Palo Alto Weekly 12.28.2012 - Section 1

Page 1

Vol. XXXIV, Number 13 N December 28, 2012

Inside this issue

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OUR NEIGHBORHOODS PALO ALTO

Our Neighborhoods 2013 COLLEGE TERRACE

OLD PALO ALTO

ESTHER CLARK PARK

P R O F I L E S, M A P S A N D V I TA L FA C T S O F F E AT U R E D N E I G H B O R H O O D S I N T H E C O M M U N I T Y PaloAltoOnline.com

PAGE 3

Donate to the HOLIDAY FUND page 14

Eating Out 21

Shop Talk 22

Movies 23

Puzzles 30

Home 32

N Upfront Citizens who made a difference

Page 9

N Arts Stanford murals celebrate Latino narrative

Page 19

N Sports From Palo Alto High to the Rose Bowl

Page 25


Find the perfect gift at your local Microsoft retail store.

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Upfront

Goal $350,000

See who’s already contributed to the Holiday Fund on page 14

As of Dec. 19 287 donors $184,878

Donate online at PaloAltoOnline.com

with matching funds

,OCAL NEWS INFORMATION AND ANALYSIS

2012: Palo Alto’s wild growth spurt %CONOMIC REBOUND BRINGS WAVE OF PROPOSALS FOR MASSIVE DEVELOPMENTS AND A CHORUS OF CONCERNS OVER THEIR IMPACTS by Gennady Sheyner ARLIER THIS MONTH AS 0ALO !L TO S PLANNING COMMISSIONERS DELVED INTO THE IRKSOME PROB LEM OF DOWNTOWN PARKING #OMMIS SIONER -ICHAEL !LCHECK MADE A KEEN OBSERVATION !S FAR AS PROBLEMS GO A WILDLY POPULAR DOWNTOWN ISN T SUCH A BAD PROBLEM TO HAVE

E

h) THINK WE CAN APPROACH THIS PROBLEM WITH SOME LEVEL OF PRIDE WITH SOME LEVEL OF APPRECIATION THAT WE VE ACCOMPLISHED A SUCCESS STORY THAT OTHER 0ENINSULA CITIES HAVEN T v !LCHECK SAID AT THE $EC MEETING (IS COMMENT IN MANY WAYS EN CAPSULATED IN 0ALO !LTO )F

WAS THE YEAR IN WHICH THE CITY WAS WASHING OFF THE COBWEBS FROM THE 'REAT 2ECESSION WAS THE YEAR IN WHICH THE CITY COMPLETED ITS ECO NOMIC REBOUND AND BEGAN DEALING WITH THE PROBLEMS OF ITS OWN SUC CESS )T WAS THE YEAR IN WHICH GIANT DEVELOPMENTS BEGAN TARGETING 0ALO !LTO ENRAGING DOWNTOWN RESIDENTS WHO RECALL WITH A MIX OF NOSTALGIA AND ANGER THE GOOD OLD DAYS WHEN THERE WERE AMPLE PARKING SPOTS OUT SIDE THEIR HOMES )T WAS THE YEAR IN

WHICH HIGH SPEED RAIL AN ISSUE THAT HAS BEEN ENRAGING THE COMMU NITY AND ENGAGING THE COUNCIL SINCE FINALLY RECEDED INTO THE BACKGROUND AFTER STATE LEGISLATORS AP PROVED IN *ULY FUNDING FOR THE LINE S FIRST SEGMENT IN #ENTRAL 6ALLEY !ND IT WAS ALSO THE YEAR IN WHICH THE CITY COMPLETED ITS LONG AWAITED "IKE AND 0EDESTRIAN -ASTER 0LAN AND SECURED ENOUGH FUNDING TO ENSURE THAT THE AMBITIOUS PLAN WILL NOT LAY DORMANT LIKE ITS PREDECESSOR

4HE CITY HAD ITS SHARE OF PROBLEMS FROM RESIDENTIAL BURGLARIES TO OUT DATED INFRASTRUCTURE FROM PENSION COSTS THAT HAVE INCREASED TENFOLD OVER THE PAST DECADE TO MEDICAL SPENDING THAT CONTINUES TO SURGE !ND THE #ITY #OUNCIL HAD TO STIFLE ITS USUAL SHARE OF CONTROVERSIES FROM ANIMAL LOV ERS OPPOSING #ITY -ANAGER *AMES +EENE S UNPOPULAR PROPOSAL TO SHUT TER THE LOCAL ANIMAL SHELTER AND A (continued on page 8)

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District looks to build schools, shrink achievement gap %LECTION YEAR BRINGS PHYSICAL CHANGES TO CAMPUSES by Chris Kenrick

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It’s more of a guess than we would like. — Dana Tom, Palo Alto school board vice president, regarding recent projections on district enrollment by consulting demographers.

January 13

PERIOR MODEL USED AT 0ALO !LTO (IGH 3CHOOL WHICH ENLISTS MORE THAN hTEACHER ADVISERSv TO AUGMENT A SMALL COUNSELING STAFF 4HE OTHER THREE CANDIDATES SAID THEY WERE WILLING TO ALLOW TIME FOR AN INTERNAL 'UNN COMMITTEE TO REC OMMEND REFORMS TO THE SCHOOL S TRA DITIONAL COUNSELING SYSTEM WHICH DOES NOT USE TEACHER ADVISERS SO LONG AS STUDENTS AT BOTH HIGH SCHOOLS GET hCOMPARABLE SERVICES v 6OTERS RETURNED TWO INCUMBENTS -ELISSA "ATEN #ASWELL AND #A MILLE 4OWNSEND TO OFFICE AND ALSO ELECTED NEWCOMER (EIDI %M BERLING $AUBER THE SHARPEST CRITIC OF THE DISTRICT TRAILED IN THE FIELD 4HE NEW YEAR COULD BRING A RESO LUTION TO THE COUNSELING CONTROVERSY !N ADVISORY COMMITTEE COMPRISING 'UNN PARENTS TEACHERS STUDENTS COUNSELORS AND ADMINISTRATORS IS DUE TO REPORT IN &EBRUARY ON ITS RECOMMENDATIONS FOR COUNSELING REFORMS AT THE SCHOOL TO BE IMPLE MENTED STARTING NEXT FALL 4HE SCHOOL DISTRICT HAS ALSO TURNED TO A COMMUNITY ADVISORY COMMITTEE TO HELP SETTLE THE CALENDAR DISPUTE 4HE COMMITTEE OF PARENTS STUDENTS

This is a personal crime. This feels quite a bit more frightening. — Karen White, president of the Duveneck/St. Francis Neighborhood Association, on the armed robbery of a man walking his dog.

February 17

Veronica Weber

LANS TO OPEN NEW SCHOOLS IN 0ALO !LTO AND TO RAISE THE BAR ON GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS HIGHLIGHTED LOCAL EDUCATION NEWS IN WHICH WAS AN ELECTION YEAR 2ESULTS OF THE COMPETITIVE SCHOOL BOARD RACE IN .OVEMBER SUGGESTED GENERAL SATISFACTION WITH 0ALO !LTO S CURRENT EDUCATION LEADERSHIP /N THE STUDENT LEVEL SURVEYS OF 0ALO !LTO YOUTH REFLECTED A MEASURE OF IMPROVEMENT IN SOCIAL EMOTIONAL HEALTH POSSIBLY ATTRIBUTABLE TO A RANGE OF STUDENT WELLNESS PROGRAMS THAT HAVE BEEN LAUNCHED SINCE A DEV ASTATING STRING OF STUDENT DEATHS BY SUICIDE IN AND %VEN SO A DEBATE OVER GUIDANCE COUNSELING SPECIFICALLY THE CONSIDERABLY DIFFERENT COUNSELING MODELS USED AT 0ALO !LTO S TWO HIGH SCHOOLS CONTINUED TO SIMMER 4HE COUNSELING CONTROVERSY AND A HOTLY CONTESTED CHANGE TO 0ALO !LTO S ACADEMIC CALENDAR THIS YEAR WERE AMONG THE MOST DISCUSSED IS SUES IN THE SCHOOL BOARD ELECTION 4HE SHARPEST CRITIC AMONG THE CANDIDATES +EN $AUBER ARGUED THAT 'UNN (IGH 3CHOOL SHOULD IMMEDI ATELY ADOPT WHAT HE CONSIDERS THE SU

!S PART OF THE MILLION h3TRONG 3CHOOLSv BOND PASSED IN CONSTRUCTION IS UNDERWAY AT *ORDAN -IDDLE 3CHOOL

AND SCHOOL STAFF WILL CONVENE EARLY IN TO DEVISE SURVEYS AND OTHER MEANS TO GAUGE OPINION ON WHETHER THE NEW CALENDAR SHOULD BE RETAINED BEYOND 4HE PAST YEAR SAW 0ALO !LTO S BIG GEST SCHOOL BUILDING BOOM SINCE THE S AS PROJECTS FINANCED UNDER THE MILLION h3TRONG 3CHOOLSv BOND APPROVED BY VOTERS IN BECAME VISIBLE ACROSS TOWN 3IX CAMPUSES INCLUDING BOTH OF THE HIGH SCHOOLS ALL THREE MIDDLE SCHOOLS AND &AIRMEADOW %LEMENTA

If we want a healthy community, we need to constantly work on our relationships. — Penny Ellson, of the Greenmeadow Community Association, on building a sense of community through the Mayor’s Challenge.

March 16

RY 3CHOOL OPENED THE ACADEMIC YEAR WITH HARDHAT ZONES !T $UVE NECK %LEMENTARY 3CHOOL PORTABLE CLASSROOMS WERE MOVED TO MAKE WAY FOR GROUNDBREAKING ON A NEW TWO STORY CLASSROOM BUILDING IN EARLY ! NEW TWO STORY CLASS ROOM BUILDING AT /HLONE %LEMEN TARY 3CHOOL OPENED LAST YEAR !BOUT HALF OF THE h3TRONG 3CHOOLSv BOND MONEY HAS BEEN SPENT OR COM MITTED TO PROJECTS UNDER CONSTRUC TION 4HE REST IS IN RESERVE CURRENTLY ALLOCATED TO 'UNN AND 0ALO !LTO

HIGH SCHOOLS AS WELL AS TO THE OPEN ING OF A NEW ELEMENTARY SCHOOL 0ALO !LTO S STEADY ENROLLMENT GROWTH HAS PROMPTED A DECISIVE MOVE TOWARD OPENING A TH EL EMENTARY CAMPUS PROJECTED BY FALL AND ALSO POSSIBLY A FOURTH MIDDLE SCHOOL !N ADVISORY COMMITTEE WILL CONVENE *AN TO EVALUATE TWO POTENTIAL ELEMENTARY SITES 'AR LAND AT . #ALIFORNIA !VE AND (continued on page 11)

The people who do this are ruthless.

In the old days people thought a monster was eating the sun.

— John Hanna, of the Crescent Park neighborhood, on how his beautiful dogwood tree was attacked.

— Andrew Fraknoi, Foothill College astronomy professor, on how people used to regard solar eclipses.

April 20

May 18

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Upfront QUOTE OF THE YEAR

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Palo Alto UniďŹ ed School District Notice is hereby given that proposals will be received by the Palo Alto UniďŹ ed School District for multiple work bid packages. Description of the projects/work is as follows: s 'UNN (IGH 3CHOOL 2EPLACEMENT OF 'YM (EATERS \ #ONTRACT .O ''( s 0ALO !LTO (IGH 3CHOOL 2EPLACEMENT OF 7INDOWS AT 4OWER "LDG (AY MARKET 4HEATRE 2EBID \ #ONTRACT .O 0!72 Mandatory Job Walk: 4HERE WILL BE A PRE BID CONFERENCE AND SITE VISIT FOR each project. Bid Submission: Proposals must be received at the District Facilities Of lCE "UILDING “Dâ€?. For more details on obtaining plans and speciďŹ cations, the mandatory job walk, bid submission, prevailing wage laws, or the bid packages, please see the contact below. PREVAILING WAGE LAWS: 4HE SUCCESSFUL "IDDER MUST COMPLY WITH ALL prevailing wage laws applicable to the Project, and related requirements CONTAINED IN THE #ONTRACT $OCUMENTS 0ALO !LTO 5NIlED 3CHOOL $ISTRICT WILL MAINTAIN A ,ABOR #OMPLIANCE 0RO GRAM ,#0 FOR THE DURATION OF THIS PROJECT )N BIDDING THIS PROJECT THE CONTRACTOR WARRANTS HE SHE IS AWARE AND WILL FOLLOW THE 0UBLIC 7ORKS #HAPTER OF THE #ALIFORNIA ,ABOR #ODE COMPRISED OF LABOR CODE SECTIONS n ! COPY OF THE $ISTRICTS ,#0 IS AVAILABLE FOR REVIEW AT #HURCHILL !VENUE "UILDING $ 0ALO !LTO #! ! PRE JOB CONFERENCE SHALL BE CONDUCTED WITH THE CONTRACTOR OR subcontractors to discuss federal and state labor law require ments applicable to the contract. 0ROJECT CONTRACTORS AND SUBCONTRACTS SHALL MAINTAIN AND FURNISH to the District, at a designated time, a certiďŹ ed copy of each payroll with a statement of compliance signed under penalty of perjury. 4HE $ISTRICT SHALL REVIEW AND IF APPROPRIATE AUDIT PAYROLL RECORDS TO VERIFY COMPLIANCE WITH THE 0UBLIC 7ORKS #HAPTER OF THE ,ABOR #ODE 4HE $ISTRICT SHALL WITHHOLD CONTRACT PAYMENTS IF PAYROLL RECORDS are delinquent or inadequate. 4HE $ISTRICT SHALL WITHHOLD CONTRACT PAYMENTS AS DESCRIBED IN THE ,#0 INCLUDING APPLICABLE PENALTIES WHEN THE $ISTRICT AND ,ABOR #OMMISSIONER ESTABLISH THAT UNDERPAYMENT OF OTHER VIOLATIONS has occurred. "IDDERS MAY EXAMINE "IDDING $OCUMENTS AT &ACILITIES /FlCE Building “Dâ€?.

EDITORIAL Editor Jocelyn Dong (223-6514) Associate Editor Carol Blitzer (223-6511) Sports Editor Keith Peters (223-6516) Express & Online Editor Tyler Hanley (223-6519) Arts & Entertainment Editor Rebecca Wallace (223-6517) Assistant Sports Editor Rick Eymer (223-6521) Spectrum Editor Tom Gibboney (223-6507) Staff Writers Sue Dremann (223-6518), Chris Kenrick (223-6512), Gennady Sheyner (223-6513) Editorial Assistant, Internship Coordinator Eric Van Susteren (223-6515) Staff Photographer Veronica Weber (223-6520) Contributors Colin Becht, Dale F. Bentson, Peter Canavese, Kit Davey, Iris Harrell, Sheila Himmel, Chad Jones, Karla Kane, Kevin Kirby, Jack McKinnon, Jeanie K. Smith, Susan Tavernetti Editorial Interns Pierre BienaimÊ, Lisa Kellman DESIGN Design Director Shannon Corey (223-6560) Senior Designers Linda Atilano, Diane Haas, Scott Peterson, Paul Llewellyn Designers Lili Cao, Rosanna Leung PRODUCTION Production Manager Jennifer Lindberg (223-6595) Sales & Production Coordinators Dorothy Hassett (223-6597), Blanca Yoc (223-6596) ADVERTISING Vice President Sales & Advertising Tom Zahiralis (223-6570) Shop Product Manager Samantha Mejia (223-6582) Multimedia Advertising Sales Adam Carter (223-6574), Elaine Clark (223-6572), Janice Hoogner (223-6576), Wendy Suzuki 2236569), Brent Triantos (223-6577), Real Estate Advertising Sales Neal Fine (223-6583), Carolyn Oliver (223-6581), Rosemary Lewkowitz (223-6585) Inside Advertising Sales David Cirner (223-6579), Irene Schwartz (223-6580) Real Estate Advertising Assistant Diane Martin (223-6584) Classified Administrative Assistant Alicia Santillan (223-6578) EXPRESS, ONLINE AND VIDEO SERVICES Online Operations Coordinator Rachel Palmer (223-6588) BUSINESS Payroll & Benefits Susie Ochoa (223-6546) Business Associates Elena Dineva (223-6542), Mary McDonald (223-6543), Claire McGibeny (223-6546), Cathy Stringari (223-6544) ADMINISTRATION Receptionist Doris Taylor Courier Ruben Espinoza EMBARCADERO MEDIA President William S. Johnson (223-6505) Vice President & CFO Michael I. Naar (223-6540) Vice President Sales & Advertising Tom Zahiralis (223-6570) Director, Information Technology & Webmaster Frank A. Bravo (223-6551) Major Accounts Sales Manager Connie Jo Cotton (223-6571) Director, Circulation & Mailing Services Bob Lampkin (223-6557) Circulation Assistant Alicia Santillan, Computer System Associates Chris Planessi, Chip Poedjosoedarmo The Palo Alto Weekly (ISSN 0199-1159) is published every Friday by Embarcadero Media, 450 Cambridge Ave., Palo Alto, CA 94306, (650) 326-8210. Periodicals postage paid at Palo Alto, CA and additional mailing offices. Adjudicated a newspaper of general circulation for Santa Clara County. The Palo Alto Weekly is delivered free to homes in Palo Alto, Menlo Park, Atherton, Portola Valley, East Palo Alto, to faculty and staff households on the Stanford campus and to portions of Los Altos Hills. If you are not currently receiving the paper, you may request free delivery by calling 3268210. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Palo Alto Weekly, P.O. Box 1610, Palo Alto, CA 94302. Š2013 by Embarcadero Media. All rights reserved. Reproduction without permission is strictly prohibited. The Palo Alto Weekly is available on the Internet via Palo Alto Online at: www.PaloAltoOnline.com Our email addresses are: editor@paweekly.com, letters@paweekly.com, digitalads@paweekly.com. Missed delivery or start/stop your paper? Call 650 326-8210, or email circulation@paweekly.com. You may also subscribe online at www.PaloAltoOnline.com. Subscriptions are $60/yr.

SUBSCRIBE! Support your local newspaper by becoming a paid subscriber. $60 per year. $100 for two years. Name: _________________________________

Palo Alto UniďŹ ed School District #HURCHILL !VENUE "UILDING h$v 0ALO !LTO #! 0HONE &AX

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Address: ________________________________ City/Zip: ________________________________ Mail to: Palo Alto Weekly, P.O. Box 1610. Palo Alto CA 94302

‘‘

‘‘

PUBLISHER William S. Johnson (223-6505)

Un-friend! — Florence Detlor, a 101-year-old Menlo Park resident and one of the oldest people on Facebook, on what she does when someone posts negative, strange or overtly partisan comments on her news feed (Weekly, Aug. 31, 2012).

Odds and Ends WOMAN HIT WITH MILKSHAKE, LOSES $2,000 ... A woman who was struck with a milkshake and angrily threw her alligator-skin purse at a vehicle full of teenagers lost $2,000 after the handbag flew into the open vehicle window, Palo Alto police said June 25. The incident started Sunday, June 24, just before midnight. The woman was walking east on University Avenue near Rudy’s Pub when a white, recklessly driven Range Rover approached, full of male teenagers. One of the occupants allegedly threw a vanilla milkshake and struck the woman as she approached the corner of University and High Street, Sgt. Brian Philip said. Police believe the woman retaliated by throwing her alligator-skin purse at the SUV. The woman denied throwing her purse at the car, but Philip said there is no indication it was snatched from the victim. Police looked for the teens but had no descriptions. If found, they could face charges including battery for striking the woman with the milkshake, or possession of stolen property or misappropriation of property, Philip said. PALO ALTO EXEC NABBED FOR LEGO SCAM ... The vice president of Palo Alto software firm SAP Labs, LLC was charged with four felony burglary charges for allegedly pasting fraudulent barcodes on LEGO toys at local Target stores. Thomas Langenbach, 47, allegedly purchased the items at greatly lowered prices scanned from the barcodes, according to a criminal complaint by the Santa Clara County District Attorney’s office. Loss-prevention officers initially detained Langenbach at Target, Inc., 555 Showers Drive, Mountain View, after he purchased a LEGO set that he allegedly labeled with a fake barcode. Mountain View police arrested him on May 8 at the store at about 3:45 p.m. Langenbach had been “ticket switching� LEGO boxes since April 20 at the Mountain View and Cupertino Target stores and another Target near his San Carlos home, said Liz Wylie, Mountain View police spokeswoman. Police found hundreds of unopened LEGO sets — many special-edition items — at his gated, multimillion-dollar home, according to court papers. Investigators also found eight Ziploc bags containing labels with fraudulent barcodes in his 2011 Toyota Sienna van and shipping boxes in the home. Police say he had an eBay account, through which

he has sold 2,100 items since April 17, 2011. Wylie said Langenbach has sold about $30,000 in merchandise on the eBay account under the name Tom’s Brickyard. At the time of his arrest, 193 items were for sale. Most were LEGO sets, according to court papers. MYSTERIOUS OBJECT HITS CAR, CONFIRMED AS TRAIN PART ... A mysterious object that slammed into a parked Chevrolet Suburban in Palo Alto in October turned out to be part of a passing locomotive. The object, a 1-foot-long, 20-pound hunk of molded material with two large bolts, ripped into the car sometime between Monday night, Oct. 8, and Tuesday morning, initially confounding Palo Alto police and the vehicle’s owner. Resident Daniel Peters discovered a huge gash in the tailgate of his black SUV when he went to take his children to school Tuesday morning. The heavy object was embedded amid the torn metal and could not be extracted, he said. At first, he thought the car had been vandalized, but he had second thoughts when he saw the object and the trajectory of the large slash. It seemed to come from above. “My sister said, ‘No, a part of a plane fell on it,’� he said. Peters’ bodyshop repairman had another idea. It looked like part of a train fan housing, and it was marked “UP 9999,� Peters said. Union Pacific spokesman Aaron Hunt initially said there were no reports of a Union Pacific incident in Palo Alto, but by Friday confirmed the debris was a cooling fan from a passing freight locomotive. PROWLER ARRESTED AFTER MISTAKING A ROOF FOR A TRAIN ... A man who was arrested for prowling on Sunday, Feb. 19, told Palo Alto police he did not know how he had gotten on a resident’s roof and thought he was taking the train home. A woman on Alexis Drive in the Palo Alto Hills neighborhood called police at 6:14 a.m. to report hearing a prowler on her roof, police Agent Marianna Villaescusa said. Officers arrived to find 23-year-old Wai Wong of Stanford on top of the home. Police described him as extremely intoxicated and said Wong thought he was taking the train to the Stanford University campus. He could not recall how he got on the roof or any of the events leading up to the incident. He was booked into the Main Jail in San Jose on a charge of prowling, Villaescusa said. N


Upfront

Palo Alto’s year, by neighborhood Ravenswood Shopping Center

East Palo Alto

City OKs redesign for San Francisquito Creek, golf course

Menlo Park Breach in floodwall causes mosquito invasion

Brazen burglars strike Palo Alto homes

Redevelopment of Edgewood Plaza begins

Downtown Palo Alto

Parking in downtown becomes hot-button issue Renovated Art Center re-opens

27 University Ave. office plan triggers outcry

Animal Services avoids proposed closure 13th elementary school planned at Garland or Greendell

Palo Alto Stanford University

Bike bridge over 101 gets $4M

State OKs $600M to electrify Caltrain

Council OKs California Avenue redesign, again

Construction begins on city’s first mosque

New police building, offices, housing proposed New Mitchell Park Library nears completion

Stanford perimeter trail gets $4.5M

Closure of Buena Vista Mobile Home Park planned

Alma Plaza finally gets new grocery store Advisory groups plan Cubberley Community Center future

Arastradero Road changes to stay put

Historic Juana Briones property sold

San Antonio Shopping Center

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Upfront

Palo Altans addressed quality of life in 2012 2012: The Year in Numbers &ROM THE -AYOR S #HALLENGE TO CAR CAMPING RESIDENTS ORGANIZED TO CREATE A STRONGER SENSE OF PLACE by Sue Dremann ESIDENTS ORGANIZED AROUND A HOST OF ISSUES AND RAISED QUES TIONS TO CITY LEADERS ABOUT THE KIND OF 0ALO !LTO THEY WANT THIS YEAR -ANY OF THOSE CONCERNS REVOLVED AROUND ISSUES IN THEIR OWN BACK YARDS INCLUDING SUCH EVERGREENS AS SPILLOVER PARKING AND RETAINING NEIGHBORHOOD SHOPPING CENTERS "UT TOPICS ALSO INCLUDED INCLU SIVENESS 2ESIDENTS ARGUED ON BOTH SIDES ABOUT BANNING CAR CAMPING AND WHETHER THE CITY S ONLY MOBILE HOME PARK SHOULD BE CLOSED !ND INITIATIVES SUCH AS THE -AYOR S #HAL LENGE AND A NEIGHBORHOOD GRANTS PROGRAM ALSO SOUGHT TO BRING THE COMMUNITY CLOSER !NSWERS TO THOSE CHALLENGES HAVE NOT COME EASILY 6EHICLE DWELLING BECAME A HOT TOPIC MORE THAN TWO YEARS AGO PAR TICULARLY IN THE #OLLEGE 4ERRACE AND 6ENTURA NEIGHBORHOODS 0ALO !LTO CITY STAFF CRAFTED AN ORDINANCE TO BAN THE PRACTICE BUT VEHICLE DWELL ERS AND SUPPORTERS PLEADED WITH CITY LEADERS TO FIND AN ALTERNATIVE TO A BAN AND THEY FORMED AN ALLIANCE TO STUDY OPTIONS /N .OV THE #ITY #OUNCIL S 0OLICY AND 3ERVICES #OMMITTEE VOTED TO RECOMMEND THE COUNCIL APPROVE A SIX MONTH PILOT PROGRAM TO ENGAGE CHURCHES BUSINESSES NOT FOR PROFIT INSTITUTIONS AND 3TANFORD BASED ORGANIZATIONS IN HOSTING UP TO THREE VEHICLES WITH DWELLERS ON THEIR LOTS 4HE PROGRAM WOULD BE MODELED ON THE (OMELESS #AR #AMPING 0ROGRAM IN %UGENE /RE 2EGISTERED VEHICLE DWELLERS USE PARKING SPOTS AT DESIG NATED CHURCHES AND BUSINESSES 4HE CITY WOULD EXPLORE USING CITY OWNED PARKING LOTS AS POSSIBLE HOSTING SITES FOR VEHICLE DWELLERS AN OPTION COUN CIL MEMBERS PREVIOUSLY REJECTED h) THINK THE CITY NEEDS TO GET SOME SKIN IN THE GAME v SAID FORMER #OUN CILMAN *OHN "ARTON h)F YOU WANT TO ASK THE CHURCHES AND THE NONPROFITS AND THE BUSINESSES TO STEP UP WHY ISN T THE CITY STEPPING UP ) THINK THE CITY NEEDS TO SHOW THE WAY ON HOW TO HELP

R

23 million

50

4HE DOLLARS THAT THE CITY SPENT ON EMPLOYEE PENSIONS IN FISCAL YEAR 4HIS IS MILLION MORE THAN IT HAD SPENT IN AND ABOUT MILLION MORE THAN IN

4HE HEIGHT LIMIT IN FEET FOR NEW DEVELOPMENTS IN 0ALO !LTO )T IS ALSO AT THE CENTER OF THE CITY S TOP LAND USE DISPUTE WITH NUMER OUS DEVELOPERS LOOKING TO REACH OR EXCEED THE HEIGHT LIMIT NEAR THE DOWNTOWN #ALTRAIN STATION AND MANY RESIDENTS ARGUING THAT SUR PASSING THE FOOT BARRIER WOULD RUIN THE CITY S CHARACTER

22.1 million

Veronica Weber

4HE SALES TAX DOLLARS 0ALO !LTO RECEIVED IN FISCAL YEAR A SMALL INCREASE FROM MILLION IN AND A SIGNIFICANT BUMP FROM THE RECESSION LOW OF MILLION IN 7HILE OTHER CIT IES ARE STILL STRUGGLING WITH THEIR BUDGETS THE 'REAT 2ECESSION AP PEARS TO HAVE GREATLY RECEDED IN 0ALO !LTO

260,000 ! POLICY IS UNDER DISCUSSION FOR A PILOT PROGRAM TO ENGAGE CHURCHES BUSINESSES AND NONPROFITS IN HOSTING UP TO THREE VEHICLES WITH DWELLERS ON THEIR LOTS 4HIS COULD IMPACT &RED 3MITH SHOWN HERE IN THE 26 WHERE HE LIVED IN THOSE WHO NEED TEMPORARY HELP v

