Silicon Valley Republican Women Federated
NEWSLETTER
www.svrwf.org * October 2005
President: Doris Whitney – 408-997-0581 * 1st VP & Program: Alice Story – 408-733-3248 * 2nd VP & Membership: Marie Dominguez-Gasson - * Newsletter Editor: Laura Riffle – 408-263-0990
All SVRWF luncheons and dinner meetings are held at the Ramada Inn Silicon Valley, 1217 Wildwood Avenue, Sunnyvale, California – Luncheon Meetings: Social 11:30am, Lunch 12:00 Noon – Dinner Meetings: Social 6:30pm, Dinner 7:00pm – Luncheon: $16.00 – Dinner: $20.00 – For reservations please call Louise Kinney at 408-739-4724 or Alice Wilson at 408-733-6352 or Doris Whitney at 408-997-0581
CFRW Convention – Irvine……………………………………………….. Sept. 30 – Oct. 2
SVRWF Luncheon Meeting………………………………………………. October 6
Speaker: Tim Risch, Former Sunnyvale Vice mayor and Council Member
“Protecting our health, livelihood and economic well-being by re-building our 100-year-old water system”
Luncheon Choices: Chicken Cameron with Prawn Garnish or Pasta Primavera with Alfredo Sauce
SVRWF Board Meeting…………………………………………………… October 13
SVRWF Luncheon Meeting………………………………………………. November 3
Speaker: Diane Claypol, Storyteller – SPARC Board Member
“Thanksgiving in early America”
SVRWF Board Meeting…………………………………………………. November 10
Northern Division Convention – Pleasanton……………………………. November 10-12
SVRWF Luncheon Meeting………………………………………………. December 1
Speaker: Don Wolfe, President, Silicon Valley Citizens Against Lawsuit Abuse
“Sick of frivolous lawsuits? Here’s a solution.”
On September 9th, I flew to Nashville, Tennessee to attend the National Federation of Republican Women's 33rd Biennial Convention representing our club, Silicon Valley Republican Women Federated. My husband accompanied me, which made it also very pleasant. The convention was held at Gaylord Opryland Resort and Convention Center. There were 1597 attendees.
The Opening Night Reception was on Friday, September 9, which was hosted by Tennessee Federation of Republican Women and was a delightful evening giving convention-goers a "Taste of Tennessee". Guests were treated to the sights, sounds and tastes of Tennessee with country singer/songwriter Stella Parton headlining the event.
Saturday, September 10 current NFRW President Dianne Thompson called the General Session to order at 8:00A.M. During the General Session, some of the following business was conducted:
Presentation Bylaw Proposed Amendments and those which passed 1. Were creating a student association membership category, 2. Re-instating the use of the word "club" to refer to the local organization of Republican women, 3. Authorized the NFRW Executive Committee to remove, by two-thirds vote, a member, officer or board member, and 4.Require re-affiliating units to pay dues and service charge for the current year only. Increasing dues was defeated.
Addresses by Elected Officials, Military Leaders, Political Experts and Other Notable Guests: Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist(R-TN); U.S. Senator Lamar Alexander (R-TN); U.S. Rep. Marsha Blackburn (IR-TN); retired Gen. Thomas L. Carter, who served as Ambassador L. Paul Bremer's senior counselor for legislative affairs in Iraq and Washington; retired Maj. David A.Coker, executive director of the Fisher House Progam; and, Howard Kaloogian, co-chairman of Move America Forward.
Former Secretary of Education discussed education reform and assured the attendees that we were on the right road and it was working. Secretary Paige presented My Favorite Teacher Award to Fullerton, California high school reading instructor Ronald A. Carcich.
President George W. Bush was unable to attend the convention, but he sent a message of thanks expressing his appreciation for our good work in the communities of America and stated how much he needs our continuing support.
The Ronald Reagan Leadership Award was presented to Indiana Federation President Joyce Smith. Convention pages were high school girls from all 50 states. Hospitality Suites were hosted by various state federations with California hosting a ballroom hospitality area to introduce the attendees to the next convention scheduled September 2007 in Palm Springs, California. (NFRW convention sites are arranged 4 years prior to the convention.)
