+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Review Coupons!

Review Coupons!

Date post: 23-Mar-2016
Category:
Upload: wick-communications
View: 218 times
Download: 1 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
Good deals around town and over the hill.
Popular Tags:
1
HERE’S THE DEAL: OFFERED BY: 225 S.Cabrillo Hwy 102C (in Shoreline Station) Half Moon Bay 650.712.1378 TERMS: EXPIRES 3/31/12 CLIP & SAVE Tortellini Originali Pasta Company Tortellini Originali Pasta Company Tortellini Originali Pasta Company BUY ONE POUND FRESH RAVIOLI OR TORTELLINI AND RECEIVE A FREE HALF PINT SAUCE OF YOUR CHOICE. HERE’S THE DEAL: OFFERED BY: 101 Main Street # D (near Ocean Shore Hardware) Half Moon Bay 650.712.8191 TERMS: EXPIRES 3/31/12 CLIP & SAVE 20% PERMS, COLOR, HIGHLIGHTS, SHAMPOO & SETS. OFF HAIRCUTS today’s ® HERE’S THE DEAL: OFFERED BY: 85 Avenue Portola, El Granada (Across from post office) (650) 726-5009 TERMS: EXPIRES 3/31/12 CLIP & SAVE 20% ALL TOOLS! OFF Good Deals CLIP FROM THE PAPER OR PRINT OUT ONLINE! GO TO WWW.HMBREVIEW.COM
Transcript
Page 1: Review Coupons!

8A half moon bay review ■ wednesday, march 7, 2012

CONVICTEDMURDERER

REPORTEDLYANGRY AFTER

PROPOSALREJECTEDBy Mark Noack

[ [email protected] ]

An 81-year-old man with a past murder conviction was arrested on Thursday after-noon at the Half Moon Vil-

Originally directed byTrevor Nunn and John Caird

Originally production byCameron Mackintosh and

The Royal Shakespeare Company

Lyrics byHerbert Kretzmer

Book byVictor Hugo

Music byClaude-Michel

Schonberg

HALF MOON BAY HIGH SCHOOL PRESENTS

March 16th, 17th, 23rd & 24that 7:30 P.M.

March 18th & 24that 2:00 P.M.

Reserved seating tickets available at www.cabrillo.k12.ca.us/hmbhs and general admission tickets are available at the door

Tickets: Adults $15 and Students $10

Les Miserables School Edition is presented through special arrangement with Music Theatre Internation (MTI) and Cameron Mackintosh. All authorized performance materials are also supplied by MTI. 421 West 54th Street, New York, NY 10019 Phone: 212-541-4684 Fax: 212-397-4684 www.MTIShows.com

a production of

Directed by Jim Ward - Student Director: Bryan Dahl - Music Director: John Lehrack Choreographer: Michelle McDonald - Costumer: Robyn Hatcher & Leslie Greenberg

Set Designer: Doug McCurdy - Producer: Lew Cohen

Contains some mature themes.

HMB native suffers SoCal catastropheHOUSEMATES SHOT, HOUSE

BURNED IN WANTON ACT

By Mark Noack[ [email protected] ]

Checking his cell phone af-ter class, 28-year-old Daniel Choy began listening to a gar-bled voice mail from his wife. He could only understand bits and pieces, but it was a message he’ll never forget.

“The house is on fi re. I’ve been shot. And I love you,” he heard his wife, Laurel Noelle, whisper between sobs.

That day, Feb. 16, life as Choy knew it went into a tail-spin. A friend arrived to taxi him across town as he franti-cally tried to contact Noelle, the police or someone who could tell him what was go-ing on. He eventually arrived at the hospital to fi nd No-elle alive and breathing but suffering from fi ve gunshot wounds.

Choy, a U.S. Navy veter-an and 2002 graduate from Half Moon Bay High School, was living in Hollywood in a shared rental home with his wife and four other room-mates while taking classes in hopes of someday working in the entertainment industry. He was stunned to learn that his wife was in the hospital, nearly all their possessions were gone and their house had burned to the ground.