Buena Vista Mobile Home Park 7HETHER THE CITY CAN RETAIN LOW INCOME RESIDENTS WAS A QUESTION SOME PEOPLE RAISED AFTER LEARNING THAT THE YEAR OLD "UENA 6ISTA -OBILE (OME 0ARK COULD CLOSE NEXT YEAR 0ROPERTY OWNERS THE *ISSER FAMILY DECIDED IT S TIME TO SELL THE ROUGHLY ACRE SITE AND 3AN -ATEO DE VELOPER 0ROMETHEUS WANTS TO GET A ZONING CHANGE TO BUILD HIGH END APARTMENTS FOR TECH WORKERS 4HE CHANGEOVER WOULD ELIMINATE LOW INCOME HOUSING UNITS FROM THE CITY S ROSTER WITH NO REPLACEMENTS -OBILE HOME OWNERS WILL RECEIVE COMPENSATION FOR THEIR DWELLINGS AND RELOCATION EXPENSES IF THEY CAN NOT BE MOVED BUT ADVOCATES SAY "UENA 6ISTA RESIDENTS WOULD BE FORCED OUT OF 0ALO !LTO ALTOGETHER AND THAT ISN T ACCEPTABLE "UT CLOSING THE MOBILE HOME PARK SUITS SOME NEARBY "ARRON 0ARK RESIDENTS JUST FINE 4HEY SAY "UENA 6ISTA IS AN EYESORE AND THEY WANT IT RAZED /THER NEIGHBORHOOD RESIDENTS SAID THAT NOT SAVING THE MOBILE HOME PARK OR FINDING ALTERNATIVE HOUSING

WITHIN THE CITY WOULD RUN COUNTER TO THE CITY S #OMPREHENSIVE 0LAN AND SAY MUCH ABOUT THE COMMITMENT OR LACK THEREOF TOWARD INCLUSIVENESS AND DIVERSITY

Parking .EIGHBORHOODS SURROUNDING DOWN TOWN 0ALO !LTO CONTINUED TO WRESTLE WITH SPILLOVER PARKING FROM BUSINESS ES AND THEIR EMPLOYEES THIS YEAR /N *ULY 0ROFESSORVILLE NEIGH BORHOOD RESIDENTS LOST THEIR BID FOR A PARKING PERMIT PROGRAM AFTER THE #ITY #OUNCIL VOTED TO REJECT A STAFF PROPOSAL #OUNCIL MEMBERS SAID THEY WOULD SEEK MORE PERMANENT SOLUTIONS TO THE DILEMMA 4HE PARKING PERMIT PROGRAM DID NOT INCLUDE THE $OWN TOWN .ORTH NEIGHBORHOOD WHICH IS ALSO CLOGGED WITH PARKED CARS )N .OVEMBER THE COUNCIL AGREED TO INITIATE TWO MAJOR STUDIES /NE WOULD LOOK AT DOWNTOWN S CAPACITY FOR NEW DEVELOPMENT AND ANOTHER FOCUSES ON GARAGES AND POTENTIALLY BUILDING NEW PARKING FACILITIES 4HE COUNCIL ALSO DIRECTED STAFF TO CONSID ER ZONING REVISIONS TO REDUCE PARK ING PROBLEMS RESULTING FROM NEW (continued on page 11)

4HE NUMBER OF SQUARE FEET IN THE FOUR BUILDING OFFICE COMPLEX PRO POSED BY DEVELOPER *OHN !RRILLAGA AS PART OF HIS CONCEPT FOR A NEW hARTS AND INNOVATION DISTRICTv AT 5NIVERSITY !VE IN DOWNTOWN 0ALO !LTO 4HE NUMBER WAS LATER SCALED DOWN TO

400 4HE APPROXIMATE NUMBER OF 0ALO !LTO RESIDENTS WHO WOULD BE DISPLACED IF THE "UENA 6ISTA -OBILE (OME 0ARK SHUTS DOWN AS PROPOSED BY THE PROPERTY OWNER

94 0ERCENT OF RESPONDENTS TO THE .ATIONAL #ITIZEN 3URVEY WHO RATED 0ALO !LTO S hQUALITY OF LIFEv AS hEXCELLENTv OR hGOOD v

62 4HE PERCENTAGE OF 0ALO !LTO VOTERS WHO REJECTED A MEASURE ON THE BALLOT THAT WOULD HAVE AL LOWED MEDICAL MARIJUANA DISPEN SARIES TO OPEN SHOP IN THE CITY

55 4HE RETIREMENT AGE FOR NEWLY HIRED 0ALO !LTO POLICE OFFICERS AND FIREFIGHTERS UNDER THE h AT v PENSION FORMULA THE CITY HAD AGREED TO THIS YEAR WITH ITS PUBLIC SAFETY UNIONS 0REVIOUSLY THE AGE WAS

LOOKING TO BEGIN CONSTRUCTION IN FALL

A new gateway 4HE IDEA OF BUILDING DENSE TALL DEVELOPMENTS NEAR TRANSIT STATIONS HAS LONG BEEN A CENTRAL TENET OF .EW 5RBANISM 4HIS YEAR 0ALO !LTO OF FICIALS DOUBLED DOWN ON THE IDEA OF hTRANSIT ORIENTED DEVELOPMENTSv WHEN THEY APPROVED ,YTTON 'ATE WAY 4HE FOUR STORY PROJECT WILL OC CUPY THE PROMINENT INTERSECTION OF ,YTTON !VENUE AND !LMA 3TREET A STONE S THROW FROM THE DOWNTOWN #ALTRAIN STATION 4HE COUNCIL AP PROVED THE PROPOSED PROJECT AFTER INTENSE NEGOTIATIONS WITH DEVELOPER "OYD 3MITH AND HIS GROUP AND AFTER A WAVE OF CONCERN FROM $OWNTOWN .ORTH RESIDENTS ABOUT THE PROJECT S

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23 4HE PERCENTAGE BY WHICH THE NUMBER OF FULL TIME POSITIONS SUPPORTED BY 0ALO !LTO S 'ENERAL &UND HAS DECREASED SINCE

6 4HE NUMBER OF CANDIDATES WHO RAN FOR #ITY #OUNCIL THIS YEAR THE SMALLEST NUMBER SINCE 4HE PRIOR COUNCIL ELECTION IN SAW PEOPLE VIE FOR FIVE SEATS

1 4HE NUMBER OF TRULY hNEWv MEMBERS WHO WILL SERVE ON THE #ITY #OUNCIL IN 7ITH FOUR SEATS UP FOR ELECTION THIS YEAR VOTERS BROUGHT BACK INCUMBENTS 0AT "URT AND 'REG 3CHMID AND RETURNED PAST -AYOR AND MORE RECENTLY 3ANTA #LARA #OUNTY 3U PERVISOR ,IZ +NISS TO THE DAIS ALONG WITH ATTORNEY -ARC "ER MAN THE ONLY TRUE NEWCOMER 4HE ELECTION BY CONTRAST SAW FOUR NEW FACES JOIN THE NINE MEMBER COUNCIL

Veronica Weber

0ALO !LTO S EFFORT TO REINVIGORATE THE CHARMING BUT NEGLECTED COM MERCIAL STRIP OF #ALIFORNIA !VENUE SPED AHEAD THIS YEAR DESPITE SPEED BUMPS OF OPPOSITION FROM AREA MERCHANTS /PPONENTS TOP CON CERN REMAINS THE CITY S PLAN TO RE DUCE LANES ON #ALIFORNIA !VENUE GIVING IT THE CONFIGURATION AND OFFICIALS HOPE THE CHARACTER OF DOWNTOWN S 5NIVERSITY !VENUE OR -OUNTAIN 6IEW S #ASTRO 3TREET 4HIS YEAR THE CITY MADE THE AL READY DRAMATIC STREETSCAPE PROJECT EVEN MORE SO WHEN IT AGREED TO EXPAND SIDEWALKS AND CREATE FLEX IBLE PLAZAS NEAR THE #ALTRAIN STA TION AND ON THE BLOCK BETWEEN !SH AND "IRCH STREETS 7ITH THE DESIGN WORK LARGELY COMPLETED THE CITY IS

4HE AVERAGE NUMBER OF DAYS IT HAS TAKEN 0ALO !LTO S $EVELOP MENT #ENTER TO ISSUE A BUILDING PERMIT OVER THE PAST YEAR !C CORDING TO #ITY -ANAGER *AMES +EENE THIS IS A FIVE YEAR LOW )N IT TOOK AN AVERAGE OF DAYS TO GET A PERMIT 4HE CITY HAD EMBARKED IN ON A MAJOR EF FORT TO REVAMP AND IMPROVE THE $EVELOPMENT #ENTER IN AN EFFORT TO COUNTER THE NOTORIOUS STIGMA OF THE TERM h0ALO !LTO PROCESS v

#ONSTRUCTION OF THE NEW -ITCHELL 0ARK ,IBRARY AND #OMMUNITY #ENTER IS NEARLY COMPLETE WITH FORMAL OPENING SET FOR SPRING

Top projects of 2012 California dreamin’

38

IMPACT ON PARKING !S PART OF THE COMPROMISE THE #ITY #OUNCIL ASKED THE DEVELOPERS TO REDUCE THE NUMBER OF STORIES FROM FIVE TO FOUR AND TO FUND A STUDY THAT WILL ASSESS DOWN

TOWN S COMPLEX PARKING SITUATION

The new chapter #ONSTRUCTION OF 0ALO !LTO S NEW -ITCHELL 0ARK ,IBRARY AND #OMMU

NITY #ENTER DIDN T EXACTLY PROCEED BY THE BOOK 4HE MOST CONSPICUOUS AND EXPENSIVE PROJECT IN THE (continued on page 12)


Upfront #2)-%

Burglary wave topped Palo Alto crime news by Sue Dremann TER (AYS $RIVE 4HE VIOLENT CRIME UPPED FEAR AMONG RESIDENTS AND BROUGHT CONCERNS THAT THE PRIOR YEAR S TREND MIGHT CONTINUE "UT THE HOLD UPS DID NOT COME CLOSE TO THE WAVE WHEN AT LEAST PEOPLE WERE ARRESTED FOR THE STREET ROBBERIES h4HIS IS A PERSONAL CRIME 4HIS FEELS QUITE A BIT MORE FRIGHTENING v SAID +AREN 7HITE PRESIDENT OF THE $UVENECK 3T &RANCIS .EIGHBORHOOD !SSOCIATION AFTER THE &EB ARMED ROBBERY 3HE SAID IT WAS TIME FOR THE CITY TO INSTALL SURVEILLANCE CAMERAS AT THE NEIGHBORHOOD S ENTRANCES /THER STREET CRIMES INCLUDED A MAN WHO THREATENED A GARDENER WITH A KNIFE IN /CTOBER AND STOLE HER LEAF BLOWER ON THE BLOCK OF #HAN NING !VENUE !ND A HOODED MAN ALLEGEDLY

0OLICE RETRIEVED BAGS AND BACKPACKS LOADED WITH JEWELRY IN CONNECTION WITH A BURGLARY CRIME WAVE IN /CTOBER GROPED WOMEN ON RESIDENTIAL STREETS STARTING IN !UGUST AND IS CONNECTED WITH A SIMILAR ASSAULT AT 3TANFORD 3HOPPING #ENTER (E IS STILL AT LARGE /N $EC THE 3ANTA #LARA #OUN TY $ISTRICT !TTORNEY S /FFICE WITH 0ALO !LTO POLICE RELEASED A VIDEO TO ALERT RESIDENTS TO ANOTHER CRIME

EPIDEMIC THAT HAS RESULTED IN PART FROM THE THEFTS OF SO MANY PERSONAL COMPUTERS LAPTOPS AND PHONES IDENTITY THEFT 4HE CRIME WAVE HAS BEEN DUBBED I#RIME N 3TAFF 7RITER 3UE $REMANN CAN BE EMAILED AT SDREMANN PAWEEK LY COM

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-ARCH 0ALO !LTO POLICE INVESTIGAT ING STOLEN I0ADS HELPED BUST A MILLION METHAMPHETAMINE OPERATION IN 3AN *OSE THE LARGEST SEIZURE OF THE DRUG IN 5 3 HISTORY 3EVEN PEO PLE FACE CHARGES IN THAT CASE 4WO %AST 0ALO !LTO WOMEN !NA ,AUESE AND -ALINDA ,ADSON WERE ARRESTED BY ,OS !LTOS POLICE /CT AND HAVE BEEN CONNECTED TO RESIDENTIAL BURGLARIES ACROSS THREE COUNTIES INCLUDING SEVERAL IN 0ALO !LTO ACCORDING TO POLICE /FFICERS DISCOVERED THOUSANDS OF PIECES OF JEWELRY THAT FILLED DOZENS OF BACK PACKS AT THE WOMEN S HOME "Y COMPARISON RESIDENTIAL ARMED ROBBERIES S TOP CRIME CONCERN WERE DOWN IN BUT NOT OUT )N &EBRUARY A MAN WALKING HIS DOG WAS ROBBED AT GUNPOINT ON 7AL

E

RIME WAS .O ON THE LIST OF 0ALO !LTO NEIGHBORHOOD CON CERNS IN WITH RESIDENTIAL BURGLARIES TAKING CENTER STAGE (OME BURGLARIES JUMPED BY PERCENT IN POLICE SAID IN 3EPTEMBER 4HIEVES FOCUSED ON PERSONAL ELEC TRONICS CASH AND JEWELRY AMOUNTING TO HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS ACCORDING TO POLICE )N ONE HIGH PROFILE CASE +ARIEM -C&ARLIN A BURGLAR WHO ENTERED THE LATE !PPLE CO FOUNDER 3TEVE *OBS HOME MADE OFF WITH 4IFFANY NECKLACES TWO !P PLE COMPUTERS AN I0AD OTHER ELEC TRONIC EQUIPMENT AND *OBS WALLET (E USED A HIDDEN KEY TO GAIN ENTRY 2ESIDENTS AND POLICE MOBILIZED TO CONTAIN THE CRIME WAVE LAUNCHING NEIGHBORHOOD WATCH CAMPAIGNS AND TRADING INFORMATION ON THE LATEST SUR VEILLANCE CAMERAS AND SPOTLIGHTS /N -ARCH THE 0ALO !LTO 0OLICE $EPARTMENT STARTED AN ANTI BURGLARY PROGRAM DUBBED h,OCK )T OR ,OSE )T v 4HE PROGRAM BEEFED UP PATROLS TRAINED CITY UTILITIES WORKERS TO DE TECT SUSPICIOUS BEHAVIOR AND PRO VIDED TIPS TO RESIDENTS ON REPORTING CRIMES AND BOOSTING HOME SECURITY h7E RE NOT GOING TO SOLVE THIS WITHOUT YOUR HELP v POLICE #HIEF $ENNIS "URNS TOLD A PACKED ROOM OF CONCERNED COMMUNITY MEMBERS 4HE BURGLARIES SLOWED IN !PRIL BUT BY *UNE THEY WERE ON THE RISE AGAIN /NE CONTINUING VULNERABIL ITY PEOPLE LEAVING THEIR DOORS AND WINDOWS UNLOCKED OR OPEN 0OLICE PRESSED THE MESSAGE OF PREVENTION THROUGH SOCIAL MEDIA WHICH INCLUD ED STEPPED UP COMMUNICATION VIA &ACEBOOK 4WITTER AND THE )NTERNET ALERT SERVICES .IXLE AND R"LOCK -ANY 0ALO !LTO NEIGHBORHOODS ORGANIZED IN WAYS THEY HAD NOT SINCE THE RISE OF .EIGHBORHOOD 7ATCH PROGRAMS IN THE S 2ESIDENTS JOINED NEIGHBORHOOD NETWORKING SITES INCLUDING R"LOCK AND SENT OUT ALERTS ON RESIDENTIAL EMAIL LISTS WHEN SUSPICIOUS ACTIV ITY OR A BREAK IN OCCURRED #RESCENT 0ARK AND $UVENECK 3T &RANCIS RESIDENTS ORGANIZED MEET INGS WITH POLICE AND INSTALLED CAM ERAS AND MOTION SENSOR LIGHTS AT THEIR HOMES 3OME DISCUSSED WAYS TO MOUNT SURVEILLANCE CAMERAS TO COVER ACTIVITIES ON THE STREET /NE HOME SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM DOCUMENTED THIEVES PILFERING 503 PARCELS FROM A #RESCENT 0ARK FRONT PORCH WITHIN SECONDS OF DELIVERY IN 3EPTEMBER 4HE RESIDENT SHARED THE VIDEO WITH NEIGHBORS AND POLICE h)F THEY KNOW WE HAVE EYES ON THEM THEY WILL MOVE ON v THE RESI DENT SAID .EIGHBORHOOD VIGILANCE AND POLICE WORK HAVE PAID OFF 0OLICE HAD ARREST ED PEOPLE FOR BURGLARY AS OF $EC DEPARTMENT SPOKESMAN ,T :ACH 0ERRON SAID $OZENS OF OTHERS WERE TAKEN INTO CUSTODY FOR POSSESSION OF BURGLARY TOOLS AND PROWLING 3OME OF THE ARRESTS WERE MADE AFTER RESIDENTS CALLED IN SUSPICIOUS ACTIVITY 4WO SEPARATE BURGLARY INVESTIGA TIONS LED TO SPECTACULAR ARRESTS )N

Courtesy of Los Alto Police Department

2ESIDENTS POLICE JOINED FORCES TO STANCH THEFTS IN

BEST OF 2009

2010

BEST EYEWEAR LUX EYEWEAR

BEST EYEWEAR LUX EYEWEAR

2011

2012

BEST EYEWEAR LUX EYEWEAR

BEST EYEWEAR LUX EYEWEAR

1805 El Camino Real #100 Palo Alto

650.324.3937 info@luxpaloalto.com

Architecture, Passion, Innovation

www.luxpaloalto.com

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Upfront

Top five trends of 2012 Goodbye, plastic

)F THERE IS ONE TREND THAT HAS SHAPED 0ALO !LTO S MOST FERVENT DE BATES OF IT S THE CITY S PUSH TO ENCOURAGE DENSE DEVELOPMENT NEAR MAJOR TRANSIT STATIONS NAMELY DOWNTOWN AND NEAR #ALIFORNIA !V ENUE 4HIS YEAR HAS SEEN NO SHORT AGE OF MEGA PROPOSALS NEAR TRANSIT HUBS INCLUDING THE APPROVED ,YTTON 'ATEWAY BUILDING ON !LMA 3TREET AND ,YTTON !VENUE THE PROPOSED MIXED USE BUILDING AT (AMIL TON !VE THE SKY BUSTING 5NI VERSITY !VE OFFICE COMPLEX AND THE NEW THREE STORY BUILDING SLATED TO REPLACE #LUB )LLUSIONS AT #ALI FORNIA !VE )N THE !RCHITECTURAL 2E VIEW "OARD S FINAL MEETING OF THE YEAR BOARD MEMBER ,EE ,IPPERT NOTED THE PROJECT S PROXIMITY TO THE #ALTRAIN STATION AS THE MAJOR REASON FOR WHY THE LATTERMOST BUILDING S SIZE AND HEIGHT AREN T A PROBLEM IN HIS MIND ,IPPERT CITED THE CITY S PUSH FOR TRANSIT ORIENTED DEVELOP MENTS AND PREDICTED THAT 0ALO !LTO WILL LIKELY SEE MANY MORE BUILDINGS IN THE AREA THAT ARE hTALLER BIGGER AND BULKIER THAN THIS v &OR RESIDENTS IN ADJOINING NEIGHBORHOODS WHERE PARKING SPOTS ARE GRADUALLY BECOM ING A DELICACY THIS IS HARDLY REASSUR ING 3TAY TUNED

2012

(continued from page 3)

CONTROVERSIAL PLAN TO BAN VEHICLE HABITATION TO A COMMUNITY UPROAR OVER INSUFFICIENT PARKING AND THE CITY S BACK DOOR NEGOTIATIONS WITH BILLIONAIRE DEVELOPER *OHN !RRIL LAGA OVER THE LATTER S PLAN TO BUILD A GIANT OFFICE AND THEATER COMPLEX NEAR THE DOWNTOWN TRAIN STATION "UT ASIDE FROM THE POCKETS OF ISSUE SPECIFIC DISCONTENTS THE MOOD HAS GENERALLY BEEN BRIGHT IN 0ALO !LTO 7HEN RESPONDENTS TO THE .ATIONAL #ITIZEN 3URVEY WERE ASKED IN 3EPTEMBER TO RATE THE OVERALL hQUALITY OF LIFEv IN THE CITY PERCENT GAVE THE CITY A hGOODv OR hEXCELLENTv GRADE AND PERCENT GAVE THE TWO HIGHEST GRADES TO THE CITY S hQUALITY OF SERVICES v !S +EENE NOTED IN HIS ANNUAL WRAP UP PRESENTATION THE IMPACT HAS BEEN PARTICULARLY SIGNIFICANT WHEN IT COMES TO ECONOMIC DEVEL

Technology and testing can wait. — Ginny Russell, a retiring kindergarten teacher, on the need to let kindergartners play.

June 1

h/NE WORD 0LASTICS v -R -C'UIRE FAMOUSLY ADVISES YOUNG "ENJAMIN IN h4HE 'RADUATE v .OW THE PAST S WORD OF THE FUTURE IS SET TO BECOME THE NEAR FUTURE S WORD OF THE PAST IN 0ALO !LTO &OLLOWING A POPU LAR REGIONAL TREND THE CITY IS PREPAR ING TO CHARGE AHEAD IN ITS CRUSADE AGAINST PLASTIC BAGS IN THE COMING YEAR 0LASTIC BAGS HAVE ALREADY BEEN BANNED FROM LOCAL SUPERMARKETS )N THE CITY WILL LOOK TO EXTEND THE PROHIBITION TO ALL FOOD ESTABLISH MENTS AND TO REQUIRE STORES TO CHARGE -EMBERS OF 3AVE /UR 3HELTER MET AT A 0ALO !LTO CAF£ IN -AY TO DISCUSS FOR PAPER BAGS WAYS TO SAVE THE 0ALO !LTO !NIMAL 3HELTER 4HEY ULTIMATELY MORPHED INTO A h&RIENDSv GROUP THAT VOWED TO RAISE MONEY TO KEEP THE SHELTER RUNNING Veronica Weber

Transit-oriented development

Open data

h(ACKERSv AREN T WHAT THEY USED TO BE 4HE WORD ONCE HAD A SINISTER RING CONNOTING DOWNED WEBSITES AND STOLEN CREDIT CARD NUMBERS )N 0ALO !LTO THEY HAVE BECOME THE CITY S WILLING PARTNER /N -ARCH THE CITY TEAMED UP WITH SEVERAL DOWNTOWN FIRMS TO CO SPONSOR THE 3UPER (APPY "LOCK 0ARTY v A hHACK ATHONv AND DIGITAL STREET PARTY THAT SAW HERDS OF DESIGNERS PROGRAM MERS AND VENTURE CAPITALISTS TAKE OVER A BLOCK OF (IGH 3TREET FOR A DAY OF PROGRAMMING NETWORKING AND BOBBING HEADS TO hSILENT DISCO v 4HE CITY ALSO HELD A SMALLER MORE FORMAL hHACKATHONv EVENT WITH A

OPMENT AND EMERGENCY PREPARED NESS )N THE FORMER CATEGORY PERCENT GAVE THE CITY A hGOODv OR hEXCELLENTv RATING UP FROM PERCENT IN )N THE LATTER CAT EGORY THE NUMBER WENT UP FROM PERCENT TO PERCENT +EENE SAID IT WAS GRATIFYING TO SEE RESIDENTS RECOGNIZE THE CITY S IMPROVEMENT IN AREAS THAT HAVE SEEN A PARTICULAR COUNCIL FOCUS IN RECENT YEARS h7E RE A SMALL CITY AND WE HAVE A MEDIUM SIZE STAFF BUT THE VOL UNTEER EFFORTS OF THE COUNCIL AND COMMUNITY AND THE WORK OF OUR STAFF STACKS UP WITH ANYBODY RE ALLY v +EENE SAID 7HILE SOME FISCAL CHALLENGES REMAIN IT WAS THE TOPIC OF GROWTH THAT DOMINATED #ITY #OUNCIL MEET INGS IN NOT THE WORST SUB JECT TO DEAL WITH AT A TIME WHEN THE REST OF THE NATION IS STILL EXPE RIENCING A SLUGGISH ECONOMIC RE COVERY A FRAGILE REAL ESTATE MARKET AND STUBBORN UNEMPLOYMENT RATE THAT HOVERED AT AROUND PERCENT

0ALO !LTO S FINANCE OFFICIALS HAD A BANNER YEAR WITH THE CITY S MA JOR REVENUE SOURCES ALL EXPERIENCED LARGER THAN EXPECTED BOUNCES END ING ON A FISCAL HIGH NOTE "UT WITH EMPLOYEE EXPENDITURES CON TINUING TO RISE EVEN FASTER THAN REV ENUES REFORMS TO PENSION AND HEALTH CARE PLANS WERE HIGH ON THE #ITY #OUNCIL S AGENDA IN AND WILL REMAIN THERE IN 4HE UNSUSTAIN ABLE COSTS HAVE ALSO PROMPTED THE COUNCIL TO CONSIDER WAYS TO REDUCE COSTS INCLUDING A DEEPLY UNPOPULAR PROPOSAL TO CLOSE THE CITY S ANIMAL SHELTER 4HIS MOVE WAS AVERTED BY THE FORMATION OF THE &RIENDS OF 0ALO !LTO !NIMAL 3HELTER WHICH VOWED TO RAISE MONEY TO KEEP THE OPERATION RUNNING 4HE COUNCIL WAS SWAYED TO KEEP THE SHELTER GOING AND VARIOUS MEMBERS POINTED TO PUBLIC PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS AS EPITOMIZED BY THE CITY S MANY h&RIENDSv GROUPS AS THE CITY S MODEL FOR THE FUTURE N 'ENNADY 3HEYNER

0ALO !LTO S LARGE AND ENTHUSIASTIC BICYCLING COMMUNITY HAS MUCH TO CELEBRATE THESE DAYS &ROM THE RECENT

NEAR THE YEAR S END )N 0ALO !LTO SALES TAX REVENUES HAVE RISEN FOR THE THIRD STRAIGHT YEAR GOING FROM MILLION IN FISCAL YEAR TO A PROJECTED IN WHICH BEGAN ON *ULY HOUSING PRICES ARE NEAR AN ALL TIME HIGH AND THE UNEMPLOYMENT RATE IS PERCENT /THER REVENUE SOURCES ARE ALSO BOOMING (OTEL TAX REVENUES IN 0ALO !LTO HAVE RISEN FROM MILLION IN TO MILLION IN /FFICE VACANCIES DROPPED FROM PERCENT IN FISCAL YEAR TO PERCENT IN 4HE YEAR S MOST PASSIONATE DEBATES STEMMED DIRECTLY FROM THIS SUCCESS 3PRING SAW A SERIES OF TENSE PUBLIC HEARINGS OVER THE FOUR STORY h,YTTON 'ATEWAYv BUILDING THAT WAS PROPOSED FOR THE PROMINENT CORNER OF !LMA 3TREET AND ,YTTON !VENUE A PROJ ECT THE #ITY #OUNCIL APPROVED IN -AY )N THE SUMMER THE COUNCIL DEBATED AN OFFER FROM COMMERCIAL DEVELOPER *AY 0AUL TO BUILD A LARGE

OFFICE COMPLEX AND A NEW POLICE HEADQUARTERS NEAR THE !/, BUILD ING ON 0AGE -ILL 2OAD A PRO POSAL THAT IS SET TO UNDERGO FURTHER TRANSFORMATION IN !ND THE BIGGEST PROPOSAL OF ALL CAME IN THE FALL WHEN THE CITY CONSULTANTS UNVEILED !RRILLAGA S hCONCEPTv FOR TRANSFORMING A CENTRAL BUT LONG NE GLECTED SECTION OF DOWNTOWN INTO WHAT THE CITY DUBBED AN hARTS AND INNOVATION DISTRICT v 4HE TOPIC OF NEW DEVELOPMENTS PARTICULARLY DOWNTOWN HAS LIT ERALLY HIT CLOSE TO HOME FOR THE FRUSTRATED RESIDENTS OF $OWNTOWN .ORTH AND 0ROFESSORVILLE WHERE RESIDENTS OFTEN TALK ABOUT A DIMIN ISHING QUALITY OF LIFE 4HE ISSUE CAME TO A BOIL WITH !RRILLAGA S PRO POSAL WHICH HAS BEEN NEGOTIATED LARGELY OUT OF PUBLIC VIEW MUCH TO THE CONSTERNATION OF LOCAL LAND USE WATCHDOGS AND COUNCIL WATCHERS /N $EC MORE THAN A HUNDRED RESIDENTS ATTENDED A COUNCIL MEET ING AND DOZENS BLASTED THE COUNCIL

FOR TAKING SHORTCUTS 4HE COUNCIL RESPONDED BY NIXING ITS PREVIOUS PLAN TO BRING THE !RRILLAGA PROJECT TO THE VOTERS AND DIRECTED STAFF AND CONSULTANTS TO EVALUATE TWO OTHER ALTERNATIVES IN ADDITION TO !RRIL LAGA S AS PART OF A hMASTER PLANv FOR THE SITE AT 5NIVERSITY !VE "Y A VOTE WITH ,ARRY +LEIN AND 9IAWAY 9EH NOT PARTICIPATING THE COUNCIL AGREED THAT THE PLAN IS A BIT TOO AMBITIOUS FOR THE COM MUNITY AND THAT IT S TIME TO TAKE A STEP BACK h4HE BEST WAY FOR US TO MOVE TOWARD SOMETHING THAT BOTH HAS A GOOD CHANCE FOR COMMUNITY SUP PORT AND GOOD DESIGN OUTCOMES IS TO GO AHEAD AND INVEST IN THIS OPEN 0ALO !LTO PROCESS v "URT SAID AT THE HEARING 4HE DEBATE OVER 5NIVERSITY !VE CARRIES SOME SHADES OF THE AGE OLD FEUD BETWEEN THE CITY S PRO GROWTH hESTABLISHMENTv FORCES AND ITS SLOW GROWTH hRESIDENTIAL ISTSv A CONFLICT THAT REACHED ITS

If nobody uses them because there is nowhere to go, your project is going to tank.