The election of NFRW officers for 2006-2007 was finalized Sunday, September 11. Each member of the NFRW Slate of Officers for 2006-2007 was elected, including Beverly Davis as the next president. Davis narrowly defeated Florida Federation President Judith Albertelli in what was the only contested race. Officers are: President Beverly Davis, Utah; lst VP Shirley Sadler, Ohio; 2nd VP Sue Lynch, Wisconsin; 3rd VP Shirley Foote, California (our CFRW President 2000-2001); 4th VP Marilyn Dankner, Maryland; Secretary Joyce Phillips, Arkansas; Treasurer Jane Lane, New Hampshire; and Members-At Large Dreama Perdue, West Virginia; Theresa H. Esposito, North Carolina and Jeannine Long, Oklahoma.
Resolutions were passed supporting victims of Katrina, First Lady Laura Bush for her monumental efforts in promoting women's rights and democracy in the Middle East, NASA Discovery Crew STS-114 for their dedication and work in the exploration of Space , a "no use" position on drugs and alcohol for children, promote in our state and communities our Commander in Chief George W. Bush's agenda that will benefit our citizens through Social Security, the War on Terror, nominating competent judges to the Supreme Court and support our military men and women, a thank you to NFRW 2004-5 President Dianne Thompson, and a thank you to the Tennessee Federation for hosting the convention.
It was a great convention and it was an honor to represent you. At our October 6 regular luncheon meeting, I will be glad to answer any further questions you may have. I look forward to seeing you on October 6.
Doris Whitney
President

“A reservation made is a reservation paid” – If you tell us you’re coming and don’t, the restaurant still needs to be paid and we must bill you for your meal.
- Carol Greenleaf, Treasurer
Political News Compiled by Eve Bretzke
National / Washington, D.C.
PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH: "We'll once again show the world that the worst adversities bring out the best in America."
PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH: "This is one of these disasters that will test our soul and test our spirit. But we're going to show the world, once again, that not only will we survive, but that we will be stronger and better for it when it's all said and done, that amidst this darkness, there is light. And I want to thank you all for providing light, immediate light to people who needed help. You make your state and your local governments and your country proud... Americans can be certain our nation has the character, the resources and the resolve to overcome this disaster. We will comfort and care for the victims. We will restore the towns and neighborhoods that have been lost in Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama. rebuild the great city of New Orleans. And we'll once again show the world that the worst adversities bring out the best in America." — in Louisiana, Katrina Press Conference
HOUSE SPEAKER DENNIS HASTERT: "The Founding Fathers believed that our Creator gave us certain inalienable rights. The Pledge of Allegiance simply reinforces the beliefs that led to the birth of our great nation. It is an oath of our fidelity to our country, and I am disappointed that the [9th Circuit] Court chose to rule against this American treasure." — Addressing a federal judge's ruling Wednesday that schools permitting students to freely recite the Pledge of Allegiance is unconstitutional
California / Sacramento
Schwarzenegger Needs More Than GOP Can Give -- Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's opening steps in the campaign for his November ballot measures illustrate the fragile balance he must strike to strengthen his Republican support while rebuilding his image as a centrist. Schwarzenegger's challenge was on clear display over the weekend. On Saturday in Orange County, he roused a state Republican convention crowd with tough talk on blocking higher taxes, battling "union bosses" in Sacramento and stopping illegal immigrants from getting driver's licenses. Michael Finnegan in the Los Angeles Times -- 9/19/05
Governor Backs Prop. 75 -- Pushing to diminish organized labor's clout in Sacramento, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger on Saturday threw his support behind a November ballot measure that would bar public-employee unions from spending member dues on political campaigns without prior consent. His endorsement of Proposition 75 puts Schwarzenegger at the forefront of a longtime cause of the Republican Party and its business allies. In an effort to dry up a prime source of campaign money for Democrats, they have backed similar measures across the nation. Underscoring its commitment, the state Republican Party has put $250,000 into the "Yes on 75" campaign. Los Angeles Times, San Francisco Chronicle, Sacramento Bee, San Jose Mercury, Orange County Register, San Diego Union-Trib, Oakland Tribune, Contra Costa Times ,Riverside Press -- 9/18/05
