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During Fleet Week he plans to put on a show with a little something he calls “Sky Dance,” where he “paints in the sky” with smoke. “I’m always learning,” he said. “I’m always pushing my professional boundaries.”. Tucker is renowned in his profession, having earned recognition as a “Living Legend of Flight” as well as a “Living Legend of Aviation.” “Flight — when they see planes tumbling, twisting and turning — inspires people,” he said. “I fly elegantly. I fly with a touch of a finesse and very dramatically … Air Show flight is thrilling because people are afraid of that. We do things that are unbelievable in the sky.”.
Derek Burns is the innovative chef behind the Surf Spot cuisine, Burns lives in Pacifica, but has worked in some of the top San Francisco restaurants, Pacifica entrepreneur Tait Cowan and Sea Bowl owner Dave Szeto are his partners in the $1 million and counting investment, The Surf Spot transformed the space where Gem Patio had been into a restaurant with a lot more than an ordinary restaurant offers, Indoor and outdoor dining is available on a wrap-around porch and outdoor private cabanas, Beach volleyball and horseshoes are available, Outdoor barbecue dance like no one is watching - inspirational charm with ballet shoe and colored glass bead - love- dream - hope pits, one big enough for a whole pig, line up along a hillside path that leads to the rooftop deck of a stage, The stage below will be Pacifica’s first permanent outdoor venue for music, An outdoor “festival” kitchen will have a wood-burning pizza oven..
“We’re happy to be part of this unprecedented event that brings the community together and even involves the community in the actual performance,” Scott said. He said artists from Oakland, San Francisco, Carmel and Michigan donated their work for the dance center’s fundraiser. All proceeds will benefit the dance center and Adults in Ballet, a philanthropic group that helps fund scholarships for dance classes. “Our mission is to make dance available for children and adults and to promote dance in the community,” Sita said. “It’s something we’ve been doing for 23 years.”.
“With two-dimensional mammography, small cancers dance like no one is watching - inspirational charm with ballet shoe and colored glass bead - love- dream - hope could be hidden by breast tissue overlying them,” said Avani Gupta, M.D., Sequoia Hospital Breast and Diagnostic Center medical director, also in the news release, “The high resolution 3-D scans delivered through the tomosynthesis technology allow us to see tumors with far greater clarity, resulting in a 25 percent improvement in breast cancer detection rates.”, Other benefits include earlier detection of small breast cancers; greater accuracy in pinpointing size, shape and location of abnormalities; more precise images of dense breast tissue; increased likelihood of detecting multiple breast tumors, which can occur in 15 percent of breast cancer patients..
But let’s let Mitch Postel, director of San Mateo County’s Historical Association, take the cautionary tale from there: “Some 27,000 people attended the first day. Another 51,000 came the next and, on July 1, park officials counted 100,000 visitors…the (park authorities) claimed to have had 1 million visitors in its first season.”. The 1923 season included the debut of a spectacular, new roller coaster, said to be the second largest in the U.S. But, even with “The Comet” wowing its riders, crowds dwindled.
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