Surrounding cities don’t allow them, so we’d be the magnet.

— Judith Wasserman, chair of the Palo Alto Architectural Review Board, on the proposed bikeshare pilot program focused on downtown Palo Alto and Stanford University.

— Greg Scharff, Palo Alto vice mayor, on why Palo Altans should vote no on Measure C, which would allow medical pot dispensaries in town.

Pedaling along

This is a ridiculous, undemocratic process.

—Barbara Klausner, Palo Alto school board member, regarding Superintendent Kevin Skelly’s failure to communicate the board’s direction on counseling to Gunn High School staff.

— Larry Klein, Palo Alto City Councilman, regarding the state high-speed rail funding bill that was released Tuesday night, with a potential vote on Friday.

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Friends with benefits

LANE CONFIGURATIONS ON !RASTRADERO 2OAD TO THE UPCOMING STREETSCAPE PROJECT ON THE COMMERCIAL STRIP OF #ALIFORNIA !VENUE THE CITY IS UN DERGOING A 2ENAISSANCE OF BIKING IMPROVEMENTS 4HE #ITY #OUNCIL APPROVED IN *ULY A NEW MASTER PLAN FOR BIKING IMPROVEMENTS AND HAS WASTED NO TIME IN PURSUING MANY OF THE BIG TICKET ITEMS ON THE LIST INCLUDING A NEW BIKE BRIDGE OVER 5 3 (IGHWAY AT !DOBE #REEK 4HE PROJECT RECEIVED A MAJOR BOOST IN .OVEMBER WHEN THE 3ANTA #LARA #OUNTY "OARD OF 3UPERVISORS AP PROVED A MULTIMILLION DOLLAR GRANT THAT WOULD FUND MOST OF THE DESIGN

GROUP OF 3TANFORD 5NIVERSITY STU DENTS WHO OVER A NIGHT OF PROGRAM MING PIZZA AND 2ED "ULL CAME UP WITH AN INDEX OF CITY STREETS AND THEIR CONDITIONS 4HE INFORMATION IS AVAILABLE ON THE CITY S NEW h/PEN $ATAv WEBSITE WHICH OFFICIALS HOPE WILL CONTINUE TO ENTICE LOCAL PRO GRAMMERS THE BRAINY AND BENIGN NEW AGE HACKERS TO MAKE DATA PUBLICLY AVAILABLE AND EASILY ACCES SIBLE TO LOCAL RESIDENTS

At this point the governance process has broken down.

June 15

WORK FOR THE NEW BRIDGE AS WELL AS PAY FOR IMPROVEMENTS TO -ATADERO #REEK AND TO PERIMETER TRAILS AROUND 3TANFORD 5NIVERSITY PROJECTS INTENDED TO CREATE ONE GIANT BIK ING NETWORK SPANNING MUCH OF THE CITY !S 6ICE -AYOR 'REG 3CHARFF PHRASED IT IN THE FINAL COUNCIL MEET ING OF THE YEAR h) THINK 0ORTLAND NEEDS TO WATCH OUT 7E RE GOING TO BE THE .O BIKE CITY v

July 6

August 3

September 7


Upfront

People of the year

PREPAREDNESS COORDINATOR EARNED KUDOS THIS YEAR FOR HER CONTINUED EFFORTS TO GALVANIZE THE CITY S RESI DENTS TO PREPARE FOR DISASTER 3HE LAUNCHED 1UAKEVILLE FOR THE THIRD YEAR BUT THIS TIME IT WAS ON A CITY WIDE SCALE 4HE DRILL TOOK PLACE AT #UBBERLEY #OMMUNITY #ENTER WITH A SCENARIO THAT FOCUSED ON AN OVERNIGHT IN AN EMERGENCY SHEL TER

0ALO !LTO CITIZENS WHO MADE A DIFFERENCE IN Ken Alsman

SIGHTS ON A DEVELOPMENT CLOSER TO HOME A PROPOSAL BY OWNERS OF THE "UENA 6ISTA -OBILE (OME 0ARK TO REDEVELOP THE SITE 4HE MOVE BY THE *ISSER FAMILY WOULD DISPLACE THE MOBILE HOME PARK S ROUGHLY RESIDENTS AND MAKE WAY FOR APARTMENTS )N RESPONSE $EL LENBACH HAS LAUNCHED THE GROUP h&RIENDS OF THE "UENA 6ISTA -OBILE (OME 0ARK v WHICH HAS ALREADY AT TRACTED DOZENS OF MEMBERS )T STILL PROMISES TO BE A TOUGH BATTLE FOR THE MOBILE HOME RESIDENTS BUT AT LEAST THEY WON T BE ALONE

Penny Ellson

Winter Dellenbach 7INTER $ELLENBACH HAS LONG BEEN A SKEPTIC WHEN IT COMES TO MAJOR DEVELOPMENTS THAT EXCEED ZON ING REGULATIONS IN EXCHANGE FOR hPUBLIC BENEFITS v 4HIS YEAR THE "ARRON 0ARK RESIDENT AND FORMER FAIR HOUSING ATTORNEY TURNED HER

ZENITH DURING THE S AND S "UT WHILE THE #ITY #OUNCIL IN THOSE DAYS WAS DEEPLY POLARIZED TODAY S GROUP SPEAKS LARGELY IN UNISON AS IT TRIES TO FIND A SWEET SPOT FOR DOWN TOWN GROWTH AND STRIKE A PERFECT BALANCE BETWEEN PROTECTING THE QUALITY OF LIFE AND ENCOURAGING ECO NOMIC GROWTH )N 3EPTEMBER "URT WAS ONE OF SEVERAL COUNCIL MEM BERS TO VOICE ENTHUSIASM FOR !R RILLAGA S PROPOSAL WHICH INCLUDES A NEW THEATER FOR THE AWARD WIN NING COMPANY 4HEATRE7ORKS AND A HOST OF CIRCULATION IMPROVEMENTS AROUND THE DOWNTOWN TRANSIT HUB "UT EVEN AS HE SUPPORTED BREAKING THE FOOT HEIGHT BARRIER FOR THIS PROJECT HE CALLED ON HIS COLLEAGUES TO REAFFIRM THE CITY S GENERAL COM MITMENT TO THE HEIGHT RESTRICTION A BEDROCK PROVISION FOR THOSE WHO THINK THE CITY IS GROWING TOO FAST 4HE DEBATE OVER GROWTH IS SURE TO PROVOKE FURTHER DEBATES AND DIS AGREEMENTS IN THE YEARS AHEAD "UT EVEN WITH THE ISSUES OF PARKING

That just defies common sense. — Claude Ezran, chair of the Palo Alto Human Relations Commission, on the idea that corporations have the same rights as people.

October 19

Scottie Zimmerman

Veronica Weber

/VER THE PAST FEW YEARS 0ROFES SORVILLE RESIDENT +EN !LSMAN HAS BEEN HIS NEIGHBORHOOD S MOST PAS SIONATE AND PERSISTENT VOICE IN DE CRYING DOWNTOWN S PARKING WOES 4HIS YEAR THE PROBLEM OF INSUF FICIENT DOWNTOWN PARKING REACHED A TIPPING POINT AS MAJOR COMMER CIAL DEVELOPMENTS BEGAN MAKING THEIR WAY THROUGH THE CITY S PLAN NING PROCESS THREATENING TO MAKE THINGS EVEN WORSE AND GALVANIZING MAJOR OPPOSITION FROM DOWNTOWN NEIGHBORHOODS 4HOUGH A REAL SOLUTION REMAINS FAR AWAY 0ALO !LTO OFFICIALS HAVE DEVOTED CON SIDERABLE TIME THIS YEAR ON TRYING TO SOLVE THIS PROBLEM AND HAVE LAUNCHED A NEW PARKING STUDY A BROADER ANALYSIS OF DOWNTOWN DE VELOPMENT AND A MORATORIUM ON AN OLD LAW THAT REDUCES PARKING REQUIREMENTS FOR DOWNTOWN DE VELOPMENTS

,YDIA +OU LEFT IS HEAD PLANNER FOR h1UAKEVILLE v A CITYWIDE EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS SIMULATION THAT TOOK PLACE AT #UBBERLEY #OMMUNITY #ENTER THIS YEAR

0ALO !LTO HAS SKY HIGH AMBITIONS WHEN IT COMES TO BIKING WITH OF FICIALS OFTEN TALKING ABOUT OVERTAK ING 0ORTLAND /RE AS THE NATION S PREMIER BICYCLING CITY 4HIS YEAR HAS SEEN ITS SHARE OF BIKE PROJECTS FROM THE CITY S DECISION TO MAKE RE CENT LANE REDUCTIONS ON !RASTRADERO 2OAD PERMANENT AND ITS COMPLETION OF LANE REDUCTION PLANS ON #ALIFOR NIA !VENUE TO ITS SUCCESSFUL GRANT APPLICATION IN CONJUNCTION WITH 3TANFORD 5NIVERSITY 4HE APPLICA TION GIVES THE CITY MILLION FOR A NEW BIKE BRIDGE OVER (IGHWAY AND FUNDING FOR NEW TRAILS AT -ATA DERO #REEK AND AROUND 3TANFORD

5NIVERSITY 4HESE IMPROVEMENTS ARE COMING AT A TIME WHEN THE NUMBER OF STUDENTS BIKING OR WALKING TO SCHOOL CONTINUES TO CLIMB STEADILY AND WHEN COUNCIL MEMBERS WAX EN THUSIASTICALLY ABOUT THE CITY S NEW "IKE AND 0EDESTRIAN 4RANSPORTATION 0LAN THE CITY S VISION DOCUMENT FOR BIKING SUPREMACY 0ENNY %LLSON HAS AS MUCH TO DO WITH THE CITY S THRIVING BIKING CULTURE AS ANYONE !S THE CO CHAIR OF THE 0ALO !LTO #OUNCIL OF 04!S 4RAFFIC 3AFETY #OMMITTEE SHE HAS HELPED TO LEAD

TRAFFIC AND INFRASTRUCTURE HIGH ON THE AGENDA COUNCIL MEMBERS WERE GENERALLY SANGUINE ABOUT THE PAST YEAR WITH MANY ECHOING !LCHECK S VIEW THAT IN THE GRAND SCHEME OF THINGS THIS IS A GOOD TIME TO BE 0ALO !LTO 7HEN THE #ITY #OUNCIL CONVENED ON $EC FOR ITS FINAL MEETING OF AND HEARD #ITY -ANAGER *AMES +EENE S hYEAR IN REVIEWv PRESENTATION THE DISCUS SION FELT LIKE A VICTORY LAP h) THINK WE DID A LOT OF IMPACT FUL THINGS THIS YEAR THAT ARE GOING TO MAKE 0ALO !LTO A MUCH BETTER PLACE v 6ICE -AYOR 'REG 3CHARFF SAID AFTER THE PRESENTATION (IS COLLEAGUES AGREED WITH 'REG 3CHMID WHO WAS RE ELECTED THIS YEAR CALLING +EENE S PRESENTATION A hGREAT WAY TO END THE YEARv AND 0AT "URT WHO WAS ALSO RE ELECTED PRAISING CITY STAFF FOR ACCOMPLISH ING hA GREAT DEAL IN A YEAR v #OUN CILMAN 3ID %SPINOSA AND -AYOR 9IAWAY 9EH EACH OF WHOM CON CLUDED HIS FIFTH AND FINAL YEAR ON

THE COUNCIL ALSO VOICED ENTHUSIASM ABOUT THE CITY S RECENT PROGRESS h)T S EXCITING TO KNOW THAT AS A CITY THERE S IMMENSE STRENGTH THAT EXISTS AT ALL LEVELS v 9EH SAID 3CHARFF WHO IN ACCORDANCE WITH LOCAL TRADITION IS SET TO BECOME MAYOR IN *ANUARY POINTED TO SEV ERAL PROJECTS THAT ADVANCED IN AND THAT WILL IMPACT THE CITY FOR DE CADES TO COME 4HESE INCLUDE THE STREETSCAPE PROJECT ON #ALIFORNIA !VENUE WHICH WILL REDUCE LANES AND ADD NEW PLAZAS STREET FURNITURE AND OUTDOOR SEATING TO THE COMMER CIAL THOROUGHFARE ALL PART OF THE CITY S EFFORT TO MAKE THE STREET MORE LIKE 5NIVERSITY !VENUE OR #ASTRO 3TREET IN -OUNTAIN 6IEW (E ALSO CITED THE DRAMATIC RENOVATION OF THE 0ALO !LTO -UNICIPAL 'OLF #OURSE WHICH THE COUNCIL APPROVED IN .O VEMBER AS PART OF A REGIONAL PLAN TO IMPROVE FLOOD PROTECTION AROUND 3AN &RANCISQUITO #REEK !S PART OF THE PROJECT WHICH INCLUDES REBUILT LEVEES A WIDENED CHANNEL AND AN

Palo Alto is not New York.

He loved the town, and the town loved him.

— Arthur Keller, Palo Alto planning commissioner, on why he opposes a proposed 161-foot-tall office tower at 27 University Ave.

— Joe Simitian, a close friend, former Palo Alto mayor and outgoing state senator, on the passing of Gary Fazzino, who served 18 years on the Palo Alto City Council, including two stints as mayor.

October 26

November 2

0ALO !LTO S WILDLY SUCCESSFUL h3AFE 2OUTES TO 3CHOOLv PROGRAM AND HAS BEEN A PERSISTENT ADVOCATE FOR IM PROVING DANGEROUS CORRIDORS AND INTERSECTIONS .OW IT FEELS LIKE EVERYONE IN #ITY (ALL IS PEDALING ALONG WITH HER

Lydia Kou 7HEN THE NEXT MAJOR EARTH QUAKE FLOOD OR FIRE ARRIVES WILL 0ALO !LTO RESIDENTS BE READY ,YD IA +OU WANTS TO MAKE SURE THEY ARE 4HE "ARRON 0ARK EMERGENCY

EXPANDED BRIDGE BETWEEN 0ALO !LTO AND %AST 0ALO !LTO THE GOLF COURSE WILL BE ENTIRELY RECONFIG URED AND ACRES OF SPACE WILL BE MADE AVAILABLE FOR THREE ATH LETIC FIELDS -ORE IMPORTANTLY THE PROJECT WILL PROTECT RESIDENTS IN THE MOST VULNERABLE AREA DOWNSTREAM OF THE CREEK FROM THE TYPE OF DAM AGE THEY EXPERIENCED IN &EBRUARY WHEN FLOOD WATER DRENCHED NEIGHBORHOODS IN 0ALO !LTO %AST 0ALO !LTO AND -ENLO 0ARK ! LESS VISIBLE BUT NO LESS IM PORTANT ACCOMPLISHMENT TOUTED BY 3CHARFF IN THE FINAL MEETING OF THE YEAR WAS THE COUNCIL S ABILITY TO RESPOND TO THE ECONOMIC RECESSION BY CUTTING ABOUT MILLION IN AN NUAL COSTS BETWEEN AND WITHOUT REALLY IMPACTING THE LEVEL OF SERVICES h4HAT S REALLY THE BIG WIN HERE v 3CHARFF SAID h7E HAVEN T DEGRADED WHAT WE OFFERED TO THE COMMUNITY IN TERMS OF SERVICES v 7ITH THE CITY S PENSION AND

7HEN 0ALO !LTO OFFICIALS PRE SENTED IN -ARCH THEIR PROPOSAL TO SHUTTER THE CITY S ANIMAL SHELTER AND OUTSOURCE ITS OPERATIONS LOCAL ANIMAL LOVERS RALLIED IN DEFENSE OF THEIR BEST FRIENDS $OZENS OF ANI MAL ADVOCATES INCLUDING 3COTTIE :IMMERMAN ,UKE 3TANGEL AND 0ALO !LTO (UMANE 3OCIETY S %XEC UTIVE $IRECTOR #AROLE (YDE RALLIED TO SAVE ANIMAL SERVICES BY FORM ING THE GROUP h3AVE /UR 3HELTER v WHICH LOBBIED THE #ITY #OUNCIL NOT TO MAKE THE RECOMMENDED CUTS !S THE EFFORT EVOLVED :IMMERMAN AND OTHER VOLUNTEERS FOUNDED THE NONPROFIT GROUP h&RIENDS OF THE 0ALO !LTO !NIMAL 3HELTER v WHICH PLEDGED TO HELP RAISE MONEY FOR THE SERVICES 4HE GROUP STILL HAS PLENTY OF WORK TO DO BUT IT SCORED A MA JOR VICTORY IN -AY WHEN IT HELPED PERSUADE THE COUNCIL TO KEEP THE SHELTER RUNNING N 'ENNADY 3HEYNER AND 3UE $REMANN

HEALTH CARE OBLIGATIONS STILL ON THE RISE THE PROBLEM OF CUTTING COSTS HASN T COMPLETELY FADED AWAY 4HE COUNCIL S DECISION TO KEEP THE LO CAL ANIMAL SHELTER RUNNING PLACES MUCH OF THE ONUS FOR RAISING FUNDS FOR THE ANIMAL OPERATION ON A NEW ADVOCATES GROUP &RIENDS OF 0ALO !LTO !NIMAL 3HELTER 4HE NUMBER OF FULL TIME POSITIONS IN THE CITY S 'ENERAL &UND HAS DROPPED BY PERCENT OVER THE PAST DECADE AND THE COUNCIL PLANS TO CONTINUE IN ITS LONG AND PAINFUL EFFORT TO EXTRACT BENEFIT CONCESSIONS FROM THE CITY S LABOR UNIONS %VEN WITH THESE CHALLENGES ON THE HORIZON MARKED A TURNING POINT FOR 0ALO !LTO AS THE CITY PIVOTED FROM PROBLEMS OF AUSTERITY TO PROB LEMS OF GROWTH 4HE LATTER LOOMED LARGE AS THE YEAR CAME TO AN END AND ARE LIKELY TO TOWER OVER OTHER ISSUES AS THE NEW YEAR BEGINS N 3TAFF 7RITER 'ENNADY 3HEYNER CAN BE EMAILED AT GSHEYNER PAWEEKLY COM

I think the city needs to get some skin in the game.

We need more ethics, spine and responsibility to residents.

— John Barton, an advocate for the homeless, on the need for the City of Palo Alto to host car campers on city property.

— Fred Balin, a College Terrace resident, on the process of planning for 27 University Ave. that took place outside of public view.

November 23

December 7

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Upfront

News Digest Palo Alto prepares for solar-energy shopping spree 0ALO !LTO S GOAL OF GREATLY EXPANDING ITS LOAD OF hGREENv ELECTRICITY SURGED FORWARD THIS MONTH WHEN THE CITY RECEIVED A RECORD NUMBER OF BIDS FROM COMPANIES LOOKING TO SELL RENEWABLE ENERGY TO THE CITY 4HE HUGE DEMAND BY PROVIDERS OF RENEWABLE ENERGY SPELLS GOOD NEWS FOR THE FAMOUSLY GREEN CITY WHICH PLANS TO GET AT LEAST PERCENT OF ITS ELECTRICITY SALES FROM RENEWABLE SOURCES BY 4HE AMBITIOUS OBJEC TIVE TOOK A BIG LEAP FORWARD LAST MONTH WHEN THE #ITY #OUNCIL APPROVED A YEAR CONTRACT WITH THE COMPANY "RANNON 3OLAR TO PROVIDE ENERGY AT A COST NOT EXCEEDING MILLION 4HE PROJECT WOULD PROVIDE ABOUT PERCENT OF THE CITY S ANNUAL ENERGY NEEDS 4HE CONTRACT CAN BE A SIGN OF THINGS TO COME FOR #ITY OF 0ALO !LTO 5TILITIES WHICH ALREADY HAS ONE OF THE NATION S PREMIER GREEN ENERGY PROGRAMS 0ALO!LTO'REEN UNDER WHICH RESIDENTS VOLUNTARILY PAY A FEE TO SUPPORT RENEWABLE ENERGY ,AST MONTH THE CITY RECEIVED PRO POSALS FOR RENEWABLE ENERGY PROJECTS FROM COMPANIES OFFERING PROJECTS /F THESE ARE SOLAR PROJECTS SAID *AMES 3TACK A 5TILITIES $EPARTMENT RESOURCE PLANNER WHO GAVE A BRIEF PRESENTATION ON THE RESPONSES TO THE 5TILITIES !DVISORY #OMMISSION EARLIER THIS MONTH 3TACK SAID THE CITY CURRENTLY HAS FIVE RENEWABLE ENERGY PROJECTS UNDER DEVELOPMENT INCLUDING THE "RANNON ONE 3OLAR ENERGY PRICES HAVE BEEN DROPPING OVER THE PAST YEAR MAKING THIS A GOOD TIME FOR THE CITY TO BUY HE SAID )F EVERYTHING GOES AS PLANNED THE CITY S RENEWABLE ENERGY PORTFOLIO WILL SLIGHTLY EXCEED THE PERCENT GOAL BY "UT JUST TO MAKE SURE THE GOALS ARE MET THE CITY ISSUED A FRESH REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS WHICH RESULTED IN A FLOOD OF RESPONSES THAT EXCEEDED LAST YEAR S RECORD NUMBER 3TACK SAID STAFF HAS NARROWED DOWN THE RECEIVED PROPOSALS TO THREE AND EXPECTS TO SEND THEM TO THE COUNCIL FOR APPROVAL NEXT SPRING N 'ENNADY 3HEYNER

Floor heater may have sparked house fire

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! TWO ALARM FIRE THAT DAMAGED A HOME IN THE #OLLEGE 4ERRACE NEIGH BORHOOD OF 0ALO !LTO NEAR 3TANFORD 5NIVERSITY ON 3UNDAY $EC MAY HAVE BEEN CAUSED BY A FLOOR HEATER MALFUNCTION ACCORDING TO THE 0ALO !LTO &IRE $EPARTMENT &IREFIGHTERS RESPONDED TO A P M REPORT OF A HOUSE FIRE IN THE BLOCK OF 9ALE !VENUE A BLOCK WEST OF %L #AMINO 2EAL 4HE BLAZE WAS REPORTED BY A NEIGHBOR WHO HAD SEEN SMOKE SPEWING FROM A VENT FIRE OFFICIALS SAID 7HEN CREWS ENTERED THE SQUARE FOOT HOME THEY SAW FLAMES IN THE LIVING ROOM AND UPGRADED THE RESPONSE TO TWO ALARMS CALLING IN CREWS FROM -OUNTAIN 6IEW ACCORDING TO THE FIRE DEPARTMENT 4HE FLAMES WERE EXTINGUISHED AND THE HOME WHICH WAS UNOCCUPIED AT THE TIME OF THE FIRE SUSTAINED EXTENSIVE SMOKE DAMAGE WITH FIRE DAMAGE CONFINED TO THE LIVING ROOM OFFICIALS SAID .O ONE WAS INJURED AND THE 3ANTA #LARA 6ALLEY CHAPTER OF THE !MERICAN 2ED #ROSS PROVIDED ASSISTANCE TO THE LONE RESIDENT OF THE HOME OFFICIALS SAID 4HE CAUSE OF THE BLAZE REMAINS UNDER INVESTIGATION BUT IT MAY HAVE BEEN SPARKED BY A FLOOR HEATER ACCORDING TO THE FIRE DEPARTMENT &IRE OFFICIALS SAID THE INCIDENT SHOULD SERVE AS A REMINDER TO RESIDENTS TO HAVE THEIR FLOOR HEATERS SERVICED AND TO KEEP THEM AWAY FROM ANY COMBUSTIBLE DEBRIS N "AY #ITY .EWS 3ERVICE

Accused killer to be tried on weapons charges

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'REGORY %LARMS 3R THE MAN WHO WAS ACCUSED OF GUNNING DOWN %AST 0ALO !LTO COMMUNITY ACTIVIST $AVID ,EWIS AT THE (ILLSDALE 3HOPPING #ENTER IN WILL BE TRIED ON WEAPONS CHARGES 3AN -ATEO #OUNTY 3UPERIOR #OURT *UDGE *OHN 'RANDSAERT RULED 4HURSDAY $EC %LARMS IS CHARGED WITH POSSESSION OF SHANKS IN COUNTY JAIL INCLUDING A SHARPENED TOOTHBRUSH A SHARPENED SPORK AND TWO SHARPENED PENCILS TIED TOGETHER TO WORK AS A STABBING INSTRUMENT (E WAS IN CUSTODY FACING SPECIAL CIRCUMSTANCES MURDER CHARGES FOR ALLEGEDLY GUNNING DOWN ,EWIS IN THE SHOPPING MALL PARKING GARAGE ON *UNE "UT THE COURT THREW OUT THE MURDER CHARGES IN .OVEMBER AFTER A DEFENSE MOTION THAT %LARMS WAS DENIED HIS -IRANDA RIGHTS (IS DEFENSE ATTORNEY *ONATHAN -C$OUGALL HAD ARGUED THAT 3AN -ATEO POLICE VIOLATED %LARMS RIGHTS WHEN THEY CONTINUED TO QUESTION HIM ALTHOUGH HE HAD ASKED FOR AN ATTORNEY 0OLICE SAID %LARMS LAY IN WAIT FOR ,EWIS AT 3AN -ATEO -EDICAL #ENTER WHERE ,EWIS WORKED AND FOLLOWED HIM TO THE SHOPPING CENTER WHERE HE CONFRONTED HIM AND SHOT HIM ONCE ,EWIS WAS A WELL KNOWN COMMUNITY ACTIVIST WHO HELPED FOUND THE &REE !T ,AST DRUG REHABILITATION PROGRAM IN %AST 0ALO !LTO AND WAS INSTRUMENTAL IN STARTING THE SUCCESSFUL PAROLEE REENTRY PROGRAM 4HE TWO KNEW EACH OTHER AS YOUTHS IN %AST 0ALO !LTO %LARMS REMAINS IN CUSTODY ON BAIL (E WILL APPEAR IN COURT *AN FOR A PRELIMINARY HEARING AND A HEARING TO REDUCE HIS BAIL N 3UE $REMANN LET’S DISCUSS: Read the latest local news headlines and talk about the issues at Town Square at PaloAltoOnline.com

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Upfront

School

(continued from page 3)

Life

(continued from page 6)

DEVELOPMENT ADDING BIKE PARKING STATIONS AND SHORTER TERM SOLUTIONS SUCH AS LOADING ZONES AROUND RESI DENTIAL AREAS )N $ECEMBER THE COUNCIL PUT A ONE YEAR MORATORIUM ON A ZONING EXEMPTION THAT LOWERED THE PARKING REQUIREMENTS FOR NEW DOWNTOWN DEVELOPMENTS "UT THEY WERE SPLIT ON WHETHER THE MORATORIUM SHOULD APPLY TO TWO PROJECTS CURRENTLY GO ING THROUGH THE PLANNING PROCESS WHICH ARE LOCATED AT (AMILTON !VE AND 7AVERLEY 3T #OUNCIL MEMBERS WILL REVISIT THAT DISCUSSION IN THE COMING YEAR "UT RESIDENTS LIVING IN 0ROFESSORVILLE 5NIVERSITY 3OUTH AND $OWNTOWN .ORTH SAID THEIR NEIGHBORHOODS ARE ALREADY AT OR NEAR SATURATION h$OWNTOWN IS GOING TO FILL UP LIKE A BATHTUB FULL OF WATER AND THERE WON T BE ANYWHERE TO PUT THE NEW CARS v SAID $OWNTOWN .ORTH RESI DENT 3ALLY !NN 2UDD

Retail development 'OOD NEWS ARRIVED THIS YEAR FOR TWO NEIGHBORHOOD RETAIL DEVELOP MENT PROJECTS WHICH HAVE BEEN HANGING FIRE FOR YEARS !FTER SEVEN YEARS !LMA 0LAZA HAS BEEN REBUILT -IKI S &ARM &RESH -ARKET OPENED IN /CTOBER OFFERING ORGANIC AND SPECIALTY FOODS AT LOW