Gov. Vows to Veto Driver's License Bill -- Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger will veto legislation approved Thursday to create a separate driver's license for illegal immigrants in California, a top aide said only hours after the bill passed the state Senate. The upper house sent the controversial bill to Schwarzenegger on a 21-15 vote, the minimum needed for passage, only to have the governor's office say he would reject it. It would be the second time in two years that Schwarzenegger has rejected Democratic legislation allowing licenses for illegal immigrants. Robert Salladay and Jennifer Delson in the Los Angeles Times Lynda Gledhill, Christian Berthelsen in the San Francisco Chronicle Clea Benson, Jim Sanders and Gary Delsohn in the Sacramento Bee Harrison Sheppard in the Los Angeles Daily News -- 9/9/05
CA GOP Rivals Diverge on Social Issues -- But Campbell and Brewer aren't simply fighting over mainstream Republican votes. Because it's a special election - called after Cox was named to head the Securities Exchange Commission - voters can cross party lines in the polls. Campbell needs to shore up votes that might go to American Independent Jim Gilchrist, an immigration activist who shares Campbell's positions on key social issues, or the eight lesser-known Republican candidates, most of whom share many of Campbell's social views. Brewer needs to pull in social moderates, including Democrats and independents. M. Wiscol in the Orange County Register -- 9/19/05
AB 849: From the states, in California, the culture-war front over redefining marriage to cover same-sex couplings raged on this week, when the state Senate and Assembly both passed AB 849 making state-recognized matrimony a contract between "two persons." In 2000, California voters by a 61.4 percent majority enacted Prop. 22, saying, "Only marriage between a man and a woman is valid or recognized in California." Now, the Golden State's elected representatives refuse to submit to the obvious will of the voters. If the legislators can treat the citizens' votes for Prop. 22 as meaningless, we in our humble editorial shop are wondering how the people's votes electing them as "representatives" can possibly be seen as meaningful. We wonder, too, if these arrogant polls realize how unpopular homosexual marriage is among Hispanics, who will become 50 percent of the state's population by 2050.
Menu Vast for Drug Benefit -- California seniors can expect to pay the lowest premium for Medicare's new prescription drug coverage in the United States, but they will have to sift through a profusion of 40 plans to make the right choice. As the plans have developed, the monthly premium has dropped from a projected $35 to an average of $25 in California, officials with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services said. Nancy Weaver Teichert in the Sacramento Bee -- 9/19/05
REAL ID Act: Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff will exercise the authority granted him, to complete a border security fence near San Diego. He will have the authority to override environmentalist lawsuits. In releasing his decision, Secretary Chertoff explained of such border security fences, "projects like this make sense in certain settings like the urban environment about San Diego." Indeed, the region in question hosts crucial military facilities, and a border cannot be guaranteed permeable only to unlawful workers but not to Jihadi terrorists. You cannot make a border sieve with only illegal worker-sized holes!
More News…
ARTICLE: America's Border Troubles, North and South
Aug 25th 2005, The Economist Global Agenda , Economist Magazine
Last paragraph: ”In an age of global terrorism, America is surely right to be more defensive of its borders. But its neighbors see its policies on foreign affairs, drugs and immigration as arrogant or needlessly antagonistic. Though commerce has boomed since America, Canada and Mexico signed the North American Free-Trade Agreement (NAFTA) in 1994, America’s relationship with China shows that trade does not equal friendship. Changing attitudes—in all three countries—are in danger of becoming permanent.”
U.S. Tightens Asylum Rules -- This spring, as critics grew more concerned about hasty decision-making by the Board of Immigration Appeals, Congress responded by making it tougher for federal judges to overturn board rulings in asylum cases. Howard Mintz in the San Jose Mercury -- 9/19/05
With the president back at his Crawford Ranch, the anti-war protest right outside his ranch is getting a lot more media attention. ABC7 looks at who is financing and who is providing on the ground support. The camp at Crawford is full of Cindy Sheehan supporters, people from all walks of life, but off to the side are a small group of professionals skilled in politics and public relations who are marketing Cindy Sheehan's message.
Cindy Sheehan kneels before a cross with her son's name on it, touches his picture, wipes her tears. It's an outpouring of emotion that is part of a scheduled news event organized daily for the television, radio and print reporters who crowd in to capture a mother's grief.
Cindy Sheehan: "I'm never going to see him again, I'm never going to hold him again, I'm never going to hear his voice again." Sheehan's message hasn't changed since she got here, but the support staff interested in getting that message out to the world has grown considerably. Organizers are set up in a house trailer. Their meetings closed to reporters.
Leading the group is Fenton Communications employee, Michele Mulkey, based in San Francisco. Fenton specializes in public relations for liberal non-profits. Their bills are being paid for by True Majority, a non-profit set up by Ben Cohen -- of Ben and Jerry's Ice Cream fame.
