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News Edgewood Plaza revamp plan moves ahead Page 3 Arts ‘Familiar Strangers’ debuts at Pear Theatre Page 26 Sports CCS basketball titles at stake Page 35 Winning short stories: Page 41 Community 8 Title Pages 19 Spectrum 24 Eating Out 30 Movies 33 Home 53 Puzzles 69 Palo Alto garbage rates going up Page 5

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Page 1: Palo Alto Palo Alto garbage rates going up · Monday, Mar. 12, 2:30 – 4 p.m. 795 El Camino Real, Palo Alto, 650-853-4873 Join Dr. Cheng and Ms. Reilly on an action-packed excursion

w w w . P a l o A l t o O n l i n e . c o m

Palo Alto

News Edgewood Plaza revamp plan moves ahead Page 3

Arts ‘Familiar Strangers’ debuts at Pear Theatre Page 26

Sports CCS basketball titles at stake Page 35

Winning

short stories:

Page 41

Community 8 Title Pages 19 Spectrum 24 Eating Out 30 Movies 33 Home 53 Puzzles 69

Palo Alto garbage rates

going upPage 5

Page 2: Palo Alto Palo Alto garbage rates going up · Monday, Mar. 12, 2:30 – 4 p.m. 795 El Camino Real, Palo Alto, 650-853-4873 Join Dr. Cheng and Ms. Reilly on an action-packed excursion

Palo Alto Medical Foundation

Community Health Education Programs

pamf.org/healtheducation.

March

Lectures and Workshops

Sleep and Your Child

Parent Workshop Lecture SeriesPresented by Elizabeth Copeland, M.D.,

PAMF Pediatrics

Tuesday, Mar. 13, 7 – 8:30 p.m.

701 E. El Camino Real, Mountain View, 650-934-7373

Understand sleep safety basics, learn importance of and recommendations

for hours of sleep and discuss sleep training methods.

Cancer Care– Exercise for Energy –

men and women’s group

– Expressions

– Healing Imagery

– Healing Touch

– Healthy Eating

After Cancer Treatment

– Look Good, Feel Better

– Qigong

– When Eating is a Problem,

During Cancer Treatment

Childbirth and Parent Education Classes– Baby Safety Basics

– Breastfeeding

– Childbirth Preparation

– Feeding Your Young Child

– Infant and Child CPR

– Infant Care

– Infant Emergencies and CPR

– Introduction to Solids

– Mother-Baby Circle

– New Parent ABC’s –

All About Baby Care

– OB Orientation

– Prenatal Yoga

– Sibling Preparation

– What to Expect

with Your Newborn

Living Well Classes– Back School

– Mind/Body Stress Management

– Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction

Nutrition and Diabetes ClassesMountain View, 650-934-7177 Palo Alto, 650-853-2961

– Diabetes Management

– Healthy Eating

with Type 2 Diabetes

– Heart Smart

(cholesterol management)

– Living Well with Prediabetes

– Sweet Success Program

(gestational diabetes)

Weight Management Programs 1-888-398-5597

– Bariatric Weight Loss

Surgery Program

– Healthy eating. Active

lifestyles. (for parents of children ages 2-12)

– HMR Weight

Management Program

– Lifesteps® (adult weight management)– New Weigh of Life

(adult weight management)

Support Groups– AWAKE

– Bariatric Surgery

– Breastfeeding

– Cancer

– CARE

– Chronic Fatigue

– Diabetes

– Drug and Alcohol

– Kidney

– Multiple Sclerosis

Don’t Turn Green, LIVE Green

Library Lecture SeriesPresented by Barbara Erny, M.D.

Wednesday, Mar. 14, 7 – 8:30 p.m.

Sunnyvale Public Library

655 W. Olive Avenue, Sunnyvale, 650-934-7373

By the end of this introduction to living “green,” you’ll understand what

chemicals are present in your everyday environment, know about the safest

fruits and vegetables, how to reduce your chemical intake, and learn what

you can do to reduce environmental chemical exposure for you and your

family.

Past, Present, and Forever:

Making the Most of Your Aging Journey

Senior Lecture SeriesPresented by Peter H. Cheng, M.D., PAMF Geriatric Medicine,

and Kelly Reilly, R.N., MSN, CDE, PAMF Diabetes Education

Monday, Mar. 12, 2:30 – 4 p.m.

795 El Camino Real, Palo Alto, 650-853-4873

Join Dr. Cheng and Ms. Reilly on an action-packed excursion to learn how

to best take charge of your health as you get older.

Eat Your Way to True Happiness!

For Your Health Community Lecture SeriesPresented by Darcie Ellyne, R.D., M.S., CDE,

PAMF Nutrition Services

Tuesday, Mar. 13, 7 – 8:30 p.m.

795 El Camino Real, Palo Alto, 650-853-4873

This lecture will help you understand the impact of food on how you feel,

think, act, and sleep. You will learn to develop eating strategies that will

boost your mood, eliminate that gnawing, craving for junk food and help

you slim down and feel great.

Page 2

Page 3: Palo Alto Palo Alto garbage rates going up · Monday, Mar. 12, 2:30 – 4 p.m. 795 El Camino Real, Palo Alto, 650-853-4873 Join Dr. Cheng and Ms. Reilly on an action-packed excursion

by Gennady Sheyner

A shopping plaza anchored by The Fresh Market grocery store and featuring a small

park could soon take shape at Palo Alto’s Edgewood Plaza after the city’s planning commission-ers agreed Wednesday night, Feb.

29, to approve a zone change that would enable the project.

The proposal to redevelop Edge-wood Plaza, the only local shop-ping plaza to be developed by iconic home-builder Joseph Eichler, has gone through several iterations throughout the years-long approval

process. Developer John Tze of Sand Hill Property Company had previ-ously proposed building 24 homes on the plaza, a plan that was widely panned by residents in the adjacent neighborhoods.

The new proposal, for which the Planning and Transportation Com-

mission approved a zone change by a 6-0 vote (Greg Tanaka was absent), includes 10 homes and renovations to the three original retail buildings on the plaza, which is bounded by Embarcadero Road, Channing Av-enue and West Bayshore Road.

The most critical component of

the new plaza will be a 20,000-square-foot grocery store that would occupy the building once occupied by Albertsons (formerly Lucky Su-permarket). Albertsons left Edge-wood in 2006.

UpfrontLocal news, information and analysis

Veronica Weber

Palo Alto’s planning commission approves proposal to rehabilitate three stores, build 10 homes at Eichler shopping center

A n armed street robbery on Feb. 15 and a rash of residential burglaries last week in Palo

Alto has some residents calling for the city to install surveillance cam-eras and license-plate readers, and others ramping up efforts to com-

municate with their neighbors. Duveneck residents, who live near

Embarcadero Road and U.S. High-way 101, asked Palo Alto police to consider adding cameras or plate readers at the neighborhood’s three access points after a man walking

his dog was held up at gunpoint. But Capt. Ron Watson told the residents in an email that he did not think it would be possible to blanket the area with cameras.

“While I understand the concern for your neighborhood, it ... wouldn’t do anything if any future crime hap-pened to occur in an area adjacent to your neighborhood,” he wrote.

In addition, he said, the depart-ment proposed using grant money a few years ago to purchase a license-plate reader to look for stolen vehi-cles and other criminal activity, but the City Council felt the idea leaned too far toward “Big Brother.”

“Having said that, there are any number of citizens who have placed video cameras around their home

and captured images of crimes, which can most definitely be use-ful in some circumstances,” Watson said.

Duveneck residents had also asked for the Public Works department to trim trees and improve lighting. Watson said the department is look-ing into those improvements.

Joel Henner, a neighborhood lead-er who has worked on emergency preparation and reconstituting some form of neighborhood watch, said crews have been trimming the shrubs and trees this week, and it has made a difference. He has also noticed increased police patrols, he said.

Duveneck residents call for surveillance cameras

After spate of burglaries, neighborhood wants license-plate readers to combat burglaries, street robberies

by Sue Dremann

YOUTH

Surveys: Student emotional health

improvingSchools report on citywide

initiatives to boost teen wellness after suicides

by Chris Kenrick

P alo Alto students gained a bit of ground in their overall social-emotional well-being

between 2007 and 2011, according to survey data presented Tuesday, Feb. 28, to the Board of Education.

Results of the California Healthy Kids Survey as well as the Palo Alto Reality Check Survey showed improvement in areas of student “school connectedness” and rela-tionships with adults.

Tuesday’s presentation came in a school board review of initiatives to boost “student connectedness” — a much-discussed priority for schools following a devastating string of Palo Alto student suicides in 2009 and 2010.

In response to the tragedies, the school district helped form a com-munity-wide youth mental-health coalition, Project Safety Net, and hired a staff member to coordinate an array of efforts related to student social-emotional health.

The schools, along with many community groups, also adopted a youth-wellness framework known as the Developmental Assets, a list of characteristics needed for healthy development that is now widely pro-moted across Palo Alto.

Nearly three years after the first student died in what came to be la-beled a “suicide cluster,” Tuesday’s progress report delivered by school Student Services Coordinator Amy Drolette was greeted with praise.

“We asked you to stitch together this net at a time when people were raw — I think that’s the word,” Su-perintendent Kevin Skelly said of Project Safety Net.

“It’s a sign of how this community is dedicated to kids, but we still have a lot of work to do.”

The Healthy Kids survey, given in

Checking out the modern drive-inSabastian and Samay Jauregur adjust the steering wheel on their “car,” made out of a cardboard box, during the Box Car Drive-In event hosted by the Palo Alto Children’s Library on Wednesday, Feb. 29. The library provided building materials, license plates and driver’s licenses, and children got to watch cartoons while sitting in their new automobiles.

CRIME

Plan to revitalize Edgewood Plaza moves ahead

(continued on page 12)

(continued on page 17)(continued on page 13)

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Page 4: Palo Alto Palo Alto garbage rates going up · Monday, Mar. 12, 2:30 – 4 p.m. 795 El Camino Real, Palo Alto, 650-853-4873 Join Dr. Cheng and Ms. Reilly on an action-packed excursion

QUOTE OF THE WEEK

Around Town

‘‘‘‘

TWEET TWEET ... Explaining Palo

Alto’s budget problems or transpor-

tation projects in 140 characters or

less is no easy feat, but that won’t

stop Mayor Yiaway Yeh and City

Manager James Keene from trying.

On Monday, the two joined the city’s

Chief Information Officer Jonathan Reichental in the city’s first-ever

Twitter Q&A — a chance for resi-

dents to pose pressing questions

and get brief answers about city

government. The questions varied

from big-picture inquiries (What are

your goals for 2012?) to the specific

(one questioner wanted the latest on

the grant application for California

Avenue streetscape improvements).

The answers came in wonky bursts.

When asked about goals, Yeh re-

sponded: “2012 = Year of Infrastruc-

ture & Renewal. Open Data-Hacka-

thons! Youth Health and Well-Being.

Balanced Budget. Mayor’s Chal-

lenge.” Why are the city’s revenues

dropping? Keene responded: “Slow

revenues = Prop 13 & sales tax dips

as economy shifts to services.” In

some cases, the answers weren’t as

concise as they could’ve been. When

asked whether he believes voters will

approve a measure in November to

legalize marijuana dispensaries, Yeh

forewent a simple “No comment” or

“Don’t know” in favor of, “Not in the

business of predicting outcomes

that are determined by the vote of

the people.” At other times, officials

were able to cram generous heaps of

substance into their 140 characters.

When asked about the California

Avenue grant, Yeh responded: “The

important project will be proceeding

but grant funding at risk this year due

to litigation. We remain committed.”

Officials said after the event that they

were pleased with their first foray into

Twittersphere. “There were many les-

sons learned, in particular, realizing

that 30 minutes is too short for a

session,” they wrote at the end of the

Q&A transcript.

FANTASYLAND ... Before Mayor Yi-away Yeh took to the stage to deliver

his State of the City address, Assem-

blyman Rich Gordon took the stage

to introduce Yeh (the two had worked

together when Gordon served on the

San Mateo County Board of Supervi-

sors). Gordon praised Yeh’s intellect

and noted the mayor’s penchant for

asking questions. “What impressed

me the most — and what probably

drives most colleagues a little crazy

— is that he is completely inquisitive,”

Gordon said. “He always wants to

know how, why, when, where and

what.” Gordon, meanwhile, received

a much pithier introduction from

Vice Mayor Greg Scharff, who noted

that Gordon had once worked at

Disneyland. That experience, Scharff

said, prepared Gordon “for being an

assemblyman because he worked in

Fantasyland.”

DOWNTOWN ... For the latest sign

that the local economy is improv-

ing, look no further than downtown

Palo Alto. The city’s “commercial

downtown” zoning area has seen

a marked drop in vacancy rate and

an increase in retail rents, according

to an annual survey of downtown

that the city released this week.

While the vacancy rate in this area

was 6.39 percent in 2008-09, it has

dropped to 2 percent in 2010-11,

the report states. Rent, meanwhile,

has gone up. For small office spaces

on University Avenue, for example,

rent ranged from $3.50 to $5.50 per

square foot in last year’s monitoring

report (not including insurance, jani-

torial services and taxes). This year,

the range is between $4.50 and $7

per square foot, the report states. It’s

conclusion? “Economic conditions in

Palo Alto downtown area are improv-

ing gradually.”

PRESIDENTIAL PROPS ... Linsanity

has reached the White House. Presi-

dent Barack Obama talked about the

Palo Alto High School graduate and

current New York Knicks point guard

during an interview Wednesday, Feb.

29, with ESPN’s Bill Simmons. “I’ve

been on the Jeremy Lin bandwagon

for a while,” Obama said. “He seems

like a wonderful young man. And,

look, it elevates this great sport all

around the world.”

TECHY TIDBITS ... Palo Alto city

workers will soon be saying farewell

to their desktop computers as part

of the city’s effort to become more

green, modern and flexible. An an-

nouncement from the IT Department

this week notes that the city plans to

replace most desktops with laptops.

“These laptops will use up to 90

percent less power than desktops

and will enable staff to access their

applications and information without

being tethered to a fixed location,”

the announcement states. The city

also plans to look into whether it

makes sense for staff to have tablet

computers.

This place should be inhospitable to crooks.

— Joel Henner, a Palo Alto neighborhood leader, on reconstituting a watch program in the Duveneck/St. Francis neighborhood. See story on page 3.

PUBLISHER William S. Johnson

EDITORIAL Jocelyn Dong, Editor Carol Blitzer, Associate Editor Keith Peters, Sports Editor Tyler Hanley, Express™ and Online Editor Rebecca Wallace, Arts & Entertainment Editor Rick Eymer, Assistant Sports Editor Tom Gibboney, Spectrum Editor Sue Dremann, Chris Kenrick, Gennady Sheyner, Staff Writers Eric Van Susteren, Editorial Assistant, Internship Coordinator Veronica Weber, Staff Photographer Kelsey Kienitz, Photo Intern Dale F. Bentson, Colin Becht, Peter Canavese, Kit Davey, Iris Harrell, Sheila Himmel, Chad Jones, Karla Kane, Kevin Kirby, Jack McKinnon, Jeanie K. Smith, Susan Tavernetti, Contributors Cristina Wong, Editorial Intern

DESIGN Shannon Corey, Design Director Raul Perez, Assistant Design Director Linda Atilano, Diane Haas, Scott Peterson, Paul Llewellyn, Senior Designers Lili Cao, Designer

PRODUCTION Jennifer Lindberg, Production Manager Dorothy Hassett, Samantha Mejia, Blanca Yoc, Sales & Production Coordinators

ADVERTISING Tom Zahiralis, Vice President Sales & Advertising Judie Block, Adam Carter, Janice Hoogner, Brent Triantos, Display Advertising Sales Neal Fine, Carolyn Oliver, Rosemary Lewkowitz, Real Estate Advertising Sales David Cirner, Irene Schwartz, Inside Advertising Sales Cathy Norfleet, Display Advertising Sales Asst. Diane Martin, Real Estate Advertising Asst. Alicia Santillan, Classified Administrative Asst. Wendy Suzuki, Advertising Sales Intern

EXPRESS, ONLINE AND VIDEO SERVICES Rachel Palmer, Online Operations Coordinator Rachel Hatch, Multimedia Product Manager

BUSINESS Susie Ochoa, Payroll & Benefits Elena Dineva, Mary McDonald, Claire McGibeny, Cathy Stringari, Business Associates

ADMINISTRATION Janice Covolo, Doris Taylor, Receptionists Ruben Espinoza, Courier

EMBARCADERO MEDIA William S. Johnson, President Michael I. Naar, Vice President & CFO Tom Zahiralis, Vice President Sales & Advertising Frank A. Bravo, Director, Information Technology & Webmaster Connie Jo Cotton, Major Accounts Sales Manager Bob Lampkin, Director, Circulation & Mailing Services Alicia Santillan, Circulation Assistant Chris Planessi, Chip Poedjosoedarmo, Computer System Associates

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 house-holds 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 326-8210. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Palo Alto Weekly, P.O. Box 1610, Palo Alto, CA 94302. Copyright ©2012 by Embarcadero Media. All rights reserved. Reproduction without permis-sion is strictly prohibited. The Palo Alto Weekly is available on the Internet via Palo Alto Online at: www.PaloAltoOnline.comOur email addresses are: [email protected], [email protected], [email protected] delivery or start/stop your paper? Call 650 326-8210, or email [email protected]. You may also subscribe online at www.PaloAltoOnline.com. Subscriptions are $60/yr.

450 CAMBRIDGE AVE, PALO ALTO, CA 94306 (650) 326-8210

SUBSCRIBE!Support your local newspaper

by becoming a paid subscriber. $60 per year. $100 for two years.

Name: _________________________________

Address: _______________________________

City/Zip: _______________________________Mail to: Palo Alto Weekly,

P.O. Box 1610. Palo Alto CA 94302

UpfrontPalo Alto Historical Associationpresents a public program

Sunday, March 4, 2012, 2:00 p.m.Lucie Stern Community Center, 1305 Middlefi eld Road, Palo Alto

Life inBlack and White

Presenters: Henry and Rochelle

Ford

THURSDAY MAR. 8TH, 4:30-7:30pmALBERT M. BENDER ROOM at THE GREEN LIBRARY

STANFORD UNIVERSITY

A special evening featuring a workshop, dramatic poetry reading

and reception

RSVP required by Mar. 5 athttp://europe.stanford.edu/events/registration/6883

NELLY SACHS: Migration and Memory,

Poetry and Context

For more info., please visit http://europe.stanford.edu

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Upfront

P roclaiming 2012 the year of “renewal,” Mayor Yiaway Yeh used his “State of the

City” address Monday, Feb. 27, to lay out a vision for sprucing up Palo Alto’s aged infrastructure and encouraging residents to become more engaged in city life.

In a speech that lasted about 40 minutes and was delivered at the Oshman Family Jewish Commu-nity Center, Yeh briefly highlighted the City Council’s progress on its five annual priorities — finances, environmental sustainability, land-use and transportation, emergency preparedness and youth well-being. But most of his address focused on explaining the city’s drive to get its infrastructure in order and to inspire community engagement.

The focus on infrastructure has been Yeh’s main theme since he took over as mayor last month. In his inauguration speech, Yeh de-clared 2012 as the “year of infra-structure renewal and investment.” On Monday, he recapped the recent work of the Infrastructure Blue Rib-bon Committee, which surveyed the city’s infrastructure needs and con-sidered ways to pay for them.

“I’m eager to move forward with the infrastructure improvements that the community expects,” Yeh said.

At times, the themes of infrastruc-ture and engagement intertwined. Yeh described a recent “hackathon” at Stanford University during which the city made its data on street con-

ditions available to students, who over the next 24 hours developed a website that allows residents to learn about the state of the streets they live on.

A subsequent version of this inter-face allows residents to upload pho-tos of their streets, a function that city officials hope will engage them with Palo Alto’s drive to accelerate the street repairs this year. Yeh cited the hackathon as an example of the city’s willingness to solve problems in new ways.

Yeh said people often don’t know what city officials mean when they talk about “infrastructure” — a broad word with many definitions. He catalogued the city’s many phys-ical assets, including fire stations, bridges and municipal buildings that make up infrastructure.

“Ultimately, our physical assets support our community. Yet they often go unnoticed until something goes wrong,” Yeh said. “A street with too many potholes and cracks, a sidewalk pushed up by tree roots, a community center’s classroom with a leaking roof, or offices for our po-lice department that won’t withstand a significant disaster.”

Yeh said he has directed staff to analyze the possibility of using the city’s gas-tax receipts as leverage to borrow $12 million to repair streets. The goal of this “enhanced funding program” is to make the repairs without relying on the city’s General Fund or additional taxpayer money, he said.

Yeh also said the city may ask voters for a bond measure for other infrastructure repairs, but only after it has considered every other option for paying for the needed improve-ments.

Another major council priority in 2012 will be figuring out how to pay for much needed upgrades of the city’s worn down and seismically vulnerable police building and the fire stations near Rinconada and Mitchell Parks. He said the coun-cil would hold a special retreat later in the year (one of three that would focus on infrastructure) to consider its options.

“As you know, our police build-

ing and fire stations currently suf-fer from decades-old wear and tear. They have doubtful functionality in the event of a major disaster in our community.”

Yeh also ran through the city’s ef-forts to engage local youth, a coun-cil priority for the past two years. He mentioned the new Teen Cen-ter that will be built as part of the Mitchell Park Library and Commu-nity Center and the Teen Advisory Council that will work in the newly renovated Palo Alto Arts Center. He called on businesses to participate in the city’s effort to make teens feel welcome.

“What can you as a business

do?” Yeh asked. “One idea is to create deals-of-the day or week for our students. Another is to high-light how students can patronize your business. Think creatively how to incorporate high-schoolers with internships over the summer. Open up your business world to the curiosity and commitment of our

Yeh lays out vision for Palo Alto’s ‘renewal’

Mayor’s ‘State of the City’ speech focuses on infrastructure upgrades, citizen engagement

by Gennady Sheyner

CITY HALL

Yiaway Yeh, mayor of Palo Alto, delivers his State of the City address Monday, Feb. 27, at the Albert L. Schultz Jewish Community Center on Fabian Way as former and current City Council colleagues and other local representatives, seated onstage, listen.

The text of Mayor Yiaway Yeh’s State of the City speech has been posted on Palo Alto Online. To read it, search for “Yeh lays out vision.”

READ MORE ONLINEwww.PaloAltoOnline.com

P alo Alto residents who try to limit their waste by switch-ing to smaller trash cans

could find their garbage rates spik-ing dramatically and possibly dou-bling over the next several years as part of the city’s effort to bring financial stability to its troubled refuse operation.

The city has recently completed a “cost of service” study that propos-es a radically different rate struc-ture for residential customers. The goal is to stabilize the city’s Refuse Fund, which has been losing mon-ey in recent years, and to get away from the existing system under which commercial customers sub-sidize through their rates the cost of providing service to residents.

A new proposal from the Pub-lic Works Department calls for a 5.3 percent rate increase for all residential customers along with a $2.09 flat fee that would be tacked on to every residential bill to cover the cost of street sweeping. The increases could be phased in over several years but start in July.

The study, which the city initi-ated in August 2010 and which the City Council’s Finance Committee is scheduled to discuss Tuesday night, March 6, offers a rate struc-ture that would affect all residential customers but would have the most dramatic impact on those who con-serve the most. Under this model, residents who use mini-cans (about

29 percent of all customers) would see their monthly refuse rates jump from $20.52 to $45.46, a 121 per-cent increase. The 55.7 percent of residential customers who use the standard 32-gallon cans would see their monthly rates go up from $37.58 to $50.48, a 37 percent in-crease.

Meanwhile, those who use 64-gallon cans would see their rates decline by 12 percent, from $72.46 to $63.86.

Because of the severity of the spike for customers who use the two smallest containers, staff is recommending phasing the rate changes over two or three years, according to Brad Eggleston, the city’s solid waste manager. The

Public Works Department propos-es keeping “conservation pricing” in place to encourage smaller cans but to reduce the savings of conser-vation pricing by introducing a flat fee for all customers.

The plummeting revenues in the Refuse Fund can, in many ways, be attributed to the city’s success in encouraging conservation through its Zero Waste program. By switch-ing to smaller cans, residents bring down their trash bills and, in do-ing so, reduce the city’s revenues. In addition, more people recycle and compost — services for which the city has not been charging its residents.

The council began dealing with this problem last year when it ap-proved a flat rate hike of $4.62 percent for all customers, regard-less of can size. The new rate struc-ture, however, would bring much more significant changes. Under the cost-of-service model, the city would start charging all residential customers $7.66 for recycling, and $10.99 for picking up their yard trimmings and $6.71 for street sweeping.

While the city is unlikely to in-troduce all these fees in the short term, the street-sweeping fee would kick in as early as July un-der the staff proposal. Because the council already added the $4.62 fee last year, it would need to tack on another $2.09 fee to achieve the $6.71 rate required to meet the cost of providing street-sweeping services.

The model, in short, proposes a major shift from a system that pro-vides pricing incentives for cus-tomers who switch to smaller cans to one in which rates reflect the actual cost of services. Under the model in the study, the difference between the rates for those who use mini-cans and those who use stan-dard cans is only $5.02. Under the current structure, this difference is $16.96.

On Tuesday, the Finance Com-mittee is scheduled to review the staff recommendation and consider an array of other options, including some that extend the rate increases over a longer period of time and others that would eliminate con-servation pricing.

UTILITIES

Palo Alto looks to hike refuse ratesStaff proposes 5 percent increase and new $2.09 fee this year;

more dramatic changes aheadby Gennady Sheyner

Gen

nady

She

yner

(continued on page 12)

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City declares impasse after six months

of negotiationsby Gennady Sheyner

F ive months after the City of Palo Alto completed its long and bitter negotiations with

the city’s firefighters union, offi-cials and Palo Alto’s largest police union find themselves at odds.

City officials declared an impasse in negotiations last Friday, Feb. 24, after six months of negotiations with the Palo Alto Police Officers Asso-ciation. The decision sets the stage for a possible unilateral imposition of benefit reductions by the city on the union’s 82 members.

The two sides began negotiations on July 27, 2011, and according to a letter from the city’s negotiator, Darrell Murray, have reached “dead-lock” and remain far apart.

The union’s previous contract had expired on June 30, 2011, but the terms of that agreement remain in place until a new contract is signed.

The city’s struggle with the po-lice union comes five months after

it reached an agreement with the Palo Alto Professional Firefight-ers Association after 18 months of tense talks. The police union, however, has less leverage than the firefighters did because of the vot-ers’ decision in November to repeal the binding-arbitration provision in the City Charter. The provision had empowered a panel of arbitrators to settle labor disputes between the city and its public-sector unions, which unlike other labor groups are legally barred from striking. Without bind-ing arbitration, the city can impose its conditions on the police union.

The impasse comes at a time when the city is trying to cope with budget deficits by seeking benefit reduc-tions from all of its labor groups — a process that gained momentum three years ago.

The city’s largest labor union, the Service Employees International Union, Local 521, was forced to accept benefit reductions, includ-ing a second pension tier for newly hired workers and a requirement to pay a share of health care costs (the city had previously paid all medi-cal costs). The firefighters union agreed to similar concessions in

September.Sgt. Wayne Benitez, president of

the police union, told the Weekly that he was surprised by the city’s announcement of the impasse, an announcement that he said officials didn’t share with the union before publicizing it.

Benitez said he doesn’t under-stand why “the police union, who has a proven track record of coop-erating with the city, could not even get the same concessions as the fire department received.”

“We offered considerable conces-sions to the City, but the City denied them,” Benitez said.

The city’s current budget, which the council passed in June, assumed concessions by both major public-safety unions. City Manager James Keene has stated on many occasions that every labor group would need to make sacrifices to help the city cope with consecutive years of bud-get deficits — gaps that are largely driven by increases in pension and health care costs.

The city’s newly released long-term financial forecast projects a $2 million deficit in fiscal year 2013 followed by budget gaps of

$3.7 million and $4 million in 2014 and 2015, respectively.

The impasse creates a major wrinkle in what has been a general-ly amicable relationship between the city and its police union. While the City Council has engaged in various highly publicized spats with the fire union, it has consistently lauded the police union’s willingness to work with the city. In 2009, the union had agreed to defer its negotiated 6 per-cent wage increases by a year, help-ing the city close the budget gap.

Keene said in a statement that while the city “greatly appreci-ated” the union’s decision to defer its members’ raises for a year, it is now looking for “ongoing structural savings.”

“The City has reached agreements that include employee pay and ben-efit concessions with all of our other labor groups,” Keene said. “We ex-pect the POA to participate fully with our other employees in conces-sions to help ensure the City’s fiscal sustainability.”

Murray noted in his declaration of impasse that public-safety expendi-tures have been gradually taking a bigger chunk of the city’s General

Fund, which pays for basic city ser-vices (not including utilities). In fiscal year 2006, 25 percent of the General Fund was allocated to pub-lic safety. The number went up to 36 percent in fiscal year 2011.

An average member of the police union gets a salary of $104,013. The average salary and benefits total about $185,616.

“As the City has often stated, it believes that fairness dictates that all employees contribute in a man-ner that would involve a measure of real and immediate adverse im-pact — without a wage increase to absorb that impact,” Murray wrote. “The Police Officers’ Association stands alone in its continued un-willingness to meet this measure of shared sacrifice — sacrifice that the City’s lowest paid employees began to experience over two years ago.”

