Sec 1 - Mountain View Online

Transcription

Sec 1 - Mountain View Online
Crazy
for
craft
beer
WEEKEND | 16
JUNE 14, 2013 VOLUME 21, NO. 20
www.MountainViewOnline.com
650.964.6300
MOVIES | 19
Council backtracks after
cat owners pounce
on licensing law
By Daniel DeBolt
A
MICHELLE LE
HAPPY HOMECOMING
Air National Guard Lt. Col. Fred Foote gets an enthusiastic embrace from his daughter Riley, 4, when
he returned to Moffett Federal Airfield after a four-month deployment. Families and friends of the
129th Rescue Guard gathered to welcome home their heroes on Monday, June 10. Almost 150 men
and women from the unit were scheduled to arrive throughout the week, returning from missions in
Afghanistan and Cape Horn in Africa. Besides its wartime role of combat search-and-rescue missions,
the 129th works closely with the U.S. Coast Guard and others to rescue civilians.
Google denies giving NSA
‘direct access’ to user data
By Daniel DeBolt
N
ational Security Agency
documents leaked to
the press say Mountain
View’s Google has been cooperating with the United States
government to spy on citizens on
an unprecedented scale, allowing
direct access to the company’s
servers. Google executives deny
that to be the case.
According to bombshell reports
in the Guardian and Washington Post newspapers, an NSA
program called PRISM allows
the U.S. government to collect
data directly from the servers
of Google and others, including
Facebook, Apple and Microsoft.
The revelation that the NSA
apparently has such unchecked
INSIDE
ability to spy on the American
public’s internet activities came
from a slide show presentation
about PRISM, leaked by whistleblower and former NSA contractor Edward Snowden. He has fled
to Hong Kong, leaving behind a
$200,000-a-year job and a home
in Hawaii with his girlfriend.
“I’m willing to sacrifice all of
that because I can’t in good conscience allow the U.S. government to destroy privacy, internet freedom and basic liberties
for people around the world
with this massive surveillance
machine they’re secretly building,” Snowden said in a video
interview.
A slide in the leaked NSA presentation about data gathering
described PRISM as “Collection
directly from the servers of these
US service providers: Microsoft, Yahoo, Google, Facebook,
PalTalk, AOL, Skype, YouTube,
Apple.”
The report was met with
strongly worded denial from
Google executives in a June 7
blog post titled “What the...?” by
CEO Larry Page and chief legal
officer David Drummond.
“The U.S. government does
not have direct access or a “back
door” to the information stored
in our data centers,” the executives write. “We had not heard
of a program called PRISM until
yesterday.”
The Google executives say they
do provide the U.S. government
with specific Google user data,
but only when required by law,
known as the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.
“Our legal team reviews each
See GOOGLE NSA, page 9
VIEWPOINT 12 | GOINGS ON 20 | MARKETPLACE 22 | REAL ESTATE 24
fter public outcry, on Tuesday City Council members
were persuaded to scratch
new regulations for pet owners in
Mountain View, including controversial licensing and rabies shot
requirements for cats.
The regulations, which the
council voted in favor of last
week, are going back to the drawing board.
The new animal control ordinance, based on a model proposed by the city’s new animal
services provider, Silicon Valley Animal Control Authority, required a second vote of
approval on June 11 before it
could go into effect. It includes
a cat license requirement, with
a $10 annual fee ($50 if your cat
isn’t neutered or spayed) and
mandated rabies shots.
News of the ordinance’s
approval last week drew an angry
response online from cat owners
who complained that they had
not known about it.
Dozens of cat owners spoke
against the new ordinance Tuesday, and not one person spoke in
support.
“This is why I voted the way I
did last week,” said Mayor John
Inks, who was last week’s lone
vote of opposition.
Council member Mike Kasperzak conceded, “You were right.”
This time, council members voted 5-1, with Inks again
opposed, to keep the city’s existing ordinance, and add in the
legalization of beehives. Member
Jac Siegel was absent.
Several residents said the ordinance would require they go
against the advice of veterinarians that indoor cats not be vaccinated for rabies.
“Two of my cats have had
breast cancer, probably because
of the rabies shots they had when
they were little,” said Alison
Stern. “Making all of us put our
cats at risk is not OK,” she said in
tears.
Resident Todd Nagengast said
he chooses not to vaccinate his
indoor cats and is “concerned
that new ordinance would basically make me a law-breaker,
make me guilty of a misdemeanor, I’d like to not go to jail
for that.”
See CAT LICENSE, page 9
Council hesitant to boost
library funding
By Daniel DeBolt
I
n city budget discussions on
Tuesday, the City Council
supported adding $50,000 to
next year’s library budget for new
books, CDs, and DVDs and other
materials. Even with the boost,
the city’s spending on such items
will still be lower than in comparable cities’ libraries.
Library board trustee Randall
Stock told the council on Tuesday
that the city has been spending
less on materials than five other
“benchmark” libraries and recommended an increase in funds.
“Mountain View has a very
good library with similar costs”
in most areas, he said. “The
red flag is the city’s investment
in materials, books, and CDs.
Mountain View spends 17 percent less per capita” than comSee BUDGET, page 11
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Where people, homes and a bit of imagination intersect
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Luxurious 3bd/2.5ba custom home, completely remodeled,
features an office, family room and fabulous master suite.
Saratoga schools. Open Sat. & Sun.
$1,139,000
SUNNYVALE
Contemporary 3bd/2.5 two-story home in the heart of Silicon
Valley. High ceilings, wood floors, A/C, large master bedroom,
plus office/bonus room.
$799,000
LYNN NORTH
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Stunning 4bd/2.5ba end-unit townhouse. Updated kitchen
with granite countertops and tile. MBR with high ceilings.
Lovely patio area with total privacy.
$649,000
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This 4bd/2ba Rose Garden beauty features HW floors,
triple-curved windows in the LR with fireplace, plus freshly
painted kitchen with upscale appliances.
$798,000
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MOUNTAIN VIEW
Impressively remodeled 3bd/2ba home with office, features
high ceilings, designer finishes and dual-pane windows.
Nicely landscaped. Open Sat. & Sun.
$768,000
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SUE DUMAS
MOUNTAIN VIEW
Charming 2bd/1.5ba home features Bamboo floors in living
room, bedrooms and hallway. Kitchen with custom cabinetry
and granite counters. 7500+/- sf lot.
$1,100,000
S
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CAROL & GRAHAM SANGSTER
MOUNTAIN VIEW
3bd/1ba home with pool located in desirable neighborhood
with Bubb Elementary School and Los Altos High School.
Close proximity to commuter routes.
$849,000
DOROTHY & ALEX LIU
S
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TORI CORBETT
JERYLANN MATEO
SAN JOSE
Beautiful 3bd/2.5ba townhouse in Communications Hill.
Bright, open floor plan with large living/dining room, bonus
room and MBR with walk-in closet.
$625,000
167 South San Antonio Rd 650.941.1111
APR COUNTIES ⎮ Santa Clara ⎮ San Mateo ⎮ San Francisco ⎮ Marin ⎮ Sonoma ⎮ Alameda ⎮ Contra Costa ⎮ Monterey ⎮ Santa Cruz
2
■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ June 14, 2013
7PJDFT
A R O U N D
T O W N
Asked in downtown Mountain View. Photos and interviews by Samson So.
THANK YOU FOR YOUR VOTE
OF CONFIDENCE IN 2013!
2012
Go to MountainViewOnline.com and Vote!
- OR Scan the QR Code and vote with your mobile phone!
What is the weirdest Father’s Day
present you’ve given or received?
“The wackiest present I ever got
my dad was concert tickets to a
Pat Benatar concert about two
years ago. He always liked her,
but my father’s not the most
savvy, so he’d never been to a
real concert venue.”
Norah Hibbits, Sunnyvale
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“There was this T-shirt with
my face, saying that it’s a rock
tour and on the back it has all
the made-up songs I sang at
home. The front was like the
world tour of a concert.”
Call for details. Some restrictions may
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Dr. William Hall ~ Dr. Jamie Zubrow ~ Dr. Tiffany Chan
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Gabriel Broner, Mountain View
“A pickle plucker is a long stem
with syringes and when you
push down the plunger it opens
up like fingers. Then you can
grab the pickle and pull it out. I
absolutely still use it and I consider it a cherished item.”
Phil Hearin, San Jose
“My dad’s a big fan of pretzels.
The weirdest thing I ever got
my dad is a big, gigantic bag of
three pounds of pure unsalted
pretzels. I though it was going
to take him a year or so to finish it, but he polished them off
in two or three weeks.”
National Melanoma Awareness Month!
Medical, Pediatric, Surgical and Cosmetic Dermatology
WELCOMES
Dr. Sandy Bendeck
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.
Nick Jager, Sunnyvale
“My dad really likes to play
boardgames, but my sister
and I aren’t such big fans. His
request for Father’s Day every
year is that we do a barbeque
and then spend the entire day
playing board games with him
because he enjoys our company
more than anything else.”
Caitlin Bayse, Sunnyvale
She is looking forward to helping you
with your skin care needs.
Melchor Pavilion, 2490 Hospital Drive
Suite 201, Mountain View, CA 94040
650.962.4600
www.menkesclinic.com
facebook.com/themenkesclinic
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June 14, 2013 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■
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Police arrested a San Jose man for allegedly stealing a bicycle
at the Mountain View Caltrain station after a witness alerted
police.
The witness told officers of hearing a lock being cut and seeing a
man hiding a pair of bolt cutters under his shirt at about 5:15 p.m.
on June 11, according to Shino Tanaka of the Mountain View
Police Department. Based on the witness’ description, officers
found the suspect heading southbound on Stevens Creek trail,
riding a stolen white bicycle. The suspect refused to stop, leading
to a brief chase, Tanaka said.
Officers arrested Alden Garcia, Sr., a parolee out of San Jose.
He was booked for resisting arrest, possession of stolen property
and petty theft with priors, and on charges of being under the
influence of a controlled substance. Garcia was transported to
county jail.
“It’s through collaborative relationships with our alert
and caring community that allows us to locate and capture
See CRIME BRIEFS, page 4
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KMVT ELECTS SIX NEW BOARD MEMBERS
Kenzo Kamei
August 1918-June 1, 2013
Kenzo Kamei, resident of Mountain
View, California, passed away June 1,
2013 at the age of 94. Kenzo was born in
Vacaville, California in August 1918 to
farm workers Suteatsu Kamei and Yei
Yoshikawa.
As a young child, Kenzo went to live
in Wakayama Prefecture, Japan with his
uncle, Tamejiro Nishihara. In Japan, he
attended elementary and secondary school. After completing secondary school in April
1936, he returned to the Vacaville area, where he worked
with his mother and father
harvesting crops and working
on farms. He continued his
education by attending evening classes to learn English.
Shortly before World War II,
Kenzo was working in Sunnyvale, California at a flower
nursery. At the flower nursery, he met
Ruth Kisa "Kisako” Nishimoto and fell in
love. He and Ruth married shortly before
they were interned at Heart Mountain,
Wyoming. During the war, Kenzo had
daily work release passes that allowed him
to work outside of the camp. He worked
on the railroad as a spike hitter and Ruth
worked in the internment camp cafeteria.
He returned to the Sunnyvale area after
the war and worked as a warehouseman
and a gardener. He was able to earn enough
money to purchase land to establish Kamei
Nursery, Inc. in Mountain View with Ruth.
The nursery specialized in growing cut
flowers, for which he won numerous
awards. He loved the nursery business
and at one time had nurseries in Mountain View and Morgan Hill. He retired in
2001. Thereafter, he spent several years caring for his long
beloved Ruth, the love of his
life. They were married for 70
years. Ruth lived 91 years and
passed away on June 8, 2012.
Kenzo is survived by his
son, Kenneth; daughters, Eileen (Robert) Eng, and Judy
(Steve) Inamori; grandchildren Ami, Ellen and Jonathan Kamei, Emily Eng Holbrook, Laura Eng Derdenger
and Julia Eng, Bradley, Gregory and
Kathryn Inamori; great grandchild
Davis Patrick Derdenger, and numerous
nieces and nephews. Kenzo was preceded
years earlier by his brothers Tokunosuke
and Kameji, and his sister Shizuze.
