Sec 1 - Mountain View Online
Transcription
Sec 1 - Mountain View Online
INSIDE THIS ISSUE Summer Home + Garden Design JULY 12, 2013 VOLUME 21, NO. 24 www.MountainViewOnline.com 650.964.6300 MOVIES | 19 Can’t compete with free eats FACING CLOSURE, SHORELINE RESTAURANT OWNERS NEGOTIATE WITH GOOGLE By Daniel DeBolt A group of restaurant owners north of Highway 101 say they have been watching their customers disappear as Google expands in the area, bringing them to the brink of closure unless Google is willing to pay for its employees to eat off-campus. In Mountain View, over 10,000 Google employees are now fed in private cafeterias serving organic food throughout the North Bayshore area north of Highway 101, like the one that recently opened at 1015 Joaquin Road, around the corner from the restaurants. See EATERIES, page 10 Stanford treating SFO plane crash victims S tanford Medical Center evaluated 55 patients from the crash of Asiana Airlines Flight 214 on July 6 and admitted 18 — 11 to Stanford Hospital and seven to Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital, according to spokesman James Larkin. One at Stanford Hospital remained in critical condition as of Tuesday morning, July 9, according to spokesman James Larkin. Four patients remain at Stanford Hospital with one listed in critical but stable condition, one listed in fair condition, and two in good condition, Larkin said. Two patients were discharged from Stanford Hospital Monday afternoon. All of the patients admitted to Packard Children’s were discharged Sunday evening. They Summertime and the learning’s easy ‘STEPPING UP TO ALGEBRA’ MATH CAMP HELPS GET KIDS BACK ON TRACK By Nick Veronin S ummer is close to halfway over for students at Crittenden and Graham middle schools. While many of their peers are whiling away the hours swimming and playing INSIDE video games, about 50 incoming eighth-graders are spending the first half of the day at Monta Loma Elementary School crunching math problems. It’s about 9:45 a.m. on July 9 and about 25 of the students are listening as Graham Middle MAGALI GAUTHIER Small restaurants in North Bayshore are going out of business, thanks to increasing competition from Google cafeterias. had all been listed in good condition when they were admitted on Saturday, he said. The vast majority of patients came by ambulance, although some were flown in by U.S. Coast Guard helicopter, said Dr. David Spain, director of the hospital’s trauma center. The injuries ranged from internal bleeding to numerous fractures, including several spinal fractures and blunt force injuries, Spain said. Stanford is one of nine Bay Area hospitals to receive patients from the crash, which killed two and injured 182 others. The two killed were 16-year-old Chinese girls, the airline has confirmed. The San Mateo County Coroner’s office is investigating the cause of death, including the possibility that one of the victims was struck and killed by a first responder’s vehicle. The teenagers have been identified as Ye Meng Yuan and Wang Lin Jia, according to a statement from Asiana Airlines. Both were students and Chinese nationals, according to airline officials. In the statement, Asiana rep- School algebra teacher Jennifer Lewis discusses how to figure out the common denominator of a fraction. This is the Stepping up to Algebra summer camp — a program designed to help students who have fallen behind get back on track and to ensure that those middle-schoolers who have been keeping up with their studies hit the ground running in the coming year. “The purpose of the program is to prepare students for algebra who otherwise may not have been on that algebra track,” says Craig Goldman, superintendent of the Mountain View Whisman School District. Organized by the Silicon Valley Educational Foundation, the Stepping up to Algebra program is in its sixth summer across Santa Clara County. This is the first year the program has been implemented in the Mountain View Whisman School District, Goldman says, and it’s been going well. “The kids seem very interested and engaged,” Goldman says after the kids break for recess. He explains that the children took a test, at the beginning of the program to gauge their understand- VIEWPOINT 15 | GOINGS ON 20 | MARKETPLACE 21 | REAL ESTATE 23 resentatives said the company offers its “deepest apologies and condolences.” Dr. Eric Weiss, Stanford’s director of emergency medicine, said that the hospital activated its emergency management plan immediately after being notified of the crash and within 30 minutes was able to mobilize more than 150 health care staff including doctors, nurses and other support staff. In particular, the hospital activated seven trauma teams See SFO CRASH, page 8 ing of the concepts. There will be a test at the end of the week to see how much the children have learned. “We’re looking forward to seeing the final assessment results. Based on what we’ve seen so far, we expect that the results will be favorable.” It’s easy to see why his hopes are high. Even though it is the final week of the program, and even though several other summer camp programs are going on around the Monta Loma campus, all the children are focused on Lewis, who uses an See MATH CAMP, page 12 apr.com EXPLORE THE NEW Where people, homes and a bit of imagination intersect LOS ALTOS HILLS Beautifully constructed 5bd/4.5ba home, 4458+/- sf of living space. Well-landscaped grounds with pool and hot-tub. 1.03+/acre lot. Palo Alto schools. $3,650,000 LOS ATLOS Sprawling 3bd/3ba ranch-style home with guest quarters, located on a beautiful 1+ acre lot across the fairways of the Los Altos Golf and Country Club. $2,995,000 LOS ALTOS Spacious 4bd/4ba remodeled home in the country club area. Open floor plan with chef’s kitchen, office and MBR with private office. Solar-heated pool. $2,849,000 MOUNTAIN VIEW Exquisitely crafted 4bd/3ba two-story home, 2000+/- sf. 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Photovoltaic solar roof system. $2,895,000 S S S KATHY BRIDGMAN KATHY BRIDGMAN S S S JIM & JIMMY NAPPO DOROTHY & ALEX LIU SAN JOSE Bright 2bd/1.5ba remodeled condo with Cupertino schools. Updated kitchen and baths, + new paint and carpet. Convenient location. Open Sat. & Sun. $369,000 LOS ALTOS LOS ALTOS⎮ ⎮167 167South SouthSan SanAntonio AntonioRd Rd650.941.1111 650.941.1111 APR ⎮⎮ Marin ⎮⎮ Sonoma ⎮⎮ Alameda ⎮⎮ Monterey APR COUNTIES COUNTIES ⎮⎮ Santa SantaClara Clara⎮⎮San SanMateo Mateo⎮⎮San SanFracisco Francisco Marin Sonoma Alameda⎮ ⎮Contra ContraCosta Costa Monterey⎮ ⎮Santa SantaCruz Cruz 2 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ July 12, 2013 7PJDFT A R O U N D T O W N Asked in downtown Mountain View. Photos and interviews by Sofia Biros How is the rising cost of housing affecting you? 2012 the world always looks Brighter from behind a smile! “I’ll never be able to afford a house unless I move to the East Bay or somewhere else, but I do love this area, so for now we’ll keep renting.” Smiles Dental invites you to meet Dr. Tavarez on friday, july 19th Elyse Cooper-Smith, Mountain View for your free Invisalign Consultation. Dr. Kathleen Tavarez Orthodontist “I am currently in a rental situation and would love to have a chance to purchase a home in the Mountain View area. What I want to do is save up and put the biggest down payment on a house.” Dr. Tavarez has been specializing in orthodontics since 1992. Dr. Kathleen Tavarez considers it her personal obligation to provide the highest quality of orthodontic care to her patients. She is on the cutting edge of clinical & technological orthodontic advances so that she can provide her patients the benefits of the most proven & advanced orthodontics. Free Invisalign Consultation! a $100 value! Some restrictions may apply. Call for details. Offer good for 60 days. 100 W. El Camino Real, Suite 63A Mountain View ( Corner of El Camino & Calderon ) www.SmilesDental.com | 650.564.3333 Sham Essadki, Mountain View “The rising housing prices don’t affect me as much because I own my home but it does affect us trying to help my mother and my friend find homes.” National Melanoma Awareness Month! Medical, Pediatric, Surgical and Cosmetic Dermatology Annie Millan, Scotts Valley WELCOMES Dr. Sandy Bendeck “I know that the rising home prices do affect the rental market, which is more relevant to me. I had attempted to find rentals around here but it’s just too expensive.” Jennifer Jabar, Alameda Dr. Bendeck is Stanford trained, Board certified in Dermatology, and fellowship trained in Mohs surgery. Her expertise includes skin cancer detection and surgery, achieving the best possible cosmetic outcome. She has had nine years of experience in her field. She is looking forward to helping you with your skin care needs. “Housing prices really haven’t affected me because I am a homeowner already.” Louise Walker, San Jose Melchor Pavilion, 2490 Hospital Drive Suite 201, Mountain View, CA 94040 650.962.4600 www.menkesclinic.com facebook.com/themenkesclinic Have Have aa question question for forVoices VoicesAround AroundTown? Town? E-mail Email itit to to editor@mv-voice.com editor@mv-voice.com July 12, 2013 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ 3 VOTED BEST AUTO REPAIR 2012 NOT JUST AUTO REPAIR BUT AUTO CARE Entrust the care of your Honda vehicle to us, and enjoy expert service and a whole lot of TLC in a relaxing and stress-free environment. -PDBM/FXT NPOLICELOG AUTO BURGLARY ROBBERY 1800 Block Hackett Av.,7/03 San Antonio Rd & Terminal Bvd., 7/05 San Antonio Rd & Terminal Bvd., 7/05 2600 Block W El Camino Real, 6/22 BATTERY VANDALISM COMMERCIAL BURGLARY RESIDENTIAL BURGLARY 400 Block Poppy Pl., 7/04 1300 Montecito Av., 7/05 1700 Block W El Camino Real, 7/08 500 Block W Middlefield Rd., 7/08 W Middlefield Rd., 7/08 1700 Block W El Camino Real, 7/08 1000 Block Independence Av., 7/08 300 Block Escuela Av., 7/09 100 Block Mercy St., 7/07 2200 Block Sun-Mor Av., 7/09 DISORDERLY CONDUCT 600 Block Showers Dr., 7/05 1500 Block Meadow Ln., 7/03 2300 Block Adele Av., 7/07 400 Block Castro St., 7/09 Schedule your appointment by calling us today: 650-961-0302 TLC for Dean’s Automotive. TRUST in their abilities and to deliver what they promise. LOYALTY to their customers and their vehicles. CARE for the vehicles they work upon. Customer Service dedication to a gold standard, and the ability to back it up. I could ask for nothing more. 2009 2010 2011 RUNNER-UP 2037 Old Middlefield Way, Mountain View deansautomotive.com Find us on Facebook 2012 1000 Block Villa St., 7/08 NCRIMEBRIEFS MAN SPITS ON WOMAN Open Monday-Friday 8am-5:30pm —K. W., Mountain View 1 Block W El Camino Real, 7/04 500 Block Evelyn Av., 7/09 (recovered) 1000 Block N Rengstorff Av., 7/07 GRAND THEFT “Service Excellence with a Personal Touch” STOLEN VEHICLES Is your watch SUMMER PROOF? A man spit in the face of a woman while she waited in the drive-through line of a local McDonald’s on July 6, according to a police report. The man, who was not caught, apparently believed the woman had intentionally cut him off on the freeway moments before the incident, said Sgt. Sean Thompson, public information officer for the Mountain View Police Department. According to the police report, the woman was in the drivethrough of the McDonald’s at 1060 N. Rengstorff Ave. at about 11 p.m., when a man came up to her car, yelled at her and then spit in her face before running off. Thompson said the woman, a 37-year-old from Mountain View, told police she recognized the man as the driver of a red Corvette she had seen just minutes before while she was driving on Highway 101. She told police it seemed that the man in the Corvette had attempted to speed up and get in front of her, but hadn’t succeeded in doing so before she exited the freeway to go to McDonald’s. She said the Corvette followed her for a time after she got off the freeway, but she didn’t think much of it — until the man showed up at her driver’s-side window. Before the man spat in her face, the woman told police he was yelling about her cutting him off and calling her names. Thompson said police are working with the management of the McDonald’s to see if they can get any security footage that might aid the investigation. ELECTRONICS, CASH JEWELRY STOLEN 7ÀÊiÊÊ*ÀiÃiÃÊUÊ>ÌÌiÀÞÊ >}iÊ7 iÊ9ÕÊ7>Ì ,ivÕÀLà }ÊvÊÊ7>ÌV iÃÊiV >V>ÊEÊ+Õ>ÀÌâ®ÊUÊ+Õ>ÌÞÊ-iÀÛViÊÕ>À>Ìii` Summer Special: 30% OFF OF WATER PRESSURE TESTING (now $10.50) Grant Plaza Old location Ã`i ,ÌiÊ` 4 Regular Watch Battery Replacement $6.95 -iÊUÊ ÌâiÊUÊ*ÕÃ>ÀÊ ->}iÊ >ÃÉ- V]Ê 6VÌÀÝÊ-ÜÃÃÊÀÞ® Ü>ÌV ÊÀi«>ÀÃ]ÊVVÊÀi«>ÀÃ]Ê VÀÞÃÌ>ÃÊ>`ÊÜ>ÌV ÊL>`à -ÜiiÌÊ />Ìià New Watch Gallery Suite 315 ÕÀÃ\Ê£äÇÊ7ii`>ÞÃÉ£äÈÊ7iii`à £ä{äÊÀ>ÌÊ,`]Ê-ÕÌiÊΣx]ÊÕÌ>Ê6iÜÊiÝÌÊÌÊ-ÜiiÌÊ/>Ìiî ÈxäÈxÈä£ ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ July 12, 2013 A warped window appears to have been all a burglar needed to get into a home in the 100 block of Mercy Street, according to police. On July 7, at about 1:15 p.m., the 50-year-old resident of a home in the area returned to his house to find that electronics, cash and jewelry had been stolen, said Sgt. Sean Thompson, public information officer for the Mountain View Police Department According to the police report, the man secured all his doors and windows before leaving his house at 10:45 a.m. that morning. However, a window in one of the rooms was warped, Thompson said, and as a result, would not close and lock. “It appears that’s how they got in,” Thompson said. Reported stolen was an iPod Touch, a gold ring and about $300 in cash from the home, Thompson said. The suspect appears to have exited through a side door to the garage. —Nick Veronin The Mountain View Voice (USPS 2560) is published every Friday by Embarcadero Media, 450 Cambridge Ave, Palo Alto CA 94306 (650) 964-6300. Periodicals Postage Paid at Palo Alto CA and additional mailing offices. The Mountain View Voice is mailed free upon request to homes and apartments in Mountain View. Subscription rate of $60 per year. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Mountain View Voice, 450 Cambridge Ave, Palo Alto, CA 94306. -PDBM/FXT MOUNTAIN VIEW VOICE ■ CITY COUNCIL UPDATES ■ COMMUNITY ■ FEATURES Police improve anonymous tip tech CITIZENS MAY NOW TEXT, USE SMARTPHONE APP TO REPORT SUSPICIOUS CIRCUMSTANCES By Nick Veronin in a brief tip of no more than 160 characters. eporting a crime in There is also a TipSoft Mountain View is now smartphone app, which is as easy as shooting off a available for the iPhone and text, posting to Instagram or for Android devices. Using taking a Vine. the TipSoft app, concerned The Mountain View Police citizens can send images or Department is now using videos to the local police. TipSoft — a citizen crime- Users of the TipSoft app can reporting system, which users also send simple text tips. can access via standard text The smartphone applicamessaging or a free smart tion has some advantages phone application. over sending tips via text, The TipSoft system has a according to the TipSoft webstrong track record in prevent- site. Besides the ability to ing crimes and solving cases, send photos and video, the according to a press release application can geographiissued by police officials. The cally tag the location from service, created by the online which a tip was sent, making it company CrimeReports.com, easier for officers to get to the is credited with contribut- scene. The app also has a chat ing to 145,000 arrests, 55,000 feature, which allows users fugitives caught to chat virtually and more than with emergency $5.3 billion in responders. Tipseized drugs ‘It’s fairly clear Soft users can also and recovered chat via text, but it property. is not as efficient Lt. Derek Sou- to us that there as the instant messa, head of the senger feature of MVPD’s investhe app. are certain tigative services Finally, Tipdivision, told Soft can also be people who just accessed on the the Voice that some people web by going to don’t want to T i p S o f t . c o m would rather make reports — however, the using their cell get involved.’ MVPD recomphones and that mends using the LT. DEREK SOUSA the department department’s own is happy to tip-reporting accom modate online ser v ice them. instead. Citizens interested “It’s fairly clear to us that in reporting crimes through there are certain people their browser can go to the who just don’t want to get City of Mountain View’s webinvolved,” Sousa said. “They site, click onto the MVPD’s want to remain anonymous page under the tab marked and this is another way that “Public Safety” and scroll they can do that.” down to the hyperlink for the There are a number of ways department’s “online crime to access the TipSoft system reporting tool.” — all of them anonymous, Chief Scott Vermeer said the according to the release. new technolog y would The most basic method of undoubtedly be an asset. “We submitting a tip is via text mes- look forward to our commusaging. Text tips can now be nity having another option sent to the MVPD by address- when reporting vital informaing a message to the number tion that can solve crimes and 274637, or “crimes,” typing in make Mountain View an even the keyword “MVTips” — all safer place,” he said in the one word — and then typing press release. R MICHELLE LE Juan Aranda Jr is embraced by his wife at their Mountain View home. Aranda is being honored by the Air Force for his heroic actions during a 1957 hurricane. ‘A hero all along’ LOCAL AIR FORCE VETERAN GETS LONG-OVERDUE RECOGNITION By Nick Veronin A n Air Force veteran and longtime Mountain View resident is finally getting recognized for saving the lives of a father and his three sons from rapidly rising waters and 115-mph winds during a hurricane in Puerto Rico. Juan C. Aranda Jr. is set to be awarded the Air Force Commendation Medal for his actions nearly 57 years ago at a ceremony at Moffett Field on July 15. Mary Alice Reid, a neighbor and 15-year friend of the 78-year-old, said she isn’t surprised — even though she only learned of Aranda’s tale recently. “He is a very modest man,” she explained on a recent sunny day, sitting in front of Aranda’s home on Farley Street. The fateful day Back in August of 1956, Aranda, then a radio operator for the Air Force, was stationed in his native Puerto Rico. Hurricane Santa Clara was bearing down on the island and the young airman was growing increasingly worried about his family. When he heard a broadcast over the radio report- ing flooding near his family’s home, he made a decision that some might call rash. Aranda and a fellow airman went AWOL — breaking curfew and leaving their base without authorization — to go check on loved ones in the nearby town of Aguadilla. As it turned out, Aranda’s family was safe, but on the way back the two men encountered the father and his three sons trapped by rising water and hanging on to a palm tree, with water rising all around them. See VETERAN, page 13 Protest of Castro Street development O n Monday at 6:30 p.m. a group of residents is set to assemble to speak their minds about a redevelopment proposed for Castro Street and El Camino Real that will displace a slew of local businesses. A resident living near the corner, Linda Curtis, said she and her neighbors were upset about the proposal, which would “tower” over the neighborhood and mean the end of the Rose Market and several other family-owned businesses, including the Sufi Coffee Shop, Le’s Alterations and Tanya’s Hair Design, a popular salon. In place of the businesses, a 200-unit apartment complex has been proposed. Curtis says she plans to get on her “soapbox” in front of the Rose Market along with anyone who wants to join her. —Daniel DeBolt V July 12, 2013 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ 5 -PDBM/FXT NCOMMUNITYBRIEFS OUTDOOR MOVIE NIGHTS COURTESY HUNG LE IN THE SWING OF IT Third baseman Katelyn Albrecht bats for the local Nova fast-pitch softball team made of up girls 10 and under from Mountain View and Los Altos. Albrecht led the girls on offense at the recent Nor Cal Championships at Twin Creeks, where the Nova 10 and under C team took first place among 21 teams from Northern California. “Over the weekend, these young ladies played an amazing streak of five consecutive wins against some of the best girls’ softball teams in the region,” said proud team parent Hung Le. Nova teams are part of Mountain View-Los Altos Girls Softball, a fast-pitch recreational softball league for girls ages 5 to 16. Tryouts for Nova competitive and travel teams are held in August. More information is at mvlags.org or novasoftball.org. Support Mountain View Voice’s print and online coverage of our community. Join today: SupportLocalJournalism.org/MountainView <gZVi H]dee^c\ A :ciZgi ^kZ V^cbZc i With many of Saturday’s Asiana Airlines plane crash victims being cared for at Stanford Hospital and the Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital, the Stanford Blood Center has announced an urgent need for type O-positive, O-negative blood donors and platelet donors. Though the blood center has already received an “outpouring” of support from existing donors and the public, it is working to make sure inventory is as strong as it can be, said Dayna Kerecman Myers, the blood center’s marketing and communications manager. The center serves as both hospitals’ main blood supplier. Kerecman added that because the blood center was closed on July 4 for the holiday, they were already low on O-positive blood. See COMMUNITY BRIEFS, page 6 Downtown Mountain View Free Parking! July 11 o C o m e tto w i ie V t in ta own Moun July 25 D o w n to t o S tre e t s tr a C e c n e ie a n d ex p e r . .. August 8 t h e c a rs.. w iit h o u t th 5:30 - 8:30 pm For more info rmation visit: ww w.mountainviewdowntown.com Getting There: Caltrain and Valley Transportation Authority (V TA) light-rail stop at the foot of Castro Street . 6 BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED 6lVgYÄL^cc^c\ GZhijgVcih @^Yh 6Xi^k^i^Zh ;VgbZgh BVg`Zi Mountain View officials are lining up family-friendly movies for outdoor showings in local parks this summer. The Summer Outdoor Movie Night Series begins Friday, July 12, with “Madagascar 3” at Cuesta Park. The program, which will run through Aug. 16, is part of a statewide public relations campaign for parks in California. Each week, a movie is shown in a different city park, with sites chosen in major Mountain View neighborhoods, according to Kristine Crosby of the Mountain View Recreation Department. Admission is free, and attendees are encouraged to blankets or lawn chairs. All movies are scheduled to start at 8:30 p.m. For more information, call the Recreation Office at 650-9036331 or visit its Facebook page at facebook.com/MountainViewRecreation. The schedule is: ■ Friday, July 12, “Madagascar 3” at Cuesta Park, 615 Cuesta Dr. ■ Friday, July 19, “Antz” at Sylvan Park, 600 Sylvan Ave. ■ Friday, July 26, “Wreck It Ralph” at Eagle Park, 652 Franklin St. ■ Friday, Aug. 2, “Shrek” at Stevenson Park, 750 San Pierre Way. ■ Friday, Aug. 9, “Dr. Seuss’ The Lorax” at Whisman Park, 400 Easy St. ■ Friday, Aug. 16, “Hotel Transylvania” at Rengstorff Park, 201 South Rengstorff Ave. —Elize Manoukian ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ July 12, 2013 -PDBM/FXT G U I D E TO 2013 S U M M E R C A M P S F O R K I D S For more information about these camps, see our online directory of camps at http://paloaltoonline.com/biz/summercamps/To advertise in a weekly directory, contact 650-326-8210 Academics Stanford EXPLORE Careers in Medicine and Science Series Stanford Are you a high school or college student interested in science, medicine or healthcare but unsure what degrees or careers are available? Stanford Explore has the answers! explore.stanford.edu Email: explore-series@stanford.edu COURTESY MOUNTAIN VIEW POLICE DEPARTMENT Mountain View firefighters had the unhappy task of shutting down a damaged fire hydrant on Google property. Hit-and-run damages hydrant A fire hydrant was knocked over by a hit-and-run driver on Google property Tuesday, July 9, creating a temporary fountain that spurted about 20 feet into the air until fire crews shut it off. The incident occurred at about 4:30 p.m. at the Google building located at 1400 Crittenden Lane, according to Shino Tanaka, public safety and community coordinator with the Mountain View Police Department. It took the fire department until about 5:55 p.m. to stop the water gushing from the ground. Because the incident occurred on Google property, the search company’s private security will be handling the investigation, Tanaka said. At deadline, no Google representatives had returned calls to say if there were any witnesses to the crash. No one was reported to have been injured in the incident. —Nick Veronin Want to get news briefs emailed to you every weekday? Sign up for Express, our new daily e-edition. Go to MountainViewOnline.com to sign up. Support Mountain View Voice’s print and online coverage of our community. Join today: SupportLocalJournalism.org/MountainView July 12, 2013 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ 7 -PDBM/FXT Investigators question pilots in Asiana plane crash T he pilot flying Asiana Airlines Flight 214 had operated a Boeing 777 for a total of about 35 hours before the deadly crash at San Francisco International Airport, according to information relayed to National Transportation Safety Board investigators. The Boeing 777 aircraft crashed on the runway at San Francisco International Airport on Saturday morning, July 6, killing two people and injuring dozens of others, San Francisco Fire Chief Joanne Hayes-White said. The Asiana Airlines flight from Seoul, Korea was coming in for a landing when the tail end of the plane slammed into a rocky berm or sea wall near the edge of the San Francisco Bay and the runway, according to witness reports. Hayes-White said the plane originated in Shanghai, China. NTSB Chairman Deborah Hersman said at a news conference in South San Francisco Tuesday afternoon that interviews with the four pilots had began Monday and were continuing. “All of the crew members have been very cooperative and forthright,” she said. In these interviews and other probes into the crash, investigators are scrutinizing all aspects of the f light, including why the plane was going nearly 40 mph below the recommended speed as it descended The Bay Area’s Premier Summer Festival July 20-21, 10am-6pm Santa Cruz Avenue, Menlo Park toward the runway. According to preliminary information Hersman said came directly from the pilots themselves and has yet to be corroborated with other data, there were three pilots in the cockpit at the time of the crash and the fourth pilot was in the cabin during the approach into SFO. The pilot flying the aircraft was in his initial training period for this type of plane and was seated in the left seat next to his instructor pilot. A relief first officer was seated in the jump seat in the cockpit, while a relief captain was in the main cabin. She explained that on the long trans-Pacific flight the relief captain and first officer took over the aircraft in the middle of the flight. The pilot and instructor were at the helm during take-off and landing, she said, with the third pilot in the cockpit to monitor the situation. The commanding pilot reported he has flown 9,700 hours with about 5,000 hours as a pilot in command. He was in his training period for a Boeing 777 aircraft and had completed 35 of the 60 hours required to be considered proficient on the craft, as set by Asiana Airlines standards. The pilot was hired in 1994 and had his initial training in Florida and is trained on several other aircrafts. His accompanying instructor SFO CRASH 8-"),-***2$0 77 /1620(" 8 12/# 64(*(&'1-,"$/1 *(%-/,( *2$0 "'(,$ .+(,/$+-,1 /) 8"1(-, ")$#(#02,-,$ 8,(1$("6"*$ /)(,& 8+.*$/$$ /)(,&-4,1-4, 8*$ 0$-,0(#$/2!*("/ ,0(1 8/$$#+(00(-, Info-line: 650-325-2818 | www.miramarevents.com | | Presented By The Menlo Park Chamber Of Commerce | www.menloparkchamber.com 8 ous event,” Hersman said. Both suffered serious injuries. Hersman said she walked the entire runway area today and could see on the seawall where the landing gear and then the tail struck the area. Sections of the cabin were strewn around the runway and she could see aircraft parts, galley mats, newspapers and magazines among the wreckage. Hersman said the investigation is at its beginning stages but that “numerous reports and accounts about slides deploying inside the aircraft” have come in, including from the first officer who described a trapped flight attendant underneath a chute that had inflated. That’s “certainly not what’s intended,” she said. All eight doors and slides have been removed from the crash site to be inspected as part of the crash investigation, Hersman said. Another key component under investigation is whether a San Francisco emergency vehicle may have struck and killed one of two 16-year-old girls who died in the crash. The cause of the girl’s death has not yet been determined by the San Mateo County coroner’s bureau. Hersman said evacuation procedures are being thoroughly investigated, and more interviews are taking place with cabin and flight crews and surviving passengers. She advised that probable cause of the crash would not be determined until a complete investigation is conducted. —Bay City News Service including some with minor injuries who were treated and released without hospitalization, Kagan said. Kagan noted that the hospital had converted a pediatric urgent care center to help deal with the influx of patients. The hospital also set up tents outside and brought in additional staff. At San Francisco International Airport, investigators from the National Transportation Safety Board were at the airport Sunday, sifting through the wreckage of plane. NTSB officials have recovered the airplane’s flight data recorder and cockpit recorder and sent the devices to Washington, D.C., for analysis. NTSB Chairwoman Deborah Hersman said investigators will be trying to evaluate “the human side” of the crash — pilot interaction and performance — as well as conditions at the airport and the airplane itself. “We’re going to be looking at the aircraft and certainly looking at the airport and doing documentation as far as the airport and the environment goes,” Hersman said. Hersman said that it could be up to a week before the actual remains of the aircraft could be removed from SFO’s airfield. That runway remains closed. Many airlines are waiving fees to reschedule travel for customers whose flights were canceled or delayed after the crash. Hundreds of passengers were diverted to other California airports, including Oakland International Airport and San Jose International Airport. Meanwhile, many were left stranded. All flights in and out of SFO were canceled in the hours following the crash. Download Our Awesome App! Continued from page 1 8-,1$+.-/ /6(,$/1/ %10 8 !2*-20--#(,$ 8-+$ /#$,5'(!(10 8/$$,/-#2"10'-4" 0$ 8/1(0 ,.$"( *16--#2/3$6-/0 8$ *1'$**,$00(0.* 60 8("/-!/$4(,$ 01(,&$,1 8,& &(,&'$%0$+-0 821-(,--**$"1-/ /'-4 pilot had flown 13,000 hours during his career with 3,000 hours in a 777. This was his first trip as an instructor pilot and it was the first time the two had flown together. The instructor pilot had been in the Korean Air Force for 10 years. The pilot in the jump seat, who served as relief, had flown into SFO as many as six times as a monitoring pilot and had experience on a 777 aircraft. The fourth pilot was not in the cockpit during the landing and his interview was underway. Hersman said because the U.S. does not have oversight responsibility for foreign-licensed pilots, a requirement to be tested for drugs and alcohol after an accident was not implemented. Other information that the pilots told investigators included that the pilot in the jump seat said he could not see the runway from his seat during the landing because the nose was pitched up. The instructor pilot reported that the plane was high and he told the pilot to pull back. Other crewmembers reported that after impact the aircraft ballooned, yawed left and went into a 360-degree spin. The first officer was the only pilot to receive medical treatment once the plane came to rest. He suffered a cracked rib in the accident. But two flight attendants in the rear of the plane were ejected in the crash and found on the side of the runway, Hersman said. The two survived but, “obviously had gone through a seri- ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ July 12, 2013 that included skilled surgeons, Weiss said. Spain noted that while the hospital handled the influx of patients from the crash, patients from other incidents were still being admitted and helped as needed. Elsewhere in the Bay Area, San Francisco General Hospital had received 52 patients from the Asiana Airlines crash as of Saturday evening, a hospital spokeswoman said. The hospital received four waves of patients from the crash, including an initial wave of 10 critical patients, hospital spokeswoman Rachel Kagan said. Of those initial 10, two were children. Kagan said five of those patients have since been upgraded to serious condition. Later waves of patients included a wider mix of conditions, —Bay City News Service and Palo Alto Weekly staff A History of Caring s4HEFIRST"ROWNIEAND3COUTGROUPSFORMINORITYCHILdren, now integrated into the Girl Scouts. The agency has also sought and established partnerships with other nonprofit providers, to ensure their delivery to CSA’s clients. Examples: Women Infants and Children, Lawmobile, and Rotacare. F or fifty years, Community Services Agency (CSA) has been providing vital social services for residents of Mountain View, Los Altos, and Los Altos Hills. We understand that hardship can come at any time and knows no age limit. We provide a safety net so that independence and self-sufficiency can be restored and maintained. An evolving name reflects an evolving organization CSA has grown from humble origins. In 1957, a group of Mountain View residents, concerned about the welfare of low-income families in the city, gathered to talk about the plight of the local migrant farm workers. They decided to form the Mountain View Welfare Council to address the needs of this population. Within a year, the council was incorporated, and it was planning its first sharing of holiday gifts for families. By 1967, the interests of the council had expanded to include housing issues, immigration issues, and the needs of senior citizens. Accordingly, its name was changed to the Mountain View Community Council. With a move into larger, permanent office space in 1974, the organization changed its name once again, this time to Mountain View Community Services, reflecting the increasing services provided, such as meals and counseling. CSA assumed its present name, Community Services Agency, in 1982, in recognition of a client base that extends through Los Altos to Los Altos Hills. A growing repertoire of programs and services CSA’s first program in 1958 was a holiday gift distribution called Christmas Clearance. Later called Santa Claus Exchange, the program remains today an important element of CSA’s work, now the Holiday Sharing program. 