Veronica Weber

'REENDELL AT -IDDLEFIELD 2OAD BASED ON SELECTION CRITERIA SPECI FIED BY THE "OARD OF %DUCATION 4HE COMMITTEE IS EXPECTED TO MAKE REC OMMENDATIONS BY LATE -ARCH 3UPERINTENDENT +EVIN 3KELLY SAID HE WOULD PRESENT OPTIONS EARLY NEXT YEAR ON EITHER OPENING A FOURTH MIDDLE SCHOOL OR EXPANDING CAPACITY AT THE EXISTING MIDDLE SCHOOL CAMPUSES 4HE OLD #UBBERLEY (IGH 3CHOOL CAMPUS ON -IDDLEFIELD 2OAD MAY PLAY A PART IN THOSE SOLUTIONS THOUGH THAT IS FAR FROM CERTAIN 4HE SCHOOL DISTRICT HAS INDICATED ITS PREFERENCE FOR RENEWING THE #ITY OF 0ALO !LTO S MILLION A YEAR LEASE OF #UBBERLEY FOR USE AS A COMMUNITY CENTER AND PLACING THE TH ELEMENTARY SCHOOL AND FOURTH MIDDLE SCHOOL ELSEWHERE 4HE DISTRICT AND CITY ARE WORKING TOGETHER ON A PLAN FOR #UBBERLEY S FUTURE WITH A #OMMUNITY !DVISORY #OMMITTEE ON #UBBERLEY DUE TO RE PORT ITS RECOMMENDATIONS EARLY IN THE NEW YEAR 4HE CURRENT #UBBERLEY LEASE AGREEMENT BETWEEN THE DISTRICT AND THE CITY EXPIRES IN )N 3EPTEMBER 0ALO !LTO REPORTED SOME PROGRESS IN ITS LONG STRUGGLE TO NARROW THE ACHIEVEMENT GAP WHILE ADMITTING THERE S STILL A LONG WAY TO GO !N ANALYSIS OF #ALIFORNIA 3TAN DARDS 34!2 4EST SCORES BETWEEN AND SHOWED !FRICAN !MERICAN AND (ISPANIC STUDENTS MADE SIGNIFICANT GAINS h7HEN WE LOOK AT CLOSING THE ACHIEVEMENT GAP BETWEEN THE HIGH EST PERFORMING AND THE LOWEST PER FORMING ELEMENTARY AND MIDDLE SCHOOL STUDENTS IN %NGLISH LANGUAGE

0ALO !LTO (IGH 3CHOOL STUDENT -ARK .ISHIMURA SETS THE ACHIEVEMENT BAR EVEN HIGHER AS HE PRESENTS HIS RESEARCH DONE IN COLLABORATION WITH 3ILICON 6ALLEY MENTORS ARTS THE PERCENTAGE DIFFERENCE BE TWEEN !SIAN AND !FRICAN !MERICAN STUDENTS IN WAS PERCENT AND LAST YEAR IT WAS PERCENT BE TWEEN THE SAME GROUPS v SAID $IANA 7ILMOT STATISTICIAN FOR THE 0ALO !LTO SCHOOL DISTRICT 3HE REPORTED SIGNIFICANT GAINS IN BOTH MATH AND %NGLISH FOR BLACK AND (ISPANIC STUDENTS 3UPERINTENDENT 3KELLY SAID AT THE TIME h7E VE MADE PROGRESS BUT THE GAPS ARE STILL WAY TOO BIG v )N FACT AN OUTSIDE GROUP GRADED 0ALO !LTO AS A h$v IN ITS SERVICE TO LOW INCOME AND MINORITY STUDENTS IN A REPORT ISSUED IN -ARCH 4HE /AKLAND BASED %DUCATION 4RUST 7EST BACKED BY FUNDERS INCLUDING THE 7ILLIAM AND &LORA (EWLETT &OUNDATION AND THE "ILL -ELINDA 'ATES &OUNDATION SAID 0ALO !LTO COMPARES POORLY WITH OTH ER LARGE SCHOOL DISTRICTS ON METRICS SUCH AS hSIZE OF ACHIEVEMENT GAPv

BETWEEN WHITE STUDENTS AND BLACK AND (ISPANIC STUDENTS h) THINK WE RE DOING THE RIGHT WORK IN ADDRESSING THE ACHIEVEMENT GAP WE JUST HAVE TO EXECUTE v 3KELLY SAID AT THE TIME ! NEW STRATEGY TO RAISE THE BAR FOR UNDERACHIEVING STUDENTS WAS APPROVED BY THE SCHOOL BOARD THIS YEAR WITH SUPPORT FROM MINORITY STUDENT AND PARENT GROUPS STARTING WITH THE GRADUATING CLASS OF HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS WILL BE STIFFENED TO MATCH ENTRANCE CRITERIA FOR #ALIFORNIA S PUBLIC FOUR YEAR UNIVERSITIES 3TUDENTS NOT WISHING TO COMPLETE THE COLLEGE PREP CURRICULUM MAY NEGOTIATE hALTERNATIVE GRADUATION REQUIREMENTSv WITH THEIR SCHOOL 4HE STIFFER REQUIREMENTS WILL NOT AFFECT THE MORE THAN PERCENT OF 0ALO !LTO STUDENTS WHO ALREADY MEET THEM BUT ARE MEANT TO RAISE EXPECTATIONS FOR STUDENTS DISPRO

ER PRICES THAN MOST OTHER SPECIALTY MARKETS AND A LARGER SPACE THAN ITS PREDECESSOR !LBERTSON S !FTER TWO CONTENTIOUS YEARS AND HEARINGS THE PROJECT WAS AP PROVED TO INCLUDE HOMES BE LOW MARKET RATE APARTMENTS A SMALL PARK AND A COMMUNITY ROOM 4HE REDEVELOPMENT OF %DGEWOOD 0LAZA 3HOPPING #ENTER ALSO HIT A FEW SNAGS INCLUDING A LAWSUIT IN TO GIVE RESIDENTS A SAY IN WHAT WENT ON THE PROPERTY AS SPECIFIED IN THE LAND TRACT S COVENANTS $EVELOPER 3AND (ILL 0ROPERTY #OMPANY SETTLED THE CASE IN AND AGREED TO RETAIN THE HISTORIC %ICHLER RETAIL STRUCTURES FIND A GRO CERY STORE AND REDUCE THE NUMBER OF HOMES TO BE BUILT TO %AST #OAST GROCER 4HE &RESH -ARKET SIGNED A CONTRACT IN &EBRUARY OF THIS YEAR AND WILL INHABIT THE RENOVATED SPACE PREVI OUSLY OCCUPIED BY !LBERTSON S 2ENOVATION BEGAN IN 3EPTEMBER 4HAT MEANT THE END OF THE POPULAR FOOD TRUCK GATHERINGS %DGEWOOD %ATS WHICH WERE ORGANIZED BY #RES CENT 0ARK RESIDENT 3USIE (WANG AS A WAY TO KEEP THE SITE FROM BECOMING COMPLETELY DERELICT AND TO RALLY THE COMMUNITY AROUND THE PLAZA 2ESIDENTS WERE EXCITED WHEN THE PROJECT FINALLY GOT UNDER WAY BUT FEELINGS SOON SOURED AFTER ONE OF TWO %ICHLERS WAS DISMANTLED AND HAULED AWAY 2ESIDENTS WHO ORIGI NALLY HAD FILED SUIT TO KEEP THE STRUC TURES CRIED FOUL 4HE BUILDING WAS TO BE DISMANTLED AND MOVED THEN RE

CONSTRUCTED "UT DEVELOPER *OHN 4ZE SAID MOST OF THE BUILDING S STRUCTURE WAS TOO ROTTEN TO SAVE

Building community 4WO INITIATIVES DESIGNED TO IMPROVE A SENSE OF COMMUNITY TOOK ROOT IN -AYOR 9IAWAY 9EH INTRODUCED THE -AYOR S #HALLENGE A SERIES OF COMMUNITY GATHERINGS AROUND EVENTS 4HE FIRST ATHLETIC EVENT ON -ARCH WAS A TABLE TENNIS PINGPONG CHAL LENGE FOLLOWED IN *UNE BY h! $AY IN THE 0ARK v WHICH FEATURED BOCCE BALL YOGA AND YOUTH TENNIS AT -ITCHELL AND 2INCONADA PARKS 4HE LAST IN THE SERIES A BICYCLE CHAL LENGE TOOK PLACE IN /CTOBER ALONG WITH THE "IKE 0ALO !LTO EVENT h/VERALL THE -AYOR S #HALLENGE SAW OVER PEOPLE FROM AROUND THE 0ALO !LTO COMMUNITY INCLUD ING PARTICIPANTS AND VOLUNTEERS TAKE PART v 9EH SAID )N 3EPTEMBER HE INTRODUCED A NEIGHBORHOOD GRANTS PROPOSAL TO STRENGTHEN A SENSE OF CONNECTEDNESS #ITY LEADERS ENDORSED THE PROGRAM WHICH WOULD FUND BLOCK PARTIES NEIGHBORHOOD WATCH PROGRAMS AND OTHER PROJECTS 4HE COUNCIL DIRECT ED STAFF TO DESIGN A PROGRAM IN THE COMING MONTHS h! GAME OF PINGPONG IS GREAT FOR ONE DAY S WORTH OF GETTING TOGETHER AND TRYING SOMETHING OUT BUT IT S NOT ENOUGH TO REALLY RECOMMIT RE KINDLE OR RE SPARK A LOT OF THAT SENSE OF NEIGHBORLINESS v 9EH SAID N

PORTIONATELY (ISPANIC AND BLACK WHO CURRENTLY GRADUATE WITHOUT THE FOUR YEAR COLLEGE PREP COURSEWORK ! HOST OF EFFORTS TO BOOST STUDENT SOCIAL EMOTIONAL HEALTH CONTINUED IN SOME OF THEM SCHOOL BASED AND OTHERS THROUGH COMMUNITY NON PROFIT OR RELIGIOUS ORGANIZATIONS 3OME PROGRAMS SUCH AS 'UNN S 2/#+ 2EACH /UT #ARE AND +NOW WHICH BEGAN AS CRISIS RESPONSES TO THE SUICIDES THREE YEARS AGO HAVE SETTLED INTO MORE GENERAL WELLNESS AND PEER SUPPORT ACTIVITIES #URRENT 'UNN SENIOR #HANDLER 'ARDNER JOINED 2/#+ IN HER FRESH MAN YEAR AND CONTINUES AS A PEER COUNSELOR 2/#+ SHE SAID hCHANGED TO FIT THE NEEDS OF 'UNN AS THE YEARS HAVE PASSED AND HAPPILY WE VE HAD NO MORE SUICIDES h.OW WE RE MORE OF A COMMUNITY BUILDING CLUB AND DO WHAT WE CAN TO SUPPORT OUR COMMUNITY AS A WHOLE h(IGH SCHOOL CAN BE A REALLY TOUGH PLACE AND TEENS ESPECIALLY MAY NOT ALWAYS WANT TO TALK TO AN ADULT 2/#+ CREATES PEERS WE CAN TALK TO 4HEY RE IN HIGH SCHOOL TOO AND THEY KNOW THE TEST THE TEACH ERS AND EVERYTHING WE RE GOING THROUGH v 'ARDNER SAID 3TUDENT SURVEY RESULTS SHOWED THAT SOCIAL EMOTIONAL INDICATORS AMONG 0ALO !LTO STUDENTS AS A WHOLE ARE IMPROVING 4HE INFORMATION CAME THROUGH THE #ALIFORNIA (EALTHY +IDS 3URVEY AS WELL AS THE 0ALO !LTO 2E ALITY #HECK 3URVEY h3OME OF THE MEASURES THAT WE AS A COMMUNITY HAVE BEEN MOST

FOCUSED ON LIKE SUICIDE IDEATION AND STUDENT DEPRESSION ARE HEADING IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION v 3KELLY SAID 4HURSDAY $EC (OWEVER hTHE DATA ALSO SUPPORT THE NEED FOR CONTINUED CONCERTED EFFORTS ACROSS THE SCHOOL DISTRICT COMMUNITY TO ADDRESS STUDENT HEALTH AND WELLNESS NEEDS v 4OWARD THE END OF AN IM PROVED FINANCIAL OUTLOOK ALLOWED SCHOOL LEADERS FOR THE FIRST TIME TO CONSIDER LONG DEFERRED INVESTMENTS "ETTER THAN EXPECTED PROJECTIONS ON PROPERTY TAX REVENUE GROWTH AS WELL AS PASSAGE OF #ALIFORNIA 0ROPO SITION IN .OVEMBER MEANT THAT AS OF $EC THE SCHOOL DISTRICT S BUDGETED INCOME AT MILLION WAS MILLION ABOVE AN TICIPATED EXPENDITURES %ARLIER IN THE YEAR SCHOOL BOARD MEMBERS HAD AGREED ON A PRIORITY LIST FOR ANY ADDITIONAL REVENUE THAT MIGHT BECOME AVAILABLE )T READS hELIMINATE STRUCTURAL DEFICIT AD DRESS PROGRAM NEEDS EMPLOYEE COMPENSATION PROFESSIONAL DEVEL OPMENT AND CAUTION IN MAKING ON GOING COMMITMENTS v )N THEIR LAST MEETING BEFORE THE HOLIDAYS ALL FIVE SCHOOL BOARD MEM BERS SIGNALED THEIR INTENT TO VOTE IN *ANUARY IN FAVOR OF A ONE TIME BO NUS FOR TEACHER AND STAFF EQUIVALENT TO PERCENT OF SALARY 4HE DISTRICT REMAINS IN NEGOTIATIONS WITH EMPLOYEE UNIONS CONCERNING CON TRACT TERMS FOR N 3TAFF 7RITER #HRIS +ENRICK CAN BE EMAILED AT CKENRICK PAWEEKLY COM

NOTICE OF A PUBLIC MEETING of the Palo Alto Planning & Transportation Commission Please be advised the Planning and Transportation Commission (P&TC) shall conduct a public meeting at 6:00 PM, Wednesday, January 9, 2013 in the Council Chambers, Ground Floor, Civic Center, Palo Alto, California. Any interested persons may appear and be heard on these items. Staff reports for agendized items are available via the City’s main website at www.cityofpaloalto.org and also at the Planning Division Front Desk, 5th Floor, City Hall, after 2:00 PM on the Friday preceding the meeting date. Copies will be made available at the Development Center should City Hall be closed on the 9/80 Friday. NEW BUSINESS. Study Session 1. Review and provide input on the draft scope of work for the “Downtown Development Cap” Study. Public Hearing 2. Draft Density Bonus Ordinance Review: Request by Planning Division staff for PTC review and recommendation to City Council for the adoption of the Density Bonus Ordinance with Menu of Concessions Questions. For any questions regarding the above items, please contact the Planning Department at (650) 329-2441. The files relating to these items are available for inspection weekdays between the hours of 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM. This public meeting is televised live on Government Access Channel 26. ADA. The City of Palo Alto does not discriminate against individuals with disabilities. To request accommodations to access City facilities, services or programs, to participate at public meetings, or to learn more about the City’s compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA), please contact the City’s ADA Coordinator at 650.329.2550 (voice) or by e-mailing ada@cityofpaloalto.org. *** Curtis Williams Director of Planning and Community Environment

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Learn the Guitar this Winter

Upfront

Carol McComb’s “Starting to Play� workshop includes the FREE use of a Loaner Guitar for the duration of the classes.* Regular cost is just $160 for nine weeks of group lessons, and all music is included.

Projects

*“Starting to Play� meets for one hour each Monday night for nine weeks beginning January 7. Students are encouraged to bring their own guitar, but both nylon-string and steel-string loaner guitars are available.

MILLION BOND THAT 0ALO !LTO VOTERS APPROVED IN SUFFERED A SERIES OF SETBACKS ˆ FROM MISSING DETAILS IN ARCHITECTURAL PLANS TO CONSTRUC TION DELAYS IN WATERPROOFING THE BUILDING ˆ DRIVING UP COSTS AND PUSHING THE TARGET DATE FORWARD BY A YEAR %VEN SO BY THE END OF MOST OF THE WORK ON THE NEW BUILD INGS HAS ALREADY BEEN COMPLETED GIVING RESIDENTS IN SOUTH 0ALO !LTO MUCH TO LOOK FORWARD TO IN SPRING OF WHEN THE BUILDINGS ARE SCHED ULED TO OPEN

Other classes at more advanced levels are also offered. A full brochure is available at Gryphon.

Stringed Instruments Since 1969

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(continued from page 6)

Plugging in Caltrain

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CITY OF PALO ALTO NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE TO DESTROY WEEDS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on December 10, 2012, pursuant to the provisions of Section 8.08.020 of the Palo Alto Municipal Code, the City Council passed a resolution declaring that all weeds growing upon any private property or in any public street or alley, as deďŹ ned in Section 8.08.010 of the Palo Alto Municipal Code, constitute a public nuisance, which nuisance must be abated by the destruction or removal thereof. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that property owners shall without delay remove all such weeds from their property, and the abutting half of the street in front and alleys, if any, behind such property, and between the lot lines thereof as extended, or such weeds will be destroyed or moved and such nuisance abated by the county authorities, in which case the cost of such destruction or removal will be assessed upon the lots and lands from which, or from the front or rear of which, such weeds shall have been destroyed or removed; and such cost will constitute a lien upon such lots or lands until paid, and will be collected upon the next tax roll upon which general municipal taxes are collected. All property owners having any objections to the proposed destruction or removal of such weeds are hereby notiďŹ ed to attend a meeting of the Council of said city, to be held in the Council Chamber of the City Hall in said city on January 14, 2013, at seven p.m., or as soon thereafter as the matter can be heard, when and where their objections will be heard and given due consideration. Eric Nickel Fire Chief

)N THE FOUR YEARS SINCE #ALIFOR NIA VOTERS APPROVED A BILLION BOND TO BUILD THE NATION S FIRST HIGH SPEED RAIL SYSTEM THE PROJECT HAS QUICKLY TRANSFORMED IN THE EYES OF LOCAL OFFICIALS FROM THE GREAT PRO GRESSIVE HOPE TO A BILLION LEM ON 4HIS YEAR HOWEVER LEGISLATORS WERE ABLE TO SQUEEZE SOME LEMON ADE OUT OF THE MAMMOTH ENDEAVOR 7HEN THE STATE 3ENATE APPROVED IN *ULY FUNDING FOR THE FIRST SEGMENT OF CONSTRUCTION IN #ENTRAL 6ALLEY THE APPROVAL INCLUDED A GIFT FOR THE 0ENINSULA ˆ ABOUT MILLION FOR THE LONG AWAITED ELECTRIFICATION OF #ALTRAIN 4HE ELECTRIFICATION PROJ ECT WHICH #ALTRAIN HAS BEEN COVET ING FOR MORE THAN A DECADE IS STILL YEARS AWAY BUT WITH THE STATE FUND ING SECURED THERE IS FINALLY HOPE THAT THE POPULAR BUT CASH STRAPPED COMMUTER SERVICE WILL SOON REACH ITS GOALS OF MODERN TRAINS AND FI NANCIAL SOUNDNESS

Calming the creek &OURTEEN YEARS AGO WATER FROM THE 3AN &RANCISQUITO #REEK SPILLED OVER LOCAL BRIDGES CAUSING MIL LIONS OF DOLLARS IN FLOOD DAMAGE TO 0ALO !LTO %AST 0ALO !LTO AND -ENLO 0ARK !FTER MORE THAN A DECADE WITH VIRTUALLY NO PROGRESS OFFICIALS FROM THE THREE CITIES THIS YEAR APPROVED A MAJOR FLOOD CON TROL EFFORT AIMED AT PROTECTING THE PARTICULARLY VULNERABLE AREA DOWN STREAM OF THE FICKLE CREEK BETWEEN 5 3 (IGHWAY AND THE 3AN &RANCISCO "AY "UT THE PROJECT ˆ WHICH INCLUDES REBUILT LEVEES AN UPGRADED BRIDGE A WIDENED CHAN NEL AND A COMPLETELY RECONFIGURED 0ALO !LTO -UNICIPAL 'OLF #OURSE ˆ DOES MUCH MORE THAN JUST OFFER FLOOD PROTECTION FROM THE CREEK 4HE 3AN &RANCISQUITO #REEK *OINT 0OWERS !UTHORITY WHICH IS SPEAR HEADING THIS EFFORT IS ALSO USING THE OPPORTUNITY TO PROTECT THE AREA FROM POSSIBLE SEA LEVEL RISE RELATED TO CLIMATE CHANGE N ˆ 'ENNADY 3HEYNER

Corrections The Palo Alto program to convert electric wires from overhead to underground has impacted parts of University South and Professorville, not Old Palo Alto, as stated in the Dec. 21 story. To request a correction, contact Editor Jocelyn Dong at 650-223-6514, jdong@ paweekly.com or P.O. Box 1610, Palo Alto, CA 94302.

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Online This Year

Ronald McDonald House eyes major expansion 4O COPE WITH RISING DEMAND THE 2ONALD -C$ONALD (OUSE IN 0ALO !LTO IS PLANNING ITS MOST AMBITIOUS EXPANSION YET ˆ A THREE STORY SQUARE FOOT ADDITION THAT WOULD EFFECTIVELY DOUBLE ITS SPACE AND ADD GUEST ROOMS 3TANFORD 5NIVERSITY IS PROVIDING LAND CURRENTLY A VACANT GRASSY PLOT ADJACENT TO THE CURRENT ONE AT 3AND (ILL 2OAD (Posted Feb. 12 at 12:29 p.m.)

Group calls for more Caltrain crossings &OR 0ALO !LTO RESIDENTS WHO LIVE NEAR THE #ALTRAIN CORRIDOR THE TRACKS ARE BOTH A BLESSING AND A CURSE ˆ A WAY TO GET AROUND THE 0ENINSULA WITHOUT CARS AND A BARRIER THAT RESTRICTS THEIR ABILITY TO TRAVEL EAST AND WEST 4HIS DICHOTOMY AND THE OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES IT PRESENTS IS AT THE CENTER OF A REPORT FROM A SPECIALLY APPOINTED 0ALO !LTO 2AIL 4ASK &ORCE A MEMBER GROUP THAT HAS BEEN MEETING FOR MORE THAN A YEAR WITH THE GOAL OF ADOPTING AN OFFICIAL COMMUNITY hVISIONv FOR THE CORRIDOR (Posted March 2 at 8:49 a.m.)

Palo Alto detectives find $34 million worth of meth 4HREE PEOPLE BELIEVED TO HAVE TIES TO A -EXICAN DRUG TRAFFICKING ORGANIZATION APPEARED IN COURT -ONDAY AFTERNOON -ARCH TO FACE CHARGES IN ONE OF THE LARGEST METHAMPHETAMINE SEIZURES IN 5 3 HIS TORY 0ALO !LTO POLICE DETECTIVES DISCOVERED THE DRUGS ˆ POUNDS OF METHAMPHETAMINE ˆ WORTH MILLION ON THE STREET WHILE INVES TIGATING STOLEN I0ADS AT A 3AN *OSE APARTMENT 4HURSDAY -ARCH (Posted March 2 at 10:35 p.m.)

Caltrain victim lost battle against mental illness 4HE MAN STRUCK BY A TRAIN IN -ENLO 0ARK &RIDAY MORNING -ARCH WAS %RIC 3ALVATIERRA A YEAR OLD 0ALO !LTO RESIDENT ACCORDING TO THE 3AN -ATEO #OUNTY #ORONER S /FFICE (IS FAMILY RELEASED A STATEMENT -ARCH CHARACTERIZING HIS DEATH AS A LOST BATTLE AGAINST A MENTAL ILL NESS (Posted March 11 at 2:34 p.m.)

Teachers: Support needed for graduation proposal (IGH SCHOOL TEACHERS 4UESDAY -ARCH SAID A MOVE TO STIFFEN GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS BY ITSELF WILL NOT BOOST THE ACHIEVEMENT OF STRUGGLING STUDENTS $EPARTMENT HEADS MET WITH THE "OARD OF %DU CATION TO DISCUSS A PROPOSAL TO ALIGN GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS WITH ENTRANCE CRITERIA FOR #ALIFORNIA S PUBLIC FOUR YEAR UNIVERSITIES (Posted March 13 at 9:48 a.m.)

$22M verdict against PAMF in malpractice lawsuit 4HE 0ALO !LTO -EDICAL &OUNDATION WAS HIT WITH ONE OF THE LARGEST MEDI CAL MALPRACTICE VERDICTS IN 3ANTA #LARA #OUNTY HISTORY -ONDAY -ARCH AFTER A -ENLO 0ARK WOMAN SUFFERED PARALYSIS WHILE UNDERGOING TREAT MENT FOR MIGRAINES 2OBYN &RANKEL WHO WAS YEARS OLD IN WHEN THE TREATMENT PARALYZED HER WON A MILLION VERDICT FROM THE JURY OF SIX MEN AND SIX WOMEN (Posted March 21 at 9:55 a.m.)

Classmates stunned by loss of Paly graduate (UNDREDS GATHERED 3ATURDAY -AY TO REMEMBER THE LIFE OF %MILY "ENATAR A VIVACIOUS 0ALO !LTO (IGH 3CHOOL GRADUATE WHO DIED -AY IN 3T ,OUIS WHERE SHE HAD BEEN A FIRST YEAR STUDENT AT 7ASHINGTON 5NIVERSITY "ENATAR S FRIENDS AT COLLEGES ACROSS THE COUNTRY WERE IN THE MIDST OF FINAL EXAMS WHEN THEY LEARNED THEIR CHEERFUL AND ACCOMPLISHED CHILDHOOD FRIEND HAD LOST HER BATTLE AGAINST MENINGOCOCCAL DISEASE AFTER THREE WEEKS IN THE HOSPITAL (Posted May 18 at 9:05 a.m.)

Palo Alto gymnastics teacher drowns in Yosemite ! POPULAR CHILDREN S GYMNASTICS TEACHER DROWNED IN 9OSEMITE .A TIONAL 0ARK ON 7EDNESDAY !UG HIS FAMILY HAS CONFIRMED 2USSELL 7RIGHT HAS TAUGHT 0ALO !LTO CHILDREN FOR A DECADE AT 'YM &IT FOR ,ITTLE /NES AT THE ,UCIE 3TERN #OMMUNITY #ENTER (E WAS AT A -ERCED 2IVER SWIMMING HOLE WITH HIS DAUGHTER WHEN CURRENTS CARRIED HIM DOWNSTREAM 7RIGHT S FOOT BECAME CAUGHT BETWEEN TWO BOULDERS AND HE DROWNED HIS SISTER -ORIA 0ETERS SAID (Posted Aug. 4 at 8:03 p.m.)

Police arrest suspect following manhunt 0ALO !LTO POLICE ARRESTED #AMERON #ONLEY OF /AKLAND AFTER A NEARLY THREE HOUR MANHUNT NEAR DOWNTOWN 0ALO !LTO 4HURSDAY AFTERNOON !UG #ONLEY LED POLICE ON A WILD CHASE THROUGH DOWNTOWN AND INTO THE $OWNTOWN .ORTH NEIGHBORHOOD AFTER A TRAFFIC STOP ON 5NIVERSITY !VENUE CRASHING INTO SIX CARS AND AT TEMPTING TO CARJACK A TRUCK POLICE SAID (Posted Aug. 30 at 1:09 p.m.)

Hobee’s at Town & Country to close ,ONGTIME 0ALO !LTO ICON (OBEE S #ALIFORNIA 2ESTAURANT WILL CLOSE AT 4OWN #OUNTRY 6ILLAGE SHOPPING CENTER IN *ANUARY PROPERTY OWNER %LLIS 0ARTNERS ANNOUNCED ON 4HURSDAY 3EPT (OBEE S 3TANFORD HAS BEEN AT THE CORNER OF %MBARCADERO 2OAD AND %L #AMINO 2EAL SINCE SERVING UP ITS WELL KNOWN BLUEBERRY COFFEE CAKE AND OTHER HOMEY DISHES (Posted Sept. 27 at 3:58 p.m.)


Transitions

In memoriam 2012

A look back at some of the notable community members who died this year Gary Fazzino Gary Fazzino, a two-time Palo Alto mayor who served 18 years on the City Council, died Oct. 30. He was 60. Fazzino was first elected in 1977 at the age of 24 and during his tenure promoted the ban on smoking in public places, the preservation of Arastradero property as open space, the establishment of the San Francisquito Creek Joint Powers Authority and aid to East Palo Alto during a wave of murders. Fazzino’s love of Palo Alto and encyclopedic knowledge of its history earned him the nickname “Mr. Palo Alto.”

Ellen Fletcher Ellen Fletcher, a former Palo Alto City Councilwoman who spearheaded the city’s transformation into a nationally recognized bikefriendly community, died Nov. 7. She was 83. She was an advocate for environmental issues for more than half a century. Her leadership was key to the city’s launch of the household hazardous-waste program, passage of anti-smoking laws and establishment as a nuclear-free zone. In 2002, the city officially named Bryant Street the “Ellen Fletcher Bicycle Boulevard.”

John Johnson John Johnson, who ran the Palo Alto Medical Foundation for more than two decades and served as city manager of Menlo Park during the boom years of the early ‘60s, died Sept. 17. He was 88.

Visit

Lasting Memories An online directory of obituaries and remembrances. Search obituaries, submit a memorial, share a photo. Go to:

PaloAltoOnline.com/ obituaries

During Johnson’s tenure from 1952 to 1964, the city expanded its borders and built a library and police station. In 1964 he became executive administrator of the Palo Alto Medical Clinic, presided over its growth into the Palo Alto Medical Foundation, and became vice president of administration in 1987. He retired in 1991 but served on the foundation’s board and several others, including as president of the Stanford Alumni Association.

