POWAY
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THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 2014
50 cents (includes tax) | Vol. 61, ISSUE 14
Big decline in reported Poway crimes
INSIDE
BY STEVE DREYER
• St. Michael's student given dream trip to Australia. A2 • Poway man's swim cut short by shark sightings. A2 • Boy has chance meeting with big movie star. A3
COMMUNITY
Preliminar y statistics covering the first six months of 2014 show a significant decrease in the number of crimes reported in Poway when compared to the same period of last year. Overall, the number of reported crimes dropped by a hefty 32 percent, according to information in the county’s computerized reporting system. Topping the decreases were a 53 percent drop in auto thefts (217 this year, compared to 304 in 2013) and a 50 percent decline in burglaries (51 compared to 100). Thefts declined by 20 percent (151 compared to 181). The number of total property thefts, including burglaries, auto thefts and thefts, dropped 40 per-
cent when compared to Januar yJune of 2013. Darlene Duncan, the crime prevention specialist assigned to the Poway sheriff’s station, said the dip in burglaries may be a result of the arrest last year of several suspects tied to three separates series of burglaries in the city. She said she was not sure why the number of auto thefts had declined so sharply. The statistics, inputted into the Automated Regional Justice Information System (ARJIS) will be refined in the near future into an overall crime rate by the San Diego Association. Typically, Poway’s rate is the lowest among all cities in the county. The one area where Poway’s incidents were higher this year was aggravated assaults. There were 37 reported cases during the first six
months, up five from the same period last year. There were two fewer reported rapes this year (two, compared to four) and one less robbery (eight). There were no homicides during either reporting period, according to the ARJIS report. Turning to the number of arrests made in Poway, ARJIS numbers show 128 adult felony arrests between January and June of this year, one more than during the same six months of last year. The number of adult misdemeanor arrests dropped 24 percent (265 compared to 328). There were 13 juvenile felony arrests, the same as last year, and a significant decrease in the number of juvenile misdemeanor arrests (16, compared to 38). Overall, the number of arrests in the city was down 20 percent (422 compared to 506).
Duncan stressed that Poway residents should not relax their crime-prevention mindsets because of lower numbers of crime reports. Meeting with groups throughout the city, Duncan said she often runs into sentiment that since Poway is advertised as being so far, residents sometimes forget to take precautions. “A lot of Poway is still living in the ‘Mayberry’ days,� Duncan said. “Many, many times the low crime mindset lends itself of them being a victim.� If August is any indication, some of those crime numbers may increase, Duncan said. For example, auto thefts and thefts from vehicles appear to be on the rise. There have been seven thefts so far this month from cars parking at the Blue Sky Reserve, she said.
Front yard now features fierce guardian • At long last, a bridge over busy roadway. B1 • PUSD board member trims campaign signs B3 to meet city rules.
SPORTS HIGH SCHOOL
FOOTBALL Preview
• Your guide to high school football. B23
BUSINESS
• Enjoy Mediterranean, Lebanese food at new Poway eatery. A6
THE ARTS
• RB High grad shines in 'Oklahoma' at Welk Theatre. B18
ALSO • Calendar • Crime Log • Editorial • Homes • Marketplace • Obituaries • Seniors
B8 B7 B14 B21 B30 B9 A5
Poway News Chieftain An Edition of
14023 Midland Road Poway, CA 92064 (858) 218-7200 pomeradonews.com
BY EMILY SORENSEN A Poway woman’s yard is a little more fearsome with the addition of a metalwork dragon head. The head, which is over 6 feet tall and weighs about 300 pounds, was created by Ricardo Breceda, a Southern California artist whose immense metal sculptures can be seen in Borrego Springs and Temecula. This dragon head is the first piece of Breceda’s work in Poway. The sculpture’s new owner, Debbie Boyd, a retired deputy sheriff, has always loved collecting ar t. Her home is filled with unique pieces of African-American, Native, Alaskan and Egyptian art, as well as her own homemade hats. After running out of room on the walls of her home, Boyd turned to sculpture. Her first piece, a replica of the famed winged Nike statue, sits in her front yard by her garage. “I discovered Ricardo Breceda’s work when I went out to Borrego Springs with a couple of friends,� said Boyd. “We stumbled across a couple of his sculptures, an elephant and an eagle.� Boyd’s friend looked the artist up online and discovered he had an enormous dragon sculpture, so big it spans both sides of a road. “I took a trip with DayTrippers to see (the dragon),� she said. Boyd fell in love with Breceda’s work, and decided
Debbie Boyd, left, and artist Ricardo Breceda, right, with the dragon sculpture now residing in Boyd’s front yard. Photo by Emily Sorensen that she wanted to own a piece herself. “I was in the market to buy something small,� she said. “He had this incredible dragon that was out of my price range. We made a deal and he made me this dragon.� She described Breceda as the “Mexican Mi-
chelangelo.� The dragon head, which was entirely handmade by Breceda and his assistants out of 20-gauge sheet metal, took about six weeks to complete, Breceda said, mostly due to the intricate scales. Boyd had the statue in-
Poway approached to be Special Olympics host city BY EMILY SORENSEN Poway could play host to a contingent of Special Olympians from somewhere in the world next summer. The City Council will decide at Tuesday night's meeting whether to approve a request to become a host town for Special Olympic athletes and their families next year during the 2015 Special Olympics World Games, which will be held July 25 through Aug. 2 in Los Angeles. “I’m not aware of Poway ever doing anything like this before,� said Director of Community Services Robin Bettin. As a host town, Poway would be responsible for providing lodging, transportation, meals and entertainment to a contingent of about 100 Special Olympians and support staff from a yet-to-be-determined country, as well as their families, for three days prior to the beginning of the games. “We would introduce (the athletes) to the community,� said Bettin. Poway would also need to provide a space for the athletes to
train. “Poway has a lot of great amenities. We can take them to ride the train in Old Poway Park, maybe out to the lake for some fishing.� Providing social and cultural events unique to Poway is part of being a host town. The 2015 Special Olympics World Games will be the largest humanitarian and athletic event in Los Angeles since the 1984 Olympics, and 100 towns from San Luis Obispo to San Diego will be chosen to act as host towns for the estimated 7,000 athletes from 177 participating countries. The cost to be a host town is estimated to be $50,000. If the council approves, city staff plans to request an appropriation of $25,000 in the next quarterly budget update for 201415, to get a running head start. The rest of the funds would be raised through donations, sponsorships and fundraisers by businesses, individuals or groups. Bettin said she and staff members have met with representatives of local special needs organizations to make sure they didn’t step SEE HOST, Page A3
stalled in the front yard of her El Mar Avenue home on Saturday, and it’s already proven to be a hit. “A lot of my neighbors are excited to see the statue,� she said. She plans to have a fence put in around the dragon, to prevent viewers from accidently
Singing contest kicks off annual Poway Days fun BY EMILY SORENSEN
T
he Poway Days celebrations will be kicking off Friday with the beginning of the fourth annual So You Think You Can Sing competition at Kamin-
ski’s. The first qualifying round of the competition will begin at 9 p.m. Friday. Qualifying rounds will continue each Friday until the finale, which will be held on Sept. 19. There will be two finalists per category selected per each qualifying round. Finalists will be required to sing one live song and submit a live version of the National Anthem. There are two categories to compete in: open participation for anyone and 15 and under for kids. The winners of each category will perform the National Anthem live at the Poway Rodeo. The first-place winner will perform at the evening rodeo performance on Sept. 27. Second place will perform at the evening rodeo on Sept. 26 and the winner SEE SING, Page A3
Cathy Peterson 42 Year Resident of Poway
I am Farmers 3RZD\ 5RDG ‡ 3RZD\ &$ (Corner of Poway Road and Carriage Road) www.farmersagent.com/cpeterson1 cpeterson1@farmersagent.com
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injuring themselves on the metal’s sharp edges. Breceda, who was born in Mexico and moved to California 25 years ago, has been making his sheet metal sculptures for 15 years. His first was at the request of his SEE DRAGON, Page A3
+20( ‡ $872 /,)( ‡ &200(5&,$/ ,5$ ‡ $118,7,(6
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LOCAL NEWS
PAGE A2 THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 2014
NEWS BRIEFS
NEWS CHIEFTAIN
Relay swim try cut short by shark sightings
Chamber mixer tonight
(CNS) – A team of swimmers attempting a 76-mile relay swim from Catalina Island to La Jolla Cove in support of wounded veterans abandoned the swim after multiple shark encounters, organizers said. The group of eight swimmers, three kayakers and a support boat left the city of Avalon on Catalina Island about 4:10 p.m. Friday and planned to arrive at La Jolla Cove sometime Sunday morning, group organizer and Poway resident Will Miller said. But the group abandoned the swim for precautionar y reasons Saturday after swimming 44 miles because of multiple encounters with sharks, Miller said. One shark followed about 20 feet behind a swimmer at one point and the group spotted a total of eight sharks nearby. They were about 20 miles offshore from Camp Pendleton when they decided to stop. “After 44 miles, safety takes precedent over ego and wanting to finish,” Miller said. “At night it was pitch black, and our concern was we would never see the shark at night until it was too late.” The group swam a ceremonial final leg from
The Poway Chamber of Commerce is holding its monthly mixer from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. tonight (Thursday) at Belmont Village, 13075 Evening Creek Drive in Sabre Springs. This island-style mixer will feature steel drum entertainment with an array of tropical hors d’oeuvres. Cost is $10 at the door for chamber members (free with RSVP) and $25 for nonmembers.
Poway 4-H to meet Poway 4-H will hold its first meeting of the year at 4 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 7 at the back of Old Poway Park by the softball fields. Pizza and drinks will be provided, but you are welcome to bring a dish to share. For information, contact Deb Katz at debkatz.poway4H@gmail.com.
the La Jolla pier to La Jolla Cove about 10:30 a.m. Sunday. The team called the swim “Beyond Avalon” and was swimming to raise awareness and benefit the San Diego-based nonprofit group Warrior Foundation Freedom Station, which helps wounded veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars who are currently receiving medical care at Camp Pendleton and Naval Medical Center San Diego. “It doesn’t matter if you’re in favor of the military or not,” Miller told City News Service. “We’ve all benefited from what these wounded soldiers and their families have sacrificed.” Miller, one of the co-founders of the “Beyond Avalon” team, said he chose the Warrior Foundation Freedom Station as his charity of choice because it is a volunteer-run organization that helps all branches of the military. “I’m not a fundraiser, I’m a guy who works and swims,” Miller said. “But Warrior Foundation Freedom Station is such a great cause.” Miller, an attorney, said the “Beyond Avalon” swim was a grassroots effort to raise awareness and funds that would help injured veterans like
Mark Zambon, a retired Marine Explosive Ordinance Disposal technician who lost multiple fingers and both legs while on tour in Afghanistan, and Dana Selles, a Navy pilot who suffered a broken back in Afghanistan. Both Zambon and Selles were members of the “Beyond Avalon” team attempting to complete the swim. “For every person like Mark and Dana, there are thousands of others experiencing Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and whatever else who we can never repay,” Miller said. Nobody on board the support boat was able to tell what kind of sharks were in the water, but Miller said the support boat’s captain and commercial fishing boat captains said the most common sharks in that area are the great white and the mako. The team swam with an electromagnetic device designed to repel sharks for part of the swim but decided it was too dangerous to continue even with the device, which needed to be recharged every few hours. “You have to respect the power of the sea and the power of the creatures in the sea,” Miller said.
St. Michael's student given dream trip to see platypuses
Square dancing classes
BY ELIZABETH MARIE HIMCHAK
The Wranglers Square Dancing Club is starting up a new year of classes, beginning at 7 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 11 at Los Penasquitos Elementar y School, 14125 Cuca Street in Rancho Penasquitos. The first class is free; subsequent classes are $5 per class, per student. You do not need a partner. For information, visit thewranglers.org.
When 11-year-old Ben Krueger returned to St. Michael’s School in Poway on Wednesday, he had a lot of good news to share with his fellow sixth graders. On Tuesday morning, Ben learned he and his family will be traveling to Australia in a couple months so he can meet a platypus, courtesy of Make-A-Wish San Diego and Isagenix International. The Rancho Bernardo boy had missed most of the previous school year due to undergoing chemotherapy for acute lymphoblastic leukemia, a disease that this summer entered a 2 ½-year maintenance phase, according to his parents. Due to his impaired immune system — a side effect of chemo — Ben had to stay at home for most of the past 12 months. But now that Ben is healthy, he can return to school and when he did so, he had more than just the typical kid-topics to share after an extended separation from his friends. “It was amazing, I was overwhelmed,” Ben said about the announcement made while he was helping Gerry Katzman, owner of Hollywood’s Magic Castle, perform a magic trick at
Low-cost groceries The Poway Food Share Program offers low-cost groceries once a month, with costs ranging from $9 to $38. The menu includes a basic package of meat and fresh fruits and vegetables for $33; a fresh vegetable package for $24; a breakfast package for $27; a mega meat package for $38 and more. There are no requirements for participation in the food share program. Orders can be placed weekdays between 8 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. at the Poway Senior Center or online at www.powaysharefoods.com until Thursday, Sept. 18. Distribution will be on Saturday, Sept. 27 from 8 to 9 a.m. at the Poway Senior Center. For more information, call Don at 858-229-6874, Vicki at 858-229-6875 or email powaysharefoods@cox.net.
Make-A-Wish recipient Ben Krueger, right, with his younger brother, Leon, and parents, Stephanie and Ingolf, who will be going to Australia this fall to fulfill Ben’s wish of seeing a platypus in person for the first time. Photo by Elizabeth Marie Himchak Isagenix International’s Strength in Momentum celebration in the San Diego Convention Center. “I had no idea we are actually going and my wish was granted.”
CARAMELIZED ONION DOGS EVERY SATURDAY 11:00AM-6:30PM
Ben’s parents, Stephanie and Ingolf Krueger, were in on the secret, but kept it a surprise so Ben could learn about it in front of more than 10,000 conference attendees.
“I thought I was going down there just to tell them about Make-A-Wish Foundation, that I would just be speaking in front of a crowd,” Ben said. “It was hard,” Ingolf said about keeping the trip a secret. “We told Ben the event was part of the Make-A-Wish process.” “It was tough and I was so tempted to tell him … to cheer him up on the not-sogood days,” Stephanie said. Ingolf said last summer the family was in Florida, where Ben attended a soccer goalkeeper camp with Tim Howard from the U.S. Men’s National Team. During the trip Ben experienced joint pain in his ankles and knees that became progressively worse as they flew back home. A few days later, with now “unbearable pain,” Ben saw his pediatrician, who referred him to a rheumatologist at Rady Children’s Hospital. On July 26, 2013 medical tests confirmed Ben had leukemia and he immediately began the first phase of his chemotherapy treatments, one that required surgery during a two-week hospitalization. After the first round of chemo he was able to return home, but had to go to the hospital frequently. A
nurse also provided treatments at his home. “He was very strong and in great spirits,” Ingolf said, adding those spirits were often lifted when messages of support were sent by his soccer teammates, St. Michael’s classmates, family friends and relatives. “They sent positive messages and we are profoundly grateful.” Classmates sent Ben a lot of cards over the year and for his birthday created a music video to his favorite song, “Happy.” Stephanie said right after Ben’s diagnosis they were told he would be eligible to have a wish granted, but due to his health they decided to postpone applying until after he was given a clean bill of health by his doctor. They started the process in June after Ben entered the maintenance phase. “His immune system is more stable, he has more strength and a normal life again,” she said. Ben said he requested an Australian trip for him, his parents and 8-year-old brother, Leon, because that is the only place people can see a platypus in the wild. “I really like (the platypus) because of how interesting it is,” he said. “It’s a mammal that lays eggs. It also looks SEE TRIP, Page A3
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DRAGON CONTINUED FROM PAGE A1
daughter. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We had just seen Jurassic Park 3, and when I asked her what she wanted for Christmas, she said she wanted me to make her a life-sized T-rex,â&#x20AC;? said Breceda. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I thought she was joking, but she wasnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t.â&#x20AC;? Despite the fact that Breceda, who taught elementary school in Mexico and sold cowboy boots once he moved to the United States, had never worked with metal before, be managed to make a 20-foot-tall Tyrannosaurus rex. From there, Breceda has made a name for himself with the many pieces purchased by Dennis Avery and installed on Averyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s property in Borrego Springs, which includes dinosaurs, settlers, wild horses and much more. Breceda has shipped pieces of his artwork around the world, including to Australia and China. Brecedaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s studio, at Vail Lake Resort in Temecula, is open to the public for viewing. â&#x20AC;&#x153;A lot of people think (my studio) is like a museum, or Disneyland, or a trip to the park. I want people to come and see that I do.â&#x20AC;? For more about Ricardo Brecedaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s work, visit www.ricardobreceda.com.