A memorial service will be held Thursday, June 13, 2013 at 11:00 a.m. at the
Mountain View Buddhist Temple 575 N.
Shoreline Blvd. Mountain View.
PA I D
O B I T UA RY
Mountain View’s community access station’s board of directors
elected six new board members. Val Carpenter, George Cohn,
Susan Davis, Young Han, Heather Hurford and Cathy Martin
join Chairman David Joud, Artie Green and Cathy Smithwick
on the board of KMVT 15 Silicon Valley Community Media
For more than 30 years, Mountain View’s KMVT 15 Silicon
Valley Community Media has provided training in video production, media literacy and a local news outlet for hundreds of
thousands of Bay Area residents. As an independent nonprofit
organization, it provides community television to the residents
of Cupertino, Foster City, Mountain View, Los Altos, and
Sunnyvale.
KMVT’s board is working to raise $500,000 through its “Go Digital!” capital campaign to help fund studio improvement and new
See COMMUNITY BRIEFS, page PB
NPOLICELOG
ASSSAULT W/ DEADLY
WEAPON
200 Block Castro St., 6/10
AUTO BURGLARY
500 Block Castro St., 6/5
700 Block W El Camino Real., 6/6
BATTERY
1400 Block Plymouth St., 6/5
1 Block Amphitheatre Pkwy., 6/9
2400 Block Porterfield Ct., 6/9
1600 Block Amphitheatre Pkwy., 6/9
2500 Block Grant Rd., 6/9
1400 Block N Shoreline Bl., 6/10
2200 Block Latham St., 6/4
1500 Block Montalto Dr., 6/5
400 Block Tyrella Av., 6/5
1100 Block Mercy St., 6/6
1000 Block Cuesta Dr., 6/6
600 Block Farley St., 6/8
100 Block Evandale Av., 6/10
1 Block Eldora Dr., 6/10
ROBBERY
600 Block Showers Dr., 6/5
600 Block Tyrella Av., 6/5
Central Av &Stevens Creek Trl., 6/6
STOLEN VEHICLES
GRAND THEFT
500 Block Showers Dr., 6/4
2200 Block Latham St., 6/5
300 Block N Whisman Rd., 6/5
W Dana St & Hope St., 6/5
1100 Block Castro St., 6/7
900 Block High School Wy., 6/7
400 Block Sierra Vista Av., 6/8
100 Block Bryant St., 6/10
100 Block Castro St., 6/6
THEFT OF UTILITIES
RESIDENTIAL BURGLARY
100 Block E El Camino Real., 6/6
COMMERCIAL BURGLARY
2300 Block Leghorn St., 6/5
100 Block Castro St., 6/7
2500 Block W Middlefield Rd., 6/7
800 Block W El Camino Real., 6/7
800 Block W El Camino Real., 6/7
1600 Block Notre Dame Dr., 6/4
Support
Mountain View Voice’s
print and online coverage
of our community.
Join today: SupportLocalJournalism.org/MountainView
4
■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ June 14, 2013
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MOUNTAIN VIEW VOICE
■ CITY COUNCIL UPDATES
■ COMMUNITY
■ FEATURES
The day the video
store died
MOUNTAIN VIEW SAYS GOODBYE TO VIDEOSCOPE,
CITY’S LAST VIDEO RENTAL SHOP
By Elize Manoukian
N
ostalgia lines the shelves
in Videoscope, Mountain View’s last video
rental store. The sentiment
overwhelms upon entering the
storeroom, where navigating the
clutter of racks and boxes that
swell with films of every era and
genre seems impossible without
a map — or your neighborhood
video clerk.
Going to the video store is,
after all, a hands-on experience. For those whose memories
extend back before the era of
Netflix, the sheer kinesthetic
involvement of renting a movie
requires a certain level of commitment. Not just to movies,
or even to the customer-service
interaction, but to a dying
medium.
Videoscope, located at 2290
W. El Camino Real, is the latest
victim, following in the footsteps of video rental franchises
Blockbuster and Hollywood
Video. While outliving local
competitors, years of steadily
decreasing revenues followed by
a proposed rent increase have
convinced owners Nona and
See VIDEOSCOPE, page 8
Full bellies all summer long
By Nick Veronin
H
unger isn’t just a problem
in the developing world.
Even in the ostensibly
well-to-do communities of Silicon Valley, one out of every three
children rely on free or reducedprice meals provided to them by
their local schools.
But what happens when school
isn’t in session?
The Mountain View Whisman
School District and a local food
bank have answers to that question.
Kathy Jackson, CEO of the Second Harvest Food Bank of Santa
Clara and San Mateo counties,
wants struggling local families
to know they don’t need to worry
about how they will feed their
children over the summer.
The food bank’s “Stop Childhood Hunger” campaign aims to
help kids have a carefree summer.
According to a Second Harvest
press release, the organization
plans serve about 100,000 children each month this summer.
Parents of children at Crittenden, Castro, Theuerkauf and
Monta Loma schools may have
seen a Second Harvest flier
promoting the campaign. The
organization distributed infor-
MICHELLE LE
Videoscope owner Odon Sy talks to a customer while Mila Tiu sorts DVDs on June 11. The store is set
to close later this month.
mational material at those campuses, as they each serve a large
percentage of socioeconomically
disadvantaged children.
“Making sure kids get enough
to eat is one way to help end the
cycle of poverty,” Jackson said in
a statement. “Education is the
key to earning a decent living,
but hunger can deprive children
of the opportunity to get a good
education. When kids have the
nutritious food they need to
thrive, they are better prepared
to learn. They have the energy to
pursue their dreams.”
Information on Second Harvest programs can be found at
the organization’s website, shfb.
org, or by calling their multilingual hotline at 800-984-3663.
The local elementary and middle school district also has a program for feeding children over
the summer. Craig Goldman,
superintendent of the Mountain
View Whisman School District,
said the Seamless Summer program is open to all children
under the age of 18.
There is no registration necessary. Anyone under 18 can
simply show up at Monta Loma
school, prove their age and eat
breakfast and lunch for free,
Goldman said. The program is
scheduled to run from June 17
through July 26, with breakfast
served from 7:30 to 8:30 a.m.
and lunch from 11:30 a.m. to
12:30 p.m. Monta Loma school
is located at 460 Thompson Ave.
in Mountain View.
“It may appear that these are
economic boom times for the
local community, but we still
have many families that are
struggling to get by.” Goldman said. “So these additional
resources are very helpful for
families to feed their children
and not have to make impossible
choices to make ends meet.”
Like Jackson, Goldman said it
is crucial that children not have
to worry about where their next
meal is going to come from.
“We want students to be able
to focus on having a happy and
healthy childhood and not worry
about whether they’re going to
have an adequate amount of food
to get through the day.”
Google security guards
protest working conditions
By Daniel DeBolt
F
MICHELLE LE
SEIU members and supporters protest over working conditions for
guards employed by Google’s security contractor on June 6.
or some, a job at Google is
the stuff dreams are made
of, but for security guard
Manny Cardenas, it’s been more
of a nightmare.
While working as security
guard at Google’s Mountain
View headquarters, 24-year-old
Cardenas said he had to move
back in with his mother and
enroll his daughter in MediCal
because his pay amounted to
$1,000 a month at most, and he
received no health benefits.
He says Google’s security guard
contractor, Security Industry
Specialists, doesn’t provide a set
number of work hours every week
to its security guards at Google,
which meant he’s worked as little
as one day a week some weeks.
Even though he’s paid $16 an
hour, his monthly pay at its peak
was less than what a full time job
at minimum wage provides.
Not all of Google’s security
guards are treated this way, but
according to Service Employees
International Union, a survey
found that 80 percent of the contract security guards were only
offered part time work, and similar problems have been found
for security guards employed by
Apple. Just a few years ago, under
a different contractor, this wasn’t
the case for Google’s security
guards, the union says.
At a rally at Google headquarters Thursday, June 6, union
members called on Google to
See GOOGLE PROTEST, page 8
June 14, 2013 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■
5
-PDBM/FXT
MV property taxes on the rise
NCRIMEBRIEFS
Continued from page 4
criminals and deters crime,” said Acting Lt. Mike Fisher in a
press release. “Just last week we had a similar incident where
a Mountain View resident reported a suspicious person with a
crowbar. This call resulted in the arrest of a burglary suspect.
We continue to urge the Mountain View community to always
‘See Something, Say Something.’”
BREAK-IN, INTERRUPTED
A man and his daughter discovered an intruder climbing into
their home through a bathroom window on June 6, police said.
After hearing a strange sound outside, the daughter saw a man
leaning into the bathroom window and screamed to warn her
father, according to the police report.
The intruder, described as a Hispanic man appearing to be 25
years old, about 5 feet tall and weighing 190 pounds, fled, jumping over fences. The victims gave chase, but lost track of him, they
told police.
—Mountain View Voice staff
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.
By Samson So
A
lmost a quarter of Santa
Clara County’s property
owners are set for a jump
in their property tax bills, thanks
to this year’s boost in the residential real estate market.
During the real estate market
collapse, 136,000 property owners’ residences assessed below
their purchase prices, according
to the Santa Clara County Assessor’s office
The market value of 47,000
of those properties have completely erased that lost value and
now exceed their original price.
Another 81,000 properties will
regain part of their lost value,
officials said.
With the increase in market
value, assessed values increase as
well, leading to a bump in property taxes.
Mountain View Whisman
and Los Altos both will see an
8 percent increase in property
tax revenues in their elementary
school districts.
“The market solely determines
whether the assessed value of a
property is reduced or restored.”
said Santa Clara Assessor Larry
Stone.
California has two propositions
used to calculate property taxes.
Proposition 13 prohibits property
taxes from increasing by no more
than 2 percent a year measured
from the base year value. However, Prop 13 no longer applies if
the assessed value of a property is
lower than current market value,
which is where Proposition 8
comes in. Homeowners who have
property that is lower than the
purchase price have their property tax reassessed at the current,
lower market value.
Stone said that the tax hikes
aren’t necessarily a bad thing.
“The increases in assessed value are clear evidence that Silicon
Valley is roaring out of the economic abyss created by the recession,” he said. “Unemployment
has dropped to 7 percent, faster
than the nation or the state. The
NASDAQ is soaring. Apartment
rents have reached record levels
with single-family homes close
behind. It was inevitable that
property taxes would follow.”
“While increases in property
taxes are never welcome, this is
actually very good news for our
local economy, especially for
homeowners. It means the value
of most families’ single most
valuable asset, their homes, is
once again regaining solid equity
lost in the collapse of the residenSee PROPERTY TAXES, page 11
CITY OF MOUNTAIN VIEW
CITY OF MOUNTAIN VIEW
COUNCIL NEIGHBORHOODS COMMITTEE
Moffett/Whisman Road Area
Neighborhood Meeting
German International School of Silicon Valley
310 Easy Street
Thursday, June 27, 2013
7:00 p.m. – 9:00 p.m.
The City of Mountain View Council Neighborhoods Committee
will be meeting with residents in the Moffett/Whisman Road
area, as shown on the map below. The neighborhood meeting
will be held on June 27, 2013 starting at 7:00 p.m
The Council Neighborhoods Committee invites residents
in this area to participate in a forum to hear about new
projects in the community and discuss issues vital to your
neighborhood. This is an opportunity to make a difference in
the future of your neighborhood and express your thoughts
about ways to improve city services.
For further information, please call the City’s Neighborhood
Preservation Division at (650) 903-6379.
6
■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ June 14, 2013
June 14, 2013 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■
7
-PDBM/FXT
County sees wide disparities in health, life spans
By Samson So
S
anta Clara County residents
are about to be much more
informed about their health
and living standards.
The County of Santa Clara
released the Community Health
Existing Conditions Report June
6, initiating the first step in creating the new Health Element of the
Santa Clara County General Plan.
The report examines the health
conditions and risk factors.
The report provides many
key findings on the physical
well-being of Santa Clara county’s residents. According to the
GOOGLE PROTEST
Continued from page 5
take some responsibility for the
situation, recalling that in 2004
and 2008 Google had responded
to similar pressure to fairly compensate its janitors, who are now
unionized.
“In the past they did what’s
right, I’m confident they’ll do
what’s right again,” San Jose
City Council member Ash Kalra
told the crowd.