1974 was a big year for the agency. Clothing distribution was added to a growing list of Emergency Assistance services. Also, the agency moved into larger facilities at 204 Stierlin Road, Mountain View. Interior painting of the building was performed by clients and board members, while volunteers from the Mountain View Police Department handled the move from the old office space to the new. CSA Today Another milestone occurred in 1977, with the initiation of food service to the needy. CSA’s Emergency Assistance program added crisis intervention services in 1982 and the Community Kitchen (food distribution) and financial assistance services in 1983. The Senior Services program added transportation in 1983 and case management in 1984. In 1989, the agency launched a new Homeless Services program designed to lift the homeless up from their situation to rejoin society. The Alpha Omega Shelter was the first service offered, in cooperation with 17 local churches. CSA conducted a capital campaign and dramatically upgraded its facility in 1990. Among other features, the building had greater capacity for food service, then termed the Food Closet. The Homeless Services program stepped up in 1995 with the creation of Graduate House, a transitional housing facility managed by Project Match. CSA was a partner in this facility. In 1998, CSA fundamentally changed the nature of its Food and Nutrition program by creating the Food Pantry (grocery store for the needy) at the Stierlin Road facility and discontinuing its meals program. Another fundamental change occurred in 2006, when CSA discontinued the rotating homeless shelter in favor of enhanced case management services, pursuing the demonstrated “housing first” model for serving the homeless. The revised program is now called Alpha Omega Homeless Services. Programs Originated or Facilitated by Community Services Agency Throughout its history, CSA has been a source for new, innovative social services within the community. Many of these services are now administered by other agencies. A few examples: s4HEFIRSTDAYCARECENTERIN-OUNTAIN6IEWNOW7HISman Child Care Center. s-OUNTAIN6IEW#OMMUNITY(EALTH#ENTERNOWMANaged by a community group. s 4RANSPORTATION SERVICES FOR STUDENTS IN %NGLISH AS A Second Language (ESL) classes, now operated through Mountain View-Los Altos Adult Education. Mature at age 55, CSA now follows a strategy of first contact for the community’s needy, providing fundamental services and referring clients to other agencies for additional services. Caring for the homeless CSA’s Alpha Omega Homeless Services provides case management, direct assistance, and referral services (most importantly housing) to individuals and families. CSA partners with numerous other county service providers, assembling a comprehensive package of assistance to the local homeless population. Caring for the working poor and unemployed CSA’s Food and Nutrition Center supplements the nutrition requirements of needy families with fresh and staple groceries. Food items are contributed by community supermarkets and by nonprofit organizations like Second Harvest Food Bank and Hidden Villa. CSA’s Emergency Assistance program provides a much needed helping hand to those afflicted with shortterm severe needs. Assistance includes rent, utility payments, short-term shelter, medical purchases, and many services for children, especially related to school. Holiday Sharing, providing food to families and fun toys to kids, is a joyful program that draws together volunteers and clients from throughout the community. Caring for the elderly Senior Services is the fastest-growing CSA program, reflecting the growth of the elderly population in our community. Case managers deliver in-home assessments, counseling, referrals, and educational seminars, designed to allow local seniors to remain safe and independent. Our Senior Nutrition Program at the Mountain View Senior Center serves subsidized hot lunches every weekday, countering the isolation and apathy that can afflict the elderly. COMMUNITY SERVICES AGENCY 204 Stierlin Rd., Mountain View, CA 94043 sswww.csacares.org MOUNTAIN VIEW SENIOR CENTER 266 Escuela Ave., Mountain View, CA 94040 s LOS ALTOS SENIOR CENTER 97 Hillview Ave.Los Altos, CA 94022 THIS SPACE DONATED AS A COMMUNITY SERVICE BY THE MOUNTAIN VIEW VOICE July 12, 2013 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ 9 -PDBM/FXT EATERIES Continued from page 1 The result is that most of the restaurants have lost a majority of their business over the last year, owners say. “When you’ve lost 70 percent of your business, how long can you pay rent? Maybe seven to eight months?” said Bella Awdisho, owner of Cucina Venti, an Italian restaurant on Pear Avenue and Shoreline Boulevard. The owner of Falafel and Kebab, Dervis Yuksel, said he recently sold his car to pay his restaurant’s rent, and said he wasn’t sure how much longer he’d stay open. In an attempt to save their businesses, the restaurants have been in talks with Google in recent months to find a solution. Awdisho has been representing the owners of the restaurants, including Shoreline Park’s lakefront favorite Michael’s at Shoreline, and several small eateries near the Century movie theaters: Sunny Bowl, Falafel and Kebab, Hon Sushi, and Ole Taqueria. They say there is really only one way for them to stay in business — Google should pay for its employees to eat off-campus. MAGALI GAUTHIER Falafel and Kebab’s owner says his patrons have been disappearing, as Google and its free employee cafes expand in the area But Google executives have refused, the owners say. “We are all going to close,” Awdisho said of the businesses, saying that many would be “looking at bankruptcy” to pay off debts. She has 13 years left on her 20-year lease. MAGALI GAUTHIER Google bikes are parked near the Ole Taqueria in North Bayshore. COME SEE OUR NEW EXPANDED SHOWROOM UÊ 7 UÊ / UÊ ," UÊ -," UÊ " UÊ *-/, UÊ /"/" UÊ , Ê-/ ,Ê ", Googlers still eat free In private conversations, Yuksel and Awdisho said Google executives refused a proposed program where Google employees would use Google funds at the local restaurants using something like the “Google wallet” app. A Google spokesperson denied that such an Plumbing, Irrigation, Electrical, and Heating Supplies UÊ1 /-ÊEÊ8/1,-Ê UÊ /, Ê-1**UÊ/ Ê-1**-Ê UÊ66Ê"8UÊ/"/UÊ,Ê/"Ê Ê*,/UÊ*" Ê --",-Ê UÊ/""-ÊUÊ " 1/Ê UÊ,Ê/-Ê UÊ*,--1,Ê ,1/",UÊ-/Ê/ÊUÊ*1*Ê",Ê, -t 650-948-7160 arrangement was discussed, though City Council member Mike Kasperzak said he’d been part of talks to have such an arrangement implemented. Chamber of Commerce director Oscar Garcia said it had also been brought up in the talks, but Google never confirmed whether it could be done. The restaurant owners say Google executives refused such an arrangement because the restaurants aren’t up to Google’s standards — including the use of organic ingredients. There was also the issue of taxes, Awdisho said. Google executives explained to Awdisho and others that they would have to pay additional taxes if Googlers were reimbursed for eating offcampus. “As a giant company, they are looking for pennies here and there to save,” Awdisho said. A Google spokesperson said the the tax and food quality issues Awdisho claimed Google executives raised were “misinformation.” The spokesperson added that Google has only discussed what is in two letters addressed to the restaurant owners that were provided to the Voice. In the first letter, Google refuses to provide a fixed August Events for Active Adults Successful Aging Celebration Sat. Aug. 10, 9:30 am - 1:30 pm Palo Alto Medical Foundation 701 East El Camino Real, Mountain View A free day of seminars, art, music, food, prizes, a movie and more! Call 650-934-7380 for more information or to register. Avenidas Fitness Camp Aug. 20, 9 am - 3 pm Channing House 850 Webster St., Palo Alto Call 650-289-5436 for more information or to register. Family Caregiving 101 A year-long series of free workshops Avenidas Rose Kleiner Center 270 Escuela Avenue Mountain View Self-Care Thursday, Aug. 22, 7 pm Falls Prevention Thursday, Sept. 26, 7 pm Stress Management Thursday, Oct. 24, 7 pm Call 650-289-5499 for more information or to register. 300 W. El Camino Real Mountain View, CA 94040 www.barronparksupply.com Hours of Operation: Monday - Friday: 7:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. Saturday: 8:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. | Closed Sunday Resources and programs for positve aging (650) 289-5405 | www.avenidas.org 10 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ July 12, 2013 -PDBM/FXT subsidy to the restaurants, an option proposed by the restaurant owners in May. “Google would owe the fixed amount regardless of whether Google employees choose to eat at these locations,” writes Google’s real estate director John Igoe, adding that such a deal is “not something Google is able to support.” The letter does not address paying for individual employees. Igoe suggests the restaurants change their business models to attract Googlers. “In our discussions with you we have highlighted many services that Google doesn’t provide to our employees, including alcohol service, delivery and take home dinners — all of these are business opportunities for you to implement and attract the patronage of Google employees.” In a following letter, Google does offer to help the restaurant owners advertise their businesses online. “We’d be happy to host you and other North Bayshore small businesses at our campus for breakfast in the coming weeks, where you can receive personalized training to get your restaurant set up with free Google products,” writes Google’s community affairs manager Veronica Bell. “These tools and tips can help make it easier for customers (including Googlers) to find your business online and make sure your business information is correct in search results.” Awdisho and Yuksel said the offers to help with online advertising felt like a “slap in the face.” Google perks The Chamber of Commerce also pushed Google’s products, including something called “Google perks,” a discount advertising program directed at Google employee, similar to Groupon, Awdisho said. It would require the restaurants www.danceacademyusa.com 4UFWFOT$SFFL#MWE4VJUFt$VQFSUJOP Now Enrolling for Dance Season 2013/14 SIGN UP TODAY MAGALI GAUTHIER Dervis Yuksel, owner of Falafel and Kebab, prepares an order. discount their prices by 20 percent, which would be a “recipe for disaster,” she said. Garcia told the Voice that Google perks was part of “a holistic approach to helping those businessmen. One of the things is to help those businessmen have a stronger online presence. Attract business not just from Google but surrounding communities as well.” In the last year alone, the owners of say they’ve seen thousands of employees who once ate lunch at their businesses — employees of Siemens, Visa and Omnicell, among others — leave the area to make way for Google. “All of North Bayshore is going to become a Google campus,” Awdisho said. If she were to become a catering business, as Google seems to imply, she says she wouldn’t be able to compete with caterers operating out of buildings with much lower rents. The situation for Yuksel, the owner of Falafel and Kebab, is dire. “I sold my car, and I don’t have a second car to sell to pay my rent,” Yuksel said. “We MAGALI GAUTHIER Google employees sit outside at a Google cafe. don’t know what we are going to do. In two months or three months, we’ve got to close the doors.” While Google is not legally obligated to do anything about the businesses, Kasperzak said Google should be concerned with public opinion. “Google does need to be concerned about the perception of the public as well as the City Council,” Kasperzak said. “While they don’t have any obligations, they have that motto of theirs, ‘Do no evil.’ Driving businesses out of business is not going to be perceived well by the community.” Council member Jac Siegel said restaurants aren’t the only ones suffering — businesses around the city providing services that Google provides on campus are also struggling, especially as rents rise dramatically. “It’s unfortunate we’ve become a one-company town so dominated by one company, Siegel said. “Google has done things for the city but very little compared to the size of this multi-billion dollar company. I’ve gone on record telling Google they are underwhelmingly generous to our city.” Google is “definitely going to run these companies out of business,” Siegel said, Siegel added that it probably won’t be too long before the 16-screen Century movie theater in North Bayshore also closes. It draws dinner and weekend business to the restaurants. He said Google has offered to buy the theaters, and would likely propose to build housing there in the future, though the City Council has opposed the idea. Email Daniel DeBolt at ddebolt@mv-voice.com Follow us on Twitter twitter.com/mvvoice CITY OF MOUNTAIN VIEW CALL FOR ARTISTS REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL (RFP) “The View” Mountain View Teen Center DEADLINE EXTENDED The RFP closes on Friday, September 13, 2013 Budget: $17,000 The View is located at 263 Escuela Avenue across from the Mountain View Senior Center complex. The City Council approved funding to renovate the land and building known as the Rock Church property and its conversion into a new teen center. The renovation will make improvements to both the interior and exterior of the building and site of the former church. The Youth Advisory Committee (YAC) is actively involved in the design and renovation of the building and has hands-on involvement in the selection and implementation of art. Art pieces that incorporate the creativity of Mountain View teens and an artist willing to collaborate with the teen community in the process are essential. This aspect of the project is an important criterion for selection of the artist. Applicants are encouraged to visit the site. The exact art placement will be determined by the size and nature of the art selected. SELECTION PROCESS All proposals and examples of past and current artwork will be reviewed by the City’s Visual Arts Committee (VAC) and YAC liaisons. The VAC and YAC are willing to work with an artist on the design proposal to ensure suitability. The City reserves the right to reject any or all proposals. Artists may apply individually or as a team. For all design guidelines, safety requirements, site plans and full submittal requirements please visit the City’s website at: http://www.mountainview. gov/civica/filebank/blobdload.asp?BlobID=11086 Please send your proposal by September 13, 2013 to Michelle Coral, Visual Arts Committee Staff Liaison, at michelle. coral@mountainview.gov. Late or incomplete applications will not be considered. All submittals will become the property of the City of Mountain View. July 12, 2013 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ 11 -PDBM/FXT An Independent K-8 Non profit School MATH CAMP Individualized, Self-Directed Learning Continued from page 1 Continued from page 6 “Follow the child” Essential Qualities: Respect, Responsibility, Independence Multi-Age Classrooms “Continuity is key to learning” “Children thrive on trust” (650) 813-9131 State–of–the–art facility located at 4000 Terman Rd (cross street Arastradero) in Palo Alto The Bowman faculty includes trained Montessori teachers, interns and teaching specialists who teach cultural, music and after–school enrichment programs. During the core school day our low student– to–faculty ratio enables us to place a strong focus on the child and deliver individualized teaching to each students. Follow us on Twitter twitter.com/mvvoice overhead projecting document camera to work on a problem along with the students. She asks the kids questions and tosses them a candy when they get the right answer. Incoming Crittenden eighthgrader Anthony Hansen — who only moments before caught a Jolly Rancher pitched to him by Lewis — says he definitely feels more confident in his understanding of ratios than he used to. Hansen’s friend, Kevin Esteban says he understands math better now that the program is almost over. “She shows it to us part by part,” says Esteban, an incoming eighth grader from Graham. Lewis says she can take much more time to explain each component of the a given math problem in her Stepping up to Algebra class. After all, she does have almost four hours each day with the kids. It’s just “little things” that are holding the students back in most cases, she explains. And with the extra time, Lewis can find what is tripping up each student and help them grasp the concept. But there’s more to it than just time, Lewis says. This year, the Stepping up to Algebra coursework is designed to prepare students and teachers for the Common Core curriculum — new nationwide public education standards, which have been adopted by most states. In preparing for the new Common Core standards, the curriculum of Stepping up to Algebra employs a method of teaching known as “blended learning.” It’s a system of instruction that uses a mix of direct instruction, project-based learning, educational technology and group work. Students in the Stepping up to Algebra camp have their own laptops, which they use to access online education tools, such TICKETS ON SALE NOW! TRIO DA PAZ with MAÚCHA ADNET Saturday, July 13 “Fleet-fingered music that connects jazz with Brazilian rhythms.” – The New York Times tickets on sale for these great shows REBECA MAULEÓN Sunday, July 21 TIA FULLER QUARTET Saturday, July 27 SAVION GLOVER & HIS TRIO Saturday, August 3 CHRIS POTTER Wednesday, August 7 find out more & purchase tickets ALLISON MILLER’S MADELINE BOOM TIC BOOM EASTMAN Friday, July 12 STANFORDJAZZ.ORG or 650-725-ARTS (2787) 12 NCOMMUNITYBRIEFS ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ July 12, 2013 Sunday, July 14 STANLEY CLARKE TRIO Saturday, July 20 She said the blood center has no current plans to host a blood drive to help plane-crash survivors and other patients in need, but were waiting to see how much of response they got this week. Donors should be in good health with no cold or flu symptoms. They must eat well prior to donation, drink fluids and present a photo identification. The process takes about an hour. There are donor centers in Palo Alto, Menlo Park and Mountain View. For more information or to schedule an appointment, call 888-723-7831 or visit bloodcenter.stanford.edu. —Elena Kadvany COUNTY BUSY ISSUING MARRIAGE LICENSES Santa Clara County was gearing up for another week of samesex marriages days after what is believed to be the county’s busiest day ever for issuing marriage licenses, officials said. On Friday, July 5, the county issued marriage licenses to nearly 150 couples, including 27 gay or lesbian couples, according to County Supervisor Ken Yeager. On a typical day, the