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on any toes when it came to fundraising. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We have a very active special needs community (in Poway),â&#x20AC;? said Bettin. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We all agreed that it was a good opportunity for our special needs community to meet with (special needs) athletes from around the world.â&#x20AC;? Bettin said they also made sure that the cityâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s fundraising wouldnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t be in competition with fundraising by other groups. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t want to impede our local groups,â&#x20AC;? said Bettin. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We got some good, positive feedback from them.â&#x20AC;?
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of the 15-and-under category will perform in the afternoon Sept. 27. Winners will also get a gift card to Kaminskiâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Sports Lounge and BBQ. Participation in this competition is free, but contestants need to sign up ahead of time at powayrodeo.com/ so-you-think-you-can-sing-iv. More information is also available at the website. Other events taking place during Poway Days include: â&#x20AC;˘ A pancake breakfast, hosted by the Poway Kiwanis Club, 7 - 10 a.m. Saturday, Sept. 6 at the Boys and Girls Club on Bowron Road. Cost is $5 per person. â&#x20AC;˘ The 50th annual Poway Days Parade, beginning at 9 a.m. Saturday, Sept. 6 and will run along Poway Road. â&#x20AC;˘ The Poway Days 5K Run will also be held on Sept. 6, beginning at 7 a.m. along Poway Road. Cost to sign up for the run is $25 for adults, $15 for children under 12. Visit http://www.powayparade.org for more details and to sign up. â&#x20AC;˘ The Poway Days Community Festival is also being held on Sept. 6, after the parade from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. in Poway Community Park. â&#x20AC;˘ Good Neighbor Day is Wednesday, Sept. 10. Come by Crystal Gardens Florist in Creekside Plaza for free roses to distribute to friends and neighbors. â&#x20AC;˘ The Trail Ride begins at 9 a.m. Saturday, Sept. 20 at the Poway Valley Riders Association, 14336 Tierra Bonita. Cost is $20 per person, bring your own horse. â&#x20AC;˘ The Poway Rodeo will be 7:30 p.m. Friday, Sept. 26 and 1 and 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 27. For more details on the rodeo, visit http://powayrodeo.com.
THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 2014 PAGE A3
Poway youngster meets movie star and his voice, heâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s one of my favorite actors right now.â&#x20AC;? Hernandez said the hospitalâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s ophthalmology team found A short appointment at Childrenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Hospital Los Angeles out how much Jimmy liked Prattâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s work and asked around turned into an exciting meeting for a young Poway resident. as to how to get Jimmy to meet the actor. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Through a myriad Jimmy Hernandez, 12, a seventh grader at St. Michaelâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s, was of people, he got to meet Chris Pratt,â&#x20AC;? said Hernandez. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s one of the lucky patients at Childrenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Hospital who on Aug. 20 remarkable that the timing was right.â&#x20AC;? had the opportunity to meet actor Chris Pratt. Pratt is starring Jimmy said he got to spend about 10 minutes with the actor, as Star-Lord in the hit movie â&#x20AC;&#x153;Guardians of the Galaxy.â&#x20AC;? talking about movies and taking photos. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I got to try on his Even more exciting, a photo big, long Ravager coat,â&#x20AC;? said of Jimmy trying on Prattâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s cosJimmy. â&#x20AC;&#x153;He offered to let me tume went viral, featured on try it on. It was really heavy. It The Today Show, in articles felt like there were sheets of across the internet and on sometal in it.â&#x20AC;? cial media sites like Tumblr, Jimmy said Pratt also signed Facebook and Twitter. some boxes of action figures â&#x20AC;&#x153;I subscribe to Buzzfeed, so for him, â&#x20AC;&#x153;which Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m never goseeing myself (on the website) ing to open.â&#x20AC;? was amazing,â&#x20AC;? said Jimmy. â&#x20AC;&#x153;For me, meeting someone The pictureâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s popularity was like Chris Pratt is like another also surreal for his family. â&#x20AC;&#x153;As person meeting their favorite a parent, it was very odd to see athlete,â&#x20AC;? said Jimmy. â&#x20AC;&#x153;My sport my child all over the news,â&#x20AC;? is watching movies.â&#x20AC;? said Jimmyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s mother, Cheryl Jimmy said heâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s also into Hernandez, who was with her making movies, and would son at the hospital and also got someday like to be a director. to meet Pratt. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I like watching and making Jimmy said he had no idea Poway resident Jimmy Hernandez, left, tries on actor Chris movies, itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s fun,â&#x20AC;? he said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I like Pratt would be there on the Prattâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Star-Lord jacket during a meet-and-greet on Aug. 20. (using the) cameras.â&#x20AC;? Jimmy day he and his mother headed Photo courtesy of Childrenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Hospital Los Angeles also likes Legos, and is a Boy up for a short appointment. Scout with Troop 681. Jimmy has Optic Nerve HypoHernandez said the best part plasia, or ONH, which is caused by the underdevelopment of for her was watching how excited Jimmy was. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Jimmy follows his optic nerves, and also affects his endocrine system. He is a very intensive treatment plan. This is a trek we make all classified as legally blind and travels to Childrenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Hospital Los the time, and itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s not fun. He gets poked, prodded, gets blood Angeles about four times a year for treatment. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We were very drawn. (Meeting Pratt) made making this journey worthwhile. lucky to be visiting that day,â&#x20AC;? said Hernandez. (Pratt) was genuinely interested in Jimmy. He made it about A special screening of â&#x20AC;&#x153;Guardians of the Galaxyâ&#x20AC;? was held each kidâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s visit with him. I could see how he connected with at the hospital with Pratt, but Jimmy was unable to attend it each kid in the room, and that he likes doing it. It was obvious since it was during his appointment. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We were walking back (Pratt) wanted to be there.â&#x20AC;? from the cafe and saw a big group of people,â&#x20AC;? said Jimmy, who â&#x20AC;&#x153;Once in a while, a whole lot of good comes out of a whole recognized Pratt amongst the group. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I recognized his face lot of struggle,â&#x20AC;? said Hernandez.
BY EMILY SORENSEN
TRIP CONTINUED FROM PAGE A2
Donate shoes to rugby team
very unusual, like you took the body parts of different animals and glued them onto a body.â&#x20AC;? Ben said he became â&#x20AC;&#x153;fascinatedâ&#x20AC;? with the platypus after a friend of his mother drew one and he has never seen one in person. The 10-day adventure will feature the family flying to Melbourne, Australia so they can wade with platypuses at the Healseville Sanctuary, and kayak at Great Otway National Park so they can see platypuses in the wild. They will also visit the Melbourne Museum, Melbourne Zoo and take a day trip to Phillip Island to see miniature penguins native to the island. Leon, a St. Michaelâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s third grader, said, â&#x20AC;&#x153;I want to see the platypuses and look forward to just being there and enjoying it.â&#x20AC;? Make-A-Wish grants the wishes of children with life-threatening medical conditions to give them hope, strength and joy. Wishes are provided through the help of more than 25,000 volunteers plus donors â&#x20AC;&#x201D; like Isagenix, which has raised more than $1.5 million to help grant more than 190 wishes. On Tuesday during Benâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s wish reveal, Isagenix board member Jim Pierce and his wife, Tammy, challenged the companyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s top income earners to match their $100,000 donation. The audience responded by donating more than $200,000.
Have some gently used shoes youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re not sure what to do with? The Poway High School rugby team would like them. The team is trying to collect 2,500 pounds of shoes to donate to Shoes with Heart, in an effort to raise $1,200. The funds will be used to purchase goal posts, as well as additional uniforms for the boys and girls rugby teams. The types of shoes accepted include tennis shoes, casual shoes, dress shoes, boots, cleats, soccer shoes and others in a wearable condition. Skates and golf shoes are not accepted. Shoes must be in pairs. Shoes can be donated through Sunday, Sept. 7 at Game Day Sports, 14767 Pomerado Road in Poway, in the Target shopping center. â&#x20AC;&#x153;(This fundraiser) is the most efficient way to raise the money needed, without having to dip into our own funds,â&#x20AC;? said Chris Osmun, who is a parent to one of the teamâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s players, as well as the treasurer for the rugby boosters. Shoes with Heart is a Temecula-based organization that helps other organizations hold fundraisers by collecting used shoes. Groups are given $.50 per pair of shoes. Donated wearable shoes are then sorted and delivered to developing nations by Shoes with Heart. The PHS rugby team has been collecting shoes since the beginning of August, and has about 400 pounds of shoes so far. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We still have a long way to go,â&#x20AC;? said Osmun.
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LOCAL NEWS
PAGE A4 THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 2014
NEWS CHIEFTAIN
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR A 'troubling precedent' The Poway City Council on Aug. 19 set a troubling precedent by approving the installation of a mobile home in the Ann-O-Reno neighborhood. The planners of our city certainly didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t have this in mind when Poway became a city many years ago. The property values of all Anno-Reno residences as well as most home owners in Poway are in jeopardy if this policy continues. We hope that before the next election all council members who approved this be held accountable. This was an extremely shortsighted decision and voters should pay attention and take action. Considering that council members live in neighborhoods that would never allow a mobile home to be placed on their street, how is it that they are allowed to make decisions that negatively impact the value of our properties? TOM KELLER Poway
Council seemed confused After hearing presentations regarding the appeal of a plan to place a mobile home on a vacant lot in the Ann-O-Reno Lane neighborhood, the four councilmen began discussion. It soon became clear that they were confused, suggesting they had not adequately reviewed the material they were given beforehand, and/or did not listen attentively to the presentation. Here are quotes from their dialogue: Mayor Higginson: â&#x20AC;&#x153;I donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t exactly know what is being built.â&#x20AC;? Councilman Dave Grosch: â&#x20AC;&#x153;I donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t know whatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s going in there.â&#x20AC;? Councilman Steve Vaus: â&#x20AC;&#x153;Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m simply uncomfortable approving something that we donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t really know what weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re approving.â&#x20AC;? Councilman John Mullin: â&#x20AC;&#x153;Well now, Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m more confused.â&#x20AC;? Even the city staff was confused; they didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t recognize a photo of the mobile home despite stating in their findings that it would â&#x20AC;&#x153;not have an adverse effect on the aestheticsâ&#x20AC;Śand was consistent with surrounding residences.â&#x20AC;? How would they know; they never saw the mobile home. The one thing they all understood was that the building looked like a motor home and was not compatible
with the neighborhood. Mullin was incorrect in stating the city had â&#x20AC;&#x153;no grounds to prevent the project.â&#x20AC;? Higginson even said they could send the matter back to development. However, because they were unclear of the details of this appeal, they simply gave up and voted to allow a mobile home to be placed into a neighborhood of ranch-style homes. How can one vote on an issue without being certain of the facts? This is simply irresponsible and unacceptable. RICHARD CHAGNON Poway
Supports letting dogs off leash
Silverset Park off-leash dog area appears to be a welcome and sought after idea by most neighbors in the Rancho Arbolitos community. However, as with all new projects, there are always a few people that oppose change whether the change be for the better or for the worse. I respect the opinions of Gail Navresky (Aug. 21), but Poway would not be what it is today without adopting new ideas and projects to appease the masses. Navresky and her husband claim that Silverset Park is riddled with law violators that walk their dogs off leash at night because of fear of being caught during the day. Clearly, dog owners that use the park respect other neighbors enough to not interfere with their activities during peak hours yet the Navreskys seem to feel like we should take this Gestapo approach and punish these people no matter what. I donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t know about other people, but I like it when my neighbors exercise their dogs, so that I donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t have to listen to them barking all day. Thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s what parks are for. I have never had a bad experience with a dog off leash in this neighborhood. I fully support the proposed limited hours, offleash trial period to see if dogs and neighbors can comingle without problems. As a temporary trial period, that really isnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t too much to ask. RICK NEWSOME Poway
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Recreating with our dogs Many of the neighbors around Silverset Park have enjoyed taking their dogs to the park and over time have developed close friendships. Over time we enjoyed using the empty ball field as a safe confined area for off leash recreation. We would like to have some space and time to recreate with our dogs and neighbors in an off leash area in our park, and since the ball field sits empty for 98 % of the time and is already fenced it makes sense to consider it as a potential off leash area. After speaking to many people in our community I have found that there is a strong desire to have this program instituted. A few hours each day where dog owners can walk to a local park and let their dogs chase balls, run with their other four-legged friends and just be friendly dogs to those that wish to recreate with them. This is a change for our park and some times change is difficult, but as the needs for the citizens change the city should consider ways to adapt and offer new ways of doing business. We are grateful and feel that it is a good thing that the city is looking at the possibility of implementing an area at Silverset Park. Our city needs more areas where dog owners can easily recreate with their dogs and dog friends and be able to build new friendships in their neighborhoods. SUE BUSCH Poway
Off-leash proposal has been twice rejected A group of very determined citizens would lead you to believe it would be beneficial to the community to allow unleashed dogs to roam free on the ball field at Silverset Park. This group claims that the benefits of socialization of the dogs and their owners outweigh the negatives, and that they can control the ensuing traffic and congestion once word got out that Silverset Park was open to unleashed dogs. The truth is the idea of allowing dogs to roam free at Silverset Park has been reviewed twice by committees and both times these independent committees saw no reason to move forward with this idea. Reasons cited were it is a violation of PMC 9.48.180 pertaining to unleashed dogs and guidelines covering ground water discharge. In addition there is already a â&#x20AC;&#x153;Dog Parkâ&#x20AC;? here in Poway three miles away. A few years back this group of dog own-
ers decided to allow their dogs to run free in the softball field area, and often times these dogs were off leash outside the ball field. This interfered with the rights of others using the park. While most of the owners made a good effort to remove the solid waste nothing could be done to control the liquid waste. It was only after a parks department employee bought it to the attention of his supervisor that signs were posted to stop this activity, and the city stepped in and restored the damage to the field and the park. JOE CALABRESE Poway
Support for off-lease hours at Silverset Park With anticipation and appreciation, I read your newspaperâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s account of a recent Poway City Council meeting. A number of Poway residents â&#x20AC;&#x201C; representing a much larger group of interested citizens â&#x20AC;&#x201C; clearly demonstrated the need for offleash hours in our neighborhood park. They showed how a change in Poway demographics offers an opportunity to change some of the ways we utilize our public areas. Hats off to the City Council for the unanimous vote to explore all options. I look forward to being a part of this community process where we can find ways to bring people together. For several years, folks have been unofficially gathering at our local park and socializing both our pups and ourselves. Finding ways to do this within established rules and regulations would make it more enjoyable for all groups to make use of our public parks. Your â&#x20AC;&#x153;Thumbs Upâ&#x20AC;? support (July 31) of the process speaks to our representative system. Thankfully, we have a forum where our elected officials listen to the desires and concerns of all citizens and find ways to meet the needs of all. Our â&#x20AC;&#x153;City in the Countryâ&#x20AC;? has a great opportunity to support neighbor-working-with-neighbor around this proposal. There must be a way to protect and respect the concerns of all involved. KIM CONANT Poway
MORE LETTERS ON PAGE B-14 Letters should be limited to 250 words. They can be emailed to editor@pomeradonews.com or composed online at www.pomeradonews.com.