Lalo Perez, the city’s chief finan-cial officer, said in a statement that the city continues to expend “sig-nificant resources” to support fair bargaining with its unions but noted that labor groups sometimes find de-lay preferable to settlement “because the existing contract with its better compensation package stays in effect until a new agreement is reached.

“It is not feasible or fair to our taxpayers for negotiations with-out real progress to be prolonged,” Perez said.

Upfront

A fter a two-year slump, Palo Alto is finally seeing some sunny news on the revenue

front, though officials predict that the rapidly rising cost of employee benefits will continue to saddle the city with years of budget deficits.

The two trends — rising rev-enues and spiking expenditures — are both detailed in the new Long Range Financial Forecast, which the City Council Finance Commit-tee reviewed Tuesday night.

The document is not so much a prediction as a “snapshot” based on various current assumptions, city staff said, but it shows a picture of changing finances following the 2008 recession.

Palo Alto sales-tax revenues for fiscal year 2012 (which ends on June 30) are estimated at $21.6 million, exceeding the city’s adopted budget by $1.4 million.

Hotel taxes rebounded last year after two years of declines, increas-ing by 17.8 percent between 2010 and 2011. This year, the numbers are expected to be even stronger. Tax revenues in the first quarter of 2012 exceeded those in 2011 by a whopping 26.2 percent and for the year are expected to be 7.3 percent higher than last year.

The forecast states that the tran-sient occupancy and per diem rates in Palo Alto “have moved up appre-ciably as they have along the entire

Peninsula, due to increased business activity.” Sales tax, meanwhile, “has been on an upward trend with strong department store and electronic-equipment sales.”

But while revenues are projected to grow, they are not expected to keep pace with expenditures, par-ticularly the sharply rising cost of employee health care and pension benefits. The forecast pegs the to-tal cost of benefits in fiscal year 2012 at $36.8 million. By 2017, the number could gradually balloon to $51.2 million because of the two trends.

The city’s health care expendi-tures, according to the forecast, have grown by 126 percent over the past decade, going from $6.6 million in 2002 to $14.9 million this year. The trend is expected to continue and to swallow up a greater chunk of the city’s General Fund. The pension costs are following a similar trend, having jumped from $15.6 million in 2005 to $23.9 million in 2012.

The rising expenditures carry bleak implications for the city’s General Fund. While the forecast shows a balanced budget this year, it projects a $2.1 million deficit in 2013, a $3.7 million deficit in 2014 and a $4.1 million deficit in 2015. The forecast notes that while city revenues are improving, expense increases “continue to outpace the growth in revenue.”

“The city-revenue projections are rosier than they have looked for a couple of years, but benefit costs continue their relentless upward climb — outpacing the rate of rev-enue growth,” the forecast states.

The report also notes that a recent actuarial valuation of Palo Alto’s unfunded retiree medical liability indicated that the city needs to set aside an additional $2.7 million in 2012 and $3.5 million in 2013 to cover the backlog.

“The city clearly still has its work cut out for it in addressing its struc-tural deficit,” the forecast states.

While the forecast is a forward-looking, big-picture document, its implications are already being felt in the city’s negotiations with

its labor groups. For the past three years, the city has been aggres-sively pressuring labor groups to cover a greater share of employees’ health care and pension expendi-tures (both of which have been en-tirely paid by the city). Most labor groups have already agreed (or, in some cases, have been forced to accept) less generous benefits, in-cluding a new requirement for them to chip in for medical costs and a two-tiered pension system under which newly hired employees get fewer benefits.

The sharp rise in health care and pension costs is also one of the prime justifications for the city’s decision to declare an impasse last week in its negotiations with the

Palo Alto Police Officers Associa-tion after six months of meetings (see story below). The city’s nego-tiator, Darrell Murray, highlighted the two trends in his declaration of the impasse. The city’s medi-cal insurance premium payments per employee have gone up by 21.1 percent since 2008, rising from $10,500 to $12,713. Furthermore, the city’s pension contribution for police employees was 23.6 percent of earnable compensation in 2008, a rate that has gone up to 30.1 per-cent.

“Clearly, public agencies have reason for concern that pension costs will continue to consume in-creasing shares of their budgets,” Murray wrote.

$20

$40

$60

$80

$100

2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012

Mill

ion

s

Source: City of Palo Alto

Salaries

$16.3

$13.5 $18.4 $27.3

704

752

676647 653

623

580$30.9$32.7

$36.8

$58.9

Salaries, benefits and number of Palo Alto city employees

$53.9 $55.6 $60.4 $58.4 $60.4$48.5

City employees

Benefits Full-time equivalent permanent employees (FTE)

CITY HALL

Despite tax growth, Palo Alto braces for deficits

City’s new Long Range Financial Forecast shows sales taxes rising, employee expenditures spiking

by Gennady Sheyner

City of Palo Alto employee benefits have increased over the past dozen years as a percentage of compensation, in spite of the decreasing number of full-time employees.

LABOR UNIONS

Palo Alto, police union deadlocked over contract

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Upfront

COMMUNITY

Gunn sisters juggle academics with life at the VA

On-site hospital residence for families enables them to stick with dad

by Chris Kenrick

W hen Amber and Julie Ja-cobson tell classmates at Gunn High School they

live down the street at the VA Hos-pital, they’re astounded that some say they’ve never heard of it.

“They know nothing about it,” said Julie, a freshman, who recently tried to explain military life — and the concept of an Army PX store — to a friend who “just couldn’t wrap her head around it.”

Since last August, the Jacobson sisters have been living with their mother, Amy Jacobson, in Fisher House, an onsite residence for fami-lies of patients at the Palo Alto Vet-erans Administration Health Care System.

Their dad, Sgt. Martin Jacobson, lives a stone’s throw away in the hospital’s Spinal Cord Injury Unit. A U.S. Army plumber, he was para-lyzed from the shoulders down fol-lowing a beach accident last July in Hawaii, just as he was preparing for deployment to Afghanistan.

The disastrous consequences of a dive into a sandbar upended the lives of the Jacobsons, who had spent the last two years on Army assignment in Korea.

They abruptly shifted gears, fol-lowing Martin Jacobson from Ha-waii — where they had planned to live while he was in Afghanistan — to the Palo Alto Spinal Cord Injury Unit.

“My dad’s the same person he always was — he just can’t move now,” said Amber, 16, a sophomore at Gunn.

She and her sister stop to see their father each morning on their way to

school. During the afternoons, they settle into his hospital room with their books and laptops, using the wide window ledge as a desk to do their homework.

Their older brother, Brandon Ja-cobson, 21, serves with the Army at Fort Bragg, N.C.

Amy Jacobson spends her days trying to support her husband, pre-paring some of his favorite foods — Filipino dishes, soup, roast beef sandwiches — in the spacious kitchen at Fisher House and carry-ing them across the street to hand-feed him.

Amber and Julie say their aca-demic transition to Gunn has not been difficult.

“My school in Korea was chal-lenging, so it isn’t that different,” Amber said.

Making friends was more of a challenge.

“People here grew up together. They know each other, and they’re not used to moving around,” 14-year-old Julie said. “They already have their own groups, and when you come in, you have to find your own friends.”

She finally started feeling com-fortable in November, when she got to know classmates better on field trips to Yosemite and Jasper Ridge.

Having just come from Korea, “We connect with the Korean kids (at Gunn) very easily,” Amber said.

“I tell them what school I went to, and they know it.”

Amber was surprised, upon join-ing the Model UN Club at Gunn, to find students she had known in Ko-rea in the same organization.

“They probably moved here the same time I did,” she said.

Still, it’s tough to put down roots when they know their situation is temporary.

“I keep trying to do sports, but it’s expensive, and I have to get signa-tures from my old school, and that’s hard because it’s in Korea,” Amber said.

The family now anticipates a mid-March departure date for a new home at Travis Air Force Base, but little seems to be certain.

Martin Jacobson’s room in the Spinal Cord Injury Unit is decorat-ed with self-portraits by Julie, her drawing of Honolulu’s Diamond Head as seen from Jacobson’s room in the Intensive Care Unit of Tripler Army Medical Center, and other family memorabilia.

Jacobson, 46, is up and about in his wheelchair, after having been bedridden for months and gradually

weaned from breathing assistance.He can make phone calls, switch

TV channels, send email and surf the Web using voice-recognition technology, a small, circular “mouse” stuck in the middle of his forehead and other technology.

“It’s definitely a new lifestyle for me,” Jacobson said.

“I’ve learned some freedom, but it’s not a lot. After three months of lying in bed, I really started won-dering what use I am, so that’s prob-ably my biggest challenge — being of use again.”

Of his family, he said, “They’ve been through a lot.

“Amber does volunteer work here, and she’s interacted with soldiers with traumatic brain injuries and talked to me about how she can see the difference.

“She seems to be thankful for what’s left of me.”

Since its opening six years ago,

the 21 suites in Fisher House have provided temporary shelter to more than 3,000 families, according to Palo Alto VA spokeswoman Kerri Childress.

Many families come through with young children, and about 20 have had kids old enough to attend local schools, a Fisher House staff mem-ber said.

U.S. Secretary for Veterans Af-fairs Eric Shinseki recently ap-proved a second Fisher House for the Palo Alto VA campus, to be built through the fundraising efforts of the Fisher House Foundation and local volunteers.

Major donors for the first Fisher House were Palo Alto businessman John Arrillaga, Cadence Design, Inc., and local Rotary Clubs, Chil-dress said.

Staff Writer Chris Kenrick can be emailed at [email protected].

From left, Amber and Julie Jacobson visit their father, Martin Jacobson, in his room at the Palo Alto Veterans Administration Health Care System on Tuesday, Feb. 28.

EDUCATION

Board ponders Addison Elementary boundary changeMinor shift is part of city-wide discussion of enrollment, facilities

by Chris Kenrick

S chool officials are ponder-ing changes to the attendance boundaries of the crowded

Addison Elementary School as a temporary fix among longer-term, citywide challenges of matching new classroom buildings to where children live.

The possible change would switch a portion of Professorville, as well as current Addison households south of Embarcadero Road, from Addison into the Walter Hays atten-dance area.

Superintendent Kevin Skelly said he would return in April with specific recommendations on the boundary change for consideration by the Board of Education.

In recent years, the boundaries have led to frequent “overflows” of Addison children into Walter Hays

and other schools, creating uncer-tainty for parents and home-buyers in the Addison neighborhood, Skelly said. A boundary change would of-fer more predictability for families, he said.

The Addison proposal was a de-tail in a far larger discussion held in a Board of Education study session Tuesday, Feb. 28, to consider long-term enrollment projections and fa-cilities planning.

Though little consensus emerged on specifics, board members gener-ally agreed there’s a need in the near future for a 13th elementary school and — perhaps more urgently — a fourth middle school in Palo Alto.

They specifically mentioned two possible sites for expansion: the Garland campus at 870 N. Califor-nia Ave. and the Greendell campus combined with the district’s new ac-

quisition of an adjacent parcel at 525 San Antonio Road.

However, several members noted that many more desks soon will be needed on the west side of El Cami-no Real due to Stanford University’s plans to build faculty housing on El Camino between California Av-enue and Page Mill Road, and on California Avenue south of Hanover Street.

Board members did not specifi-cally address a proposal by Skelly to postpone until at least 2019 any consideration of school facilities at Cubberley Community Center on Middlefield Road.

With the school district’s long-term lease of Cubberley to the city coming up for renewal, Skelly said the district is “heavily dependent” on the $7 million a year in lease rev-enue, which represents 4 percent of

the schools’ operating budget. Skelly said the surprising bump

in elementary enrollment of recent years will be dampened in the near future by the phase-in of a new state law mandating that children turn 5 by Sept. 1 of the year they start kin-dergarten, Skelly said.

With funds from a 2008 facilities bond, the district has completed or is in the process of building up to 40 new elementary classrooms on ex-isting campuses, including those of Ohlone, Fairmeadow and Duveneck elementary schools.

Current middle school construc-tion will provide district-wide ca-pacity for 2,900 students. Conser-vative enrollment projections show this number will be reached in 2015, he said.

Skelly urged the board to wait at least a year before firmly commit-

ting to entire new campuses, with hope that more data will offer guid-ance in light of currently iffy growth projections and financial resources.

Board member Barb Mitchell argued the district should “move forward with scenarios for both a 13th elementary school and a fourth middle school” guided by aligning investments in new classrooms with the geographic “clusters” — north, south and west — in which enroll-ment growth is occurring.

“North cluster” elementary schools are considered to be Ad-dison, Duveneck and Walter Hays; “south cluster” schools are El Car-melo, Fairmeadow and Palo Verde; and “west cluster” schools are Bar-ron Park, Juana Briones, Escondido and Lucille Nixon. Additionally,

(continued on page 16)

Kels

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Upfront

CommunityA roundup of nonprofit news

MAYOR’S CHALLENGE ... The Palo Alto Family Y has stepped forward

to help organize Mayor Yiaway Yeh’s

“Mayor’s Challenge” — a series

of four sporting events sprinkled

throughout the year and designed

to bring the city’s neighborhoods

together. The first event, a ping-

pong challenge, will be held Sun-day, March 25, from 2 to 5 p.m. at

various local gyms: the Y, Cubberley

Community Center, Jordan Middle

School, Terman Middle School and

the Campus for Jewish Life. Co-

sponsors of the pingpong event

are the Palo Alto Table Tennis Club,

Joola (a table tennis company) and

the Palo Alto Unified School District.

Neighborhoods will earn points ac-

cording to the number of residents

who participate, according to Yeh.

PRESCRIPTION FOR SAVING ... A

team of Stanford University students

and graduates has created a system

to recoup unused prescription drugs

and redirect them to uninsured

patients. The university-based non-

profit startup, SIRUM (Supporting

Initiatives to Redistribute Unused

Medications), has developed a

Web-based system to aid medical

workers charged with disposing of

unused prescription products. The

workers list the medications for a

potential match with recipients in

need. When a match is found, the

system generates a Fedex label

and packing slip, making it easy to

document and donate. The system

will start to make a dent in the bil-

lions of dollars in unused medicine

that is wasted annually in the United

States, according to State Sen.

Joe Simitian, D-Palo Alto. Simitian

sponsored legislation to ease regu-

latory hurdles to the drug transfers

after hearing about the medical

waste problem in 2005 from a

Stanford University medical student.

Simitian said he introduced addi-

tional legislation last Friday, Feb. 24,

to further facilitate SIRUM’s system

by expanding the donor base and

recipient pool and allowing pharma-

cy-to-pharmacy exchanges.

FACING AIDS ... Gunn High School’s FACE AIDS chapter will

be hosting a walkathon Saturday, March 31, to raise funds for the

nonprofit organization, which pro-

vides health care and employment

to patients with HIV and AIDS in

Rwanda. The 12-mile walk at Palo

Alto’s Foothills Park will start at

noon at the Oak Grove Picnic Area,

according to Rachael Acker, co-

president of the school’s chapter.

The length of the walk was chosen

because patients in Nyamirama,

which is near the capital of Rwan-

da, currently must walk 12 miles

for treatment at the nearest health

center. The funds will go to revital-

izing the Nyamirama Health Center.

More information is available by

emailing [email protected].

NONPROFIT NOTEBOOK

Betty Schneider, a longtime regular diner at La Comida, laughs after receiving a gift of flowers during lunch on Tuesday, Feb. 28.

T om Barry was holding court at the La Comida lunch program in Palo Alto Tuesday, 12 se-

niors joining him at the long folding table, all intent on his words.

“Are we ready for trivia?” he asked, his voice reedy, like TV com-mentator Andy Rooney’s.

Barry, a retired Palo Alto High School teacher, began quizzing his lunch mates on current events, start-ing with the Academy Awards.

“What do they call the awards in France?” he asked, referring to that country’s equivalent of the Oscars.

The seniors, all older than 60 and many retired professionals like him-self, offered their guesses: “Cannes Film Festival?” “Spirit Awards?” “Palme d’Or?”

Teasing them along, Barry dis-closed that the answer was a five-letter word starting with the letter, “C.” One woman asked for the sec-ond letter.

Barry smiled. “You always want a hint, huh?”

he joked. For people like those gathered

at Barry’s trivia table, La Comida serves as a place both to dine and to

mingle — and at a time of life when friends and intellectual stimulation can be harder to come by.

The nonprofit organization pro-vides about 31,000 lunches a year at Avenidas senior center on Bryant Street, serving close to 1,000 peo-ple, according to the organization. This week, the program marked its 40th anniversary.

Started by the Rotary Club of Palo Alto in 1972, La Comida was the first “congregate” senior nu-trition site in Santa Clara County. Now, there are 35 sites countywide. The county’s population of people older than 60 is expected to grow by another 50 percent by 2020, accord-ing to the Council on Aging, Silicon Valley.

Supporters and participants say La Comida meets two critical needs of older adults: nutrition and friend-ship.

“Some folks, this is their major meal of the day,” said Bill Blodgett, president of the La Comida board of directors.

A third of the diners are low-in-come, and the $2.50 voluntary con-tribution per meal fits within their

budgets.Even for those not struggling fi-

nancially, many simply don’t have the energy to shop for groceries and fix meals themselves or to go out to a restaurant, Blodgett said. Others — widowed and living by them-selves — seek the companionship of people who share a similar stage of life and can relate to their experi-ences and interests, he added.

“They are alone now. This pro-vides a very important way for peo-ple to be engaged,” Blodgett said.

Palo Alto resident Betty Sch-neider, 90, comes to La Comida five days a week. A world traveler with a lively mind, she and her late husband, Jack, lived for more than 15 years in South Africa. She is cur-rently writing two books, one about apartheid as seen through the eyes of her black cleaning woman.

Schneider’s fondness for meeting others was evident during a recent lunch. One man at her table, who had been fairly quiet, overheard her discussing Cambridge, Mass., and asked if she’d lived there.

Schneider swiveled her head and set her blue eyes on him.

“Yes, I did,” she said, leaning in slightly and grinning, like she’d just disclosed a secret. “Did you?”

Friendships extend beyond the lunch hour for some people. Sch-neider said she’s attended several theater productions with one man she met at La Comida, and she wel-comed another to visit her home a few times.

The trivia table is one of her fa-vorite parts of lunch at La Comida, though.

“We fight pretty hard to get in there,” she said of the table, noting that diners pull up chairs or stand at its edges.

Ninety-three percent of seniors responding to a December 2010 La Comida survey said the lunch program helps them maintain their independence. A greater percent-age reported feeling healthier and happier because of the socializing it affords them.

Mary Ruth Batchelder, the pro-gram’s site manager for the past 10 years and one of its four staff mem-bers, said she’s seen people blossom

SENIORS

Forging friendships for 40 yearsLa Comida lunch program provides seniors with more than a square meal

by Jocelyn Dong

(continued on page 10)

Vero

nica

Web

er

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Upfront

E ighty-year-old Henry Ford sat in the dining room of his Palo Alto home and recalled the

day he met Rochelle, his wife of 52 years. He was on a bus traveling to a high school football camp for the first time, leaving his home on grit-ty Orbin Street in Pittsburgh, Penn., for the white enclave of Ligonier, 35 miles north.

“I saw this cute colored girl, and I told the bus driver to stop,” he said. Ford, the team’s African-American co-captain, went to speak to the beautiful girl.

“I said, ‘Oops, sorry,’” he re-called.

“Sorry for what?” Rochelle re-sponded.

“I thought you were colored,” he said.

On Sunday, March 4, at 2 p.m. the Fords will speak about their inter-racial marriage and their life. The talk will take place at Lucie Stern Community Center, 1305 Middle-field Road, and is hosted by the Palo Alto Historical Association.

Theirs is a story of triumph amid some of the most searing racism of the past half-century. In the first decade of their courtship, they kept their romance a secret. It was a time when black men could be lynched in some parts of the country for look-ing at a white girl, and white women could be ostracized for dating or marrying a black man.

Throughout their marriage, they’ve experienced being fired from work, alienation and burning crosses as a result of their relation-ship.

Even in Palo Alto, 34 years after they moved in, racism has intruded into their lives, they said.

But there is a strong measure of

satisfaction in knowing they have thrived. The Fords became pros-perous and successful business people; and they remain a close couple. They have learned to take the painful and thoughtless com-ments of others with measured humor.

“At times we were so busy fight-ing the world we didn’t have time to fight each other,” Rochelle said at the couple’s festively decorated home Tuesday.

The Fords’ romance started out tentatively. After that initial meet-ing, they saw each other when Hen-ry came to town for other football camps or games. But it would be 4 1/2 years before they would date, Rochelle said.

Their lives couldn’t have started out more differently.

Henry grew up poor and aban-doned by his father. He lived on a dirt road with his mother and three sisters, sharing a home with an-other family of 15. The house was rat-infested and had a dirt cellar. But Henry refused to allow circum-stances to interfere with his self-esteem and his plans.

“When I looked in the mirror when I was 19 years old, I told my-self that I was going to be black the rest of my life and I was going to enjoy being me — and I do,” he said.

Football became his ticket out of the ghetto, he said. At the University of Pittsburgh, “Model T,” as Henry was known, became the first black quarterback at a white university. He also became the first black male to enter the School of Business, he said.

Rochelle grew up in a small, upper-middle-class white town. Li-

gonier had a pedigree dating to the 1760s.

“I was Miss Everything you were supposed to be — May queen ... and head majorette — everything but myself,” she said.

She eventually transferred from Allegheny College to the University of Pittsburgh. The couple began to see each other secretly in 1950.

Henry had graduated by this time, but he could not find a job in busi-ness. He signed a contract with the Cleveland Browns and eventually went to the Pittsburgh Steelers in 1956.

But in 1958 Steeler officials or-dered him to stop dating a white girl, he said. Henry said he had two lives: one professional and one per-sonal, and the two were separate. The Steelers soon fired him.

“I thought his world was coming to an end. No one called me,” he recalled.

He moved to Arizona and played quarterback in a sandlot league with other ex-professional ball play-ers. He stayed for two years, but Rochelle said, “If you don’t come home, I’ll marry someone else.”

The Fords married in 1960, more than 10 years after they began dat-ing. Interracial marriage wasn’t legal in many parts of the United States. The Supreme Court made it legal in 1967, Rochelle said.

When they married, the white school principal where Rochelle worked as a teacher asked Rochelle’s mother: “How are you going to feel about having little black children?” she recalled.

Henry got a job in business working for Acme Markets grocery chain.

A romance in black and whitePalo Alto couple to speak about their 52-year interracial marriage

by Sue Dremann

NOTICE OF A PUBLIC MEETINGof the City of Palo Alto

Planning & Transportation Committee

Please be advised the Planning and Transportation Commission (P&TC) shall conduct a public meeting at 6:00 PM, Wednesday, March 14, 2012 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.

UNFINISHED BUSINESS.

Other Items:

1. Consider revisions to Commission policies and procedures regarding private meetings and other forms of communications (“ex-parte” communications) between Commission and the public and project applicants on development projects.

NEW BUSINESS.

Study Session:

2. Study Session: Update on Rail Corridor Study and Draft Report.

Public Hearing:

3. El Camino Park, between Sand Hill and Quarry Roads, Palo Alto and 10 acres near Searsville and Fremont Roads in the County of Santa Clara (Special Condition Area B)*: Request by Stanford University for Planning and Transportation Commission review of an amendment to the 1997 Sand Hill Road Development Agreement to extend the lease on the El Camino Park site for a period of nine years, from June 2033 to June 2042 and to remove approximately 10.25 acres of land from Special Condition Area B. The amendment to the Development Agreement would not change the environmental impacts analyzed in the General Use Permit EIR. No additional environmental review is required.

* Quasi-Judicial Items subject to Council’s Disclosure Policy

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 [email protected].

***

Curtis Williams, Director of Planning and Community Environment

Series Sponsor: Jean Lane, in memory of Bill LaneMountain View Center for the Performing Arts

500 Castro Street, Mountain View

Joel Salatin Monday, March 5, at 8 p.m.

Local Food to the RescueSponsored by Sand Hill Global Advisors

Peninsula Open Space Trust222 High Street, Palo Alto, CA 94301(650) 854-7696 www.openspacetrust.org

Media Sponsor: Embarcadero Media

Order tickets by phone:(650) 903-6000

www.openspacetrust.org/lectures

Rochelle and Henry Ford, who have endured a barrage of racial discrimination, recently celebrated their 52nd anniversary.

RACE

(continued on next page)

Veronica Weber

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Upfront

HELP YOUTH THRIVEPALO ALTO FAMILY YMCA

DEVELOPMENTAL ASSETS are the positive relationships, opportunities, values and skills that young people need to grow and thrive.

Asset of the Month: Creative Activities Youth involved in creative activities have higher grades, are more socially competent and likely to volunteer, and are less apt to experience depression.

George Fisher, MD, PhD Associate Professor of Medical Oncology

COMMUNITY TALK:COLON CANCER

For more information:www.stanfordhospital.org/colonhealth

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“I was the Jackie Robinson of the grocery business,” he said, refer-ring to baseball’s first black Major League player.

Rochelle was teaching in schools in Pittsburgh ghettos. The district wanted her to teach wealthy white kids, she said.

“But I wanted to teach where I could make a difference,” she said.

Housing issues dogged the couple in the decades that followed.

The Fords were shown and in some cases unknowingly purchased “black homes,” which were desig-nated by Realtors. In Levittown, Penn., where they purchased a home, there were riots and burning crosses in front yards and blood-shed when black families moved in, Henry said.

The Fords came to Palo Alto in 1977, eventually buying Coca Cola’s vending operations from Sonoma to Santa Cruz. More business purchas-es and sales were to follow.

By this time they were financially comfortable and could afford a bet-ter home.

Rochelle had seen the Profes-sorville house in real estate list-ings, but a Realtor took the couple to East Palo Alto and other cities, where once again they were shown “black houses,” she said. When they purchased the Professorville home with the aid of another agent, two big vans brought their furnishings. A neighbor was soon designated to investigate the couple, knocking on their door.

“How many people are going to live here?” she asked, according to Rochelle.

Henry, who was tired and a little exasperated, said there would be 11.

“I knew it!” the woman said.The Fords’ two sons entered Palo

Alto schools when integration with East Palo Alto had just begun. The boys were immediately placed in the lowest reading group along with other black children, Rochelle said. Her sons had to find the ap-propriate moment to show their teachers they could really read, she said.

But the Fords are not bitter. In their 34 years in Palo Alto, they have had many wonderful experi-ences, they said. Since the couple married, American acceptance of interracial marriage has improved. According to a Feb. 16 study by the Pew Research Center, 8.4 percent of all marriages in 2010 are inter-racial, up from 3.2 percent in 1980. And 15 percent of all marriages that took place in 2010 were inter-racial.

In recent years Rochelle has turned to metal sculpting, fulfilling a longtime dream to be an artist. The Fords’ home is filled with her whimsical sculptures — Rochelle has made about 2,000 from found objects and sheet metal. A majestic oak canopies their front yard amid the sculptures and immaculately manicured plantings.

Henry does the yard work. But even in their front yard, the old ste-reotypes still seep in.

Assuming he is the family’s hired gardener, a woman asked Henry how much he charges for his work.

“I don’t charge anything. I just sleep with the lady of the house,” he said.

Staff Writer Sue Dremann can be emailed at [email protected].

through La Comida.“We get a lot of people who come

after they’ve a lost a spouse. ... I’ve seen new people come to volunteer and to dine that, you know, are a little bit down in the mouth, and they become part of a community,” she said.

“That’s why the program was originally designed. The ‘congre-gate’ dining is good for their mental health and just as important as the meals,” she said.

The program offers lunches ev-ery weekday, cooked in the kitchen onsite. Each meal includes a salad, entrée, dessert and drink and is pre-pared by a staff of three.

Volunteer musicians provide en-tertainment most days of the week, playing the grand piano tucked into one corner of the brightly lit room or bringing their own instruments.

If conversation is food for the mind, then music, apparently, is food for the spirit.

“Some people love to sing” with the musicians, said Blodgett, who volunteers along with his wife. “Some people, whenever they get half a chance, they dance.”

The program operates on a budget of more than $235,000, funded in large part by the County of Santa Clara through its Senior Nutrition Program, Batchelder said. The City of Palo Alto contributes about 10 percent of the budget.

Private donations help with ex-penses including personnel and a free shuttle that picks up frail or disabled diners from their homes.

Back at the trivia table, Barry once again turned his attention to France, inquiring about a word that the country’s prime minister recent-ly banned from official documents.

It was a word popular in World War I, Barry hinted.

“It came from a song a soldier sang in WWI,” Barry said.

Immediately, a slight man with closely cropped white hair began to croon the long-forgotten tune. Recognition spread across the faces around the table.

“Oh, Mademoiselle from Ar-mentières, parlez-vous?” he sang, as others smiled. “Hinky-dinky, parlez-vous?”

Editor’s note: The French equiv-alent of the Oscar is the “César” award. And the banned word in France is “mademoiselle.”

Editor Jocelyn Dong can be emailed at [email protected].

La Comida(continued from page 8)

A video excerpt from Sue Dremann’s interview with Henry and Rochelle Ford is posted on Palo Alto Online.