Bill Moggridge Bill Moggridge, the cofounder of Palo Alto-based design firm IDEO, died Sept. 8 of cancer. He was 69. Moggridge is

credited with designing the first laptop computer, the GRiD Compass. Moggridge founded his own design firm in 1969 and merged with IDEO in 1991. He became director of the Smithsonian Institution’s CooperHewitt National Design Museum in 2010.

George Rathmann George Rathmann, the first CEO and cofounder of Amgen, died April 22. He was 84. After receiving a doctorate in physical chemistry from Princeton University in 1951, Rathmann went work for 3M, where he helped develop Scotchgard. Then at Abbott Laboratories, his products helped the company’s diagnostics division revenues grow from almost nothing to a billion dollars. As the first CEO and a co-founder of Amgen, he built the four-person company into one with thousands of em-

CITY OF PALO ALTO CITY COUNCIL

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on January 14, 2013, the City Council of the City of Palo Alto (the “City”) will hold a public hearing as required by Section 147(f) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, with respect to a proposed issuance of bonds or other obligations by the California Enterprise Development Authority in an amount not to exceed $50,000,000 (the “Obligations”), the interest on which is intended to be excluded from gross income for federal income tax purposes and exempt from State of California personal income taxes, for the benefit of Oshman Family Jewish Community Center, a California nonprofit public benefit corporation (the “Borrower”). Proceeds of the Obligations will be applied by the Borrower to the refunding of ABAG Finance Authority for Nonprofit Corporations Variable Rate Revenue Bonds (Oshman Family Jewish Community Center Project), Series 2007, issued to enable the Borrower to acquire, construct, install and equip a 142,000-square-foot community center which includes a social/cultural hall, a preschool, studios/meeting rooms, indoor and outdoor pools, a fitness center, a gymnasium, a teen center, a café, a gift center and regional offices, located at 3921 Fabian Way, Palo Alto, California 94303 (the “Project”). The owner and operator of the Project has been and will be the Borrower. The public hearing will commence at 7:00 p.m., or as soon thereafter as the matter can be heard, and will be held at the City’s Council Chambers, 250 Hamilton Avenue, Palo Alto, California 94301, at which time any person may be heard. Those wishing to comment on the proposed refinancing of the Project may either appear in person at the public hearing or submit written comments, which must be received by the City Clerk at the address set forth above, before the public hearing on the 14th of January, 2013. DATED this 28th day of December, 2012 Donna Grider City Clerk

ployees and two multi-billion dollar products, Epogen and Neupogen.

John Tuomy John Tuomy, a former Palo Alto teacher who served for eight years on the Palo Alto Board of Education, died Nov. 30. He was 66. Tuomy taught

at several schools in the area and eventually became the head of the district’s computer program, administering a $250,000 federal grant. Despite leaving the district to work in the private sector, Tuomy fought against the proposed closure of Gunn High School and co-chaired the committee that helped pass the “Building for Excellence” school bond in 1995. Tuomy built a reputation as a straight-talking, opinionated and compassionate member of the Board of Education. N

Ruth Bonilla

Nov. 22, 1918-Dec. 18, 2012 Ruth Raleigh Bonilla, 94, a resident of Palo Alto since 1963, passed away December 18. She was born and raised in Iowa and came to California during World War II. She was married to noted geologist Manuel Bonilla for 56 years until he died in 2006. She enjoyed reading, playing the piano, and gourmet cooking. She studied and wrote poetry all her life, and took numerous poetry courses at the Palo Alto Adult School. She was remarkably free of envy, arrogance, and anger, and looked for the good in everyone. Her memory will be honored by daughters Janice of San Jose, Laurie (Ed) of Mountain View, son Roger (Gigi) of Sunnyvale, and grandsons Michael and Eric. Funeral services will be private, memorial contributions can be made to KQED Public Media. PA I D

O B I T UA RY

Inspirations a guide to the spiritual community FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH, UCC £ nxÊ Õ ÃÊ, >`]Ê*> Ê Ì ÊUÊ­Èxä®ÊnxÈ ÈÈÈÓÊUÊÜÜÜ°vVV«>° À}Ê Sunday Worship and Church School at 10 a.m.

This Sunday: What’s Next? Rev. Daniel Ross-Jones preaching An Open and Affirming Congregation of the United Church of Christ

Inspirations is a resource for ongoing religious services and special events. To inquire about or to reserve space in Inspirations, please contact Blanca Yoc at 223-6596 or email byoc@paweekly.com

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Last Year’s Grant Recipients 10 Books A Home .......................................$5,000 Able Works..................................................$5,000 Adolescent Counseling Services ..........$10,000 Art in Action ................................................$5,000 Boys and Girls Club of the Peninsula........7,500 Break Through the Static..........................$2,500 Breast Cancer Connections .....................$5,000 Canopy .........................................................$3,000 CASSY ........................................................$15,000 Children’s Center of the Stanford Community ..................................$4,000 Cleo Eulau Center.......................................$5,000 Collective Roots .........................................$7,500 Downtown Streets Team ........................$15,000 DreamCatchers ........................................$15,000 East Palo Alto Center for Community Media ................................$3,000 East Palo Alto Charter School .................$7,500 East Palo Alto Children’s Day ..................$5,000 East Palo Alto Kids Foundation ................$5,000 East Palo Alto Youth Court ........................$3,000 Environmental Volunteers ........................$3,000 Family Connections....................................$7,500 Foothill College Book Program ................$5,000 Foundation for a College Education ........$7,500 Hidden Villa .................................................$5,000 InnVision ......................................................$7,500 JLS Middle School ....................................$5,000 Jordan Middle School ..............................$5,000 Kara ............................................................$15,000 Mayview Community Health Center .....$10,000 Midpeninsula Community Media Center.........$5,000 Music in the Schools Foundation ............$5,000 My New Red Shoes ...................................$3,000 New Creation Home Ministries ...............$5,000 Nuestra Casa ..............................................$5,000 Pacific Art League .....................................$2,500 Palo Alto Art Center Foundation ..............$5,000 Palo Alto Community Child Care ..............$6,500 Palo Alto Council of PTAs .........................$2,128 Palo Alto High School Get Involved!.......$1,500 Palo Alto Housing Corporation ................$5,000 Palo Alto Library Foundation ..................$17,500 Palo Alto Youth Collaborative.................$10,000 Peninsula Bridge Program .......................$5,000 Peninsula Youth Theatre ...........................$3,000 Project Safety Net....................................$20,000 Project WeH.O.P.E. .....................................$7,500 Quest Learning Center ..............................$5,000 Ravenswood Education Foundation .......$5,000 Silicon Valley FACES..................................$7,500 South Palo Alto Food Closet .....................$1,000 St. Francis of Assisi Youth Club ...............$5,000 St. Vincent de Paul.....................................$6,000 TEDxGunnHighSchool ...............................$2,000 TheatreWorks .............................................$5,000 Youth Community Service .......................$10,000

Support our Kids with a gift to the Holiday Fund.

E

ach year the Palo Alto Weekly Holiday Fund raises money to support programs serving families and children in the Palo Alto area. Since the Weekly and the Silicon Valley Community Foundation cover all the administrative costs, every dollar raised goes directly to support community programs through grants to non-profit organizations ranging from $1,000 to $25,000. And with the generous support of matching grants from local foundations, including the Packard and Hewlett foundations, your tax-deductible gift will be doubled in size. A donation of $100 turns into $200 with the foundation matching gifts. Whether as an individual, a business or in honor of someone else, help us reach our goal of $350,000 by making a generous contribution to the Holiday Fund. With your generosity, we can give a major boost to the programs in our community helping kids and families.

Give to the Palo Alto Weekly Holiday Fund and your donation is doubled. You give to non-profit groups that work right here in our community. It’s a great way to ensure that your charitable donations are working at home.

CLICK AN D GIVE

Donate online at siliconvalleycf.org/paw-holiday-fund

Enclosed is a donation of $_______________ Name __________________________________________________ Business Name _________________________________________ Address ________________________________________________ City/State/Zip ___________________________________________

Please Make checks payable to: Silicon Valley Community Foundation and send to: Palo Alto Weekly Holiday Fund c/o Silicon Valley Community Foundation 2440 W. El Camino Real, Suite 300 Mountain View, CA 94040

E-Mail __________________________________________________ Phone ______________

Q Credit Card (MC, VISA, or AMEX) ___________________________________________ Expires _______/_______ Signature _______________________________________________________ I wish to designate my contribution as follows: (select one)

Non-profits: Grant application and guidelines at www.PaloAltoOnline.com/holidayfund

Q In my name as shown above – OR –

Q In name of business above:

Q In honor of:

Q In memory of:

Q As a gift for:

________________________________________________ (Name of person) For information on making contributions of appreciated stock, contact Bill Johnson at (650) 326-8210. The Palo Alto Weekly Holiday Fund is a donor advised fund of Silicon Valley Community Foundation, a 501 (c) (3) charitable organization. A contribution to this fund allows your donation to be tax deductible to the fullest extent of the law. All donors and gifts amounts will be published in the Palo Alto Weekly unless the boxes below are checked.

Q I wish to contribute anonymously.

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Q Please withhold the amount of my contribution.


287 donors through Dec. 19 totalling $92,439; with match $184,878 has been raised for the Holiday Fund 22 Anonymous ...................................... 3,889

Newly Received Donations Hugh O. McDevitt.................................... 200 Joan and John Barksdale .......................... 200 Lawrence Naiman ...................................... 50 Bonnie Packer ............................................ 50 Bonnie and Bryan Street ............................ ** Win and Barbara Foster ........................... 150 A. Carlisle Scott ......................................... ** Jean and Chuck Thompson ........................ ** Hoda Epstein .............................................. ** Lynnie and Joe Melena .............................. 75 Miriam Jacob ........................................... 100 Stuart and Carol Hansen ............................ ** Van Whitis and Laurie Miller .................. 200 Ted and Jane Wassam ................................ ** Allan and Marilyn Brown .......................... ** Robert and Connie Loarie .......................... ** J. and Gayle Brugler ............................. 1,000

In Memory Of Steve Fasani ............................................... ** Rich Scherer .............................................. **

In Honor Of Our Grandchildren ..................................... ** Rema I. Cotton ........................................... ** The Barnea-Smith Family .......................... **

Previously Published Donors Gil and Gail Woolley ............................... 400 Michael Kieschnick .............................. 1,000 Betty Gerard ............................................. 100 Jay Crosson and Sharon Levine ............... 200 Anne and Greg Avis ................................... ** Rae Cole ................................................... 100 Frances and Ted Jenkins ............................ 50 Tom and Pat Sanders .................................. ** Zelda Jury................................................... ** David F. Labaree ...................................... 150 Claude Madden .......................................... ** Daniel and Lynne Russell ........................ 250 Carol Kersten and Markus Aschwanden .. 250 John and Lynn Wiese ............................... 100 Lori and Hal Luft ..................................... 100 Steve and Mary Chapel ............................ 200 Ludwig and Carol Tannenwald .................. ** The Edward Lund Family ........................ 100 John and Olive Borgsteadt ......................... ** Gerry Gilchrist ........................................... 30 Dexter and Jean Dawes .............................. ** Don and Bonnie Miller .............................. ** George Cator ............................................ 250 John Tang and Jean Hsia ............................ ** Tish Hoehl ................................................ 100 Micki and Bob Cardelli.............................. ** Art and Peggy Stauffer ............................. 500 Lani Freeman and Stephen Monismith ...... 50 Steve and Nancy Levy................................ ** Jim and Nancy Baer ................................... ** Janice Bohman and Eric Keller................ 250 Martha Shirk ............................................ 500 Robert and Betsy Gamburd ........................ ** Helene Pier ................................................. ** Susie Richardson...................................... 250 Marlene and Joe Prendergast ..................... ** John and Thelma Smith ........................... 150 Harry Press ............................................... 100 Morgan Family Fund ............................ 5,000 Powar Family Fund .................................. 500

Richard A. Baumgartner and Elizabeth M. Salzer ............................. ** Tony and Judy Kramer ............................... ** Judith and Hans Steiner ............................. ** Brigid S. Barton ....................................... 200 Sallie I. Brown ........................................... ** Rich Cabrera .............................................. ** Don and Ann Rothblatt .............................. ** Dr. Richard Mazze ................................... 200 Neta Miller ............................................... 100 Romola and Mark Georgia......................... ** Roger Lau................................................... 50 Carol Cleary-Schultz.................................. 50 Katharine Esslinger .................................. 100 Deborah Ruskin ....................................... 200 Theresa Carey .......................................... 250 Russell and Alice Evarts .......................... 300 Skyles Runser........................................... 500 Michael and Lenore Roberts .................... 100 Meri Gruber and James Taylor................... ** John and Florine Galen .............................. ** Les Morris ................................................ 250 Virginia E. Fehrenbacher ......................... 100 Bonnie Berg RN ......................................... ** David and Nancy Kalkbrenner ................... ** Matt and Donna James ............................... ** Harry and Susan Hartzell ........................... ** Margaret Fisher .......................................... 50 Mike and Cathie Foster ............................ 500 Nanette Stringer ....................................... 250 Nancy and Norman Rossen ...................... 100 Ruth and Ben Hammett............................ 200 Ellen and Tom Wyman ............................. 250 William E. Reller .................................. 1,000 John and Michele McNellis ............... 10,000 Ron and Elaine Andrews.......................... 500 Susie and Matt Glickman ......................... 250 Caroline Hicks and Bert Fingerhut .......... 100 Eric and Elaine Hahn ............................ 1,000 Jean-Yves Bouguet .................................. 100 Scott and Kathy Schroeder......................... ** Lucy Berman ......................................... 1,500 Karen and Steve Ross ................................ ** John and Mary Schaefer........................... 100 Caroline and Richard Brennan ................... ** Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bonini...................... 50 Freddy and Jan Gabus ................................ ** Ted Wassam ............................................... 50 Barbara Klein and Stan Schrier.................. ** Edward Kanazawa...................................... ** Eugene and Mabel Dong.......................... 200 Penny and Greg Gallo .............................. 500 Eve and John Melton ............................... 500 Nancy and Joe Huber ............................... 100 Larry Baer and Stephanie Klein ................. ** Bill Johnson and Terri Lobdell ................ 500 Peter S. Stern.............................................. ** Leif and Sharon Erickson......................... 250 Luca and Mary Cafiero .............................. ** Denise Savoie and Darrell Duffie .............. ** Faith Braff ................................................ 500 Tom and Neva Cotter ............................ 2,000 Patricia Levin ........................................... 100 Richard Kilner............................................ ** Bob and Corrine Aulgur............................. ** Roy and Carol Blitzer ................................ ** Linda and Steve Boxer ............................... ** Ted and Ginny Chu .................................... ** David and Virginia Pollard ...................... 300 Debbie Ford-Scriba & Jim Scriba .............. ** Diane Moore .............................................. ** Harriet and Gerry Berner ........................... ** John and Susan Thomas ............................. ** Marc and Ragni Pasturel .......................... 200

Margot Goodman ....................................... ** Beth and Peter Rosenthal ......................... 300 Don and Jacquie Rush.............................. 200 Mark and Virginia Kreutzer ....................... 75 Mary Houlihan ......................................... 100 Sally Dudley............................................. 200 Adrienne Dong ......................................... 100 Ann M. Pine ............................................. 100 Craig and Sally Nordlund ........................ 500 Drew McCalley & Marilyn Green ........... 100 Joseph and Diane Rolfe ........................... 100 Richard A. Zuanich .................................. 100 Arthur and Helena Kraemer ..................... 100 Bobbie and Jerry Wagger ........................... ** Leonard Leving .......................................... ** Robyn H. Crumly ....................................... ** Sue Kemp ................................................. 250 Andrea B. Smith....................................... 100 Katherine Bass ......................................... 100 Tatyana Berezin........................................ 100 Gwen Luce ................................................. ** Roger Warnke .......................................... 300 Alice Smith .............................................. 100 Boyce and Peggy Nute ............................... ** Richard Morris ........................................... ** Scott Wong ............................................... 200 Tom and Ellen Ehrlich ............................... ** Barbara Berry ........................................... 100 The Havern Family ............................... 4,000 Solon Finkelstein ..................................... 250 Walter and Kay Hays .............................. 100 Hal and Iris Korol ...................................... ** Ferrell and Page Sanders .......................... 100 Lynn H. Drake .......................................... 100 Owen Vannatta ...................................... 2,500 Arden King................................................. 20 Bruce F. Campbell................................. 1,000 George and Betsy Young............................ ** Doug and Barbara Spreng .......................... ** Andy and Liz Coe .................................... 100 Dena Goldberg ......................................... 100 Jim and Alma Phillips .............................. 250 John and Lee Pierce ................................... ** Andy and Joyce Nelsen .............................. ** Karen Latchfor ........................................... 50 Mary Lorey ................................................ ** Michael and Nancy Hall ....................... 1,000 Patti Yanklowitz and Mark Krasnow ....... 200 Phil Hanawalt and Graciela Spivak.......... 500 Kathy and Steve Terry ................................ ** Arna and Hersh Shefrin ............................. ** Marc and Margaret Cohen ....................... 100 Michael and Jean Couch .......................... 200 Kroymann Family .................................... 250 Mandy Lowell ............................................ ** Julie and Jon Jerome .................................. ** Jody Maxim ............................................... ** Josephine B. Spitzer ................................. 150 Rick and Eileen Brooks ............................. ** Maria Gault ................................................ 40 Debbie Mytels ............................................ 50 Marcia Katz.............................................. 200 Bob and Edith Kirkwood ........................... ** Jerry and Linda Elkind ............................. 250 Adele and Don Langendorf ...................... 200 Susan and Doug Woodman ........................ ** Larry Breed .............................................. 100 Dr. Teresa L. Roberts ............................ 1,000

David Zlotnick MD .................................... ** Jim Byrnes ............................................... 300 Audrey Bernfield ...................................... 200 John Smitham........................................... 100 Ryan ........................................................... ** William Settle .......................................... 500 Steve Fasani ............................................. 100 Florence Kan Ho ........................................ ** Ro Dinkey .................................................. 35 Our Dad Al Pellizzari................................. ** Marie and Don Snow ............................... 100 Leonard W. Ely Jr..................................... 250 Leo Breidenbach ........................................ ** Thomas W. and Louise L. Phinney ............ ** Helene Klein .............................................. ** Carolyn Reller ............................................ ** Carol Berkowitz ......................................... ** Al and Kay Nelson ..................................... ** The Kurland Family and Samuel Benjamin Kurland ................ 300 A.L. and L.K. Brown ............................... 100 Dorothy Horton .......................................... ** Alan Herrick............................................... 50 Ernest J. Moore .......................................... ** Bert Page .................................................. 100 Isabel Mulcahy ........................................... ** Yen-Chen Yen .......................................... 250 Mae and Al Kenrick .............................. 1,000 Al Bernal and John Warren ........................ 50 Mary Floyd................................................. ** Betty Meltzer ............................................. ** William Kiely ........................................... 100 Ruth & Chet Johnson ................................. ** Robert Lobdell ........................................... ** Gary Fazzino .............................................. ** Dr. Thomas McDonald............................. 500 Bertha Kalson............................................. ** Bob Donald ................................................ ** Gary Fazzino ............................................ 100

In honor of Sandy Sloan ............................................. 100 Marilyn Sutorius ...................................... 150 Jack Sutorius ............................................ 150 Dr. Kenneth Weigel Stanford Animal Hospital ........................ 100 Lady Vikes Waterpolo ................................ 50

Businesses & Organizations Zane MacGregor ........................................ ** deLemos Properties.................................. 200 Alta Mesa Improvement Company ....... 1,000 Crescent Capital Mortgage ........................ ** “No Limit” Drag Racing Team .................. 25 Harrell Remodeling, Inc............................. ** Thoits Bros. Insurance ........................ 10,000 Carl King, Mortgage Broker .................... 250 Attorney Susan Dondershine ................... 200

In memory of Nate Rosenberg ........................................ 100 August L. King........................................... ** Paul Wythes.............................................. 500 Helene F. Klein .......................................... **

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Cover Story

Looking back

2012

at

The year in photos reflects culture, action and moments of passion photos and text by Veronica Weber

A firefighter lays down red tape, top, around the site where a fire was started at the Pearson Arastradero Preserve on Aug. 8, 2012. Aquamaids float upside down underwater in formation, above, while practicing their routine at the San Jose State Aquatics Center in June.

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T

he task of handpicking a selection of photos that define a whole year is always a daunting one. After scanning through thousands of photographs, we have done our best to choose photographs that reflect the color, action, moments and passionate individuals that defined the year 2012. The year began with a burst of color as young performers dressed in colorful, intricate costumes danced with brilliant red ribbons as they rang in the year of the Dragon at Stanford in January for the Lunar New Year. In April, the curious red eye of the exotic and beautiful Victoria Crown Pigeon glared out from the cover. The species of bird, a native of New Guinea, has become the focal point of conservation at Pandemonium Aviaries. And at the beginning of fall a fluttering hummingbird sought out nectar from a cactus garden full of bright orange aloe blossoms at the Stanford Cactus Garden. 2012 was also a year of athleticism and prowess as local athletes pushed their bodies to extremes on the courts and underwater. Local pingpong champion Lily Zhang, a junior at Palo Alto High School, trained long and hard all year at the ICC Table Tennis Center in Milpitas to clutch one of the four spots on the USA Olympic table-tennis team at the 2012 Summer


Cover Story

A dramatic manhunt, above, ended in an arrest after discovering the suspect in a crawl space; Bob Simmons, right, sported buttons and a sign during the hotly contested election.

Olympics in London. While two teams of synchronized swimmers on the Santa Clara Aquamaids spent practically every summer afternoon in the pool balancing upside-down perfecting their rigorous routine while training for national championships in Ohio. Some moments caught by camera also revealed the action and mood of the year. In August, a dramatic manhunt unfolded for hours in a downtown neighborhood and culminated in an arrest after the suspect was caught hiding under a house in the crawl space. Also in August, firefighters worked to extinguish the last of the hot spots at the Pearson-Arastradero Preserve after an arsonist had set four separate fires in the park. In November, Cheryl Deraiche shared a tender moment with Rev. John Hester as she received communion, a daily comfort she received while undergoing treatment for leukemia at Stanford Hospital. 2012 was also a year of committed individuals like Bob Simmons, a passionate voter who, like others around the community, spent a good deal of time traveling to swing states to canvass for his candidate during the tenser moments of the election between President Barack Obama and Governor Mitt Romney. N

Lily Zhang, left, practiced long and hard to make the 2012 USA Olympic Team; a hummingbird, above, searches for nectar in a flowering aloe vera plant at Stanford University’s cactus garden.

(continued on next page)

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Cover Story (continued from previous page)

Colorfully costumed dancers, left, perform at Stanford during the Year of the Dragon New Year Gala in January; Rev. John Hester, upper right, gives Communion to patient Cheryl Deraiche at Stanford Hospital in November; a Victoria Crown pigeon, lower right, at Pandemonium Aviaries, which is working to conserve the breed.

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Arts & Entertainment A weekly guide to music, theater, art, movies and more, edited by Rebecca Wallace

Celebrating the narrative New Stanford mural honors the stories and storytellers of Latino, Chicano, indigenous cultures by Rebecca Wallace Above: The new murals at Stanford’s El Centro Chicano feature a Mayan scribe depicted on the front panel, a codex across the top frieze and a nopal cactus on the slanting ceiling. Above right: A close-up of the codex section depicts a young woman looking into the future as she recalls the stories of her ancestors. Below right: Another codex panel shows a Mayan creation myth: a jaguar breathing song into a conch shell. Right: Mural artist Juana Alicia. All photos are courtesy of the artist.

H

olding a conch shell full of pigment, a Mayan storyteller writes the tales of her people on the trunk of a ceiba

tree. Characters and creatures swirl around her and overhead: an Aztec butterfly, symbol of movement and balance; the two ancient warrior twins Hunahpu and Xbalanque; a jaguar in a creation myth.

The latest murals at Stanford’s El Centro Chicano burst with color, but artist Juana Alicia had more than aesthetics in mind. She wanted to help students feel at home. Both Stanford students and aspirants come to the Chicano/Latino student center: for cultural programs, academic support, tutoring and socializing. When they walk in the front door, the new mural, “The Spiral Word: El Codex Estánfor,” is right there to greet them with images and stories of their heritage. To remind them that they as Chicanos and Latinos are part of a community at Stanford. “We don’t have a long history at higher-learning institutions as more mainstream people do, and we often don’t come from families who are familiar with working in those systems. And we’re not really adequately prepared sometimes in our high schools for any major university,” said Juana Alicia, a faculty member at Berkeley City Col-

lege who has also taught at Stanford, U.C. Santa Cruz and other colleges. “My goal was to be not just welcoming, but educational,” she said, adding that she hopes viewers feel “empowerment and political involvement in reading that story.” The first panel of the mural, done in digital print and acrylic paint on a canvas panel attached to an inside front wall, highlights the young Mayan storyteller. Bare-chested and serious-faced, the scribe sits and writes her stories, her tattoos a hybrid of cultures: Mayan, Aztec, Samoan, African. “The universe is sort of covering her,” Juana Alicia said. She noted that El Centro students had expressed a desire for the mural to represent the many facets of the Latino culture, with its roots in African, European and (continued on next page)

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Arts & Entertainment

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Both photos, courtesy of artist Juana Alicia, show the cactus section of the mural as it evolved from drawing to digital print and acrylic on canvas.

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MP Mongolian BBQ serves up an all-you-can-eat buffet style meal. FOR LUNCH s FOR DINNER (Includes noodles, meats, shrimp, vegetables, and sauces.) Also Available: Wonton chips, veggie spring rolls, chicken katsu, sweet and sour pork, fried rice, and sesame biscuits. Monday - Saturday AM PM s PM PM 700 El Camino Real, Suite 170 (next to BevMo) -ENLO 0ARK #!

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(continued from previous page)

indigenous civilizations. Overhead, the second panel of the mural takes the form of a frieze, in mixed media on paper. With great detail, this “codex� section sweeps across a long horizontal panel, “connecting generations with a continuous sinew of narrative,� Juana Alicia wrote in an artist’s statement, adding, “The panels are presented on a gently folding surface, meant to echo the folding form of the original Mesoamerican books.� The codex begins with a jaguar breathing song into a conch shell, leading into the story of the birth of the warrior twins. Scenes of conquest and slavery emerge, with the Mayan scribe’s story continuing in images of “the burning of her libraries, the entrapment of her indigenous and African brothers and sisters, the slave ships landing in the Americas, forced labor in cane and henequen fields, and in the silver and copper mines,� Juana Alicia wrote. Uplifting images of resistance and revolution follow. Faces include those of the Cuban poet Jose Marti, the Chilean composer and folklorist Violeta Parra, Mexican Zapatistas, and the Mujeres de Negro (Women in Black), mothers of the “disappeared� women of Juarez, Mexico. A section on global modern plagues including nuclear warfare leads into “The Future,� a panel depicting ecological renewal and hope. On the ceiling, another panel is devoted to a blooming nopal cactus done in digital print and acrylic paint on canvas. The resilient plant is a metaphor for strength and rebirth in the most difficult of times. It’s a commonly used symbol by the artist, who also thinks of the plant as a source of sweetness. Also called the prickly pear, the nopal yields syrup for tequila and tender segments for food.

The mural was installed at El Centro in the spring and formally inaugurated in November with the help of poetry, blessings and a ceremony with students, faculty and staff. Juana Alicia was inspired in her project by many authors from Latin America, in particular Eduardo Galeano. In turn, her mural has been inspiring creativity in students. One of the inaugural speakers was Stanford senior Aracely MondragĂłn, who read a trio of poems she had written after seeing the mural. The image made her think “about the power of the scribe’s voice to maintain a people’s existence,â€? she told the Weekly later. Even when colonization, slavery and other forces eat away at a culture over time, “a woman’s voice can restore stories,â€? she said. At El Centro, director Frances Morales said she feels fortunate to see the mural every day. It’s right outside her office. “It’s so vibrant. It has so much history and culture,â€? she said. “It’s like a short story.â€? When it first went up, “people would walk in and just stop. They were beyond words,â€? she said. “You could see the pride in seeing something so professional done in the center.â€? “The Spiral Wordâ€? is also in good company at El Centro, which has boasted colorful murals for decades. A bright Malaquias Montoya scene has stretched across the front exterior wall since 1981, with intense faces and hands reaching forward. Inside the center are other murals

by Cesar Armando Torres and MartĂ­n MartĂ­n. There’s also a previous mural by Juana Alicia that she created with the Yo Puedo Program for Latino high school students in the 1980s, though it has been partially covered up by a building renovation. Juana Alicia has a long history with Stanford. Her first arrival on campus in 1984 was at the invitation of the late mural artist Jose Antonio Burciaga. She taught a class about Latinas and art, and students worked with her to create the “Mujeres de Fuegoâ€? mural at the entrance to the Chicano/Latino-themed dorm Casa Zapata. Juana Alicia created the new Stanford mural after gathering students’ opinions on the topic through meetings and surveys over two academic years, she said. Her daughter, a dancer, served as the model for the Mayan scribe in the mural’s main panel. “It was a wonderful, intimate experience for her.â€? Stanford is currently closed for winter break, though campus visitors can see most of the mural through El Centro’s glass doors. When the university reopens on Jan. 7, visitors will be able to go inside to view the mural weekdays from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. N Info: El Centro is at 514 Lasuen Mall, Building 590, Old Union, Stanford University. Go to studentaffairs.stanford. edu/elcentro or call 650-725-9735.


