January 30, 2020
Volume 50 - No. 05
By Pete Peterson
A New Look at The Roaring 20’s, Or How You Gonna Get ‘Em Back on the Farm After They’ve Tasted Gin, Danced the Charleston and Listened to Jazz
Before World War I (the war to end all wars), there was the Ragtime Era, and in the Big Band Era of WWII, and the Atomic Age of the 1950’s, followed by the Free Love The Paper - 760.747.7119
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Era of the 1960’s, and the technology breakthroughs of the 70’s and 80’s. But before these life-changing times, according to historians, came the amazing decade of the Roaring Twenties.
In ten short years from 1920 to 1929, entrenched ideas like ties to the land, work standards, individual expression, modes of travel, music, literature and the arts all loosened and society’s views on religion, women’s rights, politics, civil rights and marriage created a new America.
According to social experts, the Roaring 20’s, still roars. Professor Darren Carlisle of Stetson University states, “This time one hundred years ago has a lingering impact on today’s America. Why? Because it ushered in many issues America is still wrestling with.” Carlisle goes on to say, “As tumultuous as the 1960’s was, it would not have been possible without the decade of the 20’s where more mobility and increased methods of communication wrought major changes in America.” He goes on to say that most of the advances in
The Roaring 20’s See Page 2
society today, from Civil Rights to the #MeToo movement had its origins in the twenties.
Let’s face it, dramatic change occurred in America from 1920 to1929: For the first time in history more Americans lived in cities than farms; the telephone, the telegraph and the radio made communication so much easier; transportation improved with the advent of better roads and highways and the ubiquitous Ford Model T and the airplane; the nation’s total wealth more than doubled.
The Paper • Page 2 • January 30, 2020
The Roaring 20’s Cont. from Page 1 This move from an agrarian society to an industry fueled economy swept many Americans into an affluent, but unfamiliar “consumer society.” This meant that the people in California could buy the same goods as those in New York or Chicago: Folger’s Coffee, Levi Jeans, Carnation Milk, Wrigley’s Gum, Campbell’s Soup, Eskimo Pies, and Band-Aids. Stores in Jackson, Mississippi and Gwendolin, Wisconsin stocked their shelves with the same flour and shoes and toilet paper as those in New York. Due to the nationwide spread of chain stores, the advent of commercial radio and the resultant advertising, residents of Fulton, Missouri could purchase Coca Cola and French’s Mustard as easily as those living in Los Angeles, California. Uncomfortable Issues
Now, for the first time, thanks to RCA Victor’s Victrola, and Columbia’s records and Edison’s recording devices, folks listened to the same music, danced the same dances, smoked the same cigarettes - Lucky Strike or Camels mostly and read the Saturday Evening Post or Reader’s Digest the same week. Many parents, religious leaders and politicians were uncomfortable with this new, urban, and what they considered racy, “mass culture.” In fact,
Give Us This Day Our Daily Chuckle This week, a compendium of wit, wisdom and neat stuff you can tell at parties. Enjoy!
Jack, a New York attorney representing a very wealthy art collector, called and asked to speak to his client, who, coincidentally, is called Art. "Art, I have some good news and I have some bad news."
Art replied, "You know, I've had an awful day, Jack, so let's hear the good news first." Jack said, "Well, I met with your wife today, and she informed me that she has invested only $5,000 in two very nice pictures that she thinks will bring her somewhere between $15 and $20 million ... and I think she could be right."
Art replied enthusiastically, "Holy cow! Well done! My wife is a brilliant business woman, isn't she? You've just made my day. Now, I
for many – perhaps most – people in the United States, the 1920s brought more conflict than celebration, but it heralded the first conscious effort to integrate the races, allow women the right to vote (and smoke in public!), and in response to the Volstead Act – Prohibition – made drinking cocktails before, after and during meals the order of the day. For a handful of lucky young people in the nation’s big cities, the 1920s were roaring indeed, but for many it was a time of travail - race riots - the rise of the Klu Klux Klan - labor unrest, wage disparities, sexual inequalities, immigration issues and other social ills that still plague America today. The Age of the Flapper
According to a recent poll, the most familiar symbol of the “Roaring Twenties” is the flapper: pretty young ladies with bobbed hair and short skirts who drank alcohol, smoked cigarettes and uttered what might be termed “unladylike” things such as, “I’m just a country girl who doesn’t know a thing. You want to teach me what I need to know?” Attitudes and Action Change
In addition since many women now worked, they were less dependent on their family or for that matter, men, to support them. Additionally, the flapper of the days were purported to be more sexually “free”
know I can handle the bad news. What is it?"
Jack replied, "The pictures are of you and your secretary.” •••• Along with the tablet, Apple is rumored to be developing an abacus, fire and a wheel. •••• Dance floors terrify me. I prefer floors that lie perfectly still. •••• Politicians are people who, when they see light at the end of the tunnel, go out and buy some more tunnel. ~John Quinton •••• The Democrats are the party that says government will make you smarter, taller, richer, and remove the crabgrass on your lawn. The Republicans are the party that says government doesn't work and then they get elected and prove it. ~P.J. O'Rourke •••• I offer my opponents a bargain: if they will stop telling lies about us, I will stop telling the truth about them. ~Adlai Stevenson, campaign speech, 1952 •••• Any American who is prepared to run for president should automatically, by definition, be disqualified from ever doing so. ~Gore Vidal •••• Money saving tip. 1: Buy a 3D printer. 2: Print a 3D printer.
than previous generations. In truth, most young women in the 1920s were staid - though many adopted fashionable flapper wardrobes – and women did gain unprecedented freedoms.
For example, after many years of demonstrations and discourse, women were allowed to vote; the 19th Amendment to the Constitution guaranteed that right in 1920. Millions of women worked in white-collar jobs (as stenographers, or schoolteachers or waitresses) and could afford to shop and get their hair marcelled, even travel. The increased availability of birth-control devices such as the diaphragm meant fewer children, and new machines and technologies like the washing machine, vacuum cleaner, pop-up toaster, and electric irons eliminated some of the drudgery of household work. And there was the Volstead Act. Designed to combat alcoholism, the law did not make it illegal to drink alcohol, only to manufacture and sell it. Thus, people who could afford it, stockpiled liquor before the ban went into effect. Rumor has it that the Yale Club in New York City was well equipped to handle Prohibition, with a 14-year supply of booze in its basement. The Birth of Mass Culture
As stated, many Americans had ready disposable incomes, and they spent lavishly on consumer goods ready-to-wear clothes, home appli-
3: Return the 3D printer. •••• I once knew a dyslexic cop.
He made a traffic stop on a gal and she smelled like a brewery. So he wrote her a citation for an IUD. •••• Diary of a Snow Shoveler:
From my cousin, Doug Leverenz, who grew up in Bergen, Minnesota . . . a metropolis of about three stores and 15 people.
About 10 miles away from Windom, Minnesota . . . where I was born. A much larger metropolis . . . about 2500 people; always the same population. they say it's because every time a baby is born . . . someone leaves town. I dunno. I just report the facts. Here are Doug's comments:
I got this from my friend in Minnesota and although I have seen something almost like it, this is really good. It made me laugh till I had tears coming down my cheeks. I need to save this one. I remember when we used to get a lot of snow in Minnesota but do not think that there has been so much for years. I have pictures of my car sitting on the road with the snow at least twice as high as the car and also remember when we had to dig out of my Grandparents house to get outside
ances and, the afore mentioned radios. Pittsburgh’s KDKA, was the first commercial radio station, hitting the airwaves in 1920; three years later more than 500 stations competed for the ears and pocketbooks of the nation’s listeners. By the end of the 1920s, more than 12 million radios had been sold. Let’s don’t overlook movies as an increasingly popular form of entertainment: The top box-office stars of the time included, Gloria Swanson, Tom Mix, Norma Talmadge, Rudolph Valentino, Douglas Fairbanks Sr., Norma Shearer, John Barrymore, Greta Garbo, Lon Chaney, Sr., Clara Bow, and "Little Mary" Pickford. Historians estimate that, by the end of the decade, three-quarters of the American population visited a movie theater every week. The Rise of the Automobile
But the most important consumer product of the 1920s was the automobile. Low prices - the Ford Model T- (in any color you want as long as it’s black), cost just $260 in 1924, and generous credit made cars affordable luxuries early in the decade; by the end, cars were practically necessities. In 1929 there was one car on the road for every five Americans. An automobilebased economy was born: Service stations, repair shops and motels sprang up to meet drivers’ needs.
The Roaring 20’s Cont. on Page 3
and then to the barn, etc., to take care of the animals. I also remember shoveling the driveway and then having the snowplow come by and throw everything back into the driveway. That was always the worst. Thanks Darryl for sending this as it is one of the all time great stories. Doug
An oldie but a goodie.
This is from a guy who retired down south and moved to his wife`s hometown in Minnesota. He was born and raised in Tyler, Tx. December 8 - 6:00 PM It started to snow. The first snow of the season and the wife and I took our cocktails and sat for hours by the window watching the huge soft flakes drift down from heaven. It looked like a Grandma Moses Print. So romantic we felt like newlyweds again. I love snow!
December 9 We woke to a beautiful blanket of crystal white snow covering every inch of the landscape. What a fantastic sight! Can there be a more lovely place in the whole world? Moving here was the best idea I've ever had! Shoveled for the first time in years and felt like a boy again. I did both our driveway and the side-
Chuckles Cont. on Page 5
Social Butterfly
The Paper • Page 3 • January 30, 2020
The
of-the-art audio and visual equipment to make you feel like you have a front-row seat in the auditorium. Music Appreciation is free and no registration is required. Hosted by Hank Presutti. For information, call 760.643.5288 or email luigibeethoven@cox.net.
Evelyn Madison The Social Butterfly Email Evelyn at:
thesocialbutterfly@cox.net
Important Events Coming Up at McClellan Center - AARP Tax Preparation is providing free tax preparation services at the Gloria McClellan Center beginning February 3rd to all ages, with priority given to seniors 50+. Appointments are available Mondays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays. To schedule an appointment, call (760) 643-5290. The center is located at 1400 Vale Terrace Drive in Vista. Music Appreciation is offered by the Gloria McClellan Center on Wednesday, February 5th, from 1:00pm to 3:15pm at 1400 Vale Terrace Drive. Whether you are a lover of classical music or a newcomer, you will be sure to enjoy listening to and appreciating classical music. Presentations include state-
The Roaring 20’s Cont. from Page 2
The Jazz Age
Cars also gave young people the freedom to go where they pleased and do what they wanted. (Some pundits called them “bedrooms on wheels.”) What many young people wanted was to dance: the Charleston, the cake walk, the black bottom, the flea hop. Jazz bands played at dance halls like the Savoy in New York City and the Aragon in Chicago; radio stations and phonograph records (100 million of which were sold in 1927 alone) carried their tunes to listeners. Older folks objected to jazz music’s “vulgarity” and “depravity” (and the “moral disasters” it supposedly inspired), but the younger generation loved the dance floor. Prohibition
During this time, some freedoms were expanded, and others were curtailed. The 18th Amendment to the Constitution, ratified in 1919, banned the manufacture and sale of “intoxicating liquors,” and at 12 A.M. on January 16, 1920, the federal Volstead Act closed every tavern, bar and saloon in the United States. From that day on, it was illegal to sell any “intoxication beverages” with more than 0.5% alcohol. This drove the liquor trade underground – people simply went to nominally illegal speakeasies
Free Hearing Screenings and hearing aid cleanings will be held at the Gloria McClellan Center on Thursday, February 6th, from 9:30am-11:30am. An appointment is required and can be made by calling 760.643.5288. Space is limited. The Center is located at 1400 Vale Terrace Drive in Vista. It is a one-stop hub of services that range from lunch, travel/trips, transportation, exercise, classes, clubs, and various other activities for Vista's older adult community. For more informtion, visit gmacvista.com or call
LIFE Lecture Series Continues The LIFE Lecture Series continues at 1pm on Friday, February 7th at Mira Costa College, 1 Barnard Drive. The first speaker is Gerilyn Brault discussing MCC Theater Production into the Woods. After intermission with refreshments, at 2:30pm, Henry Eisenson will speak on Improving Personal Cyber Security. A $1 parking permit is available at Lot 1A. Visit miracosta.edu/life or call 760.757.2121.
Santa Margarita Chapter, DAR, Meeting on February 8th - The Santa Margarita Chapter, Daughters of the American instead of ordinary bars – controlled by bootleggers, racketeers and other organized-crime figures such as Chicago gangster Al “Scarface” Capone, who reportedly had 1,000 gunmen and half of Chicago’s police force on his payroll.
