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Page 1

In This Issue

Kiosk Butterfly Population The Pacific Grove Natural History Museum reports 42 butterflies at the Monarch Sanctuary over the weekend of Oct. 7 Fridays

Pacific Groove Dance Jam Chautauqua Hall 8-10 PM •

Saturdays

Dance at Chautauqua Hall • •

Oct. 14

Parade Starts on Page 13

Pacific Grove’s

Times

Blessing of the Animals Berwick Park 1-3 PM •

Thurs. Oct. 19

Chamber Mixer Learn about Community Power 8:30 to 9:30 a.m. Pacific Grove City Hall •

Fund-Raising - Page 21

Book Launch - Page 18

Oct. 13-19, 2017

Sat. October 21

Your Community NEWSpaper

Vol. X, Issue 3

Butterfly Weekend Makes Memories

Annual Rummage Sale 9:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. 442 Central Ave. & Carmel Pacific Grove •

School children from Pacific Grove schools, along with people who marched as long as 60 years ago, filled the streets of downtown Pacific Grove with colorful costumes...and joy on Saturday, October 7, for the annual Butterfly Parade. Activities downtown, from book signings to auctions, brought memories and made new ones as the weather cooperated. Photos of the parade begin on page 13. This photo by Thomas Stearns

Wed., Oct. 25

Dine out with Friends to benefit the library Il vecchio Rest.

• Sat. Oct. 28

Downtown Trick or Treat 10 AM - 3 M Free •

Sat. Nov. 4

Book Sale In the arcade at the library 10-4 Emphasis on boks veterans might enjoy •

Sat. Nov. 4

Butterfly Ball PG Museum 165 Frest’$199 members $120 nonmembers 6:00 PM http://www.pgmuseum.org/ butterfly-ball/ •

Sat. Nov. 4

Flavors of Pacific Grove 10+ Chefs at Asilomar $50/person advance Sells out! 373-3304 •

Tues. Nov. 14

Parkinson’s Support Group POTLUCK BRING A DISH TO SHARE Dance for Parkinson’s Disease 3:00 pm Sally Griffin Center 700 Jewell Ave

Downtown Parking Changes The Downtown Pacific Grove Business Improvement District reminds downtown businesses that parking enforcement downtown has changed. The Pacific Grove Police Department issued the following statement: “Last month, the City of Pacific Grove implemented the License Plate Recognition (LPR) System. “The LPR system will alert parking enforcement officers of overtime parking violations, unpermitted vehicles, vehicles with expired registration, and vehicles with five or more unpaid parking citations. This will allow staff to become much more efficient in completing their routes and prevent injury caused by manual chalking. “The LPR is being installed on the City’s all-electric GO-4

Parking Scooter. It will have exterior cameras, which will make it look different. “Once fully implemented, the parking enforcement officers will rely mainly on the LPR. This includes the Downtown Area, Central Avenue, and the other timed areas. It will also assist in enforcing 48 hour and 72 hour parking violations, as well as the City’s parking permit programs. The LPR system went live on September 10, 2017. If you have any questions, contact ASM Jocelyn Francis at (831) 648-3143. “While this system will take some adjustments from our members who park their vehicles downtown for extended periods of time, we have been assured that PGPD will work with our District on this transition.”

Public Water Now launches Petition Drive By Marge Ann Jameson

Inside

Other Random Thoughts................... 16 Breaker of the Week......................... 13 Cartoon.............................................. 2 Financial.......................................... 23 FYI.................................................... 27 Healthy Living.................................... 8 Homeless in Paradise........................ 26 Keepers of our Culture...................... 18 Legal Notices.................................... 27 Otter Views....................................... 20 Painter’s Painting............................... 17 Postcard from the Kitchen................. 12 Rain Gauge........................................ 2 Reasoning with God ........................ 11 Real Estate................................ 3, 5, 28 Sports........................................... 9, 17

Public Water Now, a local nonprofit, officially launched a new campaign on October 7 for another attempt to take over California American Water. The group has been meeting in preparation for the 2018 ballot ever since a failed attempt in 2014, when a similar attempt lost by a mere 10 percent. Cal Am spent millions of dollars in opposition to the 2014 measure. The petition calls for Monterey Peninsula Water Management District to set a policy of owning the water system which serves district constituents, and to acquire if “economically feasible” Cal Am’s local system assets through negotiation or eminent domain. It calls for the water district to provide a written plan to implement the new policy within nine months of its passage. The plan would provide for the acquisition, ownership and management of a water facilities locally. Since 2014, Cal Am customers have seen their rates increase by amounts in the area of 68 percent, despite conservation measures and the declared end of the recent drought. More increases are scheduled as Cal Am seeks to recoup income lost during the drought and as a result of conservation on the part of customers. The petition needs 6,200 people to get on the ballot. Public Water Now will spend the next six months gathering signatures, with a goal of 8,000 by April, 2018. Proponents of a potential measure which would provide impetus for the Monterey Peninsula Water Management District to take over water purveyor Cal Am enjoyed music, food, and community at the launch of the petition on Sat., Oct. 7, 2017.


Page 2 • CEDAR STREET

Times

• October 13, 2017

Joan Skillman

Skillshots

Honeymoon Welcome from Pacific Grove

Last Sunday morning my husband noticed a car decorated with wedding wishes in front of the Gosby Inn. It was obvious that this couple was on their honeymoon. And what a welcome they received from our parking enforcer - a $38 parking ticket. Not much of a greeting from the Last Hometown. So as not to let the police department ruin their honeymoon we left them a wedding present. An envelope with $38 in it. Lin and Dave Blaskovich

MST Line 22 Big Sur Resumes full operation of route

With the opening of Big Sur’s new Pfeiffer Canyon Bridge on Friday, October 13, Monterey-Salinas Transit (MST) will resume operating the full route on Line 22 Big Sur. Service will resume Saturdays and Sundays with two trips in each direction. Once again you can enjoy all that beautiful Big Sur has to offer without the hassle of driving and finding parking. As recovery efforts come to an end, MST will discontinue selling its deeply-discounted $13 per month bus pass to residents and local workers of Big Sur on Thursday, October 12. The deeply-discounted pass had been made available to help alleviate congestion resulting from the construction of the Pfeiffer Canyon Bridge. For more information, visit www.mst.org or call Monterey-Salinas Transit toll free at 1-888-MST-BUS1. For RealTime bus arrival information, text “Next” and your 4-digit bus stop ID (ex. “Next 1234”) to 25370, call 1-888-MST-BUS1 with your 4-digit bus stop ID, download the free Transit App, or use Google Maps

2017 Butterfly Ball set for Saturday, Nov. 4

Join us for the 2017 Butterfly Ball at the Pacific Grove Museum of Natural History. Doors open at 6 p.m. for this elegant evening of fine dining, a silent drawing, and dancing. We hope you will join us as we work to elevate the Museum experience! The event is set for Saturday, November 4, 6-10 p.m. at the Pacific Grove Museum of Natural History , 165 Forest Avenue. Cost is $100 for members, $120 for Nonmembers Silent drawing winners will be chosen during the event. LINK: http://www.pgmuseum.org/butterfly-ball/

Pacific Grove’s Rain Gauge Data reported at Canterbury Woods

Times

Cedar Street Times was established September 1, 2008 and was adjudicated a legal newspaper for Pacific Grove, Monterey County, California on July 16, 2010. It is published weekly at 306 Grand Ave., Pacific Grove, CA 93950. Press deadline is Wednesday, noon. The paper is distributed on Friday and is available at various locations throughout the county as well as by e-mail subscription. Editor/Publisher: Marge Ann Jameson Regular Contributors: Jan Austin • Gary Baley • Mei Bailey, Mike Clancy • Bill Cohen 0• Scott Dick • Ron Gaasch • Patricia Hamilton • Luke Herzog • Neil Jameson • Kyle Krasa • Joyce Kreig • Dixie Layne Peter Mounteer • Alec Murdock • Michelle Netzlaff • Wanda Sue Parrott • Jean Prock • Jane Roland • Patrick Ryan • Katie Shain Peter Silzer •Joan Skillman • Tom Stevens Distribution: Amado Gonzales Advertising and Motorsports Features: Webster Slate Cedar Street Irregulars Alex, Bella, Ben, Benjamin, Chianti, Coleman, Corbin, Dezi, Griffin, Holden, Jay, Jeremiah, Jesse, Judy, Megan M, Nate, Reid, Theo, Tom, Spencer

831.324.4742 Voice 831.324.4745 Fax editor@cedarstreettimes.com

Week ending 10-05-17- at 10:45 AM...... .00" Total for the season................................. .11" The historic average to this date is ........N/A" Wettest year.................................................. 47.15" During rain year 07-01-97 through 06-30-98 Driest year.................................................... 15.54" During rain year 07-01-12 through 06-30-13 RAINFALL SEASON BEGINS JULY 1 EACH YEAR

Near Lovers Point Data reported by John Munch at 18th St.

Week ending morning 09/07/17........... .01" Near Lovers Point Total for the 7/1/17). ......... .35" Dataseason reported by(since John Munch at 18th St. Last week low12/07/16.......................... temperature..................48.2 Week ending .19"F Last week high temperature.................76.0 Total for the season (since 7/1/16)........ 5.42"F Last year rain to date (07/01/16-09/06/16)..... .27F ” Last week low temperature..................41.5 Last week high temperature.................63.5 F


October 13, 2017 • CEDAR STREET

‘Flavors of Pacific Grove, a Celebration of Great Chefs’

Times • Page 3

On Saturday, November 4, the Pacific Grove Chamber of Commerce will showcase A Celebration of Great Chefs, from 5:30 pm to 8:30 pm at Asilomar Conference Grounds located at 800 Asilomar Boulevard. More than 10 Chefs have signed up to serve hors d’oeuvres and tastings to the guests. The flavor of some of their best dishes will be paired with wonderful wines. The tasting will include a full show by WildCard band. A partial list of Chefs who will be featured is: Greg Lepesh - Asilomar Conference Grounds, Ted and Cindy Walter - Passionfish, Pierre and Marietta Bain - Fandango, Todd and Jordan Champagne - Happy Girl Kitchen, Gina Juntaradarapun

- Pacific Thai Cuisine, Robert Kershner and Tim Hrusa - Canterbury Woods, Mark and Julie Davis - Vivolo’s Chowder House, David Stamm - The Bridge Culinary Training Center, Thamin Saleh - jeninni kitchen + wine bar, AJ Kishk - Pizza My Way, Matthew Farmer - The Beach House Restaurant, Dean Young - Classic Catering, Hyson Epstein - Hyson Personal Chef & Catering, Jefferson Seay - The Fishwife Restaurant, Al Siekert - Al & Friends Sunday Breakfast. There will also be a silent and live auction. The event is $50 per person in advance. Limited to 300 tickets and this event sells out. For more information and to buy tickets (831) 3733304 or www.pacificgrove.org.

Help Locals in Need at Annual Rummage Sale at Pacific Grove Church

the Year Award PG Restaurant of 10 20 e th of r ne Win

If too many national tragedies steal our hope, helping locals in need just might bring it back. The Annual Rummage Sale fundraises each year to contribute to local domestic violence shelters, pack brown-bag lunches for the hungry, and serve dinners to local homeless men, just to name a few. Your purchases of clean, gently-used treasures, handmade arts & crafts, concessions & baked goods all contribute to locals in need. The Annual Rummage Sale this year is on Saturday, October 21 from 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Your potential great deal could include furniture, small appliances & gadgets, kitchen items, glassware, linens, tools, seasonal decorations, toys, games, books, records, tapes, videos, office supplies, picture frames and so much more, including vintage fashions from the Chalice Closet Thrift Store located downstairs. Annual Rummage Sale Saturday, October 21, 2017 9:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m.

WE BAKE OR YOU BAKE

Try the Peninsula’s Best Gluten-Free Crust Must present current coupon to get discount. Not combinable with other offers.

EXPIRES 11/8/17

WE DELIVER! (831) 643-1111 1157 Forest Ave., #D (across from Trader Joe’s) Mon-Thu 4-9:30PM • Fri-Sat 11-10PM • Sun 12-9:30PM

www.PIZZA-MYWAY.com

442 Central Ave. & Carmel Ave., Pacific Grove Our members volunteer to help those less fortunate. We open our doors welcoming everyone—regardless of gender, ethnicity, sexual orientation, social position or disability—to our diverse congregation who seem like family. For more details, please visit www. PacificGroveChurch.org.

We are an adjudicated newspaper. Call us at 831-324-4742 for legal publication needs.

Culinary Cupboard Fri & Sat, October 13-14 10 am - 5:30 pm Join us for our Culinary Cupboard Event featuring a wide collection of kitchen items and dishes for your cooking, dining, and entertaining pleasure. There will be something for everyone!

Care Management & Fiduciary Services Jacquie DePetris, LCSW, CCM, LPF Vicki Lyftogt, CLPF

• Licensed Professional Fiduciary • Certified Care Manager • Conservatorships • Special Needs Trusts • Health Care Agent • Professional Organizing

www.ElderFocus.com

2100 Garden Road, Suite C • Monterey jkd@ElderFocus.com • Vicki@ElderFocus.com

Ph: 831-643-2457 • Fax: 831-643-2094

Single Story Chic Just Listed | 4 Bed, 2 Bath | 2,336 Sq. Ft. | $1,095,000

Open House

Saturday 1-3pm 2121 San Vito Circle Monterey

Pacific Grove Discovery Shop 198 Country Club Gate 831 372-0866

Relationship Driven. Locally Connected. Trusted Advisor.

Mark Peterson cancer.org/discovery Cancer Information: cancer.org | 1.800.227.2345

connect with us on:

2016 Rising Star - California Association of Realtors 831.238.1380 CalBRE #01977162 Mark@MontereyCoastRealty.com PetersonCoastalProperties.com


Page 4 • CEDAR STREET

Times

• October 13, 2017

The Carmel Foundation Presents “Medicare Update 2018”

The Carmel Foundation hosts weekly Wednesday Programs- a lecture, entertainment, or educational presentation such as a Cooking Demo with Myra Goodman, Monterey’s La Merienda Celebration or a monthly Wellness Series with VNA & Hospice. Join Tamara McKee from Alliance on Aging as she informs you about the costs and changes to Medicare in 2018. The Medicare Open Enrollment Period begins October 15th. Don’t be caught off guard! Learn more about options to re-evaluate your coverages. Details: · Wednesday, October 25, 2017, 2:30pm-4:00pm · The Carmel Foundation’s Diment Hall - SE Corner 8th & Lincoln, Carmel · This presentation is free and open to the public · Space is limited to 100 · For more information, please contact Leticia Bejarano, Director of Support Services at 831.620.8705 or lbejarano@carmelfoundation.org. About The Carmel Foundation The Carmel Foundation is an organization that serves members 55 and better in the Monterey County area and beyond. The Foundation is located in Carmel on the southeast Corner of 8th and Lincoln. The Carmel Foundation gives seniors an opportunity to live productive, enriching lives by offering a luncheon program, homebound meal delivery, free medical equipment loans, in-home services and respite grants, free lending library, Saturday movie, Technology Center, low-income housing, and more than 50 classes and activities each week. For more information, contact Kimberly Willison, Director of Development at kwillison@carmelfoundation.org, www.carmelfoundation.org, or 831.620.8701.

