VOL. 104, ISSUE 4 • JANUARY 28, 2016
INSIDE
A Cove sea lion surprises Cave Store customers, A3 ■ Frontline Cancer, A8 ■ Calendar, A10 ■ Crime News, A12 ■ Business, A14 ■ News Nuggets, A24 ■ Obituaries, A30 ■ Sports, A31
Muirlands-area water project under review
DPR committee hears plans to replace 8,936 feet of piping BY ASHLEY MACKIN Plans for a “fairly large” water project in the Muirlands area were presented to La Jolla’s Development Permit Review (DPR) committee during its Jan. 19 meeting at La Jolla Rec Center. Impacted streets as part of this project include: Avenida Manana, Avenida Wilfredo, Manana Place, Muirlands Vista Way, Muirlands Drive, Solymar Drive, Newkirk Drive, Inspiration Drive, Terryhill Drive and Havenhurst Drive, and other alleys in the area. Presented as a preliminary review, the City of San Diego Public Works project will replace 8,936 feet of pipe and install 2,300 feet of new pipe within the public right-of-way at multiple SEE WATER PROJECT, A28 COURTESY OF LA JOLLA HISTORICAL SOCIETY
La Jolla Symphony performs Feb. 6-7, B3 ■ Best Bets, B8 ■ Social Life, B12 ■ Kitchen Shrink, B16 ■ Weekly Gems, B18 ■ Theater, B21 ■ Classifieds, B24 ■ Real Estate, B26
LA JOLLA
LIGHT An Edition of
565 Pearl St., Suite 300 La Jolla, CA 92037 (858) 459-4201 lajollalight.com
Memorial quilts added to veteran honor ceremonies at Mt. Soledad BY KAREN HEYMAN Quilts of Valor Foundation (QOV), a national organization whose members stitch quilts for those touched by war, will now be participating in Veteran Honor Ceremonies at Mt. Soledad Memorial, with the gifting of a commemorative quilt to a veteran’s family. “The Quilts of Collen Craven quilted this memorial for her husband Valor gifts make in memory of his father, a these honor presentations even veteran of WWII. more special,” said Bob Mulrooney, an Air Force veteran and the executive director of Mt. Soledad Memorial SEE MEMORIAL QUILTS, A19
The historical gully-washer of 1916 carries this car away in La Jolla.
La Jollans faced floods, fear and folly in 1916 — Was a rainmaker to blame? Editor’s Note: Eyeing 2016’s forecast for a super El Niño, La Jolla Historical Society Historian Carol Olten looks back at the torrents of a century ago, when residents of The Jewel were flooded out and the city had second thoughts about the rainmaker it hired from Kansas who promised to fill the new Morena Reservoir with 15 billion gallons of water.
BY CAROL OLTEN hundred years ago, the year 1916 began with La Jolla’s small population of about 200 inhabitants nestled in scattered beach cottages along the cliffs anticipating another cozy winter filled with sunshine and happy times. The new La Jolla Playground had just opened, a symbol of progressive social and cultural life along with the La Jolla Woman’s Club. There were silent movies to be enjoyed at the fancy SEE STORM, A6
A
A photograph circa 1920 of ol’ rainmaker Charles Hatfield
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PAGE A2 - JANUARY 28, 2016 - LA JOLLA LIGHT
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©2016 Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Each Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage office is owned by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker® and the Coldwell Banker Logo are registered service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Broker does not guarantee the accuracy of square footage, lot size or other information concerning the condition or features of property provided by seller or obtained from public records or other sources, and the buyer is advised to independently verify the accuracy of that information through personal inspection and with appropriate professionals. * Based on information total sales volume from California Real Estate Technology Services, Santa Barbara Association of REALTORS, SANDICOR, Inc. for the period 1/1/2013 through 12/31/2013 in Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego, Santa Barbara and Ventura Counties. Due to MLS reporting methods and allowable reporting policy, this data is only informational and may not be completely accurate. Therefore, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage does not guarantee the data accuracy. Data maintained by the MLS’s may not reflect all real estate activity in the market.
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LA JOLLA LIGHT - JANUARY 28, 2016 - PAGE A3
PHOTOS OF THE WEEK
PHOTOS BY RACHELLE AGOSTI
Cove sea lion goes shopping at Cave Store J ust before closing on Jan. 21, an unexpected customer entered the Cave Store near La Jolla Cove — a young sea lion from the cliffs below. “I was at the register with some customers when this little sea lion came up the 145 steps into the store,” said Cave Store manager Rachelle Agosti. “We’ve never had a sea lion actually come into the store before, although there was one time, about five years ago,
when Jim (Allen, Cave Store owner) was opening the door and there was a sea lion nearby, but it didn’t come in.” Agosti said staff and customers chased the sea lion around for about 10 to 15 minutes attempting to usher it out, but it “had no interest in leaving,” she said. “It climbed all over our displays and throughout the store. Eventually, we got the sea lion out to Goldfish Point and from there, it went down
the cliffs and into the ocean.” Agosti opined it was born during the most recent pupping season. “We think it came up through the tunnel we have near the store that leads down to one of the caves, but that’s about 145 steps to the store, plus a platform. We take tourists down to see the caves that way and there have occasionally been sea lions on the platform, but that’s been it.”
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PAGE A4 - JANUARY 28, 2016 - LA JOLLA LIGHT
Board OKs speed limit increases, ad hoc committee reports BY ASHLEY MACKIN La Jolla’s Traffic & Transportation (T&T) advisory board met Jan. 20 with a mix of items to discuss, including proposals for three speed limit increases, temporary road closures for special events, the Su Casa development project, and the findings of its ad hoc committee. formed to evaluate the variety of parking time limits in the Village.
Speed limit increases
T&T chair Dave Abrams said the city is suggesting speed limit increases for three La Jolla streets: Soledad Mountain Road (between Pacifica Drive and Soledad Road), La Jolla Boulevard (between Gravilla and Pearl streets), and La Jolla Scenic Drive North (between La Jolla Mesa Drive and Soledad Park Road). “The city traffic engineers conduct speed surveys every few years to see how many people are traveling at what speeds. If a certain percentage (85 percent) go above the posted limit, (due to speed trap laws) police cannot use radar to enforce that speed limit,” he said. “So the city recommends 5 miles-per-hour incremental increases so they can enforce speed laws and write tickets.”
Traffic & Transportation board members Donna Aprea, Dave Abrams and Tom Brady However, members Patrick Ryan and Brian Earley were concerned by the lack of community outreach. “I don’t think we should be increasing the speed limit in residential areas (without notifying residents). There are people backing into traffic from their driveways and I think there will be angry homeowners,” Earley said. Agreeing, Ryan added, “Usually there are residents here voicing
their opinions,” but none were present at the T&T meeting. “I just wonder if it’s going to be a problem later on when surprised residents see the speed limit signs change and they think ‘who voted for this?’ ” Nevertheless, the proposed increase on Soledad Mountain Road, from 35 to 40 miles per hour, passed 5-1-0 with Earley in opposition. Similarly, the proposed increase on La Jolla Boulevard from 25 to
ASHLEY MACKIN
30 miles per hour was also approved 5-1-0, on the basis there are more businesses than homes on that stretch, so there would be fewer impacted residents. Lastly, the La Jolla Scenic Drive South proposed increase, from 25 to 30 miles per hour, was also approved 5-1-0.
Holiday Street Closures
Ann Kerr Bache, event chair of the 59th annual La Jolla Christmas
Parade & Holiday Festival came before the board to request the street closures affiliated with the Dec. 4, 2016 event. Bache said there have been no changes in the last several years as far as the route, and each year, volunteers distribute information to make sure drivers don’t park their cars on the parade route while the street is closed. “We put the ‘no park’ signs the city requires up in advance at the entrance to the street indicating it will be closed to through- traffic temporarily, and along the street,” she said. “Last year, Boy Scout Troop 506 put out 4,000 fliers to warn drivers there was a no-park time approaching.” She said volunteers also contact local churches to make sure their congregations know about the prohibited parking. The route is on Girard Avenue between Kline and Prospect streets, and down Prospect between Girard and Draper avenues. Staging and other set-up areas are set for surrounding streets, and the Holiday Festival is held at the Rec Center, 615 Prospect St. A motion to approve the requested temporary street closures affiliated with the parade as presented approved unanimously.
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LA JOLLA LIGHT - JANUARY 28, 2016 - PAGE A5
Biologists develop method for antibiotic susceptibility tests
Su Casa
Although it was not required, Su Casa project applicant Claude-Anthony Marengo was on hand to request support for the public right-of-way vacation needed to accommodate the underground parking garage associated with the mixed-use project proposed at 6738 La Jolla Blvd. and 350 Playa del Sur, the site of Su Casa restaurant. Plans call for demolishing the existing restaurant and apartment complex and constructing a two-story 7,875 square-foot mixed-use building, a 3,820 square-foot two-story residential building and a 3,086 square-foot three-story residential building with a 15,312 square-foot underground parking garage. The two-directional driveway to the underground parking garage would be an entrance/exit and feed to La Jolla Boulevard. “The property is serpentine rather than a rectangular configuration … so we’re talking about a curved property line with sidewalks of different widths, so we would make a uniform sidewalk area … and make the property rectangular,” Marengo said. “If this was a regular building, there would be no right-of-way vacation. But we are going to change the property line and redistribute the sidewalks so they are even all the way around. That’s why I’m here.”
Su Casa project applicant Claude-Anthony Marengo A motion to support the project and its right-of-way vacation was approved unanimously.
Ad hoc committee reports
The T&T ad hoc committee charged with examining the inconsistent parking times in the Village – ranging from 15 minutes to two hours – reported it would distribute surveys in the coming weeks to the businesses along Fay Avenue between Silverado and Kline. The survey will ask business owners on that block, which currently has a parking limit of one-hour, “Would you consider changing the time limit to 90 or 120 minutes?” Ryan said. “We are also asking if the change would be
ASHLEY MACKIN
beneficial or detrimental to their businesses or if they are neutral on it. This block is straightforward and as a starting point in the Village, we thought it would be a good test sample. We’ll see how this goes, refine the process and go from there.” Ad hoc committee chair Tom Brady said the committee has been meeting for several months to decide the best course of action. “This is just to test the waters so we know how to best proceed,” he said of the surveys. ■ La Jolla’s Traffic & Transportation (T&T) advisory board meets 4 p.m. third Wednesdays at La Jolla Rec Center, 615 Prospect St. lajollacpa.org
FROM UCSD REPORTS A team of biologists and biomedical researchers at UC San Diego has developed a new method to determine if bacteria are susceptible to antibiotics within a few hours, an advance that could slow the appearance of drug resistance and allow doctors to more rapidly identify the appropriate treatment for patients with life threatening bacterial infections. In a paper published online last week in the journal EBioMedicine, the scientists reported the development of a rapid susceptibility test for Staphylococcus aureus, a bacterium that causes some 60 percent of hospital-acquired infections and which has spread in communities, causing pneumonia and a variety of skin and tissue infections in both healthy and immune-compromised individuals. The development is important, say biomedical scientists, because of the critical need for physicians to rapidly discriminate between drug resistant strains (commonly termed MRSA for methicillin-resistant S. aureus) and drug sensitive strains, since these infections can progress rapidly, especially MRSA strains with resistance to newer antibiotics designed to treat pathogens that are appearing in hospitals. Rapid antimicrobial susceptibility testing allows doctors to discriminate between infections caused by drug sensitive bacteria, which can be treated with safe and effective antibiotics developed in what scientists call the “golden age of drug discovery” (the mid-20th century) such as penicillin, and those caused by drug resistant bacteria, which might require newer antibiotics, such as daptomycin or cubicin. This approach will decrease the emergence of resistance by reserving the newest drugs for those infections where they are most needed. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, antibiotic resistance causes two million illnesses and 23,000 deaths annually, costing the U.S. economy approximately $20-billion a year in direct health care costs and nearly eight million extra days in the hospital. Indeed, bacteria are evolving resistance to antibiotics much more quickly than global biomedical research efforts are delivering new drugs to market, leading to the appearance of infections caused by bacteria that are now resistant to every therapy.
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PAGE A6 - JANUARY 28, 2016 - LA JOLLA LIGHT
FROM STORM, A1 Granada Theater. Most homes had electricity. Roads and sidewalks were being paved in the interest of driving and civility. Residents clearly were living and enjoying themselves in their snug little place by the sea. Jethro Mitchell Swain, a farmer with a mule and some chickens on Draper Avenue, set about picking his berries, selling eggs and collecting stove wood. Anson Mills, reporting in his early 1916 diary entries, noted comings and goings of numerous relations on trains to San Diego and the wonderful success of Balboa Park’s 1915-16 Panama California Exposition. In short, 1916 looked like nothing but blue sky days ahead. And then it began to rain. And then it rained some more. And it seemed like it would never stop. Winds howled. Lightning and thunder struck. Electricity went out. Roofs leaked. Railroad tracks washed out, along with bridges, dams and roadways. Food supplies in tiny, isolated La Jolla dwindled. Fear replaced the snugness and prosperity the community had come to know.
Most disastrous flood of the century
Historically, 1916 entered San Diego history as the year of the most disastrous flood of the century — a flood associated with the rainmaker, Charley Hatfield, who started his life as a sewing machine salesman in Ft. Scott, Kansas. Hatfield convinced the City of San Diego’s mayor and city council in December 1915, that if he were paid $10,000 he would fill their newly built Morena Reservoir with 15 billion gallons of water. The city got much more than they bargained for, even though Hatfield never was paid and – 100 years later – it remains undetermined if he fulfilled his role as a “moisture accelerator.” There was a countywide disaster with an estimate of more than 50 persons drowned, horrendous mudslides, and roadways and bridges destroyed. The San Diego River became a mile-wide torrent covering Mission Valley leveling out to a goopy delta filled with debris in the
COURTESY LA JOLLA HISTORICAL SOCIETY
The flooding following the deluge of 1916, forced this La Jolla baker to take to a rowboat in search of butter. bay as the water made its way to the ocean. In La Jolla, the rain of 1916 produced its own unsettlements. Mills records the chaotic local scene in his diary entry of Jan. 27: “Our streets are badly cut up, no gas or electricity and no communication with the rest of the world. No papers today so we can only guess at the damage in other places. The water at Fay and Ravina streets this morning was 60 to 80 feet wide and nearly two feet deep and very strong currents. Girard, Fay, Eads and Draper streets are badly cut. Now 9 p.m. dark and squally. Looks like more rain before morning. Nearly all the houses have leaked.” The same day Swain writes: “Last night and today all day has been the nastiest continuous rainy and windiest of this
winter and continues up to bedtime. No trains moving or other modes of travel. We are all OK, so let her go at it,” he concludes with a certain stoicism. But commiserations continue in the next day’s diary: “Everything washed out, no train and no mail and no autos, no butter in town.”
Lamenting the butter shortage
Strangely, Mills’ diaries also contain a reference that the storm has left La Jolla without a butter supply. One could wonder why — as the storm threatened their houses and roads — everyone was expressing a concern over butter. At any rate, the butter crisis reached a peak when the town’s first bakery owner, Caleniero Tonini at 7613 Fay Ave.,
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www.lajollalight.com legendarily took the matter in hand, got in a skiff and rowed himself to San Diego and back with several pounds of the golden commodity. In 1916, of course, there were virtually no weather forecasts (Hatfield’s predictive boasts to the city fathers withstanding!), so La Jolla like the rest of San Diego, didn’t know what it was getting in for as the year dawned. Both the Mills and Swain diaries indicate the disastrous rain took a stealthy approach, dropping a few drizzles here and there through early January before the first bombardment hit at mid-month. On Jan. 17, Mills recorded: “The San Diego River bank is full. They had to take people from their houses near Mission Bay in boats.” The storm, which Mills records dropping more than 30 inches of rain in La Jolla over about 10 days, began to let up in late January and early February, but the damage of the deluge continued to be cause concern. In late January, 1916, Mills and his wife, Nellie, and daughter, Ellen, were slowly drying out in their house at the corner of Fay Avenue and Prospect Street and ferreting forth to learn what really had happened. Mills does not mention rainmaker Hatfield in his diaries, but on Jan. 28 writes: “Our fears about the storm were well founded. It has raised the very dickens.” He records San Diego and Mission Bay full of wreckage, lives lost, thousands of feet of the San Diego railroad and bridges and dams washed out, the Otay valley swept clean of everything — and thousands of abalone washed ashore at Bird Rock! On Jan. 29, Mills managed to start his car and take a drive toward San Diego for a personal inspection. He got as far as “a big cut in the road half a mile below Bird Rock.” Thankfully, he notes later: “A number of cars and teams have got through from town today so we are supplied with everything but wood, coal and oil.” Swain’s La Jolla diaries of 1916 indicate the storm was followed in February by days of intense heavy fog. He reports another heavy rain arrived on Feb. 29, but it came and went quickly. By March 5, he finally found it dry and safe enough to put out his chickens!
LA JOLLA LIGHT - JANUARY 28, 2016 - PAGE A7
History workshops to highlight ‘Holocaust Journeys’
T
(with Carol Jean Delmar)
he 2015-16 Holocaust Living History Workshop series continues with authors, films and other events highlighting the diverse “Holocaust Journeys” of survivors and others, by recounting their stories. Co-sponsored by UC San Diego Library and the UCSD Jewish Studies Program, the series goal is to broaden understanding of the past, foster tolerance and preserve the memory of victims and survivors of the Holocaust. Events are free and held 5-7 p.m. Wednesdays in Geisel Library’s Seuss Room on campus, with an exception, June 1 (as noted below):
“Serenade” is Delmar's tribute to her parents' life, love and suffering. Her father, Franz Jung, was a budding opera singer in prewar Vienna when his dreams were halted by Hitler's annexation of Austria. Franz and his wife, Franziska, fled Vienna with help from the Hebrew Immigration Aid Society. After reaching safety, he lost his voice, and had to abandon his career. In this presentation, Delmar, a Los Angeles-based opera and theatre critic, recreates her parents' story from Vienna to Hollywood and traces her own journey in the footsteps of their experience.
Feb. 10: Exile in Ecuador (with Moselio Schaechter)
Schaechter spent his childhood in Mussolini’s Italy. Thanks to a transit visa for Portugal and the United States, the Schaechters made it to Quito, Ecuador in January 1941. Over the next nine years, Moselio struggled to accommodate his Jewish identity with a nascent South American self. He will share memories of his youth, experience in the Ecuadorian Jewish refugee community, life in the U.S., and subsequent visit to his old “home.”
March 2: Charlotte Salomon Interventions (with Darcy C. Buerkle)
Historian Buerkle discusses her book, “Nothing Happened: Charlotte Salomon and an Archive of Suicide,” which examines the life of writer/artist Salomon. Born into a Jewish family in Berlin, Salomon was deported to Auschwitz and murdered at age 26. In her final work “Life? or Theatre?” which consists of 769 autobiographical gouache paintings, she envisioned the circumstances surrounding the eight suicides in her family, all but one of them women.
April 13: Serenade: A Memoir of Music and Love from Vienna and Prague to L.A.
May 4: Chava Rosenfarb's The Tree of Life: An Epic about Life in the Lodz Ghetto (with Goldie Morgentaler)
Morgentaler, a professor of English literature at the University of Lethbridge, discusses the work and life of her mother, Chava Rosenfarb, a Yiddish writer of the mid-20th century. Born in Lodz, Poland in 1923, Chava began writing poetry in the ghetto. After barely surviving internments in Auschwitz and Bergen-Belsen, she was homeless and stateless for several years before immigrating to Canada, where she married the abortion rights activist and physician Heniek (Henry) Morgentaler.