VIDEOSCOPE
Continued from page 5
Odon Sy to shut down operations at the end of this month.
The closing is tentatively set for
June 22.
This news came as a huge
blow to the store’s fiercely loyal
customer base. “Technology has
killed another time-honored
institution,” says longtime customer Kathy Graham.
Graham first visited the store
in 1982, the year of Videoscope’s
inception, at its original Palo
Alto location. Nona Sy was a
Filipino emigre with a collection of 50 horror films on VHS,
report, county residents are very
healthy compared to the rest of
California and the country.
Residents of Santa Clara tend
to live longer than others in the
state and country. At the same
time, disparities exist. Citizens
of Los Altos, Mountain View
and Palo Alto have an average life
expectancy of 86.7 years, while
midtown San Jose has an average
life expectancy of 79.5 years.
In Santa Clara County, cancer
and heart disease remain the
leading causes of death, attributed to 50 percent of all deaths.
The number of overweight and
obese county residents is on the
rise, with 55 percent of adults
and 25 percent of middle school
students considered overweight
or obese. Southern parts of the
county, like midtown San Jose,
Gilroy and Morgan Hill, have the
highest rates of heart disease and
diabetes, the report said.
The report also shows the
discrepancies of health based on
social status, race and ethnicity,
income and education. Obesity
remains a significant problem for
lower-income families. Economically disadvantaged students
are 62 percent more likely to be
overweight or obese, compared
to non-disadvantaged students.
Hispanic/Latino students are
also 55 percent more likely to be
overweight or obese than white
students.
The report also examined the
rates of health insurance in Santa
Clara County. The percentage
of uninsured adults (age 18-64)
more than doubled from 8 percent in 2000 to 18 percent in
2009. Also, 35 percent of Santa
Clara County adults under 35
years of age lack health insurance, according to the report.
Santa Clara’s Health Element
is a new update to the county’s
general plan, which outlines how
a community’s physical, social
and economic resources can and
should be used.
“The purpose of this planning
process is to identify existing
health conditions in the county,
and to take steps now to anticipate and prevent injuries and
diseases before they occur.” said
Ken Yeager, president of Santa
Clara County Board of Supervisors, and chair of its Health and
Hospital Committee.
The Health Element is the first
of its kind and will be used as a
model for other counties, states
and the entire country, he said.
To view the full report, go to
sccplanning.org.
Representatives at SIS and
Google were not available for
comment about the protest.
“What’s this about? Workers’
rights!” shouted a crowd of several dozen who marched around
Google’s campus Thursday afternoon. Signs said: “Security officers deserve secure jobs” and
“Google: is it evil to turn a blind
on SIS’s bad behavior?”
Members of a delegation of
400 Belgian business leaders who
were visiting Google seemed to
be bit surprised by the action.
“We are accustomed to strikes
in Belgium, it’s a democratic
right,” said Gael Lambinon, a
member of the Belgian business
group. “It’s nice to see that people
are free to claim their rights, even
at Google in Silicon Valley. Silicon Valley is not paradise — that
is what we tend to imagine.”
A young Googler approached
the Voice to ask what the protest
was about. Upon hearing a brief
explanation, he said, “Whatever,
I don’t give a (expletive).”
Mountain View resident Elena
Pacheco said the situation was
illustrative of there being “two
Silicon Valleys” where “the rich
are getting more rich and the
poor are getting worse.”
A letter to Google from labor
leaders and three San Jose City
Council members claims that
SIS posted anti-union content
on its company website and “has
gone so far as to break the law
by infiltrating worker meetings
— a charge which the federal
government investigated — and
substantiated.”
The SIS website does have a
page with information countering the SEIUs efforts, including a link to a ruling from the
National Labor Relations board
which says that the charge about
SIS sending spies to union meetings “may have merit” but was
dropped because it appeared to
be an “isolated” incident and
no other such charges have been
made against SIS.
The SEIU reports that 40,000
security guards nationwide have
joined the union.
years before cassettes had fully
reached American homes.
“I told my husband, ‘Why
don’t we open a store and make
them available to all people?’”
Sy said. “We bought everything
over the years. We own every
one of these tapes.”
The store moved to Los Altos
in 1996 and to Mountain View
in 2002. As the collection of
titles expanded to the thousands,
operations within the store grew
to include Sy’s husband, Odon,
who had been let go from his job
as an engineer. For the next three
decades, the couple set about
spreading the joy of cinema in
the form of VHS, LaserDisc, and
DVD rentals.
“Those were very good years,”
Odon says. “Fantastic years.”
It was not built to last, according to Odon. Although the business achieved local notoriety
for its extensive LaserDisc collection, the large, record-shape
disc never really replaced the
success of the VHS. When the
smaller, higher-resolution DVD
was introduced, Odon says,
“The studios loved it.”
Immediately, the LaserDisc was
killed, a decision that had two consequences. First, it set a precedent
by which a cinematic medium can
be swiftly eliminated. Second, the
DVD was digital, meaning it can
be copied illegally.
“Everything is copied, upload-
ed, downloaded,” Odon says.
“Studios are financially strapped
right now; budgets are getting
smaller and smaller, and it’s hitting everybody.”
Streaming video offered a
financial solution for the industry.
Hollywood effectively eliminates
the middleman while regaining
control over how, and to whom,
movies are distributed.
“Many of our customers want
us to try our best to continue, to
keep on going,” Odon says. “We
are closing because we cannot
fight it.”
Now, the family is selling off
its personal collection of films,
which has since grown to 20,000
VHS, 20,000 DVDs, and 10,000
LaserDiscs. Customers new and
old have been trickling in, either
to explore it for the first time, or
to have last conversations with
their friends behind the counter.
“There’s nothing left like this,”
a customer says, walking out of
the store. “Now, it’s just houses.”
“We just feel like we are lucky,”
Nona says. “We were there when
it was a novelty, and we lasted
this long. It’s sad, but it’s time to
say goodbye.”
“I cannot retire,” Odon says.
“I’ll be looking for things. I still
don’t know what’s out there.”
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8
■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ June 14, 2013
JAZZ ORGAN
BLOWOUT
Friday, June 28
TUCK & PATTI
Saturday, June 29
NCOUNCILBRIEFS
COUNCIL OKS 21 HOMES
A largely vacant 1.4-acre lot at 137 Easy St. may soon be home
to a development of row houses after the council unanimously
approved the project on Tuesday, June 11.
Robeson Homes plans to build 21 detached row homes, each
three-stories tall, with an estimated average price of $850,000
each. Sizes range from 2,000 to 2,900 square feet.
Neighbors complained about traffic and the location of the
driveway entrance for the project, with one neighbor saying,
“Our community is too small to handle this much traffic.” The
portion of Easy Street in front of the project, just north of Central
Expressway, is used by those entering Highway 85.
Council member John McAlister said he was happy to see “ownership” housing being built in the city. It was noted that the project
scored a relatively high 125 points for environmental friendliness
with the GreenPoint rating system. A total of 16 trees will be
removed, while 65 will be planted, according to the plans.
Email Daniel DeBolt at [email protected]
-PDBM/FXT
GOOGLE NSA
Continued from page 1
and every request, and frequently
pushes back when requests are
overly broad or don’t follow the
correct process,” the executives
write. “Press reports that suggest
that Google is providing openended access to our users’ data
are false, period. Until this week’s
reports, we had never heard
of the broad type of order that
Verizon received — an order that
appears to have required them to
hand over millions of users’ call
records. We were very surprised
to learn that such broad orders
exist. Any suggestion that Google
is disclosing information about
our users’ Internet activity on
such a scale is completely false.”
Google’s executives note that
they have worked hard to be
“transparent” about the data
requests received, being the first
internet company to publish a
“Transparency Report” about
CAT LICENSE
Continued from page 1
“Just the fact there’s a possibility somebody could be arrested
for a misdemeanor for having a
cat just scares the bejeesus out
of me,” said council member
John McAlister, who made a
motion to remove the cat license
requirement from the ordinance.
He later withdrew it so the entire
ordinance could be reviewed.
Residents and council members said the new animal control
ordinance was too long, detailed
and affected too many people
to be approved without more
scrutiny. A review will soon be
underway with efforts to get
public input, city manager Dan
Rich said.
The cat license controversy
drew the the public’s attention to
the ordinance’s other problems,
which also were not discussed by
council members last week, such
as rules forbidding dogs on city
property.
“The reason we don’t have a
room full of dog lovers is because
they haven’t read the part of the
ordinance that says you shan’t
have a dog on city property,” said
council member Ronit Bryant.
Council member Margaret
Abe-Koga noted that a former
council member who had often
brought her dog to City Hall
would be in violation of the ordinance.
“A lot of business let their
employees bring their pets,” she
said. “Should we be more pet
friendly, too?
Cat owners protest
Carol Hyde, director of the
government requests for data.
The reports show a steadily
increasing number of requests for
user data, from 12,539 requests
in last half of 2009 to 21,389 in
the last half of 2012. Between
66 percent and 76 percent of the
‘We didn’t fight the
Cold War just so we
could rebuild the
Stasi ourselves.’
YONATAN ZUNGER OF GOOGLE
requests led Google to turn over
some data, starting in 2011.
The executives also appear
to oppose the laws that compel
them to hand over user data, laws
which apparently require a “level
of secrecy” about the requests.
“We understand that the U.S.
and other governments need to
Palo Alto Human Society, was
one of the dozens who spoke
Tuesday against the cat licensing
requirement. “It is essentially
unenforceable. Cats live in loose
association with people, often
showing up just for food. It can
lead to abandonment of cats,” she
said. Because enforcement would
likely have to be “complaintdriven” it would be “unfairly
enforced.”
Christina Peck of Fat Cat
Rescue and the Stanford Cat
Network said the two cat rescue
groups also oppose mandatory
rabies shots and licenses, noting
that the groups operate without
any contact with SVACA.
Police Capt. Max Bosel, who
called cat licensing and rabies
vaccinations a “common and
best practice,” had noted that the
ASPCA endorses rabies vaccinations and cat licensing requirements, and most cities in the
county require both.
Summarizing the “general
belief” by most groups that
oppose cat licensing, Bosel said
“they theorize that licensing
will lead to additional stray cat
populations and additional cats
in shelters, which will kill cats at
a greater number” but that is not
the experience of the city’s animal control provider. Bosel said
fewer than 700 cats are licensed
in the city of Santa Clara, where
SVACA is based, while over
3,500 dogs are licensed.
It was noted that 84 percent of
cats are saved from euthanasia
at the SVACA shelter at 3370
Thomas Road in Santa Clara,
which also serves Campbell
and Monte Sereno. The other
SVACA cities have all adopted a
similar ordinance, which Abe-
take action to protect their citizens’ safety — including sometimes by using surveillance,” the
executives write. “But the level
of secrecy around the current
legal procedures undermines the
freedoms we all cherish.”
Google’s chief architect Yonatan
Zunger wrote his own response.
“Owing to the nature of my work
at Google over the past decade, it
would have been challenging —
not impossible, but definitely a
major surprise — if something
like this could have been done
without my ever hearing of it.”
He added his own concerns
about the U.S. government’s
growing surveillance apparatus.
“I, personally, am by now disgusted with their conduct: the
national security apparatus has
convinced itself and the rest of
the government that the only way
it can do its job is to know everything about everyone. That’s not
how you protect a country. We
didn’t fight the Cold War just so we
could rebuild the Stasi ourselves.”
Koga said should be a concern
for SVACA’s board.
The week prior, SVACA director Dan Soszynski said the
license requirement aimed to
increase the rate at which lost
cats are returned to owners in a
96-hour holding period, now at
only 10 percent. Fifty percent of
dogs are returned, though some
say the comparison isn’t fair.
He said that SVACA recommends cats wear collars with
registration tags. Several cat
owners had issues with this saying that inserting chips in cats
was enough to identify them at
shelters. Others said that collars
come off or are a danger to cats
if they get caught on a fence,
though “break-away” collars are
available.
“If I tried as hard as I could to
abide by your ordinance — my
cat loses his collar on a regular
basis — it just won’t work,” said
resident Carter Coleman. “To
pass a law you know residents
cannot abide by doesn’t make
any sense.”