Ben Cohen, True Majority: "People are willing to listen to her and we want to do as much as we can to make her voice heard." Cohen's group has teamed up with Berkeley based MoveOn.org, an anti-Bush group co-founded by Joan Blades. Earlier this month, MoveOn helped organize anti-war vigils in support of Cindy Sheehan.
Current Democratic National Party Chair Howard Dean's organization Democracy for America is also involved, as is the more radical anti-war group Code Pink organized by San Francisco's Medea Benjamin. Money donated through these groups and others is helping to pay for Gold Star families whose children have been killed in Iraq to attend anti-Bush protests.
This week Simi Valley California Gold Star wife Melanie House flew to Idaho for a protest and then flew to Crawford. ABC7's Mark Matthews: "Can you tell us if you're getting help in airfare to come down here?" Melanie House: "What difference does that make?"
There is real reluctance to talk about who's paying, and the P.R. machine that's promoting Cindy Sheehan, but not everyone here is completely comfortable with it. Gold Star mother Karen Meredith came here from Mountain View. Her son Ken Ballard died last year. Karen Meredith, Gold Star mother: "Sometimes things don't feel quite right to me. They don't feel wrong, but maybe that's how they do it in the marketing business."
ABC7's Mark Matthews: "You feel you're part of a marketing business?" Karen Meredith: "Possibly. Yeah I think so." On the other side, pro-Bush supporters are getting on the ground to help reiterate their message. Grassfire.org and IM4W.com came back to the same Iowa-based conservative public policy organization, an organization with ties to the Republican National Committee.
There is also the "Cindy you don't speak for me tour," a caravan of military wives and mothers led by Deborah Johns of Roseville. Her son William is a marine who has served two tours of duty in Iraq. Johns and her supporters are traveling to Crawford to confront Cindy Sheehan. Deborah Johns, caravan leader: "It means everything for me to be here, to see the support. We're so proud of him."
The caravan is getting a lot of help from MoveAmericaForward.org. It's a non-profit organization co-chaired by former state assemblyman Howard Koologian. Koologian is a Republican who takes credit for launching the recall against Governor Gray Davis. His co-chair is KSFO Radio talk show host Melanie Morgan. The group's PR firm is led by a veteran California political strategist and the firm claims clients running from a county supervisor to President of the United States.
KSFO Radio is owned by Disney which also owns ABC7. Copyright 2005, ABC7/KGO-TV/DT.
SHEEHAN BACK IN THE NEWS: Cindy Sheehan, the mother of an American soldier killed in Iraq, last night brought her campaign to end the war to New York, where she accused Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton of not doing enough to challenge the Bush administration's Iraq policies. Speaking in front of more than 500 supporters in Fort Greene, Brooklyn, Ms. Sheehan, speaking of Senator Clinton, said, "She knows that the war is a lie but she is waiting for the right time to say it." Then, as the crowd cheered, she issued a challenge to Senator Clinton, saying, "You say it or you are losing your job." NY Times: Mother Who Lost Son in Iraq Continues Fight Against War
CULTURE
"Let's be clear about one thing: Hollywood people are glamorous, but that's about it. They are ill informed about jihad. They are ill informed about Islam. They are ill informed about Israel, the [Palestinian Authority], Iraq, Afghanistan. They are ill informed about U.S. history, the Constitution, etc. The truth is, the movie people I've met are ignorant about most everything—save the weekend grosses of the top ten films." —Emmy-Award winning screenwriter Robert Avrech
"It isn't hard to convince most parents to enlist in the daily battle for the hearts and minds of their children—the evidence of cultural rot is all around. But many lack the practical tools they need to assure victory. For those who doubt that we are, indeed, at war over our children, consider: They are the most marketed-to generation of kids in world history. They spend an estimated $150 billion to $200 billion a year on everything from music to clothes to high-tech gadgets. They enjoy more affluence and more toys than any generation before them. Yet they also suffer from depression, fractured families and self-absorption." —Rebecca Hagelin
"America has become the country of the warning label. California is the warning-label state. Since California voters approved Proposition 65—which mandates warnings when people are exposed to known carcinogens or chemicals that cause birth defects—in 1986, to live in California is to be warned. Most office buildings and parking garages post Prop. 65 warnings. When you fill your gas tank, there's a warning. When you go to a department store or a restaurant, there are warnings. Ditto the grocery store, where there are warnings not just about lighter fluid, nail polish and the effects of alcohol, but for fruits and vegetables, nuts and fish. Now, if Attorney General Bill Lockyer has his way, you can expect warning labels for fast-food French fries and potato chips. If he succeeds, the legislature might as well post a billboard at the border that reads: 'Eating in California can be hazardous to your health.'... [W]hatever I do, it must be wrong, because there's always a sign telling me that what I'm eating, drinking or buying is bad for me. If all of these things are so hazardous, why am I alive?" —Debra Saunders
Radio Host Urged New Orleans' Poor to Loot In a broadcast Sept. 3rd, Air America radio talk radio host Randi Rhodes repeatedly urged listeners in the hurricane-devastated Gulf Coast to go out and loot, insisting the poor should be allowed to steal goods at will.