June 1: Tom Segev: Living with the Holocaust
Historian, author and journalist Tom Segev brings an unflinching look at Israel’s history and tortured attempts to come to terms with the Holocaust. Born in Jerusalem to parents who fled Nazi Germany, Segev is among the so-called New Historians, who has challenged many of the country’s traditional narratives or “founding myths.” His books include “The Seventh Million: the Israelis and the Holocaust” (2000); and “Simon Wiesenthal: The Life and Legends” (2010). This event will be held at 5 p.m. in the Calit2 Auditorium.
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PAGE A8 - JANUARY 28, 2016 - LA JOLLA LIGHT
Transformative period in cancer prevention
O
ne year ago this month, a pair of distinguished researchers at Johns Hopkins University published a study that essentially concluded getting cancer is just “bad luck,” the unfortunate result of random mutations during DNA replication. It was a startling statement, undermining the fundamental premise of cancer prevention, and it quickly prompted contentious debate among scientists and doctors. New research testing the Hopkins’ hypothesis published last month in Nature has come to the opposite conclusion: Cancer is not bad luck. It is, in fact, mostly preventable. This hopeful message was proclaimed in a special report on the future of cancer prevention research, published in the journal of the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) by some of the nation’s leading cancer researchers, including Elizabeth Blackburn, former president of AACR, new president of Salk Institute for Biological Studies and an attendee at the recent World Economic Forum in Davos-Klosters, Switzerland to discuss the topic. (Full disclosure: I’m a co-author of the report, member of the AACR Board of Directors and Cancer Prevention Committee and editor-in-chief of Cancer Prevention
Research. This is a topic close to my heart and an emphasis in my decades of cancer research and practice.) The National Cancer Institute (NCI) has also highlighted this transformation in its Jan. 13 Cancer Currents Blog by Barry Kramer, director of National Cancer Institute’s Division of Cancer Prevention. We have entered a transformative period in cancer prevention, and just in time. The American Cancer Society recently described a “rising global cancer epidemic,” with nearly 8 million people dying from cancer each year worldwide. The recent pace of cancer prevention research and translation has been astonishing, with advances in next-generation sequencing, liquid biopsy technology, big data analytics and immune oncology. These approaches are revealing the molecular and cellular events that launch the genetic, epigenetic (changes in gene expression without changes in the actual DNA) and tumor inflammatory microenvironment alterations that drive development of cancer. In other words, this is the work that can – and will – lead to new drugs, vaccines and therapies that prevent the mutations that result in “bad luck,” treat premalignancy and detect cancer at an earlier, curable stage. The AACR special report has much to say.
Here are some of the major cancer prevention advances in just the last two years, largely through precision medicine and immune-oncology (boosting the body’s natural defenses to fend off malignancies): • Advances in genomics and the improving ability to crunch extraordinary amounts of data are fueling efforts like those of investigators at the Iris and Matthew Strauss Center for the Early Detection of Ovarian Cancer, who reported last year the discovery of six ovarian tumor-specific mRNA isoforms (from more than 350,000 genome-wide) and now in clinic trial at Moores for early detection of ovarian cancer with a pap smear. Other related efforts include the Cancer Cell Mapping Initiative, a collaboration involving Moores Cancer Center, the Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center at UC San Francisco and others. Similarly, there is a “Pre-Cancer Genome Atlas” in the works. • Genomic markers for early detection of colon and lung cancer have been validated for standard clinical use. Liquid biopsy technologies, which seek to identify tell-tale clues of lurking cancers in blood samples, have shown promise in pancreatic cancer research. Moores is part of a five-center team (funded last year by the NCI), which includes UCSF and MD Anderson, that focuses on the critical need for blood-based biomarkers and imaging tools for early detection of pancreatic neoplasms at a potentially curable stage. • There have been major advances in the global implementation of the human papillomavirus vaccine and development of non-viral vaccines for colon and breast cancer, including in hereditary cancer syndromes, such as BRCA mutation carriers. • More expansive screenings and improved lifestyle research on major cancer risk factors,
such as obesity and physical activity, are reducing the risk of cancer. Population-science researchers at Moores, funded by the National Institutes of Health, have contributed substantially to national and international guidelines and innovations like GPS devices that help prompt beneficial behavioral change. Obesity control is also a major focus of a recently awarded, unique NCI-funded partnership between UC San Diego and San Diego State University to reduce cancer in Hispanic populations in San Diego and Imperial counties. These are just some of the diverse efforts in progress. We stand at the edge of a new frontier. It’s been a long journey, with plenty of wrong turns and dead-ends. Cancer possesses the ungodly ability to defy effective treatment. Cancer and premalignant cells can change their surrounding microenvironment to cloak their presence while drawing out additional sustenance and support from its host (us). They are diverse and complex cell masses that mutate and evolve constantly, reducing the odds of total destruction while increasing the chances of rebound, return, spread and kill. President Obama recently challenged American medical science to cure cancer, “once and for all.” That is a very tall order. It won’t happen anytime soon. It may be easier – and happen earlier – if we simply learn, and effectively implement, how to prevent this scourge and its “bad luck” from happening in the first place. — Scott M. Lippman, MD, is director of UC San Diego Moores Cancer Center. His column on medical advances from the front lines of cancer research and care appears in the La Jolla Light the fourth Thursday of each month. You can reach Dr. Lippman at mcc-dir-lippman@ucsd.edu
Beautiful single level, family home in the hills of
La Jolla Mesa.
Open floor plan with downtown and panoramic ocean views! - Dutch-style entry door with keyless entry - Newly refinished hardwood floors throughout the home - LED overhead lighting in every room with skylights in kitchen and bathrooms - Custom modern bathrooms with large tile - Crown molding throughout home - Dual pane windows and sliders - Large garage and brick-paved covered back patio
Seller will entertain offers between $1,495,000 - $1,575,000
858.864.8741 | CarlosGSD.com | CalBre#01507102 8
©20 Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Each Coldwell Banker ©2015 Re Residential Brokerage office is owned by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker®and the Coldwell Banker Logo, Coldwell Banker Previews International® and the Coldwell Banker Previews International Int Logo, are registered service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Broker does not guarantee the accuracy of square footage, lot size or other information concerning the condition co or features of property provided by seller or obtained from public records or other sources, and the buyer is advised to independently verify the accuracy of that information through personal inspection ins and with appropriate professionals.
www.lajollalight.com
LA JOLLA LIGHT - JANUARY 28, 2016 - PAGE A9
OFFERED FOR AUCTION ON FEBRUARY 23RD, if not sold prior. Bidding from $3.2M* 18880 Old Coach Way, Poway
This 6+3BR, 9+5BA estate is nothing less than a masterpiece of luxury living. Entertain graciously in the great room with 30-foot ceilings, a genuinely oversized kitchen, and sumptuous bedrooms in more than 18,600 SF under roof (approx. 13,000 SF in main residence, approx. 3,433 SF guest home, and approx. 2,385 SF stable quarters). Family and friends will enjoy an equally impressive guesthouse, and incomparable indoor/outdoor living areas showcasing a view-enriched lanai with an infinity edge pool, waterfall, spa, waterside, and a lazy river. A world-class estate, that is not just the finest in Poway, but among the most desirable in San Diego County. The secondary legal parcel currently accommodates a baseball diamond with batting cage that can easily be transformed into a personal vineyard or a secondary property with its own estate. To see this stunning property’s video, photo slideshow, and 3D Matterport walkthrough, go to www.oldcoachway.com
FONG NG J HKIR NKPJPMNQRFNLR OPPORTUNITY, REGISTER YOUR INTEREST TODAY SO YOU DON’T MISS OUT! For Up-To-Date Auction Information and to Schedule Your Private Showing:
ANNA HOUSSELS
BRITTANY HAHN
858.877.0203
858.999.5340
CalBRE #01342337
Listing agent is Marie Jo Atkins.
CalBRE #01186585
*Opening bid is anticipated to start at $3.2M. Subject to sellers approval. ©MMVIII Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates LLC. A Realogy Company. All Rights Reserved. Sotheby’s International Realty® is a registered trademark licensed to Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates LLC. An Equal Opportunity Company. Equal Housing Opportunity. Each Office is Independently Owned And Operated. CalBRE #01767484
Anna@HousselsHahn.com
CalBRE #01983072
Brittany@HousselsHahn.com
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PAGE A10 - JANUARY 28, 2016 - LA JOLLA LIGHT
(858) 395-1222. lajollagtrotary.org ■ Tai Chi, 10 a.m. beginner, 10:45 a.m. advanced, La Jolla Rec Center, 615 Draper Ave. (858) 552-1658 ■ Computer Help Lab, for general questions on computers and programs, 11 a.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 552-1657. lajollalibrary.org ■ Kiwanis Club of La Jolla meets, noon, La Jolla Presbyterian Church, 7155 Draper Ave. First 3 meetings free as a member's guest, then $15. (858) 945-2280. frankbeiser@gmail.com
28
Saturday, Jan. 30
Thursday, Jan. 28
■ Sunrise Rotary of La Jolla meets, 6:55 a.m. The Shores Hotel, 8110 Camino Del Oro. $20. (619) 992-9449. ■ Qi Gong, 9:30 a.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 453-6719. ■ Pen to Paper writing group meets, 1 p.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 552-1657. ■ Office hours with Asseblymember Toni Atkins’ representatives, 4 p.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 552-1657. ■ American Legion La Jolla Post 275, 6:30 p.m. The Shores Hotel, 8110 Camino Del Oro. (619) 572-1022.
Friday, Jan. 29
■ La Jolla Golden Triangle Rotary Club Breakfast Meeting, 7:15 a.m. La Jolla Marriott, 4240 La Jolla Village Drive. $20.
3 N 1E Y OP DA UR T SA
■ Educational playdate for ages 2-5 with science, art and music activities, 9 a.m. San Diego French-American School, 6550 Soledad Mountain Road. RSVP with name and birthdate of the child admissions@sdfrenchschool.org or (858) 456-2807, ext. 306. sdfrenchschool.org ■ Seniors Computer Group, 9:30 a.m. Wesley Palms, 2404 Loring St., Pacific Beach. How to use computers and smartphones safely. Free for guests, $1 monthly membership. (858) 459-9065. ■ Food lecture with Rancho La Puerta’s nutrition director Yvonne Nienstadt, “Nutrition Trends and Fads,” 10 a.m. La Jolla Wellness Studio 7580 Fay Ave. ■ Wildlife lecture with Ecolife founder Bill Toone, 3 p.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 552-1657. ■ Atheists La Jolla group meets, 3:45 p.m. outside Starbucks, 8750 Genesee Ave. Suite 244. Repeats Sunday, 7 p.m. Peet’s Coffee, 8843 Villa La Jolla Drive, Suite 202. RSVP: teddyrodo@hotmail.com ■ Book discussion with “The Alchemy
of Action” author Doug Robinson, 7 p.m., D.G. Wills Books, 7461 Girard Ave. (858) 456-1800. dgwillsbooks.com
Sunday, Jan. 31
■ La Jolla Open Aire Market, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Girard Avenue at Genter Street. Food vendors and farmers market. (858) 454-1699. ■ Pancreatic cancer lecture, specialists from Scripps Clinic on latest treatment options, 3 p.m. Scripps Radiation Therapy Center, 10670 John Jay Hopkins Drive. Free, registration requested: (858) 678-7128.
Monday, Feb. 1
■ Ico-Dance class 9 a.m. La Jolla Community Center, 6811 La Jolla Blvd. $7 members, $12 non-members. amandabanks.com/ico-dance ■ Yiddish Circle 1:30 p.m. Read poems and stories, watch videos, celebrate holidays, sing songs (mostly in Yiddish). Jewish Community Center, 4126 Executive Drive. $3. (858) 450-9081. ■ Raja Yoga class, guided by the Nataraja Yoga and Meditation Center, 4:30 p.m. Congregational Church of La Jolla, 1216 Cave St. By donation. (858) 395-4033. ■ Soroptimist International of La Jolla dinner meeting, 5:30 p.m. Location to be provided upon RSVP. (858) 454-9156 or soroptimistlj@gmail.com ■ Open Mic Cabaret, 7 p.m. Hennessey's, 7811 Herschel Ave. (858) 232-1241.
Tuesday, Feb. 2
■ Rotary Club of La Jolla, noon, La Valencia Hotel, 1132 Prospect St. Lunch $30. Guests welcome. lora.fisher@usbank.com
■ Hatha Chair Yoga, 12:30 p.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 552-1657. ■ Bird Rock Community Council meets, 6 p.m. Bird Rock Elementary, 5371 La Jolla Hermosa Ave. info@birdrockcc.org ■ Alzheimer’s lecture, “One disease or three converging diseases?” 3 p.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 552-1657. ■ Community Balance Class, learn techniques for walking safely to maximize independence, 6 p.m. Ability Rehab, 737 Pearl St., Suite 108. Free for MS Society members, $10 non-members. (858) 456-2114. ■ Seaside Quilt Guild monthly gathering, 6:30 p.m. social, programs at 7 p.m., Soledad Club, 5050 Soledad Road. $5. lois.c.heath@att.net ■ Toastmasters of La Jolla meets to improve public speaking skills, 6:30 p.m. La Jolla Rec Center, 615 Prospect St. Free for guests, and $85 six-month membership. president@tmlajolla.org
Wednesday, Feb. 3
■ Kiwanis Club of Torrey Pines meets, 7:15 a.m. Torrey Pines Christian Church, 8320 Scenic Drive North. First three meetings free, then $15. tbilotta1@gmail.com ■ Day trip to Viejas Casino for those who can’t drive but would like to socialize. Departs 10 a.m. Mary Star of the Sea, 7669 Girard Ave. $10. (858) 900-1275. ■ Social Service League of La Jolla meets, 10:30 a.m. Darlington House, 7441 Olivetas Ave. ssl@darlingtonhouse.com ■ Torrey Pines of La Jolla Rotary meets, 11:30 a.m. Rock Bottom Brewery, 8980 La Jolla Village Drive. $20.
1482 COTTONTAIL LANE • 5 BEDROOMS, 6.5 BATHS, 4,775 (EST.) SQ.FT.
Rarely comes an opportunity to purchase a completely remodeled, single level home on an entirely usable, 22,000 sq.ft. lot with ocean and coastline views such as this. Dream kitchen includes 60 bottle, built in wine cooler and 60” Wolf range with two 30” ovens, 6 burners and French cooktop, two 36” Subzero refrigerators, vegetable sink, custom built hood, herringbone Carrera marble backsplash and oversized island with bar seating. There is ample room for an outdoor dining set next to the built in BBQ station equipped with Turbo grill, Big Green Egg BBQ, under the counter refrigerator, sink, storage and ice cooler. Enjoy the saltwater pool, fire pit and 12 person hot tub surrounded by bamboo and drought tolerant landscaping. The master bedroom offers the ultimate in luxury with separate his and hers bathrooms, each with dual sinks as well as cedar lined walk in closets. De-stress in your very own soaking tub or Carrera marble steam shower before resting in your master bedroom lounge area with fireplace. All of the bedrooms are spacious enough to furnish with king size beds and a desk or reading chair. Each with their own en-suite bath and beautifully finished, rift cut oak hardwood floors. Surround sound music, dedicated AV component closet, keypad entry, magnetic locking front door, four 65” televisions, owned solar system as well as 5 heating and AC zones. Call for asking price.
Eugenia Garcia & Jeff Carlson Effective Strategies & Superior Services
619.987.4851 | Eugenia@EugeniaGarcia.com www.EugeniaGarcia.com | CALBRE #01372053
HARCOURTS INTERNATIONAL GLOBAL. NATIONAL. LOCAL. YOU.
www.lajollalight.com
LA JOLLA LIGHT - JANUARY 28, 2016 - PAGE A11
our recent affiliation with Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty.
Children’s Pool seawall
Talk and Walk
ASHLEY MACKIN
Our infinite local knowledge and experience, combined with the empowering Sotheby’s International Realty brand, provide an unmatched platform in our commitment to serve you best.
■ A presentation about the Harbor Seals of Children’s Pool (aka Casa Beach) will be held 2 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 30 at Mangelsen Gallery, 7916 Girard Ave. A short walk to Children’s Pool follows the lecture. Free. (858) 551-9553. (858) 459-8912. gurneymcm@aol.com ■ Tapping To The Stars, a multilevel adult dance class, noon. Ooh La La Dance Academy, 7467 Cuvier St. $70. nancy@tappingtothestars.com
Thursday, Feb. 4
■ Sunrise Rotary of La Jolla meets, 6:55 a.m. The Shores Hotel, 8110 Camino Del Oro. $20. (619) 992-9449. ■ Qi Gong, 9:30 a.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 453-6719. ■ Pen to Paper writing group meets, 1 p.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 552-1657. ■ E-clinic, learn to download e-books and access online resources from your tablet or mobile device, 3 p.m. Riford Library, 7555
Draper Ave. (858) 552-1657. ■ Lecture, “Introduction to 3D printing,” 3 p.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 552-1657. ■ La Jolla Community Planning Association meets, 6 p.m. La Jolla Rec Center, 615 Prospect St. info@lajollacpa.org All events are free unless otherwise noted.
Did we miss listing your community event?
■ E-mail information to: ashleym@lajollalight.com ■ The deadline is noon, Thursday for publication in the following Thursday edition. Questions? Call Ashley Mackin at (858) 875-5957.
From left to right: Edna Juarez, Joshua Gaylis, Lindsey Boney, Marc Lotzof, Craig Lotzof and Pam Miller-Xitco.
Complimentary X-Rays & Complete Examination
&
Call us today to find out how we can put these new resources and connections to work for you!
Marc and Craig Lotzof
Free Sonicare Toothbrush for every new patient that starts treatment
619.994.7653 | Info@LotzofRealEstate.com www.TheLotzofGroup.com 7855 Ivanhoe Avenue, Suite 110, La Jolla, CA 92037 CalBRE #01211688 | CalBRE #01046166 | NMLS #246756
Schedule your appointment today!
(858) 771-9657
8861 Villa La Jolla Dr., La Jolla, CA 92037
beautifulsmileslajolla.com
©MMVIII Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates LLC. A Realogy Company. All Rights Reserved. Sotheby’s International Realty® is a registered trademark licensed to Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates LLC. An Equal Opportunity Company. Equal Housing Opportunity. Each Office is Independently Owned And Operated. CalBRE #01767484
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PAGE A12 - JANUARY 28, 2016 - LA JOLLA LIGHT
Crime and Public Safety News WindanSea meeting held to discuss series of area thefts
Falkirk Row, 4:45 p.m.
Jan. 18
Responding to a rash of burglaries and thefts in the WindanSea neighborhood, a group of residents held an informational meeting Jan. 20 at a private home. In attendance were about 25 homeowners and San Diego Police Community Relations Officer Larry Hesselgesser. Just before Christmas and leading into January, resident Nate Jernigan said a string of thefts took place in the community. “I had my truck stolen on Jan. 12 and we know of a few incidences of property — including bicycles, surfboards and other equipment — being stolen right on our street and alleys,” he said. Other reported incidences included a home burglary in the middle of the night just before Christmas and another home invasion in the middle of the day. “We needed to bring this to the attention of our neighbors and get everyone involved,” he said. “A Neighborhood Watch is such a simple thing, but it can make such a difference. Getting all our neighbors in the same room at the same time helps bring crime and other issues to the table, such as parking or trash cans left on the street.” Stephanie Jernigan added that the meeting with Hesselgesser was “very productive” because residents got a chance to meet each other and learn safety tips. “Officer Hesselgesser gave us pointers on how to be
■ Petty theft/theft of personal property/shoplift (valued at $400 or less), 1200 block Coast Blvd., 2:45 p.m. ■ Residential Burglary, 5500 block Linda Rosa Ave., 5:30 p.m.