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Email Daniel DeBolt
at [email protected]
Support
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June 14, 2013 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■
9
2013
Get your thumbs up
and hashtags ready
for the 2013 edition of
Best Of Mountain View.
Share your snapshots
of the traditions that make
Mountain View the best:
#BestOfMountainView
Vote Online
MountainViewOnline.com/best_of
Go Mobile
Deadline
to vote:
July 7
scan the code to vote
Restaurants
Best Breakfast/Brunch
Best Chinese Restaurant
Best Independent
Coffee House
Best Fine Dining
Best Fusion Restaurant
Best Indian Restaurant
Best Italian Restaurant
Best Mediterranean
Restaurant
Best Mexican Restaurant
Best Middle Eastern
Restaurant
Best New Restaurant
Best Outdoor Dining
Best Place for a
Business Lunch
Best Seafood Restaurant
Best Sushi/Japanese
Restaurant
Best Thai Restaurant
Best Vegetarian
Restaurant
Best Vietnamese
Restaurant
Food and Drink
Best Bagel
Best Bakery
Best Bar
Best BBQ
Best Burger
Best Hardware Store
Best Home Furnishings
and Decor
Best New Business
Best Store for
Unusual Gifts
Best Burrito
Best Deli/Sandwich
Best Ice Cream/
Frozen Yogurt
Best Noodle Place
Best Pearl Tea
Best Pizza
Best Produce
Best Small Non-Chain
Grocery Store
Best Take-Out
Services
Best Acupuncture
Best Auto Body Repair
Best Auto Repair
Best Chiropractor
Best Dentist
Best Dry Cleaners
Best Gym
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Retail
Best BIke Shop
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■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ June 14, 2013
Fun Stuff
Best Happy Hour
Best Park
Best Place for Live Music
Best Place for a Playdate
Thank You
for your
Vote
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& Oil Change
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-PDBM/FXT
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PROPERTY TAXES
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Continued from page 6
tial housing market.”
Stone said his office is in the
process of sending out annual notification letters that will
inform homeowners of the current assessed values. That will help
identify the geographic areas that
can be expected to received the
largest increases in property taxes.
“Santa Clara County is one of
only 10 counties in California
to provide this early notice,”
said Stone.
Stone said he encourages homeowners to use the on-line tool
at www.sccassessor.org to help
them to understand which comparable sales were used to determine the assessment of homes.
Property owners will also be
allowed an informal review of
their assessed value after they’ve
received their notice.
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parable libraries in the area.
Stock said the library board
voted unanimously to recommend restoring a $50,000 cut
made to the library’s annual
materials budget during the
recession in 2009, even though
the city “will still be spending
7 percent less than the average
of the other libraries” with the
funding restored.
Council members were hesitant to restore the $50,000 for
more than a one-time basis, voting 6-0 to approve the funding
for next year only.
“Our library is one of our
jewels, I would very much like to
restore the funding,” said council
member Ronit Bryant. “But we
have received budget designed to
be balanced.”
“As a city manager, I always
have concerns about ongoing
expenses,” said Dan Rich, adding
that spending less than $50,000
on an ongoing basis would be
more “palatable.”
Rich’s proposed 2013-14 general fund budget, which also funds
the library, totals $97.5 million
this year, with $1.9 million left
over, based on revenue projections. Last year’s adopted general
fund budget was $95.5 million.
Dr. William Hall
Dr. Jamie Zubrow ~ Dr. Tiffany Chan
100 W. El Camino Real, Suite 63A Mountain View ( Corner of El Camino & Calderon )
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7JFXQPJOU
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EDITORIAL
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■ YOUR LETTERS
■ GUEST OPINIONS
NGUEST OPINION
NEDITORIAL
Founding Editor, Kate Wakerly
■ EDITORIAL
THE OPINION OF THE VOICE
VOICES FROM THE COMMUNITY
A year of living
adventurously
Don’t move social services
out of Mountain View
I
t’s not always obvious when we as individuals arrive at a
crossroad. Decisions that seem inconsequential at the time
can lead to events and situations that can be life-changing.
Some crossroads, however, are quite predictable and it is useful
to consider the options when we’re in one. Personal character
could be at stake.
Take this question: Should a high school graduate go directly
to college right after high school, or should she get away for a
year or two to accumulate experiences and perspectives from the
wider world? Whether to take a gap year is a compelling question for an 18 year old, not to mention for her parents. Is it also a
momentous question? Perhaps. Parents may exhibit high anxiety
if the subject even comes up. Are there advantages in this competitive global economy in having to make it on your own for a
while, in going places and doing things that may have little to do
with advancing your career?
Summer is the season that brings such adventures to mind.
The future is out there and some adventures are best experienced
when you’re young and healthy. Having the money to explore in
comfort is great, but so is not having that kind of money — to
a point. In taking a meaningful break, you want to have a good
plan. One place to start is a web search for “gap year,” which
turns up five or six outfits offering a range of possibilities.
A few ideas: interning with a lawyer in China, assisting a veterinarian in Romania, interning as a reporter in South Africa. A
few more: rehabbing buildings in Thailand, assisting in the classroom in Ghana, working as a ranch hand in Australia.
Is there a higher priority than becoming an educated person?
Maybe not, but what is education, and to whom should we be
putting that question? “Education,” said William Butler Yeats, “is
not the filling of a pail, but the lighting of a fire.” Is there that fire
inside you? How brightly is it burning?
All this is not to deny the reality that conventional wisdom
describes: Job hunting these days is brutal. No college degree
means few prospects for a conventionally comfortable life unless
you’re a born entrepreneur. Good schools very often lead to
good connections and a resume that survives the winnowing.
Life-enriching experiences can be had after college, after all the
hard work and the long hours, after winning the security of that
degree — right?
The jury is out. Massive student debt now forces grads to
choose jobs that may pay well but aren’t fulfilling. Is there a college course in how to live fully? In figuring out what’s important
and what is not? How about a class in discovering what you really
want to do, and, crucially, what you really do not want to do?
There are valuable courses and important experiences to be had
in college, but a great deal depends on what a student brings to it.
The institution is not called the ivory tower for nothing.
“The ultimate goal of the educational system is to shift to the
individual the burden of pursuing his own education,” renowned
educator, thinker and Stanford scholar John W. Gardner once
said. “This will not be a widely shared pursuit until we get over
our odd conviction that education is what goes on in school
buildings and nowhere else.”
■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ June 14, 2013
By Joe Simitian
F
or Mountain View, it really
is a case of déjà vu all over
again.
In the late 1990s, Santa Clara
County officials planned to
shutter the County’s Mountain
View social services/welfare
office and relocate to a more
southerly location. This is the
office that provides essential
services to people of modest
means, including health care,
welfare and help in moving
from welfare to work.
The notion at the time was that
a location closer to the County’s
center would be more convenient
to more people; and besides, the
argument went, “the need isn’t
there in your part of the County.”
Wrong. When we actually looked
to see where the clients were from
who showed up at the Moffett
Boulevard office in Mountain
View, lo and behold, the Mountain View site was actually more
convenient than the proposed site.
Armed with that data, the office —
and services — stayed local.
Now, more than a dozen years
later, we face the same debate
again.
But this time the challenge is
even greater. It’s not a matter of
choice. The Moffett Boulevard
office will close toward the end of
August because the lease is up and
the owner has sold the property.
So all these years later, we’re
again faced with proposals to
relocate these services to “central
Santa Clara County,” which is far
from “central” for residents of the
North County area I represent,
and for Mountain View residents
in particular. The challenge is even
more acute for the large number of
low-income residents who rely on
public transportation.
While the area I represent (District Five) is undeniably more
prosperous than other parts of the
County, it is in many respects an
even tougher place to make it for a
person of modest means.
Too often people of limited
resources become “invisible”
because of their limited numbers
and the relative prosperity of the
larger community. But as too
many Mountain View residents
have reason to know, our region’s
prosperity is neither universal nor
uniform.
That invisibility, and the relatively smaller number of lower
income folks, means the tendency
is, understandably, to provide
essential services, like our social
services office, in areas where the
population using County services
is both larger and more visible.
And, of course, the high cost of
living in our end of the County,
particularly skyrocketing rents,
makes day-to-day survival an
even greater challenge.
Ironically, one of the reasons
the County has been considering
sites closer to the County’s center
is the high cost of commercial
rents in Mountain View, which
just makes the point about how
tough it can be to hang on in our
part of the County.
Simply put, invisibility, fewer
services and the high cost of living combine to make it especially
tough for low-income residents of
Mountain View and surrounding
North County communities.
The good news is that County officials have redoubled their
efforts to find an appropriate and
affordable location in Mountain
View — an effort I’m pushing.
And I’m hopeful that my colleagues on the Board of Supervisors will support my efforts to keep
these services in Mountain View.
For a great many folks, making
it in Mountain View is a daily
struggle. But with help that’s real
and local and accessible, they can
not only survive, but thrive.
Joe Simitian is a member of
the Santa Clara County Board
of Supervisors. He represents
District Five, which includes
Mountain View.
7JFXQPJOU
NLETTERS
VOICES FROM THE COMMUNITY
DUBIOUS ABOUT
LICENSING CATS
I am writing in response to
your article “You got a license
for that cat, Mister?” (June 7,
2013) about a new bill requiring Mountain View citizens to
have licenses for cats. It does not
seem enforceable and I doubt it
would be cost-effective. For one
thing, unlike dogs, stray cats are
incredibly difficult to round up.
It’s pretty hard to pick up your
own cat, let alone try to catch a
wary stray. They don’t react particularly well to collars either. It
is the basic nature of a cat to go
where it pleases and do what it
pleases.
My family has a cat, but we
do not”own” this cat. It started
hanging around our house looking hungry one day so we fed it.
We have now been feeding it and
taking care of it for a year or so.
We would take it to the vet if it
was sick or injured, and we give
it flea medicine, but he could
have a second family for all we
know. Would this cat also be
covered under this law?
The reason cats have a lower
return rate than dogs is that cats
don’t really have any one home.
“Home” to a cat is its marked
territory. It may disappear on
occasion for several days before
returning.
Furthermore, cats are natural
pest hunters. They are unobtrusive and keep mostly to
themselves. They don’t leave
droppings on the street like
strays do. They are not typically
carriers for disease, and there
has not been an outbreak of a
cat-specific disease (rabies etc.)
that I am aware of. One reason
argued is that it will help return
cats to their rightful owners,
but most of the cats that are
picked up would probably come
home if you left them alone long
enough.
If this is to control the cat
population, licensing will not
solve this problem either. This
bill does not seem like a financial gain as the fee is only $10 per
year, and the cost of enforcing
this would probably offset that
tiny payout. So is this law made
simply because it could be done,
or is there a larger issue I don’t
know about?
Personally I find the notion of
requiring licenses to keep cats to
be fairly dubious.
Nick Lamm
Bush Street
IMPEACH OBAMA
Just because the government
“isn’t reading our e-mail,” no
one should be resting easy these
days. The sort of meta-data
being collected by the NSA (and
who knows what other secret
Federal Agencies), is the same
kind use to formulate “signature
strikes,” based not on actual
guilt, but on “patterns of behavior.”
It’s a sad commentary that
we’ve been through one impeachment based on lies about an
affair, yet we see Republicans
and Tea Partiers sit idly by while
the president spies on us, and
draws up “hit lists.” Never mind
the Democrats, who also swore
an oath to protect the Constitution.
This is exactly the sort of executive over-reach that impeachment was designed to remedy.
Bill Michel
Ortega Avenue
FREE SPRINKLER DESIGN
WE GIVE YOU:
YOU GIVE US:
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Plumbing,
Irrigation,
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Heating Supplies
UÊ1
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650-948-7160
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
LET’S DISCUSS:
Read the latest local news headlines and talk about the issues at Town Square at
MountainViewOnline.com
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June 14, 2013 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■
13
14
■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ June 14, 2013
June 14, 2013 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■
15
8FFLFOE
MOUNTAIN VIEW VOICE
■ RESTAURANT REVIEW
■ MOVIE TIMES
■ BEST BETS FOR ENTERTAINMENT
crazy for CRAFT BEER
STEINS OFFERS BROAD ARTISAN SELECTION,
EXCELLENT EATS TO BOOT
N R E S TA U R A N T R E V I E W
By Dale F. Bentson
N
Top: The Steins burger at Steins Beer Garden in Mountain View. Above: Bartender Braden Langlais pours a
drink during happy hour on the patio.