county issues about 35 marriage licenses, county officials said. “It has been my honor to perform marriages for so many loving couples this week,” Yeager said. “Many of them have waited years for the opportunity to be married.” Yeager married 41 same-sex couples last week, with many opting for express marriage ceremonies, allowing them to marry the same day they received their marriage licenses, county officials said. The quicker marriage option launched last Monday, following the June 28 decision by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals to dissolve a stay on U.S. District Court Judge Vaughn Walker’s injunction against enforcing Proposition 8, an initiative passed by California voters in 2008 that banned same-sex marriages. The county Clerk Recorder’s Office set up the express marriage option in anticipation of the rising demand for marriage licenses. With express marriages, couples can walk in, purchase a marriage license and have their ceremony performed at a service window for a $110 fee, plus an additional $10 witness fee. Couples can also opt for the standard marriage license and civil ceremony for $79. County officials say they are working to accommodate the high demand for marriages by opening the express window early at the clerk recorder’s office and opening two additional chapel facilities. —Bay City News Service as Mountain View-based Khan Academy — where students can watch lessons on YouTube. Jazlyn Mejia, an incoming eighth-grader at Graham, says she likes Khan Academy, because it allows her to learn concepts that Lewis may have glossed over in class. “Some things she won’t get to,” Mejia says. “So, I go on (Khan Academy).” The students also use an online math program called Sumdog, which pits the students against one another in a math-based competition. All of this adds up to a math class that the kids actually seem to enjoy. Lewis says they are having fun, “because they’re actually having success. It’s hard when you’re in a classroom and you’re almost getting something but you’re not quite there.” This class gives the kids the time and space and tools to make sure they get there. As a result they are proud of themselves and their performance, she says. Goldman says he has been enthusiastic about the practice of blended learning for some time. He has given multiple presentations to the district’s board of trustees advocating the approach to education. The way Goldman sees it, the Stepping up to Algebra camp isn’t just a learning experience for the children, it is also a bit like a training seminar for Lewis. “This gives us the opportunity to see how blended learning could work in a classroom environment,” he says. At Crittenden and Graham middle schools, the teaching staff has not had much of a chance to work with blended learning, but Lewis says she is already a fan and planning on bringing much of what she has learned teaching Stepping up to Algebra back to her colleagues at Graham. “I’ve already talked with some of the other teachers about some of the methods we’re going to steal,” Lewis says. V -PDBM/FXT www.demartiniorchard.com 66 N. San Antonio Rd., Los Altos VETERAN Open Daily 8am-7pm Prices Effective 7/10 thru 7/16 Continued from page 5 According to Aranda, the decision to jump in after the man and his boys came just as easily as his decision to leave the base. In fact, he said, it wasn’t much of a decision at all. “It was instinct,” he said. Although going with his gut is now resulting in an award, at the time the decision almost got him booted from the Air Force. Instead of facing a court martial, however, Aranda ultimately was honorably discharged in 1961 and told “the wheels are rolling for an award” for his brave actions. AWOL award But that award never came. Although Aranda periodically inquired about it and even the Voice in 2000 wrote about his forgotten act of heroism, the Air Force never reached out to formally recognize Aranda for risking his life to save four others. That is until Congresswoman Anna G. Eshoo got wind of the story and got the long-stalled wheels rolling again toward officially commemorating Aranda’s act of bravery. When Aranda heard what Eshoo had done, he said he was “flabbergasted.” No surprise Reid, on the other hand, said she was far from surprised. “To a lot of us, he’s been a hero all along,” Reid said, explaining that her neighbor’s noble spirit was apparent from the first time she saw him interacting with kids at nearby Theuerkauf Elementary School — where, according to Reid, many of the children came from homes without a father. Aranda provided a strong and positive male presence in the lives of many young kids, Reid said, and he was always willing to listen and help when parents came to him with a problem. “He’s been a positive force for good in this community for the 15 years I’ve known him,” she said. Taking a look at Aranda’s resume, it would be hard to argue otherwise. He’s coached local Little League baseball, helped with the city’s recreation department, been a youth men- WHITE FLESH 650-948-0881 Farm Fresh and Always the Best NORTHWEST GROWN NECTARINES BLUEBERRIES LOCAL - LARGE VERY SWEET AND JUICY 1 $ FLAVOR GOLD PLUOTS SWEET VERY TASTY 1 $ 99 LB. RED SEEDLESS MICHELLE LE Juan Aranda holds a photo of himself taken when he was in his early 20s. tor with a Restorative Justice program in Mountain View and served on the Whisman School Board and the Mountain View Whisman School Board. In 2002, two years into his term as an Mountain View Whisman district trustee, he had to step down in order to focus on his battle with prostate cancer. But after beating the disease he got right back on the metaphorical horse. Today, Aranda volunteers as a Spanish tutor in his neighborhood and as a Spanish-to-English translator at the local RotaCare clinic. He also teaches salsa dancing lessons at the Mountain View Community Center. When it comes to helping the kids, Aranda said that experiences in his life — a father who died young and the fact that he didn’t get a chance to raise his daughters — have made him especially aware of how disruptive it can for to children who grow up without a dad. He said he wants to do all he can to make sure other children don’t suffer as a result of being fatherless. But much of his enthusiasm for helping the community has a much simpler explanation. “This is me,” Aranda said with a shrug. “It’s the only way I can explain it.” Aranda will be presented with the Air Force Commendation Medal on July 15 at 3:30 p.m. at Moffett Field. The ceremony will be hosted by Rep. Eshoo, the Department of the Air Force and the California Air National Guard’s 129th Search and Rescue Wing. V GRAPES CALIF. SWEET CRISP 1 $ 99 LB. PLUMP - CRISP AND SWEET PINT BASKET NOW IN SEASON 2 C PINT BSK. FOR 5 $ 00 BLACKBERRIES BINGHERRIES PADRON PEPPERS JUMBO $ 99 CHAMPAGNE GRAPES NORTHWEST LB. ORG. FILET BEANS SAN JOSE GROWN FRESH FIGS WHITE CORN LOCAL ORGANIC TRIPLE CROWN CHERRY TOMATOES 9 KINDS AND COLORS ORGANIC LOCAL ORGANIC LOCAL IN HUSK FRESH DAILY 4 3 99¢ F O R ORGANIC LOCAL CELERY ZUCCHINI TBROCCOLINI B .$ ¢ $ 29 00 F 99LB. B . E LARGE 24 SIZE CRISP 2 3 1 Your Everyday Farmers Market UN COLORED $1.49 SQUASH LB. SQUASH $4.99 BLOSSOMS PKG. ENDER ALL DIBLE UN OR Online at www.DeMartiniOrchard.com *'(-*"-#&# %$#((& " ()(, ""+ "" $ "%")%*"-))%&'%+ +'"*) %$ () #)(, )+ ,)%("" $)*&%# $ *) %$( $$'$ (%,%'!$ %($"( $)%""%, $)%' ( Granville Redmond Spring in Southern California, 1931 oil on canvas Sold for $446,500 $') %%!(&($*(' &)( ,"'( $%'!(%') *'$ )*'%') +')( By appointment only: Sarah Hurt, +1 415 503 3287 appraisal.us@bonhams.com Fitzgerald, Francis Scott Key. The Great Gatsby. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1925. First edition Sold for $182,000 Good for Business. Good for You. Good for the Community. 79LB. An important Louis XV style gilt bronze mounted marquetry commode, Paul Sormani fourth quarter 19th century Sold for $115,500 A magnificent blue and white porcelain vase, tianqiuping Yongzheng Mark and Period Sold for $5,906,500 A belle époque diamond solitaire ring Sold for $458,500 %$#(%# ©2013 Bonhams & Butterfields Auctioneers Corp. All rights reserved. Bond No. 57BSBGL0808 July 12, 2013 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ 13 At Risk for Diabetes? Stanford University Seeking Volunteers! s Weight Loss sessions at End of Study! s Opportunity for Monetary Compensation! s In Good Health s 30-60 years old s Moderately Overweight BMI 25-35 Dr. Gerald Reaven at Stanford University is studying how a medicine like aspirin works to lower blood sugar in people at risk for type 2 diabetes. You will be screened for diabetes, receive cholesterol panel results & an evaluation of risk for heart disease. If you qualify you will recieve 1 month of the study medicine or placebo (no medicine); payment for study time AND instructions for weight loss by the dietitian! Call Dr. Reaven & Associates @ 650-723-7024 Check YOUR Risk for Type 2 diabetes! For general information regarding questions, concerns, or complaints about research, research related injury, or the rights of research particiapants, please call (650) 723-5244 or toll-free 1-866-680-2906, or write to the Administrative Panel on Human Subjects in Medical Research, Administrative Panels Office, Stanford University, Stanford CA 940305 Public Notice for KSFH Mountain View, CA On November 29, 2005, KSFH was granted a license by the Federal Communications Commission to serve the public interest as a public trustee until December 1, 2013. Our license will expire on December 1, 2013. We must file an application for renewal with the FCC by August 1, 2013. When filed, a copy of this application will be available for public inspection during our regular business hours. It contains information concerning this station’s performance during the last license term commencing on December 1, 2005. Individuals who wish to advise the FCC of facts relating to our renewal application and to whether this station has operated in the public interest should file comments and petitions with the FCC by November 1, 2013. Further information concerning the FCC’s broadcast license renewal process is available at Station KSFH, (1885 Miramonte Ave., Mountain View, CA 94040), or may be obtained from the FCC, Washington, D.C. 20554. Inspirations a guide to the spiritual community LOS ALTOS LUTHERAN Bringing God’s Love and Hope to All Children’s Nursery 10:00 a.m. Worship 10:10 Sunday School 11:15 a.m. Fellowship Pastor David K. Bonde Outreach Pastor Gary Berkland 460 South El Monte (at Cuesta) 650-948-3012 www.losaltoslutheran.org To include your Church in Inspirations Please call Blanca Yoc at 650-223-6596 or email byoc@paweekly.com ST. ANN ANGLICAN CHAPEL A TRADITIONAL EPISCOPAL CHURCH x{£ÊiÛiÊÛi°]Ê*>ÊÌ]Ê Ê{Îä£ÊUÊÈxänÎnäxän The Most Reverend Robert S. Morse, Vicar Reverend Matthew Weber, Assistant -Õ`>Þ\Ê££\ää> À>ÊÕV >ÀÃÌÊEÊ-iÀÊ 7i`iÃ`>Þ\Ê££\{x>À}Ê*À>ÞiÀÊUÊ£Ó\ää\ÊÕV >ÀÃÌÊ Ç\ää«\ÊLiÊ-ÌÕ`ÞÊUÊ `Ê >ÀiÊ*ÀÛ`i` MOUNTAIN VIEW CENTRAL SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH Sabbath School: 9:30 a.m. Saturday Services: Worship 10:45 a.m. Wednesday Study Groups: 10-11 a.m. Pastor Kenny Fraser, B.A.M. DIV 1425 Springer Rd., Mtn. View - Office Hrs. M-F 9am-1pm www.mtviewda.adventistfaith.org Phone: 650-967-2189 14 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ July 12, 2013 7JFXQPJOU ■ EDITORIAL ■ YOUR LETTERS ■ GUEST OPINIONS NGUEST OPINION VOICE FROM THE COMMUNITY Secret money is poisoning our democracy Founding Editor, Kate Wakerly N S TA F F EDITOR & PUBLISHER By Congresswoman Anna Eshoo Tom Gibboney (223-6507) EDITORIAL Managing Editor Andrea Gemmet (223-6537) Staff Writers Daniel DeBolt (223-6536) Nick Veronin (223-6535) Intern Elize Manoukian Photographer Michelle Le (223-6530) Contributors Dale Bentson, Angela Hey, Sheila Himmel, Ruth Schecter, Alissa Stallings DESIGN & PRODUCTION Design Director Shannon Corey (223-6560) Designers Linda Atilano, Lili Cao, Rosanna Leung, Paul Llewellyn, Scott Peterson, Kameron Sawyer ADVERTISING Vice President Sales and Marketing Tom Zahiralis (223-6570) Advertising Representatives Adam Carter (223-6573) Real Estate Account Executive Rosemary Lewkowitz (223-6585) Published every Friday at 450 Cambridge Avenue Palo Alto, CA 94306 (650) 964-6300 fax (650) 964-0294 Email news and photos to: editor@MV-Voice.com Email letters to: letters@MV-Voice.com A “Star Trek” parody video, line dance lessons, and presidential hotel suites. These are just some of the outrageous things the Internal Revenue Service spent $49 million of taxpayer money on at more than 200 employee conferences from 2010 through 2012. The findings, presented at a recent Congressional oversight hearing, come amid revelations that the IRS inappropriately held up applications for tax-exempt status by groups with “Tea Party,” “patriot,” and “progressive” in their names. Does this sound unacceptable? I’d certainly say so. But the IRS is complicit in a broader breach of trust with the American people — one that is threatening the fabric of our democracy. Beyond gross misuse of taxpayer money and mishandling the applications of mom-and-pop nonprofits, the IRS is wrongfully allowing secret, big-money interests to conceal millions of dollars in political campaign spending and run roughshod over our elections. All of the estimated $300 million in secret money spent in the 2012 election cycle can be traced back to a single provision in our tax laws, called Section 501(c)(4). Originating in the Revenue Act of 1913, Section 501(c)(4) provides tax-exempt status to nonprofit groups “operated exclusively for the promotion of social welfare.” Like many nonprofits, 501(c)(4) groups are not required to publicly disclose their donors. The operative word in the law is that these organizations are required to function “exclusively” for the general public’s benefit, meaning they are prohibited from engaging in political campaigns. But in a 1959 rule-making, the IRS turned this simple standard on its head, changing the word “exclusively” to “primarily.” This seemingly small change opened up a loophole in our tax law that, until the Supreme Court’s infamous “Citizens United” decision, had News/Editorial Department (650) 964-6300 fax (650) 964-0294 NLETTERS Display Advertising Sales (650) 964-6300 Classified Advertising Sales t fax (650) 326-0155 Email Classified ads@MV-Voice.com Email Circulation circulation@MV-Voice.com The Voice is published weekly by Embarcadero Media Co. and distributed free to residences and businesses in Mountain View. If you are not currently receiving the paper, you may request free delivery by calling 964-6300. Subscriptions for $60 per year, $100 per 2 years are welcome. ©2013 by Embarcadero Media Company. All rights reserved. Member, Mountain View Chamber of Commerce NWHAT’S YOUR VIEW? All views must include a home address and contact phone number. Published letters will also appear on the web site, www.MountainViewOnline.com, and occasionally on the Town Square forum. Town Square forum Post your views on Town Square at MountainViewOnline.com Email your views to letters@MV-Voice.com. Indicate if letter is to be published. Mail to: Editor Mountain View Voice, P.O. Box 405 Mountain View, CA 94042-0405 Call the Viewpoint desk at 223-6507 gone relatively unnoticed. Once “Citizens United” opened the spigot of corporate money in elections, special interests rushed to funnel hundreds of millions of dollars into political campaigns under the secrecy provided by 501(c)(4) status. This secret money from unknown donors is poisoning our electoral system and our democracy. So long as their primary purpose is to promote social welfare — arguably a mere 51 percent — 501(c) (4) organizations with innocuous-sounding names like Americans for Prosperity can pour the remainder of their funds into political campaigns, all without disclosing their big-money backers. For all we know, foreign nationals could be influencing our elections with undisclosed contributions. Furthermore, taxpayers end up subsidizing the political agendas of special interests. The IRS attempted to rectify how it considers 501(c)(4) applications this week. Applicants who have been waiting more than 120 days for a decision will be approved if they “self-certify” that no more than 40 percent of spending goes toward elections. Rather than pull an arbitrary standard from thin air, the IRS should update its rule to ensure that 501(c)(4) organizations function “exclusively” to promote social welfare, as Congress intended. The burden of ridding our elections of secret money doesn’t fall entirely on the IRS. A constitutional amendment overruling the “Citizens United” decision is necessary to grant Congress full regulatory authority over campaign contributions and expenditures. Congress should also pass legislation that requires corporations, labor unions and nonprofit groups to disclose all campaign-related spending or donations within 24 hours. Our government is being bought and sold on the auction block by unlimited money from anonymous buyers. That is not a democracy, and the American people should not stand for it. Anna G. Eshoo, a Democrat, represents California’s 18th Congressional district. VOICES FROM THE COMMUNITY QUESTIONABLE QUESTION Your ‘Voices Around Town’ question from July 5th was “If you could marry anyone of the same sex, whom would it be?” This intentionally provocative question has no place in a community newspaper like the Voice. I’m certain a large number of Mountain View residents would be offended were this question asked to them. For the sake of all our community, please avoid these questions in the future. Greg Corsetto Creeden Way BAND MEMBERS DESERVE PE CREDITS Marching Band/Color guard should earn those credits. The activities are multiple. Those kids have to play an instrument, which involves breathing, coordination, not to mention memory and phrasing. They do this at the same time they’re marching, moving with 75-100 other people all in sync at the same time, doing different moves