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2000 » Issue 36, Published on Wednesday, September 6, 2000 » Sports
By CrediView relocates from Los Altos

CrediView, a privately held global company specializing in real-time e-commerce fraud prevention solutions, has relocated its worldwide corporate headquarters in Silicon Valley from Los Altos to 1330 O’Brien Drive in Menlo Park.

The company’s research and development team will remain at its existing technical facility in Tel Aviv, Israel. Additional support services will continue to be provided from the company’s New Jersey office.

Additional information on CrediView and its online fraud prevention services is located on the World Wide Web at www.crediview.com.

Apartment Towers being built in MV

AvalonBay Communities Inc. announced it has begun construction on a high-rise luxury apartment community in Mountain View. The community known as “Avalon Towers on the Peninsula” will feature 211 apartment homes in two 11-story buildings.

Avalon Towers on the Peninsula will mark the first luxury high-rise apartment community development on the Lower Peninsula within the last 35 years.

AvalonBay manages approximately 34 luxury apartment communities throughout the Bay Area.

Construction is scheduled to be completed in late 2001. For more information on this community, log on to: www.avalonbay.com.

Lempert named techie of year

Assemblymember Ted Lempert, whose 21st assembly district includes Los Altos, was named High-Tech Legislator of the Year by the American Electronics Association (AEA). The award is given to those legislators who “significantly (advance) high-tech legislation during the 2000 legislative year.”

Teresa Casazza, Vice President for California Public Affairs said that since Lempert’s return to the Legislature in 1996, he has “championed a number of tax incentives important to high-tech companies in California, including bringing California tax law closer to conformity with federal tax treatment of net operating losses.”

According to Casazza, this and other changes initiated by Lempert have benefited the high-tech industry, and “keeps California an attractive place to locate and expand high-tech businesses.”

Lempert was one of 11 legislators awarded the title by AEA.


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In Our Opinion

Editorial

For the first time in five years, a public elementary school, Gardner Bullis, opened its doors last week in Los Altos Hills. For some, it was, metaphorically speaking, the last stitch removed from the old wound following the closure of the original Bullis-Purissima School in 2003.

For others, including the diehards who formed the successful Bullis Charter School, the sting of the Bullis closure lingers. But our sense is that for most Hills residents not part of the Loyola School coverage area, the opening of Gardner Bullis means the resurrection of a long-sought-after neighborhood school and the community benefits that come with it.