To many middle-class white Americans, Prohibition was not about controlling alcohol, but instead was a way to assert some control over the unruly immigrant masses who crowded the nation’s cities. For instance, to the so-called “Dries,” those who did not drink, beer was known as “Kaiser brew.” To this group, the drinking of alcohol was a symbol that represented their dislike for modern city life. By eliminating alcohol it was felt, they could turn back the clock to an earlier and more comfortable time. The “Cultural Civil War”
Prohibition was not the only source of social tension during the 1920s. The Great Migration of African Americans from the rural South to Northern cities and the increasing visibility of black culture - jazz and blues music, for example, and the literary movement known as the Harlem Renaissance - discomfited many white Americans. Can you imagine – white girls dancing with black guys and black entertainers paid big money to sing songs and tell off color jokes like Redd Foxx. Millions of men in states like Indiana and Illinois joined the Klu Klux Klan. To them, the Klan represented a return to all the “values”
Revolution (DAR), will meet Saturday, February 8, at the El Camino Country Club in Oceanside. Following a 9:30am breakfast buffet, members will hear from local students who participated in the DAR American History Essay Contest, and also honor the recipient of the DAR Good Citizen Award. A business meeting will follow where delegates for the DAR Continental Congress will be elected. The DAR is open to any female eighteen years of age or older who is lineally descended from an ancestor who assisted in some way in the patriots fight for independence in the American Revolution. Visit www.santamargarita.californiadar.org African Violet Society Meeting Announced - The February meeting of the San Diego County African Violet Society will be on Tuesday, February 11th from 10:30am to 12:30pm, in the community room of the Vista Public Library, 700 Eucalyptus Avenue. Visitors are welcome and encouraged to attend a friendly and fun atmosphere to learn how to care for African Violets. The program at this meeting will be a presentation on "African Violet Pests and what to do about them" presented by Barbara Conrad. This club is affiliated with the African Violet Society of America, Inc. For additional information, send email to bconrad999@yahoo.com President's Week Camp at Oceanside Boys & Girls Club -
that the fast-paced, city-slicker Roaring Twenties trampled on. The Red Scare
Likewise, an anti-Communist “Red Scare” in 1919 and 1920 encouraged a widespread nativist, or antiimmigrant, hysteria. This led to the passage of a restrictive immigration law, the National Origins Act of 1924, which set immigration quotas that excluded some people (Eastern Europeans and Asians) in favor of others (Northern Europeans and people from Great Britain, for example).
This law set off conflicts – what historians have called a “cultural Civil War” - between city-dwellers and small-town residents, Protestants and Catholics, blacks and whites, “New Women” and advocates of old-fashioned family values. This is perhaps the most important part of the story of the Roaring Twenties and according to a Duke University study, set the tone for the Age of Aquarius in the 60s. The First World War
The experience of the Western democracies in the First World War was disheartening and disillusioning to many Americans. In response to what happened “Over There,” many young, talented, writers and artists left the United States to take up residence in France and Italy. The thinking of these expatriates
Sign up your child today for the President's Week Camp, February 18th -21st, from 7am to 6pm, by the Oceanside Boys & Girls Club. Snack and lunch included. Build a log cabin, Cooking across America, Run for President, Presidential Trivia, and snow trip (weather permitting). Cost is $76 pre-paid by February 14th; $86 if paid day of event; or a $25/daily rate. 10% Sibling discount; Scholarship opportunities available. Register online today at BGCOCEANSIDE.ORG or call 760.433.8920. The Boys & Girls Club is located at 41 Country Club Lane, Oceanside, 92054.
NARFE Meeting Announced Alfred Santos, GEHA Outreach Executive, will speak at the Thursday, February 20th meeting of the National and Active Federal Employees (NARFE Chapter 706) at the Oceanside Senior Center, 455 Country Club Lane from 2pm-3pm. He will speak on the importance of spine health. A free informational spine analysis will be provided to those who arrive a little early or stay after the presentation. The Chapter will conduct a business meeting from 1:30-2:00pm. The public is welcome to attend. Light refreshments served.
Swing & Country Dance Party Every 4th Saturday Each Month - On the 4th Saturday each month there will be a Swing & Country
Social Butterfly Cont. on Page 5
went like this: So called “civilized” countries declared war on each other for uncertain reasons, fought to a stalemate in brutal trench warfare that needlessly killed or maimed thousands. Then, a peace was negotiated that neither settled the underlying causes of the war nor truly brought peace.
The nationalistic fervor that had motivated many Americans and Europeans to enlist in the war effort dissipated in the muddy trenches of battle, where the purpose and aims of the war seemed distant and unclear. Technological advances in armaments made World War I the deadliest conflict in human history at the time, claiming millions of casualties on all sides. The very nature of the war called into question the West’s perception of itself as “civilized.” Small wonder, then, that many in the United States and Europe began to question the values and assumptions of Western civilization. The Lost Generation
The term Lost Generation refers to the generation of writers, artists, musicians, and intellectuals that came of age during the First World War and the “Roaring Twenties.” The unprecedented carnage and destruction of World War One stripped this generation of their illusions about democracy, peace, and
The Roaring 20’s Cont. on Page 5
Local News
The Paper • Page 4 • January 30, 2020 Fatal Traffic Collision Escondido
On January 20, 2020 at 6:30 PM, Escondido Police and Escondido Fire responded to a vehicle versus pedestrian collision on Washington Avenue at Grape Street.
Officers arrived on scene within minutes to find a 49-year-old male pedestrian unconscious in the roadway. It was determined the pedestrian was crossing north on Washington Avenue at Grape Street when he was struck by a 2007 Kia Spectra which was eastbound on Washington Avenue. The driver of the Kia, a 49-year-old Escondido resident, was not injured in the collision. The pedestrian was transported to Palomar Medical Center where he later died from injuries sustained in the collision. The cause of this collision is under investigation by Officer Tom Venable of the Escondido Police Department Traffic Division. Anyone who may have witnessed this collision is encouraged to contact Officer Venable at (760) 8394483. Carl DeMaio to Release “CLEAN STREETS” Initiative to Combat Homelessness
Congressional Candidate Carl DeMaio today released a major initiative to combat homelessness which has reached epidemic proportions in California’s cities.
DeMaio is calling his initiative “CLEAN Streets” which stands for “Coordinated Law Enforcement Action Now” on homeless on the street.
DeMaio blames a “culture of coddling” homeless for the crisis and says law enforcement must be given back powers to force homeless into mental health and substance abuse programs. DeMaio is committing resources to defeat various tax hikes being proposed by politicians that they claim will go to fund programs for the homeless. “Career politicians are literally throwing good money after bad by funding failure again and again on homelessness,” said DeMaio. “We cannot tax our way out of this homeless crisis — we must enforce our way out of it,” DeMaio noted. “Career politicians are trying to get voters to approve yet another massive tax hike with Measure C and falsely claim it will solve the homeless crisis. Measure C will actually make things worse because politicians are literally throwing good money after bad by funding failure again and again on homelessness,” said DeMaio. “We cannot tax our way out of this homeless crisis — we must enforce our way out of it,” DeMaio noted.
After a sometimes angry exchange
It took him less than two minutes to discover the problem.
“I tightened up your gas tank filler cap and you’re good to go.”
OK, time to ‘fess up.
I’m a total klutz when it comes to anything mechanical, electrical, has moving parts, or is female. Last Thursday I noticed my “Check Engine” light came on.
I figured it just probably meant I needed an oil change but thought my oil had been changed recently. Better check with the expert.
So I drove my Honda Accord down to Pars Automotive, 207 E. Valley Parkway, Escondido, and have Mo Sadooghi, the world’s leading expert on things automotive, mechanical, electrical and probably female as well (This guy knows EVERYTHING!)
“I want to publicly apologize to Councilmember Morasco,” McNamara said near the beginning of Wednesday council meeting.
“I was a bit short with him and I was thinking about something else that got me angry and sometimes you take it out on somebody else. Mike and I are good friends and I think he does a great job here on the council. “So Mike, I hope you can accept my apology.” Morasco responded :"Absolutely. Thank you mayor. I appreciate that.”
“I was disappointed in myself because I believe civility and cooperation is the way to move forward,” he said Thursday. “It was very classy,” Morasco said Thursday of the apology. “As he said, we are friends. It was just an off night.”
Escondido Mayor McNamara Apologizes
“You haven’t tightend down your gas tank filler cap when you last got gas,” he explained. “If you leave it loose the doowacky lets alll the gas fumes out and the thingamajig makes the sensor turn on.” (I think that’s what he said.)
Man About Town
during last week’s Escondido City Council meeting between Mayor Paul McNamara and Councilman Mike Morasco Mayor McNamara opened this week’s meeting by apologizing.
Time spent? Two minutes. Cost? Zero.
He could have charged me $25$50 to fix the problem and I’d have been none the wiser. But Mo has this trait. He’s honest.
Not only is he honest but he is more than reasonable on his rates when and if you have a real automotive problem that needs to be fixed. I found this out about nine months ago when, again, the “check engine” light came on.
This time there were several problems. But you know what? Mo, who is the owner of the business . . . took the time to show me every defect he found. He showed me at least three hoses tht were cracked and leaking; he showed
me an air filter that was loaded with dirt and other debris. I gave him the green light and he had my care fixed and ready to go on the same day!
That was my first experience with Mo Sadooghi and I was impressed. So much so that whenever I have a mechanical problem, he’s the man I go see immediately. I know him, I like him, I trust him. What else could you ask for in an automotive repair guy? Highly recommend him.
I find myself feeling a bit sorry for good pals Paul and Nome Van Middlesworth, owners of The Computer Factory in San Marcos. Demand has been so high that they’ve had to extend their hours. They are now open on Saturdays from 9am to 6pm in order to accomodate the clients that need to upgrade from Windows 7 to Windows 10 (yes, they’ve already upgraded my both Evelyn’s and my computer). They had actually given thought to retiring but when word got out their many friends, patrons, and family members marched upon the store with torches, buckets of tar and lots of feathers and threatened to apply plenty of tar and feathers if they so much as mentioned retirement again. No, the demands were that they
Letters to the Editor
Letter to the Editor. Got a chance to finally, actually, bump into your brilliant writer, Friedrich Gomez last month (end of December) and - well -- wow, he's just a "kid" and yet he writes with such great authority on such past subjects as Elvis Presley, Red Skelton, Dick Clark, Ed Sullivan, and other fabulous icons of yesteryear! I've been a longtime fan of his and although I have nothing against older writers, Friedrich is just a "sprout" amongst a forest of "redwood" trees! All of which makes his 'writing genius' just that much more impressive for me, and all his fans out here. We're a big Irish family with plenty relatives in the U.K.
Letters to the Editor Cont. on Page 10
stay put and continue to solve all of the computer problems in the world. Even though Paul is a Marine veteran he was thoroughly cowned and agreed to hang around for awhile longer - like maybe for the next 20 years. Oh, and Paul thought to give himself some extra time by cutting back his weekly column in The Paper (page 12) to every other week. Nope.
He tried it for about a month and the same crowds returned, again with tar buckets and feathers in hand, with a similar threat. Paul, knowing when he was beaten, and not wanting to upset his many patrons, agreed to return to a weekly column.
He’s in again this week and we are pleased to report that the tar buckets and feathers seem to have disappeared ... along with the very large crowds of upset people. I can only hope that if Evelyn and I someday decide to hang up our editor and publisher aprons and look toward retirement that we, too, will have a huge outpouring of our readers who demand that we stay in place and continue to tell our stories. We shall see. Evelyn is getting tired . . . but she is much younger than me so . . .
The Paper • Page 5 • January 30, 2020
The Roaring 20’s Cont. from Page 3 prosperity, and many expressed doubt and cynicism in their artistic endeavors.
Some of the more famous writers of this generation - F. Scott Fitzgerald, Gertrude Stein, T.S. Eliot, Ernest Hemingway, John Dos Passos, and John Steinbeck – moved to Paris. These writers adopted themes of moral degeneracy, corruption, and decadence in their works. F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel The Great Gatsby is a classic of the genre. A Little on Fitzgerald
One of the saddest examples of the Lost Generation is Fitzgerald. He was born in 1896, to a salesman father and an Irish-Catholic mother who was the heir to a successful Minnesota grocery store. The F. Scott, of F. Scott Fitzgerald, stands for Francis Scott; he was named for his distant cousin, the writer of the poem that became the lyrics to American national anthem. Until 1908 the family moved throughout upstate New York, but when his father lost his job, the Fitzgerald’s moved to St. Paul, Minnesota. Scott, as family and friends knew him, had his first story published when he was 13 - a detective story printed in the school newspaper. After his expulsion for lack of academic effort, he boarded at Newman School, a Catholic school
Social Butterfly Cont. from Page 3
Dance Party from 7:00pm-9:30pm, at the Dance North County, 535 Encinitas Blvd., Suite 100, Encinitas. Music played is East Coast Swing, West Coast Swing, Jitterbug, Lindyhop, Charleston, Country Two-Step, Country Waltz, Cowboy Cha-Cha, 10-Step Polka and more. Doors open at 6:45pm; 7:00pm, basic lesson; 7:30pm, intermediate lesson; 8:00-9:30pm, social dancing. Co-hosts/instructors: Liz O'Grady and Christy Johnson. Attire recommended: smart-casual dance clothes and leather-soled shoes. Cost is $10/person at the door; no partner needed, couples and singles welcomed. Light refreshments and water provided. Please bring your favorite snack to share. For more info, text or call Liz O'Grady at 760.525.7331 or Christy Johnson at 760.580.0116. The 2020 schedule is Feb 22, Mar 28, Apr 25, May 23, Jun 27, Jul 25, Aug 22, Sep 26, Oct 24, Nov 28, and Dec 26. RSVP Facebook https://www.facebook.com/events/ 994102407635613/ MeetUp -
Local Students at Calvin Christian School Compete in First Round of National Competition - Eleven junior high students at Calvin Christian School participated in the school competition of the National Geographic GeoBee on January 21, 2020. Seventh grader Latimer Stutzman
in New Jersey. After graduation in 1913, he attended Princeton University, where he wrote articles for the college humor magazine, stories for the literary magazine, and scripts for the musicals of the Triangle Club. However, again he neglected his studies; in 1917 he was placed on academic probation, and he dropped out of college to join the army. Shortly before reporting for duty Fitzgerald wrote his first novel, The Romantic Egoist, and although the publisher rejected it, Fitzgerald was encouraged to submit later works. While posted to Camp Sheridan in Alabama, then Second Lieutenant Fitzgerald met Zelda Sayre, daughter of an Alabama Supreme Court judge and society darling. The Great War ended in 1918, so Scott was never deployed to Europe. Zelda would not marry him until he could support her financially; he moved to New York to work in advertising and write short stories, but she broke off the engagement. Fitzgerald moved home to his parents to work on his novel, The Romantic Egoist. Recast as This Side of Paradise it was published in 1919. Zelda and Scott resumed their engagement, and the couple were married in New York a week after the novel’s publication in 1920. Their only child, Frances Scott Fitzgerald, was born a year later.