and actions, breathing hard and running, then stopping, turning, running and marching again. All within the same show! I know from having taught and worked with numerous athletes that they respect what a marching band “team” does. And they admit privately that they couldn’t do it. “Ordinary” athletes don’t have to multi-task. They just get out there and do their thing — run their plays. With the marching band /color guard teams those plays are multiple, complicated and most of all physical. What more could one want? My observations date back to when I was working with Mountain View Police Department as the school resource officer serving not only MVHS but St. Francis High School as well, where I taught marching band for years. Bill Crawford San Jose ANOTHER DOWNTOWN OFFICE PROJECT I would prefer to see the site used as retail but an office building is a second choice. Anything but more multi-family rental units. Yes, the City Council remains as puppets for the devel- opers. It would be more efficient to just elect developers to the City Council. Only one problem, they don’t live in Mountain View. They prefer to live in less densely populated areas. Konrad Sosnow Trophy Drive July 12, 2013 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ 15 8FFLFOE MOUNTAIN VIEW VOICE ■ FOOD FEATURE ■ MOVIE TIMES ■ BEST BETS FOR ENTERTAINMENT N F O O D F E AT U R E By Rebecca Wallace A spoonful of sugar may have helped the medicine go down for Mary Poppins, but a spoonful of cumin can sink a whole recipe. That is, if you’re trying to cook an Indian dish for the first time and the smallest bag you can find of the flashy yellow spice weighs 400 grams. Enter Savitha Rao. She buys those hefty containers so cooks don’t have to, and creates recipe bags with the pre-measured amounts of spices, rices, pastas, peanuts and other ingredients needed for individual Indian dishes. Detailed cooking instructions are included. Add your perishables, such as fresh vegetables and ghee, and dinner emerges. A longtime cook who grew up eating and creating South Indian food in her native country, Rao carefully devises each meal plan after experimentation in her Mountain View home kitchen. She can spend six months honing a single dish. “I’m Spices, rice and other dry ingredients are premeasured and packed in Recipe Sacks by Mountain View’s Savitha Rao. Shown, clockwise from bottom, are cinnamon sticks, cashews, garam masala, curry powder, chili powder, cumin, cloves and star anise. PHOTOS BY VERONICA WEBER PRECISELY SPICED PENINSULA COOK’S RECIPE SACKS TAKE THE GUESSWORK OUT OF HOMEMADE INDIAN CUISINE 16 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ July 12, 2013 8FFLFOE not just buying and repackaging. These are my own recipes,” she says. Rao calls her business Recipe Sack. The logo is a peppy red, white and black, with a jauntyhaired woman hoisting a sack high. Through her website and at trunk shows, Rao sells nine types of sacks and two multirecipe gift baskets. Chitranna (lemon rice), a nostalgia-inducing favorite among South Indians, is a best-seller at $3 a sack. Inside its linen sack are rice and peanuts, along with spices and dried coconut flakes; cooks contribute the lemon, oil, onions and salt. They can also add cilantro for garnish, and a dash of yogurt or curds. Rao calls this a good starter dish for cooks new to Indian food. “My 8-year-old daughter asks for it at least once a week,” Beverly Acevedo, a regular Mountain View customer, said in an enthusiastic email. Acevedo, whose daughter goes to school with Rao’s children, is just the type of customer Rao is Continued on next page Savitha Rao measures ingredients for her Recipe Sack meal kits in a commercial kitchen. DINNER BY THE MOVIES AT SHORELINE’S Cucina Venti ons ervati s e r g in rty! accept iday pa l o h r u le! for yo vailab Now ng a cateri Join us for Dinner Before the Show! Shoreline Amphitheatre Kenny Chesney, Eli Young Band & Kacey Musgraves: No Shoes Nation Tour Thursday, July 25 Century 16 Back to the Future–PG, 1hr56mins; 2pm Sunday, July 14 1390 Pear Ave., Mountain View (650) 254-1120 www.cucinaventi.com Hours: 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Thursday 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Friday through Saturday 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sunday Movie Theater is right across the street from Cucina Venti Come see live music on the Cucina Venti patio every Wednesday & Thursday, 5-8pm! July 12, 2013 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ 17 8FFLFOE Continued from previous page trying to attract: someone who loves Indian food but has little experience cooking it at home. Acevedo bought her first Recipe Sack at a school holiday boutique and has been using them ever since. “Most recipes call for exotic ingredients I do not already have in my pantry and making a list and purchasing all of the ingredients felt like a daunting task. ... There are a few other frozen or prepared Indian foods offered in stores, but they don’t compare to the freshness of Recipe Sack,” she said. Other Recipe Sack options include vermicelli uppma ($3), with cashews and noodles (add ginger, peas and other veggies); dosas ($2.50); and vegetable pulav ($3), with basmati rice and cashews. Kichdi ($2.50), a comfort food of lentils and rice, is Rao’s husband’s favorite. It’s a simple Savitha Rao porridge-like dish that can be fancied up with eggplant, potatoes, raita or stir-fried greens. Today, Rao is putting together a sack for vegetable pulav in the shared commercial-kitchen space she rents in San Jose. Recipe experimentation may be done at home, but sack assembly is reserved for the commercial space. Wearing a Recipe Sack T-shirt, with a white iPhone peeking out of her cargo-pant pocket, Rao spoons turmeric powder into a small plastic bag, following it with mild chili powder, “a pinch of cinnamon,” garam masala, cumin and others. The brilliant spices gleam like a sunset. Every now and then, a refreshing blast of cold air sweeps through the warm kitchen as another cook opens a walk-in fridge. “It’s fun,” Rao says, closing the bag with a plastic-film sealer. “Some days I do it as an assembly line.” She places the plastic bag inside a drawstring linen sack; she’s chosen the linen in hopes of being eco-friendly, and orders the biodegradable plastic bags online. Rao opens another sack, this one containing the fixings for lemon rice. “With a side salad, it’s a full meal,” she says. A full vegetarian meal, of course. Rao doesn’t eat meat, and all her recipes are vegetarian, though when asked she may give advice on incorporating chicken stock into a rice dish. Her recipes are also free of cream, something she says she sees too much of in Indian restaurants. She tries to make her dishes feel less heavy. The business could be seen as a culinary inheritance. Rao grew up enjoying her mother’s recipes, and her father is a foodie who loved to take the family to favorite restaurants. Rao came to the United States in 1997 to earn a master’s degree in communications at Wayne State University in Detroit. A career as a public-relations consultant followed as she lived in various American cities (she met her husband in Cincinnati). The family came to the Bay Area in 2007. Interested in a career change, Rao decided to work in products instead of services, and her experiments in the kitchen started to seem like a potential business. She started selling the sacks at a school boutique in 2011. Now Recipe Sack is her full-time job. Rao estimates that she has about 50 repeat customers, and that she sells about 150 sacks at each trunk show. She hasn’t done much marketing, but plans to start an augmented campaign, upgrading her website and trying to get her products into stores. In the meantime, she’s back in her kitchen, experimenting away. She says she hopes to soon supplement her Indian offerings with African and Middle Eastern dishes. N I N F O R M AT I O N For more about Recipe Sack, go to recipesack.com. PENINSULA 185 Discover the best places to eat this week! AMERICAN New Tung Kee Noodle House Armadillo Willy’s 947-8888 520 Showers Drive, Mountain View www.shopmountainview.com/luunoodlemv 941-2922 1031 N. San Antonio Road, Los Altos www.armadillowillys.com INDIAN The Old Pro Janta Indian Restaurant 326-1446 541 Ramona Street, Palo Alto www.oldpropa.com 462-5903 369 Lytton Ave. www.jantaindianrestaurant.com ITALIAN Thaiphoon Cucina Venti 323-7700 543 Emerson Ave, Palo Alto www.ThaiphoonRestaurant.com 254-1120 1390 Pear Ave, Mountain View www.cucinaventi.com CHINESE Read and post reviews, Chef Chu’s explore restaurant menus, 948-2696 1067 N. San Antonio Road www.chefchu.com and more at ShopPaloAlto, Ming’s ShopMenloPark 856-7700 1700 Embarcadero East, Palo Alto www.mings.com and ShopMountainView get hours and directions powered by 18 Join us for WEEKEND BRUNCH! ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ July 12, 2013 Panettone French Toast with Maple Syrup, Mascarpone Whipped Cream, Roasted Rhubarb & Local Strawberries. Try our brand new brunch menu and indulge in our Frutti di Bosco, “Mixed Berries” with Adami Prosecco, Vecchia Romagna Italian Brandy and Mixed Berries. Or try our… BOTTOMLESS BELLINI’S FOR $15 BRUNCH Saturday & Sunday 10:30am - 2:30pm Open for Lunch and Dinner, Wednesday - Sunday 185 University Ave, Palo Alto Reservations: (650) 614-1177 www.campo185.com 8FFLFOE NMOVIEREVIEWS DESPICABLE ME 2 -- While the original “Despicable Me,” from 2010, wasn’t exactly one for the ages, it had provocative undertones courtesy of its antihero, Gru (Steve Carell). Since the first film’s arc arrived at a nice Gru who embraced single-fatherhood with three little girls, there’s little point in blandly extending the story. Then again, though you can’t squeeze blood from a turnip, you can squeeze lucre from a hit movie by sequelizing it. And so Gru finds himself recruited by the Anti-Villain League to root out a super-villain plotting to unleash a mutating serum. Gru reluctantly partners with AVL agent Lucy Wilde (Kristen Wiig). Before long, Lucy’s positioned as the potential mother Gru’s cute daughter Agnes (Elsie Fisher) has been pining for. The courtship of Agnes’ father gets “Despicable Me” into some uncomfortable territory, with distasteful women browbeating and/or boring Gru until he realizes the woman for him has been under his nose all along. Rated PG for rude humor and mild action. One hour, 38 minutes. — P.C. THE EAST --- Are we headed in the wrong direction? A collective called The East thinks so, and its members believe corporations are taking us there through “worldwide terrorism.” And so, The East commits eco-terrorism against Western corporations. That’s the setup for suspense thriller “The East,” directed by Zal Batmanglij and co-written by Batmanglij and star Brit Marling. Marling plays Jane Owen, a fomer counter-terrorist agent for the FBI who now lends her expertise to the private sector. As an operative for the private intelligence firm Hiller Brood (headed by Patricia Clarkson’s Sharon), Jane infiltrates eco-terrorist groups and gathers intelligence to share with law enforcement as they dismantle the groups. That’s all well and good for the ambitious and devoutly Christian Jane until she gets in with The East, whose anarchism seems more reasoned to her the longer she spends in their company. This is a form of Stockholm Syndrome, yes, but perhaps something more as she sees the legitimate appeal of the group’s intimacy and depth of belief, and the undeniable, unanswered crimes of the corporate executives they target. Rated PG-13 for thematic elements, violence, disturbing images, sexual content and nudity. One hour, 56 minutes. — P.C. (Reviewed June 7, 2013) THE HEAT -- The “feminist” buddy-cop comedy “The Heat” proves its bona fides by being about as funny and as lazy as guyfronted buddy-cop comedies. I’m not sure that’s a victory for women, but it will probably translate into healthy box office. Sandra Bullock plays FBI Special Agent Sarah Ashburn. She’s brilliant but also arrogant and competitive, which annoys the men who surround her. With a promotion at stake, bythe-book Ashburn finds herself forced to play nice with burn-the-book Boston cop Shannon Mullins (Melissa McCarthy), whose technique is less Sherlock Holmes and more bull in a china shop. They’re set loose on a flimsy, “Lethal Weapon”-y drug case, an excuse for the ol’ odd-couple tropes to play out: the uncool Ashburn needs to learn not to be so uptight, while the hard Mullins needs to learn to let down her emotional guard. Rated R for pervasive language, crude content and violence. One hour, 57 minutes. — P.C. I’M SO EXCITED -- Writer-director Pedro Almodovar returns to broad comedy with “I’m So Excited,” a wacky, candy-colored allegory for modern life. Unfortunately, a plot about a plane that has trouble making a landing could just as well be a metaphor for the movie. A prologue amusingly allows Antonio Banderas and Penelope Cruz to be responsible for screwing up the plane’s landing gear and trapping passengers, pilots and flight crew in a Sartrean limbo. Almodovar deliberately marginalizes the coach passengers as drugged sheep, opting to spend most of the film in the only superficially classy first class. There, a trio of gay stewards (Javier Camara, Carlos Areces, Raul Arevalo) wait on the morally compromised elite, including a scandalized banker (Jose Luis Torrijo), a mystery man (Jose Maria Yazpik), a pair of newlyweds (Miguel Angel Silvestre and Laya Marti), an actor/lothario (Guillermo Toledo), and a dominatrix (Cecilia Roth) to the rich and famous. They’re joined by one interloper from economy class, a cheery virgin psychic (Lola Duenas). What follows amounts to a perverted comedy of manners, with the characters spilling drinks, secrets and sperm in a haphazard, fearful response to potential sudden death. Almodovar merrily doses his characters with mescaline-laced Valencia cocktails, while the bisexual pilots (Antonio de la Torre and Hugo Silva) carry on a comic soap opera with the stewards. Rated R for strong sexual content and drug use. One hour, 30 minutes. — P.C. THE INTERNSHIP --1/2 Google goes Hollywood in “The Internship,” an intermittently amusing but mostly strained feature-length commercial for the tech giant that reteams “Wedding Crashers” Vince Vaughn and Owen Wilson. The stars play laidoff watch salesmen who apply for an internship at Google, despite their lack of knowledge about technology. Naturally, Google accepts the pair, overlooking that they qualify as college students only by a hasty enrollment in the online University of Phoenix. Though Vaughn’s riffing skills remain in fine form, as do Wilson’s, the story makes every obvious choice. The script also happily tells flagrant lies about how technological idiots could thrive in such a competition by learning programming in less than a month, or cramming enough about Gmail in one night to man a helpline the next day. The production spent five days shooting at Google’s Mountain View campus, but shot mostly on replica sets. It’s an effective simulacrum, and so, in a way, is the movie, which pushes a root-for-the-underdog vibe so sunny one might almost forget that 95 -Skip it --Some redeeming qualities ---A good bet ----Outstanding percent of the young interns who fear uncertain futures will be shown the door. Rated PG-13 for sexuality, some crude humor, partying and language. One hour, 59 minutes. — P.C. THE LONE RANGER --- Inevitably, Disney’s new-millennial “The Lone Ranger” is a mass of contradictions, just like the country it’s about. But it’s hard to shake the feeling that director Gore Verbinski and executive producer Johnny Depp are getting away with something. Again. In a bit of magical absurdism, it’s a 100-year-old Tonto (Johnny Depp), who tells his story to a confused child who is the audience’s surrogate. In 1869 Texas, an action sequence shackles (a la “The Defiant Ones”) Tonto to John Reid (Armie Hammer, well cast). He’s the man who will become The Lone Ranger — but not before we see him reading John Locke’s “The Treatises of Government” and averring, “This here’s my Bible.” Reid’s arc will be one of disillusionment, passing through greed and corruption to arrive at the conclusion “If men like him represent the law, I’d rather be an outlaw.” This pop-culture reboot — an example of Hollywood’s current default position — operates in large part as a deconstruction of its source material, including the Lone Ranger’s historical trust in government. In sun-cracked white face paint and with a dead crow perched atop his head, this Tonto is both a typically oddball Depp creation, and an embodiment of the sane insanity of the unfathomably victimized: If he’s a fool, he’s a holy fool. Rated PG-13 for action, violence and suggestive material. Two hours, 29 minutes. — P.C. MAN OF STEEL --- Superman first appeared in the pages of Action Comics in 1938, so it’s fitting that action is the driving force behind the character’s big-screen adventure 75 years later. “Man of Steel” should give DC Comics a much-needed boost as it tries to keep pace with rival Marvel at the box office. Superman’s latest revamp, courtesy of “300” director Zack Snyder, helps wash away memories of DC’s cosmic misstep “Green Lantern” in 2011. Snyder and his filmmaking team present Superman’s origin in periodic flashbacks, which break the flow but protect the audience from unnecessary backstory. The design team deserves a wealth of credit for the costuming and set pieces, which showcase Krypton beautifully. But the conflagration of action and visual effects, especially in the film’s final act, lead to a sensory overload. The wanton destruction that takes place during the picture’s bigbudget action scenes is dizzying — even the Incredible Hulk would say “enough’s enough” — and the filmmakers may have been better served prioritizing story over visuals. Rated PG-13 for scifi violence, action and language. Two hours, 23 minutes. — T.H. NMOVIECRITICS S.T.- Susan Tavernetti, P.C. Peter Canavese, T.H.