“I’m bawling when I see her, and she’s angry at me for crying,” he said. “Before this happened, things were peace-ful. I was happy with what was going on … and in an in-stant it was gone.”

A group of Coastside friends and family is now helping to raise funds to help Choy and Noelle get things back in order.

Noelle and three other people at the house that day were victims of violence that still remains hard to com-prehend. In an apparently well-planned revenge, a man most of the housemates bare-ly knew went inside their house that morning carrying a .25-caliber pistol and a can-ister of lighter fl uid.

The man’s name was Ma-rio Hernandez, a 56-year-old former boyfriend and busi-ness partner of one of the housemates. Trespassing in-side the house, he made a beeline straight for Noelle’s room, where she was lying on her bed.

Hernandez went up to No-elle and began dousing light-er fl uid on her and the bed.

“It was surreal. I saw the liquid coming at me and he was chuckling, just laugh-ing,” she recalled. “When I saw it was lighter fl uid, I thought, he’s going to set me on fi re.”

She jumped to her feet, and Hernandez drew his pistol.

He fi red, hitting her in the chest. Then he fi red three more times, hitting her twice

in her forearm and a fi nal shot to the head. Believing she was dead, Hernandez re-portedly set her bed on fi re and left.

Hernandez then went through the house on a shoot-ing rampage. A 21-year-old housemate confronted him but was killed by a gunshot. A visiting friend tried to subdue the gunman, punching him in the face, but he was shot in the ear and fell unconscious.

Hernandez kicked in a bathroom door to fi nd his ex-girlfriend. He shot her twice in the face, but did not kill her. She pretended to be dead and watched as he turned the

gun on himself. Meanwhile, the house was

engulfed in fl ames. Noelle, in a state of shock, ran outside to hide while calling for the police.

Since the attack and fi re, Noelle needed surgery for the chest wound and on her pinky fi nger, which may nev-er fully recover, she said. A grocery store employee, she felt fortunate to have health insurance to cover the medi-cal bills. She still has night-mares of the attack and sees the gunman pointing his fi re-arm at her.

It’s been particularly hard for Choy and Noelle to piece

together what’s left from the catastrophe. Both artists, the couple lost their collected photography and paintings in the fi re. The blaze also de-stroyed Choy’s collection of painted fi gurines and books for board gaming and near-ly all his fi lm equipment on loan from the college. Per-haps most sentimental of all, the couple lost their hand-made costumes from their fantasy-themed wedding.

All that was left unscathed from the fi re, they say, were some dishes, clothes and some marbles.

“You can’t lose your mar-bles,” Noelle chuckled. “You

have to get up every day and deal with pain and get through it.”

Their insurance put them up temporarily in a hotel, but Choy and Noelle have to pay for their own housing start-ing this week. Affording a new home won’t be easy as Noelle remains disabled and Choy only works part time at a nearby coffee shop.

A friend in Southern Cali-fornia started a fundraiser for them on the website Indie-gogo.com, and many friends and old acquaintances from the Coastside have pledged to help. Since it began, the fundraiser has already met its $20,000 goal, but they say more contributions would still be useful. Choy says he’s been astonished at the gener-osity of people he hasn’t seen for years in his old home-town.

“I never was a big person in the community,” he said. “To be honest, I had no idea that a lot of people remembered me (on the Coastside).”

Half Moon Bay resident Tena Bateman remembered Choy being an old high school friend of her son, and she wanted to help out.

“He spent a lot of time in our home,” she said. “Our thoughts and prayers go out to him and his wife.”

Anyone interested in help-ing Choy and his wife can make an online donation at http://www.indiegogo.com/Hollywood-Shooting-Vic-tims-Fund. r

Wilkinson School receives accreditation

Since 1977, when Ed and Linda Wilkinson founded the Wilkinson School, the El Granada campus has come a long way. When Tim Mill-er took the helm of the independent school in 2009, he had an eye on getting the school ac-credited.

