sonia Fatima da Silva said as she tried
crews returned to mud-covered flats Sunday to to get information about her son, who had
resume the search for hundreds of people worked at Vale for 20 years. “My hope is that
missing in the wake of a dam collapse after they be honest. I want news, even if it’s bad.”
the operation was suspended for several hours Da Silva said she last spoke to her son
over fears that a second dam was at risk of before he went to work Friday, when around
breach. midday a dam holding back mine waste col-
The Civil Defense office in Minais Gerais lapsed, sending waves of mud for miles and
state raised the confirmed death toll to 58, burying much in its path.
with up to 300 people still missing follow- She was one of dozens of people in
ing the avalanche of iron ore waste from a Brumadinho who desperately awaited word on
mine Friday. their loved ones.
Earlier Sunday, authorities stopped the Romeu Zema, the governor of Minas Gerais
search and evacuated several neighborhoods state, said that by now most recovery efforts
in the southeastern city of Brumadinho that will entail pulling out bodies.
were within range of the second B6 dam The flow of waste reached the nearby com-
owned by the Brazilian mining company munity of Vila Ferteco and an occupied Vale
Vale. An estimated 24,000 people were told administrative office. It buried buildings to
to get to higher ground, but by the afternoon their rooftops and an extensive field of the
civil engineers said the second dam was no mud cut off roads.
longer at risk. Some residents barely escaped with their
“Get out searching!” a woman yelled at fire- REUTERS lives.
fighters near a refugee set up in the center of A rescue helicopter hovers over the area where a dam broke in Brazil. “I saw all the mud coming down the hill,
Brumadinho. “They could be out there in the tsunami of iron ore mine waste from Friday’s “I only heard shouting, people saying to snapping the trees as it descended. It was a
bush.” dam collapse was turning to anguish and get out. I had to run with my family to get to tremendous noise,” said a tearful Simone
Areas of water-soaked mud appeared to be anger over the increasing likelihood that higher ground, but there was no siren,” she Pedrosa, from the neighborhood of Parque
drying out, which could help firefighters get many of the missing had died. said, adding that a cousin was still unaccount- Cachoeira, 5 miles from where the dam col-
to areas previously unreachable. Late Sunday, There was also mounting anger at Vale and ed for. lapsed.
more than 100 Israeli soldiers and other per- questions about an apparent lack of an alarm Several others made similar complaints Pedrosa, 45, and her parents dashed to their
sonnel arrived with plans to join rescue and system Friday. when interviewed by The Associated Press. In car and drove to the highest point in the
recovery efforts Monday. Caroline Steifeld, who was evacuated, said an email, Vale told the AP that the area has neighborhood.
Even before the brief suspension of rescue she heard warning sirens Sunday, but no such eight sirens in the area, but “the speed in “If we had gone down the other direction,
efforts, hope that loved ones had survived a alert on the day the dam collapsed. which the event happened made sounding an we would have died,” Pedrosa said.

Rivals Maduro and Guaido vie for Venezuelan military backing


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS At the same time, Maduro demonstrated coup against him. nation.
his might, wearing tan fatigues at military “No, my commander-in-chief, ” they The standoff has plunged troubled
CARACAS, Venezuela — The struggle for exercises. Flanked by his top brass, Maduro shouted in unison, and Maduro responded: Venezuela into a new chapter of political
control of Venezuela turned to the military watched heavy artillery fired into a hillside “We’re ready to defend our homeland — turmoil that has already left more than two
Sunday, as supporters of opposition leader and boarded an amphibious tank. under any circumstance.” dozen dead as thousands took to the streets
Juan Guaido handed leaflets to soldiers Addressing soldiers in an appearance on The dueling appeals from the two rivals demanding Maduro step down.
detailing a proposed amnesty law that would state TV, Maduro asked whether they were again put the military center stage in the It erupted when Guaido declared before
protect them for helping overthrow plotting with the “imperialist” United global debate over who holds a legitimate masses of supporters last week that he has
President Nicolas Maduro. States, which he accused of openly leading a claim to power in the South American temporarily assumed presidential powers,

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