In the 1920s Fitzgerald fell into severe alcoholism and suffered from writer's block. Zelda's mental
took first place. Natalia Velayudhan, also a seventh grader, was the runner-up. Sixth grader Gideon Van Ee finished in third place. The school competition is the first round in the annual National Geographic GeoBee, a geography competition designed to inspire students’ curiosity about the world. The National Geographic Society developed the GeoBee in 1989 in response to concern about the lack of geographic knowledge among young people in the United States. Calvin Christian School has been participating since 1990.
School champions, including Stutzman, will take an online qualifying test. Up to 100 of the top test scorers in each state then become eligible to compete in their State GeoBee. The winners of the State GeoBees receive an allexpenses-paid trip to participate in the GeoBee national championship in Spring 2020, where students will compete for cash prizes, scholarships, and an all-expenses-paid Lindblad expedition to the Galapagos Islands aboard the National Geographic Endeavour II. Calvin Christian School is a preschool and Kindergarten through 12th grade Christian school located in Escondido, CA. For over 50 years Calvin has been partnering with Christian families and their churches to teach the whole child
Social Butterfly Cont. on Page 7
health deteriorated (in 1930 she was diagnosed with schizophrenia). The couple moved between Delaware and France, and Zelda was hospitalized in Switzerland and Baltimore. In 1932 Zelda published her semiautobiographical novel Save Me the Waltz. Scott was furious that she had drawn heavily on their life together but would go on to do the same himself in his novel Tender is the Night (1934), the story of an American psychiatrist married to a schizophrenic. The novel was a commercial disaster.
Fitzgerald's alcoholism, depression, and financial problems worsened, and after Zelda was placed in a North Carolina hospital in 1937, Scott left his wife behind and moved to Hollywood to try his hand as a screenwriter. In 1939 he began work on his final novel, The Love of the Last Tycoon, but died of a heart attack the following year without completing the work. He was forty-four and considered himself a failure at the time of his death. It is only posthumously that he has been acknowledged as one of the greatest writers of the twentieth century. The Great Gatsby is a perpetual set text, and Fitzgerald's shrewd depiction of his degrading society is lauded. Zelda Fitzgerald
One of the most enduring personalities of the Roaring 20s is the wife of F. Scott, Zelda Fitzgerald. She’s considered the original wild child, a pearl-twirling party girl who died at
Chuckles Cont. from Page 2
walks. This afternoon the snowplow came along and covered up the sidewalks and closed in the driveway, so I got to shovel again. What a perfect life! December 12 The sun has melted all our lovely snow.. Such a disappointment! My neighbor tells me not to worrywe'll definitely have a white Christmas. No snow on Christmas would be awful! Bob says we'll have so much snow by the end of winter, that I'll never want to see snow again. I don't think that's possible. Bob is such a nice man, I'm glad he's our neighbor.
December 14 Snow, lovely snow! 8 inches last night. The temperature dropped to 20. The cold makes everything sparkle so. The wind took my breath away, but I warmed up by shoveling the driveway and sidewalks. This is the life! The snowplough came back this afternoon and buried everything again. I didn't realize I would have to do quite this much shoveling, but I'll certainly get back in shape this way. I wish I wouldn't huff and puff so. December 15 20 inches forecast. Sold my van and bought a 4x4 Blazer. Bought snow tires for the wife's car and 2 extra shovels. Stocked the freezer. The wife wants a wood stove in case the
the age of 47 after a fire broke out in the North Carolina sanatorium where she was a patient. Dubbed “the first American flapper” by her husband and partner-in-drink Scott, this Southern belle has enjoyed a Hollywood make-over recently.
What is it about Zelda that fascinates us almost 70 years after her tragic end? In part, it’s that the upheavals she and her husband, lived through that echo our own challenges in these tumultuous times. The publication of Sarah Churchwell’s critically acclaimed Careless People: Murder, Mayhem and The Invention of the Great Gatsby in 2013 also helps. This work shows the many parallels between “their lives and times and the period we’re living through right now,” says Churchwell. “Theirs is a story of boom and bust and it resonates as we grapple with the boom and bust in our own lives - our own worries about the cost of our excesses and our social failures. The lives and fortunes of Scott and Zelda peculiarly mimicked their eras: in the 1920s they were roaring for all they were worth, but with the crash in 1929, everything fell apart.” It helps, too, that Zelda was so vibrant a figure. “It begins with her beauty,” says Churchwell. “But also with the stories told in the 1920s about the hijinks and fun she and
The Roaring 20’s Cont. on Page 6
electricity goes out. I think that's silly. We aren't in Alaska , after all. December 16 Ice storm this morning. Fell on my ass on the ice in the driveway putting down salt. Hurt like hell. The wife laughed for an hour, which I think was very cruel.
December 17 Still way below freezing. Roads are too icy to go anywhere. Electricity was off for 5 hours. I had to pile the blankets on to stay warm. Nothing to do but stare at the wife and try not to irritate her. Guess I should've bought a wood stove, but won't admit it to her. God I hate it when she's right. I can't believe I'm freezing to death in my own living room.
December 20 Electricity's back on, but had another 14 inches of the damn stuff last night. More shoveling! Took all day. The damned snowplough came by twice. Tried to find a neighbor kid to shovel, but they said they're too busy playing hockey. I think they're lying. Called the only hardware store around to see about buying a snow blower and they're out. Might have another shipment in March. I think they're lying. Bob says I have to shovel or the city will have it done and bill me. I think he's lying.
Chuckles Cont. on Page 6
The Paper • Page 6 • January 30, 2020
The Roaring 20’s Cont. from Page 5
Scott seemed to have. (One story is that Zelda stripped down and bathed nude before a group of partygoers.) “People really liked her: she was surprising, intelligent, shrewd, funny and loved a good time. She also liked to be the center of attention, and so she had detractors as well. But her antics combined with her beauty make her a legend.”
Scott repeatedly wrote of their relationship in his fiction, most notably in his second novel, The Beautiful and Damned, which details the heady early days of their marriage; and his melancholy fourth novel, Tender Is The Night, where the gilded dream has faded into a more tawdry reality. Zelda’s only novel, Save Me The Waltz, presented the relationship from her side.
They were arguably America’s first celebrity pairing: a carefree golden couple who wrote their way into the spotlight, creating their own mythology of gin-soaked days and fun-filled nights, only to linger too long once the light started to dim. “Their recklessness makes the story exciting and dramatic,” says Churchwell. “But they paid a very high price.” After a few giddy years, all the youthful promise crumbled away, leaving Scott a dazed and drunk jobbing hack in Hollywood and bringing Zelda to breakdown at the age of 30, a diagnosis of schizophrenia, now widely thought to be a bipolar disorder, and a life in and out of sanatoriums. “Her story is both fascinating and tragic,” says writer Therese Anne Fowler. “Here we have a woman whose talents and energy and intellect should have made her a brilliant success, who was determined to be an accomplished artist, writer and ballet dancer in an era where married women were supposed to be wives and mothers, period. Her devotion to Scott was, in many ways, her undoing [although] he was just as imprisoned as she was. Had they loved each other less, they might both have come to better ends.”
Fowler agrees there is a growing tendency to apply today’s standard on a Zelda of yesteryear. “We do anoint her as a kind of proto-feminist heroine, even though she didn’t see herself as a feminist and didn’t fully succeed at anything,” she says. After her psychotic break she was literally told that her ‘split mind’ had created her problems; that the path to a cure lay in giving up all ambitions that didn’t conform to the ‘paternalistic ideal’ of society.
Ernest Hemingway’s notoriously caustic descriptions of Zelda in A Moveable Feast, published posthu-
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Chuckles Cont. from Page 5
December 22 Bob was right about a white Christmas because 13 more inches of the white crap fell today, and it's so cold, it probably won't melt till August. Took me 45 minutes to get all dressed up to go out to shovel and then I had to pee. By the time I got undressed, peed and dressed again, I was too tired to shovel. Tried to hire Bob who has a plough on his truck for the rest of the winter, but he says he's too busy. I think the butthole is lying.
December 23 Only 2 inches of snow today. And it warmed up to 0. The wife wanted me to decorate the front of the house this morning. What is she, nuts?! Why didn't she tell me to do that a month ago? She says she did but I think she's lying. December 24
6 inches - Snow packed so hard by snowplough, I broke the shovel. Thought I was having a heart attack. If I ever catch the son of a bitch who drives that snow plough, I'll drag him through the snow by his ears and beat him to death with my broken shovel. I know he hides around the corner and waits for me to finish shoveling and then he comes down the street at a 100 miles an hour and throws snow all over where I've just been! Tonight the wife wanted me to sing Christmas carols with her and open our presents, but I was too busy watching for the damn snowplough.
December 25 Merry fricking Christmas! 20 more inches of the damn slop tonight Snowed in. The idea of shoveling makes my blood boil. God, I hate the snow! Then the snowplough driver came by asking for a donation and I hit him over the head with my shovel. The wife says I have a bad attitude. I think she's a fricking idiot. If I have to watch "It's A Wonderful Life" one more time, I'm going to stuff her into the microwave. December 26 Still snowed in. Why the hell did I ever move here? It was all HER idea. She's really getting on my nerves. December 27 Temperature dropped to -30 and the pipes froze; plumber came after 14 hours of waiting for him, he only charged me $1,400 to replace all my pipes. December 28 Warmed up to above -20. Still snowed in. My WIFE is driving me crazy! December 29 10 more inches. Bob says I have to
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Human Trafficking -- Too Close for Comfort
Earlier this session I spoke on the Assembly Floor on House Resolution 7 (HR 7), that I jointly authored with Assemblymember Eloise Gómez Reyes (D – San Bernardino). HR 7 declares January Human Trafficking Awareness Month in California, part of a nationwide effort to combat this growing menace. A form of modern slavery, human trafficking has grown 842% in the United States since 2007. Worldwide, there are over 40 million victims of human trafficking, 75% of the victims are women and girls, and 25% are children. Unfortunately, California, with its harbors, coastlines and international border, has one of the highest instances of human trafficking in the nation.
Locally, recent studies indicate that human trafficking is the secondlargest underground economy in San Diego County, after drug trafficking, generating over $800 million in profits. San Diego County is one of the 13 worst regions for human trafficking in the country, impacting 8,000 victims per year. Many victims are trafficked by gangs, the average age of entry is 16, and victims are typically trafficked for three years before they come to the attention of law
enforcement. Riverside County is also considered a hot spot for human trafficking, and despite its inland location and lack of an international border, has been described as a human trafficking corridor. No place is safe, or immune.
This repugnant industry can be defeated, but we need to raise awareness that trafficking is taking place all around us. We must be vigilant, and recognize that this scourge impacts our state and our local communities. HR 7 is a small part of this ongoing battle. With heightened law enforcement, increased awareness, education and vigilance, we can rein in human trafficking and hopefully, prevent more shattered lives. Assembly Republican Leader Marie Waldron, R-Escondido, represents the 75th Assembly District in the California Legislature, which includes the communities of Bonsall, Escondido, Fallbrook, Hidden Meadows, Pala, Palomar Mountain, Pauma Valley, Rainbow, San Marcos, Temecula, Valley Center and Vista.