16
■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ June 14, 2013
ever ask Ted Kim a simple question about beer.
If you do, you’re in for a
discourse on the qualities of craft
beer, its history and nuances, the
growth of the industry, and the
subtle differences between an
IPA and a Belgian dubbel. The
man is encyclopedic and passionate about beer.
Kim opened Steins Beer Garden in downtown Mountain
View in March in the space last
occupied by Villa 8 Buffet. It has
a mammoth, 8.000-square-foot
interior with an additional 4,000
square feet outdoors, seating
about 300 in all. Steins is reminiscent of beer halls in Europe
with its vaulted ceiling, festive
atmosphere and first-class eats.
Inside, it’s noisy with long
tables suited for groups, but there
are smaller tables and booths as
well. Conversation is possible at
smaller tables even when the place
is busy. Adding to the din, large
flat-screen TVs abound — showing sports, of course. The decor
has a contemporary feel, polished woods with pale walls that
reflect light as well as sound. An
L-shaped bar anchors the room.
Kim defines Steins as “a modern American beer garden.”
With 30 beers on tap, the choices
are not quite overwhelming.
Some beer halls have more than
100 beers on tap. Unless one
is an aficionado, the tendency
would be to simply order something familiar. Kim has authored
a thoughtfully composed beer
menu that describes, in detail,
Continued on next page
8FFLFOE
Continued from previous page
each of the beers offered.
A Sunnyvale native, Kim
became interested in beer while
working in Disney’s international
labor division. “I lived in Pasadena and frequented a local beer bar
that had 120 beers on tap. I went
through them all several times
and became extremely interested
in crafted beers.” Lured back
to northern California, he was
in charge of launching Paris
Baguette in Palo Alto and Santa
Clara before getting the bug to do
his own thing.
Steins isn’t just about libations; the food is noteworthy,
too. Executive Chef Colby Reade
turns out quantities of good
food, quickly. Reade worked at
two benchmark San Francisco
restaurants, Hawthorne Lane
and Joyce Goldstein’s Square
One, both sadly gone and sorely
missed. Reade knows what he’s
doing in the kitchen.
Steins original plan was for
continuous kitchen and bar
service from late morning until
closing. “We were slammed from
the beginning. So much so that
we had to define lunch and dinner hours so the kitchen could
recover,” Kim said. To bridge
the gap between lunch and dinner, the bar remains open with a
happy-hour menu.
The cinnamon donuts come with hot chocolate and creme anglaise.
For appetizers, the three mini
corn dogs ($8) with slaw, and
pickled mustard-seed vinaigrette
had been reshaped as orbs, two
bites each of breaded, deep-fried
happiness — perfect with beer.
The summer squash salad
($12) of mixed greens, roasted
corn, cracked wheat berries,
herb pesto and lemon vinaigrette
didn’t have much oomph. What
flavor there was came from the
roasted corn kernels. A livelier
vinaigrette would have helped.
Two of the Steins sandwiches
are worth a special trip. The fried
chicken sandwich ($12) was layered with green apple slaw, spiced
honey, pickled red onion and aioli, on house-made ciabatta. The
sandwich was mouth-watering,
the french fries absolutely addictive. By the way, Steins makes its
own breads and buns.
Steins burger ($11) competes
with local top-end burgers. The
meat was a house-ground blend
of dry aged short rib, brisket and
sirloin. It gave the burger texture and personality. Choosing a
house-made brioche bun, I happily paid an extra dollar each for
grilled onions and Vermont cheddar cheese. Fabulous hamburger
with the same addictive fries.
Of the entrees, “breakfast for
dinner” ($15), was fork-tender
smoked pork belly, topped with
Continued on next page
DINNER BY THE MOVIES AT SHORELINE’S
Cucina Venti
Steins’ large patio hosts a private party on a recent afternoon.
*Four course dinner with Complementary
glass of Proseco Champagne
$59 per person
Father’s Day
Father’s Day Menu – June 16th
A ppetiz ers
B r uschetta Al Pomodoro
Toasted slices of Oven Baked Bread topped with Roma tomato cubes
marinated with Olive Oil, Garlic and Fresh Basil
Day
s
’
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fat vation today!!
y
p
p
a
H
eser
-1120
your r
50-254
Crispy Zucchini Cakes
Served with marinated cucumber & mint yogurt
6
Make
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na-ven
uci
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m
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ble.co
openta
Salad
Summer in Sor rento
Watermelon topped with Feta cheese square, Arugula, fresh fi gs,
Sicilian olives with Vidalia onion dressing.
Strawberr y Fields
Crisp Mixed Lettuce, Fresh Strawberries, Toasted Pecans, Gorgonzola
Cheese and served with our tangy Vidalia Onion Dressing
E nt re e s
Filet Mignon
Marinated with herbs served with in a mushroom sauce with spinach.
Served with broccoli and a risotto cake fi lled with blue cheese.
B raised Short Ribs in a light red wine sauce
Served with Polenta and seasonal fresh cut Vegetables.
L inguine Pescatore
Fresh salmon, snapper, clams, mussels and prawns in a spicy tomato sauce.
Come see live
music on the
patio every
Wednesday &
Thursday, 5-8pm!
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
Hear t shape Ravioli
A Portobello & Shitake mushroom fi lling with Roma tomatoes and fresh
spinach, in a light Marsala cream sauce.
Grilled Salmon
Served with sautéed spinach wild rice and vegetables.
D essert
Tiramisu
Italian dessert, consisting of alternating layers of coffee-soaked lady
fi ngers and sweet mixture of mascarpone cheese, eggs and sugar.
L i nzar Hear ts Cookies & Gelato
Old fashioned ground nut dough cut into hearts and sandwiched with
raspberry jam served with your choice of vanilla or chocolate gelato.
June 14, 2013 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■
17
8FFLFOE
Continued from previous page
frisee and poached egg, drizzled
with maple Dijon vinaigrette and
surrounded with toast points —
high in both protein and flavor.
The slow-cooked melt-in-the-
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4QFDJBMT
mouth short rib ($19) topped a
bread pudding: strips of brioche
that soaked up meat juices.
Rainbow chard and onion jam
finished the plate. Both these
entrees were delicious.
Desserts were worth saving
NDININGNOTES
Steins Beer Garden
895 Villa St., Mountain View
650-963-9568
steinsbeergarden.com
Hours:
Lunch: Mon.-Thu. 11a.m.-3
p.m. Sat.-Sun. 11 a.m.-5:30
p.m. Dinner: Sun.-Thu. 5:3011 p.m. Sat. 5:30-11:30 p.m.
Happy hour: 3-6 p.m.
Since
1945
$)"3$0"-#30*-&3
2011
7PUFE
²#FTU#VSHFS³
BNUPQN
.PO'SJ
GPSZFBST
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BTSFQPSUFEJO
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0QFOEBZT
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.PVOUBJO7JFX…8&M$BNJOP3FBM…
The summer squash salad includes cracked wheat berries and corn.
room for. The chocolate beer float
($7) was made with Hangar 24
chocolate porter ice cream, brown
sugar and Devil’s Canyon root
beer. It was a delicious float. The
porter in the ice cream, though,
was more an interesting thought
than reality, as the flavors were
too subtle. But I didn’t care: A
well-executed float can’t be beat.
The huge wedge of lush devil’s
food chocolate cake ($7) was a
PENINSULA
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
Alcohol
Children
Catering
Takeout
Outdoor dining
Private parties
Reservations
Read and post reviews,
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
10 or more
Corkage
$15
Noise Level
loud
Parking
Bathroom
Cleanliness
city lots
excellent
rary. You will definitely like the
food, and if you have a chance to
chat with Ted Kim, you will take
a sudden liking to beer.
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
[email protected]
ST. ANN ANGLICAN CHAPEL
A TRADITIONAL EPISCOPAL
CHINESE
Chef Chu’s
triple-tiered affair with chocolate mousse separating the layers. Raspberry sauce and creme
fraiche added to the excess. Best
chocolate cake I’ve had in ages.
The flourless almond cake
($9) was buried under a mound
of fresh mixed berries and raspberry sorbet. No complaints.
House-made cruller cinnamon-sugar donuts ($8 for 3)
came with creme anglaise and a
cup of drinking/dipping chocolate. Cruller-style uses denser
dough than regular donuts.
Delightfully decadent.
You might not be a beer drinker, but there are also wine and
cocktails. You might not like the
noise level, so go early. You might
not like the beer hall ambiance,
yet it is upscale and contempo-
Credit Cards
CHURCH
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The Most Reverend Robert S. Morse, Vicar
Reverend Matthew Weber, Assistant
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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
powered by
18
■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ June 14, 2013
1425 Springer Rd., Mtn. View - Office Hrs. M-F 9am-1pm
www.mtviewda.adventistfaith.org Phone: 650-967-2189
8FFLFOE
NMOVIETIMES
NMOVIEREVIEWS
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, with eye-for-an-eye
fervor, The East commits acts of ecoterrorism 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 and
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,
some disturbing images, sexual content
and partial nudity. One hour, 56 minutes. — P.C.
THE INTERNSHIP --
Google goes Hollywood in “The Internship,” an intermittently amusing but
mostly strained feature-length commercial for the technology giant that
reteams “Wedding Crashers” stars
Vince Vaughn and Owen Wilson. They
play laid-off watch salesmen who shoot
the moon by applying for an internship
at Google, despite their lack of knowledge about technology. Naturally,
Google accepts the pair, charitably
overlooking that these fools qualify as
college students only by a hasty enrollment in the online University of Phoenix. Although 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 study 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 mostly shot on replica sets
at the Georgia Institute of Technology.
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 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.
NMOVIECRITICS
S.T.- Susan Tavernetti, P.C. Peter Canavese,
T.H.-Tyler Hanley
You’ve made your house a home.
After Earth (PG-13) (
Century 16: Fri 10 a.m. & 5:35, 8:15 & 10:40 p.m. Sat-Sun also at 12:25
& 3:05 p.m. Century 20: 12:55, 3:20, 5:50, 8:20 & 10:45 p.m.
Anatomy of a Murder (1959) (Not Rated)
Stanford Theatre: Fri 7:30 p.m.
Before Midnight (R)
Century 20: 11:15 a.m. & 1:50, 4:25, 7:05 & 9:45 p.m.
Guild Theatre: 1:15, 4, 7 & 9:45 p.m.
E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial (PG) ((((
Century 20: Sun 2 p.m.
The East (PG-13) (((
Palo Alto Square: 1:30, 4:15 & 7:15 p.m. Fri-Sat also at 10 p.m.
Epic (PG) (((
Century 20: 10:50 a.m. & 6:35 p.m. In 3D 1:20, 3:55 & 9:15 p.m.
Fast & Furious 6 (PG-13)
Century 16: 10:05 a.m. & 1 & 10:15 p.m.
Century 20: 11 a.m. & 1:55, 4:50, 7:50 & 10:50 p.m.
Frances Ha (R) (((1/2
Aquarius Theatre: 1:30, 3:45, 6, 8:15 & 10:15 p.m.
The Great Gatsby (PG-13) ((
Century 20: 12:30 & 6:50 p.m. In 3D 3:40 & 10 p.m.
The Hangover Part III (R) (1/2
Century 20: 3:35 & 10:15 p.m.
So who says you have to leave it just because
you’ve gotten older? Avenidas Village can
help you stay in the home you love.
Attend a free open house on
Thursday, June 27 at 2 pm.
RSVP to (650) 289-5405
www.avenidasvillage.org
Your life, your way, in your home
The Internship (PG-13) ((
Century 16: 9:45 & 11:05 a.m. & 12:40, 2, 3:35, 4:55, 6:30, 7:50, 9:25
& 10:35 p.m. (No 11:05 a.m. & 2 p.m. Fri. No 2 p.m. Sun.) Century 20:
10:55 a.m. & 12:25, 2, 3:15, 4:45, 6:10, 7:40, 9:10 & 10:35 p.m.