Eating Out FOOD FEATURE

Get cracking! 7INTER IS THE TIME TO SERVE UP $UNGENESS CRAB THE BELOVED "AY !REA CRUSTACEAN Story and photos by Sue Dremann ITH THEIR VOLUPTUOUS AND MEATY LEGS THE $UNGENESS CRABS WERE PILED IN ENOR MOUS BOWLS IN THE KITCHEN AT THE ) & % 3 0ORTUGUESE 3OCIETY #OM MUNITY (ALL IN -OUNTAIN 6IEW 4HEIR ROSY RED BODIES WERE SUR ROUNDED IN A BROTH OF WHITE WINE PAPRIKA AND SPICES 4HE AROMA OF ROASTED GARLIC FILLED THE CENTER S GREAT HALL (UNDREDS OF PATRONS SAT AT LONG ROWS OF PAPER COVERED TABLES ANTICIPATING THE AR RIVAL OF THE CRAB CIOPPINO 3HARING CARAFES OF RED AND WHITE TABLE WINE AND PLATES OF BUTTERY GAR LIC BREAD THEY DONNED PLASTIC BIBS DECORATED WITH AN IMAGE OF THE LARGE CRUSTACEAN AND THE WORD h#2!"v IN STARK LETTERS 3OME BROUGHT THEIR OWN ACCOUTREMENTS METAL CRAB CRACKERS CHAFING DISHES ATOP 3TERNO STANDS

W

FILLED WITH MELTED BUTTER BAGS BULGING WITH SLICED LEMONS AND HOT SAUCE 7HEN THE STEAMING BOWLS ARRIVED THE CROWD APPLAUDED 4HE 0ORTU GUESE 3OCIETY S ANNUAL ALL YOU CAN EAT CRAB FEAST HAD BEGUN 4HE ANNUAL ) & % 3 CRAB FEED HAS ENDURED AND GROWN IN POPULARITY FOR NEARLY YEARS 4HE ORGANIZA TION HOLDS MONTHLY FEEDS STARTING IN $ECEMBER DURING THE $UNGENESS CRAB SEASON 4HE FEEDS CAN ATTRACT AS MANY AS PEOPLE A NIGHT DE VOURING AS MUCH AS POUNDS OF CRAB SOCIETY PAST PRESIDENT &ER NANDO 2OSA SAID #OMPOSED MOSTLY OF 0ORTUGUESE IMMIGRANTS AND THEIR DESCENDANTS FROM THE !ZORES )SLANDS THE ) & % 3 ˆ )RMANDADE DA &ESTA DO %SPIRITO 3ANTO ˆ IS A SOCIETY DEDICATED TO A FESTIVAL HONORING THE (OLY 3PIRIT

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h)T S A LOT LIKE AN INDOOR CHURCH PICNIC v .OVAK SAID LADLING CUP FULS OF CRAB ONTO A PICNIC PLATE (E (continued on next page)

DINNER BY THE MOVIES AT SHORELINE’S

Cucina Venti

ns ervatio s e r g n epti now acc

le! b a l i a v ga caterin

#RAB ENTHUSIAST -ARK .OVAK ENJOYING THE CIOPPINO AT THIS MONTH S ) & % 3 0ORTUGUESE 3OCIETY CRAB FEED IN -OUNTAIN 6IEW

Ossobuco is a classic dish from Milan and features braised Veal shanks in a white wine and tomato sauce. Our simple, yet elegant recipe will be a family favorite for years to come. For your dining pleasure, we offer this recipe.

From our kitchen to yours, BUON APPETITO! OSSOBUCO

s TABLESPOONS EXTRA VIRGIN OLIVE OIL s SMALL ONION CHOPPED l NE s CARROTS CHOPPED l NE s STALKS OF CELERY CHOPPED l NE s VEAL SHANKS CUT ABOUT INCHES thick, each tied tightly cross-wise s m OUR SPREAD ON A PLATE

s CUP DRY WHITE WINE s TABLESPOONS BUTTER s CUP CHICKEN BROTH s CUP TOMATOES CRUSHED WITH their juices s FRESHLY GROUND PEPPER TO TASTE s SALT TO TASTE

Preparation instructions: 1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. 2. Heat 2 tablespoons of olive oil in foil pan. Add the onion, carrot and celery. Cook until the vegetables soften, about 10 minutes then drain the oil. 3. Meanwhile, heat the other 4 tablespoons of olive oil in a foil pan. Dredge the veal shanks in the our, coating on all sides and shake off the excess our. When the oil is hot, slip in the shanks and brown them on all sides. This should take about 6-7 minutes per side. Remove the veal shanks and place them in the ďŹ rst pan on top of the cooked vegetables. 4. Add the wine, butter, chicken broth, tomatoes, pepper and salt to the pot. The liquid should come at least two thirds of the way to the top of the shanks. If it does not, add more broth.

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

5. Cover the pan and place it in the oven. Cook for about 2 hours, turning and basting every 30 minutes, until the meat is very tender. 6. Transfer the Ossobuco to a warm plate and carefully remove the strings. To serve place Ossobuco on a plate with Risotto Milanese, or Pastina pasta in herbed olive oil and garlic.

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Eating Out (continued from previous page)

POURED THE SAUCE SEPARATELY INTO A PAPER CUP (E ENJOYS DRINKING IT STRAIGHT UP HE SAID *ERRY #UNHA -ARY 4AYLOR AND 4ISH 0ICCHETTI HAVE ALSO ATTENDED FOR MANY YEARS 4AYLOR SAID SHE PREFERS THE CRAB COLD WITH LEMON h7HAT BRINGS YOU BACK HERE IS THE CRAB ˆ AND THE COMPANY v SHE SAID $UNGENESS CRAB ENTHUSIASTS 2OG ER 3CHINDEWOLF AND 0ATTY 2OBINSON OFTEN BRING AS MANY AS FRIENDS 4HEY CAME DRESSED FOR THE OCCA SION IN TIE DYED h0EACE ,OVE AND #RABSv 4 SHIRTS FROM THE *OE S #RAB 3HACK CHAIN h) VE BEEN COMING HERE FOR MORE THAN YEARS AND ) ENJOY THE @CRABA RADERIE v 3CHINDEWOLF SAID #IOPPINO A DISH OF UNCERTAIN ORI GIN IS SAID TO HAVE ORIGINATED IN 3AN &RANCISCO AND WAS MADE BY 0ORTU GUESE AND )TALIAN FISHERMEN IN .ORTH "EACH )T IS A STEW OF MANY KINDS OF FISH AND SEAFOOD "UT THE 0ORTUGUESE 3OCIETY S VERSION HAS JUST CRAB AND VARIOUS FLAVORINGS ONION CELERY PARSLEY LEMON JUICE TOMATO PASTE WHITE WINE RED PEPPER SPICES AND WATER 4HE SAUCE IS POURED OVER THE COOKED CRAB AT THE LAST MINUTE SO THE MEAT IS NOT DISCOLORED 2OSA SAID -ANY 7EST #OASTERS BELIEVE THAT AMONG CRABS THE $UNGENESS CAUGHT OFF 0ACIFIC SHORES IS SUPREME Info: The I.F.E.S crab cioppino dinners for 2013 are on Saturdays, Jan. 26, Feb. 23 and March 23, with seatings from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. and 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. at 432 Stierlin Road in Mountain View. The dinner costs $50 per adult and $25 per child up to age 12, and it comes with all of the crab, wine, soda, coffee, bread and salad one can eat. Desserts are available for a separate small fee. Information on tickets is available at www.ifessociety.com/ page/page/5533996.htm.

4 SHIRTS SUM UP THE SENTIMENTS FOR 0ATTY 2OBINSON LEFT FOREGROUND AND 2OGER 3CHINDEWOLF RIGHT FOREGROUND WHO HAVE ATTENDED THE CRAB FEED FOR YEARS !LTHOUGH THE TRIED AND TRUE METHOD OF SERVING $UNGENESS IS TO BOIL OR STEAM IT AND SERVE WARM OR COLD WITH BUTTER LEMON OR MAYON NAISE THE CRAB IS EQUALLY DELICIOUS STEAMED AND TOSSED IN OLIVE OIL WITH LEMON JUICE AND SALT OR WITH CRACKED BLACK PEPPER SAID *ARAD 'ALLAGHER THE NEW EXECUTIVE CHEF AT #HEZ 4* IN -OUNTAIN 6IEW (ENRY (IATT MANAGER AT 4HE &ISH -ARKET IN 0ALO !LTO SAID HIS RESTAU RANT SERVES COOKED CRAB SMOTHERED IN GARLIC BUTTER AND SHALLOTS AND THEN ROASTED FOR ABOUT FIVE TO MINUTES IN THE OVEN UNTIL THE WHOLE THING IS CARAMELIZED 'ALLAGHER ADVISES PURCHASING TO POUND $UNGENESS CRABS BECAUSE THE LARGER ONES ARE A BIT STRINGY (E BOILS THE CRABS AND PLUNGES THEM IN ICE WATER UNTIL THEY RE CHILLED THROUGH THEN REMOVES THE MEAT IN LARGE CHUNKS RESERVING THE SHELLS AND THE hCHEESEv IN THE HEAD (E MAKES A VELOUTE SAUCE FOR DIPPING BY CREATING A STOCK TO WHICH HE ADDS ONION WHOLE CORIANDER GARLIC CHILI PEPPERS AND CHICKEN BROTH (E DRAINS THE SHELLS AND ADDS THE RE

ShopTalk by Daryl Savage

PALO ALTO HOBEE’S CLOSING NEXT WEEK ... After 28 years of serving its tall, streusel-topped, blueberry coffeecake, the branch of Hobee’s restaurant in Town & Country Village in Palo Alto will close Jan. 6. The upscale burger joint Gott’s Roadside is set to replace it. Ed Fike, president of Hobee’s, said the management at T&C attempted to work with him to get Hobee’s to stay put by upgrading the space. “We were given the option to stay, but with that came certain contingencies. Unfortunately, those contingencies added up to well beyond what we could afford,� Fike said. He added that he has tried to place most of his employees at the eight other Hobee’s restaurants in the Bay Area. There will still be a Hobee’s remaining in Palo Alto, at 4224 El Camino Real. PALO ALTO GETS ITS SECOND DRY BAR ... It may sound like a place for recovering substance-abusers,

but the term “dry bar� refers to hair salons that offer a single service: washing and blow-drying hair. The Drybar, a national franchise that started in 2010, is scheduled to open a location at Palo Alto’s Stanford Shopping Center next month. Customers sit at a bar, and the blow dryers are attached to the ceiling. For $35, stylists wash and blow-dry hair. The city’s other blow-dry bar, Halo, opened its doors two years ago in Town & Country Village. Blow-dry salons, which are popping up all over the country, have become a social experience, as the salons now offer parties and bridal showers. N

(EARD A RUMOR ABOUT YOUR FAVORITE STORE OR BUSINESS MOV ING OUT OR IN DOWN THE BLOCK OR ACROSS TOWN $ARYL 3AVAGE WILL CHECK IT OUT %MAIL SHOPTALK PAWEEKLY COM

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Holiday gifts for all occasions!

SERVED CHEESE AND A CUP OF AR BORIO RICE TO THICKEN 7HEN THE CRAB IS TENDER HE PUREES THE MIXTURE IN A BLENDER AND SERVES IT WITH THE CRAB BRIOCHE CROUTONS SWEET POTATO CUBES PICKLED CUCUM BERS FRESH DILL AND DAIKON h)T S REALLY DELICIOUS THAT WAY v HE SAID N

415 UNIVERSITY AVE. | PALO ALTO 650-853-9888 SEARCH FOR US ON GOOGLE TO SEE MORE

PENINSULA

Discover the best places to eat this week! AMERICAN

CHINESE

Armadillo Willy’s

Chef Chu’s

941-2922 1031 N. San Antonio Road, Los Altos www.armadillowillys.com

948-2696 1067 N. San Antonio Road www.chefchu.com

The Old Pro

Ming’s

326-1446 541 Ramona Street, Palo Alto www.oldpropa.com

856-7700 1700 Embarcadero East, Palo Alto www.mings.com

STEAKHOUSE

New Tung Kee Noodle House

Sundance the Steakhouse

947-8888 520 Showers Drive, Mountain View www.shopmountainview.com/luunoodlemv

321-6798 1921 El Camino Real, Palo Alto www.sundancethesteakhouse.com

INDIAN

Janta Indian Restaurant Read and post reviews, explore restaurant menus, get hours and directions and more at ShopPaloAlto, ShopMenloPark and ShopMountainView

powered by

462-5903 369 Lytton Ave. www.jantaindianrestaurant.com

Thaiphoon 323-7700 543 Emerson Ave, Palo Alto www.ThaiphoonRestaurant.com


Movies OPENINGS

Les Misérables ---

(Century 16, Century 20) One has to admire the ambition of “Les Misérables,” the through-sung play that’s now a big-screen musical. A condensation of Victor Hugo’s 1862 epic novel, the musical by composer Claude-Michel Schönberg and lyricists Alain Boublil and Jean-Marc Natel achieved enormous popular appeal with its soaring melodies and grasping melodrama. But it’s equally true that “Les Misérables” has never been known for its subtlety, with its storytelling in all-caps and its music thunderously repetitive. None of this changes, exactly, in the film adaptation helmed by Tom Hooper, Oscar-winning director of “The King’s Speech.” And like so many movie musicals, this one’s a mixed bag of suitable and not-so-suitable choices. On balance, though, it’s about as compelling a screen version of “Les Mis” as we have any right to expect. Hugh Jackman stars as Jean Valjean, a parole violator, in 19thcentury France, who lifts himself out of poverty and decrepitude but lives in fear of discovery by his former jailer, Inspector Javert (Russell

Isabelle Allen and Hugh Jackman. Crowe). From his new position of power as a factory owner, Valjean becomes entangled in the fortunes of one of his workers, despairing single mother Fantine (Anne Hathaway), and he begins to feel responsible for the woman and her child, Cosette (Isabelle Allen). The story sprawls its way into the Paris Uprising of 1832 — a studentfueled rebellion against the French monarchy — and a sort of love triangle among Cosette (now Amanda Seyfried), student revolutionary Marius (Eddie Redmayne), and his beggarly confidant Éponine (Sa-

ANNOUNCING T H E 2 7 TH A N N U A L PA L O A L T O W E E K L Y

— that never once feels affected. Hooper maximizes his budget to make “Les Misérables” look as big as can be, and occasionally he manages an ingenious small touch amidst the bombast (like seamstresses tugging needles on the beat). But Hooper also shoots himself in the foot by so insistently shooting in wide-angle close-ups. The play is “in your face” enough as it is: With the camera swooping in so often, I was sure it was going to smack an actor in the forehead. Pop a Dramamine and you’ll be fine.

mantha Barks, reprising her stage role). Throw in street urchin Gavroche (Daniel Huttlestone) and comic relief in the devious Thénardiers (Helena Bonham Carter and Sacha Baron Cohen, the latter unfortunately channeling Adam Sandler), and you have yourself a show. Jackman is perhaps the only sensible choice to headline the picture, and though he’s able enough, his performance typically feels calculated. The same could be said for Hathaway, who’s given an Oscarsavvy showcase in her single-take performance of the über-emotive aria “I Dreamed a Dream.” Hooper’s best choice is also his riskiest gambit: By recording all the vocals live (rather than the standard practice of having the actors lip-sync), he gets more vital acting, with intentionally raggedy vocals lending a palpable verisimilitude. But for my money, best acting honors go to Crowe, Redmayne and Barks, who seem most “in the moment.” Crowe suffers from some wobbly diction, but his performance is always emotionally resonant, while Barks knocks “On My Own” out of the park (I’ll admit it: I got chills). Redmayne (“My Week with Marilyn”) busts out with a surprisingly rich tenor voice — who knew?

Rated PG-13 for suggestive and sexual material, violence and thematic elements. Two hours, 37 minutes. — Peter Canavese

Django Unchained ---

(Century 16, Century 20) Brace yourselves for Quentin Tarantino’s latest provocation, the spaghetti western-cum-slavery epic “Django Unchained.” Tarantino repeats the feat of Nazi-revenge wishfulfillment fantasia “Inglourious Basterds,” with subject matter yet more highly charged for American audiences. Like “Inglourious Basterds,” “Django Unchained” is always audacious and entertaining, frequently funny and, at times, juvenile and repellent. That’s the deal you enter into with Tarantino, so there’s no point in acting surprised when he fulfills his promise. He’s the king of his own genre: Call it scavenger cinema. A curator of down-and-dirty pictures, Tarantino crafts mash-ups of fave flicks from the ‘60s and ‘70s

JUDGES: ADULT/YOUNG ADULT

CHILDREN/TEEN Katy Obringer, Former supervisor of Palo Alto Children’s Library Caryn Huberman Yacowitz, Playwright and Children’s book author Nancy Etchemendy, Children’s book author

All Writers: January 11, 2013, 5:30 p.m.

(continued on next page)

PRIZES

Tom Parker, Award winning novelist and short story writer, UC Extension and Foothill College Instructor and former Stanford Instructor Meg Waite Clayton, is the nationally best selling author of The Four Ms. Bradwells, The Wednesday Sisters, and The Bellwether Prize finalist The Language of Light. Ellen Sussman Author of New York Times best selling novel French Lessons and San Francisco Chronicle best seller On A Night Like This

EXTENDED ENTRY DEADLINE:

(such as the 1966 spaghetti western “Django,” whose star Franco Nero appears in Tarantino’s film). In keeping with those films, Tarantino serves up a strong graphic sensibility (hello, snap zooms!), a funky soundtrack (from John Legend to Ennio Morricone), and a hyperbolic hero in Jamie Foxx’s Django. As the film opens in 1858, Django gets sprung from a chain gang by a bounty hunter named Dr. King Schultz (Christoph Waltz, reminding us why he won an Oscar for “Basterds”). Plainly noting, “I kill people and sell their corpses for cash,” Schultz enlists Django to help him track three nasties and put them down. Django’s a quick study, swiftly excelling his teacher in the art of killing. This initial mission is but prelude to Django’s one true purpose: to reunite with his wife, Broomhilda von Shaft (Kerry Washington), and free her from slavery. Taken with the mythic echoes of Siegfried and Brunnhilde, Schultz agrees to help Django, and they set off for Candyland, the Deep South plantation ruled with an iron fist by Calvin Candie (a Mephistophelean Leonardo DiCaprio). There, Candie subjects his male slaves to “Mandingo fighting” (the term a nod to the Ghost of Blaxploitation Past) and his female slaves to prostitution. Here, too, Tarantino introduces us to “house Negro” Stephen, expertly played to the hilt by Samuel L. Jackson. A shameful collaborationist who has learned to shuck and jive to thrive, Stephen cackles at Candie’s jokes and hovers over his

FOR ADULTS: $500 Cash - FIRST PLACE $300 Cash - SECOND PLACE $200 Cash - THIRD PLACE FOR YOUNG ADULT/CHILDREN/TEEN: $100 Gift Certificate - FIRST PLACE $75 Gift Certificate - SECOND PLACE $50 Gift Certificate - THIRD PLACE Certificates are from co-sponsoring area bookstores. Bell’s Books (*ages 15-17) Kepler’s (*ages 12-14) Linden Tree (*ages 9-11) *age as of entry deadline

All adult winners and first place young winners in each category will be announced in the Palo Alto Weekly in February 2013. All winning stories will be published online at www.PaloAltoOnline.com

CONTEST RULES

1. The contest is open to anyone who lives, works or attends school full-time in Palo Alto, Menlo Park, Atherton, Stanford, Portola Valley, Woodside, Mountain View, Los Altos, Los Altos Hills, and East Palo Alto. 2. Limit of one entry per person. 3. Stories must be typed, double-spaced. Maximum 2,500 words. Longer stories will be disqualified. 4. $15 entry fee, along with 2 hard copies, for all ADULT stories; $5 entry fee for YOUNG WRITERS under 18. Make checks payable to “Palo Alto Weekly.” 5. Entries may not have been previously published. 6. Signed entry form must accompany story. Author’s name should NOT appear anywhere on pages of story. 7. All winners are required to email their story to the Palo Alto Weekly in a Microsoft Word Document as an attachment. Mail manuscripts to: Palo Alto Weekly Short Story Contest, P.O. Box 1610, Palo Alto, CA 94302 or deliver to 450 Cambridge Ave., Palo Alto Questions: shortstory@paweekly.com ÜÜÜ°*> Ì " i°V ÊUÊ*> Ê Ì Ê7ii ÞÊUÊ iVi LiÀÊÓn]ÊÓä£ÓÊU Page 23


Movies

Century Theatres at Palo Alto Square Fri thru Tues 12/28-1/1 Life of Pi 3D - 4:00, 7:00, 10:00 Life of Pi 2D - 1:00 Hyde Park on the Hudson 1:30, 4:30, 7:25, 9:45 Wed & Thurs 1/2-1/3 Life of Pi 3D - 4:00, 7:00 Life of Pi 2D - 1:00 Hyde Park on the Hudson 1:30, 4:30, 7:25

Tickets and Showtimes available at cinemark.com

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shoulder obligingly. In these scenes, which also concern an elaborate ruse forcing Django to mistreat slaves, Tarantino thrillingly steps past the physical horrors and plain evil of slavery and into the moral complexities of this pre-Civil War war that also horribly pitted brother against brother. But Tarantino’s greater concern, as usual, is to entertain at all costs, so “Django Unchained� is content to turn into “Blazing Saddles� for five minutes (as it takes a Coen Brothers-esque swipe at the idiocy of the pre-KKK) and to feverishly indulge Tarantino’s favorite genre: the revenge picture. Like “Basterds,� the film arrives at an opportunity for vengeance in a bloodsport staged with hand-rubbing, lip-licking glee and the triumph of an end-zone dance. There’s a case to be made that blood-spattering revenge pictures, no matter how evil the villain, are cultural poison. But if this is what it takes to scandalize audiences with Don Johnson as a dyed-in-the-wool racist done up as Colonel Sanders, well, so be it. Rated R for strong graphic violence, a vicious fight, language and nudity. Two hours, 45 minutes.

32 24 2 2

— Peter Canavese ''', $ ! , " 2* ''',$& # ! &( , "

Parental Guidance 1/2 (Century 16, Century 20) Look, I’m no fool. I know there’s an audiDraft #3, 11/26/12, Weekly ad

34th

design by harrington design

A N N U A L

T A L L T R E E

Call for Nominations The Palo Alto Chamber of Commerce and the Palo Alto Weekly are proud to announce the 34th Annual Tall Tree Awards, presented in four categories recognizing exceptional civic contributions and service to the Palo Alto community. Current elected officials are not eligible.

A W A R D S

outstanding citizen/volunteer outstanding professional outstanding business outstanding nonprofit Nomination deadline: January 11, 2013, 5 pm

nomination forms and registration:

ence for everything, even the new family comedy “Parental Guidance.� With the Baby Boomer teaming no one was asking for — Billy Crystal and Bette Midler — melded to that most moribund of genres, rugrats “comedy,� I’m gonna call this one for grandparents babysitting grandkids. But it’s my job to provide a public service, like, say, a crossing guard or a guy paid to stand next to an open manhole and say, “Don’t fall in there.� There’s a scene in this picture during which — swear to God — Crystal and Midler bond with their high-strung, tech-savvy grandkids by forcing them out to the lawn to play Kick the Can. Well, there you go. Kick the Can would be infinitely more entertaining, and a heckuva lot cheaper than going to see this movie, and you didn’t even have to suffer through it to learn your lesson. No need to thank me: Merry Christmas! That scene and others would actually be bearable if every adult in the film weren’t an insufferable, self-absorbed, hateful idiot, which screenwriters Lisa Addario and Joe Syracuse obviously see as a prerequisite for character arcs leading to redemption. Crystal and Midler (both sporting dye jobs) play Artie and Diane Decker, extra-annoying variations on their respective screen personas of irritable kvetcher and braying shopper-showgirl. Though their daughter Alice (Marisa Tomei) rues the thought, she enlists her parents in a pinch to take care of her kids (Bailee Madison, Joshua Rush and Kyle Harrison Breitkopf) for a few days. So Artie and Diane move into the prototype smart house invented by Alice’s husband Phil (Tom Everett Scott) and begin having movie problems. Director Andy Fickman obligingly indulges every cliche in the family-film playbook: DayGlo food mess, broad ethnic stereotypes, and needlessly demeaning old jokes painting Artie as hopelessly out of touch. (This includes the requisite sequence in which he denies his age with a comically inappropriate costume: in this case, skater gear.) Formerly “de voice of the Fresno Grizzlies,� Artie proves more interested in sneakily scoring his dream job of broadcasting for the San Francisco Giants than he does in winning over his grandkids, while Diane proves her airheadedness by endorsing smoking and drinking to Alice’s 12-year-old. And yet, to Alice’s horror, Grandpa and Grandma know best, or at least better than struggling helicopter parents Alice and Phil. In one running joke, the kids robotically laugh, under parents’ orders, at Artie’s corny jokes. Audiences are under no such obligation. But “Parental Guidance� wins half a star for three seconds of sublime absurdity ripped out of a Marx Brothers movie: a crouching, facepainted Crystal answering a fuddyduddy’s musical question “Who brings a child to Tchaikovsky?� with the wild-eyed retort “Me! Voodoo Man!� Now, that’s comedy. All three seconds of it. Rated PG for some rude humor. One hour, 44 minutes. — Peter Canavese

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MOVIE TIMES All showtimes are for Friday through Sunday only unless otherwise noted. For other times, as well as reviews and trailers, go to PaloAltoOnline.com/movies. 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) (G) (Not Reviewed) Century 16: Wed. at 2 & 7 p.m. Century 20: Wed. at 2 & 7 p.m. Anna Karenina (R) (( Aquarius Theatre: 2:15, 5:15 & 8:15 p.m. Argo (R) (((1/2 Century 16: 3:30 & 10:40 p.m. Century 20: 7:10 & 9:55 p.m. Because of Him (1946) (Not Rated) (Not Reviewed) Stanford Theatre: Sat.-Mon. at 7:30 p.m.; Sat. & Sun. also at 4:05 p.m. Can’t Help Singing (1944) (Not Rated) (Not Reviewed) Stanford Theatre: Fri. at 7:30 p.m. Chasing Ice (PG-13) ((1/2 Aquarius Theatre: 3, 5, 7 & 8:45 p.m. Cirque du Soleil: Worlds Away (Not Rated) (Not Reviewed) Century 16: 9:30 a.m.; In 3D at noon, 2:40, 5:20, 8:10 & 10:45 p.m. Century 20: 1:20 p.m.; In 3D at 11 a.m.; 3:40, 6, 8:20 & 10:40 p.m. Django Unchained (R) ((( Century 16: 9:40 & 11 a.m.; 1:20, 3, 5:20, 7, 9:30 & 10:40 p.m. Century 20: 11:10 a.m.; 2:45, 6:25 & 10 p.m. The Guilt Trip (PG-13) (( Century 16: 10 a.m.; 12:50, 3:40, 6:40 & 9:50 p.m. Century 20: 10:45 a.m.; 1:30, 4:35, 7 & 9:30 p.m. Hitchcock (PG-13) (( Guild Theatre: 1, 3:30, 6 & 8:30 p.m. The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey (PG-13) ((( Century 16: 10:10 a.m.; 2:10, 6:05 & 10:20 p.m.; In 3D at 9:30 & 11:40 a.m.; 1:20, 5:30, 7 & 9:40 p.m. Century 20: 10:50 a.m.; 1:35, 2:35, 6:15, 9:10 & 10:10 p.m.; In 3D at 12:30, 4:10, 5:10 & 8:05 p.m. Hyde Park on Hudson (R) (( Palo Alto Square: 1:30, 4:30, 7:25 & 9:45 p.m. I’ll Be Yours (1947) (Not Rated) (Not Reviewed) Stanford Theatre: Sat.-Mon. at 5:45 & 9:10 p.m. Jack Reacher (PG-13) ((1/2 Century 16: 9:35 a.m.; 12:40, 4:05, 7:30 & 10:50 p.m. Century 20: 10:25 & 11:45 a.m.; 1:20, 2:50, 4:20, 5:55, 7:25, 9 & 10:30 p.m. Lady on a Train (1945) (Not Rated) (Not Reviewed) Stanford Theatre: Fri. at 5:45 & 9:10 p.m. Les MisÊrables (2012) (PG-13) ((( Century 16: 9:30 & 11 a.m.; 1:10, 3, 5:10, 7, 9:10, 9:40 & 10:35 p.m. Century 20: 11:25 a.m.; 1, 3:15, 4:30, 6:45, 8 & 10:15 p.m. Life of Pi (PG) (((1/2 Century 20: 10:30 a.m.; In 3D at 1:45, 4:40, 7:40 & 10:35 p.m. Palo Alto Square: 1 p.m.; In 3D at 4, 7 & 10 p.m. Lincoln (PG-13) (((1/2 Century 16: 10:40 a.m.; 2:50, 6:30 & 9:55 p.m. Century 20: 12:20, 3:35, 6:55 & 10:20 p.m. Monsters, Inc. (G) (((1/2 Century 16: 9:30 a.m.; In 3D at 11:55 a.m.; 2:20, 4:45 & 7:20 p.m. Century 20: 10:35 a.m.; In 3D at 1, 3:25, 5:50 & 8:15 p.m. Parental Guidance (PG) 1/2 Century 16: 9:40 a.m.; 12:20, 3:20, 6:20 & 9:20 p.m. Century 20: 11:55 a.m.; 2:30, 5:05, 7:45 & 10:25 p.m. Rise of the Guardians (PG) ((1/2 Century 20: 10:55 a.m. & 6:30 p.m.; In 3D at 12:10, 2:40 & 8:55 p.m. Silver Linings Playbook (R) (Not Reviewed) Century 16: 10 a.m.; 1, 4, 7:20 & 10:10 p.m. Century 20: 11:35 a.m.; 2:15, 5, 7:50 & 10:35 p.m. Skyfall (PG-13) (((1/2 Century 16: 9:45 a.m.; 12:55, 4:10, 7:25 & 10:40 p.m. Century 20: 12:45, 3:55, 7:20 & 10:30 p.m. Something in the Wind (1947) (Not Rated) (Not Reviewed) Stanford Theatre: Tue.-Thu. at 7:30 p.m. This Is 40 (R) ((1/2 Century 16: 9:35 a.m.; 12:50, 4, 7:30 & 10:45 p.m. Century 20: 11:20 a.m.; 12:55, 2:20, 4, 5:25, 7:05, 8:30 & 10:10 p.m. Up in Central Park (1948) (Not Rated) (Not Reviewed) Stanford Theatre: Tue.-Thu. at 5:50 & 9:15 p.m. Wreck-It Ralph (PG) ((( Century 20: 11:05 a.m.; 1:50 & 4:25 p.m. Zero Dark Thirty (R) (Not Reviewed) Century 20: Thu. at 12:01 a.m.