5th District Supervisor
Jim Desmond
The Good and the Bad
Last week, we held our first Board of Supervisors meeting of the year. We had the changing of the guard as Supervisor Cox took over for Supervisor Jacob as the Chair of the Board. I was honored that my colleagues selected me Vice-Chair of the Board of Supervisors. Along with Vice-Chair I have also been selected for the following boards/committees: LAFCO (Local Agency Formation Commission), SANDAG (San Diego Association of Governments), S.O.N.G.S (San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station Fuel Removal), NCTD (North County Transit District), and the San Diego County Water Authority. I look forward to updating you on all of these boards, committees and commissions throughout the year.
Also on Tuesday, the County of San Diego and Tri-City Medical Center agreed to partner on a new psychiatric health facility in the North County. Since my first day as a member of the County Board of Supervisors I’ve made mental health a top priority. Last year, in north county and regionally, we had a behavioral health crisis. I’m happy to report that we are reversing the course of crisis and moving forward with a plan. This facility
along with others that will come online in the next year are steps in the right direction.
The Board of Supervisors also approved, for the unincorporated area, a one-year moratorium on sales of electronic smoking devices, a prohibition on sales of flavored vaping liquid and a prohibition on smoking or vaping in outdoor dining areas. This passed with a 3-2 voted, with Supervisor Gaspar and I voting against this measure. I want to keep our communities safe and healthy, but this is an overreach by the government that doesn’t address the actual issue. The Board's action does not address the sales and use of illicit THC products that are causing the most harm to people across the Country. The County of San Diego should step up enforcement of the laws that are already in place, which are that no one under 21 should have access to any of these products. All-in-all it was a quick and significant start to what promises to be a busy year.
The Paper • Page 7 • January 30, 2020
The Roaring 20’s Cont. from Page 6
mously in 1964, famously dismissed her as insane and blamed Scott’s growing alcoholism on her. “Our perception has very much changed,” says Churchwell. “We have come to sympathize with her frustration, to recognize her gifts and to be more fair-minded about her choices.” Fitzgerald wrote a few years before he died that it was a ‘moral imperative’ that their friends understand they were a couple, a unit, and would stay that way, even if her illness meant they couldn’t live together.”
Churchwell is also scathing about attempts to suggest Zelda had a larger role in her husband’s work than previously presumed. “There are people who want to credit Zelda with Scott’s work, which is just silly and doesn’t do women any favors,” she says. “Zelda had many talents, but where writing was concerned, she was probably too ill when she started to hone her gifts - it’s also true that her work isn’t in the same class as his. Her individual sentences are often lovely, and she can create a mood and has clever turns of phrase, but her works tend to be sketches rather than full stories.” The Jazz Age
No examination of the Roaring 20’s would be complete without the mention of jazz music and its mesmerizing effect on the citizens of the 1920s. Technological innovations like the radio and recording devices irrevocably altered the social lives of Americans and transformed the entertainment industry. Suddenly, musicians could create phonograph recordings of their compositions. For jazz music, which was improvisational, the development of phonograph changed the industry; its variations continue to shine today. Whereas previously, music-lovers had to attend a nightclub or concert venue to hear jazz, now they could listen on the radio or even purchase recordings for at-home listening. Harlem’s Cotton Club became famous for jazz entertainment where both whites and blacks gathered to hear the music, dance the Charleston, and illicitly guzzle booze. Other jazz clubs sprung up and the “flapper girl” became a staple of US pop culture. The Harlem Renaissance
As the Cotton club and Apollo Theatre became popular and record sales skyrocketed, the Harlem Renaissance was born. African American art, music, literature, and poetry flourished, and Harlem came alive. The writings of Zora Neale Hurston, Countee Cullen, and Langston Hughes became famous. Duke Ellington and his band frequently performed at the Cotton Club and he became one of
The Roaring 20’s Cont. on Page 8
Social Butterfly Cont. from Page 5
from a biblical worldview. For more information about this program, or schedule a campus tour, contact Heather at heathersouders@calvinchristianescondido.org.
Don't Miss New Barrier Breaking Shows! Netflix's The Healing Powers of Dude and Freeform's Everything's Gonna Be Okay are breaking barriers in the entertainment industry with accurate representation of actresses with disabilities - Sophie Kim, who has muscular dystrophy and Kayla Cromer, who is neurodiverse and has ADD, dyslexia and dyscalculia. Newcomer Kayla Cromer is breaking barriers in the entertainment industry as one of the first people on the spectrum to play a character on the spectrum in a lead role. A neurodiverse actress and activist, Cromer stars as Matilda, a high school senior who is driven to succeed and is on the autism spectrum, in Freeform’s new comedy series, Everything’s Gonna Be Okay. On Broadway, A Christmas Carol also made history with casting two actors with cerebral palsy. Emily Kranking, an actress with cerebral palsy, writes about the personal importance of that representation. Even though A Christmas Carol was looking for any kind of disability for Tiny Tim, I knew at least one of the children had to have cerebral palsy. Tiny Tim has a cane and a limp, two features many kids with cerebral palsy have. Imagine my shock and joy that both of the child actors, 8-year-old Jai Srinivasan and 7-year-old Sebastian Ortiz, have cerebral palsy! I knew I would eventually see a person exactly like me on the stage. But, I never thought two children would make history as the first actors with cerebral palsy on the Broadway stage! Following in the footsteps of The Peanut Butter Falcon, Best Summer Ever, a film created by and starring people with disabilities, will be making its SXSW debut this spring. The film features many of RespectAbility's volunteers, as well as Lab and Fellowship alumni. "We hope a film like ours encourages other filmmakers to write and cast more inclusively. There is such a breadth of unrecognized talent flying under the radar that the industry is not paying enough attention to. For Best Summer Ever, we tapped into that talent pool and found that there are very legitimate actors with a wide range of disabilites who are itching to showcase their acting and singing chops on screen. It's time others do the same." - Michael Parks Randa, Director, Best Summer Ever. To round out this week's newsletter, we have an opportunity. KPCC is about to launch season four of their storytelling series "Unheard LA" and they want to encourage people with disabilities to apply.
Social Butterfly Cont. on Page 8
Historically Speaking by Tom Morrow
Highlight Events of the 20th Century
Now that the 20th Century is in the books, here’s a look at each decade for some of the highlights and top stories. I’ve missed a number events, nevertheless, the following are thumbnail sketches of the 20th century. This will give you a guide to add your personal important events.
William President 1900-1910: McKinley was assassinated in 1901, elevating Vice President Theodore Roosevelt into the White House. Roosevelt captured the center of attention with his “trust-busting” crusades, transforming the nation’s business world. The United States took up the construction of the Panama Canal.
1910-1920: The SS Titanic, the world’s largest cruise ship, sank on her maiden voyage after hitting an iceberg in the North Atlantic. The Panama Canal is completed, and in June 1914, the future leader of the Austria-Hungary Empire was assassinated by a Serbian gunman, triggering the First World War. Millions died in what was believed to be “the war to end all wars.” The “Great War” ended on Nov. 11, 1918. 1920-1930: Prohibition of liquor production and sales became federal law. Charles Lindbergh flew solo non-stop from New York to Paris. The stock market crashed on Wall Street, wiping out the fortunes of thousands of Americans and triggering what led to a decade-long “Great Depression.”
1930-1940: A great migration of Middle-Westerners to the West coast took place as the “Dust Bowl” wiped out hundreds of farms. Prohibition crea t e d l a w breakers who brewed liquor in stills to bootlegging sales and led to a series of gangland wars. Charles and Anne Lindbergh’s baby boy was abducted and murdered, resulting in passage of a federal death penalty for kidnapping. Franklin Delano Roosevelt was elected presihis dent; “New Deal” policies began to pull the U.S. out the of decade-long “ G r e a t Depression.”
Prohibition ended, and on Sept. 1, 1 9 3 9 , Germany invaded Poland, triggering the Second World War, which became the 20th century’s most-deadly series of events.
1940-1950: On Dec. 7, 1941, the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor pulling the U.S. into World War II. The Battle of Midway turned the tide for the U.S. in the Pacific; D-Day, June 6, 1944, the world’s largest-ever amphibious assault took place on France’s Normandy coast, but the European war was nearly lost during the Battle of the Bulge.in December 1945, FDR died on April 12, 1945. Germany surrendered on May 8, 1945.
President H a r r y T r u m a n OKed dropping two atom bombs on Japan, thus ending World War II on Aug. 14, 1945. World War II transformed the U.S. from a sleepy, isolated agrarian nation to a great industrial and military world power.
1950-1960: The Korean “police action” began, pulling the U.S., and other United Nations back into combat against North Korea and ultimately “Red” China. Communism from the Soviet Union triggered a “Cold War” as Russia dropped an “Iron Curtain” around central European nations. Americans spent the remainder of the decade worried about a nuclear war with Russia. U.S. Sen. Joseph McCarthy forced Congressional hearings to hunt down so-called “communist sympathizers.” Hundreds of lives were ruined for alleged communist activities. Spies Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were executed for passing atomic bomb secrets to the Soviet Union. In October, 1957, Russia launched the world’s first satellite into space; the U.S. lagged months behind. In late 1960, the Soviets put a man into space. 1960-1970: The U.S. finally achieved manned space flights. U.S. Sen. John F. Kennedy was elected president only to be assassinated on Nov. 22, 1963, with Vice President Lyndon Johnson becoming president, the U.S. began sending troops and military aid to South Vietnam in an effort to stop the communist North Vietnam from taking control of South Vietnam. Race riots marred much of the decade; Congress passed the history-making Civil Rights law. And, the biggest event of the decade: American astronauts landed on the Moon. 1970-1980: President Richard Nixon escaped formal impeachment by resigning office after a series of illegal acts. The Vietnam War dragged on; Georgia Gov. Jimmy Carter, a peanut farmer was elected president. Race riots continued periodically around the nation. 1980-1990: Former movie star and California Gov. Ronald Reagan was elected president and an attempted assassination marred the first year of his presidency. The U.S. space shuttles go into service, but after number of successful missions, “Challenger” blew up killing all crewmembers. 1990-2000: President George H.W. Bush launched “Operation Desert Storm” against Iraq for invading neighboring Kuwait. Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton was elected president and was impeached and acquitted for sexual misconduct. At the turn of the century, George W. Bush was elected president by defeating Vice President Al Gore in tight election. George “W” won the presidency with the most electoral votes despite Gore getting most popular votes.
The Paper • Page 8 • January 30, 2020
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The Roaring 20’s Cont. from Page 7
Chuckles Cont. from Page 6
One thing is clear when one looks back at the Roaring 20s – it had many antecedents to the problems of today, and irrevocably changed America, just as the 60s changed us. And, just as the Age of Trump will be felt for many years, the Roaring 20’s will continue to roar for many years.
December 30 Roof caved in. I beat up the snow plough driver, and now he is suing me for a million dollars, not only the beating I gave him, but also for trying to shove the broken snow shovel up his BUTT. The wife went home to her mother. Nine more inches predicted.
the most influential jazz bandleaders and composers of all time.
Our author, Pete Peterson, is a prolific writer and works with writers through the Escondido Public Library
Pete Peterson’s short story collec.tion, “After Midnight,” from Pallamary Publishing, will debut this summer. He can be contacted pete9391pacox.net.
at
shovel the roof or it could cave in. That's the silliest thing I ever heard. How dumb does he think I am?
December 31 I set fire to what's left of the house. No more shoveling. •••• Pretty proud that after all these years I still have the body of a 22 yr old triathlete. In my storage shed. •••• Decided I needed a little more peace and quiet in my life so I bought myself a phoneless cord. •••• If you're ever attacked by a mob of clowns, go for the juggler.
The Social Butterfly Cont. from Page 7
Netflix’s Newest Series Takes Disability Inclusion to a New Level - With one-in-five people having a disability in the U.S. today, the lack of representation – just 3.1 percent on screen and even less in children’s television (less than one percent) – means that millions of people are unable to see themselves in media today. A new show premiering today is bucking that trend. The Healing Powers of Dude, a family comedy about Noah (Jace Chapman), a middle schooler with social anxiety disorder, premiered on Netflix on Monday. For information about any of these projects, contact Lauren Appelbaum, Vice President of Communications, RespectAbility, 202.517.6272.
Contemporary Women Donate Blankets to Vista Community Clinic -
The Sensitive Man
A woman meets a man in a bar. They talk; they connect; they end up leaving together. They get back to his place, And as he shows her around his apartment. She notices
Chuckles Cont. on Page 10
Pictured: Julie Rosales from the Vista Community Clinic
Members of GFWC Contemporary Women of North County (CWONC) create and donate "Blankets of Love" to the Vista Community Clinic. They hope the blankets will comfort newborns and young children receiving medical and dental services at the clinic. For information about Contemporary Women, visit www.cwonc.org.