Iron Man 3 (PG-13) (((
Century 20: 1:40 & 7:40 p.m. In 3D 10:45 a.m. & 4:40 & 10:40 p.m.
The Kings of Summer (R)
Palo Alto Square: 2, 4:30 & 7:25 p.m. Fri-Sat also at 9:50 p.m.
Man of Steel (PG-13)
Century 16: 9:50 & 11:30 a.m. & 1:20, 3, 4:40, 6:20, 8:10 & 9:50 p.m. FriSat also at 11:30 p.m. In 3D 9 & 10:40 a.m. & 12:30, 2:10, 3:50, 5:30, 7:15,
9 & 10:40 p.m. Century 20: 10:35 & 11:45 a.m. & 12:20, 1:45, 3, 5, 6:15,
7, 8:15 & 9:50 p.m. (Sat also at 11:10 p.m.) In 3D 11:10 a.m. & 2:20, 5:35 &
8:55 p.m. In XD 10 a.m. & 1:05, 4:15, 7:30 & 10:45 p.m. Sun 10:35 a.m. &
1:45, 5 & 8:15 p.m. In XD 10 a.m. & 1:05, 4:15, 7:30 & 10:45 p.m.
185
New Chef...
New Menu...
The Met: Carmen (Not Rated)
Century 20: Wed 7 p.m.
Monsters University (G)
Century 16: Thu 9 & 11 p.m. In 3D 8 p.m. & 12:01 a.m. Century 20:
Thu 8:30 & 11 p.m. & 12:02 a.m. In 3D 8 & 10:30 p.m. & 12:01 a.m.
Much Ado About Nothing (PG-13)
Aquarius Theatre: 1, 4, 7 & 9:45 p.m.
Now You See Me (PG-13) ((
Century 20: 10:50 a.m. & noon & 1:30, 2:50, 4:15, 5:35, 7:15, 8:30 &
10:10 p.m.
The Purge (R)
Century 16: 11 a.m. & 1:15, 3:30, 5:40, 8 & 10:25 p.m. Century 20:
11:05 a.m. & 12:05, 1:15, 2:15, 3:25, 4:35, 5:40, 6:55, 8, 9:20 & 10:30 p.m.
Star Trek: Into Darkness (PG-13) (((
Century 20: 1:45 & 7:45 p.m. In 3D 10:40 a.m. & 4:45 & 10:50 p.m.
The Ten Commandments (1956) (Not Rated)
Stanford Theatre: Sat-Sun 2 & 7:30 p.m.
This Is The End (R)
Century 16: 9:15 & 10:35 a.m. & noon & 1:25, 2:45, 4:05, 5:25, 7, 8:20
& 10 p.m. Fri-Sat also at 11 p.m. Century 20: 11 a.m. & 12:10, 1:35,
2:45, 4:10, 5:25, 6:50, 8:05, 9:35 & 10:45 p.m. (Sun 12:10, 2:45, 8:05 &
10:45 p.m. only)
AQUARIUS: 430 Emerson St., Palo Alto (266-9260)
CENTURY CINEMA 16: 1500 N. Shoreline Blvd., Mountain View (800-326-3264)
CENTURY 20 DOWNTOWN: 825 Middlefield Road, Redwood City (800-326-3264)
CINEARTS AT PALO ALTO SQUARE: 3000 El Camino Real, Palo Alto (493-3456)
STANFORD THEATRE: 221 University Ave., Palo Alto (324-3700)
For show times, plot synopses and more information about any films playing at the
Aquarius, visit www.LandmarkTheatres.com
-Skip it
--Some redeeming qualities
---A good bet
----Outstanding
For show times, plot synopses,
trailers and more movie
info, visit www.mv-voice.com
and click on movies.
“Rich and soulful...the explosion of
flavors just went on and on and on...”
Michael Bauer, SF Chronicle, about Chef Holt’s
famous Braised Chicken Arrabbiata dish
Now open for weekend 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
June 14, 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
‘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.
Monday-Saturday, 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
BENEFITS
TheatreWorks Honors Gala The evening’s honorees, Tony Award-winning Broadway playwright and Joe DiPietro (“Memphis,”
“Nice Work If You Can Get It”) and chairman of
Fenwick & West law firm Gordon Davidson, will
be celebrated for their dedication to innovation.
June 15, 5:30 p.m. $1,000. Microsoft Campus,
1065 La Avenida St., Mountain View . www.
theatreworks.org
can do themselves. June 14, 1-2 p.m. Free.
Avenidas, 450 Bryant St., Palo Alto. Call 408282-3105. mastergardeners.org/scc.html
COMMUNITY EVENTS
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 June 31. Ujena Swimwear, 1931A Old Middlefield Way, Mountain
View. Call 650-938-1002. www.facebook.com/
events/611707982174307/
CONCERTS
Irene Sharp Cello Concert Free concert by
master teacher and performer Irene Sharp. June
20, 7:30-8:30 p.m. Free. Community School of
Music and Arts at Finn Center, 230 San Antonio
Circle, Mountain View. www.arts4all.org/attend/
concerts.htm
CLASSES/WORKSHOPS
DANCE
‘Don’t Smash That Bug!’ Master gardener
Candace Simpson speaks on recognizing beneficial insects in one’s vegetable garden. June 25,
7:30-8:30 p.m. Free. Los Altos Library, 13 S. San
Antonio Road,, Los Altos. Call 408-282-3105.
mastergardeners.org/scc.html
Water Saving Tips in the Garden Summer is when gardens are watered the most.
This class, led by Master Gardener Roberta
Barnes, will teach how to increase the efficiency of an irrigation system. Most of the tips will
be simple adjustments that most homeowners
‘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
Belly Dancing and World Music Night A
belly dancer, Etain, will perform at 8:30 p.m. as
part of Morocco’s “World Music Night.” Saturdays, June 1-29, 5 p.m.-midnight. Free. Morocco’s
Restaurant, 873 Castro St., Mountain View. Call
650-968-1502. www.moroccosrestaurant.com
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 .
FAMILY AND KIDS
Picture Book Story Time Story Time at
Linden Tree, every Friday and Saturday from
11-11:30 a.m., is ideal for preschoolers, kindergartners or any children ages three to six. Titles
are selected from both classic favorites and
new books. See website for weekly themes.
May 3-July 6, Free. Linden Tree Books, 265
State St., Los Altos. Call 650-949-3390. www.
lindentreebooks.com
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
HEALTH
OATS Open House The El Camino Hospital’s
Older Event Transition Services (OATS) is holding an open house with a one-on-one tour with
a staff member or volunteer. Attendees can
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NHIGHLIGHT
ASTRONOMY CLUB MONTHLY MEETING
The monthly meeting of the Peninsula Astronomical Society includes a free talk open
to the public with speaker Brian Day of NASA/Ames speaking on NASA’s LADEE
Lunar Mission. Foothill Observatory will open after the meeting, from 9 to 11 p.m.,
weather permitting. Park in Lot 5. June 14, 7:30-9 p.m. Free/$3 Parking fee. Foothill
College Room 5015, 12345 El Monte Road, Los Altos Hills. www.pastro.org/dnn/
also learn about the program and services, how
to sign up for the OATS program and receive
information regarding anxiety and depression
in the older adult population. There will also
be live music and light refreshments. June 26,
3-7 p.m. Free. OATS, 2660 Grant Road Suite D,
Mountain View. www.elcaminohospital.org
‘Medicare Updates’ Marcelo Espiritu from
the Council on Aging will speak about the
newest information about Medicare. June 20,
1-2 p.m. Free. Mountain View Senior Center,
266 Escuela Ave., Mountain View. Call 650903-6330.
SPECIAL EVENTS
LIVE MUSIC
Semi Annual Moroccan Bazzar &
Moroccan Music Day Moroccan decorations will be on sale at Morocco’s Restaurant
in Mountain View. June 16, 11 a.m.-9 p.m.
Free. Morocco’s Restaurant, 873 Castro St.,
Mountain View. Call 650-968-1502. www.
moroccosrestaurant.com
ON STAGE
‘Wild With Happy’ TheatreWorks presents
a new play, “Wild With Happy,” by awardwinning playwright Colman Domingo. Domingo
also stars in this comedy, in which a struggling
black actor rejects normal rituals of grief and
finds himself on a rapturous road trip with his
mother’s ashes. June 5 through 30, 8 p.m. $23$73. Mountain View Center for the Performing
Arts, 500 Castro St., Mountain View. www.
theatreworks.org
SENIORS
‘Have a Question? Let’s Google’ The
Mountain View Senior Center hosts Monica
Lipscomb to show how to find facts, people, and
websites through using the internet and Google.
Basic computer skills required. June 19, 2:30-3:30
p.m. Free. Mountain View Senior Center, 266
Escuela Ave., Mountain View. Call 650-903-6330.
3D Printing Open House The Mountain
View Public Library is hosting a 3D printing
open house during which participants can
learn about how this technology is evolving,
its impact on the landscape of manufacturing
and society at large. See some of the latest
3D printers in action. June 19, 6:30-8:30 p.m.
Free. Mountain View Public LIbrary, 585 Franklin St., Mountain View. Call 650-903-6880.
mountainview.gov/library
TALKS/AUTHORS
‘Solve the Mystery of Getting -- and
Keeping -- Customers’ Small-business
marketing expert Martha Hanlon will discuss
practical tips to help grow revenue and profitability. June 20, 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
Building Schools in Kenya Jon McCormack,
photographer and vice president of Kindle, discusses the Kilgoris Project to build and support
six schools in Kenya. Refreshments will be served.
The event is sponsored by the World Affairs Council - Peninsula and the Los Altos Library. June 19,
7-9 p.m. Free. Los Altos Library, 13 S. San Antonio
Road, Los Altos.
Math
Tutoring
Experts.
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■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ June 14, 2013
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June 14, 2013 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■
21
Marketplace
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PHONE
650/326-8216
Now you can log on to
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Most listings are free and
include a one-line free
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are employment ads,
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INDEX
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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/
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800-899
NP
UBLIC/LEGAL
NOTICES
995-997
The publisher waives any and all claims
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Embarcadero Media cannot assume
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right to refuse, edit or reclassify any ad solely
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22
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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)
Thanks to St Jude
245 Miscellaneous
140 Lost & Found
AT&T U-Verse
for just $29/mo! BUNDLE & SAVE with
AT&T Internet+Phone+TV and get a FREE
pre-paid Visa Card! (Select plans). HURRY,
CALL NOW! 800-319-3280 (Cal-SCAN)
Lost Family Cat- Reward
Lost in Livermore-Orange tabby with
chip, front claws de-clawed. App. 18
lbs. 5 yrs. old with orange eyes.Mom
needs you dearly, so God watch over
“Tigger”. Due to family illness mom is
back in Arizona, Please help reunite
us with our beloved cat. Can call AVID
Microchip (800) 336-2843,
Amanda (925) 922-4893, or
Dee (928) 897-0189 or e-mail
[email protected]. Thank you
145 Non-Profits
Needs
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 [email protected] or
(650) 723-0804.
Practical Music Theory
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)
DONATE BOOKS/HELP PA LIBRARY
150 Volunteers
Fosterers Needed for Moffet Cats
FRIENDS OF THE PALO ALTO LIBRARY
Princess Dance Camp (4-6yrs)
Sign up for Summer Fun 2013!
For Sale
Stanford music tutoring
Summer Dance Camp (7-10 yrs)
Summer Dance Classes
201 Autos/Trucks/
Parts
Website Design
DISH TV Retailer
Starting at $19.99/month (for 12 mos.) &
High Speed Internet starting at $14.95/
month (where available.) SAVE! Ask About
SAME DAY Installation! CALL Now!
1-888-806-7317. (Cal-SCAN)
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)
SUPERB DRAPES SACRIFICE SALE $50-
Kid’s
Stuff
330 Child Care
Offered
Restaurants with Heart at Kabul
Unitech
DirecTV
Over 140 channels only $29.99 a
month. Call Now! Triple
savings! $636.00 in Savings, Free
upgrade to Genie & 2013 NFL Sunday
ticket free!! Start saving today!
1-800-291-0350 (Cal-SCAN)
130 Classes &
Instruction
EXPERIENCED, LOVING NANNY
Full Time/nanny share available.