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THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 2014 PAGE A5
NEWS CHIEFTAIN
Seniors Getting a Medicare-covered scooter or wheelchair Dear Savvy Senior, What’s the process for getting Medicare to pay for an electric mobility scooter or power wheelchair? My 76-year-old mother has arthritis in her knees and hips, and has a difficult time getting around anymore. Searching Daughter Dear Searching, Getting an electric-powered mobility scooter or wheelchair for your mom that’s covered by original Medicare starts with a visit to her doctor’s office. If eligible, Medicare will pay 80 percent of the cost, after she meets her $147 Part B deductible. She will be responsible for the remaining 20 percent. Here’s a breakdown of how it works. Make an appointment Your first step is to call your mom’s doctor and schedule a Medicare required, face-to-face mobility evaluation, to determine her need for a power wheelchair or scooter. For your mom to be eligible, she’ll need to meet all of the following conditions: • Her health condition makes moving around her home very difficult, even with the help of a cane, walker or manual wheelchair. • She has significant problems performing activities of daily living like bathing, dressing, getting in or out of a bed or chair, or using the bathroom. • She is able to safely operate, and get on and off the scooter or wheelchair, or have someone with her who is always available to help her safely use the device. If eligible, your mom’s doctor
Jim Miller THE SAVVY SENIOR will determine what kind of mobility equipment she’ll need based on her condition, usability in her home, and ability to operate it. It’s also important to know that Medicare coverage is dependent on your mom needing a scooter or wheelchair in her home. If her claim is based on needing it outside her home, it will be denied as not medically necessary, because the wheelchair or scooter will be considered as a leisure item. Where to shop If the doctor determines your mom needs a power scooter or wheelchair, he or she will fill out a written order or certificate of medical necessity (CMN) form for her. Once she gets that, she’ll need to take it to a Medicare approved supplier within 45 days. If your mother happens to live in one of Medicare’s competitive bidding areas, you’ll need to get her device from specific suppliers approved by Medicare. To find approved suppliers and competitive bidding suppliers in your area, visit medicare. gov/supplier or call 800-633-4227. Once you choose an approved supplier, they will send a representative to assess your mom’s home measuring her doorways, thresh-
SENIOR ACTIVITIES Poway Senior Center
olds and overall space to ensure she gets the appropriate mobility device.
Poway Senior Center, 13094 Civic Center Drive in Poway Community Park, offers “Feeling Fit” exercise, yoga, tai chi, knitting and ceramics. Call 858-748-6094 for details. Upcoming programs: Learn to line dance from noon to 2 p.m. Fridays. A free beginning jewelry-making workshop is 1 to 3 p.m. every Wednesday. Bring your beads and supplies. Win up to $1,199 playing bingo at 5:30 p.m. Saturdays and 12:15 p.m. Tuesdays. Open to all 18 and over. Proceeds benefit the nutrition program. Lunch is served from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. for a requested donation of $4. Homebound seniors can have lunch delivered daily. The center will be celebrating its 40th anniversary on Oct. 24 with a dinner and dance. Event sponsorships are being offered, ranging from $500 to $2,500. Contact Executive Director Leslie Hoffman for more information.
Financial assistance If your mom has a Medicare supplemental policy, it may pick up some, or all of the 20 percent cost of the scooter or wheelchair that’s not covered by Medicare. If, however, she doesn’t have supplemental insurance, and can’t afford the 20 percent, she may be able to get help through Medicare Savings Programs. Call your local Medicaid office for eligibility information. Or, if you find that your mom is not eligible for a Medicare covered scooter or wheelchair, and she can’t afford to purchase one, renting can be a much cheaper shortterm solution. Talk to a supplier about this option. For more information, call Medicare at 800-633-4227 and request a copy of publication #11046 “Medicare’s Wheelchair and Scooter Benefit,” or you can read it online at medicare.gov/publications/ pubs/pdf/11046.pdf.
North County Inland Center North County Inland Center, a Jewish Family Service social and wellness program for adults 60-plus, is in Temple Adat Shalom, 15905 Pomerado Road in Poway. The center offers an array of exercise programs, lectures, entertainment and more ever y Monday and Wednesday. Lunch and transportation are also available. For information, to make reservations or receive a monthly newsletter, call Melinda Wynar, program coordinator, at 858-674-1123.
Poway Adult Day Health Care Center The Poway Adult Day Health Care Center is at 12250 Crosthwaite Circle in the Poway Business Park. It offers affordable respite for caregivers through their day programs. Call 858-748-5044 for information. A nutritionally balanced lunch is included and transportation to and from the center is available when needed. A four-hour, half-day program is also now available. Receive a complimentary visit day during August. Call 858-748-5044 for information.
Medicare Advantage If your mom happens to have a Medicare Advantage plan (like an HMO or PPO), she’ll need to call her plan to find out the specific steps she needs to take to get a wheelchair or scooter. Many Advantage plans may have specific suppliers within the plan’s network they’ll require her to use. Send your senior questions to: Savvy Senior, P.O. Box 5443, Norman, OK 73070, or visit SavvySenior.org. Jim Miller is a contributor to the NBC Today show.
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Jewish Senior Center RB Jewish Senior Center, 16934 Chabad Way in Poway, is open Tuesdays and Thursdays at 10:30 a.m. and offers a variety of programs. The center also serves freshly cooked gourmet kosher meals at $4 per person. Take out is available. Reservations are preferred a day in advance by calling 858487-4873.
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LOCAL NEWS
PAGE A6 THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 2014
NEWS CHIEFTAIN
Business Newly-opened Grenadine has Lebanese, Mediterranean menu BY EMILY SORENSEN
Owner Camille Bsaibes at Grenadine, the family's third restaurant.
Photo by Emily Sorensen
Stock photography a great small business tool
R
emember the saying “A picture’s worth a thousand words”? Studies show graphic images (typically photos) catch a reader’s attention in one-quarter second. It’s probably tempting to shoot the photos yourself. Go ahead, if you have the proper equipment and training. Or hire a professional photographer ($2,000/ day) to do it for you. Models, props, locations and transportation are extra. However, if you’re on a budget, consider using stock photography. It’s the salvation of most small business marketing efforts. Libraries of generally inexpensive photos and illustrations available for use in your marketing materials can be found at Clipart, Shutterstock, Istock, and Getty. Millions of professional images are there right now in every imaginable category. At these sites you can rent photos and illustrations in low, medium, or high resolution, usually for a few dollars. To start, type in a search term and see what appears. If you don’t find pictures that impart
friend Mel did that, posting images (with an embedded watermark) on his web site. He received a nasty lawyer’s letter and paid the photo library a hefty fine. Another consideration: Because these photographs have basically become commodities, there’s a good chance you’ll see the same images you’re renting on someone else’s ads, billboards, or even a competitor’s web site. So what if you want to use stock photography to get customized imagery? Have a graphic artist Photoshop several rented images together. You could, for example, meld rented images of you and Ben Franklin flying a key in a storm. It’ll cost you something for the artist’s time, but you’ll get just what you want. Custom photographs within a budget. How cool is that, huh? With that said, I wish you a week of profitable marketing. Mr. Marketing uses clip art in his free marketing newsletter at www.askmrmarketing.com. See for yourself by subscribing.
Rob Weinberg ASK MR. MARKETING your message, try another word or combination of words. But be flexible. Searching for “teenagers” may be too broad a term; “frizzy haired girl” too narrow. Here’s a tip: the library and individual photographer split the rental proceeds, so many photographers post images at more than one location to improve their odds of making a sale. Which means by shopping around you may be able to buy the same concept for less elsewhere. And fair warning: Don’t try using any images commercially without paying for them. My
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*Prices do not reflect applicable College Grad ($750) or Military ($500) Rebates. See dealer for details. Must have graduated from an accredited 4yr college, university or nursing degree program or an accredited 2yr college in the last 2yrs. Rebate available on contracts executed through 9/1/14. **Must finance through Toyota Financial Services only. Employees of Toyota of Poway are not eligible for advertised pricing. All advertised vehicles are subject to actual dealer availability. All advertised prices exclude government fees and taxes, any finance charges, $80 dealer document preparation charge and any emission testing charge. +Toyota Military Rebate: must either be in current active duty status in the U.S. Military or U.S. Military Reserve. Must provide certifiable proof of military status or active service at the time of purchase. Finance or lease contract must be dated by 9/1/14 for the Military Rebate offer. The Military Rebate program is subject to change or termination at any time. ****Leather not included in ad price. Offers expire 9/1/14.
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fresh mint, lemon, salt and olive oil) which is always made fresh to order, said Bsaibes. Adventur ous diners should try the stone oven pizzas, which come with a variety of Middle Easterninspired toppings. Sample the lamb and beef shawerma pizza, the shrimp pesto pizza or the spicy chicken pizza. There are also multiple vegetarian and vegan options on the menu. Grenadine also makes its own pita bread fresh in restaurant, and its own baklava, made with rose water, orange blossom and sugar instead of honey. Holding a party? Grenadine also offers catering, both in-restaurant and at the location of your choice. Grenadine is open 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and noon to 8 p.m. on Sunday. For more information, call 858-842-4828 or visit www.grenadinesd.com.
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Looking for a new place to eat? Tr y Grenadine, a newly-opened Lebanese and Mediterranean restaurant in Poway. Grenadine, at 12205 Scripps Poway Parkway, Suite, E101, opened about a month ago and has been enjoying success ever since, said owner Camille Bsaibes. Grenadine is the third restaurant owned by the Bsaibes family. The others are Aladdin, in Hillcrest, and Amardeen, near the UTC mall. All three feature the family’s signature Lebanese and Mediterranean cuisine. The restaurant offers a wide variety of appetizers, salads, entrees and desserts, as well as a few surprises, like gourmet pizzas, pasta and rice dishes. Bsaibes opened his first restaurant back in Lebanon in the 1980s. He moved to San Diego in the early 1990s, and opened Aladdin Hillcrest in 2004. The success allowed him to bring his family over from Lebanon, as well as open Amardeen. Bsaibes said he has lived in Scripps Ranch for seven years, and used to eat at Yanni’s Bistro, the restaurant that used to occupy the space Grenadine is in. “I knew they were moving,” said Bsaibes, “and I thought (Grenadine) would be a great family restaurant for the neighborhood.” “(Our restaurants are) famous for kebabs, all different kinds,” said Bsaibes, “as well as shawermas.” All dishes offered by Grenadine are made from scratch with fresh ingredients. Some of the most popular dishes the restaurant offers include its homemade hummus. “It’s very simple, but it takes 48 hours to pre-
pare,” said Bsaibes. The baba ghanouj, a smoked eggplant dish, is also very popular, according to Bsaibes. “We smoke the eggplant on the grill, so it has a nice smoky taste,” he said. Grenadine also has a wide variety of finger foods, for sharing with friends and family. These include kebeh balls, which are made with lean top sirloin and wheat, stuffed with spiced ground sirloin, roasted onions and pine nuts and deep fried; three types of fatayer, which are small pies, stuffed with cheese, lamb and beef or spinach; and samboussik, which are deep-fried fatayer stuffed with spiced ground sirloin, roasted onions and pine nuts. If you’re looking for something lighter, the restaurant has a number of fresh salads available, including tabouleh salad (parsley salad with bulgur wheat, tomatoes, onions,
B1
Community
First exhibit for emerging Poway artist. B16
Long-awaited bridge becomes a reality
DIGEST
THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 2014
Business leaders show team spirit at social. B6
Free movies “Monsters University” will be shown at dusk on Friday, Aug. 29 at Rancho Bernardo Community Park, 18448 W. Bernardo Drive. The animated film is rated G. “The Nut Job” will be shown at dusk on Saturday, Sept. 6 at Patriot Park, 10502 Paseo de Linda in 4S Ranch. The animated film is rated PG. For both free events, bring a blanket or lawn chairs.
Have fun, play games on Sunday The Never Alone On Sunday group meets at 1 p.m. every Sunday for a fun day of games including bridge, canasta, contract gin, mah jong, Scrabble and Mexican train dominoes. It has relocated to The Remington Club I, 16925 Hierba Drive, Rancho Bernardo. Door prizes are offered on the first Sunday of the month. Admission is free but RSVPs are required. Call Shirley Mallon at 858-4510065. Details at www.neveraloneonsunday.com.
Got news?
Two upcoming events will officially mark the opening of the Shoal Creek Pedestrian Bridge, which youngsters at the nearby elementary school have been traversing since their first day of classes. Shoal Creek Elementary Principal Libby Keller said students, their parents and others in the community are being encouraged to walk across the bridge this Friday morning as part of the campus’ Walk to School Day activities. This includes inviting parents of students who do not live within walking distance of the school to park in the neighborhood near the bridge so their children can walk across with their schoolmates. A ribbon cutting ceremony is set for 10:30 a.m. Thursday, Sept. 4, with several dignitaries planning to attend. They include City Councilman Mark Kersey and Assemblyman Brian Maienschein, who was a councilman when the project began and whose daughters attend Shoal Creek. Also among attendees will be Carmel Mountain Ranch resident Troy Daum, who led the bridge project from inception almost 15 years ago until it was fully-funded. Keller and a group of Shoal Creek students will also attend.
Mari Garcia (858) 513-0110
marigarcia@allstate.com CA Lic: 0E02729
Above, parents and their children used the Shoal Creek Pedestrian Bridge while walking to campus when classes resumed on Aug. 20. Below, Troy Daum, who for more than a decade led the community effort to get the bridge funded, standing next to it. Photos courtesy of Troy Daum The Ted Williams Parkway Pedestrian Overcrossing at Shoal Creek Drive — dubbed the Shoal Creek Pedestrian Bridge by locals — is a more than $5 million project built across the sixlane Ted Williams Parkway on the east side of its intersection with Shoal Creek Drive in Carmel Mountain Ranch. It is a 479.5-foot bridge with a north ramp of 71.6 feet and south ramp of 157.3 feet. It is 10 feet wide with an 8-foot pedestrian clearance. Its features
include a stone facade and stained concrete with antigraffiti coating. Its purpose from the start was to provide a safe pathway for children walking to school, but Keller said she is also glad to see adult residents using it while walking their dogs and getting exercise. Since school resumed on Aug. 20, she estimates that hundreds of children and adults have walked across the bridge each day instead of trying to cross the SEE BRIDGE, Page B4
Stop by to see how much you can save. © 2011 Allstate Insurance Company
POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP
Submit event listings to editor@pomeradonews. com by noon Friday.
BY ELIZABETH MARIE HIMCHAK
THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 2014
B2
GREEN VALLE Y HIGHL ANDS
BELVEDERE ESTATES
$700,000-$750,000 VRM
OPEN SUN. 1-3 - 13544 Orchard Gate Rd.
Spectacular views! 4BR/2.5BA, Approx. 1,755 sf. Master BR with ensuite bath. Newer windows and doors. Horse property.
Beautiful updated single level home. 3BR/2BA. Sparkling pool, sited on a 1.47 acre lot.
C ARRIAGE HILLS
BRIDLE WOOD COUNTRY ESTATES
$898,000
$980,000 - $1,080,000 VRM
4BR/2.5BA, Approx. 3,226 sq. ft. Sited on lg parklike lot. Gated community.
POWAY
Custom architectural masterpiece. 3BR/3BA, 3027esf. Panoramic mountain views. Lg culdesac lot.