QUOTED
THOMAS JEFFERSON: “The care of human life and happiness, and not their destruction, is the first and only legitimate object of good government.”
D. H. LAWRENCE: "Men fight for liberty and win it with hard knocks. Their children, brought up easy, let it slip away again, poor fools. And their grand-children are once more slaves."
MARK STEYN: "They're not children in Iraq; they're grown-ups who made their own decision to join the military. That seems to be difficult for the left to grasp. Ever since America's all-adult, all-volunteer army went into Iraq, the anti-war crowd have made a sustained effort to characterize them as 'children'."
GEORGE WILL: "Since her first meeting with the president, she has called him a 'lying bastard,' 'filth spewer,' 'evil maniac,' 'fuehrer' and the world's 'biggest terrorist' who is committing 'blatant genocide' and 'waging a nuclear war' in Iraq... Sheehan is symptomatic of something that in 2008 could cause the Democratic Party a sixth loss in eight presidential elections. That something is a shrillness unlike anything heard, in living memory, from a major tendency within a major party... Do Democrats really want to embrace her variation of the Michael Moore and 'Fahrenheit 9/11' school of political discourse?"
BEN STEIN: "With each passing day Cindy Sheehan looks less and less like a grieving mother and more and more like a leftwing blogger... One half expects her to lead off her next morning press briefing with, 'I believe it was Michael Moore who once said...' As the second hand winds down on Cindy Sheehan's fifteen minutes of stupidity and the realization sets in among the Bush Haters that her mug is bound for George Bush's mantelpiece somewhere between Dan Rather and Joe Wilson, you can almost hear the velvet tones of Barry Manilow singing his 1970s hit 'I Go Crazy'."
PRESIDENT BUSH: “Our nation is saddened today by the news that Chief Justice William Rehnquist passed away last night. Laura and I send our respect and deepest sympathy to this good man's children, Jim, Janet and Nancy. We send our respect to all the members of the Rehnquist family.
William H. Rehnquist was born and raised in Wisconsin. He was the grandson of Swedish immigrants. Like so many of his generation, he served in the Army during World War II. He went on to college with the help of the G.I. Bill. He studied law at Stanford University. He graduated first in his class. That included his future colleague Sandra Day O'Connor. Judge Rehnquist and his late wife, Nan, raised their family in Phoenix, where he built a career as one of Arizona's leading attorneys. He went on to even greater distinction in public service: as an assistant U.S. attorney general, associate justice of the Supreme Court and, for the past 19 years, chief justice of the United States. He was extremely well-respected for his powerful intellect. He was respected for his deep commitment to the rule of law and his profound devotion to duty. He provided superb leadership for the federal court system, improving the delivery of justice for the American people and earning the admiration of his colleagues throughout the judiciary. Even during a period of illness, Chief Justice Rehnquist stayed on the job to complete the work of his final Supreme Court term. I was honored and I was deeply touched when he came to the Capitol for the swearing-in last January. He was a man of character and dedication. His departure represents a great loss for the court and for our country.
There are now two vacancies on the Supreme Court. And it will serve the best interests of the nation to fill those vacancies promptly. I will choose in a timely manner a highly qualified nominee to succeed Chief Justice Rehnquist. As we look to the future of the Supreme Court, citizens of this nation can also look with pride and appreciation on the career of our late chief justice. More than half a century has passed since William H. Rehnquist first came to the Supreme Court as a young law clerk. All of those years, William Rehnquist revered the Constitution and the laws of the United States. He led the judicial branch of government with tremendous wisdom and skill.