Food Scrap Collection now Made at Farmers Market

The City of Pacific Grove and Everyone’s Harvest Farmer’s Market are pleased to announce that food scraps will be collected at the market for composting beginning September 25. Residents are invited to bring their fruit and vegetable peelings, coffee grounds and kitchen scraps to drop off in the food scrap collection cart where vendors and visitors at the market may also place their food scraps, trimmings, peelings, and culls.

This is the next step in trying to make our Farmer’s Market and events in Pacific Grove zero waste, said Milas Smith, Environmental Programs Manager for the City of Pacific Grove. “Residents stop by to pick up their fresh produce at the market. We would like to provide vendors, residents, and visitors the opportunity of recycling their leftover food scraps and enjoy one of the many benefits of recycling by turning organics into energy!” GreenWaste Recovery will transport the collected material to the Monterey Regional Waste Management District where it will be digested in the Organics to Energy program to produce renewable energy and compost. For more information visit: organicstoenergy.org. The Monterey Regional Waste Management District will distribute free kitchen collector food scrap pails to the first 50 attendees that stop by their table on September 25 and October 2. Market attendees can then bring their food scraps in a reusable container which can be emptied and used again. In addition to food scraps, food service items such as to-go containers and cutlery that are certified compostable will also be accepted. The Pacific Grove Certified Farmers Market runs from 3 – 7 p.m. each Monday at the corner of Central and Grand Avenues. For more information contact: Milas Smith 831-648-3188 office msmith@ cityofpacificgrove.org

100+ Women Who Care on the Central Coast

Come see what 100+ Women Who Care is all about and be the change that you can see. The donations are tax deductible. Our next meet will take place on Thursday, November 2, 2017 at 5:30 pm with happy hour, 6:30 pm meeting at Monterey Peninsula Yacht Club, Wharf # 2, Monterey, CA. 93940. 831-235-3649. www.100womensalinasmonterey.com.

TWOExperienced GIRLS FROM CARMEL • Professional

Same Cleaner For A Personal Touch Bonded • 30 Year Track Record

HOUSECLEANING SPECIALISTS Let Us Do The Work For You

(831) 626-4426


October 13, 2017 • CEDAR STREET

The 1031 Exchange, Part II Patrick Ryan

Local Real Estate Update Today we will finish our examination of 1031 tax exchange of investment property. Please reference last week’s article for the part one and please remember to consult your tax professional before doing your own 1031 exchange. To continue where we left off, a seller/tax payer has 180 days after the close of the old property to complete the purchase of the new property or properties. The property or properties purchased must be one or ones that were identified within the 45-day period. Also, the 180 and 45-day periods run concurrently, so after the 45 days the seller has 135 days to close on new property. The key to remember is that the clock starts ticking once the old property closes. The seller can identify properties before the old property closes and then will still have 180 days once the old property closes. For reference purposes, here are the requirements to consider when entering into a 1031 exchange. We covered the first three in last week’s article. Like Kind Property A Qualified Intermediary Must Be Involved 45 Day Identification Period 180 Purchase Period Equal or Greater Value Tax Payer and Title Must Be the Same Tax Payer Must Not Receive Gain The new property/properties must be of equal or greater value than the old investment property that was sold. All of the cash received from the sale of the old investment property must be invested in the new investment property in order to avoid any taxes. Closing expenses may be subtracted from the sale of the old property. An example is if the property sells for $700,000 and after expenses the seller walks away with $600,000 cash then the new investment property must be $600,000 or greater. When purchasing new investment property, closing expenses and capital improvements done to the property within 180 days can be added to the cost of the property. You also need to replace any debt(mortgage) on the property with an equal amount debt or added cash to the purchase. Whoever was listed on the title of the old investment property, must be the same listed on the new investment property. If the old property lists a married couple on the title then the new property must be the same. If the old property lists a corporation on the title then the new title must list the same corporation on the title. This rule is very straightforward and simple to follow. If one desires to change the ownership structure that is listed on the title after the purchase there are ways to accomplish this objective. Lastly, in order to avoid paying any tax the owner of the investment property must not receive any gain from the sale of the old investment property. All proceeds must be rolled over into new property. Any gain, cash, that is not put into the new property will be taxed. A 1031 tax exchange can be a very effective tool for owners of investment property to avoid paying taxes. The rules are very specific and straightforward. As long as the purchaser follows the rules set forth by the IRS, a 1031 exchange can be a very simple process. I hope this was helpful and as always, please feel free to contact me with any questions. Patrick.ryan@sothebyshomes.com 831-238-8116

Travelogue: Mongolia at Carmel Foundation

The Carmel Foundation hosts weekly Wednesday Programs -- a lecture, entertainment, or educational presentation such as a Cooking Demo with Myra Goodman, Monterey’s La Merienda Celebration or a monthly Wellness Series with VNA & Hospice. Dan Presser recently completed a Magnificent Mongolia Adventure. He traveled to Ulaan Baatar, Mongolia’s capital and from there south to the Gobi Desert to the exact spot where the early American explorer Roy Chapman Andrews discovered fossilized dinosaur bones and dinosaur eggs. Come and discover the mystical land of Mongolia with Dan Presser, owner of FourWinds Travel. Wednesday, October 11, 2017 2:30pm-4:00pm The Carmel Foundation’s Diment Hall - SE Corner 8th & Lincoln, Carmel This presentation is free and open to the public. Space is limited to 100

Letters to the Editor Cedar Street Times welcomes your letters on subjects of interest to the citizens of Pacific Grove as well as our readers elsewhere. We prefer that letters be on local topics. At present we have not set limits on length though we do reserve the right to edit letters for space constraints, so please be concise. We will contact you to verify authenticity so your email address and/or telephone number must be included as well as your name and city of residence. We will not publish unsigned letters or letters which defame, slander or libel. Cedar Street Times is an adjudicated newspaper published weekly at 306 Grand Ave., Pacific Grove, CA 93950. Press deadline is Wednesday, noon. Marge Ann Jameson, Editor/Publisher Phone 831-324-4742 • Fax 831-324-4745 editor@cedarstreettimes.com

Times • Page 5

Gov Brown signs new California affordable housing laws Scott Dick Monterey County Assoc. of Realtors

Market Matters Source: Sacramento Bee Gov. Jerry Brown on Friday signed a robust package of housing legislation aimed at addressing California’s unprecedented affordability crisis. “These new laws will help cut red tape and encourage more affordable housing, including shelter for the growing number of homeless in California,” Brown said in a statement. SB 2, Sen. Toni Atkins, D-San Diego: Imposes a new $75 to $225 fee on real estate transactions. Estimated to generate $250 to $300 million per year to fund affordable housing development, programs to assist homeless people and longrange development planning in cities and counties. For 2018, revenue would be split equally between the state and local government. The state share is specifically aimed at combating homelessness. It’s available for rental assistance, homeless navigation centers and development of housing for homeless people. SB 3, Sen. Jim Beall, D-San Jose: Will put a $4 billion housing bond before voters in November 2018. If approved, $1 billion would go to the CalVet home loan program, established in 1921 to help military veterans purchase homes. The remaining $3 billion would help fund low-income housing projects and development near jobs and public transportation. SB 35, Sen. Scott Wiener, D-San Francisco: Lets developers bypass the lengthy and often expensive review process for new housing development, which includes extensive environmental analysis and public hearings. If a community has not built enough housing – state law outlines the housing needs, at all income levels, for each city and county in California – developers can bring forth a project without undergoing the process. It mandates higher construction worker pay and benefits on projects with 10 units or more. SB 166, Sen. Nancy Skinner, D-Berkeley: Requires local government to have development sites identified, at all times, for all unmet housing needs, from very low-income to market-rate. It also seeks to strengthen state housing law that in most cases prevents cities and counties from reducing zoning densities to ensure there is “no net loss” of building capacity. SB 167, Skinner, and Assembly Bill 678, Assemblyman Raul Bocanegra, D-Los Angeles: Strengthens the state’s Housing Accountability Act, which seeks to prevent communities from killing proposed housing projects or homeless shelters. The law aims to make it more difficult for cities and counties to vote down proposals and requires courts to impose fines on them if they do not comply with what is commonly called the “anti-NIMBY law.”

SPCA Advises Caution When Driving to Avoid Deer During Mating Season The SPCA for Monterey County advises drivers to use extreme caution when driving to avoid hitting deer on area roadways this time of year. Fall is deer mating season on the central coast and deer are significantly more likely to be on the move near and across roadways. Specifically The SPCA advises: Be particularly careful at dawn and dusk when driving, especially where visibility is limited. Use of high beams when appropriate can provide a greater area of visibility. Slow down and use extreme caution when approaching a deer standing near the side of a road. Be prepared for the deer to enter the roadway in front of the vehicle. If necessary, honk your horn and flash your lights to try to scare the deer off of the roadway. Be alert for more deer than you may see at that moment. Where there’s one deer, there are always more nearby. Use extra caution in areas where deer crossing signs are posted. These are areas where deer are known to cross roadways. Be particularly cautious in wooded and agricultural areas. Call The SPCA immediately if you see any injured or orphaned wildlife. Locally, areas of greatest deer activity at night are Pebble Beach, Carmel Valley Road, the Highway 68 corridor,

Holman Highway, River Road, and Highway 1 from Seaside to south of Carmel. Since September first, the SPCA Wildlife Rescue Center has responded to 56 reports of injured deer. These include multiple fatalities and two that rescuers were able to release from entrapment in fences. This week, the SPCA Wildlife Center has been receiving at least two calls a day about injured deer. Currently, there are six known injured, yet ambulatory, deer in Monterey that are too mobile to safely capture. SPCA Wildlife rescuers are monitoring the situations and welcome all calls about the location of these deer. The deer may recover on their own, but the SPCA relies on our community reporting injured deer to help assess their situation. Unfortunately, attempting to capture or tranquilize these deer (after which a mobile deer can travel for miles) often causes more serious injuries to the deer and the community. In 2016 The SPCA responded to 104 reports, with almost all the deer involved either dead on arrival or needing to be humanely euthanized immediately. The average insurance claim for deer/vehicle collisions in the United States is $3,995 per incident.


Page 6 • CEDAR STREET

Times

• October 13, 2017

Programs at the Library

Center for Spiritual Awakening 522 Central Ave. • 831-372-1942

Central Presbyterian Church of Pacific Grove 325 Central Ave. • 831-375-7207

Chabad of Monterey

620 Lighthouse Ave., Entrance on 18th • 831-643-2770

All programs at the Pacific Grove Library For more information call 648-5760. • Tuesday, Oct. 10 • 11:00 am Stories for PreSchool (ages 2-5) • Wednesday, Oct. 11 • 11:00 am Music with MaryLee for all ages • Wednesday, Oct. 11 • 3:45 pm Wacky Wednesday: stories, science and crafts for ages 5 and up • Thursday, Oct. 12 • 11:00 am Baby Rhyme Time for babies birth - 24 months

Christian Church Disciples of Christ of Pacific Grove 442 Central Ave. • 831-372-0363

Church of Christ

176 Central Ave. • 831-375-3741

Community Baptist Church

Monterey & Pine Avenues • 831-375-4311

Chautauqua Hall Dance Club Saturdays

First Baptist Church of Pacific Grove

As of June 2017, the entry fee is a low-cost $5 for the first Sat. of the month for members and non-members alike! Annual membership fee is $10. Try us out!

First Church of God

Fee includes 55 min. dance lesson, DJ’d music for three hours and buffet of healthful snacks.

246 Laurel Ave. • 831-373-0741

1023 David Ave. • 831-372-5005

First United Methodist Church of Pacific Grove Worship: Sundays 10:00 a.m. 915 Sunset @ 17-Mile Dr. • 831-372-5875

Forest Hill United Methodist Church Services 9 a.m. Sundays 551 Gibson Ave. • 831-372-7956

Jehovah’s Witnesses of Pacific Grove 1100 Sunset Drive • 831-375-2138

Lighthouse Fellowship of Pacific Grove

PG Community Center, 515 Junipero Ave. • 831-333-0636

Manjushri Dharma Center

724 Forest Ave. • 831-901-3156 manjushridharmacenter.org • carmelkhenpo@gmail.com

Mayflower Presbyterian Church 141 14th St. • 831-373-4705

Peninsula Baptist Church

1116 Funston Ave. • 831-394-5712

Sat., Oct. 14, 2017 Dance lesson by Metin - Dance TBD DJ for the night is:Metin 6-10PM Sat., Aug. 26, 2017 Dance lesson by Rosa: Cumbia at 6 PM DJ for the night is: Heather 6-10PM Contact: Sera Hirasuna, 831-262-0653 For more information, go to: pgdance.org/index.html or Facebook at: https://www.facebook.com/groups/PGDANCE/ Sera Hirasuna, 831-262-0653 For more information, go to: pgdance.org/index.html or Facebook at: https://www. facebook.com/groups/PGDANCE/ Background: Chautauqua Hall Dance Club, a non-profit founded in 1926, is dedicated to making dance accessible to everyone. We offer dance classes in over 20 kinds of ballroom, nightclub and specialty dances so that everyone can share in the joy in partnered social dance. Additional info: No partner needed. Everyone welcome. Kids 13 and under free with an adult.

Peninsula Christian Center 520 Pine Ave. • 831-373-0431

St. Angela Merici Catholic Church 146 8 St. • 831-655-4160 th

St. Anselm’s Anglican Church

Sundays 9:30 a.m. 375 Lighthouse Ave. • 831-920-1620 Fr. Michael Bowhay

St. Mary’s-by-the-Sea Episcopal Church

Kindness and Compassion

“Compassion is not a relationship between the healer and the wounded. It’s a relationship between equals. Only when we know our own darkness well can we be present with the darkness of others. Compassion becomes real when we recognize our shared humanity .” Pema Chodron Offered by Meika Hamisch www.montereycenterformindfulnessandcompassion.com

Central Avenue & 12 th St. • 831-373-4441

Seventh-Day Adventist Church of the Monterey Peninsula 375 Lighthouse Ave. • 831-372-7818

Shoreline Community Church

Sunday Service 10 a.m. Robert Down Elementary, 485 Pine Ave. • 831-655-0100 www.shorelinechurch.org

OUTSIDE PACIFIC GROVE Bethlehem Lutheran Church

800 Cass St., Monterey • 831-373-1523 Pastor Bart Rall

Congregation Beth Israel

5716 Carmel Valley Rd., Carmel • 831-624-2015

Monterey Center for Spiritual Living

Sunday Service 10:30 am 400 West Franklin St., Monterey • 831-372-7326 www.montereycsl.org Unitarian Universalist Church of the Monterey Peninsula 490 Aguajito Rd., Carmel • 831-624-7404 Sunday Service 9:30 a.m. and 1:15 a.m.