-Tyler Hanley For show times, plot synopses, trailers and more movie info, visit www.mv-voice.com and click on movies. NMOVIETIMES Showtimes are for Friday through Sunday unless otherwise noted. For other times, as well as reviews and trailers, go to mv-voice.com/movies. Back to the Future (1985) (PG) Century 16: Sun 2 p.m. Mon 2 p.m. Century 20: Fri 2 p.m. Sat 2 p.m. Sun 2 p.m. Mon 2 p.m. Tue 2 p.m. Before Midnight (R) Aquarius Theatre: 2:30, 5:30, 8:30 p.m. Despicable Me 2 (PG) (( Century 16: 9:15 & 11:45 a.m. & 2:30, 5:15, 8, 10:35 p.m. In 3D 10:45 a.m. & 1:30, 4:15, 7, 9:35 p.m. Century 20: 10:20 & 11:45 a.m. & 12:50, 2:20, 3:15, 4:55, 5:40, 7:30, 8:10, 10, 10:40 p.m. The East (PG-13) ((( Palo Alto Square: 1:30, 4:15, 7:15 p.m. Fri-Sat also at 10 p.m. Grown Ups 2 (PG-13) Century 16: 9 & 10:15 & 11:30 a.m. & 12:45, 2, 3:15, 4:40, 5:55, 7:30, 9, 10:20 p.m. Fri-Sat also at 11:30 p.m. Century 20: 10:45 a.m. & noon & 1:15, 2:30, 3:45, 5, 6:15, 7:35, 8:50, 10:15 p.m. The Heat (R) (( Century 16: 11:10 a.m. & 1:55, 4:45, 7:45, 10:40 p.m. Century 20: 11 a.m. & 1:45, 4:25, 7:20, 10:20 p.m. I’m So Excited (R) (( Palo Alto Square: 2, 4:30, 7:25 p.m. Fri-Sat also at 9:45 p.m. The Internship (PG-13) (( Century 16: 10:50 a.m. & 4:50, 10:20 p.m. Josh Groban Live: All That Echoes, Artist Cut (PG) Century 20: Fri 7:30 p.m. Sat 7:30 p.m. Sun 7:30 p.m. Mon 7:30 p.m. Tue 7:30 p.m. Kevin Hart: Let Me Explain (R) Century 20: 10:40 a.m. & 12:40, 2:40, 4:40, 6:40, 8:40, 10:45 p.m. The Lone Ranger (PG-13) ((( Century 16: 9 & 10:40 a.m. & 12:20, 2:10, 3:50, 5:25, 7:10, 9:10, 10:30 p.m. Century 20: 10:25 & 11:15 a.m. & 12:15, 1:40, 2:35, 3:35, 4:55, 6, 7, 8:20, 9:25, 10:25 p.m. Man of Steel (PG-13) ((( Century 16: 9:05 a.m. & 3:55 & 7:15 p.m. In 3D 12:35, 10:30 p.m. Century 20: 1:25 & 7:40 p.m. In 3D 10:20 a.m. & 4:30, 10:50 p.m. Monsters University (G) (((1/2 Century 16: 9:25 & 11:55 a.m. & 5 & 7:30 p.m. In 3D 2:25, 10 p.m. Century 20: 10:30 a.m. & 1:10, 3:45, 6:25, 9:10 p.m. In 3D 12:05, 2:40, 5:15, 7:55, 10:35 p.m. Morocco (1930) (Not Rated) Stanford Theatre: Fri 7 p.m. Much Ado About Nothing (PG-13) (((1/2 Aquarius Theatre: 2, 5, 8 p.m. Now You See Me (PG-13) (( Century 16: 7:35 p.m. Fri-Sat also at 1:45 p.m. Century 20: 10:55 a.m. & 1:40, 4:20, 7:10, 9:55 p.m. Pacific Rim (PG-13) Century 16: 11 a.m. & 2:15, 5:30, 8:45, 11:45 p.m. In 3D 9:15 a.m. 12:30, 3:45, 7, 10:15 p.m. Century 20: 10:35 a.m. & 1:35, 4:35, 7:40, 10:45 p.m. In XD 12:15, 3:15, 6:20, 9:25 p.m. Roberta (1935) (Not Rated) Stanford Theatre: Sat-Sun 5:35 & 9:25 p.m. Shanghai Express (1932) (Not Rated) Stanford Theatre: Fri 5:55 & 9:15 p.m. Star Trek: Into Darkness (PG-13) ((( Century 16: 10:05 a.m., 4:05, 7:25 p.m. In 3D 1:05, 10:25 p.m. Century 20: 1:50 & 7:45 p.m. In 3D 10:50 a.m. & 4:45, 10:45 p.m. Swing Time (1936) (Not Rated) Stanford Theatre: Sat-Sun 3:40 & 7:30 p.m. Century 16: 10:30 a.m. & 1:20, This Is The End (R) ((1/2 4:20, 7:20, 9:55 p.m. Century 20: 12:10, 2:45, 5:25, 8:05, 10:40 p.m. The Way, Way Back (PG-13) (Not Reviewed) Guild Theatre: 2, 4:30, 7:15, 9:55 p.m. White House Down (PG-13) ((1/2 Century 16: 9:10 a.m. & 12:24, 3:25, 7:05, 10:05 p.m. Century 16: 9:10 a.m. & 12:24, 3:25, 7:05, 10:05 p.m. Century 20: 10:35 a.m. & 1:35, 4:35, 7:35, 10:35 p.m. Century 20: 10:35 a.m. & 1:35, 4:35, 7:35, 10:35 p.m. World War Z (PG-13) Century 16: 9:45 a.m. & 4 & 7:15 p.m. In 3D 12:50 & 10:10 p.m. Century 20: 2:25, 8 p.m. In 3D 11:40 a.m. & 5:10, 10:50 p.m. July 12, 2013 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ 19 (PJOHT0O M O U N TA I N V I E W V O I C E ART GALLERIES CLUBS/MEETINGS ENVIRONMENT ‘Gone to the Wild’ - prints by Kathryn Kain An exhibition of prints by artist Kathryn Kain will be on display in the Mohr Gallery at the Community School of Music and Arts (CSMA). An opening reception will be held with the artist on Friday, June 21 from 6-8 p.m. MondaySaturday, June 21-July 28, 9:30 a.m.-7 p.m. Free. Community School of Music and Arts at Finn Center, 230 San Antonio Circle, Mountain View. www.arts4all.org/attend/mohrgallery.htm Tony Coluzzi Photographic Exhibition An exhibit by Bay Area artist Tony Coluzzi, “Vietnam in Color & Landscapes in Black & White,” will be on display at Gallery 9 in Los Altos from July 2 through July 28. The exhibit includes works from travels to Vietnam. A reception for the artist will take place Friday, July 5, from 5 to 8 p.m. Gallery hours: Tuesday-Saturday, 11 a.m.5 p.m.; Sunday, noon-4 p.m. Gallery 9, 143 Main St., Los Altos. www.gallery9losaltos.com Astronomy Lecture Monthly meeting of the Peninsula Astronomical Society including a talk open to the public, led by speaker Dan Werthimer of UC Berkeley and organizer of the SETI<\@>home Project. The Foothill Observatory will be open after the meeting from 9 o 11 p.m., weather permitting. July 12, 7:30-9 p.m. Free ($3 parking fee required). Foothill College Room 5001, 12345 El Monte Road, Los Altos Hills. www.pastro.org/dnn/ Charity-of-the-Month Knit & Crochet Club Inaugural meeting of a new club dedicated to making items for charity. Participants will make squares to be joined into afghans for homeless shelters and nursing homes. Tuesdays, April 9-Sept. 10, 3-5 p.m. Free. Los Altos Library program room, 13 S. San Antonio Road, Los Altos. Call 650-948-7683. sccl.org Middle School Reading Workshops Linden Tree Books hosts summer reading workshops for middle school students (6th-8th grade). Students can choose a book from their summer reading list or work with a book that they have selected to read. K-5 workshops are also available. July 17, 4-6 p.m. $35/per student. Includes one paperback book. Linden Tree Books, 265 State St., Los Altos. Call 650-9493390. www.lindentreebooks.com Mulch and Young Tree Survey Mountain View Trees hosts a mulch workshop, followed by its Young Tree Survey kickoff. Learn about different kinds of mulch materials and how they benefit trees. After survey instructions, volunteers pick up their list of addresses of trees to check for health, vigor, etc. July 13, 10 a.m.-noon. Sierra Vista Park, 859 Sierra Vista, Mountain View. Call 415-412-1127. www.mountianviewtrees.org CLASSES/WORKSHOPS Foothill College Fall Quarter Registration Registration for the fall quarter at Foothill College runs July 22-Sept. 22. Classes meet Sept. 23-Dec. 13. Review the searchable class schedule online and to register. California residents pay $31 per unit plus basic fees; fees are due at the time of registration. Foothill College, 12345 El Monte Road, Los Altos Hills. Call 650-949-7325. www.foothill.fhda. edu/admissions.php KMVT Youth Summer Camps KMVT Community Television in Mountain View offers studio production and claymation camps for middle school students ages 10-14. Camps are one week long and held every winter break, spring break and summer. June 10-August 16, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. $325. KMVT Community Television, 1400 Terra Bella Ave., Suite M, Mountain View. Call 650-968-1540. www.kmvt15.org/workshops/youth.htmlwww.kmvt Life Drawing Open Studio In these ongoing, year-round drop-in classes, participants can draw from live models. No formal instruction, work with other students and artists. Bring own supplies. Option to purchase punch card for 10 sessions. Mondays are Short/Med Pose; Wednesdays, Long Pose. See website for more info. Running until December 30, Mondays and Wednesdays, 7-10 p.m. $7 per session/$60 for 10 sessions. Community School of Music and Arts at Finn Center, 230 San Antonio Circle, Mountain View. www.arts4all.org/study/on-site/lifedrawing.htm MC Sports Broadcasting Camp for Teens The Mid Peninsula Media Center hosts a sports-broadcasting camp in Palo Alto. Using a mobile production truck, campers learn all crew positions: Field Camera Operations, Directing, Graphics, Audio, Playback Engineering and Game Announcer. The camp includes covering a real game at a local sports camp. Three instructors; limited to 12 participants. July 15-19, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. $450. Media Center, 900 San Antonio Road, Palo Alto. Call 650-494-8686. midpenmedia.org MC Sports Broadcasting Camp for Teens The Mid Peninsula Media Center is hosting a sports-broadcasting camp in Palo Alto. Using a mobile production truck, campers learn all crew positions: field camera operations, directing, graphics, audio, playback engineering and game announcer. Monday through Wednesday, July 22-29, $465. Media Center, 900 San Antonio Road, Palo Alto. Call 650-494-8686. www.midpenmedia.org Princess Dance Camp For ages 6-8. At each themed mini-camp dancers will have a dance class with a professional teacher, do a craft, play games and listen to stories, and have a snack. Aug. 6-8, 1-3 p.m. For the Love of Dance, 2483 Old Middlefield Way Suite B, Mountain View. Call 650-861-0650. www. fortheloveofdancemv.com 20 COMMUNITY EVENTS EXHIBITS Ry Smith Los Altos Hills-sponsored art exhibit of paintings by Ry Smith, a designer of high-tech products. Exhibit runs through Aug. 28. Free. Los Altos Hills town hall, 26379 Fremont Road , Los Altos Hills. Call 650-941-8073. FAMILY AND KIDS PYT Presents ‘Charlotte’s Web’ In the Peninsula Youth Theatre’s adaptation of “Charlotte’s Web” Piglet Wilbur, the runt of the litter, learns about love and friendship from farm girl Fern and spider Charlotte. The show runs FridaySunday, July 13-21. Performance vary. $7-$16. Mountain View Center for the Performing Art, 500 Castro St., Mountain View. Call 650-9888798. http://www.pytnet.org/shows/CharlottesWeb/tickets.html Summer Concert Series Linden Tree Books hosts their summer concert series, featuring special guests on Wednesday mornings. Attending families can donate new books, which will be given to Reading Partners, a local literacy organization. June 19-August 14, 10:30-11 a.m. Free. Linden Tree Books, 265 State St., Los Altos. Call 650-949-3390. www. lindentreebooks.com Waldorf Nursery & Kindergarten Playdate See Waldorf School of the Peninsula’s Los Altos campus and visit a kindergarten classroom. Children will have the opportunity to experience Waldorf activities for nursery and kindergartenaged children, and play while parents learn more about Waldorf’s Early Childhood programs and availability for fall enrollment. July 13, 10-11:30 a.m. Free. Waldorf School of the Peninsula, 11311 Mora Drive, Los Altos. Call 650-2099400. www.waldorfpeninsula.org NHIGHLIGHT SUMMER OUTDOOR MOVIE NIGHT SERIES The city of Mountain View is hosting a series of outdoor movie screenings this summer. Popcorn and light refreshments will be served. All movies begin at 8:30 p.m. or when dark enough outside. Please bring a blanket or lawn chair. Friday, July 12 at Cuesta Park - “Madagascar 3”. Call 650-903-6410. www.mountainview.gov/ Restaurant, 873 Castro St., Mountain View. Call 650-968-1502. www.moroccosrestaurant.com ON STAGE ‘Damn Yankees’ The Foothill Music Theatre presents the Tony Award-winning musical “Damn Yankees” in which mddle-aged baseball fanatic Joe Boyd trades his soul to the devil for a chance to lead his favorite team to victory in the pennant race against the New York Yankees. Performance times vary. July 26-August 18, $10-$28. Smithwick Theatre, Foothill College , 12345 El Monte Road, Los Altos Hills . www. foothillmusicals.com.† ‘Gretel and Hansel,’ a new twist on an old tale Written in the style of a British pantomime for Shakespeare Santa Cruz, this version of Gretel and Hansel is full of puns and audience participation. The music, composed by Craig Bohmler, features styles from ragtime to hip hop. Fridays and Saturdays, July 12-27, 7:309 p.m. $15 for children/seniors, $17 general. Bus Barn Theatre, 97 Hillview Ave., Los Altos. Call 650-941-0551. www.losaltosrecreation.org/laytyouth-theatre.html The Importance of Being Earnest Stanford Summer Theater presents Oscar Wilde’s “The Importance of Being Earnest,” directed by Lynn Soffer, with Kay Kostopoulos, Marty Pistone, Courtney Walsh, Don Demico, Jessica Waldman David Raymond, Austin Caldwell and Ruth Marks. July 18-August 11, 8-10 p.m. $25, $15 for students and seniors. Pigott Theater, Memorial Auditorium, 551 Serra Mall, Stanford. www.stanford. edu/group/summertheater/cgi-bin/sst/tickets ‘The Home of the Future’ The Los Altos History Museum hosts an architect, builder, educator and landscape architect on a panel to discuss what the home of the future will look like, what new features to expect and what cities will look like. Refreshments will be served. July 21, 1-3 p.m. Free. Los Altos History Museum, 51 S. San Antonio Road, Los Altos. www.losaltoshistory.org 2013 Palo Alto Clay & Glass Festival More than 150 local artists will display their handcrafted glass and ceramic art at the Clay and Glass Festival. Meet the artists while shopping, or take part in activities such as live clay and glass technique demonstrations. Ceramic and clay art projects open to all artists of all ages. July 13-14, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Free. Palo Alto Art Center, 1313 Newell Road, Palo Alto. Call 650-329-2366. www.clayglassfestival.com Ujena Swimwear Charity Drive Ujena Swimwear’s goal is to collect as many new or gently worn women’s swimsuits as possible to give away to less fortunate women. The company is offering a $20 off coupon for a future Ujena Swimwear purchase in exchange for a donation. The drive runs through July 31. Ujena Swimwear, 1931A Old Middlefield Way, Mountain View. Call 650-938-1002. www.facebook. com/events/611707982174307/ ICA Summer Film Fest Stanford University’s Division of International, Comparative and Area Studies (ICA) hosts an international film festival. A Stanford affiliate will introduce each film and lead a discussion. Wednesdays, July 3-August 14, 7-10 p.m. Free. Cubberley Auditorium, 485 Lasuen Mall, Stanford. Call 650-725-9317. www.ica. stanford.edu/2013FilmFest DANCE HEALTH ‘Roll Up The Rug’ The MVLA Adult School is offering a five-week summer social dance class that includes swing, salsa, mambo, merengue and nightclub two-step. Singles and couples welcome. Class instructors are Ellen Murray and Gene Esswein. The sign-up deadline is June 13. Mondays, June 17-July 15, 7:30-9 p.m. $35/ person. Mountain View Recreation, 201 S. Rengstorff Ave., Mountain View. Call 650-940-1333. www.mvlaae.net Jacki’s Aerobic Dancing Try one month of free classes at Jacki’s Aerobic Dancing in Mountain View. The studio offers core work, strength training and aerobic routines as well as childcare during the classes. Classes meet every Monday, Wednesday and Friday from 9-10 a.m. Free. Mountain View Masonic Lodge, 890 Church St., Mountain View. Call 650-941-1002. Musical Theater Dance Camp Dancers ages 9-17 have a week to work on musical-theater techniques: dancing, singing and auditionpreparation. July 29-Aug. 2, 1-3 p.m. $135. For the Love of Dance, 2483 Old Middlefield Way Suite B, Mountain View. Call 650-861-0650. www.fortheloveofdancemv.com Free Total Control Pelvic Health Class Introductory Session Classes that combine education and gentle exercise, taught by El Camino Hospital therapists who have undergone specialized training, can help strengthen muscles to achieve a strong pelvic core, flatter abs and improved bladder control. Call to register; space is limited. Sessions will be held May 22, June 26, July 24, August 28, September 25 and December 11, 5:30-6:30 p.m. Free. El Camino Hospital Park Pavilion Second Floor, 2400 Grant Road , Mountain View. www.elcaminohospital.org ‘Sodium Savvy’ Join Khahn from Second Harvest Food Bank for this nutrition workshop at the Mountain View Senior Center. Learn how to be smart about how to use salt in cooking and when choosing meals. July 16, 10-11 a.m. Free. Mountain View Senior Center, 266 Escuela Ave., Mountain View. Call 650-903-6330.† Facebook for Current Users The Mountain View Senior Center is hosting a workshop on how to use Facebook. A preexisting Facebook account and basic computer skills are required. July 17, 2:30-3:30 p.m. Free. Mountain View Senior Center, 266 Escuela Ave., Mountain View. Call 650-903-6330. Keeping Up Your Healthy Brain Join Hiro Sugawara, a chiropractic doctor, for this workshop on the connections between body and mental health. July 25, 1-2 p.m. Free. Mountain View Senior Center, 266 Escuela Ave., Mountain View. Call 650-903-6330.† LIVE MUSIC SPECIAL EVENTS Live Acoustic Guitar & Wine Flight with Jack Cutter Guitarist Jack Cutter will perform, starting at 7 p.m. July 18, 5-11 p.m. Free. Morocco’s Restaurant, 873 Castro St., Mountain View. Call 650-968-1502. www. moroccosrestaurant.com Live Jazz Music with Johnny Williams & Steven Gary On Morocco Restaurant’s “no corkage Tuesdays,” in July Johnny Williams and Steven Gary will also be performing, starting at 7 p.m. July 2-30, 5-9:30 p.m. Free. Morocco’s ‘Fandango! An Evening in Old California’ The Los Altos History Museum is hosting an event about the history of Californios with era-appropriate live music, dancing, a costume contest and a dinner menu based on California rancho cooking. Proceeds benefit museum programs. July 14, 5-9 p.m. $95 members; $115 non-members; Youth 9-15 years, $40. Los Altos History Museum, 51 S. San Antonio Road, Los Altos. www.losaltoshistory.org ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ July 12, 2013 FILM RELIGION/SPIRITUALITY Insight Meditation South Bay Shaila Catherine and guest teachers lead a weekly Insight Meditation sitting followed by a talk on Buddhist teachings. Tuesdays through August 13, 7:30-9 p.m. Free (donations accepted). St. Timothy’s/Edwards Hall, 2094 Grant Road, Mountain View. Call 650-857-0904. imsb.org Interspiritual Meditation Community Learn how to meditate at Sanctify the Day in Mountain View. Through July 27, the community will hold Saturday morning talks on the theme of spiritual practice led by Reverend Priya FridayPabros. 