( Skip it (( Some redeeming qualities ((( A good bet (((( Outstanding 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) CinĂŠArts at Palo Alto Square: 3000 El Camino Real, Palo Alto (493-3456) Guild: 949 El Camino Real, Menlo Park (266-9260) Stanford: 221 University Ave., Palo Alto (324-3700) Internet address: For show times, plot synopses, trailers and more information about films playing, go to PaloAltoOnline.com/movies


Sports Shorts

STANFORD FOOTBALL

A step up from state title

LIN AN ALL-STAR? . . . The 62nd annual NBA All-Star Game will be played on Feb. 17, 2013 at the Toyota Center in Houston, which means Palo Alto High grad Jeremy Lin of the Houston Rockets won’t have to travel to watch the action. Most likely, Lin may not have to travel in order to BE in the action. Lin currently ranks No. 3 among vote-getters for the Western Conference backcourt. He trails only Kobe Bryant of the Lakers (977,444 votes) and Chris Paul of the Clippers (542,564). Lin had 496,133 votes as of Thursday morning and ranks ahead of teammate James Harden (283,691, Russell Westbrook (232,074), Steve Nash (166,262, Tony Parker (111,032), Ricky Rubio (96,466), Stephen Curry of the Golden State Warriors (78,380) and Manu Ginobili (70,813).

Saturday Women’s basketball: Connecticut at Stanford, 1 p.m.; ESPNU; KZSU (90.1 FM) Men’s basketball: Lafayette at Stanford, 7:30 p.m.; Pac-12 Networks; KNBR (1050 AM)

Tuesday College football: Stanford vs. Wisconsin; 1:30 p.m.; ESPN; KNBR (1050 AM)

READ MORE ONLINE

www.PASportsOnline.com For expanded daily coverage of college and prep sports, please see our new site at www.PASportsOnline.com

Palo Alto High grad Kevin Anderson (48) used to list the Vikings’ 2010 state championship as his special football moment, but that has been replaced by Stanford’s trip to the 2013 Rose Bowl game set for Tuesday.

El Camino Real to play football at Stanford, will be with his eighthranked Cardinal teammates getting ready for Stanford’s first appearance in the Rose Bowl in 13 years. “I never envisioned myself playing there, even though it has been a goal here all along,” Anderson said. “I’m definitely looking forward to it.” (continued on page 27)

Rose Bowl game leaves a lasting impression Former quarterbacks Plunkett, Husak recall their special day by Mark Soltau or only the fourth time since 1970, the Stanford football team is Rose Bowl-bound. Jim Plunkett and Todd Husak quarterbacked their respective teams in Pasadena — Plunkett in 1971 and Husak in 2000 — and have unique perspectives on the game, the atmosphere and the similarities between their clubs and the current Cardinal squad. “No. 1, going to the Rose Bowl was our goal when we got to Stanford,” said Plunkett, who engineered a 2717 upset over Ohio State and was named the game’s MVP. “They’d been absent for 16 years when I got there. That’s what we set out to do. Guys like Bob Moore, Jack Lasater, Randy Vataha, John Sande, and list goes on and on. We were all a year apart and trying to make Stanford a better football program. We worked hard, set our goals, and were very fortunate to achieve them.” What was the New Year’s Day experience like? “Up to that point, it was the most exciting day of my football career,” Plunkett said. “I can’t tell you how excited I was to be there playing in that game against a great Ohio State team. I keep telling this story, but if we had played them 10 times, they would have won nine of them. Our

F

Don Feria/stanfordphoto.com

ON THE AIR

K

David Gonzales/stanfordphoto.com

LUCK GOES LONG WAY . . . Stanford grad and current Indianapolis Colts’ quarterback Andrew Luck set the record for yards passing by an NFL rookie when he threw for 123 in the first half of Sunday’s game against the host Kansas City Chiefs. Luck entered play 74 yards shy of Cam Newton’s mark of 4,051 yards. He surpassed it during a drive that ended with a field goal, giving the Colts a 13-3 halftime lead. Luck finished with 205 yards passing, which included the winning throw, a 7-yard scoring toss to Reggie Wayne in the fourth quarter. The Colts, 2-14 last year, clinched a playoff berth with the 20-13 victory over the Chiefs.

by Rick Eymer evin Anderson’s best football moment was helping Palo Alto High win the CIF Division I Bowl state championship game two years ago. On Tuesday, that’s about to change. Anderson, who stepped across the

Grant Shorin/stanfordphoto.com

FAMILY AFFAIR . . . Stanford women’s basketball head coach Tara VanDerveer already has Bonnie Samuelson on her roster and younger sister, Karlie, will be joining the Cardinal next season. By the time Bonnie departs, Stanford could have a third Samuelson, Katie Lou, on The Farm. That scenario certainly is possible and would give Stanford plenty of outside shooting for years to come. While Karlie is a senior at Mater Dei in Orange County, Katie Lou is just a sophomore on the same team. Both combined talents last weekend to help Matei Dei win the top bracket at the Nike Tournament of Champions event in Phoenix, Ariz. In a 96-74 victory over previously unbeaten River Baptist (Upper Marlboro, Md.), the No. 5-ranked team in the nation according to MaxPreps, Karlie Samuelson scored 36 points and grabbed 11 rebounds while Katie Lou tallied 27 points. The sisters wound up sharing Most Valuable Player honors.

Palo Alto High grad Anderson has a new best football moment

For Jim Plunkett, the ‘71 Rose Bowl was the highlight of his career at that point. guys played as well as we possibly could. We weren’t to be denied that day.” Plunkett played for John Ralston, who would coach Stanford to another Rose Bowl win the following year against Michigan behind the late quarterback Don Bunce. Husak played for Tyrone Willingham. “For me, it was playing in a game that I had watched on TV every year,” said Husak, a Southern California native. “It was a tradition. Not just for my family, but I think

For Todd Husak, the 2000 Rose Bowl game is something he’ll always remember.

families around the country. I think that’s why it’s so special for a lot of Stanford guys from the East or Midwest who probably did not attend the game, but might have been home in the snow watching it, seeing the sunny skies and beautiful California weather. There is so much history and a tremendous atmosphere with the fans. To walk out in front of that crowd is special and something I will always remember.” Husak’s Cardinal team put up a strong fight against heavily-favored

Wisconsin before falling, 17-9. “We were such tremendous underdogs going into that game,” Husak said. “It will be a little different this time around. Wisconsin was a strong team with a Heisman Trophy running back in Ron Dayne. I think people expected them to come in and roll over us. There wasn’t the pressure or focus on Stanford as a team.” This year’s Stanford team has (continued on page 28)

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Sports COLLEGE BASKETBALL

It’s more than just No. 1 vs. 2 UConn at Stanford women features a showdown of ‘frenemies’ by Rick Eymer hiney Ogwumike and Bria Hartley share a friendship that transcends basketball. They’ve worn the same USA uniform and played together for various U.S. Junior National teams in addition to playing against each other in AAU and college competition. When the two junior All-American players take the court Saturday for No. 1 Stanford’s nonconference game with No. 2 Connecticut at Maples Pavilion, Ogwumike said they will be “frenemies.” For the third time in the past four years, Stanford (11-0) and Connecticut (10-0) meet as the top two teams in the country. The game, to be televised on ESPNU at 1 p.m., has been sold out for over a week. Stanford remained undefeated thanks to last Saturday’s 73-60 win at Tennessee, in which Ogwumike scored 21 points and grabbed 19 rebounds and earned the Pac-12 Player of the Week honors. The Cardinal men (8-4) also play Saturday, hosting Lafayette (5-9) at 7:30 p.m. Tickets remain available for the nightcap, which will be televised by the Pac-12 Networks. “Bria is one of my closest friends in life,” Ogwumike said Thursday. “We’ve played the same AAU Nike circuit and developed a friendly rivalry. With USA, I always competed with her and always had so much fun.” Being in the same recruiting class, they often spoke with each other during the process. They thought they might play together before deciding on their respective schools. “We talked about how great it would be to play together,” Ogwumike said. “We have different interests, of course. We’re friends everywhere except on the basketball court when we play each other. That’s when we’re best frenemies.” Hartley said that once they step on the court, it’s all about winning. “We’re both competitive,” she said. “Before and after the game we’ll still talk and laugh.” There’s plenty at stake when two of the women’s heavyweights square off beside the No. 1 ranking. Two years ago Stanford snapped the Huskies’ NCAA-record 90-game winning streak with a 71-57 victory at Maples Pavilion. “Any loss is frustrating and that one stuck with us,” Huskies’ senior guard Kelly Faris said. “We all thought we were unstoppable and that opened our eyes. I want to leave here with a different feeling and a lot better record.” The Cardinal brings an 82-game home winning streak into Saturday’s

C

TABLE TENNIS

Palo Alto’s Zhang wins first U.S. national title Paly junior avenges loss in last year’s national championships by Keith Peters

I

t has been a very busy year for Palo Alto’s Lily Zhang, who is quickly rising to the top of the table tennis world. The 16-year-old Palo Alto High junior started the year by making the U.S. Olympic team and later competing in the London Games. Just this month, she competed at the World Junior Championships and U.S. Championships, just a few days apart. Zhang capped her best year yet in the sport by winning her first U.S. National women’s singles championship on Saturday in Las Vegas. She also earned a silver medal in doubles. ‘It was really a great moment,” Zhang said Thursday morning of her first U.S. Championship title at the senior level. “For the past three months I’ve been working really hard with my coaches, so the hard work paid off.” Zhang won three preliminary matches leading up to the finals, where she defeated fellow 2012 Olympian and former training partner, April Hsing of San Jose, 11-6, 11-5, 7-11, 11-2, 9-11, 6-11, 11-9. The victory avenged Zhang’s loss to Hsing in the same title match in 2011. “I was happy to avenge that loss,”

Zhang said. “We both were expecting us to be in the finals.” Hsing was seeded No. 2 and Zhang No. 4. The top seed was Jasna Rather, Zhang’s doubles partner. She was upset in an earlier round by No. 5 seed Erica S. Wu. Zhang then topped Wu in the semifinals. In addition to the gold in singles and the silver in doubles, Zhang lost in the semifinals in Mixed Doubles, lost in the semifinals in the Girls’ 21-under singles and finished second in the Jr. Girls Teams. All that action was spread over five days, just one day after a long plane flight from India. Just a few days before the U.S. Championships got under way, Zhang was busy at the World Junior Championships from Dec. 9-16 in Hyderabad. Zhang made the quarterfinals of Under 18 Girls’ Singles, regarded as probably the best showing of a U.S. junior at the World Junior Championships. In reaching the quarterfinals, Zhang knocked off the No. 5 seed (Bernadette Szocs of Romania) and No. 6 seed (Petrissa Solja of Germany), before losing to the No. 4 seed (Gu Rouchen of China). “Both were really big tournaments,” said Zhang. “Both were really good experiences for me.” N

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John Todd/isiphotos.com

Veronica Weber

Palo Alto High junior Lily Zhang won her first U.S. Championships title in women’s singles at the senior level last weekend in Las Vegas.

Chiney Ogwumike (13) scored six points her freshman year during Stanford’s 71-59 upset of then-No. 1 UConn. The teams will meet again Saturday in Maples Pavilion, this time Stanford is No. 1. contest, a streak that Connecticut would love to end. Stanford’s last home loss was to Florida State in the second round of the NCAA tournament in 2007. “To end their streak is not why we came out here,” Faris said. “Sure, we want to win and the streak is in the back of our minds, but you just hope you learn from it. The whole streak thing — if you’re focusing on that you’re focusing on the wrong thing.” The Huskies are 13-3 in games featuring the nation’s top two teams, including a 3-0 record against Stanford, all three when the Cardinal was ranked second. Connecticut is 4-5 all-time against the No. 1 team, including 2-4 on the road. The Huskies have lost their last three games against the topranked team, including Stanford in 2005. They have not won on the road against a No. 1 team since 2004, at Tennessee. Stanford is 6-7 in its all-time series with the Huskies, including 3-0 at Maples Pavilion. The Huskies also visited in 1988, 1993 (when ESPN analyst Rebecca Lobo was playing for UConn) and 2010. “We’re not going to get on a plane and fly 3,000 miles just to play anybody,” Huskies’ coach Geno Auriemma said. “We’re here to play Stanford. For the three freshmen and three sophomores who play a lot, this is an important game for them win or lose.” The Cardinal is 1-7 in games featuring the nation’s top two teams, with its only win coming against Alabama in 1996 at Maples Pavilion. The Huskies represent the second time a No. 1 vs. No. 2 match-up will be held at Maples Pavilion.

“We’re excited to get back at it,” Cardinal coach Tara VanDerveer said. “There couldn’t be a better way to get it restarted than with UConn. The last time UConn played here, the word electric would describe it.” While Stanford plays well at home, Ogwumike said it would be a mistake to expect to win. “You have to work to win,” Ogwumike said. “Every year you get new players and the streak is different for them. For me it’s like being back in a comfort zone here at home. It is sort of a relief to be at Maples.” The men’s team is probably thinking the same thing. Stanford is 5-1 at home this year and is coming off its first true road win last Friday, a 70-68 victory at Northwestern. Josh Huestis stepped up with a career-high 18 points and 12 rebounds in the victory, while walk-on freshman guard Robbie Lemons made his first career start and added 12 points, all on 3-pointers. The emergence of Lemons gives the Cardinal a lot of depth in the backcourt, while Huestis’ ability to fill in when Dwight Powell (8 points on 4 of 12 shooting and 6 rebounds) has a rare off night will also prove important as the season progresses. Powell continues to lead the team in scoring with his 14.9 average. Chasson Randle, who leads the team with 41 assists, is next at 13.6. Huestis averages 9.4 points, 8.5 rebounds and leads the team with 30 blocked shots. Lafayette is coming off a 75-60 loss to Minnesota, a team that also beat Stanford. The Leopards have three players who hail from Northern California. N


Sports

Anderson (continued from page 25)

Stanford (11-2) and Wisconsin (8-5) meet in Pasadena for the 99th Rose Bowl on January 1, 2013, with a scheduled kickoff of 2 p.m. (PT) on ESPN. Anderson, a redshirt freshman, won’t be some sideline observer either. The 6-foot-4, 250-pound outside linebacker, worked his way into the rotation and has been contributing to Stanford’s defensive success all year. Anderson has appeared in all 13 games as a special teams player and a linebacker. He recorded two sacks among his seven tackles on the year, helping the Cardinal lead the nation in sacks (56, a 4.31 average per game), and tackles for a loss (120, 9.31 average). Stanford ranks third in rushing defense (87.69), 14th in scoring defense (17.46) and 21st in total defense (338.92). Anderson has had a hand in all of it. “We all take pride in being the best at what we do,� Anderson said. “What we do best is rush and play defense. We take it play by play.� Anderson plays alongside linebackers Shayne Skov, Chase Thomas, Trent Murphy, Jarek Lancaster, A.J. Tarpley, Alex Debniak and James Vaughters to form one of the toughest, most cohesive units in the country. Thomas and Murphy were named first team All-Pac-12 selections and Murphy was named a third team All-American by Associated Press. “We always say we have 22 guys who can play on defense,� Murphy said. “Our four outside linebackers (Thomas, Murphy, Debniak and Anderson) could play at any university. We help each other out and can talk about what we see.� The four outside backers combined for 23 1/2 sacks and 38 1/2 tackles for a loss. Murphy led the team in both categories with 10 sacks and 18 tackles for a loss. Anderson added a pass break-

up, a pass deflection and a forced fumble to his resume. Not bad for a guy who came to Stanford as a defensive end. “I was moved to linebacker right away,� said Anderson, whose biggest adjustment was dropping back into pass coverage. “I had to work hard to get stronger and I think I’m more suited as an outside linebacker.� Anderson had no illusions when he arrived at Stanford in the fall of 2011, just after the Cardinal was victorious in its visit to the Orange Bowl, its second appearance in a BCS bowl game since the inception of the BCS for the 1998 season. “I figured I would come in, work hard and play when a spot opened up,� said Anderson, who spent an informative year on the scout team and eventually earning the Greg Piers Team Award for outstanding contributions to Stanford’s scout team. Anderson calls himself more of a football fan than a fan of any specific team, perhaps a politically correct way to stay in good graces with parents who graduated from California. Anderson was born at Stanford Hospital and has not strayed too far. Former Stanford coach Jim Harbaugh, a Palo Alto grad himself, told him as a junior he would be offered. Scout.com listed him as the nation’s 41st best defensive end prospect as a senior. “The No. 1 thing was how good the school was academically,� said Anderson, who could have played right away at a number of other colleges. “It came down to how well I liked the coaches and the players and how good the team was.� With the Orange Bowl trophy in hand, and Andrew Luck returning for another year, Anderson’s decision was made easy. He’s been part of Stanford history, three consecutive 11-plus win seasons and a third straight BCS bowl game. This one, the grandaddy of them all. “It’s exciting,� Anderson said. “Last year I was on the scout team

STANFORD FOOTBALL BOWL HISTORY (10-12-1) YEAR

BOWL

RESULT

2011 2010 2009 2011 2000 1996 1995 1993 1991 1986 1978 1977 1972 1971 1952 1941 1936 1935 1934 1928 1927 1924 1902

Fiesta Bowl Orange Bowl Sun Bowl Seattle Bowl Rose Bowl Sun Bowl Liberty Bowl Blockbuster Bowl Aloha Bowl Gator Bowl Bluebonnet Bowl Sun Bowl Rose Bowl Rose Bowl Rose Bowl Rose Bowl Rose Bowl Rose Bowl Rose Bowl Rose Bowl Rose Bowl Rose Bowl Rose Bowl

Oklahoma St. 41, Stanford 38 (OT) Stanford 40, Virginia Tech 12 Oklahoma 31, Stanford 27 Georgia Tech 24, Stanford 14 Wisconsin 17, Stanford 9 Stanford 38, Michigan State 0 East Carolina 19, Stanford 13 Stanford 24, Penn State 3 Georgia Tech 18, Stanford 17 Clemson 27, Stanford 21 Stanford 25, Georgia 22 Stanford 24, Louisiana State 14 Stanford 13, Michigan 12 Stanford 27, Ohio State 17 Illinois 40, Stanford 7 Stanford 21, Nebraska 13 Stanford 7, SMU 0 Alabama 29, Stanford 13 Columbia 7, Stanford 0 Stanford 7, Pittsburgh 6 Stanford 7, Alabama 7 Notre Dame 27, Stanford 10 Michigan 49, Stanford 0

Avenidas presents its 2nd Annual Financial Conference helping the offense. This year I’m helping the team on special teams and defense.� He’s become part of a rotation that doesn’t seem to drop off no matter what personnel are on the field. “He’s definitely a strong athlete,� Murphy said. “I know he started inside and then moved outside and responded well. We’ve all been impressed at how well he did and that he is able to hold his own. I think the hardest thing was adjusting to the game speed. He’s been impressive.� Anderson, as a two-way lineman, helped Palo Alto compile a 14-0 mark (best in school history) and the No. 2 ranking in the state in that remarkable 2010 season. Two of his former Paly teammates already have appeared in bowl games this season. Maurice Williams caught a pass for the College of San Mateo in its win over Sierra in the Bulldog Bowl and Davante Adams caught 13 passes for 144 yards and a touchdown for Fresno State, which lost to SMU in the Hawaii Bowl. Now, it’s Kevin Anderson’s turn. N

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Sports

No Mickey Mouse affair as Stanford prepares for Rose Bowl

by Dave Kiefer tanford’s charter plane touched down in sunny Los Angeles at 10:35 a.m. on Wednesday. But the Cardinal did not truly arrive for the Rose Bowl Game until that afternoon when coach David Shaw and several players burst through the entrance to Sleeping Beauty’s Castle. To the strains of “All Right Now,” played by middle-aged men in traditional band uniforms, the Stanford contingent was greeted by fans, executives, the Rose Queen, and even Mickey Mouse -- whom linebacker Chase Thomas greeted with a bear hug. It may not be chiseled in stone, not even at the Matterhorn, but it yet it seems to be fact that the Rose Bowl Game would not seem real without a trip to Disneyland. For Stanford, this was its first such visit since 1999 and the second in 42 years. And, even though Stanford is playing in its third consecutive BCS bowl, there’s nothing like the Rose Bowl. To Stanford, this is its Super Bowl, the game the team annually strives to reach. “The fact that we earned this bowl

S

based on winning our conference definitely makes it even more special,” Thomas said. “Just for the name — the Granddaddy of Them All -- this is where you want to be,” safety Ed Reynolds said. “It’s the biggest and greatest bowl you could want to go to for a college football player.”

The Rose Bowl matches what may be the two best running backs in the nation in Stanford’s Stepfan Taylor and Wisconsin’s Montee Ball, the 2012 Doak Walker Award winner to the top collegiate running back and 2011 Heisman finalist. Taylor, Stanford’s all-time leading rusher, has not received the awards or honors of Ball, but has just as impressive to many, including his teammates. “Montee Ball’s an incredible play-

Quarterbacks (continued from page 25)

2012 STANFORD HIGHLIGHTS Pac-12 Conference champion N A third straight BCS bowl appearance N A third straight 11-win season N A three-year record of 34-5 N Five wins over ranked opponents (most in FBS) N Wins over AP No. 1 & and No. 2 teams in regular season (first team to do that since 2000) N Improving school record of 46 straight weeks ranked in the AP Top 25 N Nation’s No. 1 team in sacks & tackles for loss; No. 3 in rushing defense N

the job these guys have done. Now, if they don’t win a game or if it’s even close, you kind of say, `What’s going on?’ You expect them to go to a bowl game every year, and that’s a good feeling.” Said Husak, “They did something no other team in Stanford history has done: beat four straight ranked

David Gonzales

been characterized by a power running game and stout defense that leads the nation in sacks and tackles for losses. It has proven resilient, winning many tight games, and athletic sophomore Kevin Hogan has emerged as a clutch quarterback who finds ways to win. He is unbeaten in four starts. “As far as offering advice to a guy like Kevin Hogan, I’m sure he gets enough advice from the people around him,” said Plunkett, who, in 1970, received Stanford’s only Heisman Trophy. “I’ve seen him keep Stanford in the game time after time with his play. “At times, he’s electrifying the way he can run around and make big plays when they’re needed. And that’s what it takes. Sometimes you get outplayed and face a team that’s doing a pretty good job, but you fight and scratch and find a way to come out on top. That’s what’s important.” Husak, who works with fellow Stanford graduate Dave Flemming on all Stanford football radio broadcasts, said the only advice he would give Hogan is to soak up the Rose Bowl. “Enjoy being a part of all the events and focus on preparing and winning the game,” he said. “As great as that experience was for me, losing that game left a sour taste in all the mouths of all the Stanford guys that played in it.” Like Husak, Plunkett will attend the game and root hard for Hogan and the Cardinal. Both are unabashed in the pride they feel for Stanford football. “These guys worked hard and accomplished a great deal in the last three years, starting with (Jim) Harbaugh and David Shaw (Bradford M. Freeman Director of Football),” said Plunkett. “I feel tremendous pride in

er,” Stanford center Sam Schwartzstein said. “He’s had one of the most impressive careers in ever to grace the running back position. But I think Stepfan is the best player in the country: offense, defense, special teams, across the board. “He does the seen and unseen things that make a great running back -- pass protection, catching the ball out of the backfield and he doesn’t wait for anybody else to make the big play. He decides when the big play is going to happen.” Ball has more yards rushing (1,730) and touchdowns (21) than Taylor (1,499 and 14). But Taylor also has 38 catches to Ball’s nine. **** Taylor refuses to get caught up in any personal challenge of trying to outplay Ball. “I really can’t think that way,” Taylor said. “If I do that, I’m going to hurt my teammates. I’m not going to go out there play for my stats. I owe it to my team to give then 100 percent of my focus and concentration to win this game.” **** Wisconsin likes the power running game, and Stanford likes the

Rose Bowl tickets are going for $150 and higher.

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power running game. Something has got to give. “It’s a matter of which team is going to execute better,” Schwartzstein said. “We need to execute like we’re performing surgery, you’ve got to have that precision. That’s how we want to do it and that’s how we’re going to try to attack these guys.” **** Thomas is willing to concede to Wisconsin — in the Beef Bowl last night at Lawry’s Prime Rib in Beverly Hills. “Wisconsin’s got some big boys,” he said. “They’ll probably win that one.” **** Is this the best defense in Stanford history? For a team that set a school record for sacks (56) and intercepted 14 passes while holding opponents to 17.5 points per game in an era of no-huddle, spread offenses, it could be true. “If you ask any of us, we would take on any Stanford defense put in front of us,” Reynolds said. “We do a very good job at what makes defenses great, which is sacks, causing turnovers, getting off the field on third down, and minimizing an

offense’s capacity to do what it does best.” **** Despite the good feelings about winning the Pac-12 title and reaching the Rose Bowl, the work is not done. Last season’s 41-38 overtime loss to Oklahoma State at the Fiesta Bowl has not been forgotten. “We’ve still got a chip on our shoulder,” Thomas said. “It carries over from last year’s bowl game, not being able to close that one out. We definitely know that feeling of losing. It doesn’t sit well with us.” **** There are challenges to playing Wisconsin that go beyond Ball. “Montee is the Doak Walker Award winner, he’s earned that right,” Reynolds said. “But they have a couple of other guys that run their Wildcat and their fly sweeps. They get you focused on the run and then they get you with a play-action over the top. That’s how they beat you. They kind of just grind you out.” N (Dave Kiefer is a member of the Stanford Media Relations Department)

ATHLETES OF THE WEEK

Pac-12’s No. 1 scoring defense N Two-time Pac-12 Coach of the Year; Paul “Bear” Bryant and Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year finalist David Shaw N Unanimous All-American and Mackey Award finalist TE Zach Ertz N School career rushing leader RB Stepfan Taylor N Lott IMPACT Trophy finalist OLB Chase Thomas N Consensus All-American OT/ OG David Yankey N AFCA Academic Achievement Award (100 percent GSR) N

teams to clinch the Pac-12 championship and go to the Rose Bowl. Not just that, but what the program has done is re-set the bar. Now the expectations are so high each and every year, it’s become a top-five program in the country.” More importantly to Plunkett, Stanford hasn’t taken any shortcuts or compromised its high academic standards. “It goes to show you what can be accomplished here at Stanford,” he said. “There’s a bunch of good kids out there and they do a great job of representing Stanford. We (wife, Gerry) live vicariously through Stanford football and all the other sports they have at Stanford. I couldn’t be prouder of a bunch of guys.” Husak agreed. “As Coach Shaw said the other day: Kids don’t have to choose football over education,” said Husak. “You can get the best education in the country, win a conference championship and play in a BCS game. I think that’s an incredible achievement by everybody involved.” N Mark Soltau writes for Stanford Athletics/gostanford.com

Drew Edelman

Zoe Zwerling

Menlo School

Gunn High

The senior center produced 59 points while helping the Knights win three basketball games while capturing the championship of the Santa Barbara Tournament and being named to the all-tournament team.