Jan. 19
■ Vehicle break-in/theft, 8300 block Cliffridge Ave., 6 p.m.
Jan. 2
To report a non-emergency crime, call San Diego Police Department at (619) 531-2000 or (858) 484-3154. safe (such as) locking home doors, leaving a porch light on, never leaving things in plain sight. He also stressed locking your car doors. He encouraged us to talk to neighbors and get to know them so we can all look out for each other,” she said. As an example, Jernigan said attendees were advised to watch for garage doors left open. “Now that we’ve had this meeting, we know we can knock on a neighbor’s door and let them know they left their garage open,” she said. “The meeting was great because we got to meet our neighbors, exchange numbers and communicate.” From here, the Jernigans said they would be working for more streetlights to better illuminate the neighborhood and consider
additional safety meetings. Editor’s Note: As we took this issue to press, we received a phone call from a resident in the Country Club area around Hillside Drive. She asked the Light to look into a “rash” of home invasions and car burglaries she said her neighbors have reported. The Light will follow up on the situation in the Feb. 4 issue.
Police Blotter Jan. 17
■ Vehicle break-in/theft, 7400 block Vista Del Mar Ave., 11 a.m. ■ Residential burglary, 2300 block
■ Fraud, 5700 block Waverly Ave., 8 a.m. ■ Malicious mischief/vandalism (misdemeanor), 7500 Draper Ave., 9:30 a.m. ■ Commercial burglary, 900 block Silverado St., 8 p.m.
Jan. 21
■ Petty theft(valued at $400 or less), 7500 block Girard Ave., 3:20 p.m.
Jan. 22
■ Disorderly Conduct: Alcohol, 6900 block La Jolla Blvd., 2:45 a.m. ■ Vehicle break-in/theft, 7200 block Rue Michel, 6 p.m.
Jan. 23
■ Residential burglary, 5800 block Box Canyon Road, 5 p.m.
Jan. 24
■ Commercial burglary, 7700 block Herschel Ave., 2 a.m.
55 O 19 PE M N oo SA nl T igh & t L SU an N 1 e, -4 La Jo lla
Panoramic Remodel 4 bed/4.5 bath | 3,191 sq ft
2015 custom single level, ocean & bay view home. Brought to the studs & completely remodeled/ reconfigured with designer finishes. Great room with oversized sliding windows allow the coastline to come inside. Designed by architect Tim Golba. 500 sq. ft. roof top deck has incredible views of the bay, downtown, ocean, islands, mountains, and more. Vaulted ceilings throughout with skylights.
$2,075,000- $2,275,000
858.480.9945
Team@JimMcInerney.com www.JimMcInerney.com
La Jolla Resident since 1969 Jim McInerney
©MMVIII Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates LLC. A Realogy Company. All Rights Reserved. Sotheby’s International Realty® is a registered trademark licensed to Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates LLC. An Equal Opportunity Company. Equal Housing Opportunity. Each Office is Independently Owned And Operated. CalBRE #01767484
“What the caterpillar calls the end, the rest of the world calls a butterfly”. -Lao Tzu What is your next chapter? Call me at 858-752-7854.
Monica Baxter
Sales Associate with Team Chodorow
(858) 752-7854
monica@teamchodorow.com
©2015 BHH Affiliates, LLC. An independently operated subsidiary of HomeServices of America, Inc., a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate, and a franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of HomeServices of America, Inc. Equal Housing Opportunity. CalBRE# 01317331
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LA JOLLA LIGHT - JANUARY 28, 2016 - PAGE A13
SEARCH FOR MORE LISTINGS AT
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DEL MAR $11,888,888 Fully furnished oceanfront stunner! Lydia Hwang-Vosovic (858) 472-0608
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DEL MAR $2,199,995 Single level home in Del Mar with views! Pete Middleton (858) 764-4808
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DEL MAR $1,899,995 1 acre custom family estate with views! Pete Middleton (858) 764-4808
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JULIAN $1,795,000 Awesome New England style masterpiece. Irene Chandler & Jim Shultz (858) 354-0000
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LA JOLLA $4,700,000 Gorgeous, private home with ocean views. Dan & Brenda Wyatt (858) 775-7333
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LA JOLLA $4,799,995 Stunning home. Views of La Jolla Shores! Pete Middleton (858) 764-4808
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LA JOLLA $2,875,000 Muirlands masterpiece. White water views Jeannie Thompson (858) 395-7727
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LA JOLLA $2,850,000 Spectacular home with over 4600 sqft! Kate Woods (858) 525-2510
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LA JOLLA $2,400,000 Charming home near beach with guesthouse Linda Marrone (858) 735-4173
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LA JOLLA $1,725,000 One level home with View of Mission Bay. Kate Woods (858) 525-2510
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LA JOLLA $1,625,000 Single level gem with panoramic views! Carlos Gutierrez (858) 864-8741
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SAN DIEGO $979,900 Charming 4BD 3BA home on canyon view lot Laurie Rogers (858) 442-8947
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SAN DIEGO $939,000 Upgraded 3BD 3BA home in Torrey Del Mar. Michele Esposito (619) 944-7216
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UNIVERSITY CITY $795,000 Great floor plan + swimming pool! Sharok Eslamian (858) 449-0501
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SAN DIEGO $535,000 Bankers Hill condo with bay views! Jennifer Balanay (619) 884-3555
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(858) 456-7355
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©2016 Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Each Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage office is owned by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker® and the Coldwell Banker Logo are registered service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Broker does not guarantee the accuracy of square footage, lot size or other information concerning the condition or features of property provided by seller or obtained from public records or other sources, and the buyer is advised to independently verify the accuracy of that information through personal inspection and with appropriate professionals. * Based on information total sales volume from California Real Estate Technology Services, Santa Barbara Association of REALTORS, SANDICOR, Inc. for the period 1/1/2013 through 12/31/2013 in Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego, Santa Barbara and Ventura Counties. Due to MLS reporting methods and allowable reporting policy, this data is only informational and may not be completely accurate. Therefore, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage does not guarantee the data accuracy. Data maintained by the MLS’s may not reflect all real estate activity in the market.
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PAGE A14 - JANUARY 28, 2016 - LA JOLLA LIGHT
The Broken Yolk Cafe expands across the nation BY MARTI GACIOCH The Broken Yolk Cafe is growing from coast to coast, entering the Florida market with 15 new locations planned and also a first Midwest location in Illinois. “We signed the franchise deal at the end of last year, and our first East Coast opening will be in Carrollwood, a suburb of Tampa, Florida that will open in the spring of 2016,” said Dimitra O’Rourke, director of franchise support. “An Orlando, Florida cafe will open soon afterward as The Broken Yolk Cafe spreads throughout the state. By early summer, The Broken Yolk Cafe will open its first restaurant in Plainview, a suburb of Chicago.” Well-known for its ample breakfast and lunch servings, The Broken Yolk Cafe, will also launch a new catering menu in the spring. Marketing director Lisa Erickson and O'Rourke will team together to manage this new venture for the company. “The catering industry is growing and many customers, as well as businesses, have a need for food for luncheons, meetings and events, so it makes sense for The Broken Yolk Cafe — with our diverse menu options — to fulfill those needs with breakfast and lunch options,” Erickson said. “That includes large platters of sandwiches, salads and fruit for large groups and custom breakfast or lunch boxes for smaller groups.”
Broken Yoke’s Club Sandwich, served with fries and a pickle
The Tiki Toast at Broken Yoke Cafe is a customer favorite. The Broken Yolk Cafe's catering selections will be drawn from their abundant menu of entree choices. Breakfast burritos, bagel sandwiches, buffet-style breakfasts to lunch options like a Veggie Wrap, Southwestern Chicken Wrap or sandwiches. Founded in 1979, The Broken Yolk Café started in Pacific Beach. Now the Broken Yolk Café serves breakfast and lunch from its 17 locations
throughout Southern California and also Arizona and Bakersfield. ■ The Broken Yolk Cafe at 1851 Garnet Ave., Pacific Beach, is open daily from 6 a.m. to 3 p.m. (858) 270-9655. For more locations and a view of the menu, visitthebrokenyolkcafe.com PHOTOS BY NESLIHAN AYAKTA OSTROWSKI
The Business Spotlight features commercial enterprises that support the La Jolla Light.
Southwestern Chicken Wrap
PENDING!
Vacant Land in Torrey Hills!
Ultimate Village Living!
La Jolla Shores Estate!
Build your dream estate on this 1.79 acre coastal canyon lot!
Offered at $1,050,000
Paul Ferrell (858)449-5090
B RO K E R A S S O C I AT E , C a l B R E # 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 0
4BR, 3BA Patio Home, Sleek Kitchen & Baths, Ocean Views, Walk to Village
Half acre gated estate next to La Jolla Beach & Tennis Club!
Offered at $1,650,000
Seller will entertain offers between $5,395,000 and $5,995,000
Representing Buyers and Sellers of San Diego’s Finest Homes for Over 25 years! ©MMVII Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates LLC. All Rights Reserved. Sotheby’s International Realty® is a registered trademark licensed to Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates. An Equal Opportunity Company. Equal Housing Opportunity. Each Office is Independently Owned and Operated. CA DRE#01767484
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LA JOLLA LIGHT - JANUARY 28, 2016 - PAGE A15
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PAGEa16 A16 -- january JANUARY 28, 28, 2016 Page 2016 -- LA LAJOLLA JOLLALIGHT LIGHT
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PAGE A18 - JANUARY 28, 2016 - LA JOLLA LIGHT
Danny Glover to speak at UCSD Black History Month brunch
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C San Diego will note African-American history throughout February with art exhibits, lectures, film screenings, spoken word performances and the annual Black History Month Scholarship Brunch, featuring guest speaker Danny Glover, a renowned filmmaker, actor and activist. This year’s Black History Month theme “Hallowed Ground: Sites of African-American Memory” is dedicated to the significant physical places that have inspired diversity and positive change in African-American history, such as the Apollo Theater, Little Rock Central High School, Tuskegee University and others. Glover is known for his roles as Detective Sergeant Roger Murtaugh in the “Lethal Weapon” film series. Other film credits include “The Color Purple,” “Silverado,” “Angels in the Outfield,” “Dreamgirls” and “Shooter.” Glover has served as a Goodwill Ambassador for the UN Development Program from 1998 to 2004. In 2005, he
Actor/activist Danny Glover co-founded Louverture Films, which is dedicated to the development and production of films of historical relevance, social purpose, commercial value and artistic integrity.
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The Scholarship Brunch will be held 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., Saturday, Feb. 27 at Price Center Ballroom West on campus. Tickets via (858) 822-5248 or blackhistorymonth@ucsd.edu
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FROM MEMORIAL QUILTS, A1 Association, Inc. “Last week was the first time we were able to use them, and it meant a lot to the family.” Mulrooney explained that the Memorial Association hosts 2-3 private Honor Ceremonies a month, usually on Saturday mornings. The 30-minute presentations are officiated by retired military volunteers who tell the story of Mt. Soledad, discuss the honored veteran’s service, and then end the tribute with the optional playing of Taps. The $175 fee covers related expenses. Colleen Craven, a lifelong seamstress and daughter of a WWII veteran, credits Gail Bailey, also a quilter and the wife of 2015 Association president Bruce Bailey, for connecting the two groups. “It’s a way for the American people to give back to our veterans,” said Craven, San Diego QOV group leader. “We don’t give medals like the military does, but the quilts are our way of saying ‘thank you for your service.’ ” Modern quilting is often a two-person process. “Toppers” sew colorful pieces of fabric into intricate designs, while “longarmers” use special, industrial-scale sewing machines (called longarms) to produce the elaborate stitchery that sandwiches the insulating batting between the top and the plainer back fabric. Bailey and Craven met when Bailey took her work to be longarmed by Craven, who runs a professional quilting service at colleenscreations.com In addition to creating hundreds of quilts for others, Craven made one to honor her own late father-in-law, a marine who contracted malaria at Guadalcanal, and
To Honor a Veteran at Mt. Soledad ■ Memorial plaques start at $950 ($818 is tax-deductible) at soledadmemorial.com
Bob Mulrooney, executive director of Mt. Soledad Memorial Association, Inc.
This memorial quilt for a veteran’s family was made by Cheryl Atkiss and quilted by Colleen Craven.
whose life was saved when the death of the patient in the next bed freed up a precious dose of quinine. “Had he not gotten that extra shot, the whole family line would not have been here,” Craven said. The quilts seem to work a special magic for Vietnam-era veterans, according to Craven, whose first husband is a Vietnam vet, and who also had many high school classmates who served in the war and did not return. “The Vietnam veterans were treated so badly, and they don’t like to talk about the military, or their experiences. We’ve broken through a couple of those barriers by making the very small gesture of saying, ‘this is for you, thank you for your service, and
welcome home,’ ” Craven said. “It’s helped several, that I’ve been told about, to get a better perspective and feel a little more comfortable. That’s very rewarding for us, as quilt makers.” QOV welcomes all experienced quilters as volunteers; interested locals may contact Craven through her website. The national organization will pair toppers and longarmers, who can then work back and forth. While there are standard sizes for the donated quilts, colors and patterns are up to the quilt makers. They can be personalized, but only if details about the recipient are known in time. QOV also accepts financial contributions,
ASHLEY MACKIN
■ The Honors Ceremony is $175, by reservation at (858) 459-2314. Due to the need to coordinate volunteers, please give at least 30 days notice. Donations are always welcome. Fees are used to maintain the memorial property and fund enhancements, such as new lighting and additional honor walls. and Craven adds, “We love getting donations of fabric. Mostly we like red, white and blue, but other colors are accepted, too, as well as partially finished quilts. “I’m very proud to be an American and if my quilting skills can help put a smile on somebody’s face and let them know that there are people in this country who respect them and are proud of them for what they’ve done, then that’s my little piece of giving back,” Craven said. Those interested in a Quilt of Valor are welcome to contact her, or sign up through the organization’s website, which coordinates quilt-making nationwide.
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PAGE A20 - JANUARY 28, 2016 - LA JOLLA LIGHT
Family donates papers of SAIC founder J.R. Beyster to UCSD Library BY WILL BOWEN A very special place in the Geisel Library at UC San Diego is Special Collections & Archives. This is where rare books, manuscripts and the actual papers of famous scientists and artists are housed. In Special Collections, you can touch history! Here you can interact with genius and greatness by turning document pages ... those they once held in their own hands. Something might rub off. Special Collections has original drawings by Dr. Seuss, the personal notebooks of polio vaccine discoverer Jonas Salk, and the journals of Francis Crick, who with his colleague, James Watson, unraveled the structure of the DNA molecule in 1953. It also has the personal writings of Leo Szilard, one of the fathers of the atomic bomb. Special Collections is headed by Lynda Claassen. She’s been selecting rare books and manuscripts on behalf of the UC San Diego Library for more than 31 years. Prior to that, she worked for the Library of Congress and the Smithsonian Institution on their rare book collections. Claassen wears a big smile these days because of some amazing new acquisitions. Recently, she acquired the papers of Jonas Salk, now she is getting the papers of scientist and business entrepreneur, J. Robert “Bob” Beyster. Some 250 boxes of them. Through his business ventures, Beyster connected La Jolla to the world. He was a physicist, businessman and global innovator with a broad vision, who was able to
WILL BOWEN
Bob Beyster
COURTESY
identify, work with and enable other talented scientists to get results on important projects of benefit to the whole country. Beyster worked at Los Alamos National Laboratory and General Atomics before founding Science Applications International Corporation (SAIC) in 1969, which
Mary Ann Beyster and achivist Kim Schwenk employed more than 43,000 employees and was valued at $8 billion when he retired in 2004. One of the ways he kept his employees motivated was to have them own the company. Beyster was one of the first to apply this business strategy. Now his methods are taught at UC San Diego’s Rady School of Management.
Some of SAIC’s projects included: missile detection during the Cold War; the safety of the space station; the hull design of The Americas Cup sailing ships (which enabled the USA to retake the world title in 1987); the clean-up of the Three Mile Island nuclear plant disaster in 1979; and the commercialization of the Internet (involving the ownership of the right to domain names — .com, .org and .edu). “These papers will be of great interest to scientists, businessmen and those interested in the history of science,” Claassen said. “Not just those from the university, but also people from the surrounding community. Special Collections & Archives serves over 4,000 people a year — half of whom are from outside the university. We anticipate these documents will bring in many interested individuals.” University Librarian Brian Schottlaender noted, “It is an honor for the Library — and it is especially meaningful at this time — to preserve the rich archive of materials that reflect Dr. Beyster’s core values of employee ownership, entrepreneurship, technical excellence and customer service.” The donation by the Beyster family of their father’s papers to the Library became official on Dec. 22, 2015, the one-year anniversary of his passing at age 90. But the documents are not in the Library quite yet. They are still in a room at Leidos Corp. (formerly SAIC) on Campus Point Court, where an archivist is going through them initially to extract sensitive
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LA JOLLA LIGHT - JANUARY 28, 2016 - PAGE A21
information — things like Social Security numbers. The entire processing will take about a year for the archivist to plow through all the papers, but sometime in 2017 they will be accessible in the Library. Kim Schwenk is the archivist working on the Beyster papers. She observed, “Dr. Beyster had a mind for recognizing the skills of his employees and getting them to collaborate, resolve their difficulties, and have high morale. He made sure everyone had a voice.” His daughter, Mary Ann Beyster, grew up in La Jolla, attending at various times Stella Maris Academy, Torrey Pines Elementary School and The Bishop’s School. These days, she’s trying to keep the momentum her father set going strong. “Dad taught us to be curious, to work hard, always test convention, and to be passionate about our interests,” she said. “He, himself, was very competitive. He had very high standards for his work, his family, for public service, and for the community. He valued fairness, equality and democracy. He wanted everyone to have a piece of the pie. And he wanted to protect the country.” She said he was also a very good father. “Dad had a lot of work to do with his scientific research and his management concerns,” she noted. “But even with all his work activities, he still made time for his family. Every Sunday, he took on the role of a San Diego tour guide. As we were growing up, he would take us places like the Zoo or Fort Rosecrans or the Presidio and explain to us why they were important … and he taught us how to sail.” Mentioning her mom Betty’s role in the family, she observed, “My mother was the perfect wife. She was very gracious. A people
UCSD Library’s Mandeville Special Collections ■ Address: 9500 Gilman Drive on the UC San Diego campus ■ Phone: (858) 534-2533 ■ E-mail: spcoll@ucsd.edu ■ Website: library.ucsd.edu/collections/sca/ ■ Hours: 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Wednesday; 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday person, she was very supportive of others. But she also knew the value of a dollar. She had to do a lot of adjusting to become an executive wife, having grown up on a farm in east Texas. Mom and dad met when they both worked at Los Alamos.” Mary Ann runs the Foundation for Enterprise Development, where she helps companies implement her father’s ideas about employee ownership. She also makes documentary films on social entrepreneurship. Right now she is working on her second film. It’s about the "Kitchenistas” of National City, a group of mothers who’ve gotten together to change the dietary practices of their community by promoting the use of healthier foods.