WATCH THE VIDEOwww.PaloAltoOnline.com

(continued from previous page)

Page 10

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To learn more about the benefits of giving birth at Packard Children’s, call (650) 497-8000 or visit deliver.lpch.org.

He’ll pick

his birthday.

You pick his birthplace.

Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital is devoted exclusively to expectant mothers and children.

Page 11

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“This is a neighborhood center anchored by a grocery store, and it’s intended to be that way going forward,” Tze told the commission Wednesday.

As the Weekly first reported earli-er this month, the grocery store The Fresh Market has agreed to move into the plaza and bring to Palo Alto its first store west of the Mississippi. Tze said Wednesday that The Fresh Market’s move into Edgewood is part of a broader plan to build six stores in California. Executives from The Fresh Market visited the plaza last year during “Edgewood Eats,” a resident-organized mobile-food event, he said.

Tze said the chain’s decision to build other stores in California con-vinced him that The Fresh Market would operate in the plaza for a long time.

“We don’t want the risk of some-one just opening and three years later saying they can’t do it, shut-ting down and moving back east of the Mississippi,” Tze said.

The project would also include a small park with benches and trees — a place intended to encourage community gatherings, he said. The Eichler buildings would be preserved and rehabilitated, and the plaza would include a display honoring the developer, whose distinctive style em-phasizes open space, glass doors and post-and-beam construction.

In addition to rezoning the site for a “planned community,” the com-mission voted to approve the envi-ronmental analysis for Edgewood Plaza by a 4-2 vote, with Vice Chair Susan Fineberg and Commissioner Arthur Keller dissenting. Commis-sioners said they were concerned about the recent changes in the fi-nal Environmental Impact Report,

which had initially stated that the project would have a significant impact but was later revised to say the impact would be minimal. The city’s two historical consultants dis-agreed on the issue.

In approving the project, com-missioners praised Tze’s patience and willingness to work with resi-dents on refining the plans. Com-missioner Samir Tuma thanked Tze and the project’s critics for making the revisions necessary to make the revitalization of Edgewood Plaza possible.

“I know there are a lot of people, particularly in that immediate sur-rounding community, who are look-ing forward to having an operating shopping center — one with a gro-cery store and other amenities that go with it,” Tuma said.

Commissioner Mark Michael said

the redeveloped plaza would be a “significant enhancement” to the community. Commissioner Arthur Keller agreed.

“In this particular case we’re get-ting a real shopping center,” Keller said. “We’re getting a reasonable size grocery store — 20,000 square feet — and we’re getting two other shopping-center buildings, which will

basically create a full complement of stores that it will be reasonable to consider a neighborhood center.”

Residents who spoke at the Wednesday hearing also gave the project high marks, though some said they were worried about its traffic impacts and the dangerous road conditions on West Bayshore Road.

Brenda Erwin, who lives nearby, said she has seen many pedestrians and bicyclists barely avoid getting hit by cars at West Bayshore, a busy road that runs adjacent to U.S. Highway 101. Planning Director Curtis Williams said the city will consider means beyond this project to address the traffic problems.

“West Bayshore has been there and has been a fast roadway when this was a shopping center, and we’re going to try to work to cre-

ate better access there, but it’s not this project’s impact that’s causing that,” Williams said. “Within the bounds of this project, we should do what we can do to provide a safe environment, but we cannot try to address West Bayshore’s problems just through this project.”

Martin Yonke, who lives near the plaza and whose group challenged the developer’s earlier plan, was one of several speakers to praise the project at Wednesday’s hearing.

“We look forward to having a re-vitalized shopping center that can once again be an asset to Palo Alto,” Yonke said.

The City Council is scheduled to review Edgewood Plaza plans on March 19.

Staff Writer Gennady Sheyner can be emailed at [email protected].

Upfront

Palo Alto’s planning commission approved a zone change that would enable the rehabilitation of Edgewood Plaza shopping center. The plans, which need City Council approval, call for renovations to three retail buildings originally developed by Joseph Eichler and the construction of 10 homes.

Edgewood Plaza(continued from page 3)

A n ambitious plan to rede-velop Alma Plaza in south Palo Alto took another leap

forward Tuesday, Feb. 28, when builder D.R. Horton signed an agreement with the plaza’s de-veloper to construct the first 19 houses at the plaza.

John McNellis, the developer behind the project, told the Week-ly that D.R. Horton had agreed to build the first phase of homes on the 4.2-acre plaza, which is lo-cated in the 3400 block of Alma Street. The company had also built the houses at Arbor Real, the resi-dential complex at the site of the former Rickey’s Hyatt.

McNellis’ agreement with the builder is the latest milestone for a high-profile project that was the subject of 15 public hearings span-ning two years. The City Council approved the zone change to en-

able the plaza’s redevelopment in January 2009.

While the anchor of the new plaza will be a grocery store, the project also includes 37 homes, 15 below-market-rate apartments, a small park and a community room. The city’s approval allows the construction of half of the homes once the lease with the supermarket is signed. The other half can be constructed once the store is occupied.

The Tuesday agreement pertains exclusively to 19 homes, but the same builder could return later in the process to build the remainder of the homes, McNellis said.

“We both anticipate and hope that it will be D.R. Horton build-ing the second half,” he said.

McNellis said he expects con-struction of the homes to begin March 5 and to be completed in

August. Meanwhile, construction is in progress on the retail portion of the plaza, which includes the grocery store and the public park. The plan is to finish construc-tion on the retail and the homes at about the same time, McNellis said.

The new grocery store will be occupied by Miki’s Farm Fresh Market and would be mod-eled after the popular Berkeley Bowl supermarket. Michael “Miki” Werness, who worked as manager of Berkeley Bowl and Monterey Market (both in Berkeley), announced in July his plan to open the store at Alma Plaza.

Miki’s Farm Fresh Market is scheduled to open this summer.

Staff Writer Gennady Sheyner can be emailed at [email protected].

LAND USE

Homebuilder signs deal for Alma PlazaD.R. Horton agrees to build first 19 homes in south Palo Alto plaza

by Gennady Sheyner

‘We don’t want the risk of someone just opening and three years later saying they can’t do it.’

—John Tze, Sand Hill Property Co. developer

youth in Palo Alto.”A major part of Yeh’s address

focused on what he called the city’s “human assets.” He noted that about 30 percent of the city now identifies as Asian or Asian-American. Yeh, who is the city’s first Chinese-American mayor, said that while some cross-cultural interaction inevitably occurs in lo-cal schools, the city also has a pro-active role to play in bringing the community together and “knitting a strong social fabric.”

To that end, Yeh plans to hold a series of “Mayor’s Challenge” events — athletic competitions de-signed to bring neighbors together. Yeh introduced this idea during his inauguration speech last month. On Monday, he provided some details.

The first event, Yeh said, will be a community-wide pingpong tournament that would take place on Sunday, March 25, from 2 to 5 p.m. at five locations: the Palo Alto Family Y, Cubberley Community Center, Jordan Middle School, Ter-man Middle School and the Cam-

pus for Jewish Life.Three other challenges will follow

later in the year and will pit neigh-borhoods against neighborhoods, Yeh said. The winning neighbor-hood will be the one with the most residents participating, he said.

“The goal of the Mayor’s Chal-lenge is that by the end of the year, many of you will feel the founda-tion for the tradition of neighbor-hood identity and activism has been strengthened,” Yeh said.

Yeh also briefly summarized the city’s recent accomplishments, particularly in the field of environ-mental sustainability. This year, he said, the council is spearhead-ing two initiatives intended to keep Palo Alto in the forefront of green innovation. One, called Palo Alto CLEAN, encourages businesses to install solar panels and sell power to the city. The other is creating a carbon-neutral policy for the city’s electric portfolio.

“These initiatives will help transform the physical energy in-frastructure of our community,” Yeh said.

Staff Writer Gennady Sheyner can be emailed at [email protected].

State of the City(continued from page 5)

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But he was skeptical that a city-sponsored camera-surveillance setup would become a reality. Neighbors are divided on that concept, he said.

“I think on the face of it, that’s a good idea. I wouldn’t mind seeing it. But it’s costly. And for everyone who thinks it’s a good idea, there is some-one who is opposed to it,” he said.

Karen White, Duveneck/St. Fran-cis Neighborhood Association pres-ident, said she thinks the cameras could be used on a temporary basis.

Other Palo Alto residents have added security alarms and cameras to their homes.

Alan Yu installed an alarm system after his Oregon Avenue residence was burglarized four or five years ago. A few days after the break-in, perpetrators returned and tried to kick in a door, breaking a glass window. Since installing the alarms and posting a sign outside, he has not had further trouble, he said.

But he doesn’t disapprove of add-ing street-surveillance equipment.

“There has to be some sacrifice of the convenience/privacy issues over having more safety,” he said.

“I never used to fear for my safety until I saw that robbery report. My house is a block away from 101. I feel very open and exposed. I have rarely ever seen Oregon Avenue patrolled, but I realize that’s a very expensive proposition. That’s why cameras and license-plate readers are a good option. If something does happen, then you have a record,” he said. “It’s a one-point presence with an officer. With cameras and read-ers, there are multiple points.”

Henner said two bicycles were stolen from his back yard last year. He carries a light and rape alarm when he walks his dog at night. But communication is the key to mak-ing the neighborhood inhospitable to thieves, he said. To that end, he has reached out to the Duveneck/St. Francis neighborhood through email to form watch groups. At first he hesitated, he said, fearing his neighbors might think him crazy.

“A lot of people don’t know me,” he said.

But he heard back from many people.

“No one has come back and said, ‘Mind your own business,’” he said. Henner said protection is about “creating a place where everyone knows each other” — and not for the short term.

“We have to take responsibility to keep this place safe. This place should be inhospitable to crooks. What’s really important is what we are doing six months from now and two years from now,” he said.

Crescent Park resident Amy Wardwell Kacher said residents are using email to increase neighbor-hood awareness.

“Our neighborhood Yahoo group goes crazy tracking the door-to-door salespeople: ‘Girl in her 20s wear-ing a hoodie and carrying a clip-board just came to my door, had no permit’ — this type of thing. On the Yahoo group, people are discussing possible cameras and installing mo-tion-sensor flood lights,” she said.

Parents at schools are discussing the issue when they pick up their children and are talking about how they now lock their back and side doors when they are home, she said.

Kacher said a few people have

changed to better quality dead bolts, put alarm signs in their yards, and put 3M coating on some windows, which “makes it virtually impos-sible to break through.”

Police spokesman Lt. Zach Perron said residents should not hesitate to call 911 when they see a suspicious person or suspicious circumstance. Residents who feel uncomfortable calling 911 for a non-emergency can program their phones and speed dial with the non-emergency dispatch-center number, 650-329-2413, he said.

Residents must realize they play a critical role in catching the bad guys, since a handful of officers must patrol 26 square miles and the reality is they will rarely catch bur-glars red-handed while patrolling, he said.

“I’ve been here for 14 years, and I’m going to be here for 30 years, and I will probably never witness a burglar breaking in,” he said.

He noted that neighborhood aware-ness is highly effective. Palo Alto police arrested three people Monday, Feb. 27, after a resident reported sus-picious behavior on Waverley Street near Oregon Expressway.

“It’s a perfect example of how that’s supposed to work,” he said.

Staff Writer Sue Dremann can be emailed at [email protected].

Upfront

AWARDS

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April 11, 2012

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Burglaries(continued from page 3)

Have you changed your behavior or home as a result of the recent burglar-ies? Talk about the topic on Town Square, the online discussion forum, on Palo Alto Online.

TALK ABOUT ITwww.PaloAltoOnline.com

Tips for preventing a burglary or robbery

The Palo Alto Police Department has the following recommendations to help prevent burglaries and robberies:

DO:

DON’T:

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Altaire Walk

Middlefield Rd

Middlefield Rd

E Charleston Rd

Alma St

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El CaminoSoccer Fields

Middlefield Rd

Embarcadero Rd

Embarcadero Rd

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Channing Ave

Louis Rd

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Birch St

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Recent residential burglaries in Palo Alto

1100 block Middlefield Road, 2/24, 10:56 a.m.; residential burglary.

1600 block Portola Avenue, 2/24, 12:16 p.m.; residential burglary.

300 block Sheridan Avenue, 2/24, 3:11 p.m.; residential burglary.

400 block Grant Avenue, 2/24, 4:16 p.m.; residential burglary.

300 block Sheridan Avenue, 2/24, 6:56 a.m.; residential burglary.

400 block Grant Avenue, 2/24, 9:05 p.m.; residential burglary.

300 block Sheridan Avenue, 2/24, 6:56 p.m.; residential burglary.

800 block Altaire Walk, 2/25, 11:04 a.m.; residential burglary.

800 block Altaire Walk, 2/27, 11:59 a.m.; residential burglary.

900 block Embarcadero Road, 2/27, 3:37 p.m.; residential burglary.

A spate of residential burglaries have occurred in Palo Alto in the past week.

Sha

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Page 13

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Upfront

Register at Avenidas.org or call (650) 289-5435.

Come discover:

Avenidas presents its 4th Annual

Housing Conference

Resources and programs for positive aging

Should you rent or own? How to stay safe in your home Ways to unlock your home’s value Other housing options How to eliminate clutter Tips on selling your home

Saturday, March 108:30 am - 2:30 pm

Special thanks to Presenting Sponsor Nancy Goldcamp

Avenidas presents its 5th Annual

TICKETS: livelyarts.stanford.edu | 650-725-ARTS

20112012

LIONHEART + AMERICANCONTEMPORARY MUSIC ENSEMBLE

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ANONYMOUS 4 | APR 3 AND MORE!

SUN / MAR 4 / 2:30 PMLauded early music vocalists Lionheart + NYC mavericks ACME in works by Ingram Marshall (commission/premiere) and Phil Kline.

ST. LAWRENCE STRING QUARTET

SUN / MAR 11 / 2:30 PMThe SLSQ conclude their 2011–12 series with an all-Beethoven program.

F or Palo Alto residents who live near the Caltrain corridor, the tracks are both a blessing and

a curse — a way to get around the Peninsula without cars and a barrier that restricts their ability to travel east and west.

This dichotomy, and the opportu-nities and challenges it presents, is at the center of a new report from a specially appointed City Council Rail Task Force, a 17-member group that has been meeting for more than a year with the goal of adopting an official community “vision” for the corridor. Members included Sierra Club representatives Tom Jordan and Irvin Dawid, Board of Educa-tion member Barb Mitchell, archi-tect Tony Carrasco, Jim Rebosio from the Palo Alto Chamber of Commerce, residents from various neighborhoods along the tracks and Charles Carter, Stanford Univer-sity’s director of land use and envi-ronmental planning.

The project was prompted by Cal-ifornia’s voter-approved high-speed rail system, which under the current state proposal is slated to run along the corridor. The community’s con-cerns about the $98 billion project ultimately led the city to take a fresh look at the corridor and figure out ways to improve it. In July 2010, the City Council appointed the task force to “generate a community vi-sion for land use transportation and urban design opportunities” along the corridor. In addition to the Cal-train tracks, the report examines El

Camino Real and Alma Street, two busy north-south arteries that run parallel to the tracks throughout the length of Palo Alto.

The new report, which the coun-cil’s Rail Committee began dis-cussing Thursday morning, March 1, highlights the variety of circula-tion and urban-design issues along the corridor and offers, as the com-munity vision, “to create a vibrant, transit-rich Corridor with city and neighborhood centers that provide walkable, pedestrian and bicycle-friendly places that serve the com-munity and beyond; and to connect the east and west portions of the city through an improved circulation network that binds the city together in all directions.”

Barbara Maloney, whose firm BMS Design Group served as the consultant for the task force, told the Rail Committee that the vision the task force settled on “really capital-

izes on the unique and special char-acter of the area” and on the “unique mix of uses and diversity of uses that are in this corridor.”

To capture this diversity of uses, the task force had split the cor-ridor into six distinct “subareas,” each with a unique character and challenges. These include three residential subareas — Southgate-Evergreen Park area, Ventura and the Charleston Meadows-Monroe Park area — along with downtown, the California Avenue area and the “neighborhood center” around El Camino Way in south Palo Alto.

Among the city’s highest pri-orities, the report states, should be improving east-west connectivity throughout the city and particularly in south Palo Alto.

“The Caltrain corridor represents the most significant barrier to east-west connectivity in central Palo Alto. ... It is a difficult barrier that divides the city in half,” the report states.

One of the task force’s boldest recommendations is increasing the number of rail crossings throughout the corridor, whether as an under-pass, overpass or at-grade. The task force brainstormed possible options and came up with a list of 15 poten-tial new crossings that could be add-ed to the 11 already in existence. It narrowed down its list to 15 “prior-ity crossings,” which would include four new ones — at Everett, Kellogg and Seale avenues and at Matadero Creek. These locations were located

Group calls for more rail crossings, parks around Caltrain tracks

Task force report proposes new ‘vision’ for Caltrain Corridor in Palo Altoby Gennady Sheyner

A woman walks underneath the Caltrain tracks at California Avenue in Palo Alto Thursday by way of the pedestrian/bike tunnel.

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TRANSPORTATION

‘The Caltrain corridor represents the most significant barrier to east-west connectivity in central Palo Alto. ... It is a difficult barrier that divides the city in half.’

—City Council Rail Task Force

Page 14

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Upfront

Palo Alto police arrest three after tipPalo Alto police arrested three people Monday, Feb. 27, after a resident

reported suspicious behavior on Waverley Street near Oregon Expressway.The resident noticed a vehicle occupied by two women and a man

driving slowly through his neighborhood. He followed from a distance and saw the man get out, knock on a door, wait for a few seconds and then return to the car.

After seeing this at least three times, the resident returned to his house and called 911, citing recent media reports advising people to report suspicious behavior.

Officers located and stopped the vehicle in the 2600 block of Middle-field Road, finding the two women in the car. They later found the man, who was on foot and “under the influence of a controlled substance,” at Oregon Expressway and West Bayshore Road.

In a search of the vehicle police said they found “burglary tools” (in-cluding pry tools and screwdrivers), as well as personal identifying in-formation belonging to someone else. They also found an unopened UPS package with the shipping label ripped off, making them unable to determine origin or destination.

The three people were taken into custody and transported to Santa Clara County Main Jail in San Jose. They are Becky Davis, 39, Richard Sgambati, 33, and Rochelle Vasquez, 36, all of San Jose.

Davis and Vasquez were booked for possession of burglary tools and possession of identifying information belonging to another. Sgambati was booked for being under the influence of a controlled substance.

Sgambati also had been arrested in Palo Alto Dec. 11, 2011, for posses-sion of burglary tools and stolen property after he was found with copper piping stolen from a business on East Meadow Circle.

Police said they are investigating possible links with recent burglaries.Those with information about this case are asked to contact 650-329-

2413. Anonymous tips can be emailed to [email protected] or sent by text or voicemail to 650-383-8984.

Any resident who expected a UPS delivery Feb. 27 that was not re-ceived is asked to call 650-329-2413.

— Chris Kenrick

Palo Alto apartments, homes hit in eight burglaries Palo Alto police are investigating eight residential burglaries and one

attempted residential burglary — all reported during the day on Friday, Feb. 24.

Three of the burglaries occurred on the same floor of an apartment complex in the 300 block of Sheridan Avenue between 7:30 a.m. and 2:45 p.m., the police department stated in a press release.

Another three took place on the same floor of an apartment complex in the 400 block of Grant Avenue between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m.

Another burglary occurred in the 1600 block of Portola Avenue and another in the 1100 block of Middlefield Road, both between 8:15 a.m. and 12:15 p.m.

The attempted burglary occurred in the 1100 block of Hamilton Av-enue, where a resident reported that someone had unsuccessfully at-tempted entry through a pet door between Feb. 22 and Feb. 24.

In the six apartment cases — all of which are in secured complexes that have locked interior hallways requiring a key for entry — the intruder or intruders pried open front doors and stole electronics and jewelry.

Electronics and jewelry also were taken in the Middlefield and Portola burglaries, in which entry was gained through rear doors. In one case, the door was unlocked, and in the other case entry was forced, police said.

Police said they have no suspects and are investigating the crimes and possible links to other burglaries reported in recent weeks.

Investigating officers have noticed trends in recent burglaries that may also have occurred in some of Friday’s cases. The burglars often will ring doorbells to see if anyone is home.

If they learn that someone is home, they will move on to another resi-dence. If they do not receive an answer at the door, they often will access a rear yard via an unlocked side gate.

This gives them private access to rear yards, where they often will pry or force open doors or windows to gain entry to the homes, police said.

—Chris Kenrick

Driver smashes through school wall at AddisonA young driver did several thousand dollars in damage to a building

at Addison Elementary School on Saturday evening, Feb. 25, after she “panicked” and hit the gas pedal after backing into a tree, police said.

The 17-year-old female driver was backing out of a parking space at 650 Addison Ave. at about 9:08 p.m. when her SUV struck a tree, Palo Alto police Sgt. Rich Bullerjahn said. She shifted the car into drive and panicked, putting the gas pedal to the floor, he said. The vehicle crashed into the building, leaving an SUV-sized hole.

The building sustained substantial damage. A structural engineer would need to assess the damage, Bullerjahn said.

No one was injured and the SUV sustained moderate damage. Buller-jahn said because no alcohol or drugs were involved and the driver was inexperienced and had panicked, she was not cited.

—Sue Dremann

News Digest

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Come to a celebration of art and creativity!

Join us as we celebrate storytelling through art. By sharing their visions artists revere the past,

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largely to provide residents with saf-er access to schools and neighbor-hood services areas and to “ensure safe linkages at all existing grade crossings.”

The task force’s report also urg-es the city to bring more schools and neighborhood services to ar-eas around the corridor, as well as parks and recreational amenities. The study area, the report notes, “is generally underserved by park and recreation facilities,” though the re-port also acknowledges that creating “major parks and open spaces will be challenging” given that Palo Alto is a built-out city.

“In most areas, the goods and ser-vices offered in the area tend to be more regional or citywide in their orientation rather than serving the day-to-day needs of residents in a convenient manner that does not require dependence on the automo-bile,” the report states.

The report states that the task force’s vision for the mixed-use cen-ters is to enhance their “variety of services, housing and employment, and create unique centers for neigh-borhood.”

Its vision for the residential subar-eas is to “protect areas from noise, vibration and other impacts associ-ated with Caltrain and future High-Speed Train,” improve linkages to services and enhance the bicycle and pedestrian linkages.

Though the scope of the study extends far beyond high-speed rail, the report acknowledges that the rail project would have a significant impact on its study area. It includes an analysis of possible rail crossings under a “blended” design in which high-speed rail and Caltrain use the same tracks on the Peninsula and under an alternative in which high-speed rail uses a below-ground “trench” design. It also highlights a variety of state and county trans-portation initiatives that could fur-ther impact Caltrain corridor, Alma Street and El Camino Real. These include the “Grand Boulevard Ini-tiative,” a collaboration by various Peninsula agencies to improve safe-ty and aesthetics on El Camino, and “Sustainable Community Strategy,” a regional effort to encourage devel-opment near transit.

The committee on Thursday took its first look at the report, which is still in draft form and subject to major revisions. During the brief discussion, Councilman Pat Burt urged consultants to limit their dis-cussion of state initiatives for Cal-train and high-speed rail given that these plans are “highly fluid.” The rail committee will continue its dis-cussion on March 15 and other local commissions are also scheduled to provide input in the coming months before the council adopts the docu-ment.

Staff Writer Gennady Sheyner can be emailed at [email protected].

Today’s news,

sports & hot picks

Page 15

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Upfront

Mountain View police ID man who died in crashFamily and friends of Brian Drocco say that the Mountain View

resident is the man who died in a fiery car crash in the early hours of Friday, Feb. 24. (Posted March 1 at 8:14 a.m.)

Man killed on train tracks Feb. 23 is identifiedA man who was fatally struck by a train in Palo Alto on Feb. 23 has

been identified as Wentao He, 23, of Mountain View, the Santa Clara County Coroner’s Office confirmed Tuesday, Feb. 28. (Posted Feb. 28

at 11:34 a.m.)

Woman hit by car on Stanford campus MondayA car struck a 19-year-old woman as she was jaywalking on Campus

Drive near the Mayfield Avenue intersection Monday night, Feb. 27, a CHP spokesman said. (Posted Feb. 28 at 11:03 a.m.)

School officials: ‘No need for Cubberley until 2019’Breaking a long silence on their plans for Cubberley Community

Center, Palo Alto school officials have recommended postponing con-sideration of school facilities on the property until 2019. (Posted Feb. 28

at 9:05 a.m.)

Man assaults hotel employee in Menlo ParkPolice are looking for a man in connection with an assault on a hotel

employee as she was checking rooms at the Best Western Hotel in Menlo Park Saturday, Feb. 25. (Posted Feb. 28 at 8:47 a.m.)

Four-alarm fire guts apartment complexFirefighters were mopping up after battling a four-alarm structure

fire in Mountain View, which began around 3:30 p.m. Monday, Feb. 27, and displaced a number of people, according to the Mountain View Fire Department. (Posted Feb. 28 at 8:26 a.m.)

Motorcycle collides head-on with LexusA head-on collision Saturday, Feb. 25, involving a motorcycle and a

car near Skylonda resulted in severe but non-life threatening injuries to the 20-year-old motorcyclist, the California Highway Patrol reported. (Posted Feb. 27 at 8:52 a.m.)

Man shot in driveway in East Palo AltoAn East Palo Alto man was shot Saturday evening, Feb. 25, in the

driveway of a home on Azalia Drive, according to police. (Posted Feb.

27 at 8:35 a.m.)

NFL’s Troy Polamalu teams up with LYFE KitchenAs a boy growing up poor in Southern California, NFL safety Troy

Polamalu said he probably didn’t have a single home-cooked meal. “Then I went to live with my aunt and uncle in Oregon and I had corn on the cob — I’ll never forget it,” the Pittsburgh Steelers player said Friday, Feb. 24, during an appearance at LYFE Kitchen in downtown Palo Alto. (Posted Feb. 26 at 12:23 p.m.)

VIDEO: A conversation with Mary Lynn FittonMary Lynn Fitton, Palo Alto resident and founder of The Art of Yoga

Project, talks about helping teen girls in the criminal justice system de-velop self-control and self-esteem through yoga in this exclusive “First Person” interview with Lisa Van Dusen. (Posted Feb. 26 at 10:49 a.m.)

Man dies on Caltrain tracks in Palo AltoA man was fatally struck by a train in Palo Alto Thursday night, Feb.

23, a Caltrain spokeswoman said. (Posted Feb. 24 at 7:24 a.m.

Online This WeekThese and other news stories were posted on Palo Alto Online throughout the week. For longer versions, go to www.PaloAltoOnline.com/news or click on “News” in the left, green column.

Want to get news briefs emailed to you every weekday? Sign up for Express, our new daily e-edition. Go to www.PaloAltoOnline.com to sign up.

CITY OF PALO ALTONOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Palo Alto City Council will hold a public hearing at the regularly scheduled meeting on Monday, March 19, 2012 at 7:00 p.m. or as near thereafter as possible, in the Council Chambers, 250 Hamilton Avenue, Palo Alto, to consider the Edgewood Plaza Shopping Center - Approval of a Resolution Certifying a Final Environmental Impact Report, and Adoption of An Ordinance (1) Amending Section 18.08.040 of the Palo Alto Municipal Code (The Zoning Map) to Approve a Planned Community Zone District Allowing Renovation of Three Retail Structures, Relocation of One Retail Structure (Eliminating a Parking Lot and Expanding the Main Parking Lot), Construction of Ten Single Family Homes and Creation of a 0.2 Acre Park (Replacing a Second Parking Lot) and Associated Site Improvements, and (2) Approving a Tentative Map to Merge Three Parcels into One Parcel for Resubdivision into Eleven Parcels (One Commercial Parcel and Ten Residential Parcels) and Off-Site Improvements, for a 3.58 Acre Site Located at 2080 Channing Avenue. * Quasi-Judicial

DONNA J. GRIDER, MMC

City Clerk

This is to notify the general public and other interested parties that a 30-day public review period of the Draft Annual Action Plan for the allocation of Fiscal Year 2013 Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) funds, will begin on March 23, 2012 and end on April 21, 2012. The Draft Annual Action Plan describes the activities the City may fund under the 2012/13 CDBG Program. Collectively these activities are intended to meet Palo Alto’s affordable housing and community development objectives described in the 2010-2015 Consolidated Plan.

Copies of the Draft Annual Action Plan will be available on March 23, 2012 at the Department of Planning and Community Environment, 250 Hamilton Avenue, 5th Floor, Palo Alto, CA 94301, on the City’s website http://www.cityofpaloalto.org/depts/pln/advance_planning/cdbg.asp or by calling Consuelo Hernandez, Planner – CDBG, at (650) 329-2428. Interested parties are encouraged to submit written comments on the proposed Draft Annual Action Plan during the public review period, or to comment at the public hearings and meetings described below.

PUBLIC HEARINGS AND MEETINGS

The City of Palo Alto Human Relations Commission will hold a Public Hearing on March 8, 2012 to review the Fiscal Year 2013 CDBG funding allocations recommended by the CDBG advisory committee. The Public Hearing will be held at 7:00 p.m., or as soon as possible thereafter, in City Hall Council Conference Room, 250 Hamilton Avenue, Palo Alto.