DAR Members Cooked for Residents of Fisher House - Six members of the Santa Margarita Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR), joined by Kris Wood, National Chair DAR Service to Veterans Committee, met at Fisher House on Camp Pendleton to cook a meal for the residents. Chapter members currently do this three times per year, with Linda Ramos leading the way. A main course, vegetable and dessert are prepared in the beautiful kitchen and left for residents to partake of at their convenience. Fisher House is a home away from home for military personnel receiving service at the Naval Hospital on base. Eight suites are available, at no cost to the service personnel or their families. Child care is provided on base for those who need it while the service member is receiving treatment. In addition to the meals, members donate bottled water, computer needs, cleaning supplies, hot pads and towels for the kitchen, frozen
Social Butterfly Cont. on Page 9
The Paper • Page 9 • January 30, 2020
Social Butterfly Cont. from Page 8
meals that can be heated quickly, and toiletries. It was a pleasure to have Mrs. Wood join us and see what good things the Santa Margarita Chapter is doing for our military personnel and veterans. Mrs. Wood also participates in the annual motorcycle ride “Run For
The Wall” and presented a book that she had written about the “run” to staff members, Vicki and Stephanie, for the library at the house. The DAR is open to any female eighteen years of age or older who is lineally descended from an ancestor who aided in some way in the fight for for independence in the American Revolution. Visit www.santamargarita.californiadar.org
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Pictured: Alida Woodward, Kris Wood, Wanda Prosser, Jacquie Berzins, Janet Giovannetti, Linda Ramos, Charla Boodry
Parkinson's Support Group to Meet on February 3rd - North County Parkinson’s Support Group sponsors free monthly meetings for persons with Parkinson’s and their care partners. Monthly meetings
are held on the first Monday of every month from 10am to 12pm at San Rafael Church, 17252
Social Butterfly Cont. on Page 12
Communicating With Our Elected Officials. Join us here every week!
The Paper • Page 10 • January 30, 2020
Chuckles Cont. from Page 8
that one wall of his bedroom is filled with soft, sweet, cuddly teddy bears. There are three shelves with rows of soft cuddly teddy bears covering the length of entire wall!
It was obvious that he had taken quite some time to lovingly arrange them and she was immediately touched by the amount of thought he had put into organizing the display. There were small bears all along the bottom shelf, medium-sized bears covering the length of the middle shelf, and enormous bears running all the way along the top shelf. She found it strange for an obviously masculine guy to have such a large collection of Teddy Bears, she is quite impressed by his sensitive side, but doesn't mention this to him.
They share a bottle of wine and continue talking and, after a while, she finds herself thinking, 'Oh my God! Maybe, this guy could be the one! Maybe he could be the future father of my children?'
She turns to him and kisses him
lightly on the lips. He responds warmly. They continue to kiss, the passion builds, and he romantically lifts her in his arms and carries her into his bedroom, where they rip off each other's clothes and make hot, steamy love. She is so overwhelmed that she responds with more passion, more creativity, more heat than she has ever known.
After an intense, explosive night of raw passion with this sensitive guy, they are lying there together in the afterglow. The woman rolls over, gently strokes his chest and asks coyly, 'Well, how was it?'
The guy gently smiles at her, strokes her cheek, Looks deeply into her eyes, and says: 'Help yourself to any prize from the middle shelf'. The Missing Horse
One fine day at an Oklahoma saloon, a cowboy ties his horse to the hitching rail and goes in to the bar. He orders a whisky and proceeds to drink it. Some time and several more drinks later, the cowboy leaves the saloon to find that his horse has been stolen. He calmly walks back into the saloon, draws his pistol and holds it pointed at the ceiling, and proclaims in a loud voice "Someone in this godforsaken place has stolen my horse. This hap-
Pet Parade
pened to me once before, back in Texas." Lowering the pitch of his voice, but not losing any volume, he continued "And I DON'T wanna hafta do what I done back in Texas. I'm gonna have one more drink, and my horse better be back when I'm done." True to his word, the cowboy holsters his pistol and orders one more drink, and when he finishes it he leaves the saloon to find his horse tied to the rail. He checks his saddle bags and satisfied that nothing is missing, he proceeds to mount up. As he's preparing to ride away, one brave witness from inside the bar steps up and says "I gotta know - what did you do back in Texas when this happened before?" The cowboy shrugs and says "I hadda walk home." A Good Policy
An insurance salesman was getting nowhere in his efforts to sell a policy to a rancher. “Look at it this way,” he said finally. “How would your wife carry on if you should die?” “Well,” answered the rancher after giving it some thought, “I don’t reckon that’s any concern of mine, so long as she behaves herself while I’m alive.”
Tim Tam is one of the 20 dogs recently transferred to Rancho Coastal Humane Society through the Friends of County Animal Shelters (FOCAS) program. Those dogs were given Australian names to bring attention to the animals injured or killed in the bushfires.
The $145 adoption fee for Tim Tam includes medical exams, vaccinations, spay, and registered microchip. For more information call 760-753-6413, visit Rancho Coastal Humane Society at 389 Requeza Street in Encinitas, or log on to SDpets.org.
From Patrick Flannigan, the big Irish clan and our Irish Setter dogs! More on Friedrich Gomez
Dear Mr. Editor, while I enjoy your weekly paper I noticed that your wonderful writer Mr. Fredrick Gomez has not written any recent cover stories. He has a very large following out here and if he has moved to another publication please let us know where so that we can follow his writings. Also, we are very, very close friends to many, many Native Americans who live both on and off the Pala Indian Reservation in San Luis Rey River Valley in north San Diego County and they are also big fans of Mr.
Letters to the Editor Cont. on Page 11
could be a relationship, occupation, wealth, health, and even a skill. It is always difficult to surrender those areas, but, with faith, it is knowing God is opening new areas of life to make us more productive. It is fulfilling His purpose, rather than our own.
It Is Pruning Time
Cash is a 3-year-old American Staffordshire Terrier looking for a new home. This adorable pooch is house trained and walks beautifully on a leash. He is energetic and doesn’t always know his own size, so he would be a good fit for an active, dog-savvy family with adults and older children. With plenty of exercise, training and a few treats, His adoption fee includes his neuter, current vaccinations, permanent microchip identification, a certificate for a free veterinary exam, waived enrollment fee for medical insurance from PetFirst and a license for residents in the city limits of Carlsbad, Del Mar, Encinitas, Escondido, Imperial Beach, Oceanside, Poway, San Diego, San Marcos, Santee, Solana Beach and Vista. Cash is available for adoption at San Diego Humane Society’s Escondido Campus at 3500 Burnet Drive. Please call (619) 299-7012.
and our Irish clan across the Pond just loves reading The Paper online, especially ever since Mr. Gomez did cover stories on overseas topics, such as Stephen Hawking, The Beatles, Houdini, GermanAmericans, and so on. But no matter if he writes on American subject matters or Albert Einstein, he sits at the head of the class in my book. My wife and I (and kids) really enjoyed meeting him, shaking his hand, and just telling him how much he is loved.
The Pastor Says...
Pastor Richard Huls (Retired)
Tim Tam is pet of the week at your Rancho Coastal Humane Society. She’s a 1-1/2 year old, 18 pound, female, French Bulldog mix.
Letters to the Editor Cont. from Page 4
This is the time of year when those of us who are gardeners think of the ancient art of gardening. One of the first things on our agenda is pruning last year’s growth of roses, grapes, and fruit trees. This is critical to the new year’s growth and productivity. It takes both knowledge and skill to make the right cuts, shaping the plants and trees, and removing the right amount of material. In looking forward to the new year it is important, if we want a good and prosperous one, that pruning our lives must follow nature’s way. There are two ways to do this. One is to know there is a Master Pruner, God. Jesus said that “My Father prunes every branch that produces fruit.” This is when He intervenes in our lives with His wisdom to remove things which have been productive, but are no longer. This
The second aspect of pruning is in our hands. The new year is a good time to evaluate what we have been doing, where we have been, and what has been productive. Sometimes it is necessary to move beyond those areas, because they are no longer productive. It is time to prune – cut away, reshape, discard. It is like having a pair of shoes. They could have been the greatest, but we outlive them. The same could be true of a job that has lost its luster, closets full of clothes that are outdated and worn, habits that are harmful, and our use of time that once met a need, but now is no longer productive. We are the pruners, needing to reshape our lives, cutting out the dead and meaningless activities, and preparing ourselves for a more productive life. You are invited to call Dial-a-Prayer 760 746 6611 for prayer and reflection.
The Paper
• Page 11 •
January 30, 2020
A Weekly Message from the Mayor of Your Community published in the belief that it is important for elected leaders to communicate with their constituents and that constituents have a means of hearing from their elected leaders.
San Marcos • Mayor Rebecca Jones
Vista • Mayor Judy Ritter
Advocates for Parks and Recreation
The Friends of San Marcos Parks and Recreation (FSMPR) is a nonprofit organization advocating for the value of parks and recreation in San Marcos. The FSMPR supports City staff and other recreation providers through funding projects, hosting events and volunteering within the community. The FSMPR have donated nearly $35,000 in funding toward community recreation programs, with the majority going towards City programs and events.
The FSMPR host the Double Peak Challenge and Bags N’ Brews events in conjunction with the City. Board directors are integral to these events through their volunteer time, in-kind donations and solicitation of sponsorships. While all the board members share a passion for parks and recreation, many have individual interests at the heart of their advocacy, including equestrian recreation, mountain biking, youth sports and underprivileged community involvement. The FSMPR is an essential partner to the City with access to alternative funding sources and an ability to move quickly when the community is in need. To donate or get involved with the FSMPR, visit www.friendsofsanmarcos.org.
The State of our City
I presented my State of the City Address on Monday, January 27, during the Vista Chamber of Commerce State of the Community program. The event was held at the Vista Civic Center.
During the presentation, I highlighted some of the City's past year's significant accomplishments, including our investment in city road and infrastructure improvements, our low crime rate, and our upgrades to our beautiful parks. This is my tenth address to the Vista community and I pledge to continue laying the foundation for a better future, growing our economy, and providing for our public safety. With our low crime rate, increased city reserves; the renewed downtown renaissance; well-maintained roads, the Paseo Santa Fe Improvements, and a significant investment in our parks, we are fulfilling that commitment. To read my speech and review a list of the City’s significant accomplishments, check online at CityofVista.com.
Oceanside • Mayor Peter Weiss
Escondido • Mayor Paul “Mac” Mcnamara
NEW OCEANSIDE BEACH RESORT
Greetings Escondido,
We are no different than any other city. We have our challenges. But one of the things that I see week in and week out is a small army of unsung heroes who are working to make our community better. It is genuinely moving to see how many of our residents volunteer in both big and small ways to improve the lives of others. I can’t help but feel grateful that I live in such a wonderful community. I guess the only thing I can say to all of those heroes is thank you for your service. But it seems so inadequate.
I had the opportunity to go to the Forgotten Barrel Winery on 15th street to listen to their inaugural Open Mic night for Opera. I have to admit I’ve listened to opera in the past and enjoyed the music but really never knew what they are singing. Well I didn’t know on Thursday night either but I had a blast anyway. The crowd was in to the event and one could just feed off the energy. Check out the winery’s website for the next one if you are interested. Semper Fi, Mac
Paul P. McNamara Mayor of Escondido pmcnamara@escondido.org
Letters to the Editor Cont. from Page 10 Gomez. Trust me.
For years my husband and I have become close acquaintances with the Pala Band of Mission Indians and I can tell you first-hand that these Pala Native Americans really look forward to seeing and reading Fredrick Gomez's cover stories. Don't take my word for it, just ask around the 'Rez' and see what I mean.
To be honest, Mr. Gomez also has a great following on other reservations here in San Diego County as well but as editor of The Paper you probably already know that. Keep Pala Band of Mission Indians happy by keeping Mr. Gomez on your staff. To repeat, if he has moved elsewhere, please let us fans know so that we can follow his wonderful writings. God bless.
Mrs. Arlene A. Tibbets, North San Diego County.
Another Friedrich Query:
Any particular reason Mr. Friedrich Gomez hasn't written any cover stories lately? Growing number of people out here are also wondering the same thing. From Maria Contreras, friends and family and a wide spectrum of other loyal readers, San Diego County. Editor’s Note: Friedrich recently lost a close personal friend and he is still grieving.
We anticipate his return soon but we do not intend on pushing him. He needs time to heal. Thanks for your email. lyle
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2020-9001663 The name of the business, Government Service Division, located at 7220 Trade Street, Suite 300, San Diego, CA. 92121 This business is registered by: Royal Emerald Trading Company, Inc. 7220 Trade Street, Suite 300 San Diego, CA. 92121 This business is conducted by a corporation. First day of business n/a /s/ Michael P. Duff, Vice President Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 1/21/20. 1/30, 2/6, 2/13 & 2/20/2020
Decades in the works, the Oceanside Beach Resort will be a four star plus resort being constructed on Pacific Street opposite the Oceanside Pier.
The project consists of two hotels. The property on the north side of Mission Avenue will be a boutique Joie de Vivre Hotel with a rooftop pool and bar, a ground-level signature restaurant, street front retail, an outdoor patio with fire pits, and a public garden. This boutique hotel will integrate the historic Graves House, the iconic home that appeared in the movie Top Gun . The Graves House, first built in 1887, is being renovated and will open as an ice cream or candy shop.