The junior guard produced 50 points, 20 rebounds and 12 steals during a 2-1 basketball week that included a second-place finish at the McNair Winter Classic and a berth on the all-tournament team.

Honorable mention Leeana Bade

Eric Cramer

Pinewood basketball

Gunn wrestling

MacKenzie Duffner

Aubrey Dawkins

Menlo basketball

Claire Klausner Gunn basketball

Cadence Lee Gunn wrestling

Hannah Paye Menlo basketball

Maddy Price Menlo basketball

Palo Alto basketball

Jordan Gans Palo Alto wrestling

Gary Hobach Palo Alto wrestling

Blaze Lee Gunn wrestling

Mathias Schmutz Palo Alto basketball * previous winner

To see video interviews of the Athletes of the Week, go to www.PASportsOnline.com


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Did You Know that ten million adults tweeted in the past month, while 164 million read a newspaper in print or online in the past week? Advertise in 240 California newspapers for one low cost. Your 25 word classified ad will reach over 6 million+ Californians. For brochure call Elizabeth (916)288-6019. (Cal-SCAN)

135 Group Activities

REACH 5 MILLION hip, forward-thinking consumers across the U.S. When you advertise in alternative newspapers, you become part of the local scene and gain access to an audience you won’t reach anywhere else. http://www.altweeklies.com/ads

LOST MAN’S WALLET Lost wallet in Palo Alto on Sat., 12/08/’12, between Crepevine restaurant on Univ. Ave., Union Bank parking lot at Uni. and Waverly and 7-11 at Lytton and Waverly. Please call (650) 328-6709. Reward. Thanks.

Dance Classes - Ages 3 & Up Dance Expressions - Ages 3 & up Infidelity Support pianist for Holiday performances Stanford music tutoring Teen Jazz

130 Classes & Instruction AIRLINE CAREERS Become an Aviation Maintenance Tech. FAA approved training. Financial aid if qualified - Housing available. Job placement assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance 877-492-3059 (AAN CAN)

Thanks to St Jude

140 Lost & Found lost knitted glove

Notice of Found/Unclaimed Prop. Pursuant to Sections 2080 through 2080.5 of the California Civil Code, notice is hereby given that the Mountain View Police Department has in its possession a silver band w/clear stones recovered on Hope St. in Mountain View. The owner(s) of such property are hereby notified that seven (7) days following publication of this notice, if no owner appears and proves their ownership of such property, that the title shall then vest in the person or entity that found the property. The owner, in the case of proving their ownership of such property, shall pay all reasonable charges for storing, advertising, etc of such property incurred by the City. CLAIM OF ITEM SHOULD BE MADE TO: Mountain View Police Dept., Property & Evidence Unit, 1000 Villa St. (650) 903-6375

ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from Home. *Medical, *Business, *Criminal Justice, *Hospitality. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. SCHEV authorized. Call 800481-9472 www.CenturaOnline.com (AAN CAN)

145 Non-Profits Needs

Attend College Online 100% *Medical, *Business, *Criminal Justice, *Hospitality, *Web. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. SCHEV authorized. Call 888-210-5162 www.CenturaOnline.com (Cal-SCAN)

Fosterers Needed for Moffet Cats

Aviation Maintenance Tech Airline careers begin here. FAA approved training. Financial assistance available. Job placement assistance. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance 888-242-3382. (Cal-SCAN) EARN $500 A DAY Airbrush & Media Makeup Artists For: Ads - TV - Film - Fashion Train & Build Portfolio in 1 week. Lower Tuition for 2012. AwardMakeupSchool.com 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

Music Lessons for All Ages! Find a music teacher! TakeLessons offers affordable, safe, guaranteed music lessons with teachers in your area. Our prescreened teachers specialize in singing, guitar, piano, drums, violin and more. Call 1- 866-974-5910! (Cal-SCAN)

Barton-Holding Music Studio Accepting new students for private vocal lessons. All levels. Call Laura Barton, 650/965-0139

Old TVs Needed

150 Volunteers FRIENDS OF THE PA LIBRARY

For Sale 201 Autos/Trucks/ Parts

Drexel Heritage sofa and arm cha $600

245 Miscellaneous AT&T U-verse for just $29/mo! Bundle and 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) Cable TV-Internet-Phone Save! Digital packages start at $89.99/ mo (for 12 months.) Options from all major service providers. Call Acceller today to learn more! Call 1-888-897-7650. (Cal-SCAN) Highspeed Internet everywhere by satellite! Speeds up to 12mbps! (200x faster than dial-up.) Starting at $49.95/mo. Call now and go fast! 1-888-718-6268. (Cal-SCAN) Seasoned, Split Firewood Seasoned, split Oak - $250 (650)365-4345, cash & pick-up only

560 Employment Information

615 Computers

$$$HELP WANTED$$$ Extra Income! Assembling CD cases from Home! No Experience Necessary! Call our Live Operators Now! 1-800405-7619 EXT 2450 http://www. easywork-greatpay.com (AAN CAN)

Schwinn Airdyne Comp bicycle - $340

425 Health Services Medical Alert for Seniors 24/7 monitoring. Free Equipment. Free Shipping. Nationwide Service. $29.95/ Month CALL Medical Guardian Today 866-944-5935. (Cal-SCAN) Sleep Apnea Sufferers with Medicare. Get FREE CPAP Replacement Supplies at No Cost, plus FREE home delivery! Best of all, prevent red skin sores and bacterial infection! Call 888-699-7660. (Cal-SCAN)

624 Financial

Driver: $1000 Bonus (1st 30 Hired) Up to 47 cpm New Equipment. Need CDL Class A Driving Exp. 877-258-8782 www.ad-drivers. com (Cal-SCAN)

Credit Card Debt? Gete free now! Cut payments by up to half. Stop creditors from calling.

Driver: Quarterly Bonus $0.03 enhanced quarterly bonus. Get paid for any portion you qualify for: safety, production, MPG. CDL-A, 3 months current OTR exp. 800-4149569 www.driveknight.com (Cal-SCAN)

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)

Drivers: Class A CDL driver training. $0 training. Cost with employment commitment if you enroll in the month of December! Central Refrigerated (877) 369-7126. www. CentralTruckDrivingJobs.com (Cal-SCAN) HELP WANTED!!! MAKE $1000 A WEEK mailing brochures from home! FREE Supplies! Helping Home Workers since 2001! Genuine Opportunity! No Experience required. Start Immediately! www.mailing-usa.com (AAN CAN)

420 Healing/ Bodywork

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)

Business Services

888-416-2691. (Cal-SCAN)

645 Office/Home Business Services Classified Advertising The business that considers itself immune to advertising, finds itself immune to business. Reach Californians with a Classified in almost every county! Over 270 newspapers! Combo~California Daily and Weekly Networks. Free Brochures. elizabeth@ cnpa.com or (916)288-6019. (Cal-SCAN) Display Business Card Ad Many a small thing has been made large by the right kind of advertising - Mark Twain. Advertise your Business Card sized ad in 140 California newspapers for one low cost. Reach over 3 million+ Californians. Free brochure elizabeth@cnpa.com (916)288-6019. (Cal-SCAN)

604 Adult Care Offered Caregiver Available Licensed. Call Doris, 650/754-3543

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Today’s news, sports & hot picks

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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

Suzuki 1987 Samurai - $6000

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) Donate Your Car, Truck, Boat to Heritage for the Blind. Free 3 Day Vacation, Tax Deductible, Free Towing, All Paperwork Taken Care Of. 888-902-6851. (Cal-SCAN)

133 Music Lessons

A Piano Teacher Children and Adults Ema Currier, 650/493-4797

DONATE BOOKS/HELP PA LIBRARIES

240 Furnishings/ Household items

215 Collectibles & Antiques Circa 1850 parlor couch - $1900

235 Wanted to Buy Diabetic Test Strips Wanted Cash Paid. Unopened, Unexpired Boxes Only. All Brands Considered. Help others â ” donâ ™t throw boxes away. For more information, CALL (888) 491-1168. (Cal-SCAN)

Jobs

330 Child Care Offered

PIANO AND RECORDER LESSONS

500 Help Wanted

Venus’ Little Stars Home Daycare

*NEW* all terrain tricycle

Food Service Workers I & II Substitute. MtnView-Los Altos HSD Fulltime, Apply online at www.mvla.net/Personnel/Pages/ default.aspx

340 Child Care Wanted

3/4YrsBoyclothesmajorityNew/tags

550 Business Opportunities Start Now! Open Red Hot Dollar, Dollar Plus, Mailbox, Discount Party, $10 Clothing Store, Teen Store, Fitness Center from $51,900 Worldwide! www.DRSS25.com 1-800-518-3064. (Cal-SCAN)

Classified Deadlines:

NOON, WEDNESDAY

Kid Care & Transport Needed Need part-time help for rides & homework in the afternoons for our two kids (son 13 & daughter 11). Light housekeeping / laundry also requested. Starts January 2013. Must be able to drive, have a valid driver's license and a reliable car. Call Mary at 650 387 8881

355 Items for Sale 4YrsBibbsnowpants+DownJacket$30 BabyBlanketsThick/ThinBagfull$20 BOY0-3MonthsClothesw/tags$50 BOY0-6MonthsClothesw/tags$50 Kids Accordian and zylophone$15

Peninsula Parents

Looking for part-time nanny part-time nanny/driver needed

345 Tutoring/ Lessons College Admissions Counseling

Are you looking for a nanny? Advertise in the Weekly’s Kids’ Stuff section and reach over 90,000 readers! 326-8216

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715 Cleaning Services

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741 Flooring/Carpeting

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825 Homes/Condos for Sale ÃÊ Ì Ã]ÊÎÊ ,ÉÓÊ Ê ÊfÇ äää i Ê*>À ]ÊÎÊ ,ÉÓÊ Ê Êf£ä äää *> Ê Ì ]ÊÎÊ ,ÉÓÊ Ê Êfn äää ,i`Ü `Ê ÌÞ]ÊÎÊ ,ÉÓÊ Ê Êfx äää -Õ ÞÛ> i]ÊÎÊ ,ÉÓÊ Ê Êfx 7 `à `i]ÊÎÊ ,ÉÓÊ Ê Êf£ä äää

850 Acreage/Lots/ Storage 20 ACRES FREE ÕÞÊ{ä iÌÊÈäÊ>VÀiðÊfä Ü ]Êf£ÈnÉ Ì °Ê iÞÊL>V }Õ>À> Ìii°Ê "Ê , /Ê -°Ê i>ÕÌ vÕ ÊÛ iÜðÊ, >`ÃÉÃÕÀÛiÞi`°Ê i>ÀÊ Ê*>à ]Ê/iÝ>ðʣ nää n{Î ÇxÎÇÊ ÜÜÜ°-Õ ÃiÌ,> V iðV Ê­ Ê ®

Public Notices 995 Fictitious Name Statement

781 Pest Control

3

751 General Contracting

Orkopina Housecleaning

1

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Home&Real Estate Home Front

SAY CHEESE ... Hands-on cooking classes at Sur La Table, #57 Town & Country Village, Palo Alto, include: “Delicious Homemade Cheese� (Saul Flores, Dec. 29, 11 a.m., $85) and “Date Night: Chef’s Table� (Kim Henderson, Dec. 29, 5 p.m., $79). Information: 650-289-0438 or email Cooking073@surlatable.com SEEDS AND MORE ... Ryan Batjiaka, an assistant garden manager at Ecology Action in Willits, Calif., will teach two classes on Saturday, Jan. 5, at Common Ground, 559 College Ave., Palo Alto. “Seed Propagation,� from 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., deals with creating healthy soil, pricking out seedlings from flats, transplanting and proper watering. “DoubleDigging and Bed Preparation,� from 2 to 4 p.m., is all about creating a GROW BIOINTENSIVE garden and includes a hands-on demonstration at the Common Ground garden. Each class is $31. Information: 650-493-6072 or www.commongroundinpaloalto.org RECYCLE THAT TREE ... GreenWaste will pick up Christmas trees from houses post-holidays, as long as they are cut into 4-foot lengths and tree stands, ornaments, tinsel and nails are removed. Apartment and condominium complex managers are asked to call GreenWaste to arrange tree collection. Information: GreenWaste at 650-493-4894 N Send notices of news and events related to real estate, interior design, home improvement and gardening to Home Front, Palo Alto Weekly, P.O. Box 1610, Palo Alto, CA 94302, or email cblitzer@ paweekly.com. Deadline is one week before publication.

HOME SALES

Home sales are provided by California REsource, a real estate information company that obtains the information from the County Recorder’s Office. Information is recorded from deeds after the close of escrow and published within four to eight weeks.

East Palo Alto 228 Daphne Way X. Ma to I. Villeda for $400,000 on 11/16/12; previous sale 7/01, $443,500

Los Altos 1040 Covington Road Sloane Trust to Gholamreza Trust for $1,470,000 on 11/29/12 4388 El Camino Real #39 Chang Trust to Los Altos Real Estate for $925,000 on 11/29/12; previous sale 7/09, $765,000 151 Giffin Road Altaya Ventures to P. Ranganathan for $1,900,000 on 11/30/12; previous sale 9/01, $742,000 1259 Heritage Court Lemson Trust to A. & L. Shukhman for $1,498,000 on 11/30/12 1002 Mercedes Ave. Matte Trust to S. Hesarsorkh for $1,290,000 on 11/30/12 858 Riverside Drive Jaffe Trust to G. Salamander for $2,545,000 on 11/29/12; previous sale 7/05, $2,285,000 437 Tyndall St. Camoria Company to M. Palmer for $1,027,500 on 11/30/12; previous sale 2/00, $250,000

Menlo Park 180 Loyola Ave. D. Butler to M. Albrecht for $799,000 on 11/20/12 1875 Oak Ave. R. & S. Lewis to R. Morris for $1,689,000 on 11/19/12; previous sale 6/02, $1,381,000 1843 Santa Cruz Ave. Kalua Trust to M. & M. Demoss for $1,080,000 on 11/16/12 945 Siskiyou Drive Kirkwood Trust to C. McKee for $1,890,000 on 11/16/12

Mountain View 543 Calderon Ave. S. Sevey to Harding Trust for $1,000,000 on 11/30/12; previous sale 6/05, $850,000 147 Gladys Ave. Shustek-Dubinsky Trust to Y. Gu for $690,000 on 11/28/12; previous sale 12/01, $485,000 400 Ortega Ave. #203 M. Joshi to L. Lin for $381,000 on 11/28/12 255 S. Rengstorff Ave. #2 Moos Trust to N. Borisov for $378,000 on 11/29/12; previous sale 6/11, $343,500 255 S. Rengstorff Ave. #126 K. Deleon to A. Munoz for $385,000 on 11/30/12 1963 Rock St. #26 Trustway Investments to M. Prudhomme for $742,000 on 11/29/12; previous sale 3/05, $630,000 101 Tyrella Court N. PetersBrown to Oran Trust for $799,000 on 11/29/12; previous sale 8/90,

$334,000 3380 Villa Robleda Drive Jelavich Trust to H. Leung for $1,406,000 on 11/29/12

Palo Alto 333 Byron St. Zander Trust to R. Goe for $1,550,000 on 11/28/12 325 Channing Ave. #112 Scigliano Trust to G. Scigliano for $509,000 on 11/30/12; previous sale 5/05, $1,500,000 545 Fulton St. C. Guta to D. Hoffman for $580,000 on 11/28/12; previous sale 1/00, $300,000 693 Greer Road S. & J. Klee to S. Bourbonnais for $1,075,000 on 11/30/12 3874 Mumford Place Damskey Trust to J. Pan for $1,626,000 on 11/30/12 901 Van Auken Circle Drake Trust to X. Gu for $1,280,000 on 11/28/12

Portola Valley 128 Escobar Road Khatod Trust to R. & A. Khatod for $2,170,000 on 11/20/12 11 Linaria Way Jensen Trust to J. Welser for $2,189,000 on 11/15/12

Redwood City 1002 Alameda De Las Pulgas Ferreira Trust to H. Horii for $750,000 on 11/16/12; previous sale 8/99, $415,500 539 Anchor Circle J. & C. Ortez to L. Lau for $841,000 on 11/20/12; previous sale 5/83, $140,000 360 Encina Ave. R. Beeson to Manning Trust for $650,000 on 11/20/12; previous sale 12/09, $647,500 4000 Farm Hill Blvd. #102 Bank of America to L. Bender for $350,000 on 11/20/12 551 Hillside Road M. Blucher to J. Fisher for $695,000 on 11/16/12 520 Hurlingame Ave. Citibank to R. & V. Kutuzov for $260,000 on 11/15/12; previous sale 2/06, $475,000 1146 Lyons St. Johnson Trust to J. & K. Thoene for $695,000 on 11/16/12 1143 Oliver St. Joslet Trust to Becker Trust for $671,000 on 11/20/12 36 Woodhill Drive Boyle Trust to W. & L. Gerson for $2,055,000 on 11/20/12; previous sale 1/87, $535,000

BUILDING PERMITS Palo Alto 4101 El Camino Way B. King, demolish wall and floor interior, $n/a 4161 Oakhill Ave. B. Bakhtegan, backup generator, $5,000 170 N. California Ave. M. Wiedemann, demolish swimming pool, $n/a 3012 Ross Road S. Crothers, remove and install new trusses, reroof entire property, $22,600 1125 University Ave. H. and A. Frahn, add patio, upgrade electrical service, $47,600

Experience 0OF NPSF SFBTPO UP DIPPTF #BOL PG "NFSJDB )PNF -PBOT GPS ZPVS IPNF ĂĽOBODJOH OFFET

Vicki Svendsgaard Senior Mortgage Loan Officer NMLS ID: 633619 650.400.6668 vicki.svendsgaard@bankofamerica.com

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OPEN HOME GUIDE 33

Also online at PaloAltoOnline.com

SALES AT A GLANCE

East Palo Alto

Palo Alto

Total sales reported: 1 Lowest sales price: $400,000 Highest sales price: $400,000

Total sales reported: 6 Lowest sales price: $509,000 Highest sales price: $1,626,000

Los Altos

Portola Valley

Total sales reported: 7 Lowest sales price: $925,000 Highest sales price: $2,545,000

Total sales reported: 2 Lowest sales price: $2,170,000 Highest sales price: $2,189,000

Menlo Park

Redwood City

Total sales reported: 4 Lowest sales price: $799,000 Highest sales price: $1,890,000

Total sales reported: 9 Lowest sales price: $260,000 Highest sales price: $2,055,000

Mountain View

Source: California REsource

Total sales reported: 8 Lowest sales price: $378,000 Highest sales price: $1,406,000

634 Everett St. D. Desbard, construct detached garage, $n/a 2927 South Court E. Gokcek, replace windows, upgrade kitchen counters, $8,000 840 E. Meadow Drive T. Rogers, replace kitchen cabinets, $14,000 985 Paradise Way S. Chu, replace cabinets, $23,000 936 N. California Ave. N. Kaposhilin, enclose covered porch, remodel kitchen, $42,000 817 Wintergreen Way K. Forssell, remodel kitchen, upgrade electrical service, relocate furnace, replace roof, $38,000 3375 Hillview Ave. Stanford Hospital & Clinics, install two mass spectrometers, $230,000 811 Chimalus Drive J. Tam, addition and remodel, $n/a 1294 Hamilton Ave. R. Maltzman, conversion of existing two-car garage into a single-car garage and home office, $12,693 2898 South Court K. Kam, add master bedroom suite, $57,000 1032 Forest Ave. Knoblock., new swimming pool, $56,000 765 Moreno Leary, new swimming pool, $51,650 140 University Ave. C. Kennen, demolition, $n/a 959 Addison Ave. R. Villarreal, new in-ground 440-sq.-ft. pool and spa, $75,000 4217 Pomona Ave. A. Saxena, install wall surround, new tub liner and replace valve, $7,785 212 Homer Ave. J. Cross, construct new conference room, $45,000 456 University Ave. Palo Alto Theater Corp., interior demolition of partition walls, $n/a; modify interior walls, replace stairs, new restroom, $1,811,732 2651 South Court J. Xinrong, demo house, $514 1851 Park Blvd. P. Wisowaty, twostory addition, $182,279 883 Warren Way Y. Chehade, add 1,288 sq. ft. living space, re-roof, relocate main electrical panel, $222,000 2651 South Court Y. Cao, new two-story single-family residence, $441,000; detached one-car garage, $10,700; accessory building, $19,400 375 Tioga Court K. Jeffrey, residential addition (256 sq ft) to expand bathrooms and bedroom, remodel living/dining room/kitchen, $4,925 753 Colorado Ave. A. Wang, construct a new two-story single-family residence, $521,000 660 Palo Alto Ave. V. Szczerba, install underground gas line, outdoor kitchen and firepit, $3,500 824 Seale Ave. A. Dubin, landscape and pergola, $7,490 281 Iris J. Antonow, add lights in living and dining room, replace five existing windows, $5500 1530 Page Mill Road Equity Office, add card reader doors,

$16,000 265 Homer Ave. D. Savello, residential addition and remodel, $35,251 2110 Cornell M. Malwacd, complete interior remodel, $178,000 440 Olive Ave. B. Klein, Shotcrete exterior wall at front of residence, $9,500 738 Homer M. Malingri, remodel kitchen and bath, $20,000 328 Middlefield Road J. Xu, new one-story house, $359,372; new one-car garage, $10,963 130 Iris Way J. Xu, new two-story single family house, $414,033; onecar garage, $11,005 708 Maplewood Ave. E. Nio, addition/remodel, $93,220 840 Emerson St. B. Butler, Whole Foods, exterior ADA barrier removal/tenant improvement; level existing accessible parking stalls/ patio work, $n/a 160 Homer St. B. Butler, exterior ADA barrier removal/tenant improvement; level existing accessible parking stalls/patio work, $30,000 774 Emerson St. B. Butler, ADA barrier removal; new customer service/coffee/condiments/olive bar/ salad bar counters, $149,500 300 Pasteur Drive Stanford University, construct temporary valet parking lot for hospital patients and visitors, $99,000 555 Hamilton Ave. H. Webster, replace four existing heat pumps with new units, $98,000 177 Lundy Lane T. Henriksen, cosmetic remodeling, new tile, sink, tub of two bathrooms, $16,000 4043 Ben Lomond Ave. L. Friedman, repair vehicle damage to garage wall at family room, $5,000 721 Ensign Way S. Weiss, interior remodel: kitchen, laundry, wine room; exterior changes: skylight, kitchen window, $67,000 1501 Page Mill Road Hewlett Packard, revise east face to stucco finish where tile is failing, $97,000 3375 Hillview Ave. Stanford Hospital & Clinics, add one fume hood to existing lab space, $58,952 1245 Hamilton Ave. S. Kornfeld, add bathroom on second floor, $22,874 4156 Crosby Court T. Lawyer, bathroom and closet remodel, $16,000 2300 Geng Road Equity Office Properties, add one sink and water heater, $n/a 4010 Ben Lomond Drive Bhat, extend existing gas line, $n/a 754 Palo Alto Ave. D. Warner, foundation repair at single-story home, $22,500 2645 Middlefield Road H Lynn, tenant improvement, no structural, no exterior, $90,000 851 Seale Drive L. Tsui, remodel two bathrooms, kitchen, $25,000 2105 Emerson St. D. Carter, kitchen remodel and addition guest and bath to second floor, $245,000

635 Marion Ave. G. Staal, relocate 757 sq ft single-story cottage over foundation (from 645 Marion Ave.), $15,000; one-car detached garage, $18,760 868 Northampton Drive P. Eliana, repair water lines in master bathroom, new exterior water lines, $n/a 152 Lois Lane M. Lennig, replace one window with aluminum double pane, $2,800 100 Hamilton Ave. Suite 130 BVK Hamilton Ave LLC, tenant improvement, demo/build non-structural partitions, new carpet, paint and light fixture, $99,000 1550 Mariposa Ave. S. Lada, onestory addition for new master suite, family room and existing residence remodel, $250,000 248 Hamilton Ave. F. Lijebarel, exterior facade changes, stucco color coat, new entry doors, $15,000

Menlo Park 1249 Hoover St. Hoover Associates, multifamily residential re-roof, $14,500 317 Pope St. S. Barnard, install 40A/240V circuit, $900 365 Cotton St. R. Lorenz, demolish detached garage, $1,200 1074 Laurel St. HSA Design and Development LLC, re-roof, $13,500 280 Linfield Drive S. Soffer, reroof, $18,000 740 Windsor Drive Limo LLC, demolish single-family residence, $8,000 800 El Camino Real Menlo Stations Development, commercial tenant improvement to third floor, $1,700,000 165 Garland Drive R. & S. Day, 3,918-sq.-ft. two-story residence, $783,600 309 Yale Road E. Paruszewski, interior remodel, detached garage with office, $50,000 2130 Sharon Road D. Kennelly, bath remodel, termite repair in bathroom, $4,000 1830 Oakdell Drive K. Kraemer, re-roof detached garage, $3,200; re-roof house, $12,800 1975 Avy Ave. S. Gilbert, bathroom remodel, $8,000 333 Ravenswood Ave. Stanford Research Institute, install roof screen along HVAC Unit on second floor of building G, $52,713 2319 Loma Prieta Lane P. Katz, water heater, $2,700 2025 Santa Cruz Ave. S. Zomorrodi, demolish residence, $15,000 4085 Campbell Ave. Campbell Menlo LLC, construction of a new two-story, 55,000-sq.-ft. office building, plus site improvements, $7,437,366 340 Santa Monica Ave. K. Chan, re-roof, $9,800 205 Hanna Way R. Eustace, nine new lights, four receptacles, $20,000


OPEN Happy HOMES Holidays

Happy Holidays! “Local Sales since 1986”

Call Jan today for BEST RESULTS!

JAN STROHECKER

Realtor, DRE00620365 ,ià `i Ì > ÊUÊ > `ÊUÊ£äÎ£Ê ÝV > }iÃ

Unless otherwise noted, all times are 1:30-4:30 pm

ÀiVÌ\ 650.906.6516 > \ janstrohecker@yahoo.com

MENLO PARK 3 Bedrooms - Condominium

Taylor Properties U Palo Alto

1100 Sharon Park Dr #35 $925,000 Sun Keller Williams Palo Alto 454-8500

REDWOOD CITY

Trusted Real estate Professional

4 Bedrooms 351 W Oakwood Bl $1,589,000 Sun 1-4 Alain Pinel Realtors 462-1111

WOODSIDE

ÓÇÇxÊ `` iwi `Ê,`]Ê*> Ê Ì ]Ê Ê {ÎäÈÊUÊ* i\Ê­Èxä®ÎÓ£ £x È ÊÜÜÜ°Ê `Ì Ü «> > Ì °V ÊÊÊÊ , Êään{ ÇÓ£

4 Bedrooms 880 High Rd $2,685,000 Sun 1-4 Alain Pinel Realtors

Kathleen Wilson 650.543.1094 kwilson@apr.com

529-1111

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Happy New Year!!! 2012 SALES Over $25,000,000

Bear Gulch Drive, Portola Valley Roberts Way, Hillsborough Heather Drive, Palo Alto Channing Ave, Palo Alto Homer Avenue, Palo Alto Gordon Ave, Menlo Park Parkside Drive, Palo Alto Middle Ave, Menlo Park Contact Michael for your real estate needs in 2013!

MICHAEL HALL

HOMES

Palo Alto Avenue, Mountain View Woodland Avenue, Menlo Park Beacon Shores Dr, Redwood Shores Bonita Avenue, Santa Clara Sonoma Ave, Menlo Park Rock Street, Mountain View Costa Mesa Terrace, Sunnyvale

MICHAEL HALL

Celebrating 20 Years of Success

650.465.1651 mhall@apr.com www.MichaelHallHomes.com LIC. # 01133676

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Happy New Year! From The Alan Canas Team

Is a new home on your agenda for 2013? We Provide Real Estate Services You Can Trust - Because where you live - matters. How do we do this? By making your real estate transaction process transparent to you, thus providing a positive, comfortable home buying or selling experience. Our team works hard to keep an open line of communication in order to circumvent challenges, changes and time line issues that often arise. We manage expectations and we care. We want to be your real estate team.

Call us today and you will understand why our proven team approach works. We believe in the concept that where YOU live matters to us.

Pictured from left to right: Jim Meader, Gina Fornesi, Alan Canas, and Jeanne Garde (650) 343-9059 CanasRealty.com alan@canasrealty.com Page 34ÊUÊ iVi LiÀÊÓn]ÊÓä£ÓÊUÊ*> Ê Ì Ê7ii ÞÊUÊÜÜÜ°*> Ì " i°V


Saturday 9:15 a.m. Team Building @ Hoover Park, Palo Alto

PALO ALTO BRIAN CHANCELLOR Judy Jarvis Ellis Davena Gentry Owen Halliday Leannah Hunt Laurel Robinson Bob Kamangar Kristen Batchelder Kennerly Kristine Kim-Suh R. Brendan Leary Lori Lowe Kathleen Pasin Christine Perry Chris Trapani Alex H. Wang Leslie Woods James Yang

photo by www.handsonphoto.com

Edmund Yue

REDEFINING REAL ESTATE SINCE 2006 W W W. S E R E N O G R O U P. C O M

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