James, Betty and Mary Ann Beyster with a photograph of the late J.R. Beyster
COURTESY
■ Want to know more? Reach The Foundation for Enterprise Development at (858) 754-3560 or fed.org or thekitchenistasmovie.org
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PAGE A22 - JANUARY 28, 2016 - LA JOLLA LIGHT
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At Diamond Estate Jewelry Buyers, we help people leverage the wealth that is stored in their fine jewelry boxes. Our clients decide to sell their old jewelry for a variety of reasons. Sometimes it’s due to financial necessity. Other times, it’s because they wish to liquidate inherited estate jewelry or take advantage of a spike in gold prices. Another reason people sell their jewelry is less obvious. But in recent years, it has become increasingly popular: self-discovery and personal growth. Selling your gold and diamond jewelry as a journey toward self-discovery might seem like an odd concept at first. But when we explore the idea deeper, it begins to make sense. Many of our possessions wield emotional power. And perhaps none hold greater power than fine jewelry. We purchase and receive jewelry to celebrate the most emotionally rich experiences of our lives. A mature woman’s jewelry box often reads like a diary of her most treasured moments and milestones. But, at the same time, it can contain hidden resentments and unresolved emotions—all of which can impede her continued growth and happiness. Many professional women have become aware of this fact. And now they are taking full advantage of the financial and emotional power hidden inside their jewelry boxes. By conducting a thorough evaluation and downsizing of their fine jewelry collections, they are taking important steps toward a more fulfilling and enriching life. The following steps outline how you can take this journey too.
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Step 1: How to Choose What Jewelry to Keep The fine jewelry that you keep should be a mirror of your soul—one that reflects the interior design of your spirit. So before surveying your jewelry box, spend some time in quiet contemplation. Start by taking a financial and emotional inventory of where you are now in your life. Meditate on all of the things you love and why you love them. What do you still yearn for (financially & emotionally)? What in life continues to stir your passion in a positive way? Then think about what you dislike and the reasons for those feelings. After completing this personal meditation, slowly browse your fine jewelry box. While your entire collection may still be beautiful in your eyes, focus attention on your feelings. Take special note of those items which still excite you and bring a smile to your face—and which ones don’t. As you look at the jewelry from your past relationships or marriage, ask yourself what those items truly mean to you on the soul level. After a relationship has ended, an item like a diamond ring usually signifies a mixed bag of conflicting emotions: love & hate, joy & sadness, satisfaction & regret—all of which creates a dissonance that hinders our successful journey through life. Don’t let fine jewelry (or other expensive things) fetter you to the past when it is time to let go. It’s okay of course to keep mementos of old relationships to remind you of where you have been, but a photograph of a joyful moment can serve as a more vivid and useful reminder than fine jewelry. Let’s now turn our attention to your fashion-driven designer jewelry. Many professional women have a few items in their jewelry box which they view as “status” items. These are the earrings, necklaces, or bracelets that symbolize their full arrival into adulthood, successful careers, and mature relationships. Ask yourself whether these expensive accessories are still necessary to maintain your feelings of self-worth and accomplishment. Remember that life is a journey of evolution, not acquisition. Consider the wealth that is stored in your status jewelry, and whether or not you could use that money in ways that better fulfill your current dreams and aspirations. While taking inventory of the rest of your designer jewelry, remember that what you wear affects your experiences and how others experience you. Consider the style of the person you are today and the person you wish to be 5 years from now. The future “you” might include a return to past passions and interests—ones that were suppressed as you grew older. Therefore, you might decide that it’s the small, quirky, and inexpensive jewelry that you choose to keep, while the most expensive gold and diamond jewelry is placed on the sell pile.
Step 2: How to Sell the JewelryYou’veOutgrown Step 3: How to Spend the Money From Your Jewelry Sale After selecting which jewelry to keep and which to sell, you may have second thoughts about some items. That is understandable. Selling fine jewelry with strong sentimental value is never easy. To let go of your jewelry gracefully and without regrets, you must pay respect to all of the emotions (both positive and negative) that are attached to them. Never try to side-step second thoughts by quickly selling your jewelry just to “get it over with and move on.” Your jewelry may be gone, but the emotions fettering you to your past have not. For example, quickly selling your engagement ring and wedding band after a divorce will not release you from the emotional baggage that was/ is attached to them. You must deal with everything that jewelry symbolizes and means to you before letting it go. To help this process along, pick up your jewelry and hold it for a while. Acknowledge and try to fully understand every emotion that is tied to it, especially the negative ones (otherwise those emotions will remain unresolved). If the jewelry is from a broken relationship, don’t look to assign blame or stew over regrets. Simply honor the past and all it has taught you. Then with a forgiving heart release these emotions to make way for your continued growth. Once you have paid respect to the jewelry you are planning to sell, it’s time to honor the fine jewelry you plan to keep. The best way to honor your jewelry is not by hiding it away in a box. But by displaying it in a manner where you can see it daily—this is especially true of heirloom jewelry which you may rarely (if ever) wear. Explore jewelry box alternatives like small glass cases for individual items (which can be placed on shelves), jewelry trees, and armoires. Honoring the jewelry you have kept in this manner will make it even easier to let go of the jewelry that’s now on the sell pile. When it comes to choosing a jewelry buyer and receiving a fair cash offer, the quickest rule of thumb is to work only with those buyers who have a strong reputation, are registered with the Better Business Bureau, and provide free jewelry appraisals. Contact several of these buyers for a free appraisal and cash offer. Then choose the buyer who provides you with the best offer and makes you feel the most comfortable. For more detailed advice and tips, please visit our website DiamondEstate.com, which is filled with articles on how to sell fine jewelry, diamonds, and luxury watches, as well as how to leverage these gift assets for a fast cash loan.
Once you have sold your jewelry, it’s time to decide how to spend that money in a way that will enrich your life and/or the lives of your loved ones. Every tree starts with a seed, and the money you received from selling your old jewelry is the seed money for your future prosperity—both internally and externally. We can’t enrich ourselves emotionally and spiritually while stressing over debt. So, if you have any financial problems that must be resolved quickly, do take care of those first. Once your financial house is in order, try not to make any impulse decisions. Wait a while and meditate on all the possible ways you can use your cash windfall. Taking an overdue vacation is one way that some people use the money from the sale of their fine jewelry. And that is perfectly fine. Sometimes a vacation is what we really need to rediscover ourselves and rejuvenate our spirits. But also think more deeply about the ways in which you can use this money to fulfill “the real” you. Make a list of your primary interests and passions. Think about the things that you’ve always wished to become better at or try for the first time. For example, maybe you’ve always wanted to play the piano, hire a fitness trainer, or go skydiving. Or maybe you’ve always wanted to take your children on a “helping others” holiday in the developing world. Push the boundaries of what you are doing with your life! By doing so, you’ll not only enrich yourself, but others too. If you are ready to leverage the wealth stored in your fine jewelry box, please contact Diamond Estate Jewelry Buyers for a private consultation and verbal appraisal of your items. Our jewelry appraisals are completely free of charge, with no strings attached.
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PAGE A24 - JANUARY 28, 2016 - LA JOLLA LIGHT
LA JOLLA NEWS NUGGETS Price of San Diego lifestyle up 2.4%
COURTESY
Historian Doug Brinkley
Guest lecturer to offer insight on 2016 Elections Professor of history at Rice University, Douglas Brinkley, Ph.D., a bestselling author, CBS News historian and a contributing editor at Vanity Fair magazine, will discuss “Historical Perspectives on the American Presidency and the Election of 2016,” as The Bishop's School Endowed-Scholar-in-Residence, 7 p.m. Monday, Feb. 1, at Sherwood Auditorium in the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, 700 Prospect St. The public in invited to attend the free lecture. Reserve a seat at bishops.com/douglasbrinkley or (858) 875-0790.
Overall prices measured in the federal government’s all-items category for urban consumers (CPI-U) increased by 2.4 percent in 2015 in San Diego, the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Jan. 20. That’s more than triple the 0.7 percent national rate of increase. This jarring mismatch narrows a bit when statisticians exclude the volatile food and energy sectors. By that measure, San Diego’s inflation rate was 3.1 percent, while U.S. inflation was 2.1 percent last year. News of higher inflation will come as no surprise to San Diego consumers, particularly considering the sectors leading the charge. Electricity spending surged 7.4 percent in 2015; apparel increased 6.5 percent; rent expenses grew 4.5 percent; and food away from home cost 3.7 percent more. The federal figures are based on surveys of consumers. Such gains were offset by declines in the cost of gasoline (down 8.4 percent), utility gas service (-1.3 percent), and education and communication (-0.7 percent).
Precision medicine and autism in review by Dr. Shafali Jeste The Shaffer Family Foundation Endowed Science Lecture at The Bishop’s School will host Shafali Jeste, M.D. (Bishop's Class of 1993 and Director of Neurophysiology Core,
UCLA's Center for Autism Research & Treatment) discussing "From Biomarkers to Targeted Treatments: Can we reach the goal of precision medicine for Autism Spectrum Disorders?" The free, public lecture is set for 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 28 in Michael & Marlene Teitelman Science Center on The Bishop's campus, 7607 La Jolla Blvd. RSVP: bishops.com/sciencelecture (858) 875-0790.
Symposium will address evolving history of man The next CARTA Public Symposium will explore “Origins of Genus Homo," 1-5:30 p.m. Friday, Feb. 5 at the Salk Institute, Conrad T. Prebys Auditorium, 10010 N. Torrey Pines Road. Despite discoveries of remarkable new fossils in recent years, the evolutionary events surrounding the origins of genus Homo are incompletely understood, according to a panel of presenters. This symposium will explore evidence bearing on the emergence of our genus, focusing on possible antecedents to Homo, changes in diet and body form as Australopithecus evolved toward Homo, ancient species within the genus, and evolutionary processes likely operating 2.5 to 1.5 million years ago. Registration is required for the free lecture atcarta.anthropogeny.org/ events/origins-genus-homo
Women’s chorus seeks new voices The California Women’s Chorus is coming to San Diego for its annual choral convention. To sing with them, learn the “Regards to Broadway” hits with Sweet Harmony Women’s Chorus, 9 a.m. Thursdays at the North Clairemont Recreation Center, 4425 Bannock St. There will be an area-wide rehearsal with other choruses from Southern California in March, and then April 29-30, a rehearsal with director Tom Barich at the Four Points Sheraton on Aero Drive. The San Diego Concert is May 1 with a presentation of 2016’s Vocal Music Scholarships to local students. For more details, call (858) 565-8653 or visit sweetharmonychorus.com
Jan. 30: ‘Love Your Wetlands Day’ events Nature lovers will celebrate one of San Diego’s most threatened landscapes, its wetlands, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 30 when San Diego Audubon, the UC Natural Reserve System, the US Fish and Wildlife Service, and Friends of Mission Bay Marshes bring families together for the 10th annual "Love Your Wetlands Day" at the Kendall Frost Marsh in Pacific Beach – Mission Bay’s only remaining marsh. Love Your Wetlands Day features six hours of interactive activities, guided tours, games, SEE NUGGETS, A29
THE AMERICAN PRESIDENCY The Bishop’s School invites you to attend a lecture by the School’s Endowed Scholar-in-Residence Dr. Douglas Brinkley
“Historical Perspectives on the American Presidency and the Election of 2016” -Monday, February 1, 2016, Lecture @ 7:00 p.m. -Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, Sherwood Auditorium -700 Prospect Street, La Jolla, CA 92037 Dr. Brinkley is a presidential historian, author and professor at Rice University, and he is appearing under the auspices of the School’s Endowed Scholar-in-Residence Program. Since 2003 the program has allowed Bishop’s to bring academic leaders to the campus for a period of residency. The lecture is being offered without a charge, please reserve a seat at www.bishops.com/douglasbrinkley.
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LA JOLLA LIGHT - JANUARY 28, 2016 - PAGE A25
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PAGE A26 - JANUARY 28, 2016 - LA JOLLA LIGHT
OPINION
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OUR READERS WRITE Correct beach names important to note I am glad that Casa Beach is referred to on page A10 of the Dec. 31, 2015 “Year-in-Review” issue under the headline, “Children’s Pool opens: At the end of the harbor seal pupping season; May 15, people are once again allowed at Children’s Pool (aka South Casa Beach.)” However, the attached map shows that the Children’s Pool beach is Casa Beach, not SOUTH Casa Beach. Further, the review stated that the viewing guideline rope is designed to provide a separation for humans viewing seals during the seven months of the year that are the pupping season, but the pupping season is only five months of the year and there is no viewing guideline rope during the pupping season because the beach is closed to the public. The viewing guideline rope is actually up during the seven non-pupping season months (May 16-Dec. 14 annually). Thank you for your assistance in keeping Light readers informed about the harbor seals and the elegant compromise for people and seals that
COURTESY OF JANE RELDAN
the seasonal closure and viewing guideline rope protections provide. I am happy to underscore, as quoted in your paper by Ranger Parrish Rye, that there has not been one citation at Casa
Beach for over one year. Peace has been achieved. — Jane Reldan, M.D. President Seal Conservancy
The trees were cut from the top down by a worker who attached a cable to the heavy limbs before they were cut free by the his chainsaw. The limbs were lowered to the street by the truck-mounted winch to be cut down and fed into the chipper. Both trees had lost branches in the storms of recent years and were no longer evenly balanced. They had been deemed as risks to
vehicular and pedestrian traffic. The tree closer to Neptune Place lost a huge limb in the El Niño storms during the first week of 2016. Residents and visitors alike will miss the green canopy provided by these trees as we’ve traveled to and from WindanSea Beach. The metal plates that still cover their roots will serve as a reminder of their past grandeur. — DeAnna Layne and Ivan Shriber
COURTESY OF IVAN SHRIBER
WindanSea icons lost A city crew of five men and three trucks began removing the last two giant trees on lower Nautilus Street at 8:30 a.m. on Friday, Jan. 15. Four hours later, the men, the trucks, and the two iconic denizens were gone. Both trees had been previously spray-painted with an eye-level white X to mark them for removal.
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LA JOLLA LIGHT - JANUARY 28, 2016 - PAGE A27
OUR READERS WRITE (CONTINUED) Barriers tackle only half of sea lion problem
COURTESY
La Jolla Newcomers Club members Jules Ruggles, Karl Vesper, Gary Karelis, Jan Morris, Larry McCracken, Linda Karelis, Joan Vesper, Thom Emrich, Sheila and Michael Dershowitz, Maggie Scheinman, Bob Jones and Jill Dawson hike around Lake Miramar, Dec. 10.
Newcomers welcome to join La Jolla club January brings many events to members of La Jolla Newcomers Club, such as Game Night, Book Club, Happy Hour, Coffee Around Town, lunch socials, hiking, movies and Wall Street Week! Residents new to the 92037 ZIP code within the past three years are eligible for membership and invited to join! Learn more on our website at lajollanewcomers.org — Nancy Pfleg
The proposed use of spinning cylinders along the Cove bluffs to address sea lion issues is very inventive. If it works as designed, then it may well keep sea lions off the bluffs adjoining the Cove. However, that will only be a partial solution, yet to be addressed are the troublesome challenges in the Cove. The Marine Mammal Protection Act allows city employees to use nonlethal methods for the removal of nuisance animals (Section 109(h). They are discussing the use of “crowder” boards to hinder sea lion access. It would be safer to disperse Cove sea lions using a super soaker water gun and an irritant, such as pepper spray. Both the super soaker and pepper spray are specifically mentioned as approved methods in NOAA guidance documents. — David W. Valentine, Ph.D. Retired Marine Biologist; La Jolla resident since 1968
ASHLEY MACKIN
A model of potential cylinder barriers for La Jolla Cove
■ What’s on YOUR mind? Letters to the Editor for publication in La Jolla Light should be 250 words or less, and sent by e-mail to editor@lajollalight.com and must include the full name of the sender, city of residence and phone number for verification. Note: The content of letters are not the opinions of La Jolla Light.
La Jolla stands poised for progress! O
OUR VIEW
ur December review of 2015 in La Jolla, appeared under the headline “The Year of Advocacy.” We are walking out on a limb here to predict December 2016’s headline will be “The Year of Action.” Just four weeks into January, significant solution-oriented projects are underway to address concerns that have been plaguing the Village for the past few years. Bravo! Bravo! And a hearty handshake to the citizens who have stepped up with their time, talents and treasures to make things better for all the residents and visitors to La Jolla! Job 1) Fed up with the foul Cove Stench from sea lions gone wild along the bluffs, members of the La Jolla Town Council are gathering support for a brilliant plan to string rotating plastic cylinders across stainless steel cables to inhibit the sea lions from climbing, congregating and defecating on the bluffs that abut our iconic hotels, businesses and restaurants. It looks like the city will buy into the plans, and the sooner the better! Job 2) Tired of cracked and crumbling sidewalks and trash cans filled to capacity and spilling out on the street — especially after busy, tourist-filled weekends — members of the La Jolla Community Foundation are working to establish a Maintenance Assessment District (love the acronym MAD) to generate funds for maintenance and improvements in the Village. As the Foundation’s executive director Julie Bronstein has been explaining to the various community boards and advisory groups, “La Jolla is one of the most beautiful
FILE
We’re hopeful these distressing La Jolla images will become a thing of the past in 2016. and iconic locations in San Diego if not California. But it is also an older community and suffers from a lack of ongoing maintenance. We often see overflowing trash cans, dirty sidewalks and untended landscape areas. This leads to a degradation of the Village, and as a result, we are seeing more vacant storefronts, impacts to property values and less vibrant public spaces.” Picture this instead: Pedestrian-friendly sidewalks, modern refuse containers, chic signage and inviting benches along tree-lined streets. Wouldn’t that be loverly? A pot full of ivy and geraniums for your thoughts! Job 3) A second round of Parkway cleanups is being financed through a gift to
the La Jolla Community Foundation from a generous resident. Goodbye to the sight of soiled Styrofoam containers ripped plastic bags and rusting soda cans along the berms; the entryway from The 52 into La Jolla is once again inviting and pristine. Our spirits are further buoyed by: La Jolla Music Society’s announcement of a state-of-the-art Conrad Prebys Performing Arts Center on Fay Avenue by 2018, the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego’s plans for expansion along Prospect Street and the addition of gracious townhomes on Silver Street at Draper Avenue. These civic improvements will surely put a smile on your face and a spring in your step! Happy New Year! Onward and upward La Jolla!
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FROM WATER PROJECT, A1 locations. The project will also replace a pressure-reducing station along Muirlands Vista Way and install new SCADA equipment on an antenna to be installed on an existing street light. Project manager Jericho Gallardo told those gathered, “This is a fairly large project … and is scheduled to start in June or July of this year, and we expect it will take 11 months.” Following a recommendation from DPR, the city will start the draft Environmental Impact Report, though Gallardo predicted it would likely be a Mitigated Negative Declaration (which indicates the project in question would not have any major environmental impacts). Considering the Muirlands streets are narrow and have minimal visibility, DPR member Diane Kane questioned the project’s traffic control and staging – including dirt piles while crews are trenching, pipe storage and trenching equipment. “There are major impacts to the neighborhood, particularly on those windy streets where there isn’t a lot of room for all that stuff, and I’m worried the city contractors are not paying attention to the neighborhood,” she said. Gallardo said he was not sure where the staging would be and would return to DPR with details. “Contractors are required to submit traffic control plans to our field engineering division, which we review … once we have a resident engineer on board, we can definitely give you that information,” he said. The water project will be held concurrent to the planned undergrounding project for the Muirlands area. Phase 1 of the
undergrounding project, which will ultimately take down overhead power lines and replace them with small utility boxes, will begin this summer. The larger Phase 2, which includes trenching and heavy street work, will begin in May 2017. Gallardo said once the undergrounding work is complete, the streets will be repaved. Because the project was given a preliminary review (first hearing of an application that has been accepted by the city), the project will be heard again at a future DPR meeting.