The adjacent property, a Destination Hotel, will feature an upscale beach house design, a spa, retail shops, restaurants, and extensive indoor/outdoor meeting and event space. The hotels will have joined underground parking with Mission Avenue running between them above. The Oceanside Beach Resort is anticipated to open in 2020. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
STATEMENT
#2020-9000857
#2020-9001714
The name of the business, GRTiAh,
The name of the business, Mintz and
located at 2220 Falling Leaf Road,
Basil,
Oceanside, CA. 92056.
Drive, San Marcos, CA. 92069.
This
business
is
registered
by:
located
at
1587
Loma
Alta
This business is registered by:
Michael Kaimaluhia Hernandez
Bangorn Pysith Luan
2220 Falling Leaf Road
1587 Loma Alta Drive
Oceanside, CA. 92051
San Marcos, CA. 92069
This business is conducted by an
This business is conducted by an
individual.
individual.
First day of business 1/01/2020
First day of business n/a.
/s/ Michael Kaimaluhia Hernandez
/s/ Bangorn Pysith Luan
Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr.,
Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr.,
County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego
County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego
on 1/10/20.
on 1/22/20.
1/30, 2/6, 2/13 & 2/20/2020
1/30, 2/6, 2/13 & 2/20/20
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2020-9001019 The name of the business, Babab Made It, located at 3440 Del Lago Blvd., Escondido, CA. 92029. This
business
is
registered
by:
Shahrooz Mahmoodi 1301 Morning View Dr. #614 Escondido, CA. 9026 This business is conducted by an individual. First day of business n/a. /s/ Shahrooz Mahmoodi Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 1/13/20. 1/30, 2/6, 2/13 & 2/20/2020 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2020-9001807 The name of the business, Palomar Properties, Palomar Mountain Real Estae, Palomar Mountain News, Palomar Mountain Properties, My Palomar, My Palomar Mountain, Bonnie Phelps, located at 20720 State Park Road, Palomar Mountain, CA. 92060. This business is registered by: Bonnie Phelps 20720 State Park Road Palomar Mountain, CA. 92060 This business is conducted by an individual. First day of business 8/15/2000. /s/ Bonnie Phelps Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 1/22/20. 1/30, 2/6, 2/13 & 2/20/2020
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2020-9001798 The name of the business, Paradise Plumbing, located at 1320 McClelland ST., San Marcos, CA. 92069. This business is registered by: Jimmie Joseph Lujan, Jr. 1320 McClelland St. San Marcos, CA. 92069 This business is conducted by an individual. First day of business 1/22/2020 /s/ Jimmie Joseph Lujan, Jr. Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 1/22/20. 1/30, 2/6, 2/13 & 2/20/20 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2020-9001924 The
name
of
the
business,
Microwave Antenna USA, located at 1625 Kings Way, Vista, CA. 92084. This business is registered by: Mehrdad Nejathaim 1625 Kings Way Visa, CA. 92084 This business is conducted by an individual. First day of business June 1, 2012. /s/ Mehrdad Nejathaim Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 1/23/20. 1/30, 2/6, 2/13 & 2/20/20
The Paper • Page 12 • January 30, 2020
and perhaps even a threat to our health and safety.
Similarly, only a small percentage of computer users could benefit from the components on that list. The overwhelming majority of users would see no tangible benefits with these high speed and capacity components nor would the 100Mbs (Megabits per second) Internet connection be noticeably faster than a less costly 10Mbs connection for most. Paul & Nome Van Middlesworth, The Computer Factory
www. thecomputerfactory.net "San Diego's Best Computer Store 2017-18" Union Tribune readers poll
What do these things have in common?
A 260 MPH McLaren roadster, A fast 100Mbs Internet connection, a carton of cigarettes, 32GB of RAM, a five year subscription to Porn Hub, a four Terabyte hard drive, a bottle of 1767 Chateau Margaux, an Intel i-9 10980XE and a $500 per hour Las Vegas hooker. The answer? These are all things that are highly prized by a few but not particularly of interest to the vast majority of us. The roadster, cigarettes, Porn Hub, wine and the hooker are worth the price to some, but most of us regard them as a needless indulgence and of little practical value,
Social Butterfly Cont. from Page 8
Bernardo Center Drive, Rancho Bernardo, in the Parish Hall. The first hour features a speaker relating to Parkinson’s and the second half consists of breakout groups of People with Parkinson’s in one area and care partners in another area. Our featured speaker for Monday, February 3rd is Vanessa Leschak, Certified Nutritionist and Cook who will present “Healthier Lives for People with Parkinson’s through Diet, Nutrition and Education”. Come learn, share, meet, and enjoy the free refreshments with other involved Parkinson’s persons. If you have questions, call (858) 3542498 or (760) 749-8234.
New Year Social Opportunities with North County Widows & Widowers Club - Time of kick-off the New Year for social opportunities with the North County Widows and Widowers Club. On Wednesday, February 5th bus tour to the Olympic Training Center/Chula Vista; leaves 9:45am from Vista Senior Center. Cost is $81/person, lunch included; docent led tour. Book directly with the Culture Caravan/Vista Sr. Center, 760.643.2828; more information, call Shirley at 760.741.8004. On Sunday, February 9th Brunch at Hunter's Steakhouse, 11:30am2pm, 1221 Vista Way, Oceanside 922054. Order off menu ($9-$16); unlimited Champagne additional
The point is that while the latest and greatest developments in PC and Internet speed and storage technology are important for power users and critical for many commercial, industry and education applications, these higher speeds and capacities have had little impact on the home and small business user experience.
The reason that advancing technology has not benefited the home and small business users is fairly simple. First we don’t benefit from higher speed Internet because even slow computers can handle the highest Internet speed, and as long as the Internet / computer provide a real-time experience, we don’t benefit from higher speeds. Secondly, most of our computer usage relies on iterative interaction. We start a task and wait for a result from our computer, and then we move to the next step. We interact with our computers at human speed, not computer speed. Both the Internet and our computer react a thousand times
$5. RSVP to Dale at 760.522.5144.
Genealogy Sessions Offered at Heritage Park in San Marcos Introduction to Genealogy; a fourweek series of classes to help beginners get started researching their family histories. Instruction is Julie Miller, Genealogy Researcher. Dates are Saturdays, February 8, 15, 22* and 29th, from 9:30am10:30am. *February 22nd class is 2 hours, 9:30am-11:30am - this session will explore online resources; participants are encouraged to bring a laptop computer, but is not required. Access to online resources require a San Diego County Library Card. Location is the Heritage Park in Walnut Grove Park, 1952 Sycamore Drive, San Marcos 92069. Cost is $30 for 4 classes. Registration: jjmill@peoplepc.com or 760.743.8591. Classes limited to 12 persons. RSVP in advance.
El Camino Quilt Guild Meeting on Thursday, February 13th - El Camino Quilt Guild meets at 9:30am, Thursday, February 13th, at QLN Conference Center, 1938 Avenida Del Oro, Oceanside 92056. Parking is limited, please carpool if you can. Doors open 9am. Guest fee $10. Our speaker is the award winning art quilter Linda Anderson (https://laartquilts.com). Linda says everyone everywhere has a story. She is compelled and attracted to find that moment that captures the essence of the person and share it
faster than we do. In a nutshell, we are the weakest and slowest link in our use of computers and Internet and advancing technology has yet to find a way to make us faster.
Enterprise, government and education users benefit from faster computers, network speeds and massive storage devices because much of the work done on these computers doesn’t involve slow, inefficient humans. These computers use programs to manage and consolidate vast amounts of data without having to slow down and wait for us to catch up.
So when your Internet service provider brags about their high speed service or offers to increase your Internet service speed for a price, don’t assume that you will benefit from the increased speed. At our home, two years ago we asked Cox to switch our Internet speed from 50Mbs to 10Mbs. It saved us $400 and we never noticed a differ-
through the medium of fine art quilts, merging the two elements that are closest to her heart: drawing and sewing. Come, hear her lecture “The Quilt Art of Storytelling.” There is no workshop. Visit elcaminoquilters.com or email info@elcaminoquilters.com for more information.
New Address for the Escondido ReStore - The Habitat for Humanity ReStore in Escondido has a new address. Find them now at 2239 Auto Park Way. Watch for notice of a grand opening. Keep in contact here: San Diego Habitat for Humanity · 8128 Mercury Court · San Diego, CA 92111 · USA; (619) 283-4663 · sandiegohabitat.org
City of San Marcos Rangers to Lead Free Local Hike on February 1st -- Come join City of San Marcos Park Rangers as they host members of the public on a free 6.3-mile hike, Saturday, Feb. 1, from 9am to 12noon. Register at 8:30am at the trailhead and parking lot at Cerro de Las Posas Park, Aquatics & Recreation Facility, 1387 W. Borden Road, San Marcos, 92069. Hike along 2nd San Diego Aqueduct north from Las Posas Road to Buena Creek Road, then along the flume that transports water from Lake Wohlford to the Pechstein Reservoir near Blue Bird Canyon. There will be 890 feet of elevation gain. Please bring sun protection
ence.
To determine if your PC is worth upgrading or keeping, check its CPU speed on the Internet’s Passmark Benchmark CPU chart. If it scores near 2000 or above, you’re golden. Make sure you have at least 4GB of RAM (8GB if you like to run simultaneous sites or applications). Switching to a lightning fast SSD is an inexpensive way to pep up your older PC’s performance. If in doubt bring your PC in and we will check it out for you.
If your existing PC can’t cut the mustard you may want to select a “refurb” desk top or notebook tailored to your exact needs and have your files transferred to it. We have them at all levels of performance. If you need a PC for gaming, day trading, solids modeling or any special or high task application, let’s sit down together to design and build a workstation that perfectly matches your needs.
and plenty of water.
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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2020-9001150 The name of the business, Senior Travel Service, located at 210 E. Park Avenue, Ste A,, Escondido, CA. 92025. This business is registered by: Escondido Senior Enterprises 210 E. Park Ave., Ste A Escondido, CA 92025 This business is conducted by a corporation. First day of business 1/1/2005. /s/ Vivian E. Turner, President Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 1/14/2020. .1/23, 1/30, 2/6 & 2/13/2020 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2020-9000848 The name of the business, 4S Auto Services, located at 728 N. Escondido Blvd., Escondido, Ca. 92025. This business is registered by: Autonow, Inc. 520 N. Harbor Blvd. Santa Ana, Ca. 92703 This business is conducted by a corporation. First day of business 1/10/2020. /s/ Bassil Boulus, CFO Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on1/10/2020. 1/16, 1/23, 1/30 & 2/6/2020
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• Page 13 • January 30, 2020
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SUMMONS CASE NO. 37-2019-00029826-CU-PO-NC North County Branch SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO VISTA DIVISION 325 S. Melrose Dr. Vista, Ca. 92081
NOTICE! You are being sued. The court may decide against you wihtout you being heard unless you respond within 30 days. Read the information below. You have 30 calendar days after this Summons and legal papers are served on you to file a written response at this court and have a copy served on the plaintiff. A letter or phone call will not protect you. Your written response must be in proper legal form if you want the court to hear your case. There may be a court form that you can use for your response. You can find these court forms and more information at the California Courts Online Self Help Center (www.courtinfo.ca.gov/selfhelp) your county law library, or the county courthouse nearest you. If you cannot pay the filing fee ask the court clerk for a fee waiver form. If you do not file your response on time you may lose the case by default, and your wages, money, and property may be taken without further warning from the court. There are other legal requirements. You may want to call an attorney right away. If you do not know an attorney you may want to call an attorney refall service.. If you cannot afford an attorney, you may be eligible for free legal services from a nonprofit legal services program. You can locate these nonprofit groups at the California Legal Service Web site (www.lawhelpcalifornia.org). the California Courts Online Self-Help Center (www.cortinfo.ca.gov/selfhelp), or by contacting your local court or county bar associataion. NOTE: The court has a statutory lien for waived fees and costs on any settlement or arbitration award of $10,000 or more in a civil case. The court’s lien must be paid before the court will dismiss the case. The name and address of the court is: San Diego Superior Court North County Branch 325 So. Melrose Drive Vista, CA. 92081
The name, address and telephone number of plaintiff’s attorney, or plaintiff without an attorney is: Frederic J. Milberg, Esq. CASE NUMBER:37-2010-00058389-CL-BC-NC MILBERGE & DePHILLIPS, P.C. Phone: 760.943.7103 FAX 760.943.6750 2163 Newcastle Ave., Ste 200 Cardiff, CA. 92007 Date: 06/12/2019
Clerk, by: M. Clemens, Deputy
01/16, 01/23, 01/30 & 2/06/2020 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2019-9029680 The name of the business, The Brookfield Group,
located
at
5094
Barry
This business is registered by: Shawn Maundre Brooks 5094 Barry Street Oceanside, Ca. 92057 This
business
is
conducted
by
an
individual. First day of business 12/16/19 Shawn Maundre Brooks Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder
of
San
12/16/2019. 1/9, 1/16, 1/23 & 1/30/2020
CASE NO. 37-2019-00029826-CU-PO-NC North County Branch SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO NORTH COUNTY DIVISION 325 S. Melrose Dr., Suite 1000 Vista, Ca. 92081
PLAINTIFFF: CURREN BAIN, a Minor, by and through his G.A. L., ABBE BAIN DEFENDANTS: OPTIMIST CLUB OF VISTA, RANCHO BUENA VISTA LITTLE LEAGUE, et al. AMENDMENT TO COMPLAINT
Under Code Civ. Proc. Sec. 474 FICTITIOUS NAME (Court order required once case is at issue)
Plaintiff, being ignorant of the true name of a defendant when the complaint in the abovenamed case was filed, and having designated defendant in the complaint by the fictitious name of: DOE 1 and having discoverd the true name of defendant to be JESSE ENGLISH, DBA NORTH COUNTY LONGHORNS amends the complaint by inserting such true name in place of such fictitious name wherever it appears in the complaint. Date: September 5, 2019 /s/ Frederic Milberg ORDER
The above amendment to the complaint is allowed.