BRIDLE WOOD COUNTRY ESTATES
$775,000-$925,000
$1,449,000
5BR/4BA Approx. 4,063 sf. Sited on 1.11 acres. Gourmet kitchen, resort like backyard pool/spa, waterfall, pavilion, gazebo & BBQ entertainment area.
Build your dream home on this large 3.3 acre lot w/ mountain & hill views. Located in gated Bridlewood Country Estates.
SERENATA
4S RANCH
HELPING HOMELESS KIDS — The Rancho Bernardo Republican Women Federated’s Education Committee members filled 50 tote bags with school supplies to be given to the Monarch School, a kindergarten through 12th grade school for homeless children in San Diego. Rancho Bernardo Albertson’s donated the tote bags and the club provided the calculators, binders, paper, pencils and other school supplies. Pictured are committee members, from left, Paula Carmichael, Ann Nunes and Chairwoman Wanda Arnold.
Block's community college bill is now law $975,000-$1,050,000 VRM
$899,000-$949,000 VRM
4BR/4BA, Approx. 3,368 sf. An entertainers paradise with indoor/outdoor living. Rear yd features custom built-in BBQ w/dual islands, fireplace & lush landscaping.
4BR/2.5BA Approx. 3,026sf. Single level w/ courtyard entry. Lg parklike yard, built-in spa. Remodeled master bath, kit w/lg island & granite counters.
GREEN VALLE Y SUMMIT
SADDLEBROOK ESTATES
$2,300,000-$2,500,000 VRM
$1,995,000-$2,195,000 VRM
4BR + game room + office, 6.5BA, 7,710 esf. Detached 2BR guest house, pool/spa, tennis court. 2.05 acres beautifully landscaped.
Gorgeous McCullough Ames custom. 5BR/6BA Approx. 6,505 sf. 1.79 acre lot with mtn. & sunset views. The finest of upgrades throughout. Vanishing edge pool w/waterfalls & spa.
Call Suzanne “Your Neighborhood Real Estate Specialist” tt”
POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP
858- 618-5691 www.PowayHomes.com m www.4RBHomes.com skropf@bhhscal.com
CA BRE#01261875
Legislation allowing California’s community colleges to offer four-year degrees where a demonstrated local workforce need can be demonstrated will head to the governor after the Senate concurred last week to Assembly amendments on a 32-0 vote. Senator Marty Block (D-San Diego), who authored SB 850, described his measure as a jobs bill. “This is landmark legislation that is a game changer for California’s higher education system and our workforce preparedness,” Block said. “SB 850 boosts the focus of our community colleges on job training now when California faces a major skills gap in our workforce.”
Block’s district includes Rancho Bernardo. Block’s proposal is a pilot program that would allow 15 campuses from 15 different districts to offer one baccalaureate degree each starting Jan.1, 2015 and ending in July 1, 2023. Programs would begin no later than the 2017-18 academic year. Baccalaureate degrees offered at the chosen campuses could not be duplicative of degrees offered by the University of California (UC) or California State University (CSU) campuses. “It will be value added, not duplicative,” Block said.
Free smoke detectors offered to seniors National safety statistics show that adults age 65 and older are two times more likely to die in a home fire than any other segment of the population, and for those over age 75 that risk nearly quadruples. Yet, thousands of seniors throughout San Diego County live in homes without a working smoke alarm. One way seniors can improve the chances of escaping a home fire is by making sure their home is equipped with a working smoke alarm. The Burn Institute’s Senior Smoke Alarm
Program provides seniors with free smoke alarms and installation. Fire service personnel from various fire departments throughout the county and other volunteer groups assist the Burn Institute year-round in installing the smoke alarms. To qualify for this lifesaving program, you must be 62 years or older, own your own home and not currently have a working smoke alarm. To sign up for this program, call the Burn Institute at 858.541.2277 ext. 18.
Continuing Education Center CEC meets three times a week September through May in the Remington Club II multi-purpose room, 16916 Hierba Drive, Rancho Bernardo. Cost for each twohour lecture is $5 for CEC members and $7 for nonmembers. First-time guests are free.. For details, call 858487-0464 or go to www.cecrb. org. Upcoming programs: Tuesday. Sept. 9 at 10 a.m. — William Thayer, MBA, will discuss the Ukraine and Crimea from 900 AD to 2014. First of two lectures. Wednesday, Sept. 10 at 1:30 p.m. — Charlotte Gragg will discuss the life and art of Paul Cezanne. Thursday, Sept. 11 at 1:30 p.m — William Thayer will present the second lecture on the Ukraine and Crimea.
BY STEVE DREYER
BOOKS FOR KIDS — The local United Way celebrated the longest day of the year (June 21) by packing up books for students from low-income families with volunteers, including book drive sponsor GEICO, based in Poway. In total, United Way was able to buy and collect more than 20,000 books.
School board member Marc Davis and members of his family spent time Monday trimming the size of his roadside campaign signs to comply with Poway’s amended sign code. The nine signs were put up Friday all around Poway. Within hours the News Chieftain received several complaints that they were too big. The City Council in March 2012 made a number of changes to the sign code, including reducing the maximum space allowed for a roadside sign to 24 square feet. That’s a 4-by-6-foot sheet of plywood. The old standard was 32 square feet, a standard 4-by8-foot plywood board. Contacted Monday morning, Davis said he had been unaware that the city sign rules had changed. The county Registrar of Voters office, which is running the Nov. 4 election, had said nothing to him about it, Davis said. After confirming the change with the Poway city clerk’s office, Davis and his family trimmed the edges around each of the signs to conform with the new rules. Voters in November will elect three school board members from a field of eight candidates.
B3 THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 2014
PUSD board member trims election signs
ADULT EDUCATION
Herndon & Herndon would like to thank Rancho Financial for supporting Jack-O-Smash, Nov. 2, 2014. FABULOUS POWAY LOT WITH PANORAMIC VIEWS!
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Poway $449,000 - $499,000 4BD, 2BA, 2-car garage on completely fenced large corner lot, big side yard w/potential for boat/RV storage, red brick wood-burning FP, 18-inch floor & more.
Cam (858) 449-4986 | soldbycam@gmail.com | DRE #01368116 s Sue (858) 344-9000 | sue@herndonadvantage.com | BRE #00890062
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Escondido $799,000 - $899,000 Beautiful Italian villa inspired home w/ 5BD, 3.5 BA, 3-car garage & stunning panoramic views, spacious, light & bright rooms, owned solar system reducing current electric bill to zero.
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BRIDGE
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busy, wide intersection. “There’s quite a bit of buzz about it in the community,” Keller said. “Just a great number of people are walking and we believe that the number of walkers has increased even from before.” Keller added she has heard many say the bridge is “just lovely aesthetically.” Daum, his wife, Patricia; daughter, Brittany; son, Troy Jr.; and dog, Grady, were among those who walked across the bridge when it opened last week. When Daum started pushing for a bridge and soliciting funding from various government entities, he said daughters Ashley and Brittany were at the elementary school and Troy Jr. was too young to attend. Now, Ashley has graduated from UCLA, Brittany is a senior at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo and Troy will begin his freshman year at Cal Poly in a few weeks. “It was a very, very satisfying day; one of the greatest days of my life,” Daum said of the family’s walk across the bridge. “For me, the most gratifying thing was to see the hundreds of parents walking across it with their kids. “It took a lot of time and effort to make it happen, but now kids are walking to school
safely. ... It’s going to save some lives. This was a day of a lot of joy,” he added. While progress continued since the April 2013 ground-breaking, Daum said he was doubtful the bridge would be complete in time for the first day of classes. Originally, the bridge was to be complete last February, but the date was pushed back to August due to unforeseen geotechnical conditions encountered during construction, officials said. It was originally supposed to cost $4.5 million — with more than $2 million coming from federal funding and almost $2.5 million from local Transnet funds. When construction complications increased the cost by another $500,000, San Diego City Council allocated additional funding to cover the difference. Back in the early 2000s the city also paid for a $25,000 feasibility study and had traffic engineers implement changes to make the intersection safer for pedestrians while waiting for the bridge to be built. Daum has previously said there was at least one accident at the intersection, involving a vehicle and a woman pushing a stroller. The child inside was thrown to the curb, but OK and that youngster graduated
from high school in 2013. Daum, as chairman, and fellow Shoal Creek Pedestrian Safety Committee members kept working to get the bridge built before a tragedy occurred on the road with a daily traffic volume of more than 25,000. The posted speed is 55 mph, reduced to 25 mph near the school. “I am pleased the Shoal Creek Pedestrian Bridge is complete and ready for use by the children and residents in our community,” Maienschein said. “The safety of our children is one of my highest priorities. I was proud to be engaged in the early stages of this project and was able to allocate the initial $25,000 necessary to fund the feasibility study. The study showed that the bridge was necessary and today the bridge is a reality.” “Thanks to the persistence of residents who were committed to community safety, the Shoal Creek Pedestrian Bridge will give kids and families peace of mind when walking across this busy intersection,” Kersey said. “I’m especially appreciative of the community’s patience during the construction process and I know the final project is something of which we can all be proud.”
Rancho Bernardo resident Diane Petrini was elected Region 6 president during the Ladies Auxiliary Military Order of the Purple Heart’s 81st annual convention in Denver. It was held in conjunction with the Military Order of the Purple Heart’s 82nd annual convention. Petrini was one of two LAMOPH Unit 49 members elected to national office. She previously served as president of her unit and for California. The Ladies Auxiliary Military Order of the Purple Heart formed in 1933 for females related to a Purple Heart recipient. The auxiliary works alongside a MOPH chapter to promote patriotism, fraternalism and preservation of America’s military history. Members also provide comfort and assistance to all veterans and their families. Both groups meet monthly at noon on the first Saturday at the Veterans Museum in Balboa Park.
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B5 THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 2014
Over $1 Billion sold!
858.487.6467 0-$#0DULH-R$WNLQV FRP ZZZ 0DULH-R$WNLQV FRP
CA BRE #01186585
New Listing $700,000 - $750,000
Poway
1 BR & 5BA * “Hollywood” House in Poway! * Horse Property * Main House Features 1 Bedroom/1 Bath, Sun Room, Kitchen and LR * Brand New Carpet Newer A/C * Ceiling Fan * Pool * 2 Detached Guest Houses * Potential for 5 Bedrooms in All * Bungalow 1 Features a Full BA, Room and Kitchenette Bungalow 2 Features a Murphy Bed, Kitchenette, BA * Detached Guest House 1 has a LR, BR, BA, Kitchen and Yard * Detached Guest House 2 Features LR, BR, Kitchen and Bath
Poway
$995,000-$1,195,000
No HOA * Build your Dream Home on this Incredible Lot * Gorgeous Views * Private!
4+BR & 3BA * Incredible and Tropical Backyard * Salt Water Pool/Spa * Palapas * Orchard Covered Seating Area w/ TV, Bar Gorgeous Center Island Kitchen Study/Office * Travertine Flooring Lots of Storage * Incredibly Maintained and Beautifully Upgraded
Poway ~ Green Valley $1,795,000
$3,795,000
4+BR & 4.5BA * Brand New Construction * Ames Contracting Gorgeous Views on this Incredible 1+ Acre Lot * Sleek, Simple Lines, Elegant and Stylish * Stunning Wood Floors, Exposed Wood Beams Game Room * Breathtaking Kitchen w/Top of the Line Amenities * Large Bedroom Suites w/Walk-in Closet and BA * Covered Outdoor Seating Area w/ FP
6+BR & 7.5BA * Spectacular Custom Estate * Tastefully Appointed * Quality Construction * Ideal Floorplan * Travertine Flooring * Masonry Fireplaces * Exquisite Lighting Fixtures * Wood Beamed Ceilings Wood Paneled Office * Wine Room Office * Game Room and Bar Area * Teen Bonus Room * Privately Gated Grounds w/ Fabulous Pool/Spa * Built-in BBQ Area, Putting Green * Stunning Sunset Views
Poway ~ The Heritage
$3,295,000-$3,595,000
$7,499,000
Poway ~ The Heritage
Majestic Compound! 8+BR & 10.5BA * Luxurious Gated Estate on 3.5 Acres * Outstanding Kitchen Executive Office * Opulent Living Areas * Media/Theatre Room * Gym with Sauna * Hair Salon * Game Room * Guest House * 8 Car Garage Sport Court * Clay Tennis Court Tropical Resort Style Pool/Spa Playhouse * Gazebo w/ Built-In BBQ
Poway ~ The Heritage
6+BR & 6.5BA * Situated on the Highest Lot in the Heritage * Fine Amenities & Luxuries * Crown Moldings, Wainscoting *Wine Cellar Wood Beams * Office * Guest House with Kitchenette, Bed, Bath Gorgeous Center Island Kitchen Private Bonus Room (Office) with 270 Deg. Views * Serene Outdoors Vanishing Edge Pool/Spa * Solar Panels-Virtually Low Electric Bill
$3,295,000 - $3,595,000
$3,495,000
6+BR & 6.5BA * Absolutely Breathtaking Estate! * Greg Agee Built * Tennis Court * Attached Guest House * Game Room * Home Theatre * Cherry Wood Paneled Office * Truly Amazing Pool Area 5+ Car Garage * Magnificent Views
5+BR & 5.5BA * Top of the World Views! New Construction by Greg Agee in a Exclusive New Development * Single Level * Wonderful Floor Plan with Great Room, Office, Guest House * Craftsmanship is Superior * Incredible Amenities in the Kitchen * Interior Courtyard Travertine, French Oak Wood Floors and more Rich Finishes * Beach Entry Vanishing Edge Pool
Poway ~ The Heights
POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP
Poway ~ The Heritage
2BR & 3BA * Situated on a Grand Lot in Poway with ENDLESS Possibilities * Two Guest Houses * Main House w/ Nice Sized Kitchen with LR, Wood Beams, Ceiling Fans and a Large Yard * First Attached Guest House Offers a Kitchenette, LR, BR, BA * Second Guest House is Detached and Features a LR, BD, BA and Kitchenette
$699,000-$849,000
Poway
Poway ~ Lomas Verdes
New Listing $535,000-$575,000
THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 2014
B6
RB business leaders display their team spirit Rancho Bernardo Business Association members and guests were encouraged to wear shirts to promote their favorite team during RBBA’s Aug. 20 tailgatethemed mixer at Carvers Steaks & Chops. The event featured a variety of favorite tailgate foods, including cheeseburger sliders, mini hot dogs and all the fixings. George Cooke likes the Chargers, while Kim Woods supports the University of North Carolina Tar Heels.
Photos by Elizabeth Marie Himchak
Padres fan Dr. Gianne Brintwood and RB Honorary Mayor candidate Marc Nimetz, a Chargers fan.
Sporting their “Boston strong” shirts were Kathy and Bob Van Order.
Pictured left, Chargers fan Kevin Paulson and San Diego State University Aztecs fan Sarah Paulson with Bernard Mougel. Pictured right, Rancho Bernardo Honorary Mayor candidate Debbie Kurth, left, with supporters Beverly Judge and Kim Wetzel.
Patti Hall, left, with Tracey Van Putten.
IT PAYS TO GO WITH PADO! 0/7!9
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Make The Remington Club your new home in 2014 OPEN SUN 14 PM
JUST LISTED!
4BR/3BA. Beautiful golf course & mountain views. Courtyard entrance. Entertainer’s paradise! Completely remodeled kitchen with new $789,000 Solar heated, salt water pool with waterfall. $775,000-$845,000 cabinets, granite and stainless steel appliances.