Gentrain Society Lectures

The Gentrain Society of Monterey Peninsula College is sponsoring these free public lectures in June, 2017. For lengthier descriptions and illustrations for these talks please see the Gentrain website. Wednesday, October 18, 2017 Gentrain Society Lecture: Quantifying How Farming Practices Impact the Nitrogen Cycle Monterey Peninsula College Lecture Forum 103 1:30 pm - 2:30 pm Free; MPC Parking $3.00 Information: www.gentrain.org ; info@gentrain.org ; 372-0895 Monterey County supports a greater than $4 billion agriculture industry. There are economic, yield and environmental sustainability challenges associated with the nutrient intensive production of specialty crops. With the implementation of the 2012 Irrigated Lands Regulatory Program and the 2014 Sustainable Groundwater Management Act California growers face increased pressures to optimize on-farm practices to comply with water restrictions and increased water quality standards. Dr. Arlene Haffa, Associate Professor in the School of Natural Sciences at CSU Monterey Bay, will discuss this in context of the nitrogen cycle as it relates to agriculture. Dr. Haffa’s research collaborators include the NASA-CSUMB Cooperative that is using satellite data to monitor irrigation and fertilization, the UC Cooperative Extension who have developed tools to help with best management practices, staff and students at CSUMB, and local commercial growers who generously share their fields.


October 13, 2017 • CEDAR STREET

Times • Page 7

Marge Ann Jameson New Community TV show in the works at AMP the non-profits that help our communi"Art of Travel “

This new TV show is looking for a guest to appear, travelers, musicians writers and artista are welcome, We are picking our hosts for this brand new show being developed on Cannery Row above Sly Mc Flys. This showcase studio is provided by the founder of the Monterey County Producers Club, James Le Sage. "All members and producers are welcome to use this studio to create new shows that provide awareness spots for our community, such as up coming events, where to find public offices and

ty.” (" we will be right back after these important community messages") .

"Tourist Talk, Outa-Space, Rolling Along, are a few of our current production that are airing now on Comcast Ch 24, these shows will continue and new segments will be produced using the Cannery Row Studio and the Wave Street Studio as well. Join our club, just leave your info on our message phone 831-2515768. Visit lesageproductions.com to find the Monterey County Producers Club page.

Cop Log

Predator kills deer Officer dispatched to a dead deer on Avalon Place. On arrival, officer observed a partially consumed deer that had been attacked by a predator. The scene was photographed and Public Works was dispatched for clean up. Slippery Rock Beach Female fell on rocks while tidepooling and injured left wrist. Transported to Community Hospital by AMR. Officer responded to a location on Lighthouse Ave, for the report of a male that had fallen on public property. Officer arrived on scene and was advised by a witness that she saw the male appear to lose his balance and fall into the street. The witness said she tried to assist the male to his feet, but he could not stand up. The male told me that he lost his balance. The male had an abrasion to the right side of his forehead and his right forearm. Left the male in the care of paramedics. Yeah, anyone want to step forward and claim this? On Sloat Ave. a baggy of .8 grams of marijuana found in gutter. Placed into evidence as found property. Bark Bark Bark report A barking dog was reported on Austin Ave. Operator panicked Officers were dispatched to a panic alarm activation at a residence on Junipero Ave. Officers arrived on scene and contacted the residents of the house on a welfare check. Both residents were fine. Alarm appeared to be a result of operator error. Random smashing? Ocean View Blvd. rear windshield smashed on a parked rental vehicle. Nothing taken from inside of vehicle.

Celebrating Leatherback Turtles – California’s State Marine Reptile, NOAA’s Species in the Spotlight

In recognition of California Leatherback Day, NOAA’s Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary (MBNMS), NOAA Fisheries, Moss Landing Marine Laboratories (MLML) and The Ocean Foundation invite the public to a celebration of the endangered Leatherback turtles at the Sanctuary Exploration Center in Santa Cruz. The public will have the opportunity to see a full-size cast of a Leatherback turtle, talk with Leatherback turtle scientists, see the premier of a new Leatherback film by Dutton Media Productions, and dress up in a Leatherback turtle costume! The event will be followed by MBNMS 25th anniversary presentation entitled, “The Pacific Leatherback Turtle: An Ocean Ambassador with an Uncertain Future” by Scott Benson of NOAA’s National Marine Fisheries Service. The passage of the California Marine Reptile Bill in 2012 designated Pacific Leatherback Conservation Day on October 15 and prioritized conservation for this critically endangered sea turtle species. The public is invited to build a better understanding of the ‘California State Marine Reptile’ and one of NOAA’s Species in the Spotlight. This is a free, all-day family friendly event, which will be held on Saturday, October 14 at 10:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. The MBNMS 25th anniversary Leatherback presentation will be held from 6:00 p.m. – 7:30 p.m., both at the Sanctuary Exploration Center, 35 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz The general public is invited.

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Page 8 • CEDAR STREET

Times

• October 13, 2017

Living Gluten-Free Is Not A Prison Sentence DD Hawley-Shook

Living Heathy

Gluten free was not a common term 20 years ago. The number of people who follow a gluten free diet has surged over the past decade to include not only those with celiac disease but also gluten sensitivity. If one suffers with symptoms that can be relieved by a gluten free diet, to be or not to be gluten free is not really a matter of question. Even though celiac and gluten sensitivity symptoms can be debilitating it can still be a daunting prospect to adopt a gluten free diet. Imagine no more birthday cake, croissants, turkey stuffing, beer or pretzels, the list goes on and on. It can sound like the hollow slam of a steel prison door. Wave goodbye to apple pie. Fortunately, unlike 20 years ago there are options available in increasing numbers, and as in so many things, imagination and attitude play a major role in how a gluten free diet is approached. The enjoyment of food is such an important part of life that it is worth the effort to dream up ways of being gluten free that are fun. We live in a time and place where there are more food options than there ever have been before in the history of man. It isn’t hard to come up with wonderful options. So you can’t have the apple pie, make apple crisp with a gluten free streusel topping and garnish with whipped cream. Is that so bad? The trick is to choose recipes that lend themselves to gluten free ingredients and not force gluten free where it does not work. Since sharing food is a cornerstone of human culture the subject of ‘gluten free’ a0ffects more than just those on the diet. It is such a touching gesture to have friends choose a restaurant that accommodates gluten free diets, or be invited to a dinner party that incorporates gluten free recipes into the menu. Most people will understand that a gluten free diet is not a casual decision. Yet there are a few stragglers who don’t quite get it, and roll their eyes, labeling gluten free as a new diet fad. Not so. A little bit of wheat in soy sauce can land a person with severe celiac disease in bed for two days. There are volumes of information about gluten free diets, celiac disease and gluten sensitivity symptoms on the internet. There are magazines and cookbooks with recipes and unprecedented variety of options so cheer up; life can be a bowl of cherries.

THANKSGIVING CORNBREAD STUFFING Cornbread Preheat oven to 350 Butter a 9x12 or a 9x9 pan / the 9x12 will bake a little less time Combine and sift 1 cup all purpose gluten free flour 1 cup corn flour 4 tsp baking powder ½ tsp salt 2 Tbs sugar In a separate bowl thoroughly mix 3 eggs 1 cup milk (or milk substitute) ½ stick melted butter or ¼ cup oil Combine dry ingredients with egg/milk mixture Stir just until dry ingredients are moistened no more Bake for approximately 25 minutes test for doneness with toothpick Finely chop 2 stalks celery, 1 carrot, 1 onion , 4-5 cloves garlic and saute in 2 Tbs butter until softened let cool Mix well 4 eggs and 3 cups milk & salt and pepper to taste Add to this: ¼ cup chopped parsley, 1 tsp thyme, 1 tsp rosemary, 1 tsp sage Salt and pepper to taste Crumble the finished cornbread into the milk and egg mixture, add sauted vegetables and mix it together. Pour into buttered baking dish (or stuff a turkey) with the mixture. Bake at 350 for 35 - 40 minutes or until inserted toothpick comes out clean. Serve with cranberry relish


October 13, 2017 • CEDAR STREET

Times • Page 9

The Pirelli World Challenge is Here Pirelli World Challenge Grand Prix of Monterey Provisional Schedule October 13-15, 2017

Thursday, October 12, 2017- Promoter Test Day

8:20 am - 9:00 am 9:10 am - 9:50 am 10:00 am - 10:40 am 10:50 am - 11:20 am 11:30 am - 12:00 pm 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm 1:00 pm - 1:30 pm 1:40 pm - 2:10 pm 2:20 pm - 4:00 pm 4:15 pm - 4:45 pm 4:55 pm - 5:25 pm

Test Session - Pirelli GT3 Trophy Cup USA Test Session - Battery Tender Global MX-5 Cup Test Session - Pirelli World Challenge TC, TCA. TCB Test Session - Pirelli GT3 Trophy Cup USA Test Session - Battery Tender Global MX-5 Cup Lunch; VIP, Media Hot Laps Test Session - Pirelli World Challenge TC, TCA. TCB Test Session - Pirelli GT3 Trophy Cup USA Test Session - California 8hr Series Test Session - Battery Tender Global MX-5 Cup Test Session - Pirelli World Challenge TC, TCA. TCB

Friday, October 13, 2017

8:00 am - 8:25 am 8:35 am - 9:00 am 9:00 am - 9:25 am 9:35 am - 10:00 am 10:10 am - 10:40 am 11:00 am - 12:30 pm 12:30 pm - 1:15 pm 1:15 pm - 1:45 pm 1:55 pm - 2:15 pm 2:15 pm - 2:35 pm 2:40 pm - 2:55 pm 2:55 pm - 3:10 pm 3:20 pm - 4:20 pm 4:30 pm - 4:50 pm 5:10 pm - 5:55 pm

Practice 1 - Pirelli GT3 Trophy Cup USA Practice 1 - Pirelli World Challenge TCA / TCB Practice 1 - Pirelli World Challenge TC Practice 1 - Battery Tender Global MX-5 Cup Practice 2 - Pirelli GT3 Trophy Cup USA Free Practice - Mazda Raceway California 8hr Series Lunch, VIP Hot Laps Qualifying - Pirelli GT3 Trophy Cup USA Practice 2 - Pirelli World Challenge TCA / TCB Practice 2 - Pirelli World Challenge TC Qualifying - Pirelli World Challenge TCA / TCB Qualifying - Pirelli World Challenge TC Pre-Qualifying - Mazda Raceway California 8hr Series Qualifying - Battery Tender Global MX-5 Cup RACE #1 - Pirelli GT3 Trophy Cup USA

Saturday October 14, 2017 8:00 am - 8:15 am Warm up- Pirelli GT3 Trophy Cup USA 8:20 am - 8:50 am 9:00 am - 9:40 am 9:50 am - 10:30 am 10:45 am - 11:30 am 11:30 am - 12:30 pm 11:50 am - 12:25pm 12:40 pm - 1:25 pm 1:40 pm - 1:55 pm 2:05 pm - 2:45 pm 3:00 pm - 3:45 pm 4:00 pm - 4:40 pm 5:00 pm - 5:45 pm

Qualifying - Pirelli GT3 Trophy Cup USA Race #1 - Pirelli World Challenge TCA / TCB Race #1 - Pirelli World Challenge TC Qualifying - California 8hr Series Lunch; Race & Rods Parade Lap, VIP & Media Hot Laps Pirelli World Challenge TC Autograph Session Race #1 - Battery Tender Global MX-5 Cup Super Pole - California 8hr Series Race # 2- Pirelli World Challenge TCA / TCB Race # 2 - Pirelli GT3 Trophy Cup USA Race # 2- Pirelli World Challenge TC Race #2 - Battery Tender Global MX-5 Cup

Sunday October15, 2017 8:30 am - 8:45 am 8:45 am - 9:15 am 9:30 am - 5:30 pm

Pit opens for recon laps cars staging front straight Pre-Race California 8hr Series RACE - California 8hr Series

TIME CERTAIN SCHEDULE - All sessions, except as noted, to start and finish on schedule

as of: 10/4/2017

This weekend is this season’s last weekend of racing at our church, Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca. The Pirelli World challenge is here. Everybody set up and started to test and practice Wednesday. The Mazda MX-5 Cup is really interesting and will undoubtedly offer very exciting, fast racing. The prize money or purse is $75,000. Just the cars alone probably cost about $50,000. Then you’ve got the transportation, racecar parts and spares, repairs, insurance (Ops! No insurance for open class racecars, you’re on your own…). I’ll guess it is the both the biggest purse for this class anywhere, and as well the biggest purse for this class anywhere ever. This is big money. This is one of the few opportunities that the winning team might just break even! Here we go again, Q) how does a winning race team end up with $75, 000? A) By spending $150,000 and winning. There is still glory for those who valiantly compete. I call it expensive glory. My personal tribute goes out to all who run in the MX-5 CUP! Next up, Porsche cup! Come on what could be more fun than watching and hearing multiple Porsche being driven around Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca in anger? Almost nothing; except perhaps: TCB. Takin Care of Business. You’ll be glued to your seat as these under-powered shit-boxes zoom through the field of McLaren’, Ferrari and Aston Martins throwing of their lines with an evil disregard for horsepower and expense and automotive racing perfection. These cars are a sprinkle of mayhem that add so much excitement, and danger; they crack me up every lap. GT3 & GT4 - A very fun aspect of the GT3 class and the Gt4 Class is that the factories send the engineers the drivers and many of the support staff. The cars and often the mechanics — pit crew, and sometimes co-drivers — are all from here, America. This arrangement is amazing. It is far more intricate than I have time to cover, alas. These are factory customer race cars. The factories supply them with every available asset they would their own team. This keeps the cost (losses) down, so there can be more world class racing. These people are losing their shirts to entertain us. Thank you to all you 18 manufactures out there who participate. Call me I’ll buy you a beer. Finally, my prediction. I double down. TRG for the win! TRG, ASTON MARTIN RACING will perform – The Aston Martin Opera- ( See; Cedar Street Times- Page 17 September 1st - Grey Eminence- Aston Martin opera) to the adoring race fans at Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca for the last time this season. If you see Lamborghini Moses, tell him I’ll be in the turn 4 bleachers; #46 waiting for Vale.


