HSFC_2017_01_11

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XXXXX SFChronicle.com |Wednesday,January 11, 2017| C5


Publisher’s Notice


Independent Newspaper

IN THECIRCUITCOURTOFTHE STATEOF
OREGONFORTHECOUNTYOFCLATSOP
In the Matter of the Adoption of:
SUMMONSADOPTION No.16AP01405

MACKENZIEPATRICK STILL
Petitioner,
AMinor Child,
TO:Abbie Elizabeth Still
IN THENAMEOFTHE STATEOFOR-
EGON: Youare hereby required to
appear and defend thePetition and
Order to Show Cause in the Adop-
tion of your minor child named
above, filed against you in the above-
entitled cause within30 days from
the date of last publication or posting.
NOTICETO ABBIEELIZABETHSTILL:
READ THESEPAPERS CAREFULLY!You
must “appear” in this case or the other
side will win automatically.To“ appear”
you must file with the courtalegal
paper calleda“motion” or “answer”.
The“motion” or “answer” must be
given to the courtclerk or administra-
tor within30 days from the date of last
publication or posting along with the
required filing fee. It must be in proper
form and have proof of service on the
Petitioner’s attorney or,ift he Petitioner
does not have an attorney,proof of
service upon thePetitioner.If you have
any questions, you should see an at-
torney immediately.Ifyou need help
in finding an attorney,you may call
the Oregon State Bar’s Lawyer Referral
Service at (503) 684-3763ortoll-free
in Oregon at (800) 452-7636. If you
meet the state’s financial guidelines,
you are entitled to have an attorney
appointed for you at state expense.To
request appointment of an attorney
to represent you at state expense,
you must contact the circuit courtim-
mediately.Phone503-325-8555 for
further information.Date12/17/2016
Dates of Publicaiton12/21/2016,
12/28/2016,1/4/2017,1/11/2 017
/s/Mark J. Lang
Mark J. Lang, OSB #9 73116
Mark JLang, Attorney at Law,PC
POBox 1611 ,SaintHelens,Oregon 97051
/( )kll

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FICTITIOUSFICTITIOUSBUSINEBUSINESSSS
NAMNAMESTATEMENTESTATEMENT
FILENO. A-03FILENO. A-0373853-0073853-00
Thefollowing person is doing business
as Townsend Modern/Contemporary
49 Geary Street, Suite511San Fran-
ciscoCA 94108. #1Townsend Fine
Art, Inc.CA 200Townsend St. #27
SanFranciscoCA 94107.This busi-
ness is conducted byaCorporation.
Theregistrant commenced to transact
business under the above-listed ficti-
tious business name on12/14/16
This statement was filed with the
County Clerk of SanFrancisco on: Dec
14,2016
Published on: December21,28, 2016
Jan 4,11 2017

NOTICEOF (1) DISSOLUTION OFPETER-
SONINVESTMENTCOMPANY,ALIMIT-
EDPARTNERSHIP,AND(2)PROCEDURE
FOR SUBMITTINGCREDITOR’S CLAIM
NOTICEIS HEREBY GIVEN thatPeter-
son Investment Company,alimited
partnership (the”Partnership”), has
been dissolved and is engaging in
the process of winding up its af-
fairs.NOTICEIS FURTHER GIVEN that
pursuant to California Corporations
Code section 15908.07,thePartner-
ship requests that any claim against
the Partnership or its assets be made
as follows:(1) any claim should be
submitted in writing, state the basis
of the claim, the amount of theclaim,
and attach any supporting documents;
and (2) the submission of the claim
and anysupporting documents should
be delivered as follows:Peterson In-
vestment Company,c/o Cohenand
Jacobson, LLP,900 Veterans Blvd.,
Suite 600, Redwood City,CA94063.
Any claimagainst thePartnership will
be barred unless an action to enforce
the claim is commenced withinfour
years of the date of this publication.

