San Mateo, CA|News|
San Mateo Man Drowns at Yosemite
Russell Wright was swimming underwater when he became pinned between two boulders.

Jennifer van der Kleut (formerly Jennifer McBride) was born and raised in the southern San Francisco Bay Area in Northern California. She graduated from the School of Journalism and Mass Communications at San Jose State University. She was a full-time writer for Silicon Valley Community Newsgroup from 2004 to 2006, writing for newspapers such as the Los Gatos Weekly and Saratoga News, among others. She wrote the weekly history column Los Gatos: Now and Then for the Los Gatos Daily News throughout 2007, and was a contributing editor at South Bay Accent Magazine from 2008 to 2009. She has also lent her voice to many other publications such as the Los Gatos Weekender and the online Brizzly Guide.
Jennifer was one of the very first freelance writers to contribute to many of the first Bay Patch sites in the Bay Area when they first launched in the fall of 2010. After contributing for more than a year and a half, Jennifer was hired on as an official Patch employee in May of 2012. She is very excited to be a full-fledged member of the Patch family.
In California, Jennifer served as the interim editor for Milpitas Patch in the South Bay, an associate editor for the San Mateo and Foster City Patch sites on the Peninsula, and then served as the head local editor for RedwoodCity-Woodside Patch, before transferring to the east coast in April of 2013.
Jennifer is now the local editor for both Herndon Patch and Fairfax City Patch. She loves being a part of these two communities and getting to know her new home in Northern Virginia.
Jennifer currently lives in the Clifton/Centreville with her husband, Alex and her two sons, Connor, born in Sept. 2007, and Oliver, or Ollie, born in May 2010.
Russell Wright was swimming underwater when he became pinned between two boulders.

A helpful list of school supplies from most ‘must-have' lists, plus prices from nearby stores.
The bullet button gets around the state law banning semi-automatic guns and those with removable magazines.
The NASA rover's landing on Mars, expected around 10:30 p.m. Sunday night, will be streamed live on NASA's website.
They join cities like Richmond, Calif. and New York City in mulling over a possible tax as a way of reducing obesity and obesity-related health care costs.
For every side of guacamole sold at one of their stores, the Redwood City Chipotle and others will donate $1 to the Farmer-Veteran Coalition.
The bullet button gets around the state law banning semi-automatic guns and those with removable magazines.
The bullet button gets around the state law banning semi-automatic guns and those with removable magazines. Should the button, too, be banned? Take our poll and tell us in the comments.
The bullet button gets around the state law banning semi-automatic guns and those with removable magazines.
For every side of guacamole sold at one of their stores, Chipotle - which has locations in Foster City and San Mateo - will donate $1 to the Farmer-Veteran Coalition.
The bullet button gets around the state law banning semi-automatic guns and those with removable magazines.
Word is just getting out that the computer was stolen from a doctor's locked office last month.
The California law was enacted following the death of 6-month-old Kaitlyn Marie Russell, who was left in a vehicle on a hot summer day.
California's budget vice continues to tighten around the State University system, severely limiting the number of students eligible to begin school next spring.
The bullet button gets around the state law banning semi-automatic guns and those with removable magazines.
The bullet button gets around the state law banning semi-automatic guns and those with removable magazines.
'Bark for Life' is coming up on Aug. 11, and the Foster City Relay for Life will take place Aug. 24-25. Both events honor those with cancer and raise money for the American Cancer Society.
The district claims the Chinese students who filed the complaint were transferred out of Mills High because of an issue with proof of residency, not because of their race.
The award was presented by the Davis Vanguard to him for his social justice work. Meanwhile, he is hard at work trying to ban the 'bullet button.'
The district claims the fact that a number of Chinese students were denied entrance into Mills and instead sent to Capuchino had to do with failing to adequately prove residency, not the family's race or immigration history.