Page 10 • CEDAR STREET

Times

• October 13, 2017

Reflections by a Race Fan

Hello friends,

What follows is yet another disclaimer of sorts. As you may know, at least partially; my job here at my/the beloved Cedar Street Times is to write about old cars and to be glib. With all the goings on in the world and nationally, lately, I have succumbed to a virulent sort of malaise. Even from a young age, for some inexplicable reason I have always respected and been interested in Mother Nature. As I have matured, my interest has only peaked. Over the years I have been drawn into reading extensively about Native Americans, the desert, birds, and all things exploration (starting with Artic and leading to Antarctic ) which led me into a profound interest in maritime, and Herman Melville and, more recently, marine mammals, whale entanglements, etc. Anyway, it feels to me like Mother Nature is on a rampage. My heart goes out to everyone who is on the receiving end. This morning after I heard my own President express his lack of commitment, I felt like an adjunct American. As I heard him imply that our American commitment to the people of Puerto Rico both financially and spiritually was no more, this virulent malaise swept over my soul like a post hurricane storm surge casting me awash in despair, shame and regret. I have family in Mendocino County. People I love dearly, young and old. Northern California burns and I wait to hear that they are all right, at least safe. My oldest son of 19 years could very well be on his way there to fight the fire. He is hoping I won’t notice his apparent absence from communication with me, long enough to do what he must. I have noticed, and recounting our last conversation I am proud of my son. Our new columnist DD Hawley Shook lives in the town of Mendocino. I hope she will get to enjoy her first appearance here. My friends at TRG, Aston Martin Racing are from Petaluma, which I believe might be burning as I write. Many of these teams are from our northern reaches. A heavy heart beats. So I will continue write, to do my job today. I do it with less joy than before, though with a different purpose today. So I ask a few things from you the reader: now is a great time to put the differences between us aside and help one another. We here at this paper are gathering clothing to be taken up north. We hear that people up there need clothing. So please bring what clothing you can that might help someone stay warm at night, here to the paper. Our friend Al Siekert will take a large truck load up to fire country this Sunday morning, after he serves breakfast to the local homeless. All this racing season out at our home track, Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca, culminates this weekend, and racing will go on. It leads up to the first 8-hour race ever out there and is a very special happening. Please go. I feel that I should put my head down and keep working. I will try to continue to do so with love and hope in my sore heart that our racers everywhere return home to find everything and everyone safe and sound.

Deep-Sea Discoveries in Monterey Bay: Improbable Animals and Unexpected Stories

Join us Thursday, October 19, at 6 p.m. as we host Dr. Bruce Robison, Senior Scientist and Midwater Ecologist of the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute, for his lecture on the improbable animals and unexpected stories found in the deep sea of Monterey Bay. Admission for the lecture is $5 and free for Museum members. http://www.pgmuseum.org/museum-events/2017/10/19/lecture-deep-sea-discoveries-in-monterey-bay-improbable-animals-unexpected-stories The Museum is located at Pacific Grove Museum of Natural History, 165 Forest Avenue, Pacific Grove.

Butterfly Ball is coming

2017 Butterfly Ball is set for Nov. 4, 6-10 PM. Pacific Grove Museum of Natural History , 165 Forest Avenue, will host the 2017Butterfly Ball. Cost is $100 for members, $120 for Nonmembers Join us for the 2017 Butterfly Ball at the Pacific Grove Museum of Natural History. Doors open at 6 p.m. for this elegant evening of fine dining, a silent drawing, and dancing. We hope you will join us as we work to elevate the Museum experience! Silent drawing winners will be chosen during the event. LINK: http://www.pgmuseum.org/butterfly-ball/

Country Store & Auction Set A benefit for the Blind & Visually

The Blind & Visually Impaired Center will hold its 42nd annual fundraiser on Saturday, October 28 from 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. The event is free to all and will be a day of fun, food, and entertainment. There will be a craft sale featuring items made by the visually impaired plus the “ultimate homemade sweets sale.” BID, BID, BID at the Silent auction! Bring your family and friends to enjoy the day and possibly start your holiday shopping. Wine tasting and free delicious treats are part of the experience. The Details: Saturday, October 28, 2017 The day starts at 10:00 a.m. and lasts until 2:00 p.m. The event is free to all. Live Entertainment!!!! Silent Auctions Crafts by the Visually Impaired Sale The Ultimate Homemade Sweets Sale Wine Tasting!!!! Free delicious treats for you to enjoy!!!! Location: The Blind & Visually Impaired Center of Monterey County, 225 Laurel venue, Pacific Grove, CA 93950 (Between 2nd and 3rd Street)

Be part of this fun afternoon! Background of The Blind and Visually Impaired Center of Monterey County Our mission is to empower the blind and visually impaired toward independent living through responsive education, support services and skills training. The Blind & Visually Impaired Center of Monterey County, Inc. (BVIC), is an independent, non-profit 501(C)3 charity established in 1971. The BVIC provides services that help Monterey County residents adapt to the loss of vision. Services are provided by appointment in our office, a person’s home or community setting. The Center has a Low Vision Clinic and Assistive Technology Lab and offers social support activities including Peer Support Groups, Tuesday Social Gathering and Ceramic Art Class. The Blind & Visually Impaired Center of Monterey County (BVIC) 2 2 5 L a u r e l Av e . , P a c i f ic Grove. Phone: (831) 649-3505 (800) 404-3505 (in Monterey County) Fax: (831) 649-4057 Email: vision@blindandlowvision.org http://www.blindandlowvision.org For additional information contact at (831) 649-3505.

Cone Zone Report: Maintenance

Caltrans will be performing highway maintenance on State Route 1 and US Highway 101 next week in the following areas next week. Motorists can expect lane closures in the following locations:

The No. 2 (right) lane of southbound State Route 1 will be closed near Tioga Avenue in Sand City on Tuesday, Oct. 17 from 9:30 am until 2 pm. The No. 2 (right) lane of southbound State Route 1 at Munras Avenue in Monterey will be closed on Wednesday, Oct. 18 from 9:30 am until 2 pm. The No. 2 (right) lane of northbound US Highway 101 at Trafton Road in Watsonville will be closed on Thursday, Oct. 19 from 9:30 am until 2 pm. Electronic message boards will assist the public during this roadwork. This roadwork will be performed by the Caltrans Maintenance team in Monterey. Caltrans reminds motorists to move over and slow down when driving through highway work zones. For more information on this project and for traffic updates on other Caltrans projects in Monterey County, residents can call the District 5 toll free number at 1-831-423-0396 or can visit our website at: http://www.dot.ca.gov/dist05/ paffairs/release.htm#scr

Pfeiffer Canyon Bridge to reopen Oct. 13

Cal Trans has announced the reopening of the Pfeiffer Canyon Bridge is scheduled, with a ribbon-cutting set for Friday, Oct. 13. The failure of the bridge in February, 2017 virtually cut Big Sur off from motoring visitors. Winter storms caused a landslide and locals watched the nightly news in horror as the 310-foot bridge fell off its pilings and into the canyon. It was demolished by road crews and the rebuilding began about eight months ago.

Return of the Natives Community Events

October 2017 through December 2017 Join return of the natives for our upcoming community events. Volunteers are invited to clean up trash from the park, trim bushes, and complete other restoration activities to ensure a safe and healthy park for all to enjoy. 10/28/17 National Make a Difference Day: Natividad Creek Park Clean Up 10am – 1pm 11/12/17 Big Sur Half Marathon: Fisherman’s Wharf 11:30am to 4:30pm 11/18/17 Upper Carr Lake Clean up: 824 E Laurel Dr. 10am to 1pm *Volunteer groups of 10 or more please RSVP. * Everyone is welcome! A great family activity that is FREE. Tools, water, and snacks provided. Earn community service hours and mingle with like-minded servers. For more information go to our website: https://csumb.edu/ron or call/email Giovanni Ibarra @ (831) 582-3686 or gibarra@csumb.edu


October 13, 2017 • CEDAR STREET

Times • Page 11

fear? Is our hope not the proof of our faith in God? Is faith not at the heart What does God say about courage? without of the courage we display when we face adversity?

Bill Cohen

Reasoning With God The Merriam-Webster dictionary defines courage as: mental or moral strength to venture, persevere, and withstand danger, fear, or difficulty. Why would God call us to have courage? Josh 1:7, “Only be thou strong and very courageous, that thou mayest observe to do according to all the law, which Moses my servant commanded thee: turn not from it to the right hand or to the left, that thou mayest prosper withersoever thou goest.” Why does it take courage to follow the law? Matt 10:28, “And fear not them which kill the body, but are not able to kill the soul: but rather fear him which is able to destroy both soul and body in hell.” Apparently, some will not be happy with the example we are setting when we follow the law, some of them will be upset to the point of trying to kill us. Even today, 11 Christians are killed every hour because of their faith in Christ. Here is a link to an article that discusses this problem: http://www.christianpost.com/news/11-christians-are-killedevery-hour-says-irish-catholic-bishop-who-warns-persecution-of-believers-is-at-anunprecedented-high-139312/ Should we then be afraid of those willing to kill us for our beliefs? Deut 31:6, “Be strong and of a good courage, fear not, nor be afraid of them: for the Lord thy God, he it is that doth go with thee; he will not fail thee, nor forsake thee.” The answer is no, for fear is the weapon they are trying to use to silence God’s witnesses. God has promised us eternity, so the loss of a few years should never stop us from fulfilling His calling of spreading His Word, Matt 28:18-20, “And Jesus came and spake unto them, saying, All power is given unto me in heaven and in earth. Go ye therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost: Teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you: and, lo, I am with you always, even unto the end of the world. Amen.” Has God not given us a duty to perform? 1 Pet 3:14-16, “But and if ye suffer for righteousness’ sake, happy are ye: and be not afraid of their terror, neither be troubled; But sanctify the Lord God in your hearts: and be ready always to give an answer to every man that asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you with meekness and fear: Having a good conscience; that, whereas they speak evil of you, as of evildoers, they may be ashamed that falsely accuse your good conversation in Christ.” Does God not call us to spread His Word in meekness and without fear of death? Are we not to have studied His Word, so that we may have an answer for those who seek one? Does that answer not fully explain our hope in an eternal life with God? Rom 6:23, “For the wages of sin is death; but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.” Is this not a hope worth facing death

Ps 23:4, “Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil: for thou art with me; thy rod and thy staff they comfort me.” God knows we walk in the valley of death when we fulfill His calling of spreading His Word and that is why He has given us so many verses on courage. Is 41:13, “For I the Lord thy God will hold thy right hand, saying unto thee, Fear not; I will help thee.” Is God talking about this life, or a combination of this life and the next? Dan 3:16-18, “Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, answered and said to the king, O Nebuchadnezzar, we are not careful to answer thee in this matter. If it be so, our God whom we serve is able to deliver us from the burning fiery furnace, and he will deliver us out of thine hand, O king. But if not, be it known unto thee, O king, that we will not serve thy gods, nor worship the golden image which thou hast set up.” Is God saying our courage serves as a light to others, even if we face death in this life? 2 Tim 1:7, “For God hath not given us the spirit of fear; but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind.” Jn 14:27, “Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you: not as the world giveth, give I unto you. Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid.” Rom 8:15, “For ye have not received the spirit of bondage again to fear; but ye have received the Spirit of adoption, whereby we cry, Abba, Father.” 1 Jn 4:18, “There is no fear in love; but perfect love casteth out fear: because fear hath torment. He that feareth is not made perfect in love.” Does God call us to love everyone, spread His Truth and fear no one? Comments, opposing opinions and suggestions for future topics are all welcome at: bill@reasoningwithgod.com.

G

DIN

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EPCW721-01FE 082115


Page 12 • CEDAR STREET

Times

• October 13, 2017

Kiss These Grits!

Season the grits generously with salt and butter. Remove from heat and let rest, covered, until serving. Serve hot. Feedback is welcome and encouraged, feel free to e-mail me at sallybaho@gmail. com with any comments you may have.

Sally Baho Post Cards from the Kitchen

New After-School Art Class

Norfolk, VA

In the spirit of Columbus Day and having just returned from my second trip in one month from Virginia, I am going to tell y’all about grits. If you are not familiar with grits, it is a porridge dish made from reconstituting dried, ground corn or hominy and if done right, lots of butter! In Virginia, I saw grits on the menu at every meal of the day and prepared in every which way. You may wonder why I bring up Columbus Day, which was this past Monday if you were not aware. It is also referred to as Discoverer’s Day or Indigenous People’s Day. When the discoverers found and colonized the New World (the Americas) they also found a wide range of foods they were unfamiliar with such as potatoes, tomatoes, bell peppers, pumpkins, and corn, among others. This category of foods is referred to as New World foods. Conversely, they brought with them Old World foods including apples, broccoli, eggplant, garlic, and much more. This is part of the Columbian Exchange, which refers to the transfer of not only foods, but also plants, animals, human populations, culture, and technology. The Columbian Exchange is a much larger subject with great implications—imagine Italian food without tomatoes—and if you are interested in knowing more, Alfred W. Crosby who coined the term in his 1972 book The Columbian Exchange: Biological and Cultural Consequences of 1492 may be worth a read. Please enjoy a recipe for grits, an American dish made with a New World food! Ingredients 2 cups water 2 cups milk 1 cup stone-ground or regular grits kosher salt 1⁄4 cup heavy cream 2 tbsp. unsalted butter

Grits Recipe:

Instructions Heat the water and milk in a heavy-bottomed saucepan until just simmering. While the milk is heating, put the stone-ground grits into a large mixing bowl and cover with cool water. Stir the grits assertively so that the chaff floats to the top. Skim the surface carefully and remove the chaff. Drain the grits in a fine strainer. (If you are using regular grits, skip this step.) Stir grits into the simmering water and milk. Cook, stirring often, until the grits are tender to the bite and have thickened to the consistency of thick oatmeal. As the grits thicken, stir them more often to keep them from sticking and scorching. Regular grits take about 20 minutes, but stone-ground require about an hour or a little more to cook, and you will have to add additional milk and water as needed.

A new after-school art class is being for the 8-week session: $150. for PGAC offered at Pacific Grove Art Center, on Mon- members/ $165. for non-members days, beginning Oct. 16 from 3:30-5 p.m. .* Atelier - an artist's or designer's To register, call the PGAC during regular studio or workroom; workshop business hours at (831) 375-2208 For more information, contact Dante Rondo at drondo@gmail.com (831) 626-- The Art Center is proud to offer this 4259 or Charlsie Kelly at charlsiekelly@ Ateilier* Class for young people who show yahoo.com (831) 524-3894 a serious interest in learning the basics of -- Established in 1969, the Pacific art and fine-tuning the skills they already Grove Art Center is a unique, commupossess. nity-based nonprofit art venue. Regular -- There will be an overview of different hours are from noon to 5 p.m. Wednesday materials and techniques, with emphasis on through Saturday, and from 1-4 p.m. on individual expression. Mentors for this class Sundays. There is no admission fee, but will be Dante Rondo and Charlsie Kelly. Fee donations are gratefully accepted.

Carmel-by-the-Sea celebrates its 101st birthday on Sat., Oct. 28

The City of Carmel-by-the-Sea will celebrate its 101st Birthday at 11 a.m. on Saturday, October 28th. Join the City on Ocean Avenue in downtown Carmel for the traditional Carmel parade featuring City leaders, local civic groups, schools, dancers, performers, kids, walkers, dogs and more! After the parade, enjoy a hot dog lunch, including chili, drinks and birthday cake, at the Sunset Center parking lot on San Carlos Street between 9th and 10th. Lunch tickets are $5 each and can be purchased on-site the day of the event. Lunch will be provided by the Carmel Celebrates Community Committee.