,,g
/(503) [email protected]

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FICTITIOUSBUSINESS
NAMESTATEMENT
FILENO. A-0373793-00
Thefollowing person is doing busi-
ness as: SanFrancisco Psychiatry,4
Embarcadero Center,Suite 1400, San
Francisco,CA 94111.Full name of reg-
istrant #1: RobertScott Johnson, 440
Davis Court, #1205, SanFrancisco,CA
94111.This business is conducted by
an individual.
Theregistrant commenced to transact
business under the above listed ficti-
tious business name on 11/14/2016
This statement was filed with the
County Clerk of SanFrancisco on:
December 8, 2016
Dec. 28, 2016, Jan. 4, 11, 18, 2017

FICTITIOUSFICTITIOUSBUSINEBUSINESSSS
NAMNAMESTATEMENTESTATEMENT
FILENO. A-0373898-00
Thefollowing person is doing business
as: Rebellion Dogs Bakery,233 2nd
Ave, SanFrancisco,CA 94118.Full
name of registrant #1: AliciaLynch,
233 2nd Ave, SanFrancisco,CA
94118.This business is conducted by
an individual.
Theregistrant commenced to transact
business under the above listed ficti-
tious business name on12/05/2 016
This statement was filed with the
County Clerk of SanFrancisco on:
December16,2016
Dec.21,28, 2016 &Jan. 4,11,2017

BUSINESS


and learned so many
others hadfaced the
same issues. Istarted
calling out specific solu-
tions, and now I can
work on implementing
those solutionsat scale.
... It’s exciting to feel like
I can try to have as big
an impact as possible.”
The Kapor Centerwas
foundedby FreadaKa-
por Klein andMitch
Kapor, both renowned
entrepreneurs, philan-
thropists andactivists
who ha ve led the push
for greater diversity and
a more socially conscious
way of doing businessby
tech companies.They
toutedPao’s appointment
Tuesday.
“We are thrilled to
have llen on our team,”
FreadaKapor Klein said
in a statement. “Her
valu es, her courage and
her leadershipskills ...
will prove enormously
valu able.”
As the center’s chief


diversity officer,Pao will
oversee the organiza-
tion’s efforts to help tech
companies create more
diverse workforces.
The tech industry,
which has been criticized
by everyone fromits own
employees to the federal
government for being
overwhelmingly white
and male, remains signif-
icantly less diverse than
the private sectorat
large. Few companies
have beenable to in-
crease thenumber of
technicalworkers they
employ from underrep-
resented groups, in-
cluding women, blacks,
Latinos and American
Indians.
Pao will also join the
center’s venture-capital
arm,Kapor Capital, as a
senior partnercharged
with investing in early-
stag e startups with a
social mission.Though
her main role will be
overseeing diversity and
inclusion at the Kapor
Center,Pao willwork as

a venture capitalist part
time.
On Tuesday, Pao be-
came the second female
partnerat the small in-
vestment firm.
Women comprise just
11 percent of investment
partners in the industry,

while venture capital
firms say thatabout 3
percent of partners are
black and 4 percent are
Latino,according to a
reportby the National
Venture CapitalAssocia-
tion and Deloitte 5niver-
sity’sLeadership Center
for Inclusion.
Of the 217 firms that
employ more than2,500
people, not a single one
has a black investment
partner.
“So many of the solu-
tions out there right now
address justgender. Or
just race.They’revery
limited,”Pao said.“Our
goal is to makeit in-

clusive for everyone and
end this in-group, out-
groupstructure that has
permeated tech for so
long.”
This is not the first
time Pao hasworked
with theKapors. Freada
Kapor Kleinworked with
Pao on ProjectInclude
and was one of sixwom-
en who founded the
project.
Pao saidshe will con-
tinue herwork with
ProjectInclude, which
has achieved nonprofit
status and will be hiring
a full-time director this
year.
Pao was a partnerat