0/7!9
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POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP
Living at The Remington Club is like living at a resort! You deserve it! Two story, 3BR, 2.5BA town home with beautiful mountain 5BR, 6BA home, on 2.2 ac. lot. Tennis court, pool with fountain, views. Complex features two pools and a clubhouse. $349,000 gazebo with BBQ. Incredible mountain views! $1,999,000
To Get YOUR Home Sold, Call Karen Pado!
We are walking distance, or a quick shuttle ride if you prefer, to restaurants, shopping, banking, a post office and medical facilities. Come and experience The Remington Club, San Diego’s finest retirement living community. ÕÝÕÀÞÊ Õ Ê-iÀÛ ViÊ,i Ì> Ê,iÌ Ài i ÌÊ Õ ÌÞÊUÊ `i«i `i ÌÊ> `Ê ÃÃ ÃÌi`Ê Û } Five Star Medicare Rated Health Care Center Activities to Enrich Your Mind, Body and Soul Fine Dining and So Much More
KAREN PADO & ASSOCIATES CA BRE #01307393
858-967-5784 www.KarenPado.com
Karen@KarenPado.com
2013
Call Us Today 858.673.6340 16925 Hierba Drive, San Diego, CA 92128 | 858-673-6340 www.TheRemingtonClub.com
Lic# 374602971 NHA00006936
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Crimes reported in Poway Aug. 23 • Misdemeanor use/under influence of controlled substance - 12500 block Arabian Way, 12:17 p.m. • Vehicle break-in/theft - 16200 block Espola Road, 12:30 p.m. Aug. 22 • Misdemeanor petty theft (all other larceny) - 14000 block Midland Road, 7 p.m. • Felony burglary (shoplifting) - 13500 block Poway Road, 5:15 p.m. • Residential burglary - 14200 block Silver Ridge Road, 12:58 p.m. Aug. 20 • Vehicle break-in/theft - 14200 block Woodcreek Road, 12 p.m. • Felony possession controlled substance - 12500 block Oak Knoll Road, 7:45 a.m. • Misdemeanor battery on person - 12300 block Mcivers Court, 11:45 p.m. Aug. 19 • Vehicle break-in/theft - 16200 block Espola Road, 7:03 p.m. • Misdemeanor petty theft(shoplift) 13400 block Community Road, 5:05 p.m. • Felony transaction of controlled substance - Iola Way/Poway Road, 11:43 a.m. • Felony possession concentrated can-
Il Palio Rancho Bernardo T AC
nabis - 12200 block Scripps Poway Parkway, 12:15 a.m. Crimes reported in Rancho Bernardo, 4S Ranch, Carmel Mountain Ranch, Sabre Springs and Black Mountain Ranch Aug. 25 • Abuse/cruelty to elderly/dependent adult - 11400 block Southbrook Court, 2:14 p.m. Aug. 24 • Vehicle break-in/theft - 11200 block Candleberry Court, 8 p.m. • Other sex crime - 13200 block Sparren Ave., 2 p.m. • Residential burglary - 14700 block Camto Orense Este, 11 a.m. Aug. 23 • Battery on person - 14000 block Camta Amador, 11:05 p.m. • Burglar y/unspecified - 11900 block Carmel Mountain Road, 12:50 p.m. • Residential burglar y - 11000 block Picaza Place, 9:30 p.m. • Petty theft/theft of personal property/ shoplift - 17000 block West Bernardo Drive, 4 p.m. Aug. 22 • Residential burglary - 14800 block Werris Creek Lane, 9 p.m.
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THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 2014
CRIME LOG
THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 2014
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Calendar THURSDAYAUG. 28
FRIDAYAUG. 29
SHARE YOUR HARVEST — The Backyard Produce Project will accept backyard fruits and vegetables from 8:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 28 at the Seven Oaks Community Center, 16789 Bernardo Oaks Drive in Rancho Bernardo, and The Connection Church, 14047 Twin Peaks Road in Poway. All produce will be donated to local families in need. For details, contact Jane Radatz at jradatz@att.net or 858-485-5449.
FREE MOVIE — “Monsters University” will be shown at dusk on Friday, Aug. 29 at Rancho Bernardo Community Park, 18448 W. Bernardo Drive. The animated film is rated G.
MIXER — Poway Chamber of Commerce will be holding an Island Style Mixer on Aug. 28 from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. at Belmont Village, 13075 Evening Creek Drive in Sabre Springs. Wear your favorite island attire at this outdoor event. Members are free when they RSVP, otherwise it is $10 at the door. Prospective members are free the first time and $10 thereafter.
SATURDAYAUG. 30 PANCAKE BREAKFAST — The 46th annual RB Kiwanis Pancake Breakfast is Saturday, Aug. 30 from 7 to 11:30 a.m. at Rancho Bernardo High School. 13010 Paseo Lucido. The all-you-can eat pancake and sausage breakfast costs $7 for adults and $3 for ages 4-8. All the money raised goes back into the community. The RB Kiwanis Club supports over 20 local organizations. For details, call John Gomez at 619-995-8207.
TUESDAYSEPT. 2
POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP
TAKE A SWING FOR $10,000 – Rancho Bernardo Honorary Mayor candidate Marc
SUBMISSION DEADLINE IS NOON ON FRIDAYS EMAIL TO: COMCAL@POMERADONEWS.COM
Nimetz is holding his campaign’s party from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 2 at the Country Club of Rancho Bernardo, 12280 Greens East Road. There will be various activities, including a hole-in-one contest (for an extra $100 donation). Cost: $30 per person (includes a drink and six raffle tickets). Additional ticket options are available. Call 858-603-4961 to purchase tickets.
WEDNESDAYSEPT. 3 GARDEN CLUB MEETS — The Seven Oaks Garden Club will meet at 1 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 3 at the center, 16789 Bernardo Oaks Drive. Bob Gillespie will speak on “Nature’s Window.” Open to those over 18 years of age. Call 858-487-4319 for details.
THURSDAYSEPT. 4 RB WOMAN’S CLUB – Malli’s Makuahines Polynesian dancers will entertain at the club’s 11:30 a.m. Thursday, Sept. 4 luncheon in the Rancho Bernardo Inn, 17550 Bernardo Oaks Drive. Cost is $26. Reservations required by
Monday, Sept. 1 at 858-487-6942. Guests are welcome. GOP AFTER HOURS — Darcy Brandon, co-chair of Californians United Against Common Core, will speak at the Rancho Bernardo Republican Women’s After Hours meeting set for 5:50 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 4 at the Courtyard by Marriott, 11611 Bernardo Plaza Drive, Rancho Bernardo. Cost is $15. Call 858705-0012 or visit www.rbrwf.org.
SATURDAYSEPT. 6 POWAY DAYS START – The annual community celebration begins with a 5K run at 7 a.m., on Poway Road followed by a Kiwanis Club-sponsored public pancake breakfast at the Boys & Girls Club. The 50th annual Poway Days Parade, sponsored by the Poway Rotary Foundation, will step off at 9 a.m. on Poway Road. A Poway Days Community Celebration, sponsored by the Chamber of Commerce, will be held from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Community Park. SEE CALENDAR, Page B10
B9
PRCS William Leroy Hawkins, USN Ret. 1931 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 2014
Louise K. Harbrecht 1923 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 2014 Louise Harbrecht of Rancho Bernardo, California, went to her Heavenly Home on August 18, 2014, after a
Poway Bernardo
Since 1967
MORTUARY
brief illness. She was the steadfast pillar of strength in her family. She married Robert â&#x20AC;&#x153;Bobâ&#x20AC;? T. Harbrecht on January 15, 1944, and had three sons, eight grandchildren and seven great-grandsons. Louise was born in Cleveland, Ohio, on April 20, 1923, to Marie and Joseph Krutso. She was an avid student and graduated Sandusky High School with honors. She entered Ohio University but her college career was cut short by the World War II and her romance and subsequent marriage to Bob. Her ďŹ rst son, Tom, was born in March 1945 and was followed in short order by Dave in 1946 and little Jimmy in 1948. She had great friends in Sandusky, Ohio, where she and Bob started raising their family. Louise enjoyed time with the extended family including her sister, Stella and her husband Bill, who amazingly was Bobâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s brother. She especially enjoyed visits to the beach at Cedar Point and ďŹ shing for perch in Lake Erie. She was very proud of always catching the most ďŹ sh. In 1954 Louise and Bob moved with their family to Prairie Village, KS. With her quiet faith, abounding love and the help of Bob she was able to raise all three sons to be successful in their chosen careers. Family was the center of her life and she was blessed with 65 years of marriage to Bob. Family get-togethers always
included great food. Her grandchildren were especially fond of her macaroni and cheese, perch ďŹ sh fry dinners, homemade noodles and desserts too numerous to mention. Louise is survived by her three sons, Tom Harbrecht and his wife, Jill, of Del Mar, CA, Dr. David Harbrecht of Las Vegas, NV, and Dr. Jim Harbrecht and his wife, Marilyn, of Prairie Village, KS; seven grandchildren; and seven great-grandsons. She was preceded in death by her husband, Bob; granddaughter, Amy; and sister, Stella. A celebration of Louiseâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Life Service was held on Sunday, August 24, 2014, at 1 p.m. at Hope United Methodist Church, 16550 Bernardo Heights Parkway, Rancho Bernardo in San Diego, (858) 485-5840, with a reception following at the church. In lieu of ďŹ&#x201A;owers, the family suggests contributions to The Elizabeth Hospice, 500 La Terraza Blvd., Ste. #130, Escondido, CA 92025, (800) 797-2050. Please sign the guest book online at www. legacy.com/obituaries/ pomeradonews.
Mary Ann was preceded in death by her parents, Theodore â&#x20AC;&#x153;Tonyâ&#x20AC;? and Annie Achimasi; husband, Robert; and brother, Ronald. She is survived by her brother, Theodore (Dorothy) Achimasi of Tallmadge, Ohio; sisterin-law, Mitsuko Achimasi of Japan; along with nephews, niece, and great nephews. A Memorial Service will be held Wednesday, September 3, 2014, at Mt. Olive Lutheran Church in Poway. Interment will be at Fort Rosecrans National Cemetery. Memorial Donations can be made to Mt. Olive Lutheran Church or the Humane Society. Please sign the guest book online at www. legacy.com/obituaries/ pomeradonews.
Elmer John Palmer 1927 - 2014 Mr. Palmer, 87, of San Diego, passed away August 18, 2014. Services will be held September 3, 2014, at 12:30pm at Miramar National Cemetery.
Joan Harriet Ossip 1932 - 2014
Mary Ann Waller 1935 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 2014 Mary Ann passed away peacefully at home on July 28, 2014. She was born on June 4, 1935, in Akron, Ohio.
Mrs. Ossip, 82, of Poway, passed away August 8, 2014. Services will be held September 7, 2014, at 1:30pm at Congregation Beth Israel in San Diego.
Patrick Bryan Gee Jr. 1955 - 2014 Mr. Gee, 59, of Escondido, passed away August 6, 2014. No services are planned.
Charles George Kohles 1928 - 2014 Mr. Kohles, 86, of Escondido, passed away July 23, 2014. No services are planned.
Elena Marcene Mitchell 1946 - 2014 Ms. Mitchell, 67, of Escondido, passed away July 15, 2014. No services are planned.
Robert Lee Simmons 1932 - 2014 Mr. Simmons, 81, of Encinitas, passed away July 30, 2014. No services are planned.
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William Hawkins, 82, of San Diego, went to Heaven on February 5, 2014. Bill was born on February 13, 1931, in Olympia, Washington, to Lee Rothwell Hawkins and Luella Victoria Thomas. He married his beautiful wife, Jeanette Gloria Rose (RIP 3/18/2013), on October 4, 1952. Bill was full of life. Everyone knew that he loved his Navy, he loved his wife and he loved being a grandparent. He was happy traveling all over the world with Jeanette or visiting family throughout the entire United States. He enjoyed and welcomed all family and friends into his home. Bill kept an amazing attitude when he lost his sight to glaucoma. He enrolled in the San Diego Center for the Blind. After graduating, he volunteered teaching Braille to other blind students. The blind school ended up being a big part of his life during his later years. Bill is survived by his daughter, Sherry McDonald; son, William Hawkins Jr.; and daughters, Vickie Brewington and Debra Anderson. He was blessed with eight grandchildren, Jill, Mercedie, Christopher (RIP 2006), Heather, Billy
(RIP 2006), Kyle, Tiffany and Rikki; seven greatgrandchildren; one greatgreat- granddaughter; and sister, Truda Miller. We will celebrate Billâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s life and rejoin him with his beloved wife, Jeanette, on Friday, September 5, 2014, at 1:00 pm. Bill devoted 26 years to the Navy and he will be laid to rest with full military honors at Fort Rosecrans National Cemetery. In lieu of ďŹ&#x201A;owers, contributions in his name to the San Diego Center for the Blind would be welcomed, www.sdcb.org. Please sign the guest book online at www. legacy.com/obituaries/ pomradonews.
THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 2014
OBITUARIES
CALENDAR
SERVICE CLUBS
CONTINUED FROM PAGE B8
Learn Modern
HADASSAH RESUMES — The Aviva Chapter of Hadassah will focus on landmarks of Brooklyn, N.Y. during its opening meeting at 1 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 16 in Seacrest Village, 12730 Monte Vista Road in Poway. Cost: $15. To RSVP, mail check to Rose Greenberg, 17556 Bocage Point, San Diego, CA 92128. Call 858487-5882 for details.
Meets at noon for lunch three Thursdays a month and for dinner the second Thursday at the Bernardo Heights Country Club. Cost: $17. For details, call Sandie Dewane at 858-4421059 or go to www.rbrotary.org. Upcoming speakers: Aug. 28 — Bert Upson, who was at World Trade Center on 9/11, will talk about his book, “On a Clear Day: An Eyewitness Account." Sept. 4 — Docent from San Diego Museum of Art, who will give a preview on what’s coming. Sept. 11 — Judy Joyce-Cohen, owner of Lexus of Escondido, Lexus of Carlsbad and Toyota of Carlsbad, who will talk about what it is like to be a woman owner/executive in a man’s world. RSPV required, send to dglov@san.rr.com.
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GARDEN TALK — Poway Valley Garden Club will meet at 10 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 10 at Templars Hall in Old Poway Park, 14134 Midland Road. Cindy Davison of the “Succulent Perch” will demonstrate how to make interesting container arrangements using the jew-
TUESDAYSEPT. 16
Rotary Club of Rancho Bernardo
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WEDNESDAYSEPT. 10
TRAVEL FILM — Clint Denn will screen his film “Cruising France” at a meeting of the RB Travelers set for 1:30 p.m. Friday, Sept. 12 at the Seven Oaks Community Center, 16789 Bernardo Oaks Drive, Rancho Bernardo. Guests 18 years and older are welcome. Call 858-943-1309 for information.
Meets at 7:15 a.m. Tuesdays at the Country Club of Rancho Bernardo, 12280 Greens East Road, Rancho Bernardo. Full breakfast is $18. For meeting details or membership information, call Mary Stanton at 858-521-0566 or go to www. rbsunrise.org. Upcoming programs: Sept. 2 – Jaqueline Aranda with Fresh Start Surgical Gifts. Sept. 9 – Kim Muslusky on the “Thousand Smiles Project” Sept. 16 – Fary Moini will speak about projects in Afghanastan. Sept. 23 – Vince Mudd, chairman of the San Diego Olympic Commission.
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SUNDAYSEPT. 7
FALL FASHIONS — The Rancho Bernardo Chapter of Brandeis National Committee will open its 2014-15 year with a fashion show featuring the latest in fall attire at Chico’s. The luncheon will begin at 11:30 a.m. Tuesday, Sept. 9 at Hibachi Buffet, 16785 Bernardo Center Drive in Rancho Bernardo. Cost: 20. RSVP with Lynne at 858-487-3513.