350 Preschools/
Schools/Camps
Free Earth Day Celebration
355 Items for Sale
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
2Large Ironman&Megatronthatspeak
Boy shoes11/12, 12,5 $4
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.
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NEED VIAGRA?
Stop paying outrageous prices! Best
prices ... VIAGRA 100MG, 40 pills+/4
free, only $99.00. Discreet shipping, Call
Power Pill. 1-800-374-2619 (AAN CAN)
450 Personal Growth
Tired of Online Dating? Never
seem to get quality results?
At MyHealthyConnection you will
receive quality support to reach your
goals and to make your dreams
come true. Chaplain David provides monthly seminars, workshop
activities, and face-to-face support
to help. Whether you are looking for
a mate or in a relationship that can
use guidance, this service is for you.
See website: http://www.healthyconnectionsouthbay.com Come to the
Grand Opening Seminar at Allied
Arts, Sunset Room and Patio. 75
Arbor Rd. at Cambridge Ave. Menlo
Park, CA 94025. Cost is 23 dollars
at the door or pay online at 18.95.
Contact David at
[email protected] Video Link:
www.youtu.be/LbpSeU1NcFE
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
BOY0-6MonthsClothesw/tags$50
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
SUMMER WORD POWER WRITING
GROUPS
Six one-hour meetings will *RAISE SAT
SCORES* make *ESSAY WRITING EASY*
Bring up grades in English, History, Social
Studies. Groups limited to 3 students for
individual attention. For details contact:
Adam Donovan *Coaching to Win* adam.
[email protected]/650-440-1150
133 Music Lessons
Barton-Holding Music Studio
Accepting new students for private vocal
lessons. All levels. Call Laura Barton,
650/965-0139
BMW 1999 323i Convertible
1999 BMW 323i convertible. Manual
5 speed 2.5L with very low miles (less
than 84K miles). Single Owner and
very well maintained through the BMW
Dealership. Recently spent $3,000
dollars on the convertible and new
back window. Car is very clean and
runs great.
Asking $8500.00 OBO.
Contact info: 650-964-9167 or
[email protected]
BMW 2002 M3 - $17800
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)
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
210 Garage/Estate
Sales
FUN Piano|Violin|Guitar Lessons
Redwood City, 3016 Rolison Road, June
15 & 16, 11-4
Hope Street Music Studios
In downtown Mtn.View. Most Instruments
voice. All ages & levels 650-961-2192
www.HopeStreetMusicStudios.com
Voice Lessons
Mountain View, 1259 Burgoyne St., June
15, 9-4
215 Collectibles &
Antiques
LEATHER DESKTRAY BY COACH - $135-
135 Group Activities
MEET SINGLES RIGHT NOW!
No paid operators, just real people like
you. Browse greetings, exchange messages and connect live. Try it free. Call
now 1-800-945-3392. (Cal-SCAN)
230 Freebies
Free Sofa Bed - FREE
FOGSTER.COM
Jobs
420 Healing/
Bodywork
THE TESLA SHIELDâ„¢
The #1 personal energy enhancement
tool. Transformational technology for
mind body and soul.
www.teslashield.com (Cal-SCAN)
425 Health Services
ATTENTION
SLEEP APNEA SUFFERERS with Medicare.
Get CPAP Replacement Supplies at little or
NO COST, plus FREE home delivery! Best
of all, prevent red skin sores and bacterial infection! Call 888-699-7660.
(Cal-SCAN)
CA$H PAID
FOR DIABETIC STRIPS!!
Don't throw boxes away-Help others.
Unopened /Unexpired boxes only.
All Brands Considered! Call Anytime!
24hrs/7days (888) 491-1168 (Cal-SCAN)
Canada Drug Center
es tu mejor opcion para ordenar medicamentos seguros y economicos.
Nuestros servicios de farmacia con
licencia Canadiense e Internacional te
proveeran con ahorros de hasta el 90
en todas las medicinas que necesites.
Llama ahora al 1-800-385-2192 y obten
$10 de descuento con tu primer orden
ademas de envio gratuito. (Cal-SCAN)
500 Help Wanted
Customer Service Person wanted
for busy Cafe in Los Altos
The candidate would have to be
able to take orders on a POS, make
Espresso drinks and serve food as
well as close the cafe at night.
Pay is per hour plus tips.
Please send me your resume with
the days you would like to work.
Tow Truck Driver Class C
Experienced Preferred. Applied At
National Towing 2520 Old Middlefield
Way Mountain View with a DMV record
print out.
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 – Become an Aviation
Maintenance Tech. FAA approved training. Financial aid if qualified – Housing
available. Job placement assistance.
CALL AIM 877-804-5293 (Cal-SCAN)
AIRLINE CAREERS
begin here – Get FAA approved Aviation
Maintenance Technician training. Financial
Assistance available. Job placement
assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of
Maintenance 888-242-3382 (Cal-SCAN)
DRIVERS:
Freight Up = More $. Class A CDL
Required. Call 877-258-8782
www.ad-drivers.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)
Business
Services
615 Computers
ATTN: COMPUTER WORK
Work from anywhere 24/7. Up to
$1,500 Part Time to $7,500/mo.
Full Time. Training provided.
www.WorkServices5.com (Cal-SCAN)
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)
619 Consultants
Estate Manager
Resp., Ivy League credentialed woman
w/intl. bus. exp. can manage your
home/business needs. Refs.
650/521-0759; 206/747-8072
624 Financial
Ever Consider
a Reverse Mortgage? At least 62 years
old? Stay in your home & increase cash
flow! Safe & Effective! Call Now for your
FREE DVD! Call Now 888-698-3165.
(Cal-SCAN)
GET FREE
OF CREDIT CARD DEBT NOW!
Cut payments by up to half. Stop
creditors from calling. 888-416-2691.
(Cal-SCAN)
636 Insurance
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)
640 Legal Services
BE AN IMMIGRATION OR
BANKRUPTCY PARALEGAL. $395 includes
certificate, Resume and 94% placement in
all 58 CA counties. For more information
www.mdsassociates.com or
Call 626-552-2885 and 626-918-3599
(Cal-SCAN)
Home
Services
715 Cleaning
Services
Acostas’ Housecleaning
Excellent Housecleaning
Excellent References!
Rosalina Lopez 1-650-308-5109.
GO TO FOGSTER.COM TO RESPOND TO ADS WITHOUT PHONE NUMBERS
■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ June 14, 2013
THE PENINSULA’S FREE CLASSIFIEDS WEBSITE
TO RESPOND TO ADS WITHOUT PHONE NUMBERS
GO TO WWW.FOGSTER.COM
Navarro Housecleaning Services
Apartments and homes. Carpets and
windows. 20 years exp., good refs.
Call for free est. 650/853-3058;
650/796-0935
Orkopina Housecleaning
“The BEST Service for You”
Bonded
Since 1985
751 General
Contracting
Insured
!TrustworthyDetailed
!Laundr WWalls/Windows
!Out
!
W!Work
650-962-1536 - Lic. 20624
www.orkopinabestcleaningservice.com
730 Electrical
A FAST RESPONSE!
lic #545936 Bob 650-343-5125.
www.HillsboroughElectric.com
Clarence Electric Co.
Residential Specialist
Troubleshooting Experts
Sr/Mil Disc/CC accept
Live Response!
#955129
Tired of Mow, Blow and Go?
Owner operated, 40 years exp. All phases of gardening/landscaping. Refs. Call
Eric, 408/356-1350
Call 650-690-7995
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
748 Gardening/
Landscaping
HANDYMAN
Beckys Landscape
Weekly/periodic maint. Annual rose/fruit
tree pruning, clean-ups, irrigation, sod,
planting, raised beds. Power washing.
650/444-3030
FRED
30 Years Experience
650.529.1662
650.483.4227
CompleteomeRepair
Maintenanc
emodelin
ProfessionalPainting
Carpentr
Plumbing
CustomCabineDesig
Deckence
AnMuchMore
& GARDEN
Ceja’s HOME
LANDSCAPE
30 Years in family
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
J. L. GARDENING SERVICE
% %
"$$#
%" %
!
25 Years of Exp.
650-520-9097
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.
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
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
General CleanuGardening
PrunTrimming
New LawnSprinkler Systems
Planting
(650) 969-9894
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
Real
Estate
801 Apartments/
Condos/Studios
Menlo Park - $2,600/mon
Mountain View, 1 BR/1 BA - $1545
Mountain View, 2 BR/1 BA - $1945
PA: 1BR/1BA
Creekside setting. Hardwood flrs.,
carport, gardner. In 4-plex. N/P.
$1295 mo., lease. Avail. 7/15.
Call Arn Cenedella, Agent,
650/566-5329
Palo Alto - 4500
San Carlos, 2 BR/2 BA - $2,300.00
805 Homes for Rent
Palo Alto - $8,900/mo
Palo Alto..channing Av, 4 BR/2 BA $5000. mo
Redwood City - $3,900.00
Redwood City - $4,000.00
Redwood City, 3 BR/2 BA - $4,000.00
Redwood City, 3 BR/2 BA - $3,900.00
809 Shared Housing/
Rooms
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)
Los Altos Hills, 1 BR/1 BA - $900/
month
Palo Alto, 1 BR/1 BA - $1190-1210
815 Rentals Wanted
Caretaker, Position Wanted
Teacher Looking for Quiet Rental
820 Home Exchanges
Home Based Job
825 Homes/Condos
for Sale
Quality You Can Stand On
www.SlaughterbeckFloors.com
850 Acreage/Lots/
Storage
20 ACRES FREE!
Buy 40-Get 60 Acres. $0-Down $198/
mo. Money Back Guarantee, NO
CREDIT CHECKS. Beautiful Views.
Roads/Surveyed. Near El Paso, Texas.
1-800-843-7537.
www.sunsetranches.com (Cal-SCAN)
1VCMJD
/PUJDFT
995 Fictitious Name
Statement
AJ’S REFLEXOLOGY
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT
File No.: 578465
The following person (persons) is (are)
doing business as: AJ’s Reflexology,
located at 1123 W Olive Ave. Suite
11, 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):
ATIBA E.S. JOHNSON
1123 W Olive Ave. 11
Sunnyvale, CA 94086
Registrant/Owner began transacting
business under the fictitious business
name(s) listed herein on 3/2013.
This statement was filed with the
County Clerk-Recorder of Santa Clara
County on May 14, 2013.
(MVV May 24, 31, June 7, 14, 2013)
JTB CONSULTING
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT
File No.: 578458
The following person (persons) is (are)
doing business as:
JTB Consulting, 1519 Hollingsworth
Drive, Mountain View, CA 94040, Santa
Clara County.
This business is owned by: An
Individual.
The name and residence address of
the owner(s)/registrant(s) is(are):
JENNIFER T. BEEDON
Menlo Park, 3 BR/2 BA - $1099000
Palo Alto, 3 BR/2 BA - $899000
Redwood City, 2 BR/1 BA - $485,000.0
Redwood City, 3 BR/2 BA - $599000
s4HE-OUNTAIN6IEW6OICE
is adjudicated to publish in
the County of Santa Clara.
Woodside, 3 BR/2 BA - $1099000
Woodside, 3 BR/2 BA
Excellent location with easy access to
downtown Woodside. For detailed information go to http://www.zillow.com/
homedetails/132-Audiffred-Lane-Woodside-CA-94062/2112755813_zpid/
CAROL DESIGNS
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT
File No.: 579037
The following person (persons) is (are)
doing business as:
Carol Designs, located at 1810 Van
Buren Cir., Mt. View, CA 94040, Santa
Clara County.
This business is owned by: An
Individual.
The name and residence address of
the owner(s)/registrant(s) is(are):
CAROL LANGSTON
1810 Van Buren Cir.
Mt. View, CA 94040
FEELING GOOD INSTITUTE
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT
File No.: 579255
The following person (persons) is (are)
doing business as:
Feeling Good Institute, located at 2660
Solace Place, Suite A, Mountain View,
CA 94040, Santa Clara County.
This business is owned by: An
Individual.
The name and residence address of
the owner(s)/registrant(s) is(are):
MAOR KATZ
520 Franklin St.
Mountain 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 6, 2013.