In other DPR news: ■ Smollen Homes get the go-ahead: Back for a final review, the Smollen Homes project got the DPR committee’s vote of approval and will proceed to La Jolla’s Community Planning Association for ratification. The project was first reviewed at DPR’s Jan. 12 meeting, at which time the applicant requested a coastal development permit to demolish two existing dwelling units and construct two single dwelling units on two separate lots totaling 6,956 square feet. The 0.14-acre site is at 320 and 322 Nautilus St. “Our client has lived there for 23 years and
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Project manager Jericho Gallardo shows a map of the Muirlands streets that would be under construction as part of the city’s planned water project. would like to continue living there but they want a new house to live in for their retirement. So their plan is to build a new house for themselves and another new house to sell,” said applicant Sasha Varone at the Jan. 12 meeting. For each house, plans include a first-floor kitchen, dining room, sitting area in the front; with three bedrooms and attached bathrooms on the second floor and a third floor “penthouse” with a game room or entertaining area. Parking access is from the alley behind the property, and leads to two, two-car carports. The carport walls would be at the entry and exit, with the two other sides would remain open. Returning to DPR with the landscape plan, Varone put together an illustration to show how the project maintains a consistent look to its surrounding houses, including fencing and trees. “There are four trees close to the property and we are retaining three of them … the designated street tree is a Queen Palm,
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and we have one of those, which we are keeping. The alternative street tree is a Pine Tree, which we also have and are keeping.” DPR chair Paul Benton said the Smollen Homes proposal “a straightforward, simple project following in with the neighborhood.” ■ Zephyr Residence introduced: In a courtesy review, in which DPR can take no action, plans for the Zephyr Residence were presented. The applicant seeks a coastal development permit to demolish an existing residence for the construction of a new 8,885 square foot, two-story residence with attached garage and a 703-square-foot guest house at 921 Muirlands Drive. The project will be heard at a future DPR meeting for a formal preliminary review. — La Jolla DPR meets 4 p.m., second and third Tuesdays at La Jolla Rec Center, 615 Prospect St. lajollacpa.org
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LA JOLLA LIGHT - JANUARY 28, 2016 - PAGE A29
FROM NUGGETS, A24 raffles, and bird demonstrations to illustrate the importance of wetlands in San Diego, what threatens them, and the role we play in preserving and protecting them. Admission is free. Find more details at sandiegoaudubon.org/events
COURTESY
‘Banker of the poor’ and founder of the global microfinance movement Muhammad Yunus will address UCSD graduates on June 11.
UCSD commencement speaker is Nobel Peace Prize recipient Muhammad Yunus, social entrepreneur, economist, founder of the global microfinance movement and Nobel Peace Prize recipient will serve as the keynote speaker at UC San Diego’s All Campus Commencement 10 a.m. Saturday, June 11 at RIMAC Field. The event will mark the first time in 16 years that UCSD will convene all of its graduating undergraduate and graduate students (about 8,000) for a campus-wide commencement ceremony. Yunus, a civil society leader, was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2006 for founding the nonprofit Grameen Bank
(1983), and pioneering the concepts of microcredit and microfinance. These loans are given to entrepreneurs who don’t qualify for traditional bank loans. The Grameen Bank, established in Bangladesh, has lent billions of dollars to impoverished people, mostly women, to start their own businesses. In addition to the Nobel Peace Prize, Yunus has received numerous awards including the Presidential Medal of Freedom and the Congressional Gold Medal, two of the highest civilian honors in the United States. In public speeches, Yunus has encouraged young people to rediscover themselves –– to work not just to earn a living, but to improve the lives of others. His philosophy is that everyone is creative and can be an entrepreneur. Born in 1940 in the seaport city of Chittagong, in what is now known as Bangladesh, Yunus studied at the country’s Dhaka University and then received a Fulbright scholarship to study economics at Vanderbilt University in the U.S. He received his doctorate in economics from Vanderbilt in 1969 and the following year became an assistant professor of economics at Middle Tennessee State University. Returning to Bangladesh, Yunus headed the economics department at Chittagong University. From 1993 to 1995, Yunus was a member of the International Advisory Group for the Fourth World Conference on Women, appointed by the UN secretary general. He has served on the Global Commission of Women’s Health, the Advisory Council for Sustainable Economic Development and the UN Expert Group on Women and Finance.
Lifeguards and city agree on extended health coverage After two years of negotiating, San Diego City Council and its Lifeguards have reached an agreement — albeit a tentative one — about presumptive (health) coverage. The city council voted to pay for time off and medical treatment for six conditions, and on Jan. 20, Teamsters Local 911 and the Lifeguard union leadership voted to ratify the decision.
The six conditions include pneumonia, hernia, meningitis, hepatitis, tuberculosis and MRSA. Lifeguard spokesperson Ed Harris said the two other medical conditions the lifeguards requested coverage for, but were not granted, include heart care and cancer treatment. Presumptive care would providelifeguards with long-term healthcare in the event of injury or illness (including contracting illnesses during skin-abrasion to fluid contact) on the job. The same presumptive care is granted to San Diego Police and Firefighters (lifeguards are part of the San Diego Fire-Rescue department), and Harris has long fought for what he considers to be equal coverage. “We’re not done yet, we want full presumptive coverage, but this is a really positive step for the lifeguards,” Harris said. Getting presumptive coverage to this extent is a first for lifeguards across the country.
Village Merchants change meeting schedule, venue La Jolla Village Merchant’s Association has changed the time and location of its regular monthly meetings. Starting Wednesday, Feb. 10, the group will meet 3 p.m. second Wednesdays of the month at La Jolla’s Riford library, 7555 Draper Ave. Any business owner within the 30-block area of the Business Improvement District is welcome to attend these meetings, as are members of the public. (858) 552-1657.
Gillispie School Blood Drive slated for Feb. 9 The Gillispie School in La Jolla invites members of the community to roll up their sleeves and participate in its seventh annual blood drive, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 9 on the school’s campus at 7380 Girard Ave. Those interested are encouraged to schedule an appointment online at sandiegobloodbank.org using the sponsor code: TGPS. For more information, call (858) 459-3773, ext. 103 or e-mail ehurley@gillispie.org
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CALL FOR VOLUNTEERS ■ La Jolla Community Center needs volunteers for special event set-up and break-down, kitchen help, administrative and organizational tasks. (858) 459-0831 or e-mail jm@ljcommunitycenter.org ■ La Jolla Friendly Visitors (sister organization to La Jolla Meals on Wheels) is looking for volunteers to meet with local seniors on a weekly basis for 1-2 hours, for social interaction and support. (858) 922-2297 or e-mail ljfriendlyvisitors@gmail.com ■ La Jolla Historical Society is recruiting gallery docents. (858) 459-5335 or e-mail info@lajollalight.org ■ La Jolla Meals on Wheels seeks volunteers to deliver meals Monday-Friday 10 a.m. to noon. (858) 452-0391 or e-mail gljmow@att.net ■ San Diego Police Department’s Retired Senior Volunteer Patrol (RSVP) seeks members to patrol neighborhoods, along with other tasks. (858) 552-1737 or e-mail sdpdnorthern@pd.sandiego.gov ■ So Others May Eat Inc. serves a community dinner every other Tuesday at Mary Star of the Sea, 7713 Girard Ave., and is looking for food prep, servers, cleanup and dishwashers. (858) 900-1275. soothersmayeatinc@san.rr.com ■ UCSD International Center seeks tutors for its English-in-Action Program (EIA) to help foreign students/faculty improve their English fluency. Apply at http://bit.ly/UCSD-EIAProgram
Early demolition work on the planned Silver Street Village Homes. Photo taken Jan. 25.
Life Tributes
Everlasting memories of loved ones
Carolyn Fiore Whitney
November 29, 1944 - January 10, 2016 La JoLLa — Carolyn Fiore Whitney, recently of Tucson, arizona, passed away Sunday, January 10, 2016, after a long battle with pulmonary disease. She was born on November 29, 1944, in Boston, Massachusetts, and was the daughter of Mary Josephine Fiore and Reynoldo anthony Fiore. Carolyn graduated from the prestigious Elmhurst academy in Rhode Island in 1963 and attended Marymount University in Virginia. after working at the Harvard Business Review, she married Colin Whitney in 1966 and became a devoted wife and mother to two daughters, channeling her energies into ensuring the happiness and success of her family. She loved art and was an accomplished painter. She was a great cook, loved many sports, and enjoyed literature and interior decorating. Her yearbook describes her as vivacious, gregarious and lovable, and she lived up to that all her life. She would laugh
Tear-Downs Around Town
Demolition begins for The Conrad and Silver Street townhome project ■ Silver Street Village Homes: For the next few weeks, demolition is taking place at the corner of Draper Avenue and Silver Street to remove the former animal hospital and postal service facility to make way for the Silver Street Village Homes project. The two-story development will include 18, two- to four-bedroom townhomes. Each unit will be 1,800 to 2,600 square feet and include a rooftop deck and two-car garage. Construction is expected to take 14 months and be complete by Spring 2017. An informational website will launch in the next few weeks.
■ The Conrad: Demolition started in early January on the former retail complex at 7600 Fay Ave., to tear down the small businesses and restaurants on the lot to make way for construction of the 44,000-square-foot, $65 million Conrad Prebys Performing Arts Center. The 500-seat concert hall, 150-person cabaret/multi-use space, rehearsal rooms, courtyard and offices for La Jolla Music Society has a planned opening of January 2018. Philanthropist Conrad Prebys earned naming rights after making a $15 million donation. More at theconrad.org
and inspire others even while battling her illness. Carolyn is survived by her husband, Colin; mother, Mary; daughters, Kristina and Jennifer; and her grandson, Ethan. She will be sorely missed. Carolyn was cremated at the adair Funeral Home in Tucson. a private family ceremony to celebrate her life was held on January 16, 2016, at her home in Tucson. To honor her final wishes, her ashes will be spread on the ocean at La Jolla, California, in april. Please sign the guest book online at legacy.com/ obituaries/lajollalight.
To place a Life Tribute call Cathy Kay at 858-218-7237 or email InMemory@MyClassifiedMarketplace.com
PHOTOS BY ASHLEY MACKIN
Demolition work on Fay Avenue to make way for The Conrad Prebys Performing Arts Center. Photo taken Jan. 4.
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LA JOLLA LIGHT - JANUARY 28, 2016 - PAGE A31
HOWARD LIPIN
P ATHFINDER P ARTNERS , LLC
Surfers make one of many attempts to ride the same wave Jan. 23 in La Jolla Shores.
Surfers fall short of Guinness record La Jolla Shores home to record-breaking attempt
Many of the surfers who tackled strong currents Jan. 23 at La Jolla Shores in an attempt to break the Guinness World Record for most surfers riding a single wave shared a similar sentiment: It was crazy out there, but it was awesome. The surfers ultimately came up short, but organizers and participants of the inaugural One Wave Challenge fundraiser were pleased to support and bring awareness to the nonprofit organization, Boys to Men Mentoring, which works with young men — many who are fatherless. About 150 San Diego surfers rode 18 waves in unison for nearly two hours in an attempt to override the record 110 surfers on a wave set in Cape Town, Africa, in 2009. Organizers believed the 13th attempt seemed promising enough to break the record, but official results hours later showed 97 surfers stood up and rode that wave. Craig McClain, Boys to Men co-founder and executive director, said the most important aspect was that the challenge helped people meet the boys, recruit potential members and generally spread the word about the organization. “It’s inspiring to see a whole group of people — a big community — that’s all rooting for us to be successful,” McClain said. Attila Tota, a mentor for the last six years, said it was heartwarming to see people support the work that needs to be done. The organization cited data showing boys who grow up in a fatherless home are more likely to go to prison, do drugs and drop out of school than those who have a father figure. “Boys need help,” Tota said. “There’s a lot of groups and efforts
is pleased to announce the final closing of
P ATHFINDER P ARTNERS O PPORTUNITY F UND V, L.P.
Boys to Men Mentoring ■ (619) 469-9599 ■ boystomen.org
for girls — I think for boys, when they support each other, the results are phenomenal. We see the changes and turnarounds in these young men.” O’Naje Jones, 16, who surfed during the challenge Saturday, has been a member for a year and has already been impacted. “It’s been a really life-changing experience,” he said. “It’s really opened my eyes to know there’s actually good people in the world.” He said he gives and receives; he benefits from guidance, but also mentors younger boys. Surfers who participated in the event, which is slated to be held annually, paid $50 to participate. The registration fee included breakfast, a rash guard and T-shirt. Local beach-rock band Sandollar treated attendees to a performance. The event was inspired by another fundraiser put on by Boys to Men Mentoring, the 100 Wave Challenge, in which surfers try to raise $1,000 for the organization and ride 100 waves in 12 hours. “I want to be involved in these kinds of events all the time,” Tota said. “People coming together with their hearts wide opened and all working together for one cause is what a lot of us all live for.” Eric “Bird” Huffman, the official judge of the inaugural event, acknowledged the difficulty of making history, but looked forward to next year’s event. “This was not easy,” he said. “World records are broken through hard work, passion and dedication. We will channel that energy as we spend the next 360 days preparing for next year.” —David Hernandez San Diego Union Tribune
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Theatre Ensemble unites actors
B10
LIFESTYLES
Thursday, January 28, 2016
Playhouse set to stage dark comedy
lajollalight.com
B25
SECTION B
The P a in tin g s of E d R u s c h a MCASD highlights an iconoclast w ho’s c re a t e d i c o n s COURTESY
A scene from the drama ‘Wedding Doll,’ screening 6 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 13 at the JCC
Jewish Film Fest promises surprises and discoveries BY DAVID L. CODDON “Plastic Man” is not the latest Marvel Comics film adaptation coming to a theater near you. But it is a movie, formally titled “Plastic Man: The Artful Life of Jerry Ross Barrish,” and it’s among the 60 films that will be screened between Feb. 4-14 at the 26th annual San Diego Jewish Film Festival. If you’ve never heard of Jerry Ross Barrish before, you may never forget him after seeing this lively, personality-driven documentary directed by William Farley. You might call the 75-year-old Barrish a man for all seasons. He’s been a soldier, a bail bondsman, an indie filmmaker and now a sculptor whose medium of choice is plastic, the kind you find washed up on the beach or discarded in trash bins. If Barrish isn’t the only artist in the world working with plastic, he’s certainly the only one with a film made about him. Barrish, the son of a prizefighter who was also a crony of mobsters, was drawn to sculpture after a lengthy but ultimately disillusioning career as a filmmaker. The plastic figures he creates are assembled with screws and glue. “I grew up without any tools. I never made models. I never used my hands as a kid, so everything about my art in terms of tools is self-taught,” Barrish said by phone from his Pacifica, California home. Few can or should do what he does, he says, because it’s both “dangerous” and strictly “intuitive.” Barrish’s artworks of plastic and how they are conceived are what initially attracted filmmaker Farley. “I was intrigued with what he was able to SEE FILM FEST, B6
BY DAVID L. CODDON
E
d Ruscha may have been born in Omaha, Neb., but today, 60 years after he moved to the West Coast to attend the Chouinard Art Institute in Los Angeles, he’s as much a part
of L.A. as the Hollywood Sign or the Sunset Strip, both subjects of his singular artwork. “He very much chose to be in California because it wasn’t the
‘old school’ of New York,” said Kathryn Kanjo, deputy director, Art & Programs, at the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, which opens a new exhibition titled “Ed Ruscha Then & Now: Paintings from the 1960s and 2000s” on Jan. 30 in La Jolla. ‘Shiplisting’ by Ed Ruscha. 2001, acrylic on raw linen
COURTESY OF ED RUSCHA
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LA JOLLA LIGHT - JANUARY 28, 2016 - PAGE B3
LJS&C to present symphonic exploration of space, land and sea
La Jolla Cultural Partners
FROM LJS&C REPORTS The La Jolla Symphony & Chorus (LJS&C) will perform the third concert of its 61st season “Soundscape San Diego: Exploration and Remembrance,” 7 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 6 and 2 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 7 in Mandeville Auditorium on the UC San Diego campus. Music director Steven Schick will conduct the orchestra and guest pianist Lisa Moore in a transcendental program featuring György Ligeti’s “Atmosphères,” Philip Glass’ “Piano Concerto No. 2,” the premiere of Erik Griswold’s “Jeux à la fin du monde,” and Debussy’s “La Mer.” Film director Stanley Kubrick used Ligeti’s revolutionary “Atmosphères” (composed in 1961) in the film 2001 “A Space Odyssey.” This work of dense sound textures destroys any notion of the traditional language of music — there are no themes, no harmony and virtually no rhythm. There are, instead, huge blocks of sound evolving slowly over time. Kubrick used excerpts from two other Ligeti works — “Lux Aeterna” and “Requiem” — in the movie and did all of this without asking Ligeti’s permission. The effect was that a struggling avant-garde composer suddenly found himself world-famous. Glass’ second piano concerto (2004) celebrates Lewis and Clark’s pioneering 1803-1806 expedition from the Missouri River to the Pacific. It was commissioned for one of many bicentennial observations held early in the 21st Century along the expedition’s route. Each of its three movements has a name that reflects an
Pianist Lisa Moore will perform ‘Piano Concerto No. 2,’ by Philip Glass. important aspect of the journey, and the second movement, “Sacagawea,” features a duet for piano and Native American flute. New York-based pianist Moore, who The New Yorker called “New York’s queen of avant-garde piano” and “visionary,” solos. Moore has gained an international reputation performing with a diverse range of musicians and artists, and in some of the world’s greatest concert halls. Griswold fuses experimental, jazz, and world music to create his works, which have been performed at major festivals and venues throughout Australia, Asia, Europe,
STEPHANIE BERGER
the United States and Canada. His colorful orchestral work “Jeux à la fin du monde” (“Games at the end of the world”) expands upon Debussy’s “Jeux” and Lutoslawski's “Jeux Venitiens.” Griswold holds a Ph.D. from UCSD and is adjunct professor at Queensland Conservatorium, Griffith University, in Australia. The composer will be in attendance for this world premiere. Debussy’s magnificent “La Mer” (composed from 1903 to 1905) was inspired by his feelings about the sea. He was not interested in musical scene painting, but in
Director Stanley Kubrick used Gyrgy Ligeti’s revolutionary ‘Atmosphères’ in the film 2001 ‘A Space Odyssey.’ writing music that evokes the way we feel in the presence of the ocean. This approach was misunderstood by some early critics who anticipated a more literal sound experience, but soon “La Mer” became one of the composer’s most admired orchestral works. The understated Debussy concludes “La Mer” with a roar of savage power as the music hurtles to its tremendous climax. ■ IF YOU GO: A pre-concert lecture by Schick will be given one hour prior to concert times. Tickets are $29-$15 at (858) 534-4637 or lajollasymphony.com
An innovator of West-Coast Pop and Conceptual Art, Ed Ruscha’s work defies and exceeds both categories, drawing upon popular media, commercial culture, and the landscape of Los Angeles. This tailored exhibition considers the artist’s use of recurring words, images, and themes across the decades.
Ed Ruscha Then & Now: Paintings from the 1960s and 2000s is organized by the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego and made possible by generous lead underwriting support from Pauline Foster. Institutional support of MCASD is provided by the City of San Diego Commission for Arts and Culture and the County of San Diego Community Enhancement Fund.