Learn More About March, 2018 STEM Expo

STEM Expo is a not for profit corporation created to provide an innovative alternative to the typical science fair. This artistic event features Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics [STEM] as educational opportunities and viable career paths - showcasing elementary through high school student-generated work - connecting students with community. You are invited to learn more about STEM EXPO, at MPC Lecture Forum 101 from 6:00-7:30 PM on October 11. More than just a Science Fair, STEM Expo offers a place for students to exhibit their work alongside entertainment and learning opportunities for the entire family - including expert presentations, STEM educators, real scientists and interactive events. We allow young minds to experience an innovative environment of hands-on science. STEM Expo enables students to Large Pizzas every Tuesday explore their interests and talents by offering seven elecNot valid with any other offers, discounts, fundraisers or promotions. Valid for take-out, dine-in and delivery. Delivery tive categories from which students can choose: Infernal charges apply. At participating restaurants Only. Print coupon and present at time of purchase. Expires 12/31/17 Contraptions, Intelligence & Behavior, Science Fiction, Living Things, Reverse Engineering & Invention, The Physical Universe, Robotics & Computation. Students + Tax have the option to compete with their project, or simply display it for viewing and evaluation. Collaborative groups are permitted to work on projects together and, 1 Large Specialty Pizza in the non-competitive arena, even parents and mentors Not valid with any other offers, discounts, fundraisers or promotions. Valid for take-out, dine-in and delivery. Delivery can work in tandem with students. charges apply. At participating restaurants Only. Print coupon and present at time of purchase. Expires 12/31/17 STEM Expo is becoming recognized as the model for the next generation of student science competitions. Open to students in kindergarten through eighth grade, + Tax this free event is coming to Monterey County in March 2018. Should you know of anyone who would benefit from learning about STEM Expo, please invite them 1 Large 1-Topping Pizza to join us for an informational gathering to learn more. Not valid with any other offers, discounts, fundraisers or promotions. Valid for take-out, dine-in and delivery. Delivery Feel free to contact Eric Bull at eric@STEMexpo. charges apply. At participating restaurants Only. Print coupon and present at time of purchase. Expires 12/31/17 org and go to STEMexpo.org

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October 13, 2017 • CEDAR STREET

2017 Butterfly Parade Cuteness 11 on a scale of 1-10

Photos above by Tony Prock Photos below by Gary Baley

Times • Page 13


Page 14 • CEDAR STREET

Times

• October 13, 2017

2017 Butterfly Parade

Photos by Gary Baley


October 13, 2017 • CEDAR STREET

Times • Page 15

Photos by Gary Baley


Page 16 • CEDAR STREET

Times

• October 13, 2017

Jane Roland

Bixby

Animal Tales Other Random Thoughts

I miss not working in Pacific Grove. It started in 1986 when I was asked to manage the SPCA Shop which was on Forest Avenue, next door to what is now St. Vincent DePaul and was then a bike shop. Later, due to our success, we opened SPCA II a couple of doors down. It was then that Frank Quilantang, whom I had known back in the Monterey County Symphony’s B- Sharp Follies days, came by I had been President of the Guild, Frank was a dancer in the production. He is the premier floral designer for Pebble Beach Company and kindly offered his services as a friend to create magnificent windows for us. Which, as most of you know, he did with aplomb. Later when the shop moved to Carmel, and I was asked to set up a shop for AFRP and we moved to the corner of Fountain and Central Frank came along and continued until the doors of the Treasure Shop closed in May. Now he will be with us again and one of the criteria for a shop is at least one big window for Frank. He would come in on his days off and very often late at night. He made remarkable creations out of found items (or things he purchased). Remember the aluminum foil dragon. One Halloween, he and Doc Halliday gave us a haunted house that stopped people passing by in their tracks. Doc put wheels up above somehow lighted them and hung jack-o-lanterns which sailed at night. I received telephone calls from the media. It was covered on television and, of course, the newspapers. Those were wonderful days. We had a good time while making a great deal of money for the animals. Now those times linger in our memory. One of my first jobs before I was involved in advertising in San Francisco was working as the secretary (in those days that’s what we were) to the principal of Pacific Grove Junior High (where the high school is now) …I have seen many changes, and it is hard to remember what happened before. Although, as I have mentioned, one of the students at the school is now one of my closest friends and valuable volunteers, Michele DeVaughn Tubman (Shelly). Another volunteer is Margaret Baldwin whose father, Rex Dunipace, was principal of the High School. Because PG is a small town there are many connections, I will truly miss it, as will the people who worked and are still working with me. We learned to know our customers, donors and their pets. We always had treat for the two and four legged friends and will wherever we go. People would stop by my office and sit down to chat. I understand that there are those who don’t approve of such informality, but I grew up and continued with a volunteer mentality, ...it is my nature to be friendly to those who request it which has worked for over 30 years. I just ran across a letter I received from a customer at the Treasure Shop. ” UNCLE BILL’S EULOGY FOR TIM Tim was an individual. He did what he wanted to do. He joined the US Army and served overseas in Germany and Laos. Then work for 30 years with General Motors. He bought an old house by Ellicott Creek and was restoring it. One of the last things he did was to have the metal roof installed. That will last 100 years! We talked about it during our many 1 ½ hour telephone conversations. I was very proud of him I told him in a letter how well he did with his life and I was glad that he fulfilled his

MAINTENANCE SERVICE

dreams. I admired the caregiving to his many cats. The last cat he rescued in California, he named Bixby after the famous bridge. May you rest in Peace, Tim, you deserve it. With all my love, Uncle Bill” Bill (William Robbins) went on to say “Tim was 59 years old. Bixby was taken to Western New York and was adopted by Carrie Kubik, Tim’s niece, I wonder how he like the winters in New York State. The two cats adopted by Tim 15 years ago never left the house, only looked out the windows on the second floor and watched as the snowflakes fell down Bill Robbins” I cherish these stories and hope that people will continue to send them. My mailing address is 770 Grove Street, Monterey and telephone number 831-649-0657. I miss seeing the animals, of course, we all miss their parents as well and we promise that we will have goodies for you both when we have another shop. Please remember our estate sale in Pebble Beach on November 10,11,12. Three more nights to see Stephen Moorer astound audiences as the swashbuckling romantic in Cyrano. October 5 through the 28 and Halloween is the Rocky Horror Picture Show, alternating new and established casts at Paper Wing Theatre on Hoffman Avenue. Then get ready for Mamma Mia on November 16 at The Golden Bough Playhouse, Ariel is offering You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown and Western Stage just finished In the Heights with Mel Brook’s Young Frankenstein coming in November. Who needs Broadway and San Francisco when we have such great theater; although, I must say I miss MPC’s offerings and Henry, Sky and Gary. Those were good days. Patricia Hamilton has created a masterpiece with her Life in Pacific Grove, even if you don’t live in “America’s Last Home Town” you will enjoy the tales of the city (some of which were written by and recounted to yours truly). It was a labor of love on the part of Patricia. Those of us who contributed had fun doing it. Ms Hamilton probably didn’t sleep for two or three months putting it together and those beautiful drawings of Keith Larson. It is available on Amazon. Incidentally Patricia is publishing the book written by me, illustrated by daughter Jennie. Look for it after the first of the year. And, if you are very, very good, we will autograph. Jane Roland…gcr770@aol.com

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Times • Page 17 Painters on Painting: Alejandro Sandoval The Painter’s Painting

October 13, 2017 • CEDAR STREET

Sports Shorts ELKs KICK, PUNT & PASS LOCAL PACIFIC GROVE CONTEST

(RESULTS) Results of the Pacific Grove Youth Football Skills Contest (Kicking-Off, Punting and Passing) The Contest was held at Robert Down School on Sunday, October 1, 2017 at 4:30 pm The Top Two winners in each division will compete at the Peninsula Finals at M.P.C. on November 11th. This program was part of the N.F.L., but now is continued by the support of the Monterey Elks Lodge #1285.

Last Name

School

Grahl

Forest Grove

9/10 Yr. Old Girls Gina Ella Maya

DaSilva Grahl Felthoven

Forest Grove Forest Grove Forest Grove

2nd

11/12 Yr. Old Girls Ava Sydney

Marshall Jones

PGMS PGMS

1st

13/14 Yr. Old Girls Tianna

Battistini

P G High School

Last Name

School

Nimri DaSilva Russell Moore McKeever McKeever Jones Sandmann

Robert Down Forest Grove Robert Down Forest Grove Robert Down Robert Down Forest Grove Forest Grove

9/10 Yr. Old Boys Wyatt Avery Zayne Brayden

Coe Ayala Miller Sandmann

Robert Down Robert Down Forest Grove Forest Grove

11/12 Yr. Old Boys Curtis Joseph Dilbar Anthony Aidan Marshall

DaSilva Moore Sigh Dhaliwal Nimri Ayala Pearman

PGMS PGMS PGMS Robert Down PGMS PGMS

1st

1st 2nd 3rd

1st

1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th

1st 2nd 3rd 4th

1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th

First Name 7/8 Yr. Old Girls Grace

First Name 7/8 Yr. Old Boys Andrew Ryan Quin Vaughn Ethan Liam Luke Wyatt

Webster Slate and Guest Artists I am a figurative painter by heart I was pulled into the world of figurative painting the moment I did my first Bouguereau master copy of “Satyr and the Nymphs” in college. Shortly after I completed meticulous drawings after many great painters and completed more than 2,000 anatomical studies. Drawing the figure and the rhythms that accompany it are my home. Having said that, I have had the privilege to apprentice under a plein-aire painter for half a year so I am able to shine a light on both subjects. Both categories of painting require the basics of drawing, composition, rhythm and telling a story within the realm of the work. There are some major differences between the two categories and the first of which is playing the light. With “Pacific Grove” I established a quick foundation of the rocky formation and boat in the distance. The sky was laid in multiple times with watercolor wash but notice that even though I have laid the grounds for the drawing I don’t delve deeply into any intricate aspects of the landscape. I focus only on the way light portrays the objects on itself and how the edges are formed. When completing optical paintings such as the landscape I am essentially skimming through the surface of what I am seeing and displaying the appropriate values, edges and colors.

With “Natalie Reclining” I delve much deeper into the drawing and focus from inwards and build the form outwards. This is called structural drawing and it is the main driving point in which I work. I am not skimming on the appearance of the figure but I am looking at the structures of “Natalie” as a whole. I start with a rhythmic drawing searching for the life force of her gesture. Once that is established the abstraction of the light and dark shapes are established and once that is confirmed I move towards refining the drawing with anatomical landmarks such as using the 7th vertebrae to confirm her shoulders are accurately portrayed. Many painters work in only the optical way of seeing when it comes to painting figurative work as well as landscapes and still lifes these painters focus is more tuned to the outer appearance of the way light shows us what they are seeing. Examples of these painters includeJohn Sargent, Jeremy Lipking and Richard Schmid. There are a smaller few that focus on the structural way of seeing form and they use the structural method when it comes to figurative, landscapes and still life. A prime example would be a painter named Ted Seth Jacobs who taught me to see structure as a whole. Some other examples are William Bouguereau and Jacob Collins.

Breaker of the Week By Mei Bailey

Elijah Taurke

Elijah Taurke does just about everything. The PGHS sophomore has played ultimate frisbee for several years now, having been introduced to the sport by his father. And he performs on the stage, too. Last spring, Elijah had a lead role as the dopey sidekick Lefou in the high school’s production of “Beauty and the Beast.” In addition to theater, he is an accomplished trombonist (as well as cellist on the side). Elijah has played with the MPC Orchestra as well as the Monterey Pops Orchestra. Notably, he received special recognition last February as the concerto competition winner for Youth Music Monterey, and he later got to perform that winning concerto at Carmel’s Sunset Center. Elijah is also a runner on the PGHS cross country team, despite having been diagnosed with juvenile arthritis at the age of six. He chose to use his condition to champion a noble cause--the Jingle Bell Run, which is held in PG during the holiday season and benefits arthritis research. For his tenacity, charity, and variety, Elijah Taurke is our Breaker of the Week.

Sponsored by:

Central Coast Silkscreen & Embroidery 215 Forest Ave., Pacific Grove 831.372.1401

“Pacific Grove” by Alejandro Sandoval Below: “Natalie Reclining” by Alejandro Sandoval


Page 18 • CEDAR STREET

Times

• October 13, 2017

Book Launch

Keepers of our Culture Patricia Hamilton

Above: Diane, Ron and Patti selling books

Diane, Ron and Patti selling books

Thank You Dixie & Patricia Editor:

On behalf of the Pacific Grove Chamber of Commerce and all the businesses downtown, I want to thank Dixie Layne & Patricia Hamilton for the best butterfly celebration ever. Patricia created a sense of community by writing the book “ Life in Pacific Grove”. Her event attracted hundreds of locals to Chautauqua Hall at the official book launch. In addition to Senator Bill Monning, most of the City Council members showed up. Everyone was happy to be part of this unique celebration. All of Dixie’s events were successful attracting the youth, families, and seniors. It was simply amazing. Thank you to the Heritage Society, Pacific Grove Library, Museum of Natural History, and all the businesses that were part of this weekend’s program. I look forward to the 2018 Butterfly Days and beyond. Moe Ammar

Above: Keither Larson, Patricia Hamilton, Sen. Bll Monning, Mayor Bill Kampe, and Pacific Grove City Councilman Rudy Fischer at the book launch

President, Pacific Grove Chamber of Commerce

The Hamilton family at the “Life In Pacific Grove” book launch

Troupers of the Gold Coast at the book launch Illustrator Keith Larson signs a book at the launch


October 13, 2017 • CEDAR STREET

Times • Page 19

Seven York School Students Recognized in 2018 National Merit Scholarship Program

Officials of the National Merit Scholarship Corporation have announced the names of the Semifinalists, Commended Students, and National Hispanic Scholars in the 2018 National Merit Scholarship Program. Among these groups are seven York School seniors. Semifinalist from York: Kaden Agha (Carmel Valley) Commended Students from York: Amy Cho (Salinas), Lekha Duvvoori (Gilroy), Megan Tang (Monterey) National Hispanic Scholars from York: Jared Aldape Duron (Salinas), Mason McCollum (Marina), Jojo McGuire (Seaside) About 1.6 million juniors in more than 22,000 high schools entered the 2018 National Merit Scholarship Program by taking the 2016 Preliminary SAT/National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test (PSAT/NMSQT), which served as an initial screen of program entrants. The nationwide pool of Semifinalists, representing less than one percent of U.S. high school seniors, includes the highest scoring entrants in each state. The number of Semifinalists in a state is proportional to the state’s percentage of the national total of graduating seniors. From the approximately 16,000 Semifinalists, about 15,000 are expected to advance to the Finalist level, and in February will be notified of this designation. Although they will not continue in the 2018 competition for National Merit Scholarship awards, Commended Students placed among the top five percent of the entrants and National Hispanic Recognition scholars placed among the top two point five percent of Hispanic and Latino test takers in our region. In congratulating these seniors, Chuck Harmon, Head of School, said, “We are preparing a diverse community of creative and independent thinkers for success in college and in life, and National Merit recognition is just one example of the long tradition of academic excellence at York School. We are fortunate to attract very bright and talented young people to our school, and we are committed to a growth mindset, believing that students can increase their abilities and improve their skills, including test-taking. Inspirational teaching leads to dedication and diligence, and the result is the enhancement of talent and performance.” About York School Founded in 1959, York School, located in Monterey, Calif., inspires and prepares a diverse community of creative, independent thinkers. Drawing students from public and independent middle schools in Monterey, Santa Cruz, and San Benito counties, the 225 students in grades 8-12 benefit from an exceptional academic program and a welcoming community. Combining the classics with innovative teaching and learning, the York program builds expertise and ability, preparing students to creatively navigate the 21st century. Committed faculty and small class sizes allow for personal attention and keep courses engaging and inspiring. Beyond the classroom, students pursue a variety of extra-curricular activities including athletics, fine and performing arts, clubs, and service learning. This dynamic learning environment prepares York students to be leaders in an exciting future, meeting global challenges with confidence and compassion. York is fully accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges and the California Association of Independent Schools, and is a member of National Association of Independent Schools and the Independent Left: Kaden Agha – NM Semifinalist from Carmel Valley Curriculum Group.