He honored America with a lifetime of service, and America will honor his memory.”
JUDGE JOHN ROBERTS: "I have no platform. Judges are not politicians who can promise to do certain things in exchange for votes. Judges are like umpires. They don't make rules, they apply them... The primary check on the courts has always been judicial self-restraint." — before the Senate Judiciary Committee
SENATOR DIANE FEINSTEIN: "As the only woman on this committee, I believe I have an additional role in evaluating nominees for the Supreme Court, and that's to see if the hard-earned autonomy of women is protected... How a court decides future cases could determine whether both the beginning-of-life and the end-of-life decisions remain private or whether individuals could be subject to government intrusion or perhaps the risk of prison." — Before the Senate Judiciary Committee
We thank Eve Bretzke for assembling the above information
Please Note: Fisher House Foundation, one of SVRWF’s favorite organizations, was featured at the NFRW National Convention and in a recent NFRW “Political Briefing”. Support our troops by supporting Fisher House Foundation!
DEADLINE FOR THE NEXT NEWSLETTER IS OCTOBER 17
Important contact information for Silicon Valley Republican Women
President Governor
George W. Bush (R) Arnold Schwarzenegger (R)
The White House State Capitol Building
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW Sacramento, CA 95814
Washington, DC 20500 916-445-2841
202-456-1111
United States Senate
Dianne Feinstein (D) Barbara Boxer (D)
1 Post Street, Suite 2450 1700 Montgomery Street, Suite 240
San Francisco, CA 94105 San Francisco, CA 94111
415-393-0707 415-403-0100
United States Congress
Anna Eshoo (D) Mike Honda (D)
608 Emerson Street 1999 South Bascom Avenue, Suite 815
Palo Alto, CA 94301 Campbell, CA 95008
650-343-2984 408-558-8086
California Legislature
Assembly Member Sally Lieber (D) Assembly Member Rebecca Cohn (D)
274 Castro Suite, Suite 202 100 Paseo de San Antonio, Suite 319
Mountain View, CA 94041 San Jose, CA 95113
408-277-2003 408-282-8920
Senator Joe Simitian (D) Senator Elaine Alquist (D)
160 Town & Country Village 100 Paseo de San Antonio, Suite 209
Palo Alto, CA 94301 San Jose, CA 95113
408-277-9460 408-286-8318
Republican
Keen Butcher, Chair Duf Sundheim
Santa Clara County Republican Party California Republican Party
522 North Monroe Street 1903 West Magnolia Blvd.
San Jose, CA 95128 Burbank, CA 91506
408-246-6600 818-841-5210
“Contacting elected representatives on issues that are of concern to you is an effective way to give your thoughts and ideas a voice.”
SUPPORT OUR ADVERTISERS
PREVOST PROPERTIES
Charles Prevost *4801 Yamato Drive * San Jose, CA 93111
408-972-2599
AVON – Buy or Sell
Alice Wilson
A representative of AVON – The world’s #1 beauty company
408-733-6352
Proud member of the Silicon Valley Republican Women Federated
D. Jo Ann Barr
Elected member of the Santa Clara County Republican Party
Robert E. Temmerman, Jr. – Certified Specialist – Estate Planning, Trust and Probate Law
State Bar of California Board of Legal Specialization
408-998-9500 Extension 237
2502 Stevens Creek Boulevard, San Jose, California 95128 – rtemmerman@calteclaw.com
Laura Riffle, EA
FEDERALLY AUTHORIZED TAX PRACTITIONER
2095 Park Avenue, San Jose, CA 95126 – 408-551-2130
CENTURY 21 * El Camino
Doris Whitney
Realtor ®
761 East El Camino Real, Sunnyvale, California 94087 – 408-997-0581 – www.c21ec.com
Rosemary Hernandez, EA, CFP
Federally Authorized Tax Practictioner
2095 Park Avenue, San Jose, California 95126 – 408-551-2130 rosemaryah@aol.com
Individuals * Self-Employed * Estate Trust * Real Estate
Golfland ® Entertainment Centers
Sunnyvale San Jose Milpitas
855 East El Camino Real 976 Blossom Hill Road I-680 at Jacklin Road
408-245-1322 408-225-1533 408-263-4330
RAMADA SILICON VALLEY * Home of the SVRWF