Date 9/9/2019 /s/ Jacqueline M. Stern, Judge/Commissioner of the Superior Court 1/16, 1/23, 1/30 & 2/06/2029
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NOTICE TO DEFENDANT: OPTIMIST CLUB OF VISTA; RANCHO BUENA VISTA LITTLE LEAGUE, INC., a Caliornia corporation; and DOES 1-20 YOU ARE BEING SUED BY PLAINTIFF: CURREN BAIN, a Minor, by and through his Guardian ad Litem, ABBE BAIN
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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2020-9000439 The name of the business, New West Ballet School, located at 1215 Linda Vista Dr., Ste B, San Marcos, CA. 92078. This business is registered by: New West Ballet School 1215 Linda Vista Dr. Ste B San Marcos, CA. 92078 This business is conducted by a corporation. First day of business 2/01/15. /s/ Coral Bruni, President Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 1/07/2020. 1/16, 1/23, 1/30 & 2/6/2020
Room for Rent For Single Via Rio Ave., Oceanside Kitchen & Living Room Privileges Utilities included. $750 Mo. $200 Deposit Call 760.439.1301
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STATEMENT OF DAMAGES (Personal injury or Wrongful Death) CASE NO. 37-2019-00029826-CU-PO-NC North County Branch SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO VISTA DIVISION 325 S. Melrose Dr. Vista, Ca. 92081
To: Optimist Club of Vista Plaintiff: Curren Bain, by and through his Guardian ad Litem, Abbe Bain, seeks damages in the above entitled actions, as follows: AMOUNT 1. General damages a. Pain, suffering, and inconvenience $ 100,000.00 b. Emotional distress $ 10,000.00 c. Loss of consortium $ 0.00 d. Loss of society and companionshiip (wrongful death actions only) $ 0.00 e. Other (specify) $ 0.00 f. Other (specify) $ 0.00 g. (Coninued onf Attachment 1.g. 2. Special damages a. Medical expenses (to date) $ 5,893.23 b. Future medical expenses (present value) $30,000.00 c. Loss of earnings (to date) $ 0.00 d. Loss of future earning capacity (present value) $ 0.00 e. Property damage $ 0.00 f. Funeral expenses (wrongful death actions only) $ 0.00 g. Future contribution (present value) wrongful death actions only) h. Value of personal service, advice, or training (wrongful death actions only) $ 0.00 i. Other (specify) $ 0.00 j. (Other (specify) $ 0.00 k. (Continued on Attachment 2.k. 3. Punitive Damqages Plaintiff reserves the right to seek punitive damages in the amount of $ 0.00 when pursuing a judgment in the suit filed against you. Date: 1/3/2020 Frederic J. Milberg, Esq. /s/Frederick J Milberg 1/16, 1/23, 1/30 & 2/06/2020
The Mighty Mojo Page The Paper
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• Page 14 • January 30, 2020
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1950 Hacienda Dr. Vista
760.639.5309
Coins & Loans
Insurance
760.745.1697 Escondido Coin & Loan, Inc. 241 E. Grand Avenue
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ELECTRICIAN
I Make House Calls
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The name of the business, HB Painting, located at 309 Grapevine Rd., 30, Vista, Ca. 92083 This business is registered by: Hugo G. Bazan 309 Grapevne Rd 30 Vista, Ca. 92083 This
business
is
conducted
by
an
individual. First day of business n/a. /s/ Hugo G. Bazan Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 1/22/2020 1/30, 2/6, 2/13 & 2/20/20
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2019-9030734 The name of the business, Melissa Rae
888.769.9144
Call TODAY for a FREE Quote!
Legal Services
Visit us online at:
MurrEllsServices.com
Kaley Satterlee Law Offices 3643 Grand Avenue, Suite A San Marcos, CA. 92078 Trusts & Estate Planning Free Consultation
Printing
ALOHA PRINTING
760.727.4248
WOOD FURNITURE REPAIR
Broken Parts•Loose Joints Moving Damage and MORE
STATEMENT
#2020-9001847
“Perfection is the Start”
www.escondidocoin.com Coins•Gold•Silver•Vintage Watches
Furniture Repair
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
Top grade printing of all types, brochures, letterhead, posters banners, business cards.
Lawyer Makes House Calls Free Consultation
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Brian Fieldman, Esq. 760.738.1914 sdbrf@cox.net
(760) 471-1006
Restaurants
J&M’s Family Restaurant 1215 E. Valley Parkway Escondido
MOVING/STORAGE
Where homestyle cooking is just the beginning…
760.745.3710
COLEMAN MOVING FAMILY OWNED Since 1979 BBB Insured Low Rates. CT #189466 760-746-1153
Have Items for the Social Butterfly? Email them to: thesocialbutterfly@cox.net
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT
STATEMENT
Designs, located at 11423 Kaywood Circle, Escondido, CA. 92025 This business is registered by: Melissa Rae McDonald 11423 Kaywood Circle Escondido, CA. 92025 This
business
is
conducted
by
an
individual. First day of business 12/31/19. /s/ Melissa Rae McDonald Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 12/31/2019 1/30, 2/6, 2/13 & 2/20/20
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2020-9000342 The name of the business, Waring Court Pediatric and Adult Medical Group, located at 3230 Waring Court, Suite J, Oceanside, CA. 92056. This business is registered by: Victor Michael Dalforno 3500 Bedford Circle Carlsbad, CA. 92008 Stewart Fife Wilkey 550 Anchor Way Carlsbad, CA. 92008 This business is conducted by a General Partnership. First day of business 1/1/2008. /s/ Victor Michael Dalforno Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 1/6/2020. 1/16, 1/23, 1/30 & 2/6/2020 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2020-9000400 The name of the business, JTI Petitions, located at 32989 Luiseno Circle Dr., Pauma
Letters to the Editor? We love ‘em! Our Readers do as well! Send them to: thepaper@coxnet
#2020-9001594
#2020-9000838
Valley, CA. 92061. This business is registered by: Christopher Sean Jordan
The name of the business, Property Due
32989 Luiseno Circle Dr.
Diligence, located at 250 Camino Calafia,
Pauma Valley, CA. 92061
San Marcos, CA. 92069.
This
located at 914 Caminito Madrigal, Unit G,
This business is registered by:
individual.
Carlsbad, CA. 92011.
Proper Due Diligence LLC
First day of business 1/7/2020.
250 Camino Calafia
/s/ Christopher Sean Jordan
San Marcos, CA. 92069
Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County
This business is conducted by a Limited
Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 1/7/2020.
Liability Company.
1/16, 1/23, 1/30 & 2/6/2020
The
name
Digital
of
the
Marketing,
business,
Handsfree
Handsfree
Digital,
This business is registered by: Dustin Norris 914 Caminito Madrigal, Unit G Carlsbad, CA. 92011 This
business
is
First day of business n/a. conducted
by
an
individual.
1/30, 2/6, 2/13 & 2/20/20
Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 1/10/20. 1/30, 2/6, 2/13 & 2/20/20
Theodore Roosevelt's ideas on Immigrants and being an AMERICAN in 1907
'In the first place, we should insist that if the immigrant who comes here in good faith becomes an American and assimilates himself to us, he shall be treated on an exact equality with everyone else, for it is an outrage to discriminate against any such man because of creed, or birthplace, or origin. But this is predicated upon the person's becoming in every facet an American, and nothing but an American ... There can be no divided allegiance here. Any man who says he is an American, but something else also, isn't an American at all. We have room for but one flag, the American flag ... We have room for but one language here, and that is the English ... And we have room for but one sole loyalty and that is a loyalty to the American people.' Theodore Roosevelt 1907
STATEMENT OF WITHDRAWAL FROM PARTNERSHIP OPERATING UNDER FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME #2020-9000119 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME: The Rustic Garden Box. THE ORIGINAL STATEMENT OF THIS FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME WAS FILED IN SAN DIEGO COUNTY ON 12/5/2018 and assigned File No. 2018-9029925. LOCATED AT 850 Los Vallecitos Blvd., San Marcos, CA. 92069. MAILING DDRESS: 5131 Delaney Court, Carlsbad, CA. 92008. THE FOLLOWING PARTNER HAS WITHDRAWN: Linda Berry Jenerette 2153 Silverado Street San Marcos, Ca. 92078 I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000) /s/ Linda Berry Jenerette This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County on 1/03/2020.
Clerk/Recorder of San Diego
1/09, 1/16, 1/23 & 1/30/2020
conducted
by
an
STATEMENT
Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 1/21/20.
is
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
/s/ Daniel Frizzell, Manager
First day of business 1/1/2019. /s/ Dustin Norris
business
#2020-9000180 The name of the business, Western Mutual Development, located at 929 Orchid Way, Carlsbad, Ca. 92011. This business is registered by: Edward J. and Laura J.
Scarpelli
929 Orchid Way Carlsbad, Ca. 92011 This business is conducted by a Married Couple First day of business 1/03/2020. /s/ Edward J. Scarpelli Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 1/03/2020. 1/09, 1/16, 1/23 & 1/30/2020 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2020-9001400 The name of the business, ERS Event Marketing,
located
at
1788
La
Costa
Meadows #101, San Marcos, CA. 92078. This business is registered by: Endurance Race Series, LLC 3220 Erie Parkway Erie, Colorado 80516 This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company. First day of business 7/1/2005 /s/ Jeff Stoner, President Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 1/16/2020. 1/23, 1/30, 2/06 & 2/13/2020
LEGALS
The Paper
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT
#2020-9000399 The name of the business, L.O.D. Enterprises, located at
2904
Bateman
Lane,
Modesto, CA. 95354 This business is registered by: Abraham Salazar 2904 Bateman Lane Modesto, CA. 95354 This business is conducted by an individual. First day of business n/a. /s/ Abraham Salazar Filed
with
Ernest
Dronenburg
Jr.,
J.
County
Clerk/Recorder
of
San
Diego on 1/07/2020. 1/16, 1/23, 1/30 & 2/06/2020
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT
#2020-900 1112 The name of the business, Dedicated
Dads
Transforming
the
World,
located at 612 S. Cleveland St., Oceanside, CA. 92054. This business is registered by: Joseph Antonio Marron 612 S. Cleveland St. Oceanside, Ca. 92054 This business is conducted by an individual. First
day
of
business
1/14/2020. /s/ Joseph Antonio Marron Filed
with
Ernest
Dronenburg
Jr.,
J.
County
Clerk/Recorder
of
San
Diego on 1/14/2020. 1/23, 1/30, 2/06 & 2/13/2020
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT
#2020-9000508 The name of the business, Solana Beach Solutions, located
at
727
Santa
Paula, Solana Beach, CA. 92075 This
business
is
registered by: Jacques Wixon 727 Santa Paula Solana Beach, CA. 92075 This
business
conducted
is
by
an
individual. First
day
of
business
1/8/20. /s/ Jacques Wixon Filed
with
Dronenburg
Ernest Jr.,
Clerk/Recorder
J.
County of
San
Diego on 1/08/2020 1/16, 1/23, 1/30 & 2/06/20
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME 37-2020-00003477-CU-PT-NC TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner Ryhan Zheng Arkin filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: Present name: Ryhan Zheng Arkin to Proposed name Aierken Aikebaier THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING: Date: 3/10/2020 8:30a.m., Department 23. The address of the court is: 325 S. Melrose, Vista, CA. 92081. A copy of the Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: San Marcos News Reporter, dba, The Paper, 845 W. San Marcos Blvd, San Marcos, Ca. 92078. Dated: 1/22/2020, /s/Sim von Kalinowski, Judge of the Superior Court 1/30, 2/06, 2/13 & 2/20/20
SUMMONS CASE NO. 37-2019-00049102-CU-PANC SAN DIEGO SUPERIOR COURT - NORTH COUNTY 325 S. Melrose Vista, Ca. 92081 760.201.8094
NOTICE TO DEFENDANT: RANGER SEAN MARK ROOT, an individual, KATHLEEN CARNAHAN, an individual, and DOES 1 through 10, inclusive
YOU ARE BEING SUED BY PLAINTIFF: QUYEN-QUYEN DO, an individual, KHOA DO, an individual, KEVIN DO, a minor individual, and KAIDEN DO, a minor individual. NOTICE! You have been sued. The court may decide against you without your being heard unless you respond within 30 days. Read the information below. You have 30 calendar days after this Summons and legal papers are served on you to file a written response at this court and have a copy served on the plaintiff. A letter or phone call will not protect you. Your written response mustt be in proper legal form if you want the court to hear your case. There may be a court form that you can use for your response. You can find these court forms and more information at the California Courts Online Self Help Center (www.courtinfo.ca.gov/selfhelp) your county law library, or the county courthouse nearest you. If you cannot pay the filing fee, ask the court clerk for a fee waiver form. If you do not file your Response on time, you may lose the case by default, and your wages, money, and property may be taken without further warning from the court.