The City of Palo Alto Finance Committee will hold a Public Hearing on April 3, 2012 to review the proposed Fiscal Year 2013 CDBG funding allocations identified in the Draft Annual Action Plan. The Public Hearing will be held at 7:00 p.m., or as soon as possible thereafter, in City Hall Council Chambers, 250 Hamilton Avenue, Palo Alto.

The Palo Alto City Council will hold a Public Hearing on May 7, 2012 to adopt the Annual Action Plan and the associated Fiscal Year 2013 CDBG allocations. The Public Hearing will be held at 7:00p.m., or as soon as possible thereafter, in City Hall Council Chambers, 250 Hamilton Avenue, Palo Alto.

Persons with disabilities who require auxiliary aids or services in using City facilities, services or programs, or who would like information on the City’s compliance with the Americans with

Disabilities Act (ADA) of 1990, may contact:

ADA Coordinator, City of Palo Alto,650-329-2550 (Voice) [email protected]

NOTICE OF PUBLIC REVIEW PERIOD

AND PUBLIC HEARINGS ON PALO ALTO’S

COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK

GRANT (CDBG) PROGRAM

district-wide “choice programs” are currently located in the south clus-ter at Hoover and Ohlone and in the west cluster at Escondido.

The south cluster currently has the biggest gap between supply and de-mand for school classroom space.

But Skelly assured board mem-bers that delaying hard decisions for a year would still afford lead time sufficient to prepare new facilities ahead of any student influx.

“We do see lack of clarity around what’s going to happen with elemen-tary enrollment, both by cluster and whether it’s going to grow at all in the next four years,” he said.

“These are large capital outlays and they all have their downsides.

“We live in a community that’s action-oriented and wants to make decisions, be decisive and coura-geous but, frankly, I think the pru-dent step is to wait.”

Board members appeared to re-ject Skelly’s suggestion of accom-modating middle-school enrollment growth by moving some sixth-grade programs to elementary campuses.

Another possibility, he said, could be adding classrooms at Terman Middle School, which currently has capacity for only 700 students — 400 less than the capacities at Jor-dan and JLS.

Board members did agree to Skel-ly’s recommendation to change high school boundaries so that students living in the housing development at Stanford West, along Sand Hill Road, will be assigned to Gunn High School instead of Palo Alto High School in the future.

Stanford West students attend Nixon and Terman but were as-signed to the Paly attendance area due to over-enrollment at Gunn at the time the housing complex was constructed several years ago.

Now that Gunn has fewer students than Paly, Stanford West students should automatically be assigned to Gunn along with their classmates from Terman, Skelly said.

The superintendent said he will schedule another board study ses-sion in April to continue the discus-sion on enrollment projections and facilities.

Staff Writer Chris Kenrick can be emailed at [email protected].

Addison boundary(continued from page 7)

CorrectionsIn the Weekly’s Feb. 10 News

Digest, it was erroneously

stated that planned changes to

California Avenue in Palo Alto

would be “funded by a $1.2 mil-

lion California Massage Therapy

Council grant.” Rather, it would

be funded by the Metropolitan

Transportation Commission.

The Weekly regrets the error. To

request a correction, contact

Editor Jocelyn Dong at 650-223-

6514, [email protected] or

P.O. Box 1610, Palo Alto, CA

94302.Good for Business.

Good for the Community.Good for You.

Page 16

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City Council (Feb. 27)State of the City: Mayor Yiaway Yeh gave the State of the City address, highlighting the council’s goals and accomplishments. Action: None

Council Finance Committee (Feb. 28)Retirees: The committee discussed the retiree medical actuarial report and recom-mended changes to the amortization method used in the new study. Yes: Unani-mousFinances: The committee recommended adjustments to the fiscal year 2012 budget and changes to four position titles. Yes: Unanimous

Board of Education (Feb. 28)New classes: The board approved three new courses to be offered this fall at Palo Alto High School: Conceptual Physics, Introduction to the Automobile and Sports Nutrition Yes: Unanimous Budget: The board heard an update on the school district’s current budget, and budget outlook for future years. Action: NoneSocial-emotional health: The board heard an update on district initiatives to improve the social-emotional health of students. Action: None

Parks and Recreation Commission (Feb. 28)Cogswell Plaza: The commission approved a staff proposal to make various land-scaping changes to Cogswell Plaza, including new trees and removal of turf. Yes: UnanimousBicycle plan: The commission recommended that the council approve the revised Bicycle and Pedestrian Master Plan. Yes: Ashlund, Crommie, Hetterly, Lauing, Lo-sch, Walsh No: Markevitch

Planning and Transportation Commission (Feb. 29)Edgewood Plaza: The commission approved a “planned community” zone for Edgewood Plaza, a proposal to renovate three retail buildings and build 10 homes at 2080 Channing Ave. Yes: Fineberg, Garber, Keller, Martinez, Michael, Tuma Absent: TanakaEdgewood Plaza: The commission also approved an environmental impact report for the proposed renovations to Edgewood Plaza. Yes: Garber, Martinez, Michael, Tuma No: Fineberg, Keller Absent: Tanaka

Council Rail Committee (March 1)Caltrain: The committee heard a presentation from Caltrain about its effort to elec-trify its train system and to consider other projects that could be funded as part of the high-speed rail project. Action: NoneRail Corridor Task Force: The committee heard a presentation from the Rail Cor-ridor Task Force about the community’s vision for the Caltrain corridor in Palo Alto. Action: None

Architectural Review Board (March 1)Stanford Shopping Center: The board held a preliminary review on 180 El Camino Real, a proposal by Simon Property Group for a phased construction of five retail buildings, including two multi-story structures and three one-story structures. Ac-tion: None

CityViewA round-up of Palo Alto government action this week

CITY COUNCIL ... The council plans to meet in closed session to discuss

potential litigation involving Communications and Power Industries and

labor negotiations with police and fire unions. The council also plans to

discuss an organizational assessment of the Utilities Department, consider

amendments to the city’s contract with the Palo Alto Fire Chief’s As-

sociation and adopt resolutions pertaining to the city’s new feed-in-tariff

program, Palo Alto CLEAN. The closed session will begin at 5:30 p.m. on

Monday, March 5. Regular meeting will follow in the Council Chambers at

City Hall (250 Hamilton Ave.).

COUNCIL FINANCE COMMITTEE ... The committee is scheduled to dis-

cuss reconfiguration of the Palo Alto Municipal Golf Course, water and

wastewater fund projections and results of the “cost of service” study for

the Refuse Fund. The meeting will begin at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, March 6, in

the Council Conference Room at City Hall (250 Hamilton Ave.).

UTILITIES ADVISORY COMMISSION ... The commission plans to consider

amendments to the city’s fiber-optic rate schedule and discuss projections

for the city’s gas and electric funds. The meeting will begin at 7 p.m. on

Wednesday, March 7, in the Council Chambers at City Hall (250 Hamilton

Ave.).

HUMAN RELATIONS COMMISSION ... The commission plans to discuss

the 2013 Community Development Block Grant funding allocations and the

2013 Human Services Resource Allocation Process funding allocations.

The meeting will begin at 7 p.m. on Thursday, March 8, in the Council Con-

ference Room at City Hall (250 Hamilton Ave.).

Public AgendaA preview of Palo Alto government meetings next week

UpfrontPALO ALTO CITY COUNCIL

CIVIC CENTER, 250 HAMILTON AVENUEBROADCAST LIVE ON KZSU, FM 90.1

CABLECAST LIVE ON GOVERNMENT ACCESS CHANNEL 26*****************************************

THIS IS A SUMMARY OF COUNCIL AGENDA ITEMS. THE AGENDA WITH COMPLETE TITLES INCLUDING LEGAL DOCUMENTATION

CAN BE VIEWED AT THE BELOW WEBPAGE: http://www.cityofpaloalto.org/knowzone/agendas/council.asp

(TENTATIVE) AGENDA–SPECIAL MEETING-COUNCIL CHAMBERSMARCH 5, 2012 - 5:30 PM

CLOSED SESSION1. CPI1a. Labor1b. LaborSPECIAL ORDERS OF THE DAY2. Adoption of a Resolution Expressing Appreciation to Kenneth M. Denson

Upon His Retirement 3. Adopt a Village and Free the Children Community Project- Jordan Middle

SchoolSTUDY SESSION4. Presentation of Organizational Assessment of Utilities Department CONSENT CALENDAR5. Adoption of a Resolution approving the City of Palo Alto Annex to the

Santa Clara County, CA Annex to the 2010 Association of Bay Area Governments Local Hazard Mitigation Plan “Taming Natural Disasters

6. Approval of Permanent Retention of North California Avenue Safe Routes to School/Traffic Calming Project

7. Elimination and Defunding of Capital Improvement Program Project PF-12005 (Council Conference Room Renovation); Approval of Capital Improve-ment Program Project PE-12017 (City Hall First Floor Renovation); Adop-tion of a Budget Amendment Ordinance in the Amount of $189,000; and Approval of a Contract with WMB Architects, Inc. in the Amount of $178,717 for Design of the City Hall First Floor Renovation Project

8. Approval of Agreement with County of Santa Clara to provide Point of Dispensing equipment to the City of Palo Alto to assist the City’s capacity to deliver medicines and medical supplies during large scale public health emergencies

9. Adoption of a Budget Amendment Ordinance in the Amount of $276,083 to Fund the Purchase of a Street Sweeper; and Approval of a Purchase Order with Owen Equipment Sales in an Amount Not to Exceed $262,936 for the Purchase of a Street Sweeper (Scheduled Vehicle and Equipment Replacement Capital Improvement Program Project VR-11000)

10. Approval of a Contract with SCS Field Services in a Not to Exceed Amount of $158,394 for the First Year to Provide Landfill Gas and Leachate Control Systems Maintenance, Monitoring and Reporting Services and to Exercise the Option of a Second and Third Year of the Contract

11. Adoption of a Budget Amendment Ordinance in the Amount of $100,000 to Fund the Purchase of Automotive Fuel; and Approval of Change Order No. 1 to Purchase Order #4511000918 with Western States Oil for $100,000 Each Year for an Amount Not to Exceed $2,976,675 Over the Three-Year Term for the Provision of Automotive Fuel

12. Approval of a Five Year Contract With ABM Janitorial Services in a Total Not to Exceed Amount of $3,447,346 to Provide Custodial Services at City Facilities and Approval of Amendment No. Four to Contract C07116703 with C-Way Custodian Services in the Amount of $135,000 (Current Contractor) to Extend Their Contract by 2.5 Months to Allow the New Contractor Time to Transition Their New Services Into Place

13. City of Palo Alto Response Letter to Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) Regarding One Bay Area Alternative Land Use Scenarios

14. Approval of a Wastewater Treatment Enterprise Fund Contract with Southwest Construction & Property Management in the Total Amount of $740,968 for the Facility Repair & Retrofit Project No. 2 at the Regional Water Quality Control Plant – Capital Improvement Program Project WQ-04011

15. Adoption of (1) Resolution of Intent and (2) Ordinance to Amend the Contract Between the Board of Administration of the California Public Employees’ Retirement System (CalPERS) and the City of Palo Alto to Implement California Government Code Section 20475: Different level of benefits provided for new employees, Section 21363.1: 3.0% @ 55 Full Formula, Section 20037: Three Year Final Compensation, and without Section 20692: Employer Paid Member Contributions for Safety Fire Employees

ACTION ITEMS16. Approval of Fire Chiefs Association Contract 17. Finance Committee Recommendation to Adopt Two Resolutions Pertaining

to the Proposed Palo Alto Clean Local Energy Accessible Now Program, Including the Purchase Prices and Agreements, and to Adopt an Ordinance Amending Two Sections of Chapter 2.30 of the Municipal Code Relating Facilitation of the Clean Local Energy Accessible Now Program

18. Public Hearing: To Consider An Appeal Of An Architectural Review Approval And A Record Of Land Use Action (1) Approving A Mitigated Negative Declaration, And (2) Upholding The Director’s Architectural Review Approval Of A Three Story Development Consisting Of 84 Rental Residential Units In 104,971 Square Feet Within The Upper Floors, 50,467 S.F. Ground Floor Research And Development Area, Subterranean And Surface Parking Facilities, And Offsite Improvements, With Two Concessions Under State Housing Density Bonus Law (SB1818) On A 2.5 Acre Parcel At 195 Page Mill Road And 2865 Park Boulevard. * Quasi Judicial. Applicant requests this item be continued.

19. Request Authorization to Fund Preliminary Design Review and Environmental Studies for 27 University Avenue

STANDING COMMITTEE MEETINGSThe Finance Committee meeting will be held on March 6, 2012 at 7:00 PM. regarding; 1) Golf course Impacts from San Francisquito Creek JPA Work, 2) Water Fund Financial Projections (FY 2013-FY 2017), 3) Wastewater Collection Fund Financial Projections (FY 2013-FY 2017), and 4) Refuse Fund Cost of Services Study.

schools statewide, assesses students’ “resiliency, protective factors and risk behavior.”

From 2007 to 2009, Palo Alto stu-dents scoring “high” on the “school connectedness scale” went from 66 percent to 67 percent among seventh graders, from 58 percent to 62 per-cent among ninth graders and from 56 percent to 62 percent among 11th graders.

Those numbers were far above statewide averages.

The Palo Alto Reality Check Sur-vey assesses middle and high school students in areas including bullying, risk behaviors and substance use.

From 2009 to 2011, the percent-age of students reporting they “have a good number of adults” they can talk to about problems went from 69 percent to 73 percent. Students reporting that adults “listen to what I have to say” went from 59 percent to 66 percent.

Kids reporting that “youth are in-cluded in the important decisions” made in schools and community went from 56 percent to 59 percent.

More than 4,000 Palo Alto stu-dents took a “baseline Developmen-tal Assets Survey” in October 2010, and that survey will be repeated in 2015.

The schools have set a goal to boost by five points the percentages of students who report having the “assets” of a “caring school climate, other adult relationships and bond-ing to school.”

They also set goals for improve-ment on the California Healthy Kids and Palo Alto Reality Check surveys.

Accompanying Drolette in Tues-day’s presentation was Jordan Mid-dle School seventh-grader Marion Sellier, who described a Jordan pro-gram called “Open Session.”

During weekly advisory periods, students are invited — anonymous-ly or not — to write on white cards about challenges they’re dealing with. The issues range from “being too tired after soccer for homework” to problems at home.

The cards are passed in, shuffled by the teacher and read aloud (un-less a student writes that he or she does not want the card to be read). Classmates then make suggestions, in writing or orally, on what to do, often saying they have the same problem.

“It helps you see you’re not the only one with problems — that your peers are human,” Marion said.

Though some kids were initially skeptical, “at one point or another they become in favor of the session. After class they might even come up and say, ‘Thank you. That really helped me,’” she said.

Staff Writer Chris Kenrick can be emailed at [email protected].

Emotional health(continued from page 3)

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T hree Facebook applications designed to help people get support from their friends and

family in an emergency are winners of a Facebook application challenge sponsored by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

The $16,000 challenge, which funded Facebook applications that people could use during personal medical emergencies, car acci-dents and natural or man-made disasters, was announced Aug. 24, 2011, during an interview Menlo Park-based Facebook hosted in Washington, D.C., on Facebook Live. The Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness funded the challenge.

“In the aftermath of the earth-quakes in Haiti and Japan, a tre-mendous number of people used

Facebook to post and share infor-mation about those potentially af-fected by the disasters. We want to create an app that will refine and better support this phenomenon as it can provide a venue for emo-tional support to a victim’s network and help to decompress traditional channels of communication, which are frequently overwhelmed during emergencies,” Office of the Assis-tant Secretary for Preparedness of-ficials said.

American Red Cross and National Weather Service officials during the August interview stressed the im-portance of social media in disaster preparedness and communication during disasters.

A 2011 Red Cross report found that the Internet was the third-most-important tool people used behind

radio and television to learn about emergencies in a crisis. Twenty per-cent of the public is using Facebook as a trusted source for emergency information, and the public is using social media during events such as earthquakes and accidents to tell people they are OK, said Trevor Riggen, American Red Cross se-nior director of disaster services in Washington. A full 80 percent of the public also expects disaster organizations to monitor social media and to be ready to respond to posted calls for assistance. One third expected help to arrive within one hour of the posting.

Laura K. Furgione, National Weather Service deputy director, also said the agency uses social media to send out messages to the public when there are potentially

disastrous weather events, such as hurricanes and tornadoes. All 122 forecast offices have Facebook pages, as does the weather service, she said.

The challenge awarded $10,000 to two recent Brown University gradu-ates, Evan Donahue and Erik Stay-ton, for their first-place application named Lifeline. The second-place, $5,000 award went to David Vin-son, Erick Rodriguez, Gregg Orr and Garth Winckler of Las Vegas for their application named JAMA-JIC 360. The third-place, $1,000 prize was awarded to AreYouOK? developed by TrueTeamEffort, 11 University of Illinois students led by Alex Kirlik.

Although the three products differ in how users interface with the application, all allow users to

designate three lifelines. Lifelines are Facebook friends the person can count on and who agree to check on the person in an emer-gency, supply him or her with shelter, food and other necessities, and provide the person’s social network with an update about the person’s well-being. Facebook us-ers could harness the applications to create disaster-readiness plans, share the plans with their emer-gency contacts and provide friends and family with news.

The first-place application also allows Facebook friends to collab-orate, tracking the user’s status in a disaster-affected area. The friends can easily find the user’s desig-nated lifeline friends and contact each other to report that the user is safe or if the user appears to be missing. This networked approach increases the efficiency of finding missing users, spokesperson El-leen Kane of the Office of the As-sistant Secretary for Preparedness said. The application allows users to print cards with a snapshot of their preparedness plan to carry in their wallets.

The first-place application also features a news feed and links to credible information sources, which make it useful for large-scale disas-ters and individual emergencies, such as car accidents and personal medical emergencies. The team is continuing to refine the application and in coming months might include GIS locating or tagging, she said.

The Lifeline application is ex-pected to be launched in the coming months, prior to the start of hurri-cane season.

“We’re really excited about the potential of the lifeline app to help people not only to reach out to friends and family for the kinds of assistance they may need in an emergency, but also to help improve their personal health and prepared-ness,” said Dr. Nicole Lurie, Health and Human Services assistant secre-tary for preparedness and response and a rear admiral in the U.S. Public Health Service.

“Having people you can depend on for help is especially important during a disaster, so we want to en-courage everyone to identify those people in advance. Since so many people use Facebook to connect with one another, it seemed like a natural way to help people to iden-tify their lifelines.”

Facebook spokesman Tucker Bounds said the social-networking company is pleased to be part of the disaster-response initiative.

“It’s an impressive initiative, and administration officials deserve credit for being forward-looking. Leveraging the power of the social web to create more effective disaster preparedness and response is an ex-cellent example of using technology to find new solutions,” he said.

Staff Writer Sue Dremann can be emailed at [email protected].

Upfront

Introducing Your Style, Your

NEIGHBORHOODOur Apartment Homes.

Welcome to Webster house, Palo Alto’s most gracious senior living community, now a member of the not-for-profit organization that owns and operates Canterbury Woods, Los Gatos Meadows, Lytton Gardens, San Francisco Towers, Spring Lake Village, and St. Paul’s Towers. Here, you’ll enjoy the rare combination of ideal location, dedicated staff, amenities, and services, all within walking distance of downtown Palo Alto, where you’ll find a mix of shops, restaurants, and art galleries. You’ll also find peace of mind and a welcoming community offering the advantages of continuing care. To learn more, or for your personal visit, please call 650.327.4333.

401 Webster Street, Palo Alto, CA 94301 websterhousepaloalto.org

A non-denominational, not-for-profit community. License No. 435294364 COA #246 EPWH625-01AA 02 112511

TECHNOLOGY

New Facebook applications to spearhead emergency supportApplications could help residents connect with friends and family in disasters

by Sue Dremann

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“The Shah” by Abbas Milani; Palgrave Macmillan, New York; 488 pp.; $30

T he last shah of Iran was a man full of flaws and contradic-tions. Constantly embattled,

proud and paranoid, he defied the great Western powers by pursuing a nuclear program and flirting with the Soviet Union while maintaining a deeply crippling image of a pup-pet pulled by British and American strings.

All these qualities are brought to life in “The Shah,” a sweeping and timely biography by Stanford Uni-versity scholar Abbas Milani. In his highly readable account, Milani traces the shah’s rise to the throne, his efforts to modernize Iran, his battles against nationalists and mul-lahs and his downfall in 1979 in the midst of what Milani calls “the per-fect storm.” Through a combination of interviews and analysis of previ-ously classified documents, Milani paints a vivid picture of the man whose outsized legacy continues to haunt Iranian life and shape Ameri-can foreign policy.

“The Shah” is loaded with allu-sions to Shakespeare. Milani begins every chapter with a quote, mostly from “Richard II,” and in the book’s conclusion calls the shah “a tragic figure” in the classical sense. The shah, in his account, is “a hare pre-tending to roar like a lion.” He is like Othello, Milani writes, in that he had loved his nation “not wisely but too well.”

The analogy is a bit of a stretch.

Shakespeare’s tragic heroes are typ-ically noble characters marred by a fatal flaw — Hamlet’s hesitation, Macbeth’s ambition, Othello’s jeal-ousy. The shah in Milani’s majestic portrayal seems to encapsulate all these flaws and then some. As the forces gather against him in the late 1970s, the shah comes off as proud, stubborn, paranoid, politically tone deaf and, above all, indecisive. In his final years, he is a fugitive without a

country, like Lear, a “poor old man, as full of grief as age, wretched in both.” But throughout his turbulent 37-year reign, the shah is far too hu-man to be a tragic hero.

The reign looked doomed from the start. He was born Mohammad Reza, the son of soldier Reza Khan, in 1919, a period during which Iran was dominated by warlords and competing designs from foreign powers. Britain controlled the po-litical establishment; communism was on the rise; and British, Russian and German troops occupied parts of the nation.

In February 1921, Khan and an Anglophile journalist, Sayyed Zia, led a coup against the weak and corrupt Qajar royal family. Before long, Khan turned against Zia, sent him into exile, ascended to the prime minister’s post and adopted the name “Pahlavi,” which refers to a pre-Islamic language. Four years later, he prodded Iran’s parliament to officially abolish the recently deposed dynasty and name him the new king, giving him control of the army. His son Mohammad was named crown prince at the ripe age of 6.

Even in childhood, the future shah exhibited the flaws that would later undermine him, including a flashy temper. Sent to Switzerland for his education, the Crown Prince was reportedly expelled from the first school he attended after giving him-self “airs such as his schoolmates could not endure,” according to a report from the British Consulate. He went on to study at Le Rosey, a school dominated by sons of politi-cians and businessmen. It was there that he would meet Ernest Perron, an eccentric Catholic who would later play the role of Falstaff to the shah’s Prince Hal.

During his two decades in power, Reza Khan feuded with the clerics and pursued an aggressive mod-ernization campaign, transforming

Tehran from a sprawling village surrounded by a moat to a city of tree-lined boulevards and streets ar-ranged in a “linear, rational grid.” He stripped away the clergy’s con-trol of the judiciary and education systems, and banned a traditional form of Shiite Islam mourning.

But it was ultimately foreign pow-ers rather than the mullahs’ ire that prompted his ouster. His attempt to stay out of World War II floundered as Germany, the Soviet Union and Britain all lobbied for his support. The Soviet Union and Britain also had their eyes on Iran’s oil reserves — a resource that fueled both Iran’s economic expansion and foreign meddling in its affairs.

Reza Khan’s reign began to im-plode in August 1941 when British and Soviet forces, concerned about the Nazi threat in Iran, invaded the nation. In weeks, the power struc-ture evaporated and Iran’s “much-vaunted, much-feared Iranian mili-tary collapsed in panic around the country,” Milani writes. Reza Shah abdicated his throne and his recently married son, viewed by the foreign powers as the least bad option for succession, became the shah.

Reza Khan died in exile in South Africa. Those who saw him, Milani writes, “describe a broken man, be-reft of any desire to live.”

In turn, the conditions of his son’s rise to power shaped his reign. The shah, Milani writes, seemed to have “internalized the idea that big pow-ers, particularly Britain, Russia and America, could do anything in Iran, and that in fact nothing would happen in the country without their overt approval or their covert in-trigue.”

Milani adds, “His own thirty-seven-year reign was haunted, even deformed, by this conviction.”

Much like his father, the shah would spend much of his reign

Title PagesA monthly section on local books and authors

BookTalkAUTHOR, AUTHOR ... Upcoming

book readings at Kepler’s Books,

1010 El Camino Real, Menlo Park,

include: Irvin D. Yalom, “The Spinoza

Problem: A Novel” (March 6, 7 p.m.);

Jack Kornfield, “Bringing Home the

Dharma: Awakening Right Where

You Are” (March 7, 7 p.m.); Spencer West, “Standing Tall: My Journey”

(March 9, 7 p.m.); Alexander Gor-don Smith, “Fugitives: Escape from

Furnace 4” (March 12, 7 p.m.); Dr. Eric Topol, “The Creative Destruc-

tion of Medicine” (March 13, 7 p.m.);

Cara Black, “Murder at the Lanterne

Rouge” (March 14, 7 p.m.); Elaine Pa-gels, “Revelations: Visions, Prophecy,

and Politics in the Book of Revela-

tion” (March 17, 7 p.m.); J.D. Roth-man, “The Neurotic Parent’s Guide

to College Admissions: Strategies for

Helicoptering, Hot-housing & Micro-

managing” (March 20, 7 p.m.); Jason Benlevi, “Too Much Magic: Pulling

the Plug on the Cult of Tech” (March

22, 7 p.m.); Harlan Coben, “Stay

Close: (March 25, 2 p.m.); Akash Kapur, “India Becoming: A Portrait

of Life in Modern India” (March 26, 7

p.m.); and Nura Maznavi and Ayesha Mattu, “Love InshAllah: The Secret

Love Lives of American Muslim

Women” (March 27, 7 p.m.). General

admission requires purchase of event

book or a $10 gift card; Kepler’s

members get in free. Info: keplers.

com.

MEET THE AUTHORS ... Upcom-

ing authors at Books Inc. at Town &

Country Village in Palo Alto include

“Real Parents, Real Kids, Real Talk”

(March 10, 1 p.m.); Joan Lester, “Black, White, Other: In Search of

Nina Armstrong” (March 14, 7 p.m.);

and Claire Bidwell Smith, “The Rules

of Inheritance: A Memoir” (March 20,

7 p.m.). Info: booksinc.net.

STANFORD SPEAKERS ... Authors

scheduled to give free talks this

month at Stanford University include:

Geoff Dyer, “Zona” (March 13, 5:30

p.m. with a panel discussion, Human-

ities Center, Levinthal Hall); and Eric Schlosser, “Fast Food Nation” (March

14, 5:30 p.m., CEMEX Auditorium,

Knight Management Center, Stanford

Graduate School of Business). Info:

events.stanford.edu.

KEYNOTE SPEAKER ... Abraham Verghese, author of “Cutting for

Stone,” “My Own Country: A Doc-

tor’s Story” and “The Tennis Partner,”

is the featured speaker at Breast

Cancer Connections’ fourth Spring

Benefit on March 13 from 8 to 10

a.m. Tickets to the event, which is at

the Sharon Heights Golf & Country

Club Ballroom, 2900 Sand Hill Road,

Menlo Park, are $100. Info: bccon-

nections.org/events/fundraisers/ or

keplers.com.

Items for Book Talk may be sent to Associate Editor Carol Blitzer, Palo Alto Weekly, P.O Box 1610, Palo Alto, CA 93202 or emailed to [email protected] by the last Friday of the month.

BIOGRAPHY PAINTS A VIVID PORTRAIT OF THE MAN WHOSE LEGACY STILL HAUNTS IRAN

THE TRAGEDY OF THE SHAH

by Gennady Sheyner

(continued on next page)

Author Abbas Milani, the director of Iranian studies at Stanford University.

Linda A. Cicero/S

tanford New

s Service

Page 19

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Title Pages

B R E A T H EWomen’s Wellness Symposium

Sunday, March 189:30 AM−2:30 PM

Optional ZUMBA® class at 8:00 AM

Oshman Family JCC, Schultz Cultural Arts Hall3921 Fabian Way, Palo Alto, CA 94303

$55 M, $65 NMIncludes continental breakfast, workshops,

catered lunch and keynote

Register onlinewww.paloaltojcc.org/breathe

Experience new ways to nurture your body, mind and spirit at Breathe, our second annual Women’s Wellness Symposium.

Choose from these exciting workshops:

Jewish Yoga: A Physical & Spiritual Workshop

Understanding Fertility

Empowering Your Weight Loss with Cognitive Behavioral Skills

Win-Win Approach to Successful Relationships

Caregiver Empowerment Workshop

Project Happiness

Plastic Surgery: Inside Out... Looking as Good as You Feel

Benefits of Weight Training for Women

SYMPOSIUM COMMITTEEStephanie Oshman, Chair; Riki Dayan, Co-Chair; Sonny Hurst; Sheryl Klein;

Hilary Luros; Barbara Oshman; Lana Portnov; Orli Rinat; Nancy Rossen;

Carol Saal and Eta Somekh

Co-sponsored by: Allergan, Crescent Capital, Moldaw Family Residences,

Stanford Hospital Health Library, University Chiropractic and Women’s Health at Stanford

KEYNOTE SPEAKERDr. Miri Amit

Dean of Ben-Gurion University’s Eilat campus

Reversing the Ophelia SyndromeEducating Women to be Independent Thinkers

battling nationalist, Islamist and Communist opposition at home and resisting the pervasive influence of foreign powers. Though he shared his father’s appetite for moderniza-tion and desire for industrial might, he eschewed his father’s opposition to religion and portrayed himself as a pious Muslim.