KleinerPerk ins for seven
years. In 2012,she filed
suit against the company,
alleging discrimination
and bias.
Pao lost the case after
threeyears of litigation,
but succeeded inshining
a spotlight on the lack of
diversity amongventure
capitalists, and issues of
gender bias and sexual
harassment in tech.In
2015,Pao briefly ran
controversial social me-
dia companyReddit as
its interim CO.
She reemerged during
the 2016 presidential
campaign as avocal
opponent of then-candi-
date DonaldTrumpand
criticized hissupporters
for making people of
color, immigrants and
other minority groups
feel ostracized.
DespiteTrump’s victo-
ry, Pao said, the election
has re-energized her.
“I thinkwe’d lost our
willingness toactively
fight for ourvalu es a
little bit, and then this
election called that into
sharp focus,”she said. “I
think the peoplewho are
aware of the problem are
doubling down in solving
it.”

Marissa Lang is a San
Francisco Chronicle staff
writer. Email:mlang@
sfchronicle.com Twitter:
@Marissa_Jae

Pao back in VC, still focused on diversity


Paofrom page C1


SantiagoMejia /The Chronicle
FreadaKapor Klein (left), Mitch Kapor and EllenPao participate in a Kapor
Center meeting. Pa o willoverseethe cen ter’s di versity effo rts.

BANKRUPTCY


American


Apparel sale


AmericanApparel’s
brand and some other
assetswere acqu ired in
bankruptcy proceedings
by CanadianT-shirt and
underwear makerGildan
Activewe ar forabout $88
million in cash.
Gildan will separately
purchase inventory from
AmericanApparel to
ensure that customers
receive a steady supply,
the Montreal company
said Tuesday. It won’t
acqu ire anystores.
AmericanApparel
filed for a second bank-
ruptcy in October after
struggling to recover
from a tumultuous peri-
od that include d slump-
ing sales, financial losses
and the ouster of founder
and CO Dov Charney
in thewake of allegations
of misconduct.


EUROPE


Snapgoes


to Britain


The company behind
messagingapp Snapchat
will placeits uropean
base in Britain in avote
of confidence in the
economy after thevote to
leave the uropean
5nion.
Snap’sdecisionruns


counter to that of tech
giants likeApple and
Google,who ha ve chosen
lower tax bases likeIre-
land.It also comes amid
public frustrationover
alleged taxavoidance
schemes ofmultinational
corporations.
Snap,which has 75
staff members in Britain,
will pay that nation’s
corporation tax onits
international profits.
The Los Angeles com-
pany has 150 million
users a dayworldw ide
and is planning an initial
public offering with a
reportedvalu ation near-
ing $25 billion.
ECONOMY
Global status
lookingup
The World Bank is
forecasting that theglob-
al economy willacceler-
ate slightly in 2017 after
turning in theworst
performance lastyear
since the 2008 financial
crisis.
The 189-nation lending
agency said Tuesday that
glob al growthshould see
a 2.7 percent annual rate
this year.
That is down from the
bank’s June forecast for
2.8 percent growth this
year, butit’s better than
last year’s 2.3 percent
growth.
The glob al economy

faced anumber of head-
winds lastyear, from
economic troubles in
China to bouts of fi-
nancial market turmoil.
The World Bank’s
Global conomic Pros-
pects report projects2.2
percent growth in the
5nited States, up from
an estimated 1.6 percent
in 2016.
In the years since the
2008 financial crisis, the
World Bank and the
InternationalMonetary
Fund have both repeat-
edly proved too optimis-
tic in their forecasts.
AUTOMAKERS
VW to pay
$4.3 billionfine
Volkswagen has
reached a deal with the
federalgovernment to
pay $4.3 billion to resolve
a criminal investigation
into its cheating on emis-
sions tests, the company
said Tuesday.
As part of the settle-
ment, the company will
plead guilty to criminal
charges.
The company’s man-
agement boardmust still
approve the payment,
which include s both
criminal and civil fines.
The civil part of the fines
include environmental
and customs-related
penalties.
ChronicleNews Services

BUSINESS NEWS ROUNDUP

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