FRIDAYSEPT. 12
Rancho Bernardo Sunrise Rotary
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GOLF FUNDRAISER - The GC2 Church is sponsoring a best ball charity golf tournament starting at 7:30 a.m. on Saturday, Sept. 6 at Carmel Highlands Resort. Proceeds to benefit La Masetra Heath Centers and Tribes 4 Christ. Fee: $80, including lunch. Call Casey Teng at 626-318-6913.
TUESDAYSEPT. 9
els of nature. For details, go to www. powayvalleygardenclub.org or call 858204-9070.
F
FREE MOVIE — “The Nut Job” will be shown at dusk on Saturday, Sept. 6 at Patriot Park, 10502 Paseo de Linda in 4S Ranch. The animated film is rated PG.
meeting of the school year will begin at 4 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 7 in Old Poway Park, near the fields at Aubrey Park. Pizza and soda will be served. New officers will be installed. Contact Deb Katz at debkatz.poway4H@gmail.com.
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FREE COOKING LESSONS — Learn how to make simple meals from scratch from 12:30 to 1:30 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 6 when cooking instructor Hayko Inukai Pattison presents a series of free classes at the Carmel Mountain Ranch Library, 12095 World Trade Drive. The classes are for ages 16 through adult. Future sessions will be on Oct. 4, Nov. 1 and Dec. 6. Call 858-538-8181.
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B11 THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 2014
HEALTH EDUCATION CLASSES SEPTEMBER 2014
FREE YOUR KNEES Tuesday, September 30 6 – 7:30 p.m. Pomerado Hospital 15615 Pomerado Road Poway, CA 92064 Your knees are the workhorses of weight-bearing joints, and wear out over time due to osteoarthritis or injury. Join Orthopedic Surgeon Philip Balikian, M.D., as he discusses the latest advances in treatment, including minimally invasive partial and total knee replacement so your knees can be free of pain again.
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Take Shape for Life Thursday, September 4 6 – 7:30 p.m. Palomar Health Downtown Campus Tuesday, September 9 6 – 7:30 p.m. Pomerado Outpatient Pavilion Infant Massage Mondays, September 10 – October 8 1 – 2:30 p.m. Pomerado Outpatient Pavilion
Preparation for Childbirth* Wednesdays, September 17– October 15 6:30 – 9 p.m. Pomerado Outpatient Pavilion
Healthy Habits for a Healthier Life Monday, September 29 6 – 7:30 p.m. Pomerado Outpatient Pavilion Nutrition for Kidney Disease Tuesday, September 30 10 a.m – Noon Pomerado Outpatient Pavilion
Treating PMS Naturally Thursday, September 25 6 – 7:30 p.m. Pomerado Outpatient Pavilion
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Secrets to Happiness Thursdays, September 11 & 18 6 – 7:30 p.m. Pomerado Outpatient Pavilion
Successful Breastfeeding* Monday, September 15 6:30 – 9 p.m. Palomar Health Downtown Campus
THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 2014
B12
VACATION PHOTOS Going on vacation? Have your photo taken while holding a copy of the Poway News Chieftain or Rancho Bernardo News Journal. Mail to Vacation Photos, 14023 Midland Road, Poway, CA 92064 or send an email, with the high-resolution digital photo attached, to editor@pomeradonews.com. Photos and caption information will appear in our newspapers and on our web site.
Josh and Serena Seay of Poway celebrating their third wedding anniversary in Manhattan, New York.
Discover Discover
Members of Pomerado Christian Church traveled to Hippo Valley Christian Mission in Chiredzi, Zimbabwe. Pictured are, from lef, Dennis Riley, Penny Riley, Pastor Cephas Zivnai, Linda Ballard, Marjorie Mugave, Laura Ortega-Rivera, Diane Kurtock, Cynthia Williams, Mr. Habit, Marel Sterling, Pastor Alone Gudyanga and Gayle Rubacky. The group had just finished painting the church.
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Poway resident Anita Lawson with children Richard and Joelle and friends from Indonesia and Kenya visiting the zoo in Yangoon, Myanmar.
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THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 2014
B14
Opinion EDITORIAL
LOCAL LEADERS
PUSD board should go slow on bond plan
POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP
P
oway Unified School District board members would be wise to take all the time necessary to carefully review the pros and cons of a private proposal intended to reduce some of the district’s billion dollar capital appreciation bond debt. With three of the five seats on the board up for election on Nov. 4, there is no compelling reason, in our view, to rush to judgement on the proposal prior to the election. There are eight candidates, including incumbents Todd Gutschow and Marc Davis, running for the three seats. Conceivably, the two incumbents could be defeated, resulting in a new board majority taking office in December. Common sense dictates that a decision as significant as refinancing some of the CABs should be made by board members who will be around for a few years, rather than by today’s board, which includes one retiring member and two who appear to be in political purgatory at the moment. We have no objection to continued public discussion of the plan providing the six challenging candidates are provided full access to those discussions. The Dale Scott/Barkleys Bank proposal discussed at the two most recent board meetings would include increasing non-Mello Roos property taxes above the voterauthorized $55 per $1,000 of assessed valuation. By how much would depend on what percentage of the CABs would be bought back by the district with money borrowed from the bank. In one scenario discussed on Aug. 19, property taxes would increase by $7.55 per $100,000 over 24 years but the district would save $132 million over the next 37 years. The rate could be increased by the county assessor-tax collection without a public vote. The specter of a property tax hike, no matter what size, without a public vote has some district taxpayers (and several board candidates) upset. To them, hiking the tax rate breaks a promise made by the district when it placed Proposition C on the 2008 ballot. We see their point, but must caution that the next opportunity to place the question on the ballot (without the expense of a special election) would be June of 2016. Who knows what the bond market will be like then? What makes sense to us is to postpone a vote on the Dale Scott/Barkleys Bank proposal until early next year. The post-November board would be encouraged to fully investigate the proposal, plus any possible other options, before making an informed decision. If that decision includes a property tax hike, then so be it.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Can we handle the truth? I think columnist Dick Lyles (Aug. 21) has really put his finger on the source of much that ails American culture, but I think it’s worse. The moral relativism, even agnosticism that we cannot apprehend the truth, puts us in a position where we cannot say what is good and we don’t even have a basis of fact to start the discussion from. If one opinion is as good as the next, then none of them can be right. Its logical conclusion is nihilism. Where I disagree with Mr. L yles is blaming it on higher education. By the time you get to college, you should be ready to deal with questions about what is true and how do we know it. Grade school education, however, should be supplying our children with a basic set of knowledge and the principles to use it. The educational elite that is responsible for training our teachers too often has advanced a philosophy of moral and even factual relativism that has become nearly institutionalized. They have attempted to force their own views on childhood education instead of fostering what is in the best interest of the country as a whole. I don’t know what they stand for, if anything.
Maybe we can’t handle the truth anymore. If that’s the case, then America is surely out of luck. GREGORY WEST Poway
Likes column, but ... I share columnist Barry Cronin’s worries (Aug. 14) about the possibility of being dragged into a terrible war like World War I. His example undermines his last part of his article however. World War I was started by belligerent empires who couldn’t keep their hands off their neighbors, not by superpowers who weren’t “comfortable in their own skins.” As he points out, several of those empires who felt comfortable being meddling superpowers no longer exist.
JOE SHEA Poway
Voters must OK increase No matter what capital appreciation bond (CAB) restructuring plan is considered by the Poway school board, any property tax increase must have voter approval. Seeking “feedback” from those who are SEE LETTERS, Page B20
Rancho Bernardo Community Council: Robin Kaufman, president. Meets at 6:30 p.m. the fourth Thursday of each month from January to October and first Thursday in December in Rancho Bernardo Library’s second floor community room, 17110 Bernardo Center Drive. Mailing address: 12463 Rancho Bernardo Road, #523, San Diego, CA 92198. Phone: 858487-6227. Rancho Bernardo Community Planning Board: Lou Dell’Angela. chairman. Meets at 7 p.m. the third Thursday of each month in the Club 21 room at RB Swim & Tennis Club, 16955 Bernardo Oaks Drive. Mailing address: P.O. Box 270831, San Diego, CA 92198. Phone: 858-776-8110. Rancho Bernardo Recreation Council: Sally Grigoriev, president. Meets at 7 p.m. the first Wednesday of each month at the Rancho Bernardo-Glassman Recreation Center, 18448 W. Bernardo Drive. Phone: 858-5388129. Poway Unified School District: John Collins, superintendent. Andy Patapow, Penny Ranftle, Todd Gutschow, Marc Davis and Kimberley Beatty. Mailing address: 15250 Avenue of Science, San Diego, CA 921283406. Phone: 858-521-2800. State Assemblymember: Brian Maienschein, 77th District; State Capitol Building, Sacramento, CA 95814. Phone: 916-319-2077. District office: 12396 World Trade Drive, Suite 118, San Diego, CA 92128. Phone: 858-6750077. Email: assemblymember.maienschein@assembly. ca.gov
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14023 Midland Road Poway, CA 92064 Phone: 858-748-2311 Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8 a.m.-5 p.m.
www.pomeradonews.com facebook.com/ Pomeradonews Follow us @Pomeradonews The News Journal and the News Chieftain (USPS 440760) are published each Thursday by U-T Community Press. Adjudicated as newspapers of general circulation by Superior Court No. 226549, February 23, 1962. Subscriptions are available at $27 per year by carrier within the 92127, 92128 and 92064 ZIP areas and $125 per year by mail. Call above number for rates outside area. Send address changes to above address. Copyright © 2014 U-T Community Press. All rights reserved. No part of the contents of this publication may be reproduced in any medium, including print and electronic media, without the express written consent of U-T Community Press.
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P
erhaps you remember ACT 10 in Wisconsin, but if you don’t I’ll just bet you remember the thousands of teachers who in 2011 occupied the Wisconsin state capitol, and the horde of Democrat legislators who fled across the border to a neighboring state to keep the legislature from having a quorum to pass ACT 10. ACT 10 was a bill, offered by newly elected (and embattled) Governor Scott Walker, that would make union dues no longer automatically collected by the state, and make unions hold annual elections for re-certification. Unions hate to have to re-certification annually. In a liberal state, or at least in the liberal capitol of the state where the University of Wisconsin, Madison, holds power, these anti-union actions were not just vehemently, but violently, fought. Eventually, the legislators returned from their motel room exile, the ACT 10 bill passed, and the subject moved to the courts, led by Madison Teachers, Inc. (The lawsuit was originally brought by Madison Teachers Inc. and Public Employees Local 61, AFL-CIO.) Initially, the challenge to ACT 10 was upheld by a district judge. Last month ACT 10 was been completely upheld by the Wisconsin state Supreme Court by a 5-2 decision, and a liberal
Allen Polk Hemphill TAKING THE POINT POSITION judge wrote the decision. It is a great day in America, or at least in Wisconsin. Freedom! Perhaps eventually in all of America. The union grip has been loosened in Wisconsin. Michigan and Indiana have recently joined the ranks of Right to Work states, and Ohio is making the effort. All the laws in these states are obviously under continuing legal attacks by union forces. The teachers and other individuals forced to join a union in Wisconsin had not been waiting for the final decision by their State’s Supreme Court. The Kenosha Education Association didn’t even file a report for decertification, thereby effectively decertifying itself. The Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel reported in 2013 that tens of thousands of teachers had left the union, and Reuters reported that about 13 percent of the various local unions had actively voted to decertify their union altogether. The
question is, will this ruling have a precedence, not legally, but will it energize other states to take similar actions to try to control the currently out-of-control public unions? You may recall that no less a progressive than Franklin D. Roosevelt warned against public unions. He said, “All government employees should realize that the process of collective bargaining, as usually understood, cannot be transplanted into the public service, it has its distinct and insurmountable limitations when applied to public personnel management. “The very nature and purposes of government make it impossible for administrative officials to represent fully or to bind the employer in mutual discussions with government employee organizations.” “The employer,” Roosevelt’s letter added, “is the whole people, who speak by means of laws enacted by their representatives in Congress. Accordingly, administrative officials and employees alike are governed and guided, and in many instances restricted, by laws which establish policies, procedures, or rules in personnel matters.” It’s time to resurrect the thoughts of FDR – at least in this case. We have gone far past his progressivism.
Helping teens with eating disorders
I
n my career I’ve work in just about every level of substance abuse treatment - yearlong residential programs, short-term threeday detox, large group practices to starting a private practice alone. I have also consulted with acute psychiatric hospitals who deal with severe mental illness on numerous other startup programs. I’ve sat in groups where not a single person knew I was in the room to groups of high functioning businessmen listening to every word I said. In my opinion, the hardest and most highrisk clients are those suffering with eating disorders. I’ll choose facilitating a group full of pill-popping, weed-loving tweekers and junkies over eating disorder clients any day. In the last year a few therapists in the community have asked me to team up and start an eating disorder outpatient program. My response is always the same. Eating disorders are a specific treatment issue that I don’t work with and are out of my scope of practice. There are specialists in each field that make it their sole career to work with and treat specific disorders. Not having worked in that field, I wanted to understand more about what quality eating disorder (ED) treatment looked like. I’ve spent hours on the phone with different programs and have emailed and visited many locations and providers. Since I’m primarily
Will Wooton THE STRAGHT DOPE working with teens and young adults, that is the population I focused on. To my knowledge there is one program for adolescents in San Diego that has a residential ED program, The Center for Discovery in La Jolla. I met with Jennifer Tarzia (their clinical outreach representative) who gave me a tour and introduced me to the staff. I found Jennifer and the staff to be extremely professional and knowledgeable about ED treatment. I often meet with outreach personnel from residential programs across the country and this was one of the few times I wasn’t being sold on why I should refer clients to them. They let their program speak for itself and I was impressed with the care that was provided each client. Jennifer connected me with Juli Agajanian, who has worked with Center For Discovery for seven years and is the regional director for their Eating Disorder division. I asked Juli directly what key components are
important for a good ED program? She replied, “At Center for Discovery, we feel that a good eating disorder (ED) program is comprised of a handful of essential aspects. Most importantly it is a strong dietary program that meets the clients at whichever level they are starting and challenges them throughout treatment in a nurturing way. It also needs to be staffed by clinicians who have a good understanding of the typical underlying triggers to EDs. A good ED program has a structure, which all clinicians use, that emphasizes not only the importance of identifying the root of the ED, but also finding ways to help clients get their needs met in healthier ways.” The keys to good treatment are similar in substance abuse and ED treatment programs but the approach is different. For long-term change to happen there must be a shift in the patient’s outlook and by extension behaviors. I could write a book about the reasons that adolescents are at higher rates turning to drug/ eating issues. The key is finding the best treatment options you can. There are many good substance abuse options but there are very few quality ED programs. I encourage anyone looking for ED help to visit centerfordiscoverysandiego.com or contact Jennifer Tarzia at jennifer. tarzia@centerfordiscovery.com.
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Loosening the grip of the labor unions
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Entertainment Poway artist will hold first exhibit at Café Lily BY EMILY SORENSEN For Poway resident Samantha Tutone, a chance stop for a cup of coffee has led to her first art exhibit. Tutone, who graduated from Rancho Bernardo High School in 2008, will be holding her first art exhibit from Tuesday, Sept. 2 to Oct. 1 at Café Lily in Poway. Tutone will have 11 pieces on display at the café. “It’s my first solo exhibition,” said Tutone. “I’m really excited for it.” Tutone grew up in Poway and attended the University of Delaware, where she majored in art history and art conservation. After graduating in 2012, she returned to Poway and worked at an Aaron Brothers, doing framing. Now, she’s an administrative assistant and web master for the Athenaeum Music
“Lilies,” one of Tutone’s paintings.