Milani writes that his book “fills a gaping hole in understanding and demonstrates that character is des-tiny, not just for the Shah, but for determining the fate of every policy, both American and Iranian.” The first part of this claim is certainly true. His detailed account of the CIA’s involvement in deposing the shah’s political rival, Mohammad Mossadeq, and his invaluable in-sights into Iran’s nuclear ambitions go a long way toward helping us understand today’s Iran. But it’s far less clear whether it was the shah’s character or the precarious context of 20th-century Iran that deter-mined his fall.

The shah’s paranoia was often justified. He survived several as-sassination attempts (including one in which a bullet entered his cheek, took out his front teeth and exited from his upper lip) and political coups. He had to constantly bal-ance British ambitions for Iranian oil and the effort by Mossadeq, a skilled parliamentarian, to nation-alize the oil industry. He was chal-lenged by the communist Tudeh Party from one side and by mullahs from the other. He was warding off KGB spies and holding clandestine meetings with CIA operatives who thought they knew what was best for Iran. And while he spent much of his reign playing political Whac-A-Mole with a long succession of prime ministers, his political rivals were often corrupt or ambitious enough to warrant his wrath.

It was his fierce power struggle

with his prime minister, Mossadeq, that caused the most damage to the shah’s reputation. The beleaguered shah was in Baghdad on Aug. 19, 1953, when crowds of pro-shah pro-testers gathered around Tehran’s ministries and the national radio be-gan to air royalist speeches. Moss-adeq tried to disperse the crowd, but was told that soldiers were no longer obeying orders to oppose demon-strators. Mossadeq was politically doomed. He went into exile.

The shah’s victory proved to be a Pyrrhic one. As Milani illustrates, the United States and Britain both took part in the effort to overthrow Mossadeq. The CIA was determined to depose Mossadeq and apparently provided material support for the operation. Though the extent of this involvement remains a fuzzy sub-ject, it was substantial enough for U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright to issue an apology in 2000 and acknowledge that the United States “played a significant role in orchestrating the overthrow of Iran’s popular Prime Minister.”

Milani writes that in retrospect, there “seems little doubt that while the Shah won the battle on August 19, he might well have lost the war.

“Much anecdotal evidence indi-cates that, in the collective memory of the nation, after that August the Shah never shook off the tainted rep-utation of being a puppet — a ruler forcefully restored to the throne by foreign powers.”

His personal conduct further erod-ed his image. He remarried several times, amassed a personal fortune, oversaw the rise of Iran’s feared spy agency and, in 1971, staged an over-the-top celebration of 2,500 years of monarchy in Iran. The event took place in a tent city and included a six-course dinner flown in from Paris. His extravagance did little to assuage the anger of the nation’s in-creasingly vociferous mullahs and its newly minted middle class.

Even the shah’s success in ex-

panding Iran’s economy came with unintended and devastating consequences. Paul Begala’s fa-mous bumper-sticker dictum “It’s the economy, stupid” might work in United States, but things were far more complex in 1970s Tehran, where the bazaars were teeming with Ayatollah’s men.

Milani cites Qassem Lajevardi, a senator and industry titan, who described on the Senate floor the contradiction inherent in the shah’s authoritarian drive toward modern-ization. Lejavardi observed that “the more (the shah) won his battles with oil companies and increased Iran’s revenue, the more these petrodollars helped create and train a larger and larger technocratic middle class, the more he promised the people stan-dards of living higher than those of Japan or Germany, the more these impressive accomplishments con-vinced him of his global impor-tance — the more he inadvertently prepared the conditions of his own downfall.”

“The middle classes he helped create wanted democracy, and the hubris of his increasing authoritari-anism made them increasingly un-easy,” Milani writes.

This passage is one of many in the book that seem eerily relevant today, as one Middle Eastern regime is besieged by democratic move-ments and as Israel debates whether to attack Iran to delay its nuclear ambitions. These ambitions, Milani shows, are far from new. In 1974, the shah told the French newspaper Le Monde that one day, “sooner than is believed,” the nation would be “in possession of a nuclear bomb.”

The shah comes off in Milani’s account as a man who is always struggling, and usually failing, to meet the world’s lofty expectations.

As protests mounted and foreign powers began to doubt the shah, he became more authoritarian but less decisive. He flirted with the idea of creating a legitimate opposi-

tion party, then changed his mind, disbanded all parties and created a one-party system based around the new Resurgence Party. By this point, he was too proud to relinquish his power but too weak to command the increasingly educated and mid-dle-class nation. Even his followers mocked the new party.

In 1978, the shah decided to in-stall a military government but then undermined this effort by appoint-ing timid jurists to the military cabinet. He famously insisted that his rule should not be criticized but then told the opposition in one of his final speeches that he had “heard the voice of your revolution” before acknowledging his mistakes and pledging to rule according to the constitution.

As Iran’s mullahs, nationalists and bourgeois leaders rose against him, the shah seemed unable to decide whether to crush or appease the op-position. Ayatollah Khomeini, who had been issuing virulent proclama-tions against the shah throughout the 1960s and the 1970s, stepped into the void and became the “de facto leader of the amorphous democratic movement.” Masses demonstrated against the shah and, with Western support flagging, the suddenly weak leader was forced to flee Iran.

In January 1979, he was a lonely chessboard king, jumping from square to square — New York, Mexico, Panama, Egypt — and get-ting checked at every turn. Like fa-ther, like son.

“The Shah” is both an eye-open-ing look at a fascinating historical figure and a cautionary tale for American policymakers. In his epi-logue, Milani cites the book’s four “critical lessons” for the United States. America could have done a better job studying the shah’s intense negotiations with the West over Iran’s nuclear program, he writes, and it could have used these nego-tiations to knock down allegations from Iran’s clerics that the United

States and the shah were completely in alignment.

The book also intends to show the nature of the coalition that ultimately succeeded in deposing the shah and to show that “the interests of the of the United States and Iran are both better served when the United States supports the democratic aspirations of the Iranian people.”

The story of the shah, however, il-lustrates that the fourth lesson can be a double-edged sword. Democracy, while easy to support in theory, can become a Pandora’s box when the nature of future leaders is so murky. So it was in 1978 and 1979, when leaders in America and elsewhere deluded themselves into seeing Khomeini as a potential liberal and tacitly approved his rise to power.

The book also shows how easily history can repeat itself. In October 1979, as the shah was getting treated for cancer in New York Hospital, a group of Islamist students represent-ing all major universities in Tehran gathered in a small house to plot a takeover of the U.S. Embassy in Teh-ran. Among those at the first meet-ing, Milani notes, is a “young man from a third-tier technical university called Elm-o Sanat (Science and Technology).” His name was Mah-moud Ahmadinejad, and these days, he is as keen on obtaining a nuclear weapon and suppressing dissidents as the shah he so despised. The con-nection isn’t lost on Milani.

“Events since Iran’s June 2009 contested election have shown that the same coalition (that deposed the shah) is the backbone of the move-ment now challenging clerical des-potism in Iran,” he writes. “Future American policy must take into consideration the continued power and relevance of this democratic coalition in determining Iran’s fu-ture.”

Staff Writer Gennady Sheyner can be emailed at [email protected].

‘The Shah’(continued from previous page)

Page 20

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PulseA weekly compendium of vital statistics

POLICE CALLSPalo AltoFeb. 23-29Violence relatedBattery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3Theft relatedAttempted burglary. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1Commercial burglary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2Fraud . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2Grand theft . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1Identity theft . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4Petty theft . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5Residential burglaries . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10Vehicle relatedAbandoned auto. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1Abandoned bicycle. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1Driving w/suspended license . . . . . . . . .5Hit and run . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1Misc. traffic . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10Theft from auto . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2Vehicle accident/minor injury . . . . . . . . .2Vehicle accident/property damage. . . .10Alcohol or drug relatedDrunk in public . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8Drunken driving. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2Possession of drugs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3MiscellaneousLost property . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1Misc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3Missing person . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1Outside assistance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1Psychiatric hold . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2Report of gunshots. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1Suspicious circumstances . . . . . . . . . . .4Vandalism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7Warrant arrest. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1Warrant/other agency . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1

Menlo ParkFeb. 23-29Violence relatedBattery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2Robbery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1Theft relatedAttempted burglary. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1Fraud . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5Grand theft . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1Petty theft . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2Residential burglaries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4Vehicle relatedAuto theft . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1Driving w/suspended license . . . . . . . . .7Driving without a license . . . . . . . . . . . . .1Hit and run . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3Vehicle accident/property damage. . . . .5Alcohol or drug relatedDrunk in public . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2Drunken driving. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1Possession of drugs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4MiscellaneousAnimal bite . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1Coroner case . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1Disturbance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1Felon in possession of a firearm . . . . . . .1Found property. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3Information case . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6Juvenile problem. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1Psychiatric hold . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1Resisting arrest. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1Threat . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1Trespassing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1Vandalism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2Warrant arrest. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4

AthertonFeb. 23-29Theft relatedPetty theft . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1Vehicle relatedParking violation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7Suspicious vehicle . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8Vehicle accident/minor injury . . . . . . . . .3Vehicle accident/property damage. . . . .3Vehicle code violation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9MiscellaneousAnimal call. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4Citizen assist. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1Disturbance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2Hazard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4Juvenile problem. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2Lost property . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2Medical aid . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3Outside assistance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2Psychiatric hold . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1Suspicious circumstances . . . . . . . . . . .1Suspicious person . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2Town ordinance violation . . . . . . . . . . . .2Vandalism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1Welfare check break . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1

VIOLENT CRIMESPalo AltoUnlisted block Ramona Street , 2/23, 10:50 p.m.; domestic violence/battery.500 block College Avenue, 2/24, 17:02

p.m.; battery.700 block Colorado Avenue, 2/27, 8 a.m.; robbery/simple.

Menlo Park1200 block Hollyburne Avenue, 2/24, 11:54 a.m.; battery.10 block El Camino Real, 2/25, 2:34 p.m.; battery.700 block Willow Road, 2/26, 12:04 p.m.; robbery.

RESIDENTIAL BURGLARIESPalo Alto1000 block Middlefield Road, 2/24, 10:56 a.m.; residential burglary.

1600 block Portola Avenue, 2/24, 12:16 p.m.; residential burglary.300 block Sheridan Avenue, 2/24, 3:11 p.m.; residential burglary.400 block Grant Avenue, 2/24, 4:16 p.m.; residential burglary.300 block Sheridan Avenue, 2/24, 6:56 a.m.; residential burglary.400 block Grant Avenue, 2/24, 9:05 p.m.; residential burglary.300 block Sheridan Avenue, 2/24, 6:56 p.m.; residential burglary.800 block Altaire Walk, 2/25, 11:04 a.m.; residential burglary.800 block Altaire Walk, 2/27, 11:59 a.m.; residential burglary.900 block Embarcadero Road, 2/27, 3:37 p.m.; residential burglary.

Menlo Park1000 block Tehama Avenue, 2/24, 5:05 p.m.; residential burglary.700 block Santa Cruz Avenue, 2/26, 11:37 a.m.; residential burglary.200 block El Camino Real, 2/28, 10:56 a.m.; residential burglary.300 block Oak Court, 2/28, 5:24 p.m.; residential burglary.

Lasting MemoriesAn online directory of obituaries and remembrances.

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TransitionsR ussella “Rusty” van

Bronkhorst, 79, a life-long resident

of Palo Alto, Portola Val-ley and Menlo Park, died Feb. 20 at Stanford Hos-pital surrounded by her family.

Born in Palo Alto in 1932, van Bronkhorst graduated from Palo Alto High School in 1950. She went to work at Hewlett Packard, serving in the secre-tarial pool when there were fewer than 100 employees at the company. It was there that she met her future husband, Ed van Bronkhorst. They were married in 1957 and shared a love and friendship that spanned almost 50 years. Ed passed away in March of 2006, after which Rusty moved to the Vi in Palo Alto.

While raising her three sons she also worked as campaign manager for U.S. Representative Pete Mc-Closkey’s successful Congressional campaigns. She was a founding investor of the Palo Alto Weekly’s parent company, Embarcadero Media, and served on the board of directors for 22 years. Upon her re-tirement from the board in 2002, the paper estab-lished an award in her honor, given annually to an employee who exemplifies her belief in hard work, integrity and dedication to serving the community through fair and accurate reporting and ethical busi-ness practices.

“Rusty was the first person I turned to for support when starting the Weekly because I knew she shared

my belief in the importance of quality local journal-ism,” said Bill Johnson, publisher and founder of the Weekly and president of Embarcadero Media and a friend from when both worked for McCloskey in the 1970s.

“She provided much wisdom and support to me and our young staff as we established the paper and tried to figure out how to run a successful business while also serving the community with good journal-ism,” Johnson said. “She had very high expectations of us, but they were never unrealistic and she always acknowledged the challenges and successes.”

Van Bronkhorst was an accomplished golfer and enjoyed playing bridge and dominoes. She was also an accomplished chef, often hosting elaborate dinner parties at her home in Portola Valley. Rusty and Ed also loved to travel together, and in later years they saw most of the world while on cruise ships, often sailing for months at a time. After Ed’s passing, Rusty continued to cruise with the many wonderful friends they made from all over the world.

Rusty is survived by her three sons and daughters-in-law: Kort and Laurie van Bronkhorst of Napa, Jon and Wendy van Bronkhorst of Redwood City and Derek and Suzy van Bronkhorst of Campbell; and six grandchildren: Kate, Michael, Jacque and Julia van Bronkhorst and Joe and Sam Callahan. Her extended family included her long-time helpers and care-giv-ers, Lola Panisi and Leslie Tokahata who helped take such wonderful care of her for many years.

A private family service has been held. In lieu of flowers, the family requests donations be made to the Lucile Salter Packard Children’s Hospital.

Russella ‘Rusty’ van Bronkhorst

John William HarrisonJohn William Harrison, born in

1915 in Mansfield, Ohio, where he lived most of his life, died Feb. 18 at Stanford Hospital.

In 1984 he and his wife, Ruth, who died in 1992, moved to Palo Alto to live with their daughter, Judith Steiner and son-in-law Hans Steiner, and their three children, Remy and

Hans-Christoph, of New York City and Joshua, of Oakland, all of whom survive him.

He is also survived by his son John W. Harrison, Jr. of Georgia and Susan Harrison of Florida and by grandchildren, Jenni and Kiri Brotsch, two daughters-in-law, Pa-tina Mendez and Rivka Karasik, and four great grandchildren.

He was an electrical engineer and had a long career at Westinghouse and the Bureau of Standards and held many patents. He loved travel, opera, and his lifelong hobby of building fine furniture.

He was a staunch Republican who loved the government and believed in paying taxes.

Contributions may be made in his memory to Lytton Gardens, 649 University Ave., Palo Alto, 94301 or 1st Methodist Church, 625 Hamilton St., Palo Alto, 94301.

Donald C. LoughryDonald C. Loughry, a longtime

member of the Palo Alto commu-nity, died Feb. 22 surrounded by his family.

He was born in Flushing, N.Y., on Jan. 12, 1931, the older of two sons of James Kenneth and Anita Loughry. He grew up in Ridgewood, N.J., and attended Ridgewood High School. He graduated in 1952 from Union College in Schenectady, N.Y., with a bachelor’s degree in electrical en-gineering. After college he worked two years at the Naval Ordinance Lab in Maryland and then two years in the Army Signal Corp.

His major accomplishment in his 42 years working at Hewlett Pack-ard (1956 to 1998) was his leader-

ship in the development of technical and Internet standards. He led work in the 1970s on the IEEE 488 bus that made it easier for machines to interface with each other. He was the key initiator of the IEEE’s 802 family of standards during the 1980s and 1990s.

The 802.3 Ethernet standard is now used in more than 300 million computers and the 802.11 wireless standard is ubiquitous in mobile de-vices. These international standards enable for easy global communi-cations. For his standards efforts, he earned many awards, including the 2003 IEEE Proteus Steinmetz Award and the 2011 IEEE Richard M. Emberson Award.

Staying abreast and educated on current events around the world — and sharing that knowledge — was always a goal of his. He led “Great Decisions,” an annual eight-week course by the Foreign Policy As-sociation, at First United Methodist Church of Palo Alto for more than 25 years.

He loved all varieties of science but especially enjoyed astronomy and would stay up all night watch-ing and photographing an eclipse or a meteor shower. His other pas-sion was bonsai; he found creating beauty in the form of miniature trees to be spiritual and relaxing.

After retirement, he combined his love of science and teaching by spending several days each week preparing and testing science experi-ments with a “wow factor” to excite his 6th-grade students at Crittenden school in Mountain View, where he

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Transitions

P A I D O B I T U A R Y

Jim “Stevie” Stephenson, age 80, passed away Sunday, February 19, 2012, surrounded by his family, at his home in Carmel, after a courageous and optimistic struggle with cancer.

Jim was born in 1931 in Los Angeles, the youngest child of Elizabeth and Robert Stephenson. His life long passion for sports was fostered at Fountain Valley School in Colorado Springs, where he was a three-sport athlete. Following high school, he attended Stanford University. While at Stanford, he participated in baseball and golf and was a proud member and President of Zeta Psi Fraternity. Jim obtained both his B.A. and M.B.A. at Stanford, but most importantly, it was there he met his true love, Margaret (“Margi”) Avery. The couple married on December 19, 1955, and recently celebrated their 56th wedding anniversary. Jim and Margi settled in Palo Alto where their four children were born.

In 1958, Jim started his 32-year career in finance at Irving Lundborg in Palo Alto, a position he held until 1970 when that firm merged with Clark Dodge. In 1972, the family moved to Carmel when Jim became the manager of the Carmel office of Clark Dodge (Kidder Peabody) where he remained until his retirement in 1990.

Jim was an avid golfer and enthusiastic member of the Monterey Peninsula Country Club, including serving on the MPCC Board. He was actively involved in the formation of the Hospice Golf Scramble, an annual fundraising tournament benefiting Hospice of the Central Coast. Jim was also a passionate supporter of Stanford sports. As season ticket holders for more than five decades, Jim and Margi attended nearly every home and away football game during that span. Jim also loved traveling with his wife, especially cruises abroad.

Jim’s commitment to his career, volunteer, and leisure activities pales in comparison to his devotion to his family. He treasured

his time with his wife, children, grandchi ldren, and his life long friends. The memories of summers at Lake Almanor and attending hundreds of Stanford sporting events are abundant and precious to his loved ones.

His huge heart and ebullient personality will be fondly remembered by all who knew him as a loving husband, a devoted father and grandfather, and a genuine friend who had a way of making everyone who knew him feel special.

Jim is survived by his loving wife, Margi; his children: daughters, Marian Quade (Dave) of Waunakee, WI; Gail McFall (Jim) of Palo Alto; Lynne Meiers (Brian) of Meadow Vista; and son, Jim (Loretta) of Burlingame; ten grandchildren: Chris, Erin, Christina, Caitlin, Matt, Tessa, Kassi, Jimmy, Charlie, and Cal; stepsister Marion Mack and stepbrother Don Macfarland; and step grandchildren Mitch, Shelley, Brent, Lyndsey, and Greg. Brothers William and Robert, and stepsister, Anne, preceded Jim in death.

The family is especially grateful to Dr. John Hausdorff, the nursing staff at Monterey Bay Oncology, and the supportive nurses of Hospice of the Central Coast.

A Memorial Tailgate Celebration (casual attire) will be held Saturday, March 17, 2012, from 12:00 to 3:00 p.m. at Quail Lodge Golf Club, 8000 Valley Greens Dr., Carmel.

In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made in his memory to: The James M. Stephenson Athletic Scholarship Fund, c/o Development, Department of Athletics, Arrillaga Family Sports Center, 641 East Campus Dr., Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305-6150 or to the Hospice of the Central Coast, 2 Upper Ragsdale Dr., Ste. D210, Monterey, CA 93940.

James M. StephensonNovember 17, 1931-February 19, 2012

BirthsLingbing Zhang and Geng

Liu of Palo Alto, a daughter, Feb. 10.

Isaac and Kathleen Fehren-bach of Menlo Park, a daugh-ter, Feb. 17.

Geffrey and Lyndean Gil-ligan of Mountain View, a son, Feb. 18.

Robert Nicholson and Heather Wright of Menlo Park, a daughter, Feb. 20.

Michael Goedde and Alexa Leon-Prado of Menlo Park, a son, Feb. 21.

volunteered for six years.He was a loving husband and best

friend of Alice, his wife of 55 years. He distinguished himself through his loyalty to family, friends, church, volunteer organizations and neigh-bors.

He is survived by his wife, Alice; son, Alex; daughter, Lynn Bergquist (Rick); grandchildren, Kristina and Eric Bergquist; brother, Richard (Ja-net), of Denver, Colo.; and brother-in-law, David Phillips (Ruth) of Maryland.

A Celebration of Life will be held Saturday, March 24, at 2 p.m. at the First United Methodist Church of Palo Alto, 625 Hamilton Ave., Palo Alto. A reception at Fellowship Hall will follow.

In lieu of flowers, memorial con-tributions may be made to Lucile Packard Foundation for Children’s Health, 400 Hamilton Ave., Suite 340, Palo Alto, CA 94301; First United Methodist Church, 625 Ham-ilton Ave., Palo Alto, CA 94301; or KQED, 2601 Mariposa St., San Francisco, CA 94110.

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Give blood for life!bloodcenter.stanford.edu P A I D O B I T U A R Y

Mitchell Confer – our wonderful friend, father, brother, uncle, neighbor and mentor -- passed away peacefully at home on Monday, February 20. His sisters Sally Confer and Nancy Cassillias, and his son Jackson, survive him. Mitchell had bravely battled melanoma cancer.

Mitchell lived his life to the fullest. He was a great source of laughter, and his sense of humor brought light and fun to all. He always had an optimistic point of view. He was easy to know and love. Mitchell was kind, generous and supportive.

A Menlo Park resident, Mitchell was an acclaimed artist, with a studio in San Francisco’s Hunters Point Shipyard. His work was diverse, with more than 30 years of painting, print making, photography, digital art and illustration. Mitchell’s work celebrated color, light and textures, with subjects as diverse as cityscapes, freeways, landscapes and patterns from nature. Many private

collectors, as well as companies and hotels, have commissioned his paintings. His illustrations and photography appeared in many publications such as TIME Magazine, The New York Times and Business Week.

In addition to creating beautiful art, Mitchell love to share his passion for art through teaching people of all ages. He was also an enthusiastic golfer, fly fisherman, and greatly enjoyed the outdoors.

Mitchell grew up in Fullerton, California, the son of Stan and Earlene Confer. He attended Troy High School and Fullerton College and then the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, earning his BA in Illustration. He lived in New York City, Palo Alto and Hong Kong, and became a Menlo Park resident in 1999.

Mitchell Dean ConferJuly 1, 1959-February 20, 2012

P A I D O B I T U A R Y

Bob passed way peacefully at home in Palo Alto on Thursday, February 23, 2012. Born in New York City, he attended Brooklyn Prep and graduated from Fordham University in 1935 and then started his career in commercial real estate. While working as a civilian at Wright Patterson AFB in Dayton, OH, he met co-worker Marguerite Fuetsch, the love of his life, in 1942. They were married upon his return from naval service in the Pacific in 1946. He was a devoted husband for 65 years and a loving father of seven children and grandfather of 17. Bob and Marguerite started married life in San Francisco and moved to their residence in Palo Alto in 1951.

Bob had a long and well-respected career in San Francisco in commercial real estate, serving in 1959 as President of the Building Owners and Managers Association. In 1965 he was recruited by Hare, Brewer and Kelley, to develop and manage the Palo Alto Office Center, at the time the largest structure in Palo Alto. He finished his distinguished career in San Jose. Following his retirement, he volunteered with the Food Closet in Palo Alto, worked with adults at Project Read, and traveled extensively with Marguerite. Bob and Marguerite welcomed into their home people from around the world - international students from Stanford, refugees, and travelers in need of a “home away from home”.

In addition to Marguerite, Bob is survived by daughters Reggie Winner, Ronnie Hee (Pat), Terry Surguine (Greg), Mary Seabury (John) and Greta Purcell (Mike Jawetz), as well as sons Kevin Purcell (Susan) and Carl Purcell (Sarah), and grandchildren Rob (Lindsay), Andy and Marty Winner, Brendan, Charlie (Jana), Mike and Alaina Hee, Monica and Allison Surguine, Amanda and Christopher Purcell, Lauren and Ian Seabury, Laura and Michael Purcell and Sean and Chris Jawetz.

Bob was proud of his classical Jesuit education. He often challenged friends and family to find a word that he could not both spell and define. No one ever did! His warm, generous spirit and strong commitment to his family, faith, and friends will be fondly remembered.

Memorial donations may be made to Father John Donald, S.J., in Honduras, c/o Jesuits of the California Province, P.O. Box 68, Los Gatos, CA 95031-9900 or to the American Red Cross.

Robert Joseph PurcellFeb. 9, 1915-Feb. 23, 2012

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Posted Feb. 28 at 10:37 a.m. by David Pepperdine, a resident of Another Palo Alto neighbor-hood:

The current system of defined benefits is unsustainable (re: “Despite tax growth, Palo Alto braces for deficits”).

We need to move from a sys-tem of defined future benefits (at unknown future cost) to one of defined contribution (where we set aside a known sum of money now for whatever benefit it pro-vides in the future). Rather than pay pensions for an unknown number of years, for people who can retire too early, it would be far better to make 401K-style contributions for health care and retirement.

Very few residents in this town, most of who work in the private sector, have retirement benefits approaching what city employ-ees have. We demand parity.

The City Council better move quickly on this before we follow in the footsteps of Vallejo and declare bankruptcy.

Posted Feb. 29 at 11 a.m. by AA, a member of the Palo Verde School community:

I simply don’t understand Su-perintendent Skelly’s reasoning (re: “Board ponders Addison School boundary change”). Yes, there may be some slight chang-es for the first year or so of the new K-eligible dates, but the numbers of kids overall in the district won’t change.

Let’s try and get a handle on things now, not in three or four years when it will be another game of catch up. The board vot-ed against reopening Garland a few years back only to reverse it-self. Let’s talk about middle and high school options now. We all know where enrolment is head-ed, so for once can we please try and get ahead of the curve?

Palo Alto really needs to get out of the business of choice schools. People want neighbor-hood schools, scores are so close these days — is there really an advantage to having increased t raff ic around Hoover and Ohlone? Make them charter and lose funding or have all schools cater to their neighborhoods.

Honestly, Palo Alto is already exclusive enough. If you want specific things from an elemen-tary school you should be wel-come to pay for them, our tax dollars shouldn’t.

Posted Feb. 29 at 12:17 p.m. by Elizabeth, a resident of Stan-ford:

I own a house on Stanford cam-pus — Stanford should be made to contribute more to PAUSD.

They love to recruit people on the merits of the public schools, but then they hide in the corner and expect everyone else to pay. Stanford constantly approves visiting scholars form other countries who pile their kids into the public schools for a year or two and never give a cent to PiE or PTA. It’s wonderful to have foreign visitors — but Stanford ought to take responsibility for the cost of these scholars’ chil-dren and the massive drain it puts on the schools, particularly Nixon.

There is a reason Nixon suf-fers with PTA donations — the school has a huge number of vis-iting scholar kids who are lovely, wonderful, amazing families,

but who never give one penny to anything. Many of them are ex-tremely wealthy. And it’s not one or two families — the revolving door often makes up close to a third of the school, and at the kinder/first grade it’s more like half.

Also, Stanford should not be allowed to build even one more tiny condo until they begin to actually enforce the leases in the community. There are people with zero affiliation to Stanford living for years on campus to use the schools, and the university is too lazy to bother to get those people out.

My next-door neighbor has zero affiliation with Stanford, has kids in PAUSD and rents from a professor who moved away years ago — everyone knows — and the university does nothing. There are at least two other families like this within two blocks of my house.

SpectrumEditorials, letters and opinions

More pressure on city wages, benefits

Police union final hurdle in city’s quest to close budget gap

A fter years of paying higher and higher costs for salary and pen-sion benefits to its public-safety employees, Palo Alto finally gained some leverage when voters approved repeal of binding

arbitration last November. But now, with moderately increasing revenues wiped out by higher

pension commitments and other obligations, the city is facing a pro-jected $2 million shortfall in fiscal year 2013 and deficits of $3.7 mil-lion and $4 million in the following two years. Back in 2006, the cost of public safety, made up almost entirely of personnel costs, was 25 percent of the city’s General Fund. By fiscal year 2011 the cost had increased to 36 percent of the General Fund, a trend that cannot con-tinue.

The challenge for city labor negotiators is convincing all unions to roll back wages and begin to pay for more of the cost of health and pension benefits now so this structural budget deficit can be brought under control. City Manager Jim Keene has already achieved that goal with firefighters and the Service Employees International, the city’s largest union.