JANUARY 30 THROUGH APRIL 24, 2016 > MCASD LA JOLLA
Ed Ruscha, The Los Angeles County Museum on Fire, 1965–1968, oil on canvas, 53 1/2 x 133 1/2 in. Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden Smithsonian Institution. Gift of Joseph H. Hirshhorn, 1972. Photo: Cathy Carver. © Ed Ruscha.
LA JOLLA 700 Prospect St. 858 454 3541 www.mcasd.org
CHECK OUT WHAT’S HAPPENING The Montrose Trio
Saturday, February 6, 2016 at 8 p.m. MCASD Sherwood Auditorium Tickets: $80, $55, $30 Former Tokyo String Quartet violinist Martin Beaver and cellist Clive Greensmith have joined forces with pianist Jon Kimura Parker to become The Montrose Trio. Formed in 2014, The Washington Post raved, “absolutely top-notch music-making, as fine as one could ever expect to hear…they are poised to become one of the top piano trios in the world.” (858) 459-3728 www.LJMS.org
Whale Watching Adventures Now through April 17 9:30 a.m. & 1:15 p.m.
Embark on an unforgettable journey with the ocean experts at Birch Aquarium at Scripps and Flagship Cruises & Events! Join aquarium naturalists for twice-daily cruises to locate gray whales on their round-trip migration from their Alaska feeding grounds to Baja California. Bring your camera! Adults: $40 weekdays, $45 weekends Youth: $20 weekdays, $23 weekends More info: 858-534-4109 or aquarium.ucsd.edu
Telegraph Quartet at the Athenaeum Music & Arts Library
Friday, January 29, 7:30 PM Tickets: $45 members $50 nonmembers http://www.ljathenaeum.org/ chamber-concert-series Joan and Irwin Jacobs Music Room 1008 Wall Street La Jolla, CA 92037
Guards at the Taj
By Rajiv Joseph Directed by Jaime Castañeda Feb. 2 – Feb. 28 “Funny, haunting and deeply insightful” – LA Weekly Limited Seating! Buy Today LaJollaPlayhouse.org (858) 550-1010
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PAGE B4 - JANUARY 28, 2016 - LA JOLLA LIGHT
It’s A Balancing Act
La Jolla High student government members reflect on leadership
PHOTOS BY ASHLEY MACKIN
The La Jolla High School 2015-2016 Associated Student Body includes: Julia Albanez, Claire Andrews, Nicole Andrews, Mackenzie Baldwin, Stephanie Buchbinder, Paula Conde-Porto,Francesca Cortina, Natalie Coy, Morgan Cunningham, Grant Deverman, Lucy Fitzgerald, Trenton Fudge, Kenny Hayden, Maya Hildebrand, Simon Hirschfield, Theo Hirschfield, Reagan Jetter, Avery Kotler, Erin Love, Nicole Marshall, Yassi Mesri, Mitchell Morrison, Brooke Odmark, Elise Roberts, Ariella Shair, Meredith Strange, Madison Stratton, Katya Strom, Julia Walton, Morgan Watson, Preston Weber and Ben Wintringer.
BY ASHLEY MACKIN This year, America will elect a new president. And the future leaders of America — specifically those found at La Jolla High School — will be watching. The students elected to La Jolla’s Associated Student Body (ASB) — which helps foster school spirit through dances, campus activities and student clubs — sat down with La Jolla Light to discuss what they think makes a good leader. Having participated in the electoral process, many said they have a better awareness of how balance, diplomacy, good role models and being able to follow through on what they are tasked with are crucial to good leadership. “Watching this election, especially with the insight that I get to vote for the next president, I have a greater respect for all the candidates — whether they are with the party for which I’m going to vote or not,” said ASB President Claire Andrews. “Just being able to see the world, not only as black and white, but also merge political ideas into grey to better the country as a whole — that’s a lot of what we have to do here at La Jolla High. Plus, watching them get up there in front of everyone in the United States and express their views, whether people agree or not, is admirable to me.” Added Student Rep-at-Large Grant Devermann, “Running for an elected position, you need to be down-to-earth and
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www.lajollalight.com understand what different groups want and need. Just like in the country, our school has different groups of people, and I’ve learned that when I do something on ASB, some people will love it and some people will hate it. It’s all about balance, because no matter what happens, someone will be mad. That’s just life.” Many reported having good role models to guide them and provide examples of leadership. “Mr. (Joe) Cavaiola, our ASB advisor, has been an incredible role model to anyone who has taken his class,” said Andrews. “He’s passionate about the school and really puts his heart and soul into everything we do – from dances to welcoming freshmen. He has showed us to be that way, and how to clearly communicate.” La Jolla High School athletic director Paula Conway has been a role model for ASB vice-president Maya Hildebrand. “She holds us accountable for ourselves and taught us how to be organized. For me, that transitioned into the classroom and ASB.” Water polo coach Tom Atwell has also led by example, according to senior class president Simon Hirschfield. “He’s an intimidating guy. He’s the fittest man in La Jolla and he taught me it’s worth it to work hard because he lives by that. He taught me about fortitude,” Hirschfield said. Many students said they are engaged in volunteer opportunities with groups outside of school that encourage them to better their surroundings, which is exactly what ASB is tasked with. For example, during her freshman year, Hildebrand was president of Interact Club, a teenage version of Rotary. “But I wanted to have a bigger position in
Sh Ja n u a r y
LA JOLLA LIGHT - JANUARY 28, 2016 - PAGE B5
Student Rep-at-Large Grant Devermann, ASB President Claire Andrews, Vice-president Maya Hildebrand and Treasurer Julia Albenez.
■ ABOUT THE ASB: La Jolla High’s Associated Student Body is comprised of 36 students. These include class presidents and officers, as well as ASB officers, elected in the fall. They meet during fourth period to come up with on-campus events, ways to support student clubs, and exchange ideas for dances and fundraisers. They also work with the school’s Link Crew, which greets incoming freshmen before the school year starts. stuff involving school spirit and dances, and that’s what ASB does. I like planning and organizing, so it seemed like a good fit for me,” she said. Andrews and ASB treasurer Julia Albenez participated in National Charity League, which carries out volunteer projects such as beach cleanups and visiting with senior citizens. “Through National Charity League, I learned how great it feels to give back and how empowering it is to build leadership skills,” Albenez said. These past service experiences lit the flame for many of these students to do more. At La Jolla High School, that means renewing the sense of school spirit and enthusiasm. Albenez said, “I want to make this school as spirited as it once was. I hear alumni say
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how much they loved this school, and I want all the students who are here now to feel that way when they leave.” Added Devermann, who as rep-at-large is in charge of homecoming dance, “Historically, we’ve been a very spirited school, but lately that’s been dropping. My goal is to bring that school spirit back. My parents always talked about what a big deal dances were, I feel like people at our school don’t look forward to them as much. So I want to give them something to look forward to and enjoy.” But this year’s leadership has had specific challenges on top of getting nonchalant teenagers excited for a dance. Andrews said the loss of their home field due to ongoing construction and the change in
administrators in recent years (principal Chuck Podhorsky came on board in February 2014, and two vice-principals have departed since then), has been a hindrance to Vikings’ spirits. “We have a free speech board, where for two weeks, anyone can post what they want and it can’t be taken down. The posts started to get really negative,” Andrews explained. “But through ASB, our group has done a good job to change that vibe to be more positive. I hope we can keep that upbeat vibe through the end of the year.” Maintaining that vibe, ASB advisor Cathy Hutchins said, means everything from creating campus activities to fundraising. “One of the most important things they do is fundraise for each class, so when that class is in its senior year, their senior dues (for yearbook, prom, graduation, senior breakfast) will be lower. They start in the ninth grade and have fundraisers every year,” she said. “They help a lot of students who are more introverted by spreading spirit and getting those kids involved.” Considering many ASB leaders said they were inspired to join ASB because of the class before them, Hutchins attests to the value of student leaders. “Having peers the students can look up to and emulate is good for the student body at large,” she said. Hopeful that this year’s ASB leaders will motivate the next group, Andrews said, “My goal for this year at La Jolla High is to create an environment where everyone is comfortable and understands what’s going on around them. I want a constant flow of information at school to make sure I leave it better than when I got here. I hope that continues with future generations.”
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PAGE B6 - JANUARY 28, 2016 - LA JOLLA LIGHT
FROM FILM FEST, B1 do with such economy and with material that no one wanted to deal with,” he said. When Farley learned more about Barrish the man, the film became a full-fledged biography. “Creative people have a compulsion,” Farley said. “They’ve been driven to make something that expresses their deepest connection to being alive. … I’m as much a detective as a filmmaker. I want to know why.” “Plastic Man: The Artful Life of Jerry Ross Barrish” is but one of the many offerings that San Diego Jewish Film Festival Executive Director Craig Prater characterizes as “films for discussion.” Among those Prater lumps into his personal “top five” for this year’s festival is the Rani Saar-directed “Sabena Hijacking – My Version,” a docu-drama based on a largely forgotten act of terrorism in 1972. “It certainly did make headlines at the time,” said Prater. “It’s one of the most thrill-packed films in our festival. You’ll be on the edge of your seat even though you may know how it ends.” Prater also encourages festival-goers to catch the San Diego premiere of Jean van de Veide’s “The Price of Sugar” from the Netherlands, Nitzan Gilady’s “Wedding Doll” and the festival-closing documentary “Dying to Know: Ram Dass & Timothy Leary,” which is narrated by Robert Redford. “There is no subject or educational presentation at any of the documentaries or dramas where there isn’t something for everyone,” Prater said. “I think that the misconception is that if it’s a Jewish film festival you either need to be Jewish or have
William Farley’s ‘Plastic Man: The Artful Life of Jerry Ross Barrish’ will screen Feb. 6 in Carlsbad and Feb. 7 in Clairemont.
A scene from the opening night film, ‘The Price of Sugar,’ screening 7 p.m. Feb. 4 at Reading Cinemas 14
a Jewish connection.” In addition to the feature-length films being screened, there will be a presentation on Feb. 8 of 22 short films at the ArcLight Theatres at La Jolla’s UTC mall. Other festival venues include the Garfield Theater at the Jewish Community Center, the Clairemont Reading 14 multiplex and two North County locations: the Carlsbad Village Theatre and Edwards San Marcos Stadium 18. ■ IF YOU GO: San Diego Jewish Film Festival runs Feb. 4-14 at five locations. Movie tickets are $13.75-$15.75. For a schedule of events and festival synopsis, call (858) 362-1348 or visit sdjff.org
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If You Go ■ What: “Ed Ruscha Then & Now: Paintings from the 1960s and 2000s” ■ When: Jan. 30-April 24 ■ Where: Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, 700 Prospect St. ■ Hours: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. third Thursdays. Closed Wednesdays.
‘The Los Angeles County Museum on Fire’ by Ed Ruscha. 1965-1968, oil on canvas FROM ED RUSCHA, B1 “It had that untapped potential, and he came in and he tapped it and defined it for the art world,” Kanjo said. “As an artist, he’s given us a timeless sense of not only Los Angeles but also the American landscape.” The L.A. segment of that landscape over the years has included now-iconic depictions of not only the Hollywood Sign and the Sunset Strip, but the sights of Hollywood Boulevard, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (presented as spectacularly on fire) and pop-cultural signage like the 20th Century Fox logo and one of Ruscha’s recurring and most familiar images, the bold placard above a Standard Oil gas station. Although Ruscha is usually described as an innovator of Conceptual Art and so-called
West Coast Pop, his work defies categorization, said Kanjo. “It’s totally recognizable and yet it resists classification. I think that he’s managed to use developments in art history like Conceptualism and Pop Art to his own effect or output. He’s benefited,” she said, “from breakthroughs or innovations in the art world to make his own statement and his own language.” Ruscha and the MCASD have a longtime relationship. His 1962 single-word canvas “Ace,” part of the museum’s permanent collection, was the genesis for the new exhibition, which will have 16 of his works on display. Besides a number of Ruscha prints that the museum brought into its collection in the 1970s and “Ace” (an addition facilitated by MCASD Director
COURTESY OF CATHY CARVER/SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION
Hugh Davies in the ‘80s), Ruscha created a mural on commission, “Brave Men of La Jolla,” for the museum at the time of its ‘90s expansion, and in the 2000s, the painting “Site of a Former Telephone Booth” was added to MCASD’s collection. That collection currently numbers 30 Ruscha works. Fittingly “Then and Now” is not only the title of Ruscha’s new book, depictions of every building along Hollywood Boulevard, but of this exhibition, which evokes the breadth of the artist’s connection of the MCASD. “We’re approaching our 70th anniversary,” said Kanjo, “and we are reflecting on our history and ideas and artists and issues with which the institution has aligned itself. Ed (Rushca) is one of those
■ Admission: $10; $5 ages 65-plus ■ Also on View: “Alvaro Blancarte: Marking the Present,” Blancarte xperiments with textures, materials and colors to depict the splendor of the deserts of Baja, California. The exhibit presents a new body of work alongside four earlier pieces from the Museum’s permanent collection. ■ Contact: (858) 454-3541. mcasd.org artists in whom we’ve had a consistent interest. What this show does is say ‘Wow, he had these same kinds of landscapes then that he has now. There are trademarks, logos, branding that interested him in the ‘60s that interest him now.’ ” Kanjo hopes that museum-goers will rediscover their special surroundings by experiencing the Ruscha artworks. “I want people to see him as a great American landscape painter, to go back into their California environment and see it differently, to see the sycamore a different way, the light pole a different way, the gradated sunset differently. I want them to understand that he’s painting their world.”
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PAGE B8 - JANUARY 28, 2016 - LA JOLLA LIGHT
Telegraph Quartet
A Range of Music ■ Celebrate National Kazoo Day 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 28 in the Seuss Room of Geisel Library at UCSD, 9500 Gilman Drive at Library Walk. Listen to chamber music for kazoo composed by UCSD alumni and see a collection of kazoos from many decades and many countries. Free admission (and free kazoo). (858) 822-5758. spaulson@ucsd.edu ■ “A Quintet of Quartets” continues at Athenaeum Music & Arts Library with the Telegraph Quartet, 7:30 p.m. Friday, Jan. 29 at 1008 Wall St. The group won grand prize winners at the 2015 International Fischoff Chamber Music Competition. Tickets: $40-50. (858) 454-5872. ljathenaeum.org/chamber-concert-series ■ The St. James by-the-Sea Episcopal Church Choir will perform “Annelies,” the first major choral setting of “The Diary of Anne Frank,” 4 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 31 at 743 Prospect St. The teenager’s remarkable and penetrating observations, written while hiding from the Nazis in an Amsterdam attic, is the basis of its extraordinary and moving libretto. Tickets: $30, free to
Richard Lederer
children and students, space permitting. (858) 459-3421, ext. 109. sjbts.org ■ “Dialogue,” an intimate duo concert featuring pianist Myra Melford and clarinetist Ben Goldberg, kicks off the winter series of The Athenaeum’s jazz program, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 4 in the library’s Music Room, 1008 Wall St. Seating is limited, early reservations suggested. Concert tickets: $21-$26, the series costs $76-$96. (858) 454-5872. ljathenaeum.org
Listen and Learn ■ Hear from two internationally recognized leaders in the field of integrative medicine, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 28 and Friday, Jan. 29 as part of the 13th annual Natural Supplements Conference in San Diego, hosted by the Scripps Center for Integrative Medicine. Paradise Point Resort, 1404 Vacation Road, Mission Bay. Tickets: $35. (858) 652-5400. Scripps.org/naturalsupplements
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Gilbert Castellanos ■ “Lederer on Language,” featuring San Diego Union-Tribune language columnist Richard Lederer, will focus on the fates and feats of America’s early presidents, including election reflections, 7:30 p.m. Monday, Feb. 1 at North Coast Repertory Theatre, 987 Lomas Santa Fe Drive, Solana Beach. Tickets: $22. (858) 481-1055. northcoastrep.org ■ Actor William Shatner – Captain James Tiberius Kirk himself! – performs a laugh-out-loud one-man show chronicling his journey to becoming a cultural icon, 7:30 p.m., Thursday, Jan. 28 at Balboa Theatre, 868 Fourth Ave., downtown. Tickets: $46.50. Limited meet-and-greet tickets available. (858) 570-1100. sandiegotheatres.org/shatners-world
International Dance
ArtPower’s season closes with Kota Yamazaki/Fluid Hug-Hug Dance Company’s performance “OQ,” 8 p.m. Friday, Jan. 29 at Mandeville Auditorium, UCSD, 9500 Gilman Drive. Dancers from various cultural backgrounds draw inspiration from Japanese ritual poetry readings held at the
LA JOLLA LIGHT - JANUARY 28, 2016 - PAGE B9
Kota Yamazaki/Fluid Hug-Hug Dance Company Imperial Palace. Tickets: $28-$46. (858) 534-8497. Boxoffice.ucsd.edu
Art Talk
Claude Monet, the artist who many believe most fully embodies Impressionism, is the focus of art historian Linda Blair’s final two series lectures, 7:30 p.m. Monday, Feb. 1 and Feb. 8 at the Athenaeum Music & Arts Library, 1008 Wall St. Tickets: $14-$19. (858) 454-5872. ljathenaeum.org/art-history-lectures
Concert for a Cause
UC San Diego will celebrate the 20th annual Lytle Scholarship Concert with jazz trumpeter Gilbert Castellanos and the Mambo Messengers, 3 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 31 at the Department of Music’s Conrad Prebys Concert Hall. General admission is $50; military $40; students $10. Students from all schools are welcome. (858) 534-1507.