Strong Elite Field to Compete in Monterey Bay Half Marathon Equalizer Challenge will Create Exciting Finish

More than three dozen top runners will gather for the 15th Monterey Bay Half Marathon to be held Sunday, November 12. An exceptionally-strong female field will be challenged by a group of equally-talented men as the two sexes battle to the finish in an attempt to win cash bonuses making up the $30,000 purse, one of the largest offered for half marathons in the U.S. For the second year, the scenic and race-friendly Monterey Bay Half Marathon will feature the innovative “Equalizer Challenge” with the elite women’s field receiving a nine minute and five second head start in front of the elite men. The first three finishers across the line receive cash bonuses of $3,000, $1,500 or $500 in addition to prize money awarded to the top eight male and female finishers. To catch the women, the lead men need to average 41 seconds per mile faster for the 13.1-mile half marathon distance than the lead women. Last year, the women’s pace was 44 seconds per mile above the men’s and they were caught with less than a mile to go. The additional five seconds may bring the race for the first three spots right to the finish line. Monterey Bay Aquarium, Pebble Beach registered runners to see and cheer on Concours d’Elegance, Monterey Interna- the elites as they battle within their own tional Jazz Festival, and more. Aqua Terra gender, then ultimately a male-female also offers its thriving kids! program, a contest in the last mile of the race. wholesome hot lunch service offered to Registration for all events is still area schools. available online at www.montereybayhaAqua Terra Culinary consistently pro- lfmarathon.org. vides a customized culinary experience. We achieve this by: • Focusing on the food. • Taking a seasonal, creative approach to our food. • Creating a client specific menu for every event and venue. • Providing peace of mind through competent, reliable service.

Aqua Terra Culinary, Inc. Signs as Primary Caterer for Monterey Conference Center

After a competitive nine month bidding process with the City of Monterey, Aqua Terra Culinary (www.aquaterraculinary.com) signed a contract to become the primary caterer for the new, soon to be opened Monterey Conference Center. Chef Dory Ford, owner and CEO of Aqua Terra Culinary, shared with Edible Monterey Bay that “it’s very, very exciting. Everyone who works for us is ready for the new challenges that lie ahead and we’re going to swing for the fences on this one.” Chef Ford suggests the new venue will double sales for his already vibrant local catering company. The Monterey Conference Center is set to open this fall after a two-year, $60 million dollar renovation. According to Chef Ford, “The more successful we are, the more successful Monterey tourism can be. I’ve always believed that quality speaks for itself. If you provide quality and value, people

will come back to you over and over and recommend you to their friends.” In preparation for this growth, AQUA TERRA Culinary will be announcing open positions to our local workforce in the coming weeks, and seeks to offer a job fair to be announced soon. Media may find more information in this Edible Monterey article, and by contacting Aqua Terra at 831-657-9790. Aqua Terra Culinary, Inc. specializes in using farm-to-table products that are responsibly sourced with an emphasis on seasonality, quality and minimizing environmental impact – and is known for innovative catering solutions from private parties, to weddings, to grand corporate events. The company operates and partners with many local restaurants, events and venues such as Point Pinos Grill, A Taste of Monterey, Middlebury Institute of International Studies,

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Be Seen By Thousands • Call • Webster 831-324-4742


Page 20 • CEDAR STREET

Times

• October 13, 2017

Blade Runner II Duller Tom Stevens

Otter Views

Join Us for Fall Fridays Dive into the weekend with special rates for locals. For sci-fi movie buffs, the past half century has produced many genre-expanding films, among them “2001: A Space Odyssey,” “Close Encounters of the Third Kind,” “E.T.,” “The Andromeda Strain,” “Star Wars,” “Alien” and “Terminator,” to name a handful. When viewers emerged from one of these classics into post-matinee sunlight or midnight fog, a period of catharsis often followed. It was more than just: “Wow, what a rush!” There was also a sense of disorientation, as if the ground underfoot had shifted. Cutting-edge sci-fi can throw your certainties off balance. When the original “Blade Runner” appeared in 1982, its evocation of a decaying future Los Angeles set the template for movie dystopias to follow. Many have followed, but none quite equaled that film’s acid-etched portrait of a teeming metropolis bereft of hope, sunlight, greenery and fresh air. In their place, filmmaker Ridley Scott conjured a half-ruined cityscape of smoky avenues, squalid apartment towers and skyscraper-sized neon billboards glimpsed through a bleary, dismal rain. Hover cars, android “replicants” and other futuristic flourishes shared the screen with commonplaces like noodle shops and plastic raincoats. The most disturbing aspect of Scott’s dark vision was its seeming normalcy. The umbrella-toting denizens of this future L.A.’s vast, gritty, twilit underworld went about their business with the usual jostling and clamor of city people anywhere. No one seemed to realize or care that their world was rotting in the rain. Or perhaps they were long past caring -- in some ways an even grimmer prospect. Scott and his original “Blade Runner” team created a narrative as indelible and disquieting as its dystopian setting. Harrison Ford played Deckard, a hard-guy cop assigned to hunt down and exterminate rebellious android slaves who escape an orbiting prison and return vengefully to earth. The film was set in an imaginary 2019. What made Deckard’s quest more compelling than the standard cops and villains shoot-out was that the androids had superhuman powers but human aspirations. They wanted to live, love and taste freedom. Alas, their batteries were running down. Desperate to find their callous corporate creator, they sought to force a rejuvenation. Released two years before Apple’s prophetic “Big Brother” video ad, “Blade Runner” built upon the artificial intelligence (AI) questions British coding pioneer Alan Turing embedded in his “Turing test.” What is intelligence? How do we differentiate human response from machine response? Can machines think, plan and adapt? And, by extension, might machines and humans one day become indistinguishable? The original “Blade Runner” wove these ethical and philosophical conundrums seamlessly into a fast-paced cops-and-robots survival drama that left viewers white-knuckled. The film also adroitly foreshadowed contemporary issues like climate change, widening economic disparity, and worldwide corporate corruption. Last Friday saw the release of “Blade Runner 2049.” Midway between homage and sequel, the new film from Canadian director Denis Villeneuve brings along two principals from the 1982 Ridley Scott team. Harrison Ford plays a reclusive but still formidable Deckard three haggard decades along. And co-scriptwriter Hampton Fancher reprises many of the troubling themes he explored in the 1982 film. Despite this duo’s best efforts and those of cinematographer Roger Deakens and production designer Dennis Glassner, “2049” never quite achieves liftoff. While its Los Angeles is even grimmer, its visuals more arresting and its androids far more advanced than those in the original, “2049” nonetheless misses the tripwire narrative drive and surprising soulfulness of its predecessor. What Villeneuve’s team presents instead is a plodding, overlong (2 hours, 43 minutes) mystery drama with far too many plot holes and loose threads. Their 2049 dystopia is pictorially fascinating enough to keep viewers in a steady frisson of visual suspense, but the storyline is so bewildering and many-tentacled it diminishes the pleasure. In the 30 years since “Blade Runner’s” 2019 world, the boundary between humans and androids has grown so permeable it’s impossible to tell them apart, nor does the film offer viewers any reason to try. The human-android tension that gave “Blade Runner” its philosophical grounding and crackling narrative drive is altogether missing here, and “2049” suffers as a result. The tradeoff is computer graphics. As far as I could determine, the only overtly human characters in “2049” are a tough L.A. police chief (Robin Wright), a leggy blonde prostitute and the aforementioned Deckard. Everyone else is either a new-generation android “replicant,” an app-generated hologram, or a survivor replicant from the first movie. It’s hard to know whom (or what) to root for. Ryan Gosling bears up robotically under all this, but his sad sack android bounty hunter is as depressing as the world through which he trudges. There’s some talk of replicant reproduction (“I’ve seen a miracle!”) and a coming robot revolution, but those ideas go nowhere. Maybe they’ll be in the next sequel.

To show our gratitude for your support of the Aquarium, we’re offering special promotions to residents of Monterey, San Benito and Santa Cruz counties. Arrive after 3 p.m. and save $10 on each general admission ticket. For more information, visit:

montereybayaquarium.org/locals

STAY CONNECTED

CedarStreetTimes-Fall Fridays-10.17.Final 1

10/4/17 3:20 PM

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October 13, 2017 • CEDAR STREET

Times • Page 21

Fund-Raiser for Whale Entanglement Team Results in Beautiful Sightings in Monterey Bay

Marine Life Studies has a wish list: See it here or check on our website at www.cedarstreettimes.com or on the whale website at MarineLifeStudies.org Photos by Stephan Linz

October 14, 2017 & October 15, 2017 @ 12:00 PM - 3 PM Artisans Gallery Santa Cruz 1368 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz Join us at Artisans for a tribute to Doug Ross. See the release of Doug Ross Fine Art card line with 25 images available. 10 percent of Doug Ross' art sales will be donated to the causes close to his heart. Doug was a talented artist, friend, valuable member of our Whale Entanglement Team (WET)®, and great advocate for all marine mammals and our ocean. Doug was a gift to all of us and his presence made a difference. He left a very large footprint in all of our lives. We were blessed and honored to have Doug as a friend and team member.

Come by the Artisans Gallery and meet members of WET®. Let's celebrate Doug's legacy and admire his art that he put all of his passion into.


Page 22 • CEDAR STREET

Times

• October 13, 2017

Clean Water: Are You Financially Prepared for an Is Your Family Emergency or Natural Disaster? (StatePoint) Being financially prefor an emergency or natural disaster Prepared for pared is about more than just having savings set Having access to critical personal a Disaster or aside. and financial information will help you to recovery. Emergency? on theTheroadexperts at Freddie Mac offer the

(StatePoint) When it comes to emergency and natural disaster preparation, clean, uncontaminated water should be top-of-mind. Being prepared ahead of time is essential to make sure your household will be able to hydrate safely throughout the duration of an emergency. Natural disasters, such as tornadoes, floods and hurricanes, can compromise local water sources. Flooding can be especially dangerous, when harmful bacteria and contaminants that transmit life-threatening diseases can be present in nearby waterways. Unfortunately, flooding can occur after a number of emergency scenarios, from heavy rains to hurricanes to situations when snow melts too quickly. “Contamination in fresh water sources continues to be a public health problem domestically and worldwide. During emergency scenarios, the issue is amplified, as water can become unreliable for consumption,” says Alison Hill, managing director of LifeStraw, a manufacturer of water filtration systems. Consumers need to have the ability to filter their water following an emergency situation. Be sure your emergency supplies include a portable filter which can fit onto a wide variety of popular water bottle brands such as LifeStraw Universal. This versatile filter fits on most bottles you already own and offers two-stage filtration to remove 99.999999 percent of bacteria and 99.999 percent of protozoa, while also reducing chemicals, bad taste and odors. The LifeStraw Universal kit is available online and at specialty retail stores. “We’ve developed portable filtration technology to give consumers greater confidence that, in an emergency situation or natural disaster, they can have access to safe water for days, weeks, even months following a situation where their water supply is compromised,” says Hill. While most people don’t like to dwell on worst case scenarios, the right preparation can help you remain healthy and safe during an emergency. Be sure that you equip your family with practical means to have safe drinking water.

A local effort for fire victims

Al Siekert, the Pacific Grove man who recently won a Jefferson Award for volunteer work and labors weekly to provide a healthy Sunday morning breakfast at Windows by the Bay, has added more giving to his plate. You can help. As of this writing, the Wine Country fires have killed at least 21 people, destroyed more than 2,000 buildings, and are rapidly changing and moving quickly. 560 people remain unaccounted for. Some 70,000 acres have been torched and 25,000 people have fled their homes, taking nothing with them and filling shelters. Al will make a huge batch of ham hocks and beans and take it to the Wine Country fire victims Sunday morning, along with clothing donated by the public. Men’s, women’s, and children’s clothing and toiletries are needed, especially cool/cold weather gear. Please bring items to Cedar Street Times, 306 Grand Ave. in Pacific Grove. We will hold them until Friday, when Al will leave for Wine Country. Thank you in advance for your generosity.

following tips for getting organized and prepared for the unexpected. • Compile information.The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) Emergency Financial First Aid Kit includes fillable checklists, and is a handy and free way to compile important information, such as driver’s license numbers, birth certificates and Social Security numbers, bank accounts, insurance policies, mortgage statements, credit cards, taxes, health insurance cards, accounts, medications taken and any other health records, as well as household contact information, including landlords, doctors, schools, employers, contractors, lawyers, and insurance agents. Be sure to revisit this information periodically and update it as needed. • Review your paperwork. Review your insurance policies and financial paperwork to be sure that they are current. Update any policies as soon as possible, so you are not without coverage when you need it most. After an emergency, contact your insurance agents about your policies to find out what you can expect, including an explanation of benefits. For example, many homeowners policies cover alternative living expenses that can help provide you and your family with temporary housing needs, meals and other life necessities. • Seek mortgage relief. In the event of an emergency, having access to your mortgage information can be critical, as you may be eligible for mortgage relief. “When FEMA announces that individual assistance programs have been

extended in major disaster areas, we quickly respond by offering mortgage relief options for those in the impacted areas. This includes suspending mortgage payments for up to 12 months so victims of natural disasters can focus on what’s important: their own safety and the safety of their families,” says Yvette Gilmore, Freddie Mac VP, Single-Family Servicer Performance Management. “As soon as it’s safe to do so, it’s important that impacted homeowners contact their mortgage company right away to discuss their mortgage relief options.” • Get secured. Secure your property as best as possible, keeping it safe from damaging natural elements and, if you are evacuating, potential vandalism while it sits empty. Consider protecting valuables, mementos and personal information in a safety deposit box or a

fire- and water-proof safe. When it’s safe to return home, document any damage to your home and belongings with photos or videos, if possible. • Get smart. Unfortunately, crises tend to bring out scam artists. Be wary of post-disaster scams and anyone offering to provide you with immediate assistance for money. Government officials will never ask for money and will always show their ID badges. For more disaster preparedness tips and resources, visit www.FreddieMac. com/blog. Saving for a rainy day is an important step that everyone should take to prepare for the unexpected. But remember, true financial preparation for emergencies and disasters goes beyond a savings account. For peace of mind, use free online resources to get organized.