But talks that started six months ago with the Palo Alto Police Of-ficers Association have stalled. As a result, last week the city’s chief negotiator, Darrell Murray, declared an impasse. This means the union, which by law cannot strike, may have to accept the city’s final terms, although several steps remain, including a request to seek fact-finding or even the courts. Nevertheless, without binding arbitration, the police and firefighters’ unions will find it more difficult to continue pushing their wages and pensions upward.

Under the current contract, the city says the average police union member receives an annual salary of $104,013, but when benefits are added, the total jumps to $185,616 a year. And even after retirement at age 50, officers can receive 90 percent of their highest pay for life and receive a full compliment of health care and other benefits. Municipal governments all over the state are beginning to come to grips with this huge, often unfunded, liability. But if Palo Alto and other small cities are to recover, the growth in these extraordinary wages and pen-sions must be brought under control, and if possible rolled back. Rising salary and pension expenses are expected to continue to grow at an alarming pace.

For example, in a new long-range financial forecast released this week, the city projects the cost of all employee health care and pen-sion benefits to grow from $36.8 million this year to $51.2 million in 2017. This is driven by health care spending, up 126 percent in the last 10 years, from $6.6 million in 2002 to $14.9 million this year. Pension costs are following a similar trend, from $15.6 million in 2005 to $23.9 million this year. In addition, a recent actuarial valuation found that the city needs to set aside an additional $2.7 million this year and another $3.5 million next year just to cover this growing backlog of the city’s unfunded medical liability.

City Manager Keene is correct when he asks every labor group to take on more of their members’ health care and pension costs, which in prior years have been entirely covered by the city. Most groups have agreed to or have been forced to shoulder some of the load. The Service Employees International, Local 521, the city’s largest union, already has agreed to, among other things, establish a second tier of pension benefits for new workers and require current members to pay a portion of their health care costs. Firefighters agreed to similar rollbacks last fall.

But the city may have a fight on its hands with the police union, which claims it is being asked to give back more that the firefighters, a move negotiator Peter Hoffman says could amount to a loss of $20,000 or more for each rank-and-file police officer. Hoffman says the police union simply wants to match the rollbacks given up by the firefighters. It is not clear what the union’s next step will be but Hoffman did not rule out attacking the city’s bargaining tactics in court.

Now, as the city manager seeks to settle contracts with all the city’s unions, there is increasing pressure for the police officers association to accept reduced pay and benefits. In his explanation of why the city declared an impasse, negotiator Murray said:

“Even the Firefighters Association eventually accepted a package that took their 2009 wage increases into account, effectively rolling back the 2009 increase and assuming an additional total compensation reduction of nearly 4 percent.”

The police association simply wants a similar deal, Hoffman said, who added that the request fell on deaf ears during negotiations.

At this point, it does not appear that the police will be willing to give up more than the firefighters to help the city balance this year’s budget. The union says members are willing to accept lower wages and pay a share of their health insurance costs, but believe they should only pay a fair share. Now the question is whether the ultimate outcome will produce enough savings for the city to reach its goal of delivering more sustainable budgets in the years ahead.

Editorial

The Palo Alto Weekly encourages comments on our coverage or on issues of local interest.

What do you think? What do you think of the City’s plan to raise refuse rates?

YOUR TURN

Submit letters to the editor of up to 250 words to [email protected]. Include your name, address and daytime phone number so we can reach you. We reserve the right to edit contributions for length, objectionable content, libel and factual errors known to us. Anonymous letters will generally not be ac-cepted. You can also participate in our popular interactive online forum, Town Square, at our community website at www.PaloAltoOnline.com. Read blogs, discuss issues, ask questions or express opinions with you neighbors any time, day or night. Submitting a letter to the editor or guest opinion constitutes a granting of permission to the Palo Alto Weekly and Embarcadero Media to also publish it online, including in our online archives and as a post on Town Square.

For more information contact Editor Jocelyn Dong or Online Editor Tyler Hanley

at [email protected] or 650-326-8210.

This week on Town SquareTown Square is an online discussion forum at www.PaloAltoOnline.com

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Posted Feb. 29 at 6:23 p.m. by Allen Edwards, a resident of the Old Palo Alto neighborhood:

If the neighbors had not com-plained years ago, we might have a nice expanded market there right now (re: “Home builder signs deal for Alma Plaza”). In-stead we have to drive to Menlo Park or Mountain View to get to a standard market. Well, at least we have Trader Joe’s, but you just can’t do all your shopping there.

I used to live next to the Lucky

there and it was very nice to walk to the market. Now it is in the car and a long drive. Congestion, pol-lution, etc. People in this city just complain too much, then they complain when the long-delayed project is approved, then they complain when everything is too expensive.

What do you think 12 years of delays (two years is just the latest phase of delays) cost the devel-oper? This city is way too ex-pensive to do business in.

Should the city require massage practitioners to be certified in order to practice massage in Palo Alto?Asked on Middlefield Road, Palo Alto. Interviews and photographs by Cristina Wong.

Elizabeth LeeMTF author and momChaucer Street“On the one hand, massage therapists need a certification test to gain credibility, but credible practitioners shouldn’t have to un-dergo extra scrutiny.”

Sean SymanReal estateMiddlefield Road“I think they should be certified in this town, I don’t know about other towns.”

Tom Ames StudentByron Street “I’d rather have them go through the process of being trained ... just because they’re touching your body, but I don’t have a lot of info on the matter.”

James HerefordMedical health careEmbarcadero Road“It would be ideal if they could have some clinical preparation.”

Tasseaw M. Woldeyohannes Social workerTerman Drive“In practice, someone has to be specialized. One has to go through the necessary disciplines. ... In general, I believe in this kind of certification and training.”

Editor’s note: The following is a re-sponse to a Yahoo article about a boy who wrote an encouraging letter to Kyle Williams of the 49ers after their loss to the New York Giants.

by Samantha S. Woo

I hope I will be part of a ripple ef-fect of better parenting. I say this in faith, as I am assuming others

were as inspired as I was by the ar-ticle about the 7-year-old boy who wrote an encouraging letter to Kyle Williams of the 49ers (I sent the story to everyone I know).

Then came the next question for me person-ally: How could I, as a parent, be more like that father? Surviving as a “Palo Alto mom” sometimes means there is an inner tiger that lurks in the fear of failure of all kinds, ready to roar and pounce at anything to ensure success in her children. Being human, and used to the chaos of a family of five, I had somewhat given up the hope of positive parenting in a practical sense ... that is until I was once again inspired by another human, another parent.

I thank the father of the 7-year-old boy who through a single question (“If you feel this way, how sad do

you think Kyle Williams is?”) was able to elicit human compassion and perspective in his 7-year-old that resulted in the letter. It gave me hope in parenting again, and in little moments of perspective, hope and change in people. And for a mo-ment, just a moment, it helped turn my own parenting around.

This weekend after the 49ers lost, my 9-year-old son had a basketball game. As a kid of small stature, he was more at home in soccer, his main sport, and was pretty shy with his basketball teammates and coach. However, this game was a close one, an exciting one, and my son, along with the team, fought hard. In the end, they lost by a few points. The kids were disappointed, and we parents awkwardly gave the usual, “good game, great try” phrases, and many explanations floated around about the officiating, and so on.

We got in the car and I could see my son was more upset than usual. I assumed I knew why, and started my usual “good game” talk ... but he got more upset. When I dug deeper, he became teary eyed, and said he was upset because he wanted to play the last quarter, but the coach told him that he couldn’t. My boy took this to mean he wasn’t good enough.

I was at a loss for words. I mum-bled something about equal playing time, and grasped and tried to pull every parenting inspiration I could muster. Then it came: He needed comfort and compassion, and maybe

validation. But how do you validate a kid in such disappointment? That’s when I remembered what the father did in the Kyle Williams story. He turned it around; gave perspective.

I took a brighter tone, “So you asked the coach if you could be in the last quarter?”

“Yes.”“You mean you went up to the

coach first?”“Yes.”“Wow, that took a lot of courage to

let him know what you wanted and how you felt!” I could see my son’s head tilt a little, and felt encouraged to add, “That took the life skill of initiative that will take you far, far-ther in life than one basketball game at your age can ever take you.”

Then I heard him chuckle, “Yeah.”

I took his hand and told him how proud I was of him for coming out of his shell, and how proud he should be of himself.

I know this was only a moment in time, because as a human, I revert to my human ways way too often. But this moment was worth a thou-sand others, and I have inspiration to thank — inspiration from the 7-year-old’s father and from other parents who through their everyday choices inspire all of us to have hope in our efforts as parents.

Samantha S. Woo lives in Palo Alto with her husband and three children and is a licensed patent agent.

A moment of inspired parentingGuest Opinion

Check out Town Square!Hundreds of local topics are being discussed by local residents on

Town Square, a reader forum sponsored by the Weekly on our com-munity website at www.PaloAltoOnline.com. Post your own comments, ask questions, read the Editor’s blog or just stay up on what people are talking about around town!

Streetwise

LettersMayor Yeh’s promisesEditor,

Let’s give Mayor Yiaway Yeh a chance to deliver on the promises delivered in his state of the city ad-dress. However, we need to watch the following closely:

1. How much of the budget is ded-icated to building future reserves?

2. Are city services listed out in simple language and then priori-tized?

3. Are meaningful reductions made to the size of our city govern-ment to make room for the “catch up” of infrastructure and the “re-serve” for future needs? With-out meaningful progress on both counts, the words offered will go down in history as insincere politi-cal rhetoric.

4. The labor union has spent a lot of money getting Yeh to his current spot. Beware of any indication of quid pro quo. There are many la-bor initiatives that are masked as

“fairness to the workers,” however in practice they are about escalat-ing municipal costs and preserving privilege for the few.

5. Watch out for mega projects that sneak in under the planned community zoning and violate den-sity restrictions guised as environ-mentally friendly density near tran-sit hubs. Know that sheep in wolf’s clothing. Density not only impacts the quality of life in our neighbor-hoods, but gives away school ac-cess without compensation to the schools.

In short, we can support Mr. Yeh and wish him the best, but keep these potential conflicts of interest on your radar, and if you observe any of these things happening, speak up and unveil the truth.

More simply stated: “Mr. Yeh, don’t go there.”

Timothy GrayPark Boulevard

Palo Alto

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

Playwright’s PREMIEREMargy Kahn has been enthralled by lan-

guage for almost as long as she can remember.

From writing parodies and plays in elemen-tary school, to choosing linguistics as her field of study in college, she has kept an alert ear open to the nuances of how people express themselves as they interact with each other and the world.

So it comes as no surprise that, even as she has pursued a range of careers outside the field of writing — from software development decades ago to teaching and music performance in the present — Kahn, a longtime Menlo Park resi-dent, has continued writing as an avocation.

Local playgoers will have a chance to ex-perience Kahn’s latest project when the Pear Avenue Theatre in Mountain View premieres “Familiar Strangers,” which will be performed from March 2 through 18.

“Familiar Strangers” is Kahn’s first full-length play, but she is not a stranger to Pear audiences. The theater has staged five of her one-act plays

over the years through its Pear Slices festivals.The new play reflects Kahn’s deep apprecia-

tion of Persian culture as it explores relationships among Iranian immigrants living in Los Ange-les in 1991. It is set during the Iranian festival of “No Rooz” — New Day — which is the first day of spring and also the Persian new year.

As happens with many immigrant families, there are cultural conflicts between genera-tions, represented by Massoumeh, who arrived in L.A. with husband and daughter before the 1979 revolution in Iran, and Donya, now a teen-ager shaped by an American childhood.

The family had been split 12 years earlier when Massoumeh’s husband, Ali, returned to Iran to help in the revolution to depose the shah. But the tension between mother and daughter over cultural issues is intensified by the unex-pected return of Ali, who introduces still more “sturm und drang” into the equation.

The drama of “Familiar Strangers” is tempered by Ms. Kahn’s trademark humorous touch. “All

Menlo Park

writer Margy

Kahn hopes

to further

understanding of

Iranian culture

with new

work opening

this week

story by RENEE BATTI // photos by MICHELLE LE

Menlo Park playwright Margy Kahn on stage at the Pear Avenue Theatre.

Page 26

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my plays have humor — they have to,” she said in a recent interview. “I could never write a Bergman film.”

The play is being co-directed by Jeanie K. Smith (a Weekly theater critic) and the Pear’s artistic direc-tor, Diane Tasca of Palo Alto.

Although she has long been in-terested in playwriting and the the-ater, Kahn got a powerful dose of big-time stagecraft as a high school student when she volunteered for the Centerstage theater in Baltimore, which “introduced me to Beckett, Genet, Albee,” and other greats, she says. “It was a revelation for me.”

Kahn’s plays are character-driv-en, she says. Although she admires the work of many of the theater world’s Olympians, such as Ten-nessee Williams and Edward Al-bee, “I don’t write like that,” she says. “I don’t write poetically; I write in the vernacular.”

That preference may have some-thing to do with her work as a lin-guist, which was also instrumental to her exposure to the Persian culture she takes so much pleasure from.

Pursuing linguistics — a broad field — while in college, she ulti-mately narrowed her focus to the study of the Kurdish language. That led her to a one-year stay in north-western Iran in 1974-75.

When she returned for a summer in 1978, revolutionary flames were being fanned by opponents of the shah, and anti-American sentiment was high because of the years of meddling by the United States gov-ernment in Iranian affairs. But she continued to meet and form bonds with the people, and developed a deep understanding of the anger many felt toward the U.S.

“Most Americans knew nothing about (the shah’s) history of repres-sion and torture, or how he came to power in 1953 with the help of the CIA,” she says. As the American hostage crisis of 1979 unfolded, she was deeply troubled by that lack of understanding, evident in both the media and Americans in general, which helped lead to the demoniza-tion of Iranians overseas and in the U.S. immigrant community.

Decades later, in writing “Famil-iar Strangers,” Kahn says she was hoping “to serve as a bridge for Americans to Iranian culture.” That culture, she notes, is not well known by her fellow countrymen: “Many Americans equate Arab and Persian cultures, while those two cultures couldn’t be more different.

“While we have no trouble differ-entiating the cultures of Christian Europe, we tend to lump the cultures of vast areas of the Middle East to-gether. For our shared future on this planet, I think it is critical we under-stand some of the differences.”

Kahn adds that, given the rich-ness of Persian culture — including its music and cuisine — “there is great enjoyment to be had from this process.”

In addition to her work as a play-wright, Kahn wrote a memoir in 1980 about her year of working with the Kurds in Iran, and she continues to write short stories and other fiction.

When she moved to California in 1979, she went to work for Hewlett-Packard Corp., applying her exper-tise in linguistics in speech recogni-tion and synthesis work. She found some satisfaction in the work, “but it wasn’t enough for me,” she says. “It wasn’t feeding this (artistic) side of me.” So she left that job.

Long interested in music, she took up the harp — not a predictable choice for someone in her 30s. But within four years, she was perform-ing with the Redwood Symphony, a volunteer orchestra based on the Peninsula. She now teaches the harp and performs as a freelancer.

She also teaches English as a Sec-ond Language, a project she’s been devoted to for years. “All my life I have been fascinated by the people who choose or who are forced to choose to cross cultural boundar-ies,” she says.

“My linguistic research on Kurd-ish was about loan words and lin-guistic borrowing. My fiction has also focused on this.”

Her current projects involve writ-ing a young-adult novel, and ex-panding “The Packrat Gene,” a one-act staged by the Pear. Kahn says the work is about a woman trying to move her aging, packrat mother into assisted living, while her daughter, a budding packrat herself, fights her mother’s efforts. The middle-gener-ation character is the “anti-packrat,” her creator says.

Renee Batti writes for the Al-manac, one of the Weekly’s sister papers.

Info: “Familiar Strangers” runs March

2 through 18 at the Pear Avenue The-

atre, 1220 Pear Ave., Unit K, Mountain

View. Tickets: $15-$30. Go to thepear.

org or call 254-1148 for tickets.

Arts & Entertainment--

Wrapped in a hand-dyed silk scarf from Iran, playwright Margy Kahn sits in the audience at the Pear Avenue Theatre.

Page 27

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A little less plot, a little more harmless fun‘All Shook Up’ is a colorful, cheeky take on Elvis classics

by Karla Kane

I ’m always skeptical of so-called “jukebox” theater: productions such as “Mamma Mia!” that are

based on a selection of pop songs from the past, with plots shoehorned in between musical numbers. Sure, it’s always fun to hear classic songs performed in a new context, but give me original content any day.

“All Shook Up,” the latest produc-tion by Foothill Music Theatre, takes its music from the catalog of the King of Rock and Roll himself, Elvis Pres-ley, with some gender-bending ele-ments inspired by the King of Eng-lish Literature, William Shakespeare. What the show lacks in originality it makes up for — to some extent — in good-natured spirit.

The flimsy plot (book by Joe DiPietro) takes its cues from com-mon depictions of America in the 1950s. As was apparently always the case, a small conservative town is full of repressed sexuality and a bad case of the blahs. The square inhabitants are clearly in need of a leather-clad rebel to teach them about rock and roll, following their dreams, letting loose, etc.

In “All Shook Up,” said rebel is Chad (Tony DiCorti), a suave “gui-tar-playing roustabout,” as he is fre-quently referred to by the tongue-in-cheek script. When Chad rolls into town on his badass motorcycle and fixes the town’s busted jukebox, the ladies swoon (fainting, à la “Bye Bye Birdie) for his hip-swiveling moves.

Especially entranced is Natalie (Katherine Goldman), the tomboy-ish town mechanic. But Chad has eyes only for the sophisticated Miss Sandra (Amanda Andrews), who runs the local art museum. Mean-while, nerdy Dennis (Anthony Chan) pines for Natalie, while sassy, wisecracking Sylvia (Juanita Harris) nurses a crush on Natalie’s widowed dad (Todd Wright), who also has a thing for Miss Sandra. And don’t forget Sylvia’s daughter Lorraine (the vivacious Leslie Ivy), who con-ducts a sweet, forbidden, interracial affair with Dean (Warren Wernick), the shy son of the uptight, autocratic mayor (Molly Thornton).

With a storyline (very) loosely inspired by The Bard’s “Twelfth Night,” Natalie disguises herself as a male — with the addition of a cap and jacket she magically becomes unrecognizable — called “Ed.” Her implausible idea is that if Ed can be-come best buddies with Chad, he’ll somehow realize she/he is the guy/girl of his dreams.

Chad and Ed do indeed hit it off but, complicating things further, Miss Sandra too develops feelings for Natalie-in-Ed-drag. I’ll refrain from being a spoiler so you’ll have to guess for yourselves if and how the romantic entanglements work themselves out in the end.

Act I of “All Shook Up” is fairly ho-hum stuff, with Elvis songs awk-wardly wedged in all over the place, but I’ll admit that in the second act, as the Shakespearian/screwball sil-liness and interesting homoerotic twists ramp up, the show drew me in further with its slight, goofy charms. And though it’s full of ‘50s clichés, it’s also full of cheeky self-awareness, playing off its more predictable ele-

ments to work in some surprises (such as who ultimately gets shook up and who turns out to do the shaking).

DiCorti makes for an affable Elvis-esque lothario, although the older folks — gorgeous-voiced Har-ris and the ever-loveable Wright — gained the most hoots and hollers (and rightfully so).

The five-piece band (hidden off to the side in Foothill’s Lohman Theatre) does a good job with the Presley material, though the cho-reography is a bit too corny even by this show’s standards. The set is amateurish but cute, with some technical difficulties the night I at-tended the show, and the costumes are pleasingly colorful.

“All Shook Up”’s target demo-graphic has been much better served by other shows — “Grease,” “Bye Bye Birdie,” “Hairspray!”, “Back to the Future” or heck, an actual Elvis movie, for that matter — to name but a few. But for those who crave live, local entertainment, the pro-duction delivers a dose of harmless fun and toe-tapping mid-century nostalgia.

Arts & Entertainment

THEATER REVIEW

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Tony DiCorti rocks the jailhouse as the rebel Chad in Foothill Music Theatre’s “All Shook Up.”

Dav

id A

llen

What: “All Shook Up,” an Elvis mu-

sical presented by Foothill Music

Theatre

Where: Lohman Theatre, Foothill

College, 12345 El Monte Road, Los

Altos Hills

When: Through March 11, with

shows Thursday at 7 p.m., Friday

and Saturday at 8 p.m., and Sun-

days at 2 p.m.

Cost: Tickets are $20-$28.

Info: Go to foothillmusicals.com or

call 650-949-7360.

Today’s news,

sports & hot picks

Page 28

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Opening lineupLos Lobos, San Francisco Symphony will play at new Stanford concert hall

by Rebecca Wallace

W hen Stanford University’s new concert hall officially opens its doors in January

2013, the San Francisco Symphony and Los Lobos will be among the first acts to play the Bing.

The Bing Concert Hall is still un-der construction at the east end of Museum Way and set to be finished in the summer. Grand-opening events will start Jan. 11 under the baton of Michael Tilson Thomas, Stanford officials said this week.

Along with Tilson Thomas and the San Francisco Symphony, opening night will also feature: a choral dedication with singers from the Stanford Chamber Cho-rale and Stanford Philharmonia; a Japanese-drumming processional by Stanford Taiko; and fanfares by high-tech composers from the university’s Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics. The St. Lawrence String Quartet will also perform.

For attendees who don’t score one of the Bing hall’s 844 seats, the Jan. 11 event will also be simulcast to other campus venues.

The following day, Stanford of-ficials will offer free performanc-es by Stanford artists throughout Jan. 12. That night, Los Lobos will give two ticketed hour-long shows at the Bing.

Scheduled for Jan. 13 is an after-noon concert by the St. Lawrence String Quartet, with an evening performance by various groups and soloists of the university’s mu-sic department.

On Jan. 16, the Philharmonia Ba-roque Orchestra brings its period instruments from the baroque and classical eras for a concert.

The events will be overseen by Wiley Hausam, the new managing director of the Bing Concert Hall, who took the reins last month. He comes from Purchase College in New York, where he was executive director of the Performing Arts Center.

Hausam has also served as exec-utive director of the Skirball Cen-ter for the Performing Arts at New York University, and as associate producer of four Broadway shows.

Visitors to the Bing Concert Hall will pass through a glass-enclosed foyer that will include space for talks and educational programs. Inside, they’ll see an elliptical space with a “vineyard-style con-figuration”: Terraced sections of seats will surround the stage. The hall will also include rehearsal and recording studios, along with a per-formers’ lounge and garden.

Ennead Architects of New York City designed the $112 million venue, with acoustic design by the acoustician Yasuhisa Toyota of Nagata Acoustics in Tokyo, and theatrical design by Fisher Dachs Associates of New York, Seattle and the United Kingdom.

Stanford officials plan to have a variety of artists use the concert hall, including student groups, the Department of Music and visiting artists presented by Stanford Lively

Arts. Season subscriptions for the hall will go on sale this spring.

At this point, Lively Arts con-certs scheduled to take place in the new venue after the grand opening include performances by the cellist Yo-Yo Ma, the pianists Emanuel Ax and Jon Nakamatsu, and the percussionist Glenn Kotche.

The Bing hall, which will face the Cantor Arts Center across

Palm Drive, is part of the Stanford Arts Initiative and one of a trio of new buildings planned. The new structure for visual art from the Anderson Collection is set to open in 2014, with the new McMurtry Building opening the following year to house Stanford’s depart-ment of art and art history.

More information is at binghall.stanford.edu.

Arts & Entertainment

A TRIBUTE TO PEGGY FORD ... Clowns, acrobats, actors and other

artists are planning a March 13

benefit in tribute to Peggy Ford, a

Palo Alto native and popular circus

performer who died in January after

a long illness. Ford, a graduate of

Gunn High School, went on to be

one of the first female clowns to

graduate from the Ringling Bros.

and Barnum & Bailey Clown Col-

lege, in 1974, local publicist Carla

Befera said. After touring with Ring-

ling Bros., Ford helped found and

run the Clown Conservatory in San

Francisco. The March 13 event,

scheduled for 7 p.m. at the Z Space

at 450 Florida St. in San Francisco,

will both help with the medical ex-

penses from Ford’s illness and start

the Peggy Ford Award to assist

young women who aspire to be-

come professional clowns. Sched-

uled performers include Jeff Raz

of Cirque du Soleil and the Pickle

Family Circus, juggler Sara Felder,

the acrobatic East West Duo, and a

gathering of young women clowns.

Tickets are $20-$100. Go to zspace.

org or call 415-626-0453.

A&E DIGEST

8:00 A.M., Wednesday, March 14, 2012 Palo Alto Council Chambers, 1st Floor, Civic Center, 250 Hamilton Avenue. Go to the Development Center at 285 Hamilton Avenue to review filed documents; contact Diana Tamale for information regarding business hours at 650.329.2144.

1091 Emerson Street/225 Lincoln Avenue [12PLN-00039] Request by Peter Baltay on behalf of 1091 Emerson Street Partners, LLC for historic review for demolition of a Category 3 building on the Historic Inventory and historic review of a replacement single-story, single family residence. Zone District: R-1 (Single Family Residential).

423 University [11PLN-00423] Request by Mark Bucciarelli on behalf of John Felt for historic review of façade changes to the existing building containing an eating and drinking establishment, a Category 3 building on the Historic Inventory. Zone District: CD-C(GF)(P) (Community Downtown Commercial).

The regular HRB meeting scheduled on March 7, 2012 is cancelled.

Steven Turner, Advance Planning Manager

NOTICE OF SPECIAL PUBLIC MEETINGof the City of Palo Alto

Historic Resources Board [HRB]

Palo Alto Unified School District525 San Antonio Road, Palo Alto, CA

The Palo Alto Unified School District will be accepting bids for the lease of the Surplus Property, pursuant to Mandatory Bid Instruc-tions. The initial period of the lease cannot extend past June 30, 2014. All bids must be accompanied by a deposit of $20,000.00 in the form of a certified check, cashier’s check, or money or-der. Upon selection by the District, the accepted bidder(s) shall execute a mutually satisfactory lease agreement. Deposits of rejected bids shall be refunded as soon as reasonably possible after rejection.

Bids in the above-described form may be submitted on or be-fore 2:00 p.m. on March 6, 2012. These bids will be presented to the Board by staff at the meeting of the Board on March 13, 2012. Alternatively, bidders may present bids at the time of the bid opening at the District Board of Education meeting, starting at 6:30PM on March 13, 2012 when the item is called for review by the Board.

The Board is expected to (but is not obligated to) make an award no later than March 23, 2012. The leasing price for any bidder shall be a minimum of fair market value based on existing market conditions for the Property. The Board reserves the right to reject any and all bids. If no bids are accepted, the District will adver-tise further for bids.

All requests for bid documents should be directed to Robert F. Golton, 25 Churchill Avenue, Palo Alto, CA 94306, [email protected], 650-329-3801, who is hereby authorized and directed to pro-vide a copy of said documents to any party who so requests.

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This design rendering by Ennead Architects of New York City shows the planned interior of the Bing Concert Hall, which is named after Stanford alumni Helen and Peter Bing.

Page 29

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Eating OutRESTAURANT REVIEW

Lamb souvlaki is topped with oregano and lemon juice, served atop fries.

Mic

helle

Le

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Opa! is a Greek-themed res-taurant. Actually, it’s vaguely Greek, more American in calo-

rie count, the jumbo-portioned dishes affordably priced. There are Greek names to the dishes and “Visions of Greece” looping on dining-room flat screens, but the rest, my friends, is all-American comfort food.

Opening in May 2011, Opa! re-placed the Moroccan-inspired Zi-tune. Some decor modifications were made, but not many. The space is grotto-like with dark-stained wood floors, tables and chairs; and faux stones lining the walls and abutting the ceiling. A bar occupies one-fourth of the main dining room. Lighting is recessed. Happily, there is no echo.

The restaurant is popular. I vis-ited at both lunch and dinner times and the place was ever-busy, with loads of families in early evenings. The menu is lengthy, a something-for-everyone approach, from chic sliders to loukoumades (Greek doughnuts).

Opa! is a recent restaurant entry, starting up in 2008, that now has three locations including Los Gatos and Willow Glen. The company is primed for expansion, coming soon to Walnut Creek. The menu was in-spired by family recipes from one

of the original partners, George Tsaboukos, a chef who has since passed away. While there is no ex-ecutive chef, the line cooks are well trained.

The regular menu lists nearly 70 items plus specials, desserts and beverages. It takes a while to fer-ret through so many offerings. Yet despite the busy restaurant, I was never hurried, never had a sense of being rushed. The waitstaff was at-tentive.

While the menu lists numerous mezes/starters, there are many other offerings that would make worthwhile starters. The pita piz-zas, as well as the various dips and spreads, could easily be shared ap-petizers. Portions are very large.

Melitzanosalata ($6.99) was two mounds of roasted eggplant with spices, olive oil and garlic — a lit-tle too heavy on the garlic. The ac-companying pita bread was thick, warm and delicious.

Zucchini drops ($9.99) were four big balls of shredded zucchini mixed with feta cheese and served on top of a Greek yogurt sauce. Large portion, appetizing and fill-ing.