A painting by Claude Monet
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UPCOMING EVENTS Black & Diamond Gala Saturday, February 20 • 5-8pm Adults Only Cocktail Party La Jolla Beach & Tennis Club
Family Carnival Gala Saturday, April 23 • 6-9pm Rockin’ Jump – Trampoline Park 8190 Miralani Drive, 92126 sandiego.rockinjump.com
School Office - (858) 454-2461 S StellaMarisAcademy.org
PAGE B10 - JANUARY 28, 2016 - LA JOLLA LIGHT
Stage Presence
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La Jolla Theatre Ensemble takes its shows on the road BY ASHLEY MACKIN The 2016 La Jolla Theatre Ensemble season promises to bring a variety of plays to La Jolla venues for staged readings — everything from one-act plays by local writers to lesser-known plays by well-known playwrights, all the way up to Shakespeare. Ensemble co-founder and longtime theater enthusiast John Tessmer said the pieces performed range from “serious to lighter fare” and are influenced by the season and the venue. The troupe performs at least 10 shows per season. Held primarily at the La Jolla Community Center (the Ensemble’s original name was the Riford Readers, commemorating a time when the Community Center was called the Riford Center), the staged readings have branched out to La Jolla Library and St. James By-the-Sea Episcopal Church. In February, in honor of San Diego Theatre Week and Black History Month, the Ensemble will perform “Permanent Collection” by Thomas Gibbons. “The play is about art and race issues. It’s not that we couldn’t do that anywhere else, but it’s more intellectually stimulating and literacy-based, so it’s more suited to do at the library,” Tessmer said. They take the “stage” for “Permanent Collection,” 7 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 23 at 7555 Draper Ave. In March, the troupe returns to their original home for “John Gabriel Borkman” by Henrik Ibsen. Because the last scene takes place outdoors, Tesssmer said they needed a venue with indoor and outdoor capabilities and prefer the La Jolla Community Center for its open air courtyard. “The Community Center is quite a unique setting for this town. The Old Globe Theatre
COURTESY PHOTOS
From the staged reading of ‘The Clearing,’ in March 2015: d Hollingsworth, Dana Hooley (who won the San Diego Critics Circle Award for Actress of the Year for 2014), AJ Knox, Laura Bohlin, Maelyn Gandola, John Tessmer, Steven Jensen and Sandy Torretti. has an outdoor stage, but in La Jolla, there isn’t a similar space,” he said. “Plus, it’s joy to work there.” Because 2016 marks the 400th anniversary of the William Shakespeare's death, the Ensemble will team up with the La Jolla Library and the San Diego Shakespeare Society in the spring to present an as-yet-to-be-determined program. This summer, in honor of major League Baseball’s All Star Game being held in San Diego’s Petco Park, the actors will perform a baseball-themed play. Come December, they will do a Christmas-inspired work. Staged readings, Tessmer explained,
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involve actors holding scripts and reading from them, as opposed to a stage production with costumes, sets and special effects. Still, the cast gathers for rehearsals one to four times leading up to the show. Ensemble actor Nick Young compared staged readings to watching live radio theater, behind the scenes. “Audiences enjoy a good story read aloud by actors bringing the characters to life, not so much with movement, but by the talent of their voices,” he said. “It allows the audience to imagine in their own minds the scenery, the actions, even the characters. That’s what I think audiences get, an entertaining evening that
frees their imaginations, without the commitment of a full production.” The actors, many of whom are Tessmer’s friends, perform on the San Diego theater scene. “Occasionally I hold auditions … but I generally just ask people and they participate. Some of these actors are up-and-coming or don’t get the recognition they deserve,” he said. One of them, Dan Feraldo, said being part of the Ensemble gives him opportunities he might not get otherwise. “I love being a part of this because it gives me the chance to work with a variety of actors and to perform in roles I may never have a chance to do in
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LA JOLLA LIGHT - JANUARY 28, 2016 - PAGE B11
full productions,” he said. Feraldo has been with the Ensemble since 2012. Another actor, Roberta Wolff, joined the Ensemble after 25 years in community theater in New Jersey. “It has been a real pleasure working with John and my fellow actors, an activity which I hope to continue for seasons to come,” she said. In addition to the Ensemble, Tessmer — who joked that he “just can’t seem to stop” doing theatre and reading new plays – also has a part in the North Coast Repertory Theatre’s current production of “Sherlock Holmes and the Adventure of the Great Nome Gold Rush.” Tessmer grew up in San Diego, and went to La Jolla Country Day School. “I got involved in theater there and loved it. Then I went to Yale as an undergrad and continued to do local theater productions. After I graduated, I thought it was a time to explore and gave myself a few years to see where it would go,” he said. “But because I hadn’t been on a professional track, I went to grad school and got a master’s at University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee. After that I traveled around the country searching for jobs and chasing the
work until I moved to San Diego in 2001. In 2004, I moved to La Jolla.” In 2010, Tessmer co-founded the Ensemble with fellow theater lover Davida Huchel, who has since bowed out of the management role, but still attends shows. The funding for the productions comes from patron donations. Generally, admission is a $10 donation. Tessmer said contributions can be made in person or by mailing a check designated for La Jolla Theatre Ensemble to: Friends of the La Jolla Library, 7555 Draper, La Jolla, CA 92037 or La Jolla Community Center, 6811 La Jolla Blvd., La Jolla, CA 92037. “Support of $100 or more will entitle you to free admission to all of the company's 2016 shows, as well as complimentary concessions,” he said. Should funding to pay the actors more than a stipend permit, Tessmer said he would like to stage a full-production. “The future is exciting and unknown and I have lots of ideas,” he said. “Which is a joy and a challenge.” — Check La Jolla Light’s weekly community calendar and Best Bets section for performance dates and locations.
From the staged reading of ‘The Lady from the Sea,’ in August 2014: (sitting) J. Tyler Jones and Graham Ehlers Sheldon, (standing) Tatiana Mac, John Tessmer, Rin Ehlers Sheldon, Rob Biter and Molly O'Meara.
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PAGE B12 - JANUARY 28, 2016 - LA JOLLA LIGHT
MARK-YOUR-CALENDAR SOCIAL EVENTS Prado Patrons’ gala sports Steampunk theme The ` Patrons of the Prado are planning their 2016 gala “Full Steam Ahead!” for July 9 in the Spreckels Organ Pavilion in Balboa Park, San Diego. The party will sport a Steampunk theme that features anachronistic technologies and retro-futuristic inventions to raise funds for the 11 museums and theaters on the Prado in the park. The Patrons also provide annual funding for Bucks for Buses, an initiative that underwrites transportation for underserved school children to visit Balboa Park. Since its inception in 1997, the Patrons have granted more than $3 million to: Mingei International Museum, Museum of Photographic Arts, Reuben H. Fleet Science Center, SD Hall of Champions, SD History Center, SD Junior Theatre, SD Museum of Art, San Diego Museum of Man, The NAT, Old Globe, and Timken Museum of Art. Tickets for the event are available at patronsoftheprado.org
Chic ‘bags’ needed for auction benefit The Foundation for Animal Care and Education (FACE) will host its sixth annual fashion accessories silent auction to raise funds for pets in need of critical veterinary care on May 1. Organizers are requesting the public’s support to pull it off. FACE is accepting donations of new and “gently loved” high-end designer handbags, jewelry, accessories and sunglasses for this year’s Bags & Baubles event. FACE executive director Brooke Haggerty said donated items are fully tax-deductible and will be auctioned to
JAMES RILEY
Patrons of the Prado members Kristi Pieper, Arlene Esgate and Micki Olin interact with members of Steam Powered Giraffe, a group that performed at the La Jolla Playhouse in 2013 and recently at Spreckels Theatre. provide grants to local families who are unable to afford costs of treatment for their critically injured or sick pets. More than 450 guests attended last year’s Bags & Baubles, to raise $117,000. FACE is a not-for-profit 501(c)3 public charity, established in 2006. To make a donation to Bags & Baubles, call (858) 450-3223 or visit face4pets.org
San Diego Opera throws a party Jan. 30 To celebrate its 51st season, San Diego Opera will host a party “Swing & Bling,” 6
p.m. Saturday, Jan. 30 at the McMillin Event Center at Liberty Station, 2875 Dewey Road. Guest will be treated to specialty wines, a buffet catered by Sycuan Casino and entertainment by San Diego Arts partners that includes singing, spoken word, dance and instrumental music. The highlight of the soiree will be the live auction with offerings that include a private Paris apartment for a week, spa vacation for two guests for a week of pampering, a stay at a private residence in Santa Fe with opera tickets to the Santa Fe Opera and cast party, and much more. Tickets are $300 via Jan Kaplan, director
of special events by calling (619) 232-7636 or e-mail jan.kaplan@sdopera.org
Tickets available for Heart of San Diego gala The 19th annual Heart of San Diego Gala, to benefit Sulpizio Cardiovascular Center at UC San Diego Health, is slated for Saturday, Feb. 20 at Park Hyatt Aviara. Cocktails will be served at 6 p.m. with dinner and dancing at 7:30 p.m., featuring entertainment by the Wayne Foster group. Tickets from $600 at (858) 246-1571, heartofsd@ucsd.edu or heartcentergala.org
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PAGE B14 - JANUARY 28, 2016 - LA JOLLA LIGHT
Las Patronas members and supporters mingle with beneficiaries at The Marine Room.
PHOTOS BY ASHLEY MACKIN
Alpha Project founder Bob McElroy says the Las Patronas gift will be used for a crew cab truck for its work programs, which help homeless/high risk persons transition into the workforce. 2015 Jewel Ball co-chair Kathryn Gayner looks on.
Las Patronas donates more than $870K Beneficiaries reveal how funds will be used at annual luncheon BY ASHLEY MACKIN n 2015, the La Jolla-based women’s philanthropy group Las Patronas raised almost $871,000 for San Diego organizations in need. At a luncheon Jan. 20 at The Marine Room, the ladies distributed nine gifts of more than $40,000 each to major beneficiaries and got to hear how the money would be used. Raised through the annual Jewel Ball, funds were also distributed to minor beneficiaries in lesser amounts. The 2016 Jewel Ball has a “Shangri-La” theme and will be held Aug. 6 at the La Jolla Beach & Tennis Club. More information at laspatronas.org
ASHLEY MACKIN
Chris Shilling and Jennifer Navarra from the Arc of San Diego with their check, which will fund exercise equipment for persons with disabilities.
I
ASHLEY MACKIN
Debbie Honeycutt and Karen Macauley with the check that will fund transport systems and training equipment for the University of San Diego Hahn School of Nursing
ASHLEY MACKIN
Las Patronas member Michelle Lanuti, San Diego Zoo representatives Tim Rupe and Karen Isaacs, and Las Patronas members Sherri Machelli and Michell Kearney. The zoo plans to use its gift to buy an ADA-transport vehicle for visitors with disabilities.
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LA JOLLA LIGHT - JANUARY 28, 2016 - PAGE B15
2016 Jewel Ball chair Kathryn Gayner, 2015 Jewel Ball chair Cari Massaad, Spirit of Giving Award recipient Don Caufield, 2015 Las Patronas president Annette Bradbury and 2016 Las Patronas president Lisa Betyar With 2015 Jewel Ball chair Cari Massaad standing by, Preuss School principal Scott Barton says the Las Patronas money will buy an eight-passenger van for student athletes.
Las Patronas member Jennifer Kelly with Living Coast Discovery Center representatives Ben Vallejos and Susan Fuller and Las Patronas member Susan Berrera. The Las Patronas money will fund a 15-passenger transit van to bring educational programs to schools.
Las Patronas member Jackie Sheid, Boys and Girls Club of Greater San Diego representatives Michelle Malin and Veronica Baker with Las Patronas members Cathy Maywood and Marie Browning. The club’s grant will be used for a passenger van to transport participants from area schools to their Escondido center.
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Salt: Movers and shakers of the culinary world
Y
ears ago my girlfriend and I applied for the same position teaching law at a well-respected community college. The candidates were interviewed at a fine Italian restaurant. I judiciously avoided slurpy soups and pricey items. Bittersweet, I was offered the job, while my cum laude friend missed the cut. Laurie asked the dean why she wasn’t chosen, and he told her matter-of-factly that she liberally sprinkled salt on every dish before tasting. This insulting gesture showed him she made assumptions and unfair conclusions. Historically salt has been used as a currency to pay Roman Legions, was responsible for launching lucrative trade routes and global expeditions, and been a source of superstitions (bad luck to spill, good luck to toss over one’s left shoulder). Today this ancient mineral is embraced by top chefs to enliven everything from soup to nuts, by holistic healers to ease sore throats and achy feet, and by party hosts to instantly chill Champagne and remove red wine stains from carpets. Here’s a primer to help shake things up in savory and sweet dishes.
Salt of the Earth
Salts have been harvested for thousands of years from lakes, oceans, mountains and
underground beds for pickling vegetables, curing, koshering and tenderizing meats, sautéing and baking, and as a finishing flavor. • Table salt is basically sodium chloride in a shaker stripped of valuable trace minerals and laced with anti-clumping additives (typically aluminum derivatives) along with synthetic iodine found difficult to synthesize by the body. In addition, this refined seasoning has been linked to water retention and high blood pressure. It’s crystal clear this salt should be limited or avoided. • Kosher salt, so named for its use in “koshering” meats according to Jewish kashrut laws requiring the removal of blood before cooking. Its flat, flaky, irregular crystal
shape makes Kosher salt easy to pinch and grasp in culinary showmanship for garnishing, and has become a favorite among celebrated chefs. It also dissolves easily so the flavor disperses evenly. • Sea salt having a crisp fresh bite is either coarsely or finely ground. The former is ideal for adding a crunch to caramel brownies, pretzels or corn on the cob; the latter is a good finishing salt to give a briny flavor to seafood and steamed vegetables. • Unrefined, coral-tinted Himalayan Pink salt dials up soups, stews, fowls, fish and vegetables with tangy, sharp notes. Also found in hand-cut slabs for striking presentations of fruits, cheeses or sushi, or a savory surface for grilling fish, seafood, chicken or beef. • Hawaiian Red salt is formed by blending volcanic clay called alae with sea salt, while Hawaiian Black salt incorporates activated charcoal into the grains. These impart rich, earthy flavors to sauces and soups, and are ideal for preserving fish and meats. • Fine-grained, pristine pickling salt is a dilly for making pickles and other marinated vegetables. • Gray-tinged, chunky rock salt is used to make ice cream or for seafood presentations like oysters. • Fleur de sel, French for “flower of salts,” painstakingly harvested by hand, is best used as a finishing or garnishing salt for salads and vegetables.
In the Pink
Pink Himalayan salt with the greatest store of minerals (particularly copper, iron, potassium, calcium and magnesium) imparts
many benefits, including boosting libido, the immune and skeletal systems, alkalizing the body by tempering acid production, regulating heartbeat and fluid levels, along with relieving achy joints, sore muscles, and itchy, flaky skin from a soothing salt bath. There’s more. This precious salt puts the skids on goiters, and prevents depletion of two essential hormones, serotonin and melatonin to help hike mood and regulate sleep patterns.
Rock Star
Beyond flavoring foods, salt removes odors from hands and cutting board surfaces; crisps wilted vegetables; keeps milk fresher; prevents mold on cheeses; eliminates musty smells; makes glasses sparkle; removes rust on kitchen implements and cuts grease from cooking surfaces.
Moroccan Dry Rub Ingredients • 2 tablespoons sea salt • 2 tablespoons each white and brown sugar • 2 tablespoons cumin • 2 tablespoons black pepper • 2 tablespoons cinnamon • 1 tablespoon ginger powder • 1 tablespoon turmeric • 1/2 teaspoon caraway seeds Method: Combine ingredients in an airtight jar. Cover and shake until well blended. Store in a cool, dark place. — For more recipes, visit freerangeclub.com or e-mail kitchenshrink@san.rr.com
Show Your Support
Nutrition
National Wear Red Day, Friday, February 5th
Trends & Fads Come hear guest speaker, Yvonne Nienstadt, nutrition director at Rancho La Puerta, discuss her take on Paleo vs. Vegan and everything in between: Low fat, high carb and the high fat, low carb trends.
-What’s up with gluten free? -Are grains really killing us? -Is soy as bad as some say? Is dairy? -How much protein do we really need? -What fats are best, and how much?
Yvonne Nienstadt
We’ll discuss the latest weight loss and health schemes and anything else you are interested in.
Join Yvonne at the La Jolla Wellness Center Saturday, January 30th at 10 AM for a lively, good-natured, ‘food fight’. This event is free to the public. 858-444-0340 7580 Fay Ave, Ste. 103, La Jolla lajollawellnessstudio.com
SDGoRedLuncheon.heart.org
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LA JOLLA LIGHT - JANUARY 28, 2016 - PAGE B17
All the Comforts of Home. COURTESY
Former Head of School at Bishop’s, Michael Teitelman (seated), signs copies of his book at an event Jan. 19 for guests Noni Senyei, Rose Camacho and Drew Seneyi.
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PAGE B18 - JANUARY 28, 2016 - LA JOLLA LIGHT
LA JOLLA GEMS OF THE WEEK
Best Foot Forward
“Manners That Matter Most: The Easy Guide to Etiquette at Home and in the World” by June Eding (Hatherleigh Press), was re-launched for its second printing in December. It covers topics from introductions, greetings and thank-you’s, to the etiquette of modern technology — including the appropriate places and times to call and text message. A much-needed guide for our fast-paced world, the book also includes inspirational quotes on the importance of courtesy, respect and dignity; 25 lessons everyone should learn to cultivate better manners; and tips for more effective interaction with family, friends and co-workers. Kindle $7.99. Hardcover: $11.51. amazon.com For more reads on the topic, syndicated columnist Amy Alkon has penned: “Good Manners for Nice People Who Sometimes
Say F*ck” (paperback $11.28) and “I See Rude People: One woman’s battle to beat some manners into impolite society” (paperback $18).
Wish I’d Said That! “Sarah Palin appeared in Iowa last week to endorse Donald Trump for president. Though I think she just likes him because ‘Trump’ sounds like a name she would give one of her kids — Bristol, Willow, Track and Trump.” — Seth Meyers
Now in the Vernacular Youthquake: noun; a shift in cultural norms influenced by the values, tastes and mores of young people. The term was coined by Vogue editor-in-chief Diana Vreeland in 1965.
True or False? Groundhog Day originates from an ancient celebration of the midway point between the winter solstice and the spring equinox — the day right in the middle of astronomical winter. According to superstition, sunny skies that day signify a stormy and cold second half of winter, while cloudy skies indicate the arrival of warm weather. True. Since 1887, every Feb. 2, thousands gather at Gobbler’s Knob in Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania to await the spring forecast from a special groundhog. Punxsutawney Phil emerges from his simulated tree-trunk home to look for his shadow, which helps him make his much-anticipated forecast. According to legend, if Phil sees his shadow, the United States is in store for six more weeks of winter weather. But, if Phil doesn’t see his shadow, the country should expect warmer temperatures and an early spring. Find a record of his success on the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association website: bit.ly/ghdfacts
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Dina Thomas as Lisette and Adam LeFevre as Francalou in the Shakespeare Theatre Company’s production of ‘The Metromaniacs,’ a West Coast premiere at The Old Globe
‘The Metromaniacs’ farce brings laughs to Old Globe BY DIANA SAENGER It’s hard to imagine that someone would want to resurrect playwright Alexis Piron’s 17th century farce, “La Métromanie,” but director Michael Kahn did and he commissioned playwright David Ives (“The Liar,” “Don Juan in Chicago”) to adapt the play, or what he calls a “translaptation” of the work. “This is the third play I’ve commissioned David to do,” Kahn said. “The first two were also French comedies from the 17th-century. I wanted to work with him again because he has a brilliant comedic sense, is a thoughtful translator/adapter, and a wonderful wordsmith.” Kahn said he’d not heard of Piron before, and discovered he was quite successful during his time. When he began looking at the play, he realized it came only in French. “Luckily, David is totally fluent in French,” Kahn said. “And he thought it was a wonderful play and wanted to adapt it. His version takes place in the 18th-century, so it’s a little more modern. It’s a treasure in itself, and I hope other theaters will do it. It’s a fantastic play for actors.” “The Metromaniacs,” takes place in Paris, where in the 18th-century, poets of the day were like rock stars. It’s about an older man whose daughter is a dreamer and interested in writing. Indolent, she’s not involved in anything other than obsessing about the poems she likes. Her father writes a play to be performed at their home, hoping the girl in the play will bring back life to his daughter. “There’s also a young poet who comes to the house under an assumed name,” Kahn said. “So everyone in the play at one point is involved, in one way or another, either loving poetry, writing poetry or not interested in poetry at all — just in love. As in a farce, there’s a mixup of identities. The actors take on other characters, which might
be confusing, but it’s our job to make it clear.” The cast, save one, is from the original production of “The Metromaniacs,” in association with Shakespeare Theatre Company in Washington, D.C. “The visual aspects to a play like this are important,” Kahn said. “So the costumes are wonderful and the set is ingenious. The play was originally written to be performed in a real outdoor garden, but David got the brilliant idea to make an inside garden in a ballroom of this man’s house. It adds even more theatrically, as there are trees and people moving about; a little like in ‘Midsummer’s Night Dream.’ ” Farces are appearing more and more on stages across the country and Kahn believes it’s because people want and need to laugh. “Audiences enjoy really fast, wonderful, extreme situations,” Kahn said. “Everyone in a farce has to play things very serious, like their life depends upon it. They have to do things they would never dream of doing if they were behaving rationally. It’s very liberating sometimes to be outrageous and stupid, but in this case, also to have great wonderful language to speak, which has been written so well by David. His brilliant rhyming couplets become a language of its own and fun for the audience to listen.” ■ IF YOU GO: “The Metromaniacs” runs Jan. 30-March 6 on the Shiley Stage at The Old Globe Theatre in Balboa Park, San Diego. Tickets from $29. (619) 234-5623. theoldglobe.org ■ Related free events: Insights seminar, 5 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 2; post-show forums Feb. 9, 16 and 24 with cast and crew; poetry discussion Saturday, Feb. 13 after the 2 p.m. performance with poets Gill Sotu, Karla Cordero and Jim Moreno; showcase of San Diego poetry 4 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 14.