Be Prepared for an Emergency Be Red Cross Ready!

Being prepared means being equipped with the proper supplies you may need in the event of an emergency or disaster. Keep your supplies in an easy-to-carry emergency preparedness kit that you can use at home or take with you in case you must evacuate. At a minimum, you should have the basic supplies listed below:

Water: one gallon per person, per day (3-day supply for evacuation, 2-week supply for home) Food: non-perishable, easy-to-prepare items (3-day supply for evacuation, 2-week supply for home). Flashlight [Available on the Red Cross Store] Battery-powered or hand-crank radio (NOAA Weather Radio, if possible) [Available on the Red Cross Store] Extra batteries First aid kit [Available on the Red Cross Store]

Medications (7-day supply) and medical items Multi-purpose tool Sanitation and personal hygiene items Copies of personal documents (medication list and pertinent medical information, proof of address, deed/lease to home, passports, birth certificates, insurance policies) Cell phone with chargers Family and emergency contact information Extra cash Emergency blanket [Available on the Red Cross Store] Map(s) of the area Consider the needs of all family members and add supplies to your kit. Suggested items to help meet additional needs are: Medical supplies (hearing aids with extra batteries, glasses, contact lenses, syringes, etc) Baby supplies (bottles, formula, baby food, diapers)

Games and activities for children Pet supplies (collar, leash, ID, food, carrier, bowl) Two-way radios Extra set of car keys and house keys Manual can opener Additional supplies to keep at home or in your survival kit based on the types of disasters common to your area: Whistle N95 or surgical masks Matches Rain gear Towels Work gloves Tools/supplies for securing your home Extra clothing, hat and sturdy shoes Plastic sheeting Duct tape Scissors Household liquid bleach Entertainment items

Blankets or sleeping bags

MST Line 22 Big Sur resumes full operation of route after opening of Pfeiffer Canon Bridge With the opening of Big Sur’s new Pfeiffer Canyon Bridge on Friday, October 13, Monterey-Salinas Transit (MST) will resume operating the full route on Line 22 Big Sur. Service will resume Saturdays and Sundays with two trips in each direction. Once again you can enjoy all that beautiful Big Sur has to offer without the hassle of driving and finding parking.

As recovery efforts come to an end, MST will discontinue selling its deeply-discounted $13 per month bus pass to residents and local workers of Big Sur on Thursday, October 12. The deeply-discounted pass had been made available to help alleviate congestion resulting from the construction of the Pfeiffer Canyon Bridge. For more information, visit www.mst.org

or call Monterey-Salinas Transit toll free at 1-888-MST-BUS1. For RealTime bus arrival information, text “Next” and your 4-digit bus stop ID (ex. “Next 1234”) to 25370, call 1-888-MST-BUS1 with your 4-digit bus stop ID, download the free Transit App, or use Google Maps.


October 13, 2017 • CEDAR STREET

Make plans for the Half Marathon

The word-renowned Big Sur Half Marathon is set for Sunday morning, November 12, beginning at 6:50 a.m. and ending at 11:00 a.m. The 13.1-mile race will feature 7,000 participants. It is a key economic driver for the Monterey Peninsula and is estimated to have an economic impact of $8 million as international publicity is focused on our area and money is raised for local charity groups. The event takes place in downtown Monterey, Cannery Row, Pacific Grove and the Coastal Recreation Trail. The event means the temporary closure of several streets on race morning.Here’s how to travel ino New Monterey, Cannery Row and Pacific Grove on race morning: • Until 5:30 a.m., westbound travel is available through the tunnel from Washington Street. Del Monte Avenue will be closed at 3:00 a.m. in the downtown Monterey area from Sloat to Washington Street. • Until 6:15 a.m., westbound travel is available Pacific Avenue. • After 6:15 a.m. and until Monterey streets are reopened after 9 a.m., all traffic is rerouted over Holman Highway, Highway 68. • Bus travel: Lines 1 and 2 to New Monterey and Pacific Grove will be running but may be detoured and delayed while the tunnel is closed until about 8:30 a.m. • Parking: Lighthouse Avenue in downtown Pacific Grove will be closed until 9 a.m. Cannery Row will be closed until 11 a.m.

Times • Page 23

Does Your Trust Have a “Flight Clause”?

modification of the trust without court involvement could be very helpful.

Kyle A. Krasa, Esq.

Planning for Each Generation Estate planning seems simple on the surface. You sign a series of documents naming a responsible party to manage your assets in the event of your incapacity and directing how your assets should be distributed upon your death. However, once you start to really think carefully about all the issues that are involved in the transfer and stewardship of your hard-earned assets, you begin to realize that an estate plan should be comprehensive and should address a multitude of detailed considerations. One important but often overlooked consideration is which state governs your trust? With the exception of federal tax considerations, estate planning is mostly governed by state law. Each state has its own unique rules regarding the administration and interpretation of trust provisions. Typically the state in which your trust was drafted and where you reside will govern the terms of your trust. However, there are occasions when it might be prudent to allow for a change in the governing law. A provision allowing the change of the governing law of your trust is often referred to as a “flight

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clause.” Below are a few examples of how including a “flight clause” in your trust can be beneficial to your overall estate plan. 1. Roaming Beneficiaries In today’s society, it is rare for people to spend their entire lives in the same hometown. People often move to different states for schooling, career opportunities, and adventure. It is likely that you might move to a different state after establishing your trust or that your beneficiaries might move to a different state after your death. Although your trust will be recognized in all 50 states, it might be practical or more convenient to have the governing law of your trust match the state in which the beneficiaries reside. 2. Keeping the Trust Current Your basic living trust remains revocable during your lifetime. However, upon your death, your trust becomes irrevocable. A good comprehensive estate plan will often continue the trust for the lives of your beneficiaries in order to provide them with a degree of creditor protection and divorce protection. However, circumstances can change and it might be beneficial or necessary to modify the terms of the trust even after it has technically become irrevocable. Some states, such as California, require court involvement in limited circumstances in order to modify an otherwise irrevocable trust after the Trust-maker is deceased. Other states allow for the beneficiaries to agree to a modification without court involvement. If an irrevocable trust needs to be modified, a “flight clause” allowing the governing law of the trust to be moved to a state that allows for

3. Extending the Life of the Trust Most states have a “Rule Against Perpetuities,” or a “RAP,” which limits the period of time in which a trust can last. Other states have greatly extended their RAP or have entirely eliminated their RAP. Sometimes you might want your trust to last for generations, such as to provide funding for the education of your grandchildren, great-grandchildren, and great-great-grandchildren. A “flight clause” could allow a trust governed under a state with a short RAP to be moved to a state with a longer RAP in order to allow the trust to continue for a much longer period of time. 4. Better Creditor Protection State laws vary greatly on whether or not a trust can provide the beneficiaries with creditor protection. The most favorable states are typically Nevada, Delaware, Wyoming, and Alaska among others. If a trust is formed and governed under the laws of a less favorable jurisdiction, a “flight clause” might allow the trust to be moved to a more favorable state to provide the beneficiary with better creditor protection. Conclusion: Although all of these planning opportunities involve their own nuances and are often dependent upon the particular facts and circumstances of the situation, the presence of a “flight clause” can provide flexibility in a variety of circumstances. The traditional method of setting the governing law of a trust in stone has its limitations and can often frustrate the purpose or limit the benefits of the trust. KRASA LAW, Inc. is located at 704-D Forest Avenue, Pacific Grove, California 93950 and Kyle may be reached at 831920-0205. Disclaimer: This article is for general information only. Reading this article does not establish an attorney-client relationship. Before acting on any of the information provided in this article, it is important that you consult a competent attorney who is licensed to practice law in your community.


Page 24 • CEDAR STREET

Times

• October 13, 2017

Art in Service of Anti-Bullying

Linda Regula Anti-Bullying Event Reaching for the Light Visiting Artist: LINDA REGULA Thursday, October 19, 7-8:30 pm Ohio-based artist Linda Regula has spent her adult life transforming dark, painful childhood memories into powerful works of art and empowering others to find their creative voices. The inspiring painter, author, teacher, and activist will be visiting Monterey and sharing her story at Open Ground Studios on Thursday, Oct. 19. Regula was born the second youngest of nine children in a tar-papered shack in West Virginia. “My mother ran away when I was nine years old,” she explains. “I was ill-dressed, hungry, abused, and fearful of my father’s violence. Although a world of poverty and neglect surrounded my physical body, I was also blessed because powerful imagination allowed me to create safe and beautiful worlds that helped me cope and nurtured my soul.” At thirteen, an older sister returned and took Linda to Ohio where she was the first in her family to graduate high school. In 1976, married and living on a farm, she fell forty feet from the upper loft of a four-story dairy barn and spent twenty-two months in a hospital recovering. It was then that she discovered her love of painting thanks to a friend who installed an overhead easel above her hospital bed. Today at 73, Linda is a prolific painter, whose haunting, colorful oil paintings have been widely displayed and collected. She has owned two art galleries, served as a museum curator, and led numerous arts organizations. She is also an author, teacher, motivational speaker, and anti-bullying activist. She is co-founder of an anti-bullying organization with former painting student, Monterey-based artist Paul Richmond. He attributes his lifelong love of art to his inspiring mentor. The pair, who have remained close friends since Richmond began taking painting lessons at her studio at age three, started You Will Rise in order to empower young people who have been affected by bullying to speak out. Currently, You Will Rise is hosting their first series of workshops for high school students in this area every Sunday in October at Open Ground Studios. “Reaching for the Light: Visiting Artist Linda Regula” will take place Thursday, October 19 from 7-8:30 pm at Open Ground Studios. The event will begin with a screening of the short documentary “The Mentor and the Artist” by Wild Iris Video that tells the story of the unique mentoring relationship between Linda and Paul. After the film, Linda will share her paintings and discuss how she rose above adversity. The event is free and all are welcome. SPONSORS – This program is made possible in part by a grant from the Arts Council of Monterey County, the You Will Rise Project, Open Ground Studios and Paul Richmond. We are seeking additional sponsors to support and build this program on the West Coast. Those interested can contact Open Ground Studios to get involved. ABOUT THE VENUE At Open Ground Studios we believe art plays a profound role in our human experience. As adults we are often consumed by the pace and responsibilities of our lives, while our creative spirits wait patiently to be revived. We believe emerging and professional artists thrive in a collaborative and supportive community, where freedom for innovation, growth, and camaraderie is limitless. It is our responsibility as a society to invest in the arts to preserve and strengthen this aspect of our community and of ourselves. At Open Ground Studios we specialize in maintaining space for the exploration of visual art that inspires transformation. Open Ground Studios is located in Seaside in a 2000SF space that that houses a gallery, communal studio space, coworking, a printmaking studio, and a frame room. OGS serves teens, adults, artists and creative explorers. We promote community entrйe into creative productivity by hosting workshops, open studio time, classes, social events, and exhibition space. For More Information: Paul Richmond, Artist and You Will Rise Project co-founder Tel: 614-306-0488 Email: paulrichmondstudio@gmail.com Website: paulrichmondstudio.com

MPCTA Seeks State Mediator to Resolve Contract Issues After Four Years of Frustrating Negotiations With College District In a press release, frustrated Monterey Peninsula College Teachers Association (MPCTA) members reminded the public they have been in fruitless negotiations with the Monterey Peninsula Community College District for longer than four years and state they will now seek state mediation to help reach a fair settlement that halts faculty turnover due to low pay. During these four years, MPCTA faculty salaries have fallen in statewide comparisons. The only salary increases faculty have secured have required a grievance procedure and state mediation. During this past year the district has chosen to expand administration by hiring three new deans and creating one new vice-president position. MPC’s faculty earnings are 10 percent below other local colleges and are near the lowest in the state, which makes it difficult to recruit and retain faculty, said MPCTA President Lauren Blanchard. “The most recent salary comparison indicates that MPC faculty salaries rank 59th out of 65 college districts that rely solely on state funds,” she said. “The turnover created by this incredible wage decline takes a

significant toll on students because it is harder to recruit and retain instructors who design programs and classes, deliver instruction, and provide valuable feedback to students.” The union has engaged in positional bargaining since October 2016 and has yet to settle a single substantial contract article. MPCTA has offered agreement to contract changes required for accreditation by ACCJC and compromised significantly on salary, but the district’s compensation proposal has gotten smaller and smaller. Given this regressive approach to bargaining, MPCTA reluctantly concludes that state mediation is necessary to help achieve a fair contract. MPCTA is hopeful that with state intervention a contract can be achieved soon. The Monterey Peninsula College Teachers Association is part of the Community College Association, which is affiliated with the 325,000-member California Teachers Association and the 3 million-member National Education Association.

Lecture by Author Kate Levinson

‘Emotional Currency’ at All Saints’ Carmel

Friday, October 20, 7:00 p.m. Lecture - Open to the public - $10 www.allsaintscarmel.org We generally think of money in terms of having enough or not enough of it. No matter how much or how little money we have, money is one of the most emotionally charged areas of our lives and what we feel and think about it – consciously and unconsciously – greatly influences how we deal with money matters. We rarely think about what money means to us, much less how we respond to money emotionally. Dr. Kate Levinson, author of “Emotional Currency,” will lead an introductory exploration about our inner money lives and the relationship of spirit and money at All Saints’, Dolores and Ninth, Carmel, Friday October 20, at 7:00 p.m. “Here’s the book every woman (and most men) need: a clear, thoughtful and beautifully written guide for how to cope with the myriad of emotions caused by money. Kate Levinson shows how money is both mercilessly public and intimately personal, stirring up our deepest feelings about independence, status, and attractiveness, and terrifying confusion between net worth and self worth.” Robert Reich, author of “Then Next Economy and America’s Future” Dr. Kate Levinson is a licensed Marriage and Family Therapist (#MFC 15955) and holds a PhD in Clinical Psychology. She has spent more than 20 years studying the interface of money and psychology. Levinson works with clients, couples and groups with a wide range of life and financial issues, in her private practice in San Rafael and Point Reyes Station. Kate is the author of Emotional Currency: A Woman’s Guide to Building a Health Relationship with Money, an insightful and empowering guide that offers a profound new approach to dealing with money. Kate leads Emotional Currency workshops throughout the country, and Women, Money, Spirit conferences in the San Francisco Bay Area. Kate also blogs on Psychology Today.

The former co-owner of Point Reyes Books for 14 years and co-founder of the non-profit Black Mountain Circle, Kate is on the board of West Marin Community Services and the advisory board of the Mesa Refuge.