“This was the fi nal step in fully developing our school,” Miller said in an email to the Re-

view. Miller and other school leaders have been working on getting Wilkinson School accredit-ed through the Western Association of Schools and Colleges for a full calendar year. They just heard they have received that status. It was the fi rst time the school had applied.

The Wilkinsons previously didn’t worry about accreditation because it was such a small school, but Miller said the accreditation validates that the school is “doing everything it should be doing.”

— Lily Bixler

Photo courtesy Daniel Choy

Laurel Noelle and Half Moon Bay native Daniel Choy were among the victims of a shooting rampage in Hollywood last month.

[ b r i e f ][ c r i m e ]

81-year-old felonarrested after threats

HERE’S THE DEAL: OFFERED BY:

225 S.Cabrillo Hwy 102C (in Shoreline Station)Half Moon Bay650.712.1378TERMS: EXPIRES 3/31/12

CLIP

& S

AvE

Tortellini Originali

Pasta Company

Tortellini Originali

Pasta Company

Tortellini Originali

Pasta Company

BuY OnE POunD FRESH RAvIOLI OR TORTELLInI AnD RECEIvE A

FREE HALF PInT SAuCE OF YOuR CHOICE.

HERE’S THE DEAL: OFFERED BY:

101 Main Street # D (near Ocean Shore Hardware)Half Moon Bay650.712.8191TERMS: EXPIRES 3/31/12

cLIP

& S

AvE

✂20%PERMS, cOLOR, HIgHLIgHTS,SHAMPOO & SETS.

OFF

H a i r c u t stoday’s®

HERE’S THE DEAL: OFFERED BY:

85 Avenue Portola, El Granada (Across from post office)(650) 726-5009TERMS: EXPIRES 3/31/12

cLIP

& S

AvE

20%ALL TOOLS!

OFF

GoodDealsCLIP FROM THE PAPER OR PRINT OUT ONLINE! GO TO WWW.HMBREVIEW.COM✂

lage senior communi-ty after al-legedly mak-ing threats against a woman who had rejected his marriage proposal.

The man, identified as Clyde Wilson Sheets of Half Moon Bay, was reportedly angry and erratic after the 65-year-old woman declined his marriage offer. Earlier last week, he asked a mutu-

al friend where he could get a firearm and implied that he could use it to harm the woman, according to a re-port by the San Mateo Coun-ty Sheriff’s Office.

The friend passed on a warning to the woman, and she reported it to the Sher-iff’s Office. As a felon on pa-role, Sheets is strictly prohib-ited from possessing a fire-arm, and deputies ended up arresting him.

“When these guys get out on parole, they make a deal to change their ways,” said Sheriff’s Sgt. John Gonzales. “When he threatens about getting a gun, and he’s on pa-role for murder, that’s good enough (to make an arrest).”

Sheets had once been on friendly terms with the woman, but their relation-ship reportedly soured ear-lier this year after she re-jected his marriage offer. He began showing up at her house and making unwant-ed phone calls, leading her to avoid him and block his phone number, according to the Sheriff’s Office,

Sheets had been living in Half Moon Bay after being released on parole following a murder conviction. He was reportedly convicted decades ago in Plumas County. Court officials could not immedi-ately provide more details.

On his Facebook page, Sheets stated that he grew up in Wyandotte, Mich., and had previously attended the City College of San Francisco and Feather River College in Plumas County.

Sheet is currently being held in Maguire Correction-al Facility as parole officials review the incident. If he is found culpable for violating the terms for his parole, he could face up to 180 days in county jail. r

“When he threatens about getting a gun, and he’s on parole for murder, that’s good enough (to make an arrest).”— Sheriff’s Sgt. John Gonzales

Clyde Wilson Sheets

Recommended