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PAGE B22 - JANUARY 28, 2016 - LA JOLLA LIGHT
‘When the Rain Stops Falling’ explores family relationships
T
hose who know the term “six degrees of separation” will find elements of such connections in “When the Rain Stops Falling” by Australian playwright Andrew Bovell, playing at Cygnet Theatre in Old Town through Feb. 14. Because the story covers 80 years and moves between Australia and London, strict
KEN JACQUES
Rosina Reynolds, Josh Odsess-Rubin and Rachael VanWormer in Cygnet Theatre’s ‘When The Rain Stops Falling,” directed by Rob Lofty
attention is required from audiences from beginning to end. Bovell’s engaging aim is a focus on what happens to families when their children are young and how their experiences end up affecting them when they are old. Do they remain loving relatives or distant and unable to overcome horrific occurrences? Gabriel York (Adrian Alita) is a lonely man in a much-neglected apartment with little enthusiasm until he hears from his estranged son of 20 years. Learning that his son (Josh Odess-Rubin) is coming to visit, he frets over how to clean up his place and how he will feed his son, having no food nor money. As Gabriel stands under a huge cloud mid-stage, rain pours down behind him and a fish suddenly falls from the sky. A loud roar from Gabriel becomes a thank-you for the fish delivery that will feed his son. Fish actually becomes a character in the play as family members of different ages come and go at the same table. Each wanders over to get his or her own bowl of fish soup, takes a seat and reveals a bit about who they are, what they’ve experienced and maybe where they will go from here. Gabriel then jumps into a different time in the story where he plays Henry Law, married to Elizabeth Law (Christina Soria). Elizabeth
KEN JACQUES
Josh Odess-Rubin and Christina Soria in Cygnet’s ‘When the Rain Stops Falling.’ goes through several scenarios brilliantly playing the downtrodden wife and mother not wanting to encounter any of her relations. Beth Gallagher takes on the role of the younger Elizabeth Law, dropping a clue here and there, as to her real story. The cast, including Rosina Reynolds as Gabrielle Law, Tom Stephenson as Joe Ryan and Rachael VanWormer as younger Gabrielle York, is absolutely immersed in the characters. They, rant, cry, scream profanity, and wallow in their misery and poor decisions. The sound design and music by composer Kevin Anthenill is fitting throughout the action. Cygnet continues to seek plays that go beyond the point of expectation, and much talent and work has gone into this San Diego
premiere to deliver on that promise. While the audience stood to give rousing, long applause, there were still comments from some on the way out about being confused as to who was who and what they did — a warning to those who desire happy endings. I found the rough and troubled parts of the characters’ lives extremely well presented. However, I left the theater somewhat depressed; I wanted a little more of their lives to have happiness. ■ IF YOU GO: “When the Rain Stops Falling” is for mature audiences. It runs through Feb. 14 at Cygnet Theatre, Old Town Stage, 4040 Twiggs Street, San Diego. Tickets from $34 at (619) 337-1525 or cygnettheatre.com
RELIGION & spirituality ALL HALLOWS
La Jolla Presbyterian Church
PASTOR
6602 La Jolla Scenic Drive So., La Jolla, California (858) 459-2975 • www.allhallows.com
HOW ARE WE BENEFITED BY KNOWING GOD BETTER? WE WELCOME YOU
Every
Wed. 7:30pm Christian Science Testimony Meeting 1270 Silverado Ave. La Jolla
on Kline St. between Draper and Eads)
858-454-0713 www.ljpres.org
Sunday Services: 8:45 & 11:00 Traditional with the choir & organ 10:00 Contemporary with the band OPEN HEARTS OPEN MINDS OPEN DOORS
As your faith is strengthened you will find that there is no longer the need to have a sense of control, that things will flow as they will, and that you will flow with them, to your great delight and benefit. ~Emmanuel
esbyteria Pr
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Rev. Dr. Walter Dilg, Pastor www.lajollaunitedmethodist.org
Invite readers to join in worship and fellowship. Contact Michael Ratigan today to place your ad. 858.886.6903 · michaelr@delmartimes.net
urch Ch
Rev. Raymond G. O’Donnell
7715 Draper Ave. (underground parking
n
Weekday Masses: M, T, W & F Mass at 7am Communion: Th 7am & Sat at 8am Reconciliation: Sat at 4:30pm Sunday Masses: Sat Vigil at 5:30pm 8am & 9:30am Children’s Liturgy of the Word and Childcare
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ROOMS
LJ: FURN. ROOM Priv. bath/ entrance, microwave & fridge. Avail now. 858-454-5881 or 808-280-2332
40 - FOR SALE ARTWORK
COSTANTINO ARTIST 3 Oil on canvas. La Jolla Seawall. Call for pics. 760-715-4312
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LRG. SOLID GRANITE COFFEE TABLE 18”H x 36”W x 86”L. Call for pricing, 858-454-5881 ESTATE FURNITURE Mahogany rococo 1940’s 5-piece bedroom set; pair French bisque porcelain lamps; Krause sofa bed (bed never used); electrified antique Singer sewing machine in cabinet; marbletopped mahogany table; artwork; ceramic figurines; etc. La Jolla, 619 228-1305
50 - BUSINESS SERVICES SERVICESMISCELLANEOUS
CLOSET FAIRY Call me to talk about airing out that closet & making sense of that accumulated pile of forgotten goodies. Identify, respace & love your new freshly organized closet. 619-889-7116 DID YOU KNOW...? The word millionaire was first used by Benjamin Disraeli in his 1826 novel Vivian Grey.
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60 - HOME SERVICES BEAUTY CARE
HAIR BY HAMIDA 858-249-9414 1030 Torrey Pines Rd., LJ All Cuts, $25 Root Color, $50
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80 - JOBS & EDUCATION JOBS WANTED
MAJOR DOMO/ CHEF/ HOUSE MANAGER Mature, educated, exp’d male seeking a FT position. Highly adaptable, committed and discrete. Contact John, 858-472-4257
100 - LEGAL NOTICES FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2016-001390 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. GLC b. Growth and Liquidity Consulting Group Located at: 4275 Executive Square, Ste. 200, La Jolla, CA 92037, San Diego County. Registered Owners
Lynne Moore, Owner/Trainer Ly 858 735-8318 • GoodDogTrainingSchool.com
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g y g Name(s): a. Growth and Liquidity Consulting Group LLC, 4275 Executive Square, Ste. 200, La Jolla, CA 92037, California. This business is conducted by: a Limited Liability Company. The first day of business was 01/04/2016. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 01/19/2016. Daniel Blank, Managing Member. LJ2096. Jan. 28, Feb. 4, 11, 18, 2016.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2016-001406 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Buzie Burger Located at: 10981 Clairemont Mesa Blvd., San Diego, CA 92124, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 5519 Clairemont Mesa Blvd., Ste. 327, San Diego, CA 92117. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Buzie Weimer, 10981 Clairemont Mesa Blvd., San Diego, CA 92124. b. Brandon Pike, 10981 Clairemont Mesa Blvd., San Diego, CA 92124. This business is conducted by: a General Partnership. The first day of business has not yet started . This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 01/19/2016. Buzie Weimer. LJ2097. Jan. 28, Feb. 4, 11, 18, 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2016-000066 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. JM Promotion Located at: 8517 Ivory Coast Dr., San Diego, CA 92126, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 8517 Ivory Coast Dr., San Diego, CA 92126. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Jovita Bartolome, 8517 Ivory Coast Dr., San Diego, CA 92126. b.Mario G. Tejero, 8517 Ivory Coast Dr., San Diego, CA 92126. This business is conducted by: a General Partnership. The first day of business has not yet started . This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 01/04/2016. Jovita T. Bartolome. LJ2090. Jan. 14, 21, 28, Feb. 4, 2016
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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2016-000138 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Acquavite b. Acquavite Cucina Italiana Located at: 1298 Prospect Street, Ste 2N, La Jolla, CA 92037, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Doremi Group, Inc., 1298 Prospect St., Ste 2N, La Jolla, CA 92037, California. This business is conducted by: a Corporation. The first day of business has not yet started . This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 01/04/2016. Nicola Balsemin, President. LJ2092. Jan. 14, 21, 28, Feb. 4, 2016
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2016-000014 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Be Fresh Located at: 627 Pearl St., La Jolla, CA 92037, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Nancy Juarez, 847 Safford Ave, Spring Valley, CA 91977. b.Ely Moises Castaneda, 847 Safford Ave, Spring Valley, CA 91977. This business is conducted by: a General Partnership. The first day of business was 01/04/2016. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 01/04/2016. Nancy Juarez. LJ2095. Jan. 21, 28, Feb. 4, 11, 2016
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-033214 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. John Harvard Academy La Jolla Located at: 7447 Girard Ave., La Jolla, CA 92037, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Tier 1 Education Enterprises, Inc., 7447 Girard Ave., La Jolla, CA 92037, California. This business is conducted by: a Corporation. The first day of business has not yet started . This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 12/31/2015. Bridget Throneberry, COO and Secretary. LJ2094. Jan. 21, 28, Feb. 4, 11, 2016.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2016-001663 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Mode de Vie Fit Located at: 2500Torrey Pines Rd., #503, La Jolla, CA 92037, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 2500 Torrey Pines Rd., #503, La Jolla, CA 92037. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Shanna Timms, 2500 Torrey Pines Rd., #503, La Jolla, CA 92037. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business was 01/01/2016. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 01/20/2016. Shanna Timms. LJ2098. Jan. 28, Feb. 4, 11, 18, 2016
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2016-000068 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Cercina Located at: 1237 Prospect St., Suite C, La Jolla, CA 92037, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 1237 Prospect St., Suite C, La Jolla, CA 92037. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Hafedh Chaabane, 7248 La Jolla Blvd., La Jolla, CA 92037. This business is conducted by: an Individual. 01/01/2016. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 01/04/2016. Hafedh Chaabane. LJ2091. Jan. 14, 21, 28, Feb. 4, 2016
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2016-000371 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Euro Properties Located at: 3240 Via Alicante, La Jolla, CA 92037, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Roxana Feder, 3240 Via Alicante, La Jolla, CA 92037. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business has not yet started . This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 01/06/2016. Roxana Feder. LJ2093. Jan. 14, 21, 28, Feb. 4, 2016.
Cont Lic # 418121
NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF: HELENA ANASTASIA RASMUSSEN CASE NUMBER: 37-2016-00000705-PR-PW-CTL To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both, of HELENA ANASTASIA RASMUSSEN. A Petition for Probate has been filed by U. S. BANK, N.A. in the Superior Court of California, County of SAN DIEGO. The petition for Probate requests that U. S. BANK, N.A. be appointed as personal representative to administer the estate of the decedent. The petition requests the decedent’s will and codicils, if any, be admitted to probate. The will and any codicils are available for examination in the file kept by the court. The petition requests authority to administer the estate under the Independent Administration of Estates Act. (This authority will allow the personal representative to take many actions without obtaining court approval. Before taking certain very important actions, however, the personal representative will be required to give notice to interested persons unless they have waived notice or consented to the proposed action.) The independent administration authority will be granted unless an interested person files an objection to the petition and shows good cause why the court should not grant the authority. A hearing on the petition will be held in this court as follows: Date: February 18, 2016 Time: 1:30 p.m.. Dept.: PC-2. Room: Address of court: 1409 Fourth Avenue, San Diego, CA 92101. If you object to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney. If you are a creditor or a contingent creditor of the decedent, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within the
100 - LEGAL NOTICES appointed by the court within the later of either (1) four months from the date of first issuance of letters to a general personal representative as defined in section 58(b) of the California Probate Code, or (2) 60 days from the date of mailing or personal delivery to you of a notice under section 9052 of the California Probate Code. Other California statutes and legal authority may affect your rights as a creditor. You may want to consult with an attorney knowledgeable in California law. You may examine the file kept by the court. If you are a person interested in the estate, you may file with the court a Request for Special Notice (form DE-154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code section 1250. A Request for Special Notice form is available from the court clerk. Attorney for Petitioner:
LA JOLLA LIGHT - JANUARY 28, 2016 - PAGE B25
Attorney for Petitioner: Rebecca Briskin/Bruce O’Brien 401 West A Street, Suite. 2600 San Diego, CA 92101 (619) 236-1551 LJ2099. Jan. 28, Feb. 4, 11, 2016.
ANSWERS 1/21/2016
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DID YOU KNOW...? Do you know the names of the three wise monkeys? They are: Mizaru (See no evil), Mikazaru (Kikazaru – Hear no evil), and Mazaru (Iwazaru – Speak no evil).
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AHRON R. FOSTER
La Jolla Playhouse associate artistic director Jaime Castañeda makes his Playhouse directing debut with ‘Guards at the Taj’ by Pulitzer Prize finalist Rajiv Joseph.
Playhouse’s dark comedy ‘Guards at the Taj’ opens soon BY DIANA SAENGER “Guards at the Taj” premiering next week at La Jolla Playhouse, centers on two guards in 1640s India, tasked with mundane jobs as the Taj Mahal is being built behind them. The night before its unveiling, the lifelong-friends — who are more like brothers – are asked to do something quite terrible that divides them existentially. One of them is on the side of the Emperor to whom he pledges his allegiance, the other is reeling from what they’ve done, and is asked to defy the Emperor and revolt against his government. It’s that action that puts this play in motion. Written by Pulitzer Prize finalist Rajiv Joseph (“Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo”), the production marks Playhouse Associate Artistic Director Jaime Castañeda’s directorial debut at the Playhouse (Castañeda’s other local directing credits include “Welcome to Arroyo’s” at The Old Globe). “I’m always asking myself how we can create (great) moments on stage with just a little bit of theater magic,” he said. “So when I’m approaching plays and writers I’m interested in the specific voices and theatrical gestures they provide.” The two-member cast includes, Manu Narayan (Playhouse’s “Glengarry Glen Ross”) as Humayun and Babak Tafti (Playhouse’s “Blood and Gifts”) as Babur. “ ‘Guards at the Taj’ has several challenges that are enticing to figure out,” Castañeda said. “Like how to stage it and create a world that is flexible, contemporary and historical. It has dark elements, along with comedic and physical challenges in terms of the production. Those things had me scratching my head, but jumping headfirst into the process.” Castañeda said he never worked with playwright Joseph before, but was aware of his work. When this script came to the Atlantic Theater Company for its premiere, Castañeda was a strong advocate for the production. “I knew of his work ‘Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo,’ and have been a fan of his work for several years,” Castañeda said. “I thought this play was special, and I’m happy it’s getting a life and making rounds throughout the country.” The actors, Castañeda said, “came highly recommended. Both bring unique things to the table. Manu has Indian heritage and been to the Taj Mahal, so we’ve been talking about his experience in India. Playhouse Artistic Director Christopher Ashley talked
about his involvement in ‘Glengarry Glen Ross.’ Several people had talked to me about Babak and his work. A two-hander play is a delicate thing in getting the right people in the room and having them speak the same language. I’ve been blessed with both of them, especially as they have been game to try different things the last three weeks.” He added, “This is a dark comedy thanks to a super writer who could mix the tragic and most terrible parts of our existence with the funniest and most absurd and comical moments that emerge from darker circumstances. There are scenes where my hope is the shock and the surprise comes from both of those things. In one of my favorite and most challenging scenes I’m like a Rubik’s cube on how to make these moments work on stage.” Before Castañeda joined the Playhouse as Associate Artistic Director he served as Artistic Associate at Off-Broadway’s Atlantic Theatre Company for five years. He holds an M.F.A. in Directing from the University of Texas at Austin, was the founding Artistic Director of FireStarter Productions in Texas, and an ensemble member with American Theater Company in Chicago since 2009. For his first go-around as a Playhouse production director, Castañeda chose a play about class and equality. “It’s definitely a story about friends who are like brothers trying to survive in 1640. They’re very much looking at it through this period of time and the building of this amazing Wonder of the World. They’re also reminded of what went into it to create such beauty in the world. It’s interesting that the core of the play is about conversation in class equality, like our world is having right now, which makes this play super relevant.” ■ IF YOU GO: “Guards at the Taj” runs Feb. 2-28 in the Sheila and Hughes Potiker Theatre at La Jolla Playhouse, 2910 La Jolla Village Drive. Tickets from $20. (858) 550-1010. lajollaplayhouse.org ■ Related events: ACCESS Performance: 2 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 20. Open Captioned Performance: 2 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 14. Talkback Tuesdays: Feb. 9 and 16, following the 7:30 p.m. performance. Insider Events: 6:45 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 24 and 1:15 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 27 at 1:15 p.m. Discovery Sunday: Feb. 28, after 2 p.m. performance. Foodie Friday: 6 p.m. Feb. 19.
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PAGE B26 - JANUARY 28, 2016 - LA JOLLA LIGHT
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More open house listings at lajollalight.com/homes $429,900 2 BR/2 BA
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We have 2 Buyers for La Jolla Shores!!! If yyou ou aare re cconsidering onsidering sselling elling yyour our h home ome n now ow or in the future, please give us a call.
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La Jolla Office : 858-926-3060 7855 Ivanhoe, Suite 110 | La Jolla, California | 92037
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For the most up-to-date list of open houses, mapped locations, and *premium listings with photos, visit lajollalight.com/open-houses-list/ Contact Sarah Minihane • sarahm@lajollalight.com • 858.875.5945
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PAGE B28 - JANUARY 28, 2016 - LA JOLLA LIGHT
OPEN SAT & SUN 1-4
Steps to the Ocean
Brand New Listing! First time open! 3 bed, 2.5 bath. $1,795,000 5437 Waverly
W NE TING LIS
61 in 2015*
Si Situated on La Jolla’s street of dreams-Camino de la Costa- with a sweeping panoramic view of the ocean and sunsets, this beautifully sw appointed two story home is steps to the ocean. $6,499,000 ap
*Properties rti sold or in i escrow in 2015. Te Team Chodorow Chod represented the seller, buyer or both.
LIS NEW TIN G
Newly Remodeled Muirlands
La Jolla Colony Condo
Panoramic, unobstructed ocean and sunset view from most rooms of this lovely 4,398 square foot single level home, situated on just under an acre in the heart of the Muirlands. $4,195,000
Single-level, ground floor unit in La Paz with fresh paint and new carpet in the two master suites and new flooring by Mullican in the living/dining room. Great community amenities. $399,000-$429,000
7780 Girard Avenue, La Jolla, CA BRE #00992609 | BRE #00409245 ©2015 BHH Affiliates, LLC. An independently operated subsidiary of HomeServices of America, Inc., a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate, and a franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of HomeServices of America, Inc.® Equal Housing Opportunity. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices does not guarantee the accuracy of square footage, lot size or other information concerning the condition or features of property provided by the seller or obtained from public records or other sources, and the buyer is advised to independently verify the accuracy of that information through personal inspection and with appropriate professionals. CalBRE# 01317331