7-9 a.m. Free (donations accepted). Cassand Ballet, 223 Moffet Blvd., Mountain View. Call 659-691-5206. www.sanctifytheday.com SENIORS Russian Fair: Artists & Entrepreneurs of Silicon Valley Meet Russian artists and entrepreneurs of Silicon Valley for an afternoon of art, music, classes, presentations, games, food and more. July 21, 4-7 p.m. Free. OFJCC campus, 3921 Fabian Way, Palo Alto. Call 650-223-8618. www. paloaltojcc.org/russianfair SPORTS ‘Links to the Heart’ Golf Tournament Pathways Hospice Play the Stanford University Golf Course with friends, colleagues, or clients and support Pathways Hospice. Hole-inOne prize: 2013 Lexus IS 250, compliments of Magnussen Lexus. July 15, 12:30-8 p.m. $375 per player or $1,500 for a foursome. Stanford University Golf Course , 198 Junipero Serra Blvd., Stanford. Call 408-773-4109 . www.pathwayshealth.org/golf Foothill College Learning Curve Bike Circuit Race The annual Learning Curve Bike Race will be along the Foothill College 1.09-mile campus loop road. Event registration begins at 7:15 a.m. July 14, 7:15 a.m.-6 p.m. Race entry fees ($15-$35) vary depending upon competitor age. Free admission and parking. Foothill College, 12345 El Monte Road, Los Altos Hills. Call 650-279-8472. www.foothillcollegecircuitrace.com/ TALKS/AUTHORS ‘Dial Up Your Vision: Be Bolder, Play Bigger’ Women In Consulting hosts Kate Purmal, a consultant, adviser and business coach for CEOs, to speak at a general meeting. July 18, 6-8:30 p.m. $45-$65 depending on membership status and registration date. Michael’s at Shoreline Park, 2960 North Shoreline Blvd., Mountain View. Call 408-266-9658 ext. 11. www.womeninconsulting.org ‘The Road to Conquering Diseases of the Brain’ The Oshman Family JCC hosts Dr. Dale Schenk to explore what is known about the brain -- often called “the last frontier of medicine” -- and describe the journey from an idea to the patient’s bedside for new innovative treatments. July 17, 7-8 p.m. $10-15. Oshman Family JCC, 3921 Fabian Way, Palo Alto. Call 408-280-5530. www.commonwealthclub.org/ events/2013-07-17/dale-schenk-road-conquering-diseases-brain Allen Ginsberg’s archivist at Stanford Bill Morgan, biographer and personal archivist to Allen Ginsberg, will speak at Stanford University, home of the Ginsberg archives. Several items of Ginsberg memorabilia will be on display. July 12, 1:30-3 p.m. Free. Stanford Humanities Center, 424 Santa Teresa St., Stanford . Call 650-724-0113. www.events.stanford.edu/ events/384/38421/ Chile Travel Program The Los Altos Library hosts Wayne Bernhardson, the author of travel articles on South America and several Lonely Planet and Moon guidebooks, such as Moon Handbooks Chile. July 17, 7:30-8:30 p.m. Free. Los Altos Library, 13 S. San Antonio Road, Los Altos. Call 650-948-7683. Chris Bohjalian at Books Inc. Author Chris Bohjalian shares “The Light in the Ruins”, a reimagining of Romeo and Juliet set in Tuscany at the end of World War II. July 19, 7 p.m. Free. Books Inc., 74 Town & Country Village, Palo Alto. Call 650-321-0600. www.booksinc.net/ event/2013/07/19/month/all/all/1 Mac Barnett at Books Inc. Author Mac Barnett shares “Count the Monkeys,” an interactive story about monkeys. July 20, 4 p.m. Free. Books Inc., 301 Castro St., Mountain View. Call 650-428-1234. www.booksinc.net/ event/2013/07/19/month/all/all/1 Meg Clayton at Books Inc. Books Inc. Palo Alto hosts a launch party with author Meg Waite Clayton, celebrating the release of “The Wednesday Daughters,” a novel about mothers and daughters. July 16, 7 p.m. Free. Books Inc., 74 Town & Country Village, Palo Alto. Call 650-321-0600. www.booksinc.net/ event/2013/07/19/month/all/all/1 Marketplace PLACE AN AD ONLINE fogster.com E-MAIL ads@fogster.com PHONE 650/326-8216 Now you can log on to fogster.com, day or night and get your ad started immediately online. Most listings are free and include a one-line free print ad in our Peninsula newspapers with the option of photos and additional lines. Exempt are employment ads, which include a web listing charge. Home Services and Mind & Body Services require contact with a Customer Sales Representative. So, the next time you have an item to sell, barter, give away or buy, get the perfect combination: print ads in your local newspapers, reaching more than 150,000 readers, and unlimited free web postings reaching hundreds of thousands additional people!! INDEX N BULLETIN BOARD 100-199 N FOR SALE 200-299 N KIDS STUFF 330-399 N MIND & BODY 400-499 NJ OBS 500-599 NB USINESS SERVICES 600-699 NH OME SERVICES 700-799 NFOR RENT/ FOR SALE REAL ESTATE 800-899 NP UBLIC/LEGAL NOTICES 995-997 The publisher waives any and all claims or consequential damages due to errors. Embarcadero Media cannot assume responsibility for the claims or performance of its advertisers. Embarcadero Media has the right to refuse, edit or reclassify any ad solely at its discretion without prior notice. fogster.com THE PENINSULA’S FREE CLASSIFIEDS WEBSITE Combining the reach of the Web with print ads reaching over 150,000 readers! fogster.com is a unique website offering FREE postings from communities throughout the Bay Area and an opportunity for your ad to appear in the Palo Alto Weekly, The Almanac and the Mountain View Voice. Bulletin Board 115 Announcements Advertise your business or product in alternative papers across the U.S. for just $995/ week. New advertiser discount “Buy 3 Weeks, Get 1 Free” www.altweeklies.com/ads (AAN CAN) 133 Music Lessons Enjoyable Piano Lessons Young, old, beginners, advanced, enjoy the special pleasure of playing the piano in a relaxed setting. Dr. Renee’s Piano 650 854-0543 FUN Piano|Violin|Guitar Lessons Hope Street Music Studios In downtown Mtn.View. Most Instruments voice. All ages & levels 650-961-2192 www.HopeStreetMusicStudios.com 135 Group Activities International Homeschool DID YOU KNOW that Ten Million adults tweeted in the past month, while 164 million read a newspaper in print or online in the past week? ADVERTISE in 240 California newspapers for one low cost. Your 25 word classified ad will reach over 6 million+ Californians. For brochure call Elizabeth (916)288-6019 (Cal-SCAN) Thanks to St Jude The business that considers itself immune to advertising, finds itself immune to business. REACH CALIFORNIANS WITH A CLASSIFIED IN ALMOST EVERY COUNTY! Over 270 newspapers! Combo-California Daily and Weekly Networks. Free Brochures. elizabeth@cnpa.com or (916)288-6019. (Cal-SCAN) 145 Non-Profits Needs Applying to Private Schools? FRIENDS OF THE PALO ALTO LIBRARY 140 Lost & Found FOUND! Camera bag at Paly grad Found~Camera bag with contents at Palo Alto High Graduation ceremony. Identify for return. Lost Yellow Parakeet/Church st. Moms/Daughters- $ Stanford Stanford University's Psychology Department is currently seeking mothers with a history of depression and their 10 to 14-year-old daughters for a paid research study at Stanford. Following a 20-30 minute phone screening interview, eligible participants will be asked to come to Stanford University for up to 3 sessions, each lasting approximately 3.5 hours. Eligible pairs will be compensated $40/hour and researchers will schedule sessions at your convenience: evenings and weekend sessions are available. For more information, please email or call Maria Lemus at mood@psych.stanford.edu or (650) 723-0804. original ringtones Restaurants with Heart Iron Gate Stanford music tutoring Summer Dance Camps & Classes 130 Classes & Instruction NEED CLASS A CDL TRAINING? Start a CAREER in trucking today! Swift Academies offer PTDI certified courses and offer "Best-In-Class" training. New Academy Classes Weekly. No Money Down or Credit check. Certified Mentors Ready and Available. Paid (While Training With Mentor). Regional and Dedicated Opportunities. Great Career Path. Excellent Benefits Package. Please Call: (520) 226-4362 (Cal-SCAN) French Classes through The Alliance Francaise starting in June every Tuesday and Thursday 7pm - 8:30pm @ Douce France Cafe, Town and Country Village, PA. Register: www.afsf.com or call 415/775-7755 German language class Instruction for Hebrew Bar and Bat Mitzvah For Affiliated and Unaffiliated George Rubin, M.A. in Hebrew/Jewish Education 650/424-1940 Palo Alto, 945 Colorado Ave., July 14, 8-4 215 Collectibles & Antiques Bronze Store - Buddha Statue China cabinet - 1200 COACH LEATHER DESKTRAY - $95fine art 1950’s vari-vue retorted worth high 30’s 802-343-3598 GE Clock Fine telchron 1940 clock worth $4,400 Principals 802-343-3598 235 Wanted to Buy CASH BUYER 1970 and Before, Comic Books, Toys, Sports, entire collections wanted. I travel to you and Buy EVERYTHING YOU have! Call Brian TODAY: 1-800-617-3551 (Cal-SCAN) 150 Volunteers Fosterers Needed for Moffet Cats For Sale SAVE on Cable TV-Internet-Digital Phone-Satellite. You`ve Got A Choice! Options from ALL major service providers. Call us to learn more! CALL Today. 888-706-4301.(Cal-SCAN) Breast enlargement call drmusa + $200 Kid’s Stuff 330 Child Care Offered :-) part time nanny EXPERIENCED NANNY Experienced Nanny Available NANNY/MOTHERS HELPER 340 Child Care Wanted Vintage armoire - 500 WISH LIST FRIENDS PA LIBRARY Dance Mania (5-7yr olds) Moms/Daughters- $ Stanford Palo Alto, 747 De Soto Dr., July 13 9-2 Lots of household items, books, bedding, some furniture, CD’s, kid books, come on by. DONATE BOOKS/HELP PA LIBRARY Beginning Jazz Dance (8-teen) Family seeks guest for cruise PA family seeks high school boy to join them on trip to Italy & Greece 7/288/16. Call 650-346-4150. Palo Alto, 4000 Middlefield Road, July 13 & 14, 10-4 Babysitter wanted 355 Items for Sale baby cribs and changing table Boy shoes11/12, 12,5 $4 BOY0-6MonthsClothesw/tags$50 WANTED: Pre-1975 Superhero Comic Books, sports, non sports cards, toys, original art, movies & celebrity memorabilia especially 1960’s. Collector/Investor, paying cash. Call Mike: (800)273-0312 (Cal-SCAN) Two sleeping bags 201 Autos/Trucks/ Parts Toyota 2001 Corolla CE, automatic. Low mileage 19,700. Original owner. $5000 obo. 202 Vehicles Wanted CASH FOR CARS Any Car/Truck. Running or Not! Top Dollar Paid. We Come To You! Call For Instant Offer: 1-888-420-3808 www.cash4car.com (AAN CAN) 425 Health Services 240 Furnishings/ Household items Baby bassinet - 40.00 Beautiful armoire with interior - $700 Beautiful sofa and armchair - 800.00 CA$H FOR DIABETIC TEST STRIPS!! Don't throw boxes away-HELP OTHERS. Unopened/Unexpired boxes only. All Brands Considered. Call Anytime! 24hrs/7days. (888) 491-1168 comfortable chair - $50.00 DONATE YOUR CAR Fast Free Towing 24 hr. Response Tax Deduction. UNITED BREAST CANCER FOUNDATION. Providing Free Mammograms & Breast Cancer Info 888-792-1675 (Cal-SCAN) DONATE YOUR CAR truck or boat to Heritage for the Blind. Free 3 Day Vacation, Tax Deductible, Free Towing, All Paperwork Taken Care Of. 888-902-6851. (Cal-SCAN) Canada Drug Center is your choice for safe and affordable medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy will provide you with savings of up to 90 percent on all your medication needs. Call today 1-800-273-0209, for $10.00 off your first prescription and free shipping. (Cal-SCAN) Dinning table Good condition 6 chairs offer 470 Psychics IKEA Queen Sofa/Futon - $75 210 Garage/Estate Sales Queen size sofa bed - 300 Los Altos, 190 Lyell Street, July 13, 9-2 Swivel armchairs / ottoman - 300 per se Menlo Park , 1050 Sonoma Ave., August 13 &14~ 9:30a.m.-3 p.m. Two Singer Sewing Machines - $100.00 Ea Mountain View, 537 San Pierre Way, July 13, 8-12 SAD light, original art, household goods, nice women’s clothing Palo Alto, 3369 South Court, July 13 & 14, 8-4 Vintage hand & electric Tools; misc. Hocking Red & Green depression glass; misc. Apple Blossom china (pink patter); misc. Copeland Spode china; misc. Juno Haviland china; costume jewelry & watches; misc. silver plate dinnerware & other items; misc. crystal stemware; toys; books; wardrobe chests; wood-lined steel military chests; nautical ship lights; vintage table top lamps; drafting machine; terrarium; misc. military collectables; artwork & photos; vintage home appliances. 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Helps all problems. 2 Free Questions by Phone. 1-630-835-7256 (AAN CAN) 475 Psychotherapy & Counseling Counseling Services Mental Research Institute clinics offer low cost counseling services by appointment for individuals, couples, families and children in English, Spanish, and Mandarin. Location: 555 Middlefield Rd, Palo Alto. For information, call 650/321-3055 Fogster.com is a unique website offering FREE postings from communities throughout the Bay Area and an opportunity for your ad to appear in The Almanac, the Palo Alto Weekly, and the Mountain View Voice. Jobs 540 Domestic Help Wanted NANNY/BABY-SITTER Pick up my 2,4year old kids from school and watch them until I get home from work. duties will be for 2-3 days/week. Applicant should be of the highest moral character. Send resume, salary expectations to: ciser960@gmail.com 550 Business Opportunities EARN MONEY $200 WKLY BY DRIVING We place vinyl sheet advert on your vehicle for free and you make $200 weekly when you drive your vehicle with this Ad. Interested Applicants should email Conceptcarwrap@gmail.com. Email: or Text (267) 638-6838 to apply. 560 Employment Information $$$HELP WANTED$$$ Extra Income! Assembling CD cases from Home! No Experience Necessary! Call our Live Operators Now! 1-800-405-7619 EXT 2450 http://www. easywork-greatpay.com (AAN CAN) AIRLINE CAREERS begin here – Get FAA approved Aviation Maintenance Technician training. Job placement and Financial assistance for qualified students. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance 888-242-3382 (Cal-SCAN) AIRLINE CAREERS begin here – Get FAA approved Maintenance training. Financial aid for qualified students – Housing available. Job placement assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance 877-804-5293 (Cal-SCAN) AIRLINE CAREERS begin here – Get trained as FAA certified Aviation Technician. Housing and Financial aid for qualified students. Job placement assistance. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance 877-492-3059 (AAN CAN) DRIVERS Freight Up = More $. Class A CDL Required. Call 877-258-8782. www.ad-drivers.com (Cal-SCAN) Drivers: Training Class A-CDL. Train and work for us! Professional and focused training for your Class A-CDL. You choose between Company Driver, Owner Operators, Lease Operator or Lease Trainer. (877) 369-7126 www.centraltruckdrivingjobs.com (Cal-SCAN) Help Wanted! make extra money in our free ever popular homemailer program, includes valuable guidebook! Start immediately! Genuine! 1-888-292-1120 www.easywork-fromhome.com (AAN CAN) Paid In Advance! MAKE up to $1000 A WEEK mailing brochures from home! Helping Home Workers since 2001! Genuine Opportunity! No Experience required. Start Immediately! www.mailing-station.com (AAN CAN) To place a Classified ad in The Almanac, The Palo Alto Weekly or The Mountain View Voice call 326-8216 or visit us at fogster.com GO TO FOGSTER.COM TO RESPOND TO ADS WITHOUT PHONE NUMBERS July 12, 2013 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ 21 MARKETPLACE the printed version of fogster.com Business Services 604 Adult Care Offered EXPERIENCED CARE GIVER Experienced Live-in Care Giver Available now for one or two persons Transportation, insurance, refs. 650-966-4025 615 Computers MY COMPUTER WORKS Computer problems? Viruses, spyware, email, printer issues, bad internet connections - FIX IT NOW! Professional, U.S.-based technicians. $25 off service. Call for immediate help. 1-888-865-0271 (Cal-SCAN) 624 Financial Cut your STUDENT LOAN payments in HALF or more even if Late or in Default. Get Relief FAST Much LOWER payments. Call Student Hotline 855-589-8607 (Cal-SCAN) GET FREE OF CREDIT CARD DEBT NOW! Cut payments by up to half. Stop creditors from calling. 888-416-2691. (Cal-SCAN) Home Services 710 Carpentry Cabinetry-Individual Designs Precise, 3-D Computer Modeling: Mantels * Bookcases * Workplaces *Wall Units * Window Seats. Ned Hollis, 650/856-9475 715 Cleaning Services Excellent Housecleaning Excellent References! Rosalina Lopez 1-650-308-5109. Orkopina Housecleaning Beckys Landscape Weekly/periodic maint. Annual rose/fruit tree pruning, clean-ups, irrigation, sod, planting, raised beds. Power washing. 650/444-3030 Bryan’s Weedwhacking Call me today! 831-524-5278. Ceja’s HOME & GARDEN 30 Years in family LANDSCAPE Ya Tree triming & removing, including P 650.814.1577 650.455.0062 J. Garcia Garden Maintenance Service Free est. 20 years exp. (650)366-4301 or (650)346-6781 Since 1985 LaundrWWalls/Windows Out Dependable, Trustworthy, Detailed 650-962-1536 Bonded & Insured | Lic. 20624 orkopinabestcleaningservice.com J. L. GARDENING SERVICE % % "$$# %" % ! 25 Years of Exp. 650-520-9097 730 Electrical A FAST RESPONSE! lic #545936 Bob 650-343-5125. www.HillsboroughElectric.com Guaranteed Income For Your Retirement. Avoid market risk & get guaranteed income in retirement! CALL for FREE copy of our SAFE MONEY GUIDE Plus Annuity Quotes from A-Rated companies! 800-375-8607 (Cal-SCAN) Clarence Electric Co. 636 Insurance #955129 SAVE $$$ on AUTO INSURANCE from the major names you know and trust. No forms. No hassle. No obligation. Call READY FOR MY QUOTE now! CALL 1-888-706-8325. (Cal-SCAN) 748 Gardening/ Landscaping Residential Specialist Troubleshooting Experts Sr/Mil Disc/CC accept Live Response! Call 650-690-7995 FOGSTER.COM www.JLGARDENING.COM LANDA’S GARDENING & LANDSCAPING *Yard Maintenance*New Lawns*Clean Ups*Tree Trimming*Wood Fences* Rototilling*Power Washing*irrigation timer programming. 17 years experience. Call Ramon 650-576-6242 Leo Garcia Landscape/ Maintenance Lawn and irrig. install, clean-ups. Res. and comml. maint. Free Est. Lic. 823699. 