There are other legal requirements. You may want to call an attorney right away. If you do not know an atorney, you may want to call an attorney referral service. If you cannot afford an attorney, you may be eligible for free legal services from a nonprofit legal services program. You can locate these nonprofit groups at the California Legal Service Web site (www.lawhelpcalifornia.org). the California Courts Online Self-Help Center (www.cortinfo.ca.gov/selfhelp), or by contacting your local court or county bar associataion. NOTE: The court has a statutory lien for waived fees and costs on any settlement or arbitration award of $10,000 or more in a civil case. The court’s lien must be paid before the court will dismiss the case. The name and address of the court is: San Diego Superior Court North County 325 So. Melrose Drive Vista, CA. 92081 North County Division
The name, address and telephone number of plaintiff’s attorney, or plaintiff without an attorney is: Samuel Dagan, Esq. 16885 W. Bernardo Dr., Ste 275 San Diego, CA. 92127 (858) 487.6500 CASE NUMBER: 37-2019-00049102-CU-PANC DATE: 9/18/2019
Clerk, by: M. Clemens, Deputy 1/30, 2/6, 2/13 & 2/20/2020
STATEMENT
#2020-9001100 The name of the business, BH Inspections, located at 1401 El Norte Pkwy, Space 68, San Marcos, CA. 92069. This
business
is
registered by: Robert Wayne Houx 1401 El Norte Pkwy Space 68 San Marcos, CA. 92069. This
business
conducted
by
is an
individual. First day of business n/a. /s/ Robert Wayne Houx Filed
with
Dronenburg
Ernest Jr.,
Clerk/Recorder
J.
County of
San
Diego on 1/14/2020 1/30, 2/6, 2/13 & 2/20/20
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT
#2019-9030414
The name of the business, Art and Culture, located at 259 Carissa Dr., Oceanside, CA. 92057. This business is registered by: Roberto Diaz Jacobo 259 Carissa Dr. Oceanside, CA. 92057 This business is conducted by an individual. First
day
of
business
5/15/12. /s/Roberto Diaz Jacobo Filed
with
Ernest
Dronenburg
Jr.,
J.
County
Clerk/Recorder
of
San
Diego on 12/26/2019 1/09, 1/16, 1/23 & 1/30/2020.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2019-9030662 The name of the business, Global Provisions, located at 6503 Via Dos Valles, Rancho Santa Fe, CA. 92067 This business is registered by: Richard James Valentin 11733 Stoney Peak Dr. #125 San Diego, Ca. 92128 This business is conducted by an individual. First day of business 12/30/19. /s/Richard James Valentin Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 12/30/2019 1/09, 1/16, 1/23 & 1/30/2020. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2020-9000091 The name of the business, Inland Inspection Service, located at 18218-131 Paradise Mt. Rd., Valley Center, CA. 92082 This business is registered by: Patricia Lee Kidd 18218-131 Paradise Mt. Rd. Valley Center, CA. 92082 This business is conducted by an individual. First day of business 6/01/2004. /s/Patricia Lee Kidd Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 01/02/2020 1/09, 1/16, 1/23 & 1/30/2020. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT
#2020-9000517 The name of the business, Coastal Pacific Solutions, located at 727 Santa Paula, Solana Beach, CA. 92075 This business is registered by: Jacques Wixon 727 Santa Paula Solana Beach, CA. 92075 This business is conducted by an individual. First
day
of
business
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2020-9001312 The name of the business, Breezy Remodeling and Bujilder, located at 918 Santa Margarita Dr., Fallbrook, Ca. 92028. This business is registered by: Plutarco Arroyo 918 Santa Margarita Dr. Fallbrook, CA. 92028 This business is conducted by an individual. First day of business n/a. /s/ Ariana Veronica Castro Taboada Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 1/15/2020 1/30, 2/6, 2/13 & 2/20/20
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2020-9000060 The name of the business, Hydroland Development Consulting, located at 728 Palomino Court, San Marcos, CA. 92069. This business is registered by: Ricardo Alzaga 728 Palomino Court San Marcos Ca. 92069 This business is conducted by an individual. First day of business 2/28/14.. /s/Ricardo Alzaga Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 01/02/2020 1/09, 1/16, 1/23 & 1/30/2020.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2019-9030255 The name of the business, Curry & More Indian Bistro, located at 113 S. Las Posas Rd, Ste 111, San Marcos, CA. 92078. This business is registered by: OM SM Kripa, Inc. 113 S. Las Posas Rd., Ste 111 San Marcos, CA. 92078 This business is conducted by a corporation. First day of business n/a. /s/ Sunil Malhotra, President Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 12/23/2019 1/09, 1/16, 1/23 & 1/30/2020. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2019-9030256 The name of the business, Curry & More Indian Bistro, located at 113 S. Las Posas Rd, Ste 111, San Marcos, CA. 92078. This business is registered by: Shree SM Kripa, Inc. 113 S. Las Posas Rd., Ste 111 San Marcos, CA. 92078 This business is conducted by a corporation. First day of business 10/16/16. /s/ Sunil Malhotra, President Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 12/23/2019 1/09, 1/16, 1/23 & 1/30/2020. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2019-9030598 The name of the business, Pamela Renee, located at 436 Paso Del Norte, Escondido, Ca. 92026 This business is registered by: Pamela Renee Miller 436 Paso Del Norte Escondido, CA. 92026 This business is conducted by an individual. First day of business 12/30/19. /s/ Pamela Renee Miller Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 12/30/2019 1/09, 1/16, 1/23 & 1/30/2020.
1/8/20. /s/ Jacques Wixon Filed
with
Dronenburg
Ernest Jr.,
Clerk/Recorder
J.
County of
San
Diego on 01/08/2020 1/16, 1/23, 1/30 & 2/06/20
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT
#2020-9000164 The name of the business, Thomas Kinsey Books, tdk Books,
located
at
718
Sycamore Ave., #26, Vista, Ca. 92083. This business is registered by: Thomas DuWayne Kinsey 718 Sycamore Ave., Sp. 26 Vista, CA. 92083. This business is conducted by an individual.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
• Page 15 • January 30, 2020
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
First day of business 1/1/20. /s/
Thomas
NAME
STATEMENT
#2020-9001453
DuWayne
The name of the business,
Kinsey Filed
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2019-9029484 The name of the business, White Canvas Collaborative, located at 4878 Portsmouth Bay Ct., Oceanside, Ca. 92057. This business is registered by: Maintenance Required LLC 4878 Portsmouth Bay Ct. Oceanside, Ca. 92057 This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Co. First day of business n/a. /s/ Melissa Uehara, Manager Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 12/12/2019 1/09, 1/16, 1/23 & 1/30/2020.
with
Dronenburg
Ernest Jr.,
Clerk/Recorder
J.
County of
San
The Psyche Affair, located at 519 Rush Dr.Apt 88, San Marcos, CA. 92078. This
business
Diego on 1/03/2020
registered by:
1/16, 1/23, 1/30 & 2/06/20
Ariana
Veronica
is Castro
Taboada 519 Rush Dr., Apt. 88 San Marcos, CA. 92078
To place Legal Ads Call The Paper 760.747.7119
This
business
conducted
by
is an
individual. First day of business n/a. /s/
Ariana
Veronica
Castro Taboada Filed
with
Dronenburg
Ernest Jr.,
Clerk/Recorder
J.
County of
San
Diego on 1/17/2020 1/30, 2/6, 2/13 & 2/20/20
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME 37-2020-00001025-CU-PT-NC TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner Everardo Montion Gaytan filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: Present name: Everardo Montion (Middle Name) Gaytan to Proposed name Everardo Montion (last name) Gaytan. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING: Date: 2/25/2020 8:30a.m., Department 23. The address of the court is: 325 S. Melrose, Vista, CA. 92081. A copy of the Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: San Marcos News Reporter, dba, The Paper, 845 W. San Marcos Blvd, San Marcos, Ca. 92078. Dated Jan 8, 2020 /s/Sim von Kalinowski, Judge of the Superior Court 1/30, 2/06, 2/13 & 2/20/20
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME 37-2020-00002028-CU-PT-NC TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner Mauro Javier Vasquez Armas and Esther Gomez Rivera filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: Present name: Neymar Gibran Gomez Rivera to Proposed name Neymar Gibran Vasquez Gomez THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING: Date: 3/3/2020 8:30a.m., Department N-23. The address of the court is: 325 S. Melrose, Vista, CA. 92081. A copy of the Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: San Marcos News Reporter, dba, The Paper, 845 W. San Marcos Blvd, San Marcos, Ca. 92078. Dated: 1/14/2020 /s/Sim von Kalinowski, Judge of the Superior Court 1/30, 2/06, 2/13 & 2/20/20
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME 37-2020-00003328-CU-PT-CTL TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner Jason Stuart Hernandez filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: Present name: Jason Stuart Hernandez to Proposed name Jason Stuart Martin THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING: Date: 3/11/2020 8:30a.m., Department 61. The address of the court is: Superior Court, 330 West Broadway, San Diego, CA. 92101. A copy of the Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: San Marcos News Reporter, dba, The Paper, 845 W. San Marcos Blvd, San Marcos, Ca. 92078. Dated: 1/22/2020 /s/ Lorna Alksne, Judge of the Superior Court 1/30, 2/06, 2/13 & 2/20/20 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2020-9000211 The name of the business, Semper Fi Fund, Amierica’s Fund, located at Santa Margarita Rd., Bldg H-49, Camp Pendleton, CA. 92055. This business is registered by: Injured Marine Semper Fi Fund Santa Margarita Rd., Bld H-49 Camp Pendleton, CA. 92055 This business is conducted by a corporaton. First day business 5/02/2012. /s/ Thomas Benoit, Chief Financial Officer Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 1/03/2020 01/09, 01/16, 1/23 & 01/30/2020
NOTICE OF INTENDED DECISION(Administrative)
The Planning Division Manager of the City of San Marcos has considered the proposed project and does intends to APPROVE the Director’s Permit DP19-0026 on February 10, 2020. Project No.: DP19-0026 Applicant(s): Walensky Jiu Jitsu Request: Director’s Permit Renewal to allow for the operation of a personal service facility (individual and small group Jiu Jitsu training) within a 1,202 square foot suite in an existing industrial building located in the Light Industrial (L-I) Zone within the Business/Industrial District. Environmental Determination: In accordance with the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA), the City of San Marcos did find the project Categorically Exempt (EX19043) pursuant to Section 15301 Class 1 of the California Code of Regulations (CCR), in that this is an existing facility with no expansion. Location of the Property: 810 Los Vallecitos Boulevard, Suite G, San Marcos, CA 92069, more particularly described as: Lot 5 of Tract Map No. 9676, in the City of San Marcos, County of San Diego, State of California, filed in the Office of the County Recorder of San Diego on June 9, 1980, as File No. 80185301. Assessor’s Parcel Number: 219-172-47-00. Further information about this notice can be obtained from Jordan Yanke, Assistant Planner by calling 760-7441050 extension 3204 or via email jyanke@sanmarcos.net. NOTICE: Any interested person may appeal the decision of the Planning Division Manager to the Planning Commission provided the appeal fee is paid ($20 for residents; $1,155 for nonresidents) and a written appeal is submitted to the Planning Division Secretary within ten (10) calendar days of the date of the decision (due no later than 5:30 PM on February 20, 2020). The written appeal should specify the reasons for the appeal and the grounds upon which the appeal is based. The City’s Planning Commission will then consider the filed appeal/s at a later public hearing. The Planning Division can be contacted at 760-744-1050, extension 3233 or ghenderson@sanmarcos.net. The City of San Marcos is committed to making its programs, services and activities accessible to individuals with disabilities. If you require accommodation to participate in any City program, service or activity, please contact the City Clerk’s office at 1 Civic Center Drive, San Marcos, CA. 92069, or call 760-744-1050, extension 3145. Phil Scollick, City Clerk, City of San Marcos. PD: 01/30/2020.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT
#2020-9001215 The name of the business, LRS Auto, located at 9558 Camino
Ruiz
#B,
San
Diego, CA. 92126 This
business
is
registered by: Chad Michael Buchanan 9558 Camino Ruiz #B San Diego, CA. 92126 This
business
conducted
by
is an
individual. First day of business n/a. /s/
Chad
Michael
Buchanan Filed
with
Dronenburg
Ernest Jr.,
Clerk/Recorder
J.
County of
San
Diego on 1/15/2020 1/30, 2/6, 2/13 & 2/20/20
The Paper • Page 16 • January 30, 2020