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Samantha Tutone and Arts Library in La Jolla. “It’s very interesting (working for Athenaeum),” said Tutone. “Everyone there is so creative.” Tutone said she’s been making art for as long as she can remember. “My mom put me into drawing classes when
I was a child,” she said. “I honestly can’t remember when I didn’t draw and paint. I was one of those kids who drew in every margin.” Tutone has worked in most mediums of art, including sewing, sculpture and costume design, but her main focus is drawing and painting. “I’ve dabbled in everything, but drawing and painting is my passion,” she said. “I like to paint realistically.” Her exhibition at Café Lily was almost entirely due to chance, said Tutone. “Mom and I go to the Farmer’s Market (on Midland Road) every Saturday and I’d noticed Café Lily in the past,” said Tutone. “But when I tried to go it was right after that car hit it and it was closed.” Recently, Tutone and her mother decided to stop into the café and get a cup SEE TUTONE, Page B19
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MUSIC
THEATER
San Diego blues and jazz musician Robin Henkel will perform a free concert from 6 to 9 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 6 at the Rancho Bernardo Inn, 17550 Bernardo Oaks Drive. For information, call 855-574-5356.
PowPAC, Powayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Community Theatre, presents the English thriller â&#x20AC;&#x153;Corpse!â&#x20AC;? opening Friday, Sept. 12 and running through Sunday, Oct. 12 at 13250 Poway Road. Tickets are $20 general admission, $17 students, seniors and active military. There is a $2 surcharge for opening night tickets. Tickets are available online at www.powpac.org.
Suzanne Harper will perform an acoustic concert from 2 to 3 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 13 at the Poway Library, 13137 Poway Road. This concert is free and open to the public. For information, call 858-513-2900.
DANCE The Poway Dance Project is hosting a fall dance clinic at 3 p.m. Friday, Sept. 12 in the Poway High Dance room at Poway High School, 15500 Espola Road. Participants will learn a routine and perform with the PHS dance team at the varsity football game at 7 p.m. that same day. Cost is $40, $30 for additional siblings, and includes dinner and a t-shirt. For information, contact rquinn@sandiego.edu or tammytrust@gmail.com, or visit powayhsdanceteam.wix. com/powaydance. The Black Mountain Dance Centre presents â&#x20AC;&#x153;Tales from Beatrix Potterâ&#x20AC;? 7 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 6 at the Poway Center for the Performing Arts, 15498 Espola Road. Tickets range from $11 to $15 and are available at www. powaycenter.com.
Welk Resorts Theater presents the musical â&#x20AC;&#x153;Oklahoma!â&#x20AC;? running through Sunday, Nov. 16 at 8860 Lawrence Welk Drive in Escondido. Show times are 1 p.m. Wednesday, Thursday and Sunday and 8 p.m. Thursday and Sunday. Tickets start at $45, add $18 for a pre-show buffet or $21 for Sunday brunch. For tickets and information call 888802-7469 or visit www.welkresorts.com.
THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 2014
ENTERTAINMENT CALENDAR
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ART The NCSFA is holding a bus trip to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art Saturday, Sept. 13. Departure times are 8:30 a.m. from the Poway Target and 9 a.m. from the Escondido Vons. The bus will return at 7 p.m. Cost is $75 which includes bus trip, driverâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s tip, admission to LACMA and the van Gogh to Kandinsky exhibit, bottled water, refreshments, research paper and viewing of the DVD. Reservations are made by mailing check made out to NCSFA to: NCSFA, POB #291, Poway CA 92074, attn. trips. For more details, go to ncsfa.org or call 858-748-0535.
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Welk's 'Oklahoma!' is definitely more than 'OK' BY ELIZABETH MARIE HIMCHAK Oh what a beautiful musical has arrived at the Welk Resorts Theatre with Rodgers and Hammerstein’s Pulitzer Prize-winning “Oklahoma!”. The Welk’s delightfully sweet and charming rendition can be seen in Escondido through Nov. 16. It provides a lovely, entertaining escape from present-day reality and the entire family can enjoy it. “Oklahoma!” focuses on the budding romance of farm girl Laurey Williams REVIEW (Rancho Bernardo High School graduate Kailey O’Donnell) and cowboy Curly McLain (Allen Everman) in 1906 as the Oklahoma Territory is on the cusp of statehood. Threatening their young love and happy future is Jud Fry (Will Huse), a farm hand for Laurey’s Aunt Eller (Robin Lavalley). It becomes quickly obvious that Jud is a mean, brooding man who likely murdered a farm family when the daughter refused his advances a few years earlier. Providing a comical take on romance is another couple — cowboy Will Parker (Andrew J. Koslow) and his flirtacious girlfriend, Ado Annie (Sydney Blair), who has difficulty staying faithful to Will when any other man is around and Will is absent. Will’s latest competition is the Persian peddler, Ali
The cast of “Oklahoma!” performing at the Welk Resorts Theatre through Nov. 16. Photo by Ken Jacques Hakim (Ariel Neydavoud), who is the love ‘em and leave ‘em type. Welk’s version directed and choreographed Dan Mojica is energetic and fresh despite the musical debuting on Broadway in 1943 and being historically set almost 40 years earlier — more than a century ago for today’s audience. The talented cast fully embraced the show and Mojica’s staging of the bal-
let to illustrate Laurey’s dream was enjoyable. While the 1955 movie version’s dream ballet can seem slightly out of place and excessively long to some, Mojica has given it a clear storyline that starts with Laurey’s idyllic dreams that turn into a nightmare — one that foreshadows the deadly confrontation between Jud and Curly in Act II. The ballet also works because of the talents of San Diego Ballet soloist Arielle Meads, making her debut at the Welk as Dream Laurey, and the rest of the cast that dances alongside her. The cast also does an outstanding job in the other ensemble dance numbers, notably the energetic “Kansas City,” which has Will Parker describing to Aunt Eller and the other cowboys the modern conveniences he saw when he traveled to the big city, and the box social’s dance number, “The Farmer and the Cowman,” that serves to explains the tension created as the open prairie was increasingly settled by farmers. O’Donnell — an 2012 RBHS graduate — is delightful as the plucky Laurey and does a wonderful job in the duet “People Will Say We’re In Love” that she sings with Curly. Longtime Welk veteran Everman quickly shows he is suited to his part when his rich voice is on full display during the opening solo, “Oh What a Beautiful Mornin’” as he arrives at the farm to ask Laurey to be his date to the social. Everman and Huse maintain their serious composure during the funny number “Pore Jud Is Daid” — in which Curly SEE OKLAHOMA, Page B19
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Dine Locally! Welcome to Rancho Bernardo’s new Thai restaurant located in the Rancho Bernardo area. Charm Thai Kitchen has great food selections in their menu, such as Pad Thai, Spicy Noodles, Thai Basil wok, or Thai coconut curries. Charm Thai Kitchen is a family business and this is why our special family touch will make you feel at home here. We have great local micro-brewing beer on tap, like Karl Strauss Red Trolley, Stone IPA, Pizza port, Ballast Point Sculpin, and for the first time in San Diego, Thai Singha beer on tap. Lunch specials are available Monday through Friday from 11 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Charm Thai Kitchen is open from 11:00 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. every day. We are located in Westwood Shopping Center, 11627 Duenda Road, San Diego, CA 92127. We also have a dog (or cat!) friendly patio, and plenty of parking. We also welcome big parties (limit of 24 maximum). Please call ahead for reserving tables. We accept all types of credit cards. Our menu also available online at www.charmthaisd.com, and please follow us on Facebook for some promotions at www.facebook.com/charmthaisd or our website www.charmthaisd.com . Bring in the ad you see for a Free Appetizer! For take-out orders. call 858-798-5126. Thank you very much from your “neighborhood kitchen, Charm Thai Kitchen.”
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OKLAHOMA
CONTINUED FROM PAGE B16
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of coffee while shopping. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I went in and it was the cutest place ever,â&#x20AC;? she said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I noticed there was art on the walls and I asked if they displayed local art. They said yes and asked if I was a local artist.â&#x20AC;? Tutone found out CafĂŠ Lily had an opening to display art in September and suddenly she had her first solo exhibition. Her exhibition will feature 11 of her pieces, five paintings and six pen-and-ink drawings. The drawings are architectural drawings of famous London and Venice monuments.
Most of her pieces will also be for sale, though two are on loan from a private collector for the exhibition. Rather than hold a formal reception, Tutone will instead be holding a sort of informal gathering at 1 p.m. on Sunday, Sept. 14, where sheâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll be available for conversation, lunch and puzzles. CafĂŠ Lily is at 14045 Midland Road in Poway, in Old Poway Village. It is open 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday and 9:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday, closed Monday.
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tries to convince Jud to commit suicide. Huse is perfect as the brooding villain, whose deep, rich voice is showcased in his emotional and dramatic â&#x20AC;&#x153;Lonely Roomâ&#x20AC;? â&#x20AC;&#x201D; a solo omitted from the movie. That soberness is aptly contrasted with the comical performance in â&#x20AC;&#x153;All Er Nuthinâ&#x20AC;? by Koslow and Blair,
who successfully capture the essences of Will and Ado Annie. Blair is especially delightful when performing with the funny Neydavoud, whose comedic timing is impeccable while trying to get himself out of numerous romantic entanglements. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Oklahoma!â&#x20AC;? can be seen at 1 p.m. on Wednesdays, Thursdays and Sundays, plus
8 p.m. on Thursdays and Saturdays through Nov. 16 at the Welk Resorts Theatre, 8860 Lawrence Welk Drive in Escondido. Tickets start at $45, with an optional pre-show buffet and Sunday brunch available before some performances. To purchase, call 888-8027469 or go to www.welkresorts.com.
THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 2014
TUTONE
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LETTERS CONTINUED FROM PAGE B14
10749 Ballystock Ct., Scripps Ranch Upgrades Galore! 4BR/2.5BA, 1,876 sq. ft. Newer gas filled dual pane windows make a HUGE difference! UV protection keeps house much cooler and prevents fading of furnishings & sound proofs/insulates. Vaulted ceilings. Kitchen features Viking stainless appliances, cherry cabinet refacing, auto closers, and Caesarstone (quartz) countertops. 4th BR used as ofc, built-in stays. Newer garage doors on 2-car attached garage, water heater, furnace and A/C.
able to attend a meeting is not equivalent to a ballot item that is fully and completely explained. Disclosure must include all the proposed fees being provided to finance the plan, the date of the beginning of the tax increase, and the date of the end of the increase. Through evaluation of a plan and submission to the voters is imperative after the November 2014 election.
BABS TOCHO Poway
Offered at $649,000-$699,000
Hike taxes to pay off bonds
Nancy Canfield 619.871.9333 ncanf@san.rr.com www.NancyCanfield.com CA BRE Lic #01386677
I am proposing we should start collecting new taxes in 2016 (I propose 2016 because of potential legal battles and a ballot measure will be required) to raise enough money to pay off 2011 Series B CAB in either the original 20/40 years depending on the restrictions in the original bond measure, it will be the least costly way for the community. At the end of the day the money collected the first 16/36 years (my calculation is based on implementing it in 2016 for either
16/36 years) will sit untouched earning interest at 5 percent until year 2032 when repayment must begin. Assuming to earn 5 percent interest for 16/36 years is very conservative; as we should be able to negotiate higher rates each year depending on the then Fed rate. The end result for the 16-year plan is total tax collected would be approximately $279 million with interest earned at 5 percent of approximately $159 million. The end result for the 36-year plan is total tax collected would be approximately $342 million with interest earned at 5 percent of approximately $639 million. I would not be surprised if there are legal barriers to this type of solution, but if the goal is to minimize the constituent’s taxation the appropriate steps to remove these barriers, if only for this specific situation, must be done. Sometimes the most difficult solution to implement is the best solution. It seems to me that taking the easiest way is what got us into this situation.
THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 2014
HOME OF THE WEEK
STEVEN BEAVER Poway
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Windermere Homes & Estates welcomes Candace Poucher Poway resident Candace Poucher has joined the Rancho Bernardo of fice of Windermere Homes & Estates. Poucher has been a licensed Realtor since 2003. Immediately after starting her real estate career she was invited to sit on several committees at the East San Diego County Association of Realtors. She was later named as a director at the state level with the California Association of Realtors. She was also not only an agent and served on several committees, but she was also the office manager of
CANDACE POUCHER
NORTH N ORTH IINLAND NLAND HOMES HOMES
her then brokerage. In 2007 Candace branched out and opened a restaurant with her former husband, Oggis Pizza & Brewing Co. in Liberty Station. Although she loved the restaurant industr y, her true calling has always been real estate. Also in 2007, Poucher's house in Poway burned down due to the wildfires. She took some necessary time off from real estate to regroup, returning two years later. In 2011 she left her brokerage and hung her license with another out of
area company while looking for the perfect office to call home. After a few years she insists, “I really felt the need to have a brand I can be proud of and be back in
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ters, Taylor who is 23 and Katelyn who is 18, both of whom graduated from Poway High. She lives in Poway with her husband Matthew.
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an office environment with good energy and that is why, after considering my options, I decided on Windermere Homes & Estates.” Poucher has two daugh-
THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 2014
Homes
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Evidence suggests link between exercise, reduced risk of cancers egular exercise improves health in ways most of us already know. It helps control weight, maintain strong bones, muscles and joints, reduce the risk of heart disease, diabetes and premature death. Exercise quite literally makes us feel better, physically and mentally. There is strong evidence that physical activity is associated with reduced risk of some cancers, such as colon and breast. Studies have also linked regular exercise to reduced risk of uterine, lung and prostate cancers. But having cancer doesn’t change the equation. Indeed, for patients diagnosed and treated for cancer, a life of regular physical activity can become even more critical to having a life with quality. Physical activity is a critical component of energy balance, a term researchers use to describe how weight, diet and physical activity influence health. Indeed, researchers at Moores Cancer Center are currently conducting a pair of studies to assess the effects of healthy diets and exercise programs on women at risk of breast cancer and breast cancer survivors. You can find more information at http://cancer.ucsd.edu/care-centers/ breast/Pages/breast-cancer-study.aspx. In a seminal series of papers published
R
Dr. Scott M. Lippman FRONTLINE: CANCER in 2012 in the journal Lancet, scientists from multiple institutions, including the UC San Diego, concluded that physical activity could explain more than 5 million deaths worldwide each year – a number comparable to mortality figures associated with smoking. “A surprising finding was that inactivity explains 10 percent of deaths from both breast cancer and prostate cancer,” said Jim Sallis, Ph.D., Distinguished Professor of Family and Preventive Medicine and director of the Active Living Research program at UC San Diego. “Thus physical inactivity is a major contributor to common cancers of men and women.” Regular exercise prevents obesity, which increases a person’s risk of a host of different cancers. It helps reduce inflammation, also linked to cancer, while boosting the body’s immune system func-
tion, which helps prevent cancer. How much exercise do you need? The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention broadly recommends adults engage in “moderate-intensity physical activity for at least 150 minutes per week” (about 30 minutes per day) or “vigorous-intensity” exercise for at least 75 minutes per week. The former is defined as activities like walking briskly, dancing or riding a bike on flat terrain. The latter refers to stuff like race-walking, high-impact aerobics, robustly climbing stairs or participating in fast-moving sports like basketball or soccer. The best time to begin a lifelong anticancer exercise program is today, right now. Once you’ve been diagnosed with cancer, the best time is today, right now. Often, patients become sedentary after a cancer diagnosis and treatment. They’re going through or have been through a lot. It might seem too much to launch into an exercise regimen. People tend to slow down. Don’t. As contrary as it may seem, physical activity is the most effective long-term solution to fatigue, a common characteristic of cancer and its treatment. How and how much you exercise while undergoing
cancer treatment depends upon you, your condition, treatment protocols and your doctor. You may need to take special care to monitor issues like blood counts, hydration or new or unexplained symptoms. Exercise for some cancer patients can carry a slightly higher risk for heart problems. You’ll likely need to adjust your intensity – at least at first. You’ll have to adapt. For example, older cancer patients with impacted bones or problems like arthritis or peripheral neuropathy (numbness in hands or feet) should only do exercises with minimal risk of falling or injury. Patients undergoing radiation should not expose treated skin to excessive sunlight or chlorine in swimming pools. Regular exercise boosts cancer survivorship. One study, for example, found that women diagnosed with breast cancer who exercised moderately (the equivalent of walking three to five hours per week at an average pace) had better survival rates than comparable sedentary patients. Physical activity has also been shown to help patients cope psychologically with the rigors of their disease and treatment. Scott M. Lippman, MD, is Director of UC San Diego Moores Cancer Center.