The restaurant’s baby back ribs ($10.99) were fork-tender and fell off the bone. The pork was topped

Greek-American comfort food

Dishes at Opa! are only vaguely Mediterranean, but very satisfyingby Dale F. Bentson

Page 30

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8:30 A.M., Thursday, March 15, 2012 Palo Alto Council Chambers, 1st Floor, Civic Center, 250 Hamilton Avenue. Go to the Development Center at 285 Hamilton Avenue to review filed documents; contact Diana Tamale for information regarding business hours at 650.329.2144.

1901 Embarcadero Road [11PLN-00254]: Request by AT&T, on behalf of the City of Palo Alto, for Site and Design Review / Architectural Review, and Conditional Use Permit for the installation of nine panel antennas on a new replacement lattice tower (to replace the existing Palo Alto Airport beacon tower) and associated equipment and ground based enclosure for a new wireless communication facility. Zone: PF(D).

3431 Hillview [11PLN-00458]: Request by VM Ware on behalf of Leland Stanford Jr. University for Architectural Review of the demolition of 255,000 square feet of commercial floor area and construction of four two-story Research and Development office buildings, a one-story cafeteria building and three parking structures for a total floor area of 345,270 square feet (the parking structures and cafeteria building are considered amenity space and are exempt from the total floor area). A Design Enhancement Exception has been requested to exceed the 35 feet height limit by 5 feet in order to provide a clerestory element for each of the new two-story office buildings. Environmental Assessment: An Addendum to the City of Palo Alto/Stanford Development Agreement and Lease Project EIR has been prepared. Zone District: RP-5 (Research Park).

413 Forest Avenue [12PLN-00030]: Request by Hayes Group, on behalf of South PA Homes LLC, for Preliminary Architectural Review of a new three unit attached residential condominium project (6,484 sf). Zone: RM-40.

Amy FrenchManager of Current Planning

NOTICE OF A PUBLIC MEETINGof the City of Palo Alto

Architectural Review Board (ARB)

with a sweet honey glaze and served with onion rings and a green salad. It’s a meal in itself, listed as a “starter.”

Another listing in the starter category: the Opa! sliders ($9.99). Three mid-sized burgers were each topped with a different Greek-in-spired sauce: spicy feta, horiatiki (Greek salad) and tzatziki (yogurt, cucumbers, olive oil). Good-tasting but bigger than sliders usually are, so be careful how much food you order.

One of the signature dishes was pasticio ($14.99). I didn’t care much for it. It was a heavy cheese- and pasta-laden casserole with not much evidence of the ground sir-loin nor the seasoned cloves and nutmeg it was supposed to have. The bechamel sauce added another zillion unnecessary calories to a very bland dish.

The psari psito sti skhara ($22.99), on the other hand, was delicious. The boned, fleshy, Medi-terranean branzino had been sea-soned with an olive-oil vinaigrette and was served with braised greens (horta) and oven-roasted potatoes.

Pork souvlaki ($14.99) were two skewers of tender marinated pork seasoned with fresh oregano and fresh lemon juice. For my choice of potato, I chose the Opa! fries, thick-cut and covered with both creamy and crumbly feta. While a side of mustardy Opa! sauce accompanied, I loved just squeezing more lemon

over the entire dish. This was my favorite entree.

I also liked the Greek pita pizza ($9.99) with tomato sauce, feta, mozzarella, olives, artichokes and Greek sausage. Opa! has two types of pita baked specially. One is the typical flat pocket bread for sand-wiches. The other is thinker and spongier, perfect for the bigger-than-I-had-imagined pizza.

For dessert, the bougatsa ($7.99) consisted of phyllo dough envel-oping a mixture of sauteed green apples, whipped ricotta and cream cheese, cinnamon and sugar, all drizzled with raspberry and cara-mel sauces. Gooey, caloric and not noteworthy enough to inspire.

Loukoumades ($7.99) was the

Opa! version of Greek-style fried doughnuts — and who wouldn’t like that? Eight crisp donut nug-gets, tossed in cinnamon and sug-ar, were drizzled with Greek honey then sprinkled with walnut crum-bles. To add to the sinfulness was a huge scoop of vanilla ice cream. This will definitely conclude your eating for a while.

Opa! has a full bar and cocktail menu. The wine list is diminutive but prices are reasonable and pair well with menu items. It also offers a weekend brunch.

Opa! might not quite be an au-thentic Greek dining experience but it’s affordable and a good place for families — and you will never go away hungry.

Opa!325 Main St., Los Altos

650-209-5340

opaauthenticgreek.com

Hours: Mon.-Wed. 11 a.m.-10

p.m.; Thurs.-Fri. 11 a.m.-11

p.m.; Sat. 10 a.m.-11 p.m.; Sun.

10 a.m.-10 p.m.

Reservations

Credit cards

Lot Parking

Full Bar

Takeout

Highchairs

Wheelchair access

Banquet

Catering

Outdoor seating

Noise level: Moderate

Bathroom Cleanliness: Good

Customers Kenji Ohkawa and Kristina Corral try the saganaki (flaming-cheese) appetizer.

Loukoumades, or Greek doughnuts, are served with vanilla ice cream, walnut crumbles and fruit.

Saganaki is served on a flaming iron skillet, topped with lemon juice and served with warm pita bread.

Michelle Le

Michelle Le

Michelle Le

Page 31

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Search a complete listing of local

restaurantreviews by location or type of food onPaloAltoOnline.com

AMERICAN

Armadillo Willy’s 941-2922

1031 N. San Antonio Rd., Los Altos

Range: $5.00-13.00

Hobee’s 856-6124

4224 El Camino Real, Palo Alto

Also at Town & Country Village,

Palo Alto 327-4111

Burmese

Green Elephant Gourmet

494-7391

Burmese & Chinese Cuisine

3950 Middlefield Rd., Palo Alto

(Charleston Shopping Center)

Dine-In, Take-Out, Local Delivery-Catering

www.greenelephantgourmet.com

CHINESE

Chef Chu’s 948-2696

1067 N. San Antonio Road

on the corner of El Camino, Los Altos

2010 Best Chinese

MV Voice & PA Weekly

Jing Jing 328-6885

443 Emerson St., Palo Alto

Authentic Szechwan, Hunan

Food To Go, Delivery

www.jingjinggourmet.com

Ming’s 856-7700

1700 Embarcadero East, Palo Alto

www.mings.com

CHINESE

New Tung Kee Noodle House

947-8888

520 Showers Dr., MV

in San Antonio Ctr.

Voted MV Voice Best ‘01, ‘02, ‘03 & ‘04

Prices start at $4.75

Su Hong – Menlo Park

Dining Phone: 323–6852

To Go: 322–4631

Winner, Menlo Almanac “Best Of”

8 years in a row!

INDIAN

Darbar Indian Cuisine

321-6688

129 Lytton, Downtown Palo Alto

Lunch Buffet M-F; Open 7 days

Janta Indian Restaurant

(650) 462-5903 Fax (650) 462-1433

369 Lytton Ave., Downtown Palo Alto

Lunch Buffet M-F;

www.jantaindianrestaurant.com

ITALIAN

La Cucina di Pizzeria Venti

254-1120

1390 Pear Ave, Mountain View

www.pizzeriaventi.com

Fresh, Chef Inspired Italian Food

Spalti Ristorante 327-9390

417 California Ave, Palo Alto

www.spalti.com

JAPANESE & SUSHI

Fuki Sushi 494-9383

4119 El Camino Real, Palo Alto

Online Ordering-Catereing-Chef Rental

Sushi Workshops-Private Tatami Rooms

Online Gift Card Purchase

fukisushi.com & facebook.com/fukisushi

MEXICAN

Palo Alto Sol 328-8840

408 California Ave, Palo Alto

PIZZA

Spot A Pizza 324-3131

115 Hamilton Ave, Palo Alto

Voted Best Pizza in Palo Alto

www.spotpizza.com

POLYNESIAN

Trader Vic’s 849-9800

4269 El Camino Real, Palo Alto

Dinner Mon-Thurs 5-10pm;

Fri-Sat 5-11pm;

Sun 4:30 - 9:30pm

Available for private luncheons

Lounge open nightly

Happy Hour Mon-Fri 4-6 pm

SEAFOOD

Cook’s Seafood 325-0604

751 El Camino Real, Menlo Park

Seafood Dinners from

$6.95 to $10.95

STEAKHOUSE

Sundance the Steakhouse

321-6798

1921 El Camino Real, Palo Alto

Lunch: Mon-Fri 11:30 am-2:00pm

Dinner: Mon-Thu 5:00-10:00pm

Fri-Sat 5:00-10:30pm,

Sun 5:00-9:00pm

www.sundancethesteakhouse.com

of the week

Page 32

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Movies

We Need to Talk About Kevin

(Century 16) You’ve heard the old chestnut about using one’s powers for good and not for evil. It’s a line that comes to mind about the return of director Lynne Ramsay, who has largely wasted her creative energy on “bad seed” cliches in “We Need to Talk About Kevin.”

“Evil” may be the natural state of the film’s titular character, the child of Eva Khatchadourian (Tilda Swinton) and her clue-lessly upbeat husband, Franklin (John C. Reilly). Played at three ages by Rock Duer, Jasper Newell and rising star Ezra Miller, Kevin is crafty beyond his years as he makes his mother’s life miserable and manipulates Dad into think-ing Mom is the problem.

Kevin throws tantrums, spits bile and generally acts out in es-calating aggression, all of it seem-

ingly intended to break his moth-er’s spirit. It’s possible to interpret Eva’s bad handling of one situation as the tragic error that takes the mother-son relationship beyond a point of no return, but the story — adapted by Ramsay and Rory Kinnear from Lionel Shriver’s novel — more clearly resembles Coleridge’s famous appraisal of “Othello”’s Iago as a villain with “motiveless malignity.”

The hapless Eva’s efforts even-tually recede into self-defensive management rather than active parenting. “Kevin” rides the edge of drama so extreme as to be com-ic, which Ramsay happily allows. From the first shot to the last, the film subjects Eva to near-unrelent-ing emotional punishment, broken only by glimmers of hope that lead to even more painful smackdowns of despair.

As a drama, “Kevin” is themati-cally anemic: Kevin is a force to

be dealt with, and the parents don’t have the tools to do so. Their ul-timate failure is not to utter the film’s title and insist upon clini-cal help, but padding that simple message out to a 112-minute PSA winds up making Ramsay seem more sadistic than empathetic. As an evil-kid horror movie, which the film consciously resembles in plot and lacerating tone, “Kevin” is been there, done that, film-school style.

The director of art-house clas-sics “Morvern Callar” and “Rat-catcher” remains potent, to be sure, and as fearlessly off-putting as she wants to be. Her style has come to look a bit like shtick, but there’s a dark beauty to the way she extreme-zooms the mundane to become sinister (evoking the color and texture of blood in paint or tomatoes or other suburban res-idue). And the actors are faultless in doing Ramsay’s bidding. Miller perfects his dead-eyed stare as a Columbine killer in the making, and an even more riveting Swinton proves clear and resonant in her confusion, fear, anger and guilt.

Still, put all this together in one package, and you get a mess of a film, an annoying provoca-tion with too little to say, a seri-ous credibility deficit, a whiff of misandry, and a miscalculated, unseemly gusto for abusing its hero. Instead of having catharsis, the audience just gets had.

Rated R for disturbing violence and behavior, some sexuality and language. One hour, 52 minutes.

— Peter Canavese

OPENINGS

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a Final Draft Report for

the 2012 Bicycle and Pedestrian Transportation Plan has

been prepared by the Palo Alto Department of Planning

and Community Environment, Transportation Division. This

document is available for review and comment during the

period beginning March 2, 2012 through April 2, 2012, and is

available online at www.cityofpaloalto.org/bike.

Comments may be submitted via email to transportation@

cityofpaloalto.org or to Department of Planning and Community

Environment, Transportation Division, 250 Hamilton Avenue,

Palo Alto, California, 94301.

Printed copies of the Final Draft Report are available for review

during the hours of 8:00 A.M. to 12:00 noon and 1:00 P.M. to

4:00 P.M., at City Hall, 5th Floor, 250 Hamilton Avenue, Palo

Alto, California. Additional copies are available for review at

all City of Palo Alto libraries. This Report will be considered

at a public hearing by the City Council shortly after the public

comment period closes.

Curtis Williams,

Director of Planning and Community Environment

NOTICE OF FINAL DRAFT REPORTOF BICYCLE AND PEDESTRIAN

TRANSPORTATION PLAN

Notice is hereby Given that proposals will be received by the Palo Alto Uni-fied School District for bid package:

Palo Alto High School Stadium Kitchen Equipment TI (Snack Bar) Contract No. PASK-12

DESCRIPTION OF THE WORK: The work includes, but is not limited to: Supply and install kitchen stainless sheet metal counters, sinks, tables and appliances as shown and described in the project documents. Work to be coordinated and scheduled to ensure a complete functional installation. Final installation subject to approval by Santa Clara County’s Department of Health,. Bidding documents contain the full description of the work.

There will be a mandatory pre-bid conference and site visit at 10 a.m. on March 15th, 2012 at the District Facilities Office at 25 Churchill Ave., Building D, Palo Alto, California 94306.

Bid Submission: Proposals must be received at the District Facilities Of-fice, 25 Churchill Ave., Building D, by 10:00 a.m. on March 20th 2012.

PREVAILING WAGE LAWS: The successful Bidder must comply with all prevailing wage laws applicable to the Project, and related requirements contained in the Contract Documents.

Palo Alto Unified School District will maintain a Labor Compliance Program (LCP) for the duration of this project. In bidding this project, the contractor warrants he/she is aware and will follow the Public Works Chapter of the California Labor Code comprised of Labor Code Sections 1720 – 1861. A copy of the District’s LCP is available for review at 25 Churchill Avenue, Building D, Palo Alto, CA 94306.

1. A pre-construction conference shall be conducted with the con-tractor or subcontractors to discuss federal and state labor law requirements applicable to the contract.

2. Project contractors and subcontracts shall maintain and furnish to the District, at a designated time, a certified copy of each payroll with a statement of compliance signed under penalty of perjury.

3. The District shall review and, if appropriate, audit payroll records to verify compliance with the Public Works Chapter of the Labor Code.

4. The District shall withhold contract payments if payroll records are delinquent or inadequate.

5. The District shall withhold contract payments as described in the LCP, including applicable penalties when the District and Labor Commissioner establish that underpayment of other violations has occurred.

Bidders may examine Bidding Documents at the District Facilities Office, 25 Churchill Ave, Building D, Palo Alto. Bidders may purchase cop-ies of Plans and Specifications at American Reprographics Company (ARC), 1100 Industrial Road Suite 13, San Carlos, California 94070 Phone: (650) 631-2310

Address all questions to: Palo Alto Unified School District25 Churchill Avenue, Building D, Palo Alto, CA 94306-1099Attn: Tim McBrian Phone: (650) 833-4211 Fax: (650) 327-3588 [email protected]

Palo Alto Unified School District

Ezra Miller in “We Need to Talk About Kevin.”

NOW PLAYINGThe Secret World of Arrietty 1/2(Century 16, Century 20) Great things come in small packages. That’s one of the lessons of “The Secret World of Arrietty,” the charming animated adventure based on Mary Norton’s kid-lit classic “The Bor-rowers.” This is a tale of tiny people living underfoot of human “beans,” and “borrow-ing” what they need to survive. But it’s also a reminder that the seemingly small pack-age of a hand-drawn animated film remains a warmly welcome alternative to computer-generated imagery. Director Hiromasa Yonebayashi takes the story at a leisurely pace, which allows it to breathe. Along with the gorgeously detailed art, lush color and swoony music, the film is all but guaran-teed to entrance children. The animation style, emphasizing meticulous design, perfectly lends itself to the source material. Everything about “Arrietty” is as vivid as it is (deceptively) simple, which places it in the top ranks of animated movies. With tender-ness, the story brushes against big fears — Shawn grapples with mortality, Arrietty with losing her home — while retaining the view that friendship can mean mutually solving, or at least alleviating, problems. Rated G. One hour, 34 minutes. — P.C. (Reviewed Feb. 17, 2012)

The Vow 1/2(Century 16, Century 20) If the Adam San-dler/Drew Barrymore chuckler “50 First Dates” had been recast as a romantic drama and produced by the Oprah Winfrey

Network, “The Vow” might have been the result. Fortunately, leads Rachel McAdams (“Midnight in Paris”) and Channing Tatum (“Haywire”) serve up solid performances and help keep the film somewhat ground-ed. The fledgling marriage between sweet-hearts Leo (Tatum) and Paige (McAdams) crashes to a halt when a truck slams into their car, sending Paige into a coma. When she awakes, she has no memory of Leo, who endures one awkward situation after another to win Paige back. Tatum and Mc-Adams have a comfortable chemistry and their relationship is mostly believable. The

romantic scenarios that abound range from endearing to saccharine. The characters in Paige’s life are moderately fleshed out, in-cluding her parents and sister (Jessica Mc-Namee), but those in Leo’s life are numb-ingly one-note. While most films nowadays include 3D glasses, “The Vow” comes with the rose-colored variety. Rated PG-13 for sexual content, partial nudity, language and an accident scene. One hour, 44 minutes. — T.H. (Reviewed Feb. 10, 2012)

(continued on next page)

Leila Hatami and Peyman Moadi in “A Separation.”

Page 33

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Movies

2 For 1 - My Week with Marilyn/The Iron Lady (R) (Not Reviewed) Century 16: Noon, 2:10, 4:20, 6:30 & 8:30 p.m.

A Separation (PG-13) 1/2 Century 20: 11:10 a.m.; 2, 4:50, 7:40 & 10:30 p.m. Guild Theatre: 2:30, 5:30 & 8:30 p.m.

Act of Valor (R) (Not Reviewed) Century 16: 11 a.m.; 1:35, 4:30, 7:40 & 10:20 p.m. Century 20: 11:30 a.m.; 12:45, 2:10, 3:25, 4:50, 6:30, 7:35, 9:10 & 10:20 p.m.; Sat. & Sun. also at 10:20 a.m.

The Artist (PG-13) 1/2 Century 20: 11:40 a.m.; 2:10, 4:40, 7:10 & 9:40 p.m. Palo Alto Square: 2, 4:20 & 7:25 p.m.; Fri. & Sat. also at 9:45 p.m.

Chronicle (PG-13) (Not Reviewed) Century 16: 1, 3:40 & 6:40 p.m. Century 20: 12:35 & 2:50 p.m.; Fri.-Mon., Wed. & Thu. also at 5:10 & 7:30 p.m.

The Descendants (R) 1/2 Aquarius Theatre: 3:15, 6 & 8:45 p.m. Century 20: Fri.-Tue. at 11:10 a.m.; 1:50, 4:30, 7:15 & 10 p.m.

Dr. Seuss’ The Lorax (PG) (Not Reviewed) Century 16: 11:40 a.m. & 5:10 p.m.; In 3D at 11 a.m.; 1:50, 2:30, 4:20, 7, 7:50 & 9:30 p.m.; In 3D Fri.-Wed. also at 10:20 p.m.; In 3D Thu. also at 10 p.m. Century 20: 11:10 a.m. & 3:50 p.m.; In 3D at 12:25, 1:30, 2:45, 5, 6:10, 7:20, 8:30 & 9:40 p.m.; In 3D Fri.-Wed. also at 10:45 p.m.; In 3D Sat. & Sun. also at 10:20 a.m.

Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance (PG-13) (Not Reviewed) Century 20: 12:35 & 5:25 p.m.; In 3D at 3, 7:50 & 10:25 p.m.

Gone (PG-13) (Not Reviewed) Century 16: 11:25 a.m.; 1:55, 4:25, 7:05 & 9:40 p.m. Century 20: 12:05, 2:40, 5:05, 7:45 & 10:10 p.m.

Hamlet (1948) Stanford Theatre: Tue.-Thu. at 7:30 p.m.

John Carter (PG-13) (Not Reviewed) Century 16: Thu. at 12:01 a.m.; In 3D Thu. also at 12:01 a.m. Century 20: Thu. at 12:02 a.m.; In 3D Thu. at 12:01 a.m.

Journey 2: The Mysterious Island (PG) (Not Reviewed) Century 16: 11 a.m. & 9 p.m.; In 3D at 1:25, 3:50 & 6:30 p.m. Century 20: 11:10 a.m. & 4:20 p.m.; In 3D at 1:40, 6:55 & 9:30 p.m.; In 3D Sat. & Sun. also at 10:25 a.m.

The Marriage Circle (1924) Stanford Theatre: Fri. at 7:30 p.m.

One Hour with You (1932) Stanford Theatre: Sat.-Mon. at 7:30 p.m.; Sun. also at 4:25 p.m.

Oscar-Nominated Animated Shorts (Not Rated) (Not Reviewed) Aquarius Theatre: 2:45 p.m.; Fri.-Wed. also at 7:15 p.m.

Oscar-Nominated Live-Action Shorts (Not Rated) (Not Reviewed) Aquarius Theatre: 4:45 p.m.; Fri.-Wed. also at 9:15 p.m.

Pina 3D (PG) (Not Reviewed) Palo Alto Square: 1:50, 4:30 & 7:15 p.m.; Fri. & Sat. also at 9:50 p.m.

Project X (R) (Not Reviewed) Century 16: 11 a.m.; noon, 1:30, 2:30, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9:50 & 10:30 p.m. Century 20: 11:30 a.m.; 12:45, 1:45, 3, 4, 5:25, 6:15, 7:50, 8:30, 10:10 & 10:45 p.m.

Rampart (R) (Not Reviewed) Century 16: 9:20 p.m.

The Rocky Horror Picture Show (R) (Not Reviewed) Guild Theatre: Sat. at midnight.

Safe House (R) (Not Reviewed) Century 16: 11:10 a.m.; 1:50, 4:30, 7:30 & 10:15 p.m. Century 20: 11:15 a.m.; 2, 4:35, 7:20 & 10:10 p.m.

The Secret World of Arrietty (G) 1/2 Century 16: 11 a.m.; 1:20, 3:50, 6:20 & 8:50 p.m. Century 20: 11:45 a.m.; 2:15, 4:35, 7 & 9:25 p.m.; Sat. & Sun. also at 10:15 a.m.

Star Wars: Episode I -- The Phantom Menace 3D (PG) Century 20: 1 p.m. (standard 2D); In 3D at 4:05, 7:10 & 10:15 p.m.

This Means War (PG-13) (Not Reviewed) Century 16: 12:50, 3:40, 7 & 9:45 p.m. Century 20: 11:50 a.m.; 2:20, 4:45, 7:15 & 9:40 p.m.

Trouble in Paradise (1932) Stanford Theatre: Sat.-Mon. at 5:55 & 9 p.m.

Tyler Perry’s Good Deeds (PG-13) (Not Reviewed) Century 16: 12:30, 3:35, 7:10 & 10 p.m. Century 20: 11:25 a.m.; 2, 4:40, 7:25 & 10:05 p.m.

The Vow (PG-13) 1/2 Century 16: 12:40, 3:30, 7:15 & 9:55 p.m. Century 20: 11:35 a.m.; 2:15, 4:45, 7:20 & 9:55 p.m.

Wanderlust (R) (Not Reviewed) Century 16: 11:15 a.m.; 1:45, 4:25, 7:25 & 10:10 p.m. Century 20: 12:30, 3, 5:30, 8:05 & 10:35 p.m.

We Need to Talk About Kevin (R) Century 16: 11:20 a.m.; 2, 4:40, 7:35 & 10:30 p.m.

The Woman in Black (PG-13) 1/2 Century 20: Fri.-Mon., Wed. & Thu. at 9:50 p.m.; Tue. at 10:30 p.m.

MOVIE TIMES

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)

CinéArts 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

FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH, UCC

10:00 a.m. This Sunday: A Downer of a Pep TalkRev. David Howell preaching

Come experience our new 5:00 p.m. service! Vibrant, Engaging and Arts-Based

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 [email protected]

a guide to the spiritual community

Inspirations

A SEPARATION

VIEW THE TRAILER AT WWW.ASEPARATION.COM

A FILM BY ASGHAR FARHADI WRITTEN AND DIRECTED BY ASGHAR FARHADIDreamLab

WWW.SONYCLASSICS.COM

NEW YORK • TELLURIDE • TORONTOFILM FESTIVALS

WINNERBEST INTERNATIONAL FILMFILM INDEPENDENT SPIRIT AWARD

BRITISH ACADEMY OF FILM AND TELEVISION ARTS NOMINEE

FILM NOT IN THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE

WINNERBEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM

NEW YORK FILM CRITICS CIRCLENATIONAL BOARD OF REVIEW

CRITICS’ CHOICE AWARDSOUTHEASTERN FILM CRITICS ASSOCIATIONCHICAGO FILM CRITICS ASSOCIATION

“THE BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR!”Roger Ebert, CHICAGO SUN-TIMES • Joe Morgenstern, THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

ACADEMY AWARD®

WINNERBEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM

WINNER GOLDEN GLOBE® AWARDBEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM

©A.M

.P.A

.S. ®

©HFPA

NOW PLAYING

Fri-Sat 3/2-3/3 Pina in 3-D (Three Dimensional)-1:50, 4:30, 7:15, 9:50

The Artist - 2:00, 4:20, 7:25, 9:45

Sun-Thurs 3/4-3/8 Pina in 3-D (Three Dimensional)-1:50, 4:30, 7:15

The Artist - 2:00, 4:20, 7:25

The Artist (Palo Alto Square, Century 20) Any filmgoer undaunted by something different will walk out of this new silent film with a grin. Michel Hazanavicius’ feature has an emotional generosity that speaks louder than words. Opening in 1927, “The Artist” begins with a premiere of a silent film starring George Valentin (Jean Dujardin). When Valentin stumbles into a photo op with Peppy Miller (Berenice Bejo), the ground for a relation-ship is paved. Peppy sees her star begins to rise with George’s fall, precipitated by the arrival of talkies and the crash of 1929. Writer-director Hazanavicius mostly steers clear of comparisons to the era’s epics and screen comics, instead inhabiting melodrama. The acting is inventive, and the

film joyously celebrates the movies. Rated PG-13 for a disturbing image and a crude gesture. One hour, 41 minutes. — P.C. (Re-viewed Dec. 2, 2011)

The Descendants 1/2(Aquarius, Century 20) George Clooney plays Matt King, a lawyer and father troubleshooting domestic and business concerns in a Hawaii that is not paradise. King’s petulance derives mostly from his wife being in a coma due to a boating ac-cident. As a father, he’s clumsy at best; by pampering 10-year-old Scottie (Amara Miller), Matt hopes to distract her from her mother’s decline. No such trickery works on delinquent 17-year-old Alexandra (Shailene Woodley). Matt’s business issue involves his role as trustee of his family’s ancestral land: 25,000 acres in Kauai that

will bring the Kings a pretty penny if they can agree on a buyer. As this subplot lin-gers, Matt becomes obsessed with inves-tigating a secret about his wife. It provides the excuse for the Kings to island-hop and family-bond in search of closure. Rated PG for mild rude humor. One hour, 38 minutes. — P.C. (Reviewed Nov. 25, 2011)

A Separation 1/2(Guild) Even as she defends her divorce fil-ing, an Iranian woman says of her spouse, “He is a good, decent person.” But “A Separation” — a film from Iran that just won the Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film — tests its every proposition, from the wisdom of the couple’s separation to the ethical rectitude of the spurned husband. The opening scene of writer-director As-ghar Farhadi’s drama lets wife Simin (Leila Hatami) and husband Nader (Peyman Moadi) vent their sides of the dispute that threatens to end their marriage. The two separate, forcing 11-year-old Termeh (Sari-na Farhadi) to play one parent against the other in the hope they’ll see the errors of their ways. The climate of cultural repres-sion in Iran has only made its cinema more vital. The film’s separations can be familial, but also those of class and culture and be-tween citizen and state; above all, Farhadi’s parable teaches that a rush to judgment inevitably turns back on the judge. Rated PG-13 for thematic material. Two hours, three minutes. — P.C. (Reviewed Feb. 3, 2012)

The Woman in Black 1/2(Century 20) This chilling adaptation of Susan Hill’s 1983 novel offers actor Daniel Radcliffe a chance to shed his “Harry Pot-ter” persona. Radcliffe plays it somber and stoic in “The Woman in Black,” his under-stated performance complementing the spooky atmosphere. But the paranormal period piece relies so heavily on frighten-ing imagery that backstory and character development get buried. Widowed lawyer Arthur Kipps (Radcliffe) is dispatched to a quiet village to sift through paperwork at an unkempt estate. He spots a woman in black, and unearths a mystery that involves the mansion’s former mainstays and the vil-lage’s rash of child deaths. Director James Watkins sets the mood well; the scenes of Arthur alone in the dark mansion at times literally made this reviewer’s spine tingle. Ultimately the film can’t distinguish itself from other ghosts-gone-wild tales like “The Ring” (2002).Rated PG-13 for violence/disturbing images. One hour, 35 minutes. — T.H. (Reviewed Feb. 3, 2012)

(continued from previous page)

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Page 34

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SportsShorts

READ MORE ONLINEwww.PASportsOnline.com

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

FridayCollege baseball: Stanford at Fresno

St., 6 p.m.; KZSU (90.1 FM)

SaturdayCollege baseball: Stanford at Fresno

St., 6 p.m.; KZSU (90.1 FM)

SundayCollege baseball: Stanford at Fresno

St., 1 p.m.; KZSU (90.1 FM)

Men’s basketball: California at Stan-ford, 2:30 p.m.; Fox Sports Net; KNBR (1050 AM); KZSU (90.1 FM)

Women’s basketball: Stanford at Cali-fornia, 6 p.m.; Comcast Sports Net Bay Area; KZSU (90.1 FM)

ON THE AIR

Eastside Prep junior Hashima Carothers (44) had the ball knocked away on this play, but she came up with 24 points and 24 rebounds to lead the Panthers to a 68-54 semifinal win and into the CCS Division V finals.