650/369-1477. T General Y 650.799.7809 Sam’s Garden Service General CleanuGardening PrunTrimming New LawnSprinkler Systems Planting (650) 969-9894 Tired of Mow, Blow and Go? Owner operated, 40 years exp. All phases of gardening/landscaping. Refs. Call Eric, 408/356-1350 751 General Contracting THINK GLOBALLY POST LOCALLY Fogster.com is a unique website offering FREE postings from communities throughout the Bay Area and an opportunity for your ad to appear in The Almanac, the Palo Alto Weekly, and the Mountain View Voice. A NOTICE TO READERS: It is illegal for an unlicensed person to perform contracting work on any project valued at $500.00 or more in labor and materials. State law also requires that contractors include their license numbers on all advertising. Check your contractor’s status at www.cslb.ca.gov or 800-321-CSLB (2752). Unlicensed persons taking jobs that total less than $500.00 must state in their advertisements that they are not licensed by the Contractors State License Board. 757 Handyman/ Repairs ABLE HANDYMAN FRED 30 Years Experience 650.529.1662 650.483.4227 To respond to ads without phone numbers Go to www.fogster.com 22 CompleteomeRepair Maintenanc emodelin ProfessionalPainting Carpentr Plumbing CustomCabineDesig Deckence AnMuchMore THE PENINSULA’S FREE CLASSIFIEDS WEBSITE TO RESPOND TO ADS WITHOUT PHONE NUMBERS GO TO WWW.FOGSTER.COM 759 Hauling J & G HAULING SERVICE Misc. junk, office, garage, furniture, mattresses, green waste yard debri and more... Lic. &Ins. FREE estimates. 650-743-8852 (see my Yelp reviews) Johnston Hauling 100% Recycle Junk Removal Best Rates * Local Since 1985 650/327-HAUL; 415/999-0594 Insured - PL/PD 767 Movers BAY AREA RELOCATION SERVICES Homes, Apartments, Storage. Full Service moves. Serving the Bay Area for 20 yrs. Licensed & Insured. Armando, 650-630-0424. CAL-T190632 771 Painting/ Wallpaper Glen Hodges Painting Call me first! Senior discount. 45 yrs. #351738. 650/322-8325 H.D.A. Painting and Drywall Interior/exterior painting, drywall installed. Mud, tape all textures. Free est. 650/207-7703 STYLE PAINTING Full service painting. Insured. Lic. 903303. 650/388-8577 775 Asphalt/ Concrete Mtn. View Asphalt Sealing Driveway, parking lot seal coating. Asphalt repair, striping. 30+ yrs. family owned. Free est. Lic. 507814. 650/967-1129 Roe General Engineering Asphalt, concrete, pavers, tiles, sealing, new construct, repairs. 35 yrs exp. No job too small. Lic #663703. 650/814-5572 SOLID ROCK PAVING Service your driveway now! 779 Organizing Services End the Clutter & Get Organized Residential Organizing by Debra Robinson (650)941-5073 799 Windows Bobs Window Cleaning Free Estimates, Serving the Bay Area Since 1980. 650/968-7654 Real Estate ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ July 12, 2013 820 Home Exchanges 809 Shared Housing/ Rooms Home Based Job ALL AREAS - ROOMMATES.COM Browse hundreds of online listings with photos and maps. Find your roommate with a click of the mouse! Visit: http:// www.Roommates.com. (AAN CAN) 825 Homes/Condos for Sale Los Altos - $799000 Menlo Park, 3 BR/2 BA - $1099000 Menlo Park, 2 BR/1 BA - $1,100 Mountain View, 2 BR/2 BA - $115,000 811 Office Space Mountain View, 4 BR/2 BA - $169000 Palo Alto, 1 BR/2 BA Large furnished office available Tuesdays for psychotherapist. Located in Victorian near downtown Palo Alto. 650-327-1149. 815 Rentals Wanted Couple ISO house/condo for rent PERFECT TENANTS Teacher Looking for Quiet Rental Palo Alto, 3 BR/2 BA - $899000 Redwood City, 3 BR/2 BA - $599000 Sunnyvale, 3 BR/2 BA - $599999 Woodside, 3 BR/2 BA - $1099000 850 Acreage/Lots/ Storage Land for sale 80 acres near San Jose. $125000 www.80acres.weebly.com 1VCMJD/PUJDFT 995 Fictitious Name Statement ThinkJelly FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 579875 The following person (persons) is (are) doing business as: ThinkJelly, located at 1236 Vicent Dr. Apt. C, Sunnyvale, CA 94086, Santa Clara County. This business is owned by: An Individual. The name and residence address of the owner(s)/registrant(s) is(are): SUSHMA D’SOUZA 1236 Vicente Dr. Apt. C Sunnyvale, CA 94086 Registrant/Owner began transacting business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein on 06/19/2013. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Santa Clara County on June 21, 2013. (MVV June 28, July 5, 12, 19, 2013) SF COUTURE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 580060 The following person (persons) is (are) doing business as: SF Couture, located at 160 W. Arbor Ave, Sunnyvale, CA 94085, Santa Clara County. This business is owned by: An Individual. The name and residence address of the owner(s)/registrant(s) is(are): ISABEL FAJARDO DELGADO 160 W. Arbor Ave. Sunnyvale, CA 94085 Registrant/Owner has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Santa Clara County on June 27, 2013. (MVV July 5, 12, 19, 26, 2013) AMERICAN LIMO CA FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 579965 The following person (persons) is (are) doing business as: American Limo CA, located at 840 Alice Ave., #18, Mountain View, CA, Santa Clara County. This business is owned by: An Individual. The name and residence address of the owner(s)/registrant(s) is(are): HARMEL K. BRAR 840 Alice Ave., #18 Mtn. View, CA 94041 Registrant/Owner has not yet begun to transact business under the fictitious business name(s) listed herein. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Santa Clara County on June 26, 2013. (MVV July 12, 19, 26, Aug. 2, 2013) 997 All Other Legals NOTICE OF APPLICATION TO SELL ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES Date of Filing Application: June 13, 2013 To Whom It May Concern: The Name(s) of Applicant(s) is/are: PMAB-6 LLC The applicants listed above are applying to the Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control to sell alcoholic beverages at: 545 San Antonio Rd. Ste. 31 Mountain View, CA 94040-1217 Type of license(s) applied for: 47 - ON-SALE GENERAL EATING PLACE (MVV July 5, 12, 19, 2013) To assist you with your legal advertising needs Call Alicia Santillan (650) 223-6578 Or e-mail her at: asantillan@paweekly.com 805 Homes for Rent Los Altos Hills, 5+ BR/3.5 BA $12,000 Do You Know? Menlo Park, 3 BR/2 BA Beautiful home on coveted, peaceful cul-de-sac in West Menlo. Spacious front and backyard. Newly renovated bathrooms and kitchen. Quality fixtures, stainless steel appliances. Washer and dryer. Hardwood floors and wood burning fireplace. Unfurnished. s4HE-OUNTAIN6IEW6OICEISADJUDICATEDTO PUBLISHINTHE#OUNTYOF3ANTA#LARA s/URADJUDICATIONINCLUDESTHE-ID0ENINSULA COMMUNITIESOF0ALO!LTO3TANFORD,OS!LTOSAND -OUNTAIN6IEW s4HE-OUNTAIN6IEW6OICEPUBLISHESEVERY&RIDAY $EADLINEPMTHEPREVIOUS&RIDAY Menlo Park, 3 BR/2.5 BA - $4500/mont Mountain View, 3 BR/2.5 BA - $4950 4OPLACEA#LASSIFIEDADIN 4HE!LMANAC4HE0ALO!LTO 7EEKLYOR4HE-OUNTAIN6IEW 6OICECALL ORVISITUSATFOGSTERCOM Redwood City - $3,900.00 Palo Alto - $8,750/mo Palo Alto Home, 4 BR/2 BA - 5000.. mon Palo Alto, 3 BR/2.5 BA - $4350 Palo Alto, 5+ BR/4+ BA - $8,750/mo Portola Valley, 2 BR/2 BA - $5,400.00 Call Alicia Santillan (650) 223-6578 TOASSISTYOUWITHYOURLEGALADVERTISINGNEEDS %MAILASANTILLAN PAWEEKLYCOM JUST LISTED ~ ÛJmfÛDgjÛ8n]fm]ÛDgmflYafÛMa]o OPEN Saturday & Sunday, July 13 & 14 1:30 – 4:30PM Chic, Stylish, and New! ÝÛAmklÛ[gehd]l]\Ûf]oÛ[gfkljm[lagfÛafÛ\]kajYZd]ÛNYn]jdqÛGYjc ÝÛÛZ]\jggekÛ]Y[`Ûoal`Û]fÛkmal]ÛZYl`ÛhdmkÛYÛ`Yd^¤ZYl` ÝÛ8hhjgpaeYl]dqÛÛkimYj]Û^]]lÛg^Ûdanaf_ÛkhY[]Û ÝÛ=gjeYdÛ\afaf_ÛjggeÛZmld]j¿kÛhYfljqÛYf\Ûlj]e]f\gmkÛ_j]YlÛjggeÛ oal`Û[`]^¿kÛcal[`]f ÝÛ;aklj]kk]\ÛoYdfmlÛyggjkÛkgda\Ûogg\Û[YZaf]lkÛYf\Ûkgda\Û[gj]Û\ggjk ÝÛJ][mjalqÛkqkl]eÛkgmf\Ûkh]Yc]jkÛafÛegklÛjggekÛYf\Û[]fljYdÛYajÛ [gf\alagfaf_ ÝÛGj]oaj]\Û^gjÛ:gfljgdÛ`ge]ÛYmlgeYlagfÛoal`ÛaG`gf]£aGY\ÛY[[]kkÛ ÝÛ=mddqÛdYf\k[Yh]\ÛgfÛYhhjgpÛÆÛY[j]Ûoal`Û]fl]jlYafe]flÛl]jjY[]Û and fire pit ÝÛKgh¤jYl]\ÛDgmflYafÛMa]oÛk[`ggdkÛ¨Zmq]jÛlgÛ[gfxjeÛ]fjgdde]fl© F^^]j]\ÛYlÛ~ www.13080SunMor.com Derk Brill BRE# 01256035 Lance Tate P: 650.543.1117 C: 650.814.0478 dbrill@apr.com www.derkbrill.com 408.399.4950 lance@urbanwest.com www.urbanwest.com 22 S. Santa Cruz Avenue Los Gatos, CA 95030 Square footage and/or acreage information contained herein has been received from seller, existing reports, appraisals, public records and/or other sources deemed reliable. However, neither seller nor listing agent has verified this information. If this information is important to buyer in determining whether to buy or the purchase price, buyer should conduct buyer’s own investigation. Information deemed reliable, but not guaranteed. Photography by David Eichler ©Marketing Designs, Inc. 650.802.0888 marketingdesigns.net July 12, 2013 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ 23 972 Belmont Terrace #6 Sunnyvale Open House Sat & Sun 1-4 3 Bedrooms, 3 baths 2 upper level masters Beautifully Remodeled Kitchen Offered at $675,000 Are you staying current with the changing real estate market conditions? We offer the one online destination that lets you fully explore: s)NTERACTIVEMAPS s(OMESFORSALE s/PENHOUSEDATESANDTIMES s6IRTUALTOURSANDPHOTOS s0RIORSALESINFO s.EIGHBORHOODGUIDES s!REAREALESTATELINKS sANDSOMUCHMORE Enis Hall Broker Associate (650) 917-8265 ehall@cbnorcal.com DRE# 00560902 Our comprehensive online guide to the Midpeninsula real estate market has all the resources a home buyer, agent or local resident could ever want and it’s all in one easy-to-use, local site! LDFin d O S Yo u r D re a m H o m e! Agents: You’ll want to explore our unique online advertising opportunities. Contact your sales representative at 650-326-8210 today to find out more. Explore area real estate through your favorite local website: TheAlmanacOnline.com MountainViewOnline.com PaloAltoOnline.com And click on “real estate” in the navigation bar. We have new listings every week! Call Rosemary at 650-964-6300 TheAlmanacOnline.com MountainViewOnline.com PaloAltoOnline.com 33 !"! 1( 31&!(34$3#5##650 !&3 % &! #3' ! $37(&3% %+ ### $ !"##!$#$ !%!"##!$ "&&'" "# ($)* *&!## ($+ ,! (&((!& & !#($&!$!$ ! !&-./012 % &''"()* #& +,-$. $"$ 24 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ July 12, 2013 An unwavering commitment to excellence in service SHELLY POTVIN, M.A. 650.917.7994 * Top 1% Coldwell Banker Worldwide spotvin@cbnorcal.com www.ShellyPotvin.com Royce ...Your Condo & Townhome Specialist N SU & M T SA :30P N 4 E OP :30 1 630 N Ahwanee Terrace Sunnyvale 3 bed | 2.5 ba | 1,688 sq ft Beautifully updated townhome end unit offers large living room with ¿UHSODFHRYHUVL]HNLWFKHQVHSDUDWH family room & 2 car garage * Ranked #4 in the Los Altos office of 132 agents Offered at $548,000 DRE#01236885 “Is Quality Important to You? We M easure Quality by Results” Power of T wo N SU & M T SA :30P N E -4 OP :30 1 968 Asilomar Terrace #2 Sunnyvale 2 bed | 2 ba | 988 sq ft 'HVLUDEOHWRSÀRRUFRQGRHQGXQLW with open living room & dining area, inside laundry, private deck, storage & 2 garages Yvonne Heyl Direct (650) 947-4694 Cell (650) 302-4055 DRE# 01255661 yheyl@interorealestate.com Offered at $425,000 Jeff Gonzalez Direct (650) 947-4698 Cell (408) 888-7748 DRE# 00978793 jgonzalez@interorealestate.com Team DRE# 70000637 yvonneandjeff@interorealestate.com www.yvonneandjeff.com AY ND M U S 0P EN - 4:3 P O 30 1: 448 Costa Mesa Terrace #C Sunnyvale 2 bed | 1 ba | 880 sq ft *URXQGÀRRUFRQGRZLWKLQVLGH {ÈÊÀÃÌÊ-Ì°Ê-ÕÌiÊÓääÊUÊÃÊÌÃÊ{äÓÓ laundry, storage space, private patio & 2 car tandem garage Offered at $399,000 426 Kenmore Avenue Open Saturday & Sunday 1:00pm to 4:00pm JU ST L SO 822 Calderon Avenue Mountain View D 3 bed | 2 ba | 1,820 sq ft Remodeled home with separate family room & eat-in kitchen List Price $1,075,000 Sold Price $1,206,000 Sold with multiple offers! 332 Deerwood Court Mountain View D ST In Sunnyvale’s Heritage District L SO JU 2 bed | 2.5 ba | 1,240 sq ft Two story townhome with dual master suites & private yard Adorable 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom home in great location strolling distance to Sunnyvale’s up-andcoming Downtown, the new medical clinic, and shopping. Master with large walk-in closet, spacious sunfilled living room, updated kitchen and baths, hardwood floors, crown molding, attached garage, extra storage and landscaped yards with fruit trees! All in a super cute neighborhood of delightful homes. Asking $848,000 Tori Ann Corbett Broker Associate (650) 996-0123 DRE# 00927794 www.ToriSellsRealEstate.com List Price $625,000 Sold Price $720,000 Sold with multiple offers! Royce Cablayan DRE# 01062078 The #1 Selling Agent in Mountain View since 1995 goroyce@gmail.com www.reroyce.com Colleen Rose DRE# 01221104 colleen@serenogroup.com July 12, 2013 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ 25 O P E N S AT U R DAY & S U N DAY 1 : 0 0 – 4 : 0 0 D TE S I TL S JU P .M . D TE S I TL S JU 778 University Avenue, Palo Alto 751 W. Middlefield Road #E, Mountain View Walk to Downtown Palo Alto Close to Downtown Mountain View & Public Transportation sBEDROOMBATHGROUNDmOORUNIT sBEDROOMBATHENDUNITINSMALLCOMPLEXSQFT s$ESIRABLE6ILLA#APRI!IRECOMPLEX s3PACIOUSLIVINGDININGROOMWITHVAULTEDCEILINGANDlREPLACE s/VERSQUAREFEET s5PDATEDKITCHENWITHNEWERSTAINLESSSTEELAPPLIANCES s,ARGEOPENLIVINGROOMDININGROOMCOMBINATIONWITH HARDWOODmOORINGANDWINECLOSET s-ASTERBEDROOMSUITEWITHWALKINCLOSET s3PACIOUSMASTERBEDROOMSUITEWITHREMODELEDBATH s#ENTRALAIRCONDITIONINGANDDUALPANEWINDOWS s4WOPATIOS s!TTACHEDOVERSIZEDCARGARAGE s(ARDWOODmOORINGNEWCARPETINGANDFRESHLYPAINTEDINTERIOR /FFEREDAT /FFEREDAT 4HEONLY$IAMOND#ERTIlED®2EALTOR IN-OUNTAIN6IEWAND,OS!LTOS diamondcertified.org 650.947.4780 HBloom@InteroRealEstate.com www.HowardBloom.com In the last 50 years... BRE# 00893793 Just Listed! … There hasn’t been a beƩer Ɵme for Real Estate opportuniƟes! With a low inventory of homes for sale it’s an excellent Ɵme to sell. And with low interest rates, its an excellent Ɵme to buy or invest. Whether you want to move into a larger home, downsize or invest . . . Edie has a Full Service Real Estate Team -here to serve you. Not just any Realtor – The neighborhood realtor working for you! 38 Woods Lane Los Altos Call today for your free no obligaƟon market analysis $898,000 Edie Halenbeck Realtor -Presidents Club (650)996-8466 ehalenbeck@apr.com YourFinestHomes.com Own a piece of paradise in highly desirable Toyon Farm neighborhood. Gorgeous 2bd/2ba newly remodeled townhome. 12772 SARATOGA SUNNYVALE ROAD | SARATOGA 26 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ July 12, 2013 &$/22 !'%*)')*$"&',&+"&". /',)+!"&#"& '%'-"& &'."*+!+"%+'*$$ PENDING SALE in 6 DAYS! SOLD')120%'$"*+()""&8 DAYS! SOLD')113%'$"*+()""&11 DAYS! SOLD')113%'$"*+()""&6 DAYS! SOLD')107%'$"*+()""&6 DAYS! ')107%'$"*+()""&7 DAYS! SOLD')114%'$"*+()""&9 DAYS! SOLD')120%'$"*+()""&7 DAYS! %' &'#)+&%"'#("'"* & &'$%&&#*" DAV I D T R OY E R 00 -"+)'/)'% )'!'%**'$'& #!"& &" July 12, 2013 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ 27 Coldwell Banker #1 IN CALIFORNIA SUNNYVALE Sat/Sun 1 - 4 $675,000 972 Belmont Ter, #6 3 BR 3 BA Exceptional townhome offers 3BD/3BA w/two upper-level masters. Enis Hall BRE #00560902 650.941.7040 SUNNYVALE Sat/Sun 1:30 - 4:30 $995,000 1136 Viscaino Ave 3 BR 3 BA Spacious home w/separate. FR could be used as a 4th bed or 2nd master suite. Ric Parker BRE #00992559 650.941.7040 SUNNYVALE Sat/Sun 1:30 - 4:30 $1,298,000 757 Sheraton Dr 4 BR 2 BA Large, updated & inviting home built in 1994, w/a lovely sparkling swimming pool. Aileen La Bouff BRE #01392043 650.941.7040 SARATOGA Sat/Sun 1:30 - 4:30 $3,688,000 15061 Encina Ct 5 BR 3 full BA + 3 half An entertainer’s dream! Views of mountains & city lights & more!Stone fireplace in FR & MB Eppie Lum BRE #01150959 650.941.7040 SARATOGA Sat/Sun 1:30 - 4:30 $1,900,000 13321 Via Ranchero Dr 4 BR 2.5 BA Formal entry w/marble tile; remod kit, rear yrd w/brick patio, black bottom pool & spa. Helen Kuckens BRE #00992533 650.941.7040 SAN CARLOS Sun 1:30 - 4:30 $1,595,000 4 BR 3.5 BA Stunning bay views from most rooms. In-law unit w/full bath. Lots of storage. 3 car garage Tom Huff BRE #922877 650.325.6161 REDWOOD CITY $988,000 2 BR 2 BA Vintage Wellesley Crescent home converted to duplex. Enormous rms, lrg lot, prime location Kevin Klemm BRE #01857018 650.328.5211 REDWOOD CITY Sun 1:30 - 4:30 $425,000 2 BR 2 BA Lovely 1st flr condo! Close to shopping & transportation. Well maintained. Beautiful pool. Shawnna Sullivan BRE #00856563 650.325.6161 PALO ALTO Sat/Sun 1:30 - 4:30 $950,000 4044 Park Blvd 3 BR 1 BA Beautiful remod home on tree lined st. Delightful garden, fresh paint & ready to move in. Ellen Barton BRE #00640629 650.941.7040 MOUNTAIN VIEW Sat/Sun 1:30 - 4:30 $300,000 3 BR 2 BA Large 3bed/2bath manufactured home in prime location in Mountain View! Great opportunity! Tammy Patterson/Rod Creason BRE #01931758/01443380 650.325.6161 MOUNTAIN VIEW Sat/Sun 1:30 - 4:30 $1,399,000 255/257 Paul Ave Extr desirable location in of downtown MV. 5 blks to Castro St. 3br/2ba & 2br/2ba units. Deniece Watkins Smith BRE #01295757 650.941.7040 MOUNTAIN VIEW Sat/Sun 1:30 - 4:30 $950,000 3 BR 1.5 BA Hardwood floors, living room/dining room combo, fresh paint, large yard, move right in! Alan Loveless BRE #00444835 650.325.6161 LOS ALTOS Sun 1:30 - 4:30 $1,498,000 3 BR 2 BA Inviting & well-located home, private yard, patio, porch, arbor deck, Los Altos schools! Susan Selkirk BRE #01071564 650.325.6161 LOS ALTOS Sat/Sun 1:30 - 4:30 $1,998,000 1370 Ensenada Way 5 BR 3 BA Rebuilt home designed by Duxbury Architects. Huge open central living & dining rooms. Terri Couture BRE #01090940 650.941.7040 LOS ALTOS Sat/Sun 1:30 - 4:30 $899,000 3 BR 2 BA Beautiful condo in Downtown LA. Close to shopping & restaurants. Great Los Altos schools! Brendan Callahan BRE #01397059 650.325.6161 Los Altos | Palo Alto CaliforniaMoves.com | /cbnorcal | /cbmarketingwest | /coldwellbanker ©2013 Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker® is a registered trademark licensed to Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. An Equal Opportunity Company. Equal Housing Opportunity. Each Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage Office Is Owned by a Subsidiary of NRT LLC. All rights reserved. This information was supplied by Seller and/or other sources. Broker believes this information to be correct but has not verified this information and assumes no legal responsibility for its accuracy. Buyers should investigate these issues to their own satisfaction. DRE License # 01908304 28 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ July 12, 2013
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