NOAA presents speaker series on key species

In recognition of 25 years in ocean protection, Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary is hosting a science speaker series that will highlight the status and trends of key species, habitats and resources of sanctuary environments over the past 25 years. This series will feature local marine science researchers from partner institutions presenting the latest in scientific understanding that is used to inform conservation and resource protection within the sanctuary. Join us for a presentation that will explore the habitats and species of the offshore environment of Monterey Bay. The first in the series will be presented on “Deep-Sea Discoveries in Monterey Bay: Improbable Animals & Unexpected Stories” presented by Dr. Bruce Robison, Senior Scientist and Midwater Ecologist Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute (MBARI). The date is Thursday, October 19, 6:00 p.m–7:30 p.m. The program will be presented at the Pacific Grove Museum of Natural History, 165 Forest Ave, Pacific Grove. Public audience welcome. There is a suggested donation of $5 per person to benefit hosting non-profit partner, the Pacific Grove Museum of Natural History. For more information, contact Amity Wood, NOAA Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary, Education and Outreach Coordinator, amity.wood@noaa.gov or (831) 647-4255


October 13, 2017 • CEDAR STREET

Times • Page 25

Upcoming Road Closures-Crack Seal and Slurry Seal CIP Project This notice is to inform Pacific Grove residents that the City will begin its Annual Crack Seal and Slurry Seal Capital ImStreet ½ od Sunset Drive Laurel Ave Lobos Ave ½ of Sunset Dr. th 18 Street Congress Ave Hillside Ave Short St Cypress Ave Benito Ave Benito Ct Otter Ln th 19 Street Austin Ave Buena Vista Ave

and potholes due to inclement weather. This work is an important part of the City’s pavement management program.

provement Program (CIP) Project on October 18, 2017. The purpose of this work is to prevent rapid pavement deterioration

From Closures on 10/18 & 10/23 Asilomar Ave Alder St Lighthouse Ave Closures on 10/19 & 10/24 Asilomar Ave Lighthouse Ave Lighthouse Ave Presidio Blvd Alder St Closures on 10/20 & 10/25 Lighthouse Ave Presidio Blvd Patterson Ln Benito Ave Lighthouse Ave Presidio Blvd David Ave

Specific closure dates and locations can be found in the chart below.

To Arena Ave` Forest Ave Pine Ave Arena Ave Pine Ave Pine Ave Patternson Ln Park St Pine Ave Patterson Ln Cul-de-sac Funston Ave Pine Ave South End Funston Ave

Please visit the City of Pacific Grove website, https://www.cityofpacificgrove.org/,

information

for more

or contact Daniel Gho, Director of Public Works, at 831-648-5722 with any questions.

Street Lighting Survey-The City Wants Your Input! The City of Pacific Grove is soliciting your input on street lighting! PG&E has graciously installed two new LED lighting options on Asilomar Avenue and we would like to know which option you prefer! Option 1: Badge 303, 36W 3000K LED Option 2: Badge 4953, 28W Existing Light for reference: Badge 4685, 100W HPSV *Please note the three referenced street lights are marked with yellow cards in the field.

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Page 26 • CEDAR STREET

Times

• October 13, 2017

Homeless Hotspots—Part VI

Is “Blue Bird” healthcare a hint of Homeless Town urban renewal?

Identifying the Fremont/Canyon Del Rey intersection as prime hotspot where local under-housed people gather kicked off this series. If you’re curious about why, consider these facts: To the casual passerby, it’s the tourism industry’s landmark border where Seaside, Monterey and Del Rey Oaks meet. But to those who live in and around the intersection, it’s the unofficial city center of Monterey Peninsula’s version of Homeless Town. Why? Across from Safeway, Laguna Grande Park is Homeless Town’s residential district. On both sides of Fremont Blvd., Seaside’s restaurant row, where homeless persons rummage through trash cans seven days a week, and women are fed on Mondays at Burger King. On the west side in Walgreens parking lot, a revolution in health care is under way Is this indicative of subtle urban renewal? Pay heed! Revelation by a trash picker I thank a thirty-something immigrant I’ll call Jose for setting me straight about the significance of this intersection. Here’s how it happened: Last Monday night, while hauling my trash bins to the street for Seaside’s Tuesday-morning pickup, a shadowy figure swiftly rounded the corner on his bicycle. I recognized him as one of Seaside’s trash pickers. They never enter private property, but freely help themselves to curbside discards. I always put my recyclable water bottles in a separate plastic sack that hangs on a fence post for easy pick up. On Tuesday morning, both sack and bottles are always gone. Until this week, I’d never spoken to

Wanda Sue Parrott

Homeless in Paradise

A homeless hotspot is any place unsheltered people hang in or hang out in order to hang on. Logo designed by Barbara Quin one of the trash pickers, but now I said hello to the young man in a baseball cap. He slowed to a stop. In polite broken English he asked, “Do you have any recyclables?” I handed over my small collection of seven plastic bottles. “Muchas gracias. Things are now very bad for my business.” “What business is that?” I asked. “Recyclables,” he said, explaining that since the recycling center in the Safe-

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way parking lot recently closed, he must take his collections to Salinas to sell them. “You carry bags of empty bottles to Salinas on your bicycle?” “Oh, no. I fill big sacks and then a friend takes me in his truck.” Jose waved goodbye and rode on to the next set of trash cans. Cash-and-carry street banking The flashbulb in my mind lit up. The recycling operation at Safeway had been the financial center of the peninsula’s unofficial Homeless Town. The loss of the recycling center could be, to the homeless and needy, as devastating as the bank crash of 1929 was to all Americans. I thought of Safeway as I remembered entering it from Fremont Ave. Until Jose illuminated me, I hadn’t missed the large boxcar surrounded by throngs of people with plastic bags that filled the pavement under the Black Bear Diner’s parking lot. Now I remembered dozens of poor folks standing in long queues. When they reached the front of the line, they exchanged their recyclables for a few cents

per bottle the way bank clients approach the teller’s window to withdraw pocket cash from their accounts. I thought, “The recycling center operators were the equivalent of countless underprivileged or homeless people’s bank tellers who dispensed cash and carry money.” “Omigod,” I admitted. “They vanished and I didn’t even notice they were gone!” Did you? When God closes a door A memorable line from the movie “The Sound of Music” popped into mind. The sister superior said, “When God closes a door, He opens a window.” Metaphorically, it means when something good vanishes, something new appears. And so it came to pass that as of Sept. 28, 2017, there came to another of the four corners of the Fremont/Canyon Del Rey intersection something akin to a miracle. A big blue bus named Blue Bird opened to welcome and serve much-needed health care. The big bus named Blue Bird Every Thursday from 3 p.m. to 7 p.m., the homeless will be welcome in the parking lot of Walgreens, 1055 Fremont Blvd., Seaside as the first location of Montage Health Care’s Mobile Clinic serving the homeless in Monterey County. Staffed by a nurse practitioner, clinicians and volunteers, the former Bloodmobile bus will offer treatment for sore throats, earaches, coughs, sinus issues, minor skin, wound and urinary infections. Other services will include diabetes and blood pressure screenings and treatment. Montage Health, parent company of Community Hospital of the Monterey Peninsula, is committed to making a positive impact on healthcare delivery to community members who otherwise have limited access to healthcare. At least on Thursdays, the homeless will reappear! For details see www.montagehealth. org/mobileclinic Thanks for supporting last week’s Books for Beds benefit. Others will follow! Copyright 2017 by Wanda Sue Parrott


October 13, 2017 • CEDAR STREET

Were you there? You may be eligible for aid

In a press release sent out on Tues., Oct. 10, Monterey County District Attorney Dean D. Flippo urges Monterey County residents who were present and experienced emotional and physical losses during the shooting at the Las Vegas Route 91 Harvest Festival shooting on Sun., Oct. 1, to contact the district attorney’s office. They may be able to help you pay for expenses such as medical bills, funeral expenses, mental health treatment, or lost wages. “You may apply for help whether or not you were injured in the attack. Even if you have no expenses today, the victim unit of the district attorney’s office encourages you to apply now in the event you incur expenses in the future. Please call the Monterey County District Attorney’s Office, Victim’s Unit at 831755-5072 for assistance,” said Pamela Patterson, Victim Unit Program Manager.

“The FBI is compiling a list of everyone who was at the festival during the attack. If you were there, please add your name to the FBI's list at https://forms.fbi.gov/seekingvictims-of-las-vegas-music-fe…. You can also help the investigation into the attack and find more resources for victims through the FBI's page on the Las Vegas attack at https://www.fbi. gov/…/assistance-for-victims-of-theharvest….”

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Legal Notices FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 20171848 The following person is doing business as CENTRAL COAST FIREPLACE, 221 Grand Avenue, Pacific Grove, Monterey County, CA 93950: CBLA SERVICES, LLC, 221 Grand Avenue, Pacific Grove, CA 93950. This statement was filed with the Clerk of Monterey County on 09/11/17. Registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or name(s) listed above on 09/01/17. Signed: Lindsay Beavers, Manager. This business is conducted by a limited liability company. Publication dates: 9/15, 9/22, 9/29, 10/06/17

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 20171639 The following person is doing business as iCREATE STUDIO and iCREATE DESIGN STUDIO, 227 Forest Ave. Suite 5, Pacific Grove, Monterey County, CA 93950: KRISTY CHETTLE SEBOK, 227 Forest Ave. Suite 5, Pacific Grove, CA 93950. This statement was filed with the Clerk of Monterey County on 08/10/17. Registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or name(s) listed above on 08/09/17. Signed: Kristy Chettle Sebok. This business is conducted by an individual. Publication dates: 9/08, 9/15, 9/22, 9/29/17

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 20171808 The following person is doing business as ACCOUNTING AND TAX SOLUTIONS, 520 18th Street, Pacific Grove, Monterey County, CA 93950: MICHAEL DEAN JOHNSON, 520 18th Street, Pacific Grove, CA 93950. This statement was filed with the Clerk of Monterey County on 09/05/17. Registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or name(s) listed above on 08/23/17. Signed: Michael Johnson. This business is conducted by an individual. Publication dates: 9/22, 9/29, 10/06, 10/13/17

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 20171806 The following person is doing business as CHURCH AND MCKENZIE COLLECTIBLES, 470 Hidden Valley Rd., Royal Oaks, Monterey County, CA 95076: CHURCH GLENN AND MCKENZIE KATHRYN, 470 Hidden Valley Rd., Royal Oaks, CA 95076. This statement was filed with the Clerk of Monterey County on 09/01/17. Registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or name(s) listed above on 01/01/17. Signed: Glenn Church. This business is conducted by a general partnership. Publication dates: 9/29, 10/06, 10/13, 10/20/17

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 20171848 The following person is doing business as CENTRAL COAST FIREPLACE, 221 Grand Avenue, Pacific Grove, Monterey County, CA 93950: CBLA SERVICES, LLC, 221 Grand Avenue, Pacific Grove, CA 93950. This statement was filed with the Clerk of Monterey County on 09/11/17. Registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or name(s) listed above on 09/01/17. Signed: Lindsay Beavers, Manager. This business is conducted by a limited liability company. Publication dates: 9/15, 9/22, 9/29, 10/06/17

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 20171793 The following person is doing business as CENTER STREET MARKETPLACE, Center Street between 2 Chambers Lane & 13738 Center Street, Carmel Valley, Monterey County, CA 93924. Mailing address: 947 Cass Street, Suite 1, Monterey, CA 93940: CARMEL VALLEY CENTER PARKING ASSOCIATION, 947 Cass Street, Suite 1, Monterey, CA 93940,. This statement was filed with the Clerk of Monterey County on 8/31/17. Registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or name(s) listed above on N/A. Signed: Steven F. Romberg, President. This business is conducted by a corporation. Publication dates: 9/08, 9/15, 9/22, 9/29 /17

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 20171748 The following person is doing business as SOUTH COUNTY ALL STARS, 391 Franscioni St., Soledad, Monterey County, CA 93960: MONICO PLACENCIA GONZALEZ, 391 Franscioni St., Soledad, CA 93960. This statement was filed with the Clerk of Monterey County on 08/25/17. Registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or name(s) listed above on N/A. Signed: Monico P. Gonzalez. This business is conducted by an individual. Publication dates: 9/22, 9/29, 10/06, 10/13/17

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 20171793 The following person is doing business as CENTER STREET MARKETPLACE, Center Street between 2 Chambers Lane & 13738 Center Street, Carmel Valley, Monterey County, CA 93924. Mailing address: 947 Cass Street, Suite 1, Monterey, CA 93940: CARMEL VALLEY CENTER PARKING ASSOCIATION, 947 Cass Street, Suite 1, Monterey, CA 93940,. This statement was filed with the Clerk of Monterey County on 8/31/17. Registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or name(s) listed above on N/A. Signed: Steven F. Romberg, President. This business is conducted by a corporation. Publication dates: 9/08, 9/15, 9/22, 9/29 /17

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• October 13, 2017

THE A RT OF LI VI N G

O PEN SAT U R DAY 1 2 -4 Pebble Beach | 3382 Laureles Lane | $3,950,000 Mike, Jessica & Nic Canning 831.238.5535

O P E N SAT UR DAY 12 -3 & SUN DAY 2 -3 Pebble Beach | 1038 Marcheta | $1,849,000 Doug & Lisa Steiny 831.236.7363

PEB B L E B EACH 3136 Stevenson | $2,975,000 Michele Altman 831.214.2545

OPE N SAT U RDAY 1 -4 Pebble Beach | 2955 Lake Road | $2,128,000 Shawn Quinn 831.236.4318

O P E N SAT UR DAY & SUN DAY 1 -4 Pacific Grove | 304 Locust | $1,329,300 J.R. Rouse 831.218.5738

OPEN S U NDAY 1 -3 Pebble beach | 2854 Congress | $1,295,000 Jacqueline Adams 831.277.0971

MON T E RE Y 125 Surf #426 | $1,200,000 Jeannie Fromm 831.277.3371

M ON T E R E Y 8210 Manjares Lot 131 | $1,195,000 Mike Jashinski 831.236.8913

PEB B L E B EACH 4097 Pine Meadows | $1,100,000 Dave Randall 831.241.8871

OPE N F RIDAY 3- 6, S U N DAY 1 1 -3 460 Archer | $965,000 Mark Capito 831.915.9927

MONTEREY PENINSULA BROKERAGES | SOTHEBYSHOMES.COM/MONTEREY CARMEL-BY-THE-SEA 831.624.9700 | CARMEL RANCHO 831.624.9700 | CARMEL VALLEY 831.659.2267 | PACIFIC GROVE 831.372.7700 Sotheby’s International Realty and the Sotheby’s International Realty logo are registered (or unregistered) service marks used with permission. Operated by Sotheby’s International Realty, Inc. Real estate agents affiliated with Sotheby’s International Realty, Inc. are independent contractor sales associates and are not employees of Sotheby’s International Realty, Inc.


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