Keith Peters

CCS BASKETBALL

Menlo sophomore Jaye Boissiere (9) converted the winning penalty Wednesday in a semifinal win.

Lena

Wu

CCS SOCCER

OF LOCAL NOTE . . .Over the past

three weeks, five different Brandeis

University fencers have been selected

as University Athletic Association

(UAA) Fencers of the Week, includ-

ing freshman Noah Berman of Palo

Alto, who has been honored twice.

Berman, a 2011 graduate of Palo Alto

High, was named Athlete of the Week

for the weeks of January 30 and

February 13. At the second Northeast

Conference Meet of the season, the

rookie foil fencer went 9-3 in his first

collegiate competition as the Judges

went 3-2 overall at the meet. At the

2012 Duke Invitational, he had an 11-4

record while helping the team to a

2-3 performance. He was undefeated

(3-0) against host Duke and Johns

Hopkins, 2-1 against Air Force and

North Carolina, and 1-2 against top-

ranked Penn State while earning his

squad’s only victory in that matchup.

On the year, Berman is 35-14 with

seven undefeated foil performances

despite only joining the team in Janu-

ary . . . Palo Alto High senior Tory Prati was one of 24 Bay Area high

school players honored with a $1,000

scholarship by the Northern California

chapter of the National Football Foun-

dation & College Hall of Fame at a

dinner last week in Burlingame.

BUSY AGAIN . . . Gunn High sopho-

more Sarah Robinson got her 2012

track and field season off to a fast

start by winning the girls’ 1600 meters

in 5:00.2 at the annual Bellarmine

Invitational on Saturday. The time is

a seven-second personal record for

Robinson and places her third on

the Gunn all-time list. Robinson was

Gunn’s only competitor because

she’ll be on temporary leaves from

the team for the next few weeks.

Robinson is a member of the U.S.

Under-17 Women’s National Team

that will be competing in soccer’s Ten

Nations Tournament in La Manga,

Spain. The event started Tuesday and

runs through March 10 and features

Under-19 teams from France, England

and the Netherlands. Robinson is the

only U.S. player from Northern Cali-

fornia and one of 18 players on the

American roster, headed up by head

coach Albertin Montoya. Montoya

also coaches Robinson on the MVLA

Lightning in Los Altos. Team USA,

will open in Spain on Sunday against

France before taking on England on

March 6 and the Dutch on March 8.

Menlo School girls, M-A boyshope to end title droughts

by Keith Peters

I t’s perhaps appropriate that the Menlo School girls and Menlo-Atherton boys have advanced to Central Coast Section

championship soccer matches on Saturday.Both teams are deserving, of course, or

they wouldn’t have made it this far. More-over, both programs are long overdue when it comes to a postseason payoff.

Menlo has never won a CCS title outright, having come close with three straight ties from 1988-90. Menlo-Atherton does have two section crowns in the school’s trophy

case, but the last one came in 1994.So, it’s time for both to step out of the

shadows and into the spotlight.“I think we feel good about our chances,”

said Menlo coach Donoson FitzGerald.The Knights and Bears each will have a

chance to win section titles after posting 1-0 victories in their respective semifinal matches on Wednesday night.

Menlo put itself in position to end a 22-year title drought after getting a penalty kick

(continued on next page)

Titles todefendand win

Paly-Gunn girls’ rematch tops list

of section showdownsby Keith Peters

T he goals are pretty straightfor-ward for a quartet of four local basketball teams this weekend

— defend their Central Coast Sec-tion championships.

For two other local squads, their goals are pretty simple, as well — don’t let their opponents defend.

It won’t be much simpler than that beginning Friday when the Sacred Heart Prep boys will take on Half Moon Bay while seeking a third straight CCS Division IV crown at Santa Clara University at 4:45 p.m.

On Saturday, the Pinewood girls will go after a fourth straight Di-vision V section crown against Eastside Prep at 10 a.m. At noon, the Pinewood boys will take on St. Francis-Central Coast Catholic for the Division V title. Finally, at 6 p.m., the Palo Alto and Gunn girls will meet for a third time this season and in the CCS Division I title game for a second straight season.

The good news for the six local finalists is that all will advance to the CIF Northern California play-offs that begin Tuesday. The CCS champs all will earn home games in the first round.

The bad news for the local teams is that only two are assured of bring-ing home championship trophies.

(continued on next page)

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Sports

from sophomore Jay Boissiere (a pool member of the U.S. Women’s U-15 National Team) in the 61st minute after sophomore Chandler Wickers was fouled inside the 18-yard box. That was enough as the No. 4 Knights (14-4-3) upset top-seeded Scotts Valley (13-5-4) in the CCS Division III semifinals at Val-ley Christian in San Jose.

Menlo will meet No. 2 seed Santa Cruz (14-4-3) in the title match on Saturday, also at Valley Christian, at 3 p.m. The Cardinals advanced with a 3-0 victory over No. 11 Sacred Heart Prep (12-6-5) at Gilroy High. Before that, Santa Cruz knocked out Priory, 2-0.

The Menlo-Santa Cruz showdown is a rematch of the 2010 quarterfi-nals, which Santa Cruz won in over-time on the way to beating Scotts Valley for the title.

In the past 10 years, Menlo has played in the CCS playoffs seven times and lost to the eventual cham-pion each time. FitzGerald isn’t looking to make it eight times in 11 years.

“None of these kids know that history,” FitzGerald said. “I think they’ll look at it as, hey, we beat the first-place team from that league and now we face the second-place team.”

The Knights last played in a title match in 2000, losing it to Santa Cruz. Previously, the Knights played in those three straight section finals and got only ties instead of titles.

Wednesday’s semifinal was a bat-tle of league champions — Menlo from the West Bay Athletic League and Scotts Valley from the Santa Cruz County Athletic League.

As has been the case through-out the season, Menlo’s defense was crucial to the outcome. Se-nior Shannon Lacy, junior Hannah Rubin, sophomore Sienna Stritter and freshman Alexandra Walker all stood out along with midfield-er Alex Tom. The Knights’ goalie tandem of juniors Julia Dressel and Kelly McConnell again chalked up another shutout.

McConnell came up with a key save in the final ticks of the clock when the Falcons had a long throw-in that bounced a couple of times in front of the goal before McCon-nell gathered it in. Menlo wound up with six shots on goal and held the Falcons to none.

“All the girls played really well,” FitzGerald said. “They were really aggressive. We deserved to win; we were the better team.”

The Menlo players will have their Sharpies ready one more time on Saturday. The players have been writing “1990” on their arms and legs during the postseason, in honor of the program’s last CCS co-cham-pionship.

“If and when we win,” FitzGer-ald said, “they’ll be able to write 2012.”

The Menlo-Atherton boys, mean-while, defended their No. 1 seed while improving to 17-0-5 with a 1-0 triumph over No. 4 Serra at Del

Menlo School sophomore Chandler Wickers (19) figured into the scoring when she was fouled, which resulted in the winning PK.

CCS soccer(continued from previous page)

Lena

Wu

Eastside Prep’s Charmaine Bradford (1) scored four points and was a solid addition to the backcourt after recently returning from an injury.

The Gunn girls would like to be one of those teams.

The Titans played in title games in 2009 and again last season, losing both. As they say, three’s a charm and Gunn coach Sarah Stapp hopes that will be the case after her No. 1-seeded team posted a 52-40 vic-tory over No. 4 Santa Teresa on Wednesday night at Christopher High in Gilroy.

“Iím proud of our girls, in how they played tonight,î said Stapp, “and Iím proud of our league in hav-ing three teams in the semis with two of us making the finals. It says a lot about the caliber of our league.”

While some thought Gunn would have an easy time with Santa Teresa (19-10), Stapp was not one of them.

“Theyíre very well coached and have a lot of great players,” said Stapp. “We had to play a solid game to come out on top and fortunately we did.”

The game was much closer than the final score indicated and, while Gunn did lead at one point by 16 late in the game, the game wasnít fully decided until the final three minutes. In fact, early in the fourth, Gunn only led by 31-29 and Santa Teresa had the ball with the chance to tie or go ahead.

But, after a missed shot by the Saints, Gunn freshman Meghan Ma-honey got one of her team high nine rebounds and senior Julia Maggion-calda converted on a basket to put Gunn up 33-29. That basket started a 10-0 run in a two-minute span that saw back to back three pointers by sophomore Zoe Zwerling and Mag-gioncalda, followed by an inside basket by Cat Perez to put the Titans up 41-29 with 4:57 remaining.

From that point on, Gunn com-fortably led by at least nine the rest of the game as it closed out the game to improve its record to 18-6 and earn the berth to the finals.

Zwerling led all scorers with 18 points followed by Perez with 15. Maggioncalda also scored in double figures with 10 while Mahoney tal-lied six.

Gunn, which split its SCVAL De Anza Division games with Palo Alto this season, will be out to avenge last year’s 54-44 loss to the Vikings in the section finale while looking for its first-ever CCS title.

Third-seeded Palo Alto, of course, will be looking for a second straight CCS crown after winning its first in 2011. The Vikings (19-4) took a big step in that direction by posting a big 45-33 victory over No. 2 Wilcox at Christopher High.

It was the second win in three meetings with the Chargers this sea-son and perhaps the most impressive one, given what was at stake.

“This was the best defensive game Palo Alto has played this year,” said Paly coach Scott Peters.

The Vikings did another great job on Joeseta Fatuesi, limiting the Wil-cox standout to just 11 points.

“Emilee Osagiede was all over the court with steals, rebounds and overall great defensive presence,” said Peters. “Emilee led a great team effort on defense while Josie Butler and Lindsay Black were in-strumental, as well.

“The plan was to limit Fatuesi in the post and stop the outside shots of the Wilcox guards, which had hurt us in the past,” Peters said. “Again, I think we accomplished this goal with our efforts to-night.”

Osagiede, Black and fellow senior Stephanie Allen led the way on offense while combining for 36 points. Black tal-lied 16 to grab game-high honors.

“On offense, the key was to play at a great pace and run the floor to try to tire out Fatuesi, which I think we did,” Peters said. “We also did a great job of offen-sive rebounding the entire game.

“Lindsay played one of her finest games overall, with aggressive of-fense and tenacious defense,” said Peters. “Sam Borsos, Charlotte Ali-pate, Annie Susco and Abby Strong also contributed to the defensive ef-fort.”

Division V girlsPinewood will seek its 14th sec-

tion title in program history when the Panthers of Los Altos Hills take on the Panthers of Eastside Prep in the section title game Saturday at Santa Clara University.

Second-seeded Pinewood (18-11) earned another title shot with a 61-36 romp over No. 3 St. Francis-Cen-tral Coast Catholic on Wednesday in Los Altos Hills.

Sophomore Leeana Bade pro-

duced 17 points and 14 rebounds in perhaps her best all-around game of the season for veteran coach Doc Scheppler. Bade’s sister Gabi, a freshman, made it a family affair

with 10 points, five rebounds and two assists.

Jenny Hansen, one of only two se-niors on the team, had a solid game with 13 points and five rebounds. The Panthers made nine of 28 three-point at-tempts, shooting 44 percent overall.

Pinewood will have to shoot and de-fend well if it’s going to defeat top-seeded Eastside Prep (14-14) in a rematch of last season’s section finale won by Pin-ewood, 45-44.

The Panthers of East Palo Alto will be out to win their third sec-tion title overall and the first since 2008 after advancing with a 68-54 semifinal victory over No. 4 seed Pacific Collegiate of Santa Cruz on Wednesday in Los Altos Hills.

Eastside Prep junior Hashima Carothers came up with a huge game of 24 points and 24 rebounds to spark the winning effort, over-coming a 28-point outburst by sophomore Morgan Green of Pa-cific Collegiate.

After the Pumas got to within 44-41 in the third quarter, Eastside Prep pulled away with a 13-6 run for a 57-47 advantage after three quar-

CCS hoops(continued from previous page)

Keith Peters

(continued on page 39)

(continued on page 38)

Kimberly Leu

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CCS WRESTLING

Menlo-Atherton senior Andre Delagnes avenged last year’s loss in the CCS Championships by capturing the 120-pound title with a 4-3 victory over the defending champ while earning a state meet berth.

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Palo Alto’s (L-R) Trent Marshall, Kalen Gans, Nick Ortiz and Andrew Frick helped the Vikings finish fourth at CCS while Gans, Ortiz and Frick earned state meet berths with top-three finishes as the section finals.

M-A senior is justas tough as he looksDelagnes wins section title and joins Palo Alto trio in the

CIF State Championships this weekend in Bakersfieldby Keith Peters

H is headgear looks as if it has been dragged behind a car and his singlet is looking just

as ragged, with the school’s name on the front beginning to disappear due to wear and tear.

Menlo-Atherton senior Andre Delagnes isn’t worried about ap-pearances however.

“The wrestling program doesn’t have a lot of money,” he said. “I’d rather we put it toward our wrestling room.”

It’s the facility, of course, where Delagnes trains. It’s there he en-dures strenuous training sessions in order to improve. It’s where dreams begin.

For Delagnes, it’s no longer a dream. The Central Coast Section wrestling title that escaped him last season, well, he made up for it in a big way last weekend by taking the 120-pound division crown.

Delagnes, along with three mem-bers of the Palo Alto wrestling team, will be busy for one more weekend after all four pinned down top-three finishes at the section champion-ships at Independence High in San Jose. All four qualified for the CIF State Meet this weekend in Bakers-field.

Menlo-Atherton claimed its first boy’s individual CCS champ since 1988 as Delagnes defeated Gilroy’s defending champion Victor Olmos, 4-3.

The match was closely contested throughout. With the score tied 2-2 in the third period, Olmos escaped from bottom to pull ahead 3-2, but Delagnes secured the win with a takedown in the final few seconds. He was seeded second and Olmos was seeded No. 1.

“As the takedown was awarded,

the crowd erupted with cheers and applause,” said M-A coach Peter Wright. “Delagnes finished second in the CCS last year to Olmos by a similar one-point margin, and was absolutely elated to flip the script this time around.”

On his way to the championship, Delagnes pinned two opponents, defeated a third by a score of 7-1 and then won an overtime match in the semifinals against the eventual third-place finisher. He finished the weekend with a 5-0 mark to improve to 33-2 this season.

Delagnes will be seeking Menlo-Atherton’s first-ever state champi-onship medal for boys this weekend. He’ll have some company after Palo Alto qualified three wrestlers out of the CCS finals.

Kalen Gans finished second at 160 pounds, fellow senior Nick Or-tiz was runner-up at 132 and sopho-more Andrew Frick took third at 195 to qualify for the state tournament. Junior Trent Marshall took sixth at 138 pounds to help the Vikings fin-ish fourth in the team standings with 103 points.

Gilroy won the team title with 241 points, Palma was second with 129 and St. Francis third with 111.5. Paly finished ahead of WCAL teams like Serra, Bellarmine and Mitty.

“All the boys did an excellent job,” said Paly coach Dave Duran “The past two seasons our No. 1 team goal was a top-four finish in the section.We have been in the po-sition to do this three other times, including last year (seventh), and have not quite got it done. We got it done Saturday.

“Our team goals this year includ-ed winning the duals, the SCVAL tourney, and a top four at CCS,” said Duran, who believes the fourth-place

team finish might be the highest in school history. “We won the duals, did not wrestle our best at SCVALs, but we knew we could still achieve our No. 1 goal.”

Palo Alto was 10th after Friday’s opening round of competition and needed to wrestle better during Saturday morning’s consolation rounds.

“We had five wrestlers in consola-tion — all five advanced to the next round. We had four of the five ad-vance again.”

Duran said the toughest part of the day was the third consolation round of Saturday morning.

“This was the medal round — you win (and) you are a medalist. Erik Anderson (170) and Ryan Oshima (152) dropped some tough, close

matches; Anderson an overtime loss,” Duran said. “Andrew Frick and Trent Marshall both advanced. Andrew ran the table on Saturday and qualified for the state meet. Coming off a serious injury in foot-ball, he was just cleared to wrestle a few weeks ago.”

Frick, unseeded, lost his first match but bounced back and battled his way to a state meet berth with six straight victories while defeat-ing the No. 4 and 5 seeds along the way.

Ortiz and Gans both advanced to the finals as No. 2 seeds, but each finished second.

Gans was on the short end of an overtime match, 3-2, to (No. 1 seed) Sam Hopkins of St. Francis.

“Tough way to lose a match,” Duran said. “Sometimes the calls don’t go your way. You hope for an opportunity to wrestle through those calls. Unfortunately, we did not get the opportunity to do that.”

Duran also singled out the efforts Tanner Marshall, Joey Christopher-son, and Oshima.

Senior league champ Chris Jin (145) had Gunn’s best performance at CCS with a fifth-place finish. Only the top three qualified for the state meet. He won his first three matches and made it to the semi-finals before finally losing to the eventual champion, Willie Fox of Gilroy. Jin then dropped a 3-2 de-cision in the consolation semifinals before bouncing back with a pin in the fifth-place match to finish the season with a 29-4 record.

GirlsGunn sophomore Cadence Lee

registered three pins and one regular

decision before dropping a 6-4 over-time loss in the finals while taking second in the 106-pound division at the CIF Girls State Championships on Saturday at Lemoore High in the Central Valley.

“It was hard to judge who the best wrestler was,” said Lee. “In that match, I wasn’t wrestling my usual style.”

Lee was battling illness for one, and actually tripped up in the over-time period to virtually hand her op-

ponent the victory.“She went in for a

throw and I tried to step in front of her,” explained Lee. “I felt I couldn’t throw her, so I stepped back and fell.”

Since it was overtime, the first points scored wins.

“It’s frustrating be-cause such a small mis-take costs so much — a state title,” Lee said.

“I’m still proud I got that far.”Lee, who finished seventh as a

freshman, knows the elusive title is for the taking.

“The other finalist was a senior,” she said. “Next year and the year after that I’ll be able to take that title.”

Menlo-Atherton also was repre-sented at the state meet by senior Kendra Wiley, who finished fourth at 126 pounds to become the first M-A wrestler, male or female, to win a medal at the state champion-ships.

She posted 9-1 and 8-1 victo-ries on Friday before dropping her semifinal match on Saturday. She bounced back to win by one point in double overtime in the consolation semifinals before dropping a 4-1 decision in the third-place match to become a two-time state place-winner.

Cadence Lee

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ters. Sophomore Kimberly Leu had five of the points.

Eastside Prep pulled away in the fourth quarter as freshman Chacitty Cunningham provided back-to-back hoops to spark a 7-0 run to end the game.

Division IV boysA year ago, Cole McConnell had

a safety net in his twin brothers, Will and Reed. The seniors led the Sacred Heart Prep boys’ basketball team and Cole was happy to play a supporting role.

This season, Will is at Dartmouth and Reed is at UC Irvine, and Cole has needed to take on more of a lead-ership role along with his scoring by getting his teammates involved. It’s a role that suits Cole and has been successful for the Gators.

McConnell made seven three-pointers and scored 25 points to pave the way for a 68-44 romp over Harker on Tuesday night in Ather-ton in the Central Coast Section Division IV semifinals at Menlo School.

The No. 3-seeded Gators (20-6) earned its fifth straight trip the to section finals and will seek a third straight title against No. 4 Half Moon Bay (23-5), which upset No. 1 Palma, 49-42.

The Gators, who beat Harker twice during the West Bay Ath-letic League season, posted its big-gest triumph of the three meetings by racing to a 42-21 halftime lead. McConnell, who scored a career-high 32 points in the previous win over Harker, averaged 24.3 points in his team’s three wins against the WBAL foe.

Sacred Heart Prep used its stingy pressing defense, sparked by Pat Bruni and Cameron Van, to grab a 19-6 first-quarter lead. Point guard Kevin Donahoe ran the offense and contributed nine points while Derek Hunter and Van added eight points each while SHP coach Tony Marti-nelli was able to get all 13 players into the game as the Gators’ lead ballooned in the second half.

Division V boysTop-seeded Pinewood (24-2) ran

out to a 62-27 lead en route to a 74-48 blowout over No. 4 St. Thomas More (20-4) in a semifinal on Wednesday at St. Francis-Central Coast Catholic in Watsonville.

Kevin Sweat led Pinewood with 16 points while fellow senior Solo-mone Wolfgramm added 12 points and Owen Lewis had 10.

All 11 suited-up players scored for Pinewood, which used a swarming defense to force St. Thomas More into 30 turnovers while limiting the visitors to 19 percent shooting for the night.

“I was really proud of all our guys tonight,” said Pinewood coach Jason Peery. “They played with the sense of urgency they needed in order to do what we wanted to do.”

Pinewood will attempt to repeat as section champs for the first time in school history. A victory over St. Francis-CCC will be doubly sweet for the Panthers, since the Sharks topped Pinewood in the 2010 finale by two points.

CCS hoops(continued from page 36)

The Menlo College women’s basketball team is headed to the NAIA National Championship Tournament beginning next week in Sioux City, Iowa.

Michael J. Burns

Menlo College women’s basketball teams heads to nationalsAdamek scores 26 points and grabs 17 rebounds as Lady Oaks win Cal Pac Tournament title and earn berth into NAIA championships

F or the first time since the 2006-07 season, the Menlo College women’s basketball

team is heading to the NAIA Na-tional Championship Tournament. The top-seeded Lady Oaks earned their trip by toppling No. 2 seed Cal Maritime, 78-66, in the Cali-fornia Pacific Conference Tourna-ment championship game on Mon-day night in Atherton.

“It feels amazing; it’s everything I have ever hoped for since join-

ing the program,” said Menlo head coach Shannon Osborne, who is headed to nationals for the first time in her four-year Menlo career. “This feeling is just as good as I thought it would be, and to win it at home is even more special.”

Menlo improved to 15-13 this season by winning its seventh-straight game, going 7-0 in the month of February.

Menlo next will compete in the State Farm NAIA Division II

National Championships, which will begin March 7 in Sioux City, Iowa.

Locked up in a close battle early, the Lady Oaks used a 13-3 run to take a nine point lead, 36-27, into halftime. Lauren Adamek scored six of the 13 points during the stretch, ending the contest’s first 20 with 12 points. The junior from Hollister also chipped in with 10 rebounds for a first half double-double.

Adamek opened the second half by scoring six of Menlo’s first 10 points to push the Lady Oaks’ ad-vantage to 13 within the first three minutes. The 6-foot-2 Adamek fin-ished with a game-high 26 points and 17 rebounds, showing her bril-liance when the lights were bright-est. She made 12 of 19 field goals and grabbed 11 offensive boards.

“It’s an unbelievable feeling,” re-marked Adamek on helping guide the Oaks to the playoff champion-ship after Menlo captured the reg-ular-season title. “Coming in as a transfer and being able to play with such a great group of girls is amaz-ing. I’m glad I have the chance to share this with all of them.”

Some of those teammates include the team’s dynamic freshman duo of Jolise Limcaco and Laurel Don-nenwirth. Limcaco helped guide the Oaks through a critical second half 12-2 run that saw Menlo turn a 54-40 advantage into a 66-42 lead, essentially putting the game in the books with nine minutes to go.

Limcaco finished with 19 points, 14 in the second half. Donnenwirth picked up her second consecutive playoff double-double with 11 points and 12 boards, and also hit a key bucket as time expired in the first half to give Menlo its nine-point halftime lead.

Cal Maritime, behind sharp three point shooting from Marisa Carion, who knocked down 4-of-6 from beyond the arc in the second half, got to within 11 with 3:02 left. Menlo’s suffocating defense, however, never allowed the visitors to get any closer. The Lady Oaks held the nation’s leading scorer and Cal Pac Player of the Year, Alexsis Brown, to 16 points, 12 below her average.

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Mar High in San Jose.The Bears will take on No. 3 seed

Watsonville (17-1-2) in the CCS Di-vision I title match on Saturday at Gilroy High at 3 p.m. Menlo-Ather-ton last played in, and won, a section crown in 1994.

The Bears come into the match ranked No. 18 in the nation in the ESPNHS Powerade Fab 50. M-A ranks No. 4 in the state in the poll and No. 1 in Northern California. Watsonsville is No. 28 nationally, No. 11 in the state and No. 2 in Nor-Cal.

The teams are likely as equal as they are talented.

In Wednesday’s semifinal that saw M-A and Serra battle to a score-less deadlock, the Bears earned a man advantage after sophomore El-vis Abarca Cervantes took an inad-vertent elbow to the face as the two raced downfield.

“I felt that the sending off (red card) was definitely a huge help,” said M-A coach Jacob Pickard, “but that we felt we should’ve been ahead even before the sending off in the first half.”

ATHLETES OF THE WEEK

Alex BourdillionSacred Heart Prep soccer

Drew Edelman*Menlo basketball

Kendall Jager*Sacred Heart Prep soccer

Claire KlausnerGunn basketball

Stephanie TerpeningSacred Heart Prep soccer

Kendra Wiley*Menlo-Atherton wrestling

Will CabralMenlo-Atherton soccer

Andrew FrickPalo Alto wrestling

Kalen GansPalo Alto wrestling

Cole McConnell*Sacred Heart Prep basketball

Nick Ortiz*Palo Alto wrestling

Kevin SharpGunn baseball

Honorable mention

Cadence LeeGunn High

The sophomore wrestler placed second at the girls’ state championships after suffering a 6-4 overtime loss in the finals, which she reached by registering three pins and a regular decision. She was seventh last year.

Andre DelagnesMenlo-Atherton High

The senior wrestler became the first CCS male cham-pion from the school in 24 years by capturing the 120-pound division with a 4-3 win, finishing with a 5-0 mark that included two pins, and two decisions -- one in overtime.

* previous winner

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

CCS soccer(continued from page 36)

Camp ConnectionG U I D E TO 2012 S U M M E R C A M P S F O R K I D S

Athletics

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Write Now! Summer Writing Camps Palo AltoEmerson School of Palo Alto and Hacienda School of Pleas-anton open their doors and off er their innovative programs: Expository Writing, Creative Writing, Presentation Techniques, and (new!) Media Production. Call or visit our website for de-tails. Also Pleasanton.www.headsup.org 650-424-1267, 925-485-5750

Arts, Culture and Other Camps

Community School of Music & Arts (CSMA ) Mountain View50+ creative camps for Gr. K-8! Drawing, Painting, Ceramics, Sculpture, Musical Theater, American Idol Workshop, more! Two-week sessions; full and half-day enrollment. Extended care available. Financial aid off ered.www.arts4all.org 650-917-6800 ext. 0

India Community Center Palo Alto/ Sunnyvale/Summer Camps Milpitas/OlemaJoin ICC’s Cultural Camps which give campers a quick tour of India and its vibrant culture. These camps include arts, crafts, folk dance, bollywood dance, music, yoga, Indian history and geography. Over 10 diff erent camps all through the summer for Grades K-12. To register or for more details visit:www.indiacc.org/camps 408-934-1130 ext. 225

Palo Alto CommunityChild Care (PACCC) Palo AltoPACCC summer camps off er campers, grades kindergarten to 6th, a wide array of fun opportunities! K-1 Fun for the youngest campers, Nothing But Fun for themed-based weekly sessions, Neighborhood Adventure Fun and Ultimate Adventure Fun for the more active and on-the-go campers! Swimming twice per week, periodic fi eld trips, special visitors and many engaging camp activities, songs and skits round out the fun off erings of PACCC Summer Camps! Registration is online. Open to camp-ers from all communities! Come join the fun in Palo Alto!www.paccc.com 650-493-2361

TechKnowHow Computer Palo Alto/& LEGO Camps Menlo Park/SunnyvaleFun and enriching technology classes for students, ages 5-14 Courses include LEGO and K’NEX Projects with Motors, Electron-ics, NXT Robotics, 3D Modeling, and Game Design. Many loca-tions, including Palo Alto, Menlo Park, and Sunnyvale. Half and all day options. Early-bird and multi-session discounts available.www.techknowhowkids.com 650-638-0500

Theatreworks Summer Camps Palo AltoIn these skill-building workshops for grades K-5, students engage in language-based activities, movement, music, and improfi sational theatre games. Students present their own original pieces at the end of each two-week camp.www.theatreworks.org/educationcommunity 650-463-7146

For more information about these camps, see our online directory of camps at http://paloaltoonline.com/biz/summercamps/. To advertise in a weekly directory, contact 650-326-8210

Summer 2012

With a man advantage, the Bears broke through in the 57th minute when Edgardo Molina scored off an assist from fellow senior Alan Propp.

“It was another solid performance against a team that tried to prevent us from playing the way we like to,” said Pickard. “We’re looking forward to enjoying the experience of playing in a CCS final on Satur-day.”

Edgardo Molina

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Page 40: Palo Alto Palo Alto garbage rates going up · Monday, Mar. 12, 2:30 – 4 p.m. 795 El Camino Real, Palo Alto, 650-853-4873 Join Dr. Cheng and Ms. Reilly on an action-packed excursion

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