(MVV June 14, 21, 28, July 5, 2013)
997 All Other Legals
NOTICE OF APPLICATION TO SELL
ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES
Date of Filing Application:
June 7, 2013
To Whom It May Concern:
The Name(s) of Applicant(s) is/are:
CHENG GUO RESTAURANT & DRINK
INC.
The applicants listed above are applying to the Department of Alcoholic
Beverage Control to sell alcoholic
beverages at:
2464 W El Camino Real, Ste. C
Mountain View, CA 94040-1425
Type of license(s) applied for:
41 - ON-SALE BEER AND WINE-EATING
PLACE
(MVV June 14, 21, 28, 2013)
The Mountain View Voice
publishes every Friday.
THE DEADLINE TO ADVERTISE
IN THE VOICE PUBLIC NOTICES IS:
5 P.M. THE PREVIOUS FRIDAY
Call Alicia Santillan at
(650) 326-8210 x6578 for more information
f Two!
o
r
e
w
o
P
The
s/URADJUDICATIONINCLUDES
the Mid-Peninsula communities of Palo Alto,
Stanford, Los Altos and
Mountain View.
s4HE-OUNTAIN6IEW6OICE
publishes every Friday.
YHEYL INTEROREALESTATECOM s JGONZALEZ INTEROREALESTATECOM
Deadline: 5 p.m.
the previous Friday
Call Alicia Santillan
(650) 326-8210 x6578
GO TO
to assist you with your
FOGSTER.COM
legal advertising needs.
for contact information
DAVIS PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
DAVIS & CO REALTORS
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT
File No.: 578693
The following person (persons) is (are)
doing business as:
1.) Davis Property Management, 2.)
Davis & Co Realtors, located at 2225
Showers Drive, Mountain View, CA
94040, Santa Clara County.
This business is owned by: A
Corporation.
The name and residence address of the
owner(s)/registrant(s) is(are):
THE HERSH MANAGEMENT COMPANY
2225 Showers Drive
Mountain View, CA 94040
Registrant/Owner began transacting
business under the fictitious business
name(s) listed herein on August 14,
1996.
This statement was filed with the
County Clerk-Recorder of Santa Clara
County on May 20, 2013.
(MVV May 24, 31, June 7, 14, 2013)
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 May 30, 2013.
(MVV June 7, 14, 21, 28, 2013)
Is Quality Important to You?
Do You Know?
Sunnyvale, 3 BR/2 BA - $599999
1519 Hollingsworth Drive
Mountain View, CA 94040
Registrant/Owner began transacting
business under the fictitious business
name(s) listed herein on 01/01/2009.
This statement was filed with the
County Clerk-Recorder of Santa Clara
County on May 14, 2013.
(MVV May 24, 31, June 7, 14, 2013)
WE MEASURE QUALITY
BY RESULTS
Los Altos - $799000
No phone number
in the ad?
License#298783
Hardwoods, laminates, carpets,
vinyl, area rugs, green floors
and so much more!
$399 Cabo San Lucas
All Inclusive Special - Stay 6 Days In
A Luxury BeachFront Resort With
Unlimited Meals And Drinks For $399!
www.luxurycabohotel.com 888-481-9660
(Cal-SCAN)
www.SoosanHomes.com
SOLID ROCK PAVING
Service your driveway now!
741 Flooring/Carpeting
408-379-5813
End the Clutter & Get Organized
Residential Organizing
by Debra Robinson
(650)941-5073
Santa Cruz Beach
Overlooking Natural Bridges Beach
Permitted Complete Interior Remodel
2284 sf Living Space 4704 sf Lot
650.799.7809
Sam’s Garden Service
840 Vacation
Rentals/Time Shares
Roe General Engineering
Asphalt, concrete, pavers, tiles, sealing,
new construct, repairs. 35 yrs exp. No job
too small. Lic #663703. 650/814-5572
T
General Y
fogster.com
779 Organizing
Services
Palo Alto, 4 BR/3.5 BA - $8900.00
759 Hauling
Bryan’s Weedwhacking
Call me today! 831-524-5278.
MARKETPLACE the printed version of
E-mail: [email protected]
s9VONNE(EYLs
s*EFF'ONZALEZs
Direct (650) 947-4694
Cell (650) 302-4055
Direct (650) 947-4698
Cell (408) 888-7748
DRE# 01255661
DRE# 00978793
WWWYVONNEANDJEFFCOM
INTERO
REAL
E S TAT E
S E RV I C E S ®
&IRST3T3UITEs,OS!LTOS
June 14, 2013 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■
23
Open Sat. & Sun. 1:30 - 4:30 pm
MOUNTAIN VIEW
3 BD + Office/2 BA
Offered at $768,000
1762 Elsie Avenue
Quality Is A Universal Language
JEFF STRICKER
STEVE TENBROECK
650.823.8057
650.450.0160
[email protected]
[email protected]
Broker & Attorney
Broker, President’s Club
JeffandSteve.com
24
■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ June 14, 2013
An unwavering commitment
to excellence in service
SHELLY POTVIN, M.A.
650.917.7994
* Top 1% Coldwell
Banker Worldwide
[email protected]
www.ShellyPotvin.com
Royce
...Your Condo & Townhome Specialist
N
SU
&
M
T
SA :30P
N
4
E
OP :30
1
638 Antioch Terrace
Sunnyvale
2 bed | 2.5 ba | 1,277 sq ft
Modern townhome end unit
offers dual master suites, eat-in
kitchen & attached 1 car garage
plus bonus room
* Ranked #4
in the Los Altos
office of 132 agents
Offered at $599,000
DRE#01236885
LE
Come
home to the
MOUNTAIN VIEW VOICE
Classified &
Real Estate Section!
Come home
ING
465 Central Avenue
Mountain View
SA
D
EN
P
2 bed | 1.5 ba | 1,274 sq ft
Dramatic townhome
Oversize living room with
vaulted ceiling & greenbelt view
to the Mountain View Voice
Classified & Real Estate Section!
List Price $588,000*
*Received multiple offers!
For all your real estate
advertising needs call our
Real Estate Department today.
LE
G
IN
ND
2211 Latham Street #110
Mountain View
SA
PE
2 bed | 2 ba | 1,206 sq ft
Updated condo features
spacious living room, private
patio & security building
650-964-6300
List Price $475,000*
“Make the RIGHT MOVE...”
Call Tori
for your Real Estate needs
*Received multiple offers!
LE
G
IN
ND
822 Calderon Avenue
Mountain View
SA
PE
3 bed | 2 ba | 1,820 sq ft
Remodeled home in downtown
Mountain View, separate
family & eat-in kitchen
List Price $1,075,000*
*Received multiple offers!
I love happy
clients
LE
G
IN
ND
97 Sherland Avenue #C
Mountain View
SA
PE
3 bed | 1.5 ba | 1,215 sq ft
Desirable two story townhome
with dual paned windows,
large patio & yard
List Price $499,000*
*Received multiple offers!
Royce Cablayan
DRE# 01062078
The #1 Selling Agent in Mountain View since 1995
Tori Ann Corbett
Broker Associate
(650) 996-0123
DRE# 00927794
www.ToriSellsRealEstate.com
7 ‡ [email protected]
www.reroyce.com
Colleen Rose
DRE# 01221104
9799 ‡ [email protected]
June 14, 2013 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■
25
1191 AWALT DRIVE
MOUNTAIN VIEW
4 BEDS
2.5 BATHS
SOLD IN 6 DAYS WITH
MULTIPLE OFFERS
REMODELED KITCHEN
BACKYARD WITH PLAYHOUSE
~2,720 SQ FT
DESIRABLE WAVERLY PARK
DAV I D T R OY E R
26
■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ June 14, 2013
$1,549,000
FINISHED ATTIC WITH SKYLIGHTS
EXCELLENT MOUNTAIN VIEW SCHOOLS
((
%$"!'"!
#1 AGENT 2012: combined sales in MV, LA & LAH*
&&& & $ !
"!!##!! Open Saturday & Sunday 1-5pm
Gorgeous home with pool, spa and much more!
BEDROOMBATHSs/NLYYEARSOLD
Offered at $898,000
MICHAEL GALLI
President’s Club
Open this weekend!
255 O’Keefe, Mountain View
Phone: 650.248.3076
www.MichaelGalli.com
[email protected]
DRE# 01852633
apr.com
LOS ALTOS 167 S. San Antonio Road Suite 1
650.941.1111
June 14, 2013 ■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■
27
Coldwell Banker
#1 IN CALIFORNIA
SOUTH PALO ALTO
Sun 1:30 - 4:30
$1,649,000
4317 Silva Av 3 BR 2 BA Spacious hm w/office. 2 car garage. 11,000sf
lot. Convenient location. Excellent LA schls!
DiPali Shah
BRE #01249165
650.325.6161
LOS ALTOS
Sat 1:30 - 4:30
$2,049,000
190 Lyell St 4 BR 3 BA French Country storybook home w/beautiful
resort-style backyard, pool, & spa.
Hannelore Blanchard
BRE #00593824
650.941.7040
SAN JOSE
$1,148,000
10600 Story Ln 4 BR 2.5 BA Spanish villa w/classic Old World charm.
1.41ac w/amazing views. Great for entertaining!
Greg Stange
BRE #01418178
650.325.6161
SAN JOSE
Sat/Sun 1 - 4
$1,100,000
330 N. 3rd St 4 BR 4 BA Stately pre-1900s Victorian on ¼ acre with
income producing Duplex. Near Japan Town &SJSU.
Tina Kyriakis
BRE #01384482
650.941.7040
SAN CARLOS
Sat/Sun 1:30 - 4:30
$998,000
381 Dartmouth Av 4 BR 2.5 BA With sweeping views of the San
Carlos hills, this spacious home is lovely inside!
Rod Creason
BRE #01443380
650.325.6161
MOUNTAIN VIEW
Gorgeous Chalet Townhome
$498,000
2 BR 1.5 BA 2-story remod townhs, huge backyd w/a feel of a SFR
Ron & Nasrin Delan
BRE #01360743
650.941.7040
MOUNTAIN VIEW
Sat/Sun 1:30 - 4:30
$300,000
1075 Space Park Wy #328 3 BR 2 BA Large 3bed/2bath manufactured home in prime location in Mountain View! Great opportunity!
Rod Creason
BRE #01443380
650.325.6161
MOUNTAIN VIEW
A Must See!
$1,400,000
3 BR 2.5 BA Charming 4-year-new two story home on a tranquil
avenue.
Donna Liu
BRE #01253748
650.941.7040
MENLO PARK
Sun 1:30 - 4:30
$465,000
675 Sharon Park Dr #210 1 BR 1 BA Tranquil. Pool and green belt
view from balcony. 2nd floor. Elevator. Near Sand Hill Road.
Nancy Goldcamp
BRE #00787851
650.325.6161
MENLO PARK
Sat/Sun 1 - 4
$1,349,000
533 Palmer Ln 3 BR 2 BA Don’t miss this home location on an extralarge lot!
Parvin Parineh
BRE #01879258
650.941.7040
LOS ALTOS HILLS
Sat/Sun 1:30 - 4:30
$4,098,000
24910 La Loma Ct 4 BR 4.5 BA Western hill views & peak of Valley &
Lake estates.LR, DR, eat-in kit, FR, library/office.
Terri Couture
BRE #01090940
650.941.7040
LOS ALTOS HILLS
Sun 1:30 - 4:30
$5,338,000
24017 Oak Knoll Cir 5 BR 5.5 BA Custom single-story home located
in prestigious LA Hills w/breathtaking views of Valley.
Mary & George Tan BRE #00861682, 01891525
408.252.1133
LOS ALTOS
Sun 1:30 - 4:30
$2,238,000
1238 Nightingale Ct 5 BR 4 BA Beautiful home w/huge lower level
recreation rm w/full Bdrm & Bath.
Jo Buchanan & Stuart Bowen BRE #00468827, 01412745 650.941.7040
LOS ALTOS
Sun 1:30 - 4:30
$1,498,000
178 Santa Rita Ct 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
10 Pasa Robles Av 4 BR 3 BA Appreciate timeless beauty & old world
charm while adding your own personal touches.
Clara Lee/Dorothy Gurwith BRE #01723333/01248679 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
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■ Mountain View Voice ■ MountainViewOnline.com ■ June 14, 2013