Back to your point before we hit the headlines, its been a heck of a month for stocks. 43 s p 500 stocks are up more than 5 . Just in june. And im telling you, if you sold in may and went away, you lost out on just about all the gains for the year. To your point on oil, williams, new field exploration and others, theyre leading some of the gains. Oil has actually led us higher. Thats the down side on those things is oil helps out until it starts to act as a tax on the consumer. And you dont know what the he end of the summer is going to bring. Yeah. One thing i would say, we dont care about oil prices, can he care about gas prices. We had a guy on from bp yesterday who was talking about their global study that they look over lee years. And the good news is oil prices are more stable than theyve been at any point the 1970 witness stand that means theyve closed above 100 for three years straight for the first time ever. Yeah. Crude oil has been higher than where we are right now. Carl ic
Considering a Corporate Tax cut to help that line. And uk housing data and german sentiment. As for the road map, it starts with the jcpenney ceo bill ackman resigns. And yums sales in china is an important market falling more than expected in july. And pc problems with microsoft downgraded by stifl nicolas, and is the stocks bull run coming on an end, and forget the planes and trains and automobiles, because e lon musk is out with the hyperloop. Put it out on the interneshgts a internet, and it is cool. It is cool. And wouldnt you love to be ahead of the chinese on something. Yes, lets go out there and reach for something. And musk is not settling on the chinese got ahead of us, and he is leapfrog, and we should call him leapfrog musk. Or pylon man. And we want the start off with the news that we want the cover since it was announced Hedge Fund Manager bill ackman has been pushing for changes at the top of jcpenney has resigned from the store. He runs pershing, and formally named the
Perspective to plan [speaker not understood]. Technical difficulty; please stand by most of all let there be ron pearlman on this seat. Are there any more go ahead. Good afternoon, supervisors. Im alan orrick. I have been asked to read a letter in support of mr. Pearlman by richard noitras son. I am writing in support of Jonathan Pearlmans candidacy as San Francisco historian for the perez r vation commission. Although as a physician and epidemiologist, my own career was Environmental Health, teaching at harvard, ucla, uc berkeley, and then for 27 years heading up Environmental Health research at the California Department of public health. ~ i grew up with a family of architects. After my retirement, i have been helping cal poly pomona restore the historic 1932 studio residences designed by my father, richard noytra, one of the founders of california modern. I have been visiting with other historic modernist house museums around the world to learn about their restoration and programmin
Architects. After my retirement, i have been helping cal poly pomona restore the historic 1932 studio residences designed by my father, richard noytra, one of the founders of california modern. I have been visiting with other historic modernist house museums around the world to learn about their restoration and programming. I was invited to serve on the Program Committee of the noytra house in los altos. It was originally a small residence of poet jacqueline johnson, designed by my father in the late 1930s. It has been restored and adaptively reused as an intimate conference venue. I have had the pleasure of working with mr. Pearlman on his Program Committee. What i have noticed about mr. Pearlman is this. He understands not only the importance of sensitive restoration and adaptive reuse, but also the intellectual Historical Context of original buildings. He is widely read in the history of architecture, although we are volunteers on that committee, he always follows through on what he
Their altar, as their pulpit area. So, in the course of the history of this building, which is now, you know, closing in on 90 years, the stage was probably only used for three or four years of the, of the life of that theater. So, based on that, i didnt think that that rose to being whats considered a character defining feature of the building. And that for this developer who, trust me, we dragged screaming and kicking to the from where he wanted to tear down the building to coming about 90 of the way to agreeing to restore the marquee, put the blade sign back, put some of the ornaments on the building. And basically meeting the secretary of interior standards for the rehabilitation of the building. He came 90 of the way there. But to make it worth doing financially, he needed for that portion of the building to not be there so he could build the housing that opened to hayes street. So, you know, in my judgment, while he was, you know, sort of challenging to the community and as his r