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HIGH SCHOOL
INSIDE Players to Watch Poway
FOOTBALL Preview
Rancho Bernardo Palomar League Del Norte Maranatha
THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 2014
2014
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Austin Lucht Broncos, OL/DL The 6-foot-3, 297-pound returning starting lineman is not only big, but he is athletic and the strongest on the team. Lucht benched 225-pounds 13 times and has quick feet thanks to playing basketball. He will provide push on offense and plug the holes on defense.
Tyree Range Broncos, RB/DL The 6-foot, 221-pound senior has a rare combination of power and speed. The Montana commit clocked in at 4.51-seconds in the 40yard dash. Range will be a nice addition for the Broncos on offense and is a threat to get to the opposing QB every down on defense.
8 PLAYERS TO WATCH
Dominic Hose
Titans, OL/DE
The 6-1, 218-pound senior will give the Titans plenty of push out of the rightguard position. The two-year starter is the most athletic of the lineman and a leader of the team. Expect the Titans to run behind him often.
The 6-3, 231-pound left tackle played all of last season with a broken hand. Michaels is a healthy, physical force now and will start on both sides of the ball. He will anchor the push on the left side in the running game.
SDS PRESEASON RANKINGS 1. Mission Hills 2. Cathedral Catholic 3. Oceanside 4. St. Augustine 5. Helix
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DIVISION I Oceanside, Mission Hills, Helix, Eastlake, Cathedral Catholic, St. Augustine, San Pasqual, LCC, Carlsbad, Poway, Torrey Pines, Madison, Grossmont, Steele Canyon, Olympian, Ramona, El Camino, Mt. Miguel, Vista, Point Loma, Westview, RBV, Valhalla, Mira Mesa
DIVISION II Mt. Carmel, Otay Ranch, Valley Center, Lincoln, Brawley, Scripps Ranch, Mission Bay, San Marcos, West Hills, Imperial, Chula Vista, Escondido, El Capitan, Rancho Bernardo, Serra, Del Norte
6. Eastlake 7. Ramona 8. El Capitan 9. Carlsbad 10. RBV
Jake Bronson
Nathan Marin
Eagles, RB/DL
Nighthawks, WR/DB
The 5-8, 170-pound junior is the motor behind the Eagles’ offense. He is versatile in the backfield, able to play RB and FB. He is still growing in the RB position, but has the potential to turn into a game changer.
The 5-10, 170-pound senior could be the key to Del Norte’s year. Defenses will likely double Meeks on the other side and Marin has the speed and the talent to make them pay. He has a chance to put up big numbers and boost Del Norte's offense.
Our Athlete of the Week feature story will return Sept. 4.
Athlete of the Week ekk Sponsored by
DIVISION IV Central Union, Kearny, Coronado, University City, Orange Glen, Mater Dei, Bishops, Calexico, Clairemont, Montgomery, Southwest-EC, Castle Park, Horizon, El Cajon Valley, San Ysidro, Southwest-SD
DIVISION V La Jolla Countr y Day, Holtville, Palo Verde, Crawford, Mt. Empir e, Escondido Charter, Army-Navy, Tri-City Christian, Calipatria, Vincent Memorial, Foothills Christian, Calvary Christian, Calvin Christian, San Diego Jewish Academy, Rock Academy, Classical Academy, Maranatha Christian
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DIVISION III Santa Fe Christian, Granite Hills, Hoover, Hilltop, Christian, Bonita Vista, Morse, Fallbrook, Mar Vista, Patrick Henry, Francis Parker, Sweetwater, San Diego, La Jolla, Monte Vista, Santana
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Rankings done by Sports Editor Michael Bower.
WHERE THEY LANDED Each season the San Diego Section aligns its teams based on competitiveness. The top eight teams for the Open Division playoffs will be picked from Division I at the end of the upcoming season.
Jake Michaels
Titans, OL/DL
The 6-2, 180-pound junior has dedicated his life to football since playing his first down as a freshman. Now Schwan is getting looks from colleges as a WR thanks to his combination of speed, vertical leap and hands. He also is a shutdown safety for the Eagles.
Quenton Meeks Nighthawks, DB/WR The 6-2, 190-pound speedster has piled up over 10 Division I scholarship offers, including from Stanford, UCLA and Vanderbilt. Meeks will draw plenty of attention on offense and has the ability to take away half of the field on defense.
RANCHO BERNARDO BRONCOS
RBV @Mt. Miguel EL CAMINO @Mission Hills TORREY PINES @Grossmont @Mt. Carmel* RAMONA* @Westview* RANCHO BERNARDO*
7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m.
8/29 9/5 9/12 9/19 9/26 10/10 10/17 10/24 10/30 11/7
DEL NORTE NIGHTHAWKS 8/29 9/5 9/12 9/19 9/26 10/10 10/17 10/24 10/30 11/7
Eagles, WR/S
^ Game at Mira Mesa High School * League game
POWAY TITANS 8/29 9/5 9/12 9/19 9/26 10/3 10/17 10/24 10/30 11/7
Isaac Schwan
@Horizon Christian^ RANCHO BERNARDO @Westview MT. CARMEL ESCON. CHARTER VISTA* @San Marcos* @Mission Hills* RBV* FALLBROOK
7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m.
@San Pasqual @Del Norte SERRA @La Costa Canyon CARLSBAD WESTVIEW* ESCONDIDO @Mt. Carmel* RAMONA* @Poway*
7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m.
MARANATHA EAGLES 8/29 9/5 9/12 10/3 10/10 10/17 10/31 11/7
@Capistrano Valley @Calvary Chapel FOOTHILLS CHRISTIAN @Sherman Indian @Calvary Christian* ROCK ACADEMY* LUTHERAN* @Calvin Christian*
7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m.
BY MICHAEL BOWER The top two young stars of the Poway High football team last season — quarterback Tate Martell and wide receiver Tyjon Lindsey — moved to Nevada in the offseason, leaving the Titans searching for new playmakers this year. The quarterback position should not be a problem with senior Chris Isaak stepping in as the starter. The brother of 2011 Poway graduate and quarterback, Gabriel Isaak, was the backup last year, but will be more like a veteran having been with the program for three full years. “He has really come a long way this summer,” Titans coach Damian Gonzalez said. “He is definitely our most improved player. I think you are goSEASON OPENER ing to see a lot of play-action pass off the run this year.” RBV Gone from the backfield is the at graduated Lance Mudd (Cal Poly San Poway Luis Obispo) and young sensation IsFriday: 7 p.m. siah Aguero (moved to Tennessee). Filling the void is going to be tough, but Gonzalez said there is a crop of about four young running backs that will have their chance. Listed at the position on the roster are sophomores Devin Celestine and Lamar Raboteau along with junior Jacob Gaines. “We just lost so many kids,” Gonzalez said. “Our skill guys are really young and we are in the transition of trying to fill some of these voids that have been left. We won’t have
Poway High football coach Damian Gonzalez, who enters his 11th season at the helm, speaks to his team during a practice. Photo by Sherri Cortez just one back this year, though, we are going to have three or four kids that will carry the load for us.” Fortunately, the crew carrying the load will have an experienced and talented offensive line to work with. Anchoring that line will be returners Dominic Hose, Jake Michaels and Coleman Cowling. The trio will be key to the success of Poway this year, especially with the offense returning to its run-heavy form of 2011 and 2012. “We are going to mix it up,” Gonzalez said. “We have
three pretty good tight ends and we are kind of going back to our 2011 and 2012 offense — pounding the run and running play action off of that.” The Titans did not exactly light up the scoreboard last season while running the pistol offense. Poway averaged just 17 points per game and were held under 10 points six times. Leaning on the experienced offensive line and finding an emerging young star or two should improve that area. The defense will also be inexperienced and depending on the play of the line. Safety Connor Boyle should help in the secondary, while linebacker Sean Jenks should help plug any running lanes. Boyle could also see some time on offense. “He is one of those real athletic kids,” Gonzalez said of Boyle. “He can play a lot of different positions. Just really versatile and will be one of those hybrid guys for us.” It will not be an easy road for the Titans, which will be in Division I this year. Poway opens with the always-tough Rancho Buena Vista followed by Mt. Miguel, El Camino and then defending San Diego Section Open Division champion Mission Hills. Those four teams alone went a combined 3416 last year. Then factor in Torrey Pines, Grossmont and Palomar League play and every game figures to be a battle. “It’s a brutal schedule,” Gonzalez said. “There is no doubt about it. It is not going to be easy. It is going to be a grind. But that is part of it and we are a North County team and we pride ourselves on playing a tough schedule. We are excited for the challenge.”
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Titans set to shift focus back to running game
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Broncos stacked with talent at skill positions BY MICHAEL BOWER The Rancho Bernardo High football program has had a tough go of it the past two seasons, posting a 2-19 record in that span and missing the playoffs for the first time since 2008 last year. But those will be the statistics and facts the Broncos hope their opponents turn to when playing them this season. That’s because Rancho Bernardo is full of offensive weapons at the skill positions and the element of surprise could only benefit the Broncos’ cause. “I hope they overlook us,” Rancho Bernardo coach Tristan McCoy said. “I don’t mind being the underdog. I am perfectly comfortable with that.” It would be silly for an opposing SEASON OPENER team to do it, especially with the Rancho Bernardo two-headed monster in the backat field that is running backs David San Pasqual Arevalo and University of MontanaFriday: 7 p.m. commit and Patrick Henry transfer Tyree Range. Arevalo had 103 car ries and rushed for 508 yards and six touchdowns in just four games for the Broncos last year. Teaming him up with Range, who runs the 40-yard dash in 4.51-seconds and is a bulldozer at 6-foot, 221-pounds, will cause fits for defensive coordinators. “We felt really confident with David coming back and
The Rancho Bernardo High football team has plenty of talent at the skill positions, including running back David Arevalo, above. File photo Tyree is going to make us even better,” McCoy said. “Having them in the backfield ... I wouldn’t want to have to game plan against those guys.” The Broncos are a little thin at offensive line, but with returning starters Austin Lucht, Victor Parra and Corbin Grenowich leading the way there should be plenty of
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push throughout the season should they stay healthy. The trio should also be able to give returning quarterback Tucker Reed time to examine his options in the passing game. Returning wide receivers Devin Goodloe, Ross Lovato and Kameron Calhoun will likely be his favorite targets. Calhoun led the team in receiving last year, hauling in 32 balls for 403 yards and a touchdown. “I think we have threats all over the place,” McCoy said. “The problem is going to be finding a way to get them all touches. But that is a good problem to have.” The defense will be anchored by Calhoun, safety Tim Gaylord and defensive lineman Grenowich and Range. The Broncos will need to be better than last year in that area, when they gave up over 26 points per game. Still, Rancho Bernardo was in nearly ever y game it played. The Broncos lost five games by three points or less and will emphasize finishing strong. Shouldn’t be a problem with what should be a wear-them-down running game. Mistakes in the final minutes of games is what cost the team last year, but McCoy says this year's squad has what it takes to put games away. “When last season ended these guys were mad,” McCoy said. “They couldn’t wait to get another shot at it. We felt like last year we just gave games away and this year it feels like we have what it takes to win those.” The Broncos open the season Friday at San Pasqual at 7 p.m.
BY MICHAEL BOWER The Palomar League has a different looks this season with the exit of Torrey Pines and the addition of Mt. Carmel. Defending champion Ramona is still the favorite, but certainly not by a wide margin. Here is a glance at the Palomar League teams:
Mt. Carmel â&#x2013;&#x2C6; Coach: John Anderson, 4th year. â&#x2013;&#x2C6; 2013 record: 7-5, 3-1 â&#x2013;&#x2C6; Division: II â&#x2013;&#x2C6; Outlook: The Sundevils are back in the Palomar League and are loaded with skill players. QB Lucas Johnson leads the way and his supporting cast consists of WR Derek Williams and offensive linemen Brian Cate and Carter Couch. Lucas showcased his arm last season, throwing for over 1,000 yards and seven TDs. He also did it with his legs, rushing for eight TDs. Williams hauled in 21 passes for 270 yards for the Sundevils last year and figures to get even more balls coming his way
this season. Mt. Carmel won a share of the Valley League title last year and enter the Palomar League as a threat to capture the crown.
****
Poway â&#x2013;&#x2C6; Coach: Damian Gonzalez, 11th year. â&#x2013;&#x2C6; 2013 record: 4-7, 2-2 â&#x2013;&#x2C6; Division: I â&#x2013;&#x2C6; Key players: OL/DL, Dominic Hose, Sr.; OL/DE, Jake Michaels, Sr.; QB, Chris Isaak, Sr.; WR/S, Connor Boyle, Jr.; OL/DL, Coleman Cowling, Sr. ; LB, Sean Jenks, Sr.; P/K, Jordan Choukair, Sr. â&#x2013;&#x2C6; Outlook: The Titans will have new faces residing in just about every skill position, which means they will lean heavily on their offensive and defensive lines. Seniors Hose and Michaels will lead the way in those two areas. The duo should help pave the way for a group of new running backs. The Titans plan to return to a more pounding style of football rather than spreading it out like last season. New
QB Isaak has plenty of experience, although it will be his first time starting at the varsity level. The Titans have a tough schedule and will need a few young stars to emerge at the skill positions to have a shot at competing for a league title and making a run in the playoffs. ****
Ramona â&#x2013;&#x2C6; Coach: Damon Baldwin, 10th year. â&#x2013;&#x2C6; 2013 record: 10-2, 4-0 â&#x2013;&#x2C6; Division: I â&#x2013;&#x2C6; Outlook: The Bulldogs are the favorite to win the league title again, after going a perfect 4-0 last season. Ramona returns star QB Marco Cobian, who threw for 1,330 yards and six TDs last year. He will be complimented by RB Brandon Gansch, who behind a talented line rushed for 12 TDs last season. The big question mark for the Bulldogs comes on defense, as only five starters return. But coach Baldwin always seems to have his young guys playing well by the end of the season.
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Expect Ramona to have a few tough games in league, but pull it out for a second straight title in the end. ****
Rancho Bernardo â&#x2013;&#x2C6; Coach: Tristan McCoy, 4th year. â&#x2013;&#x2C6; 2013 record: 1-9, 0-4 â&#x2013;&#x2C6; Division: II â&#x2013;&#x2C6; Key players: WR/S, Kameron Calhoun, Sr.; OL, Austin Lucht, Sr.; FB/S, Tim Gaylord Jr.; RB, Tyree Range, Sr.; QB, Tucker Reed, Sr.; RB, David Arevalo, Sr.; DB, Jeff Molino, Jr.; DB, Nathan Powell, Sr.; DE, Corbin Grenowich, Sr.; WR, Devin Goodloe, Sr.; DL/OL, Victor Parra, Sr. â&#x2013;&#x2C6; Outlook: The Broncos won just one game last year, but five of their losses were by three points or less making this season about finishing the job. RB has the talent at the skill positions to do just that, especially with the duo of Arevalo and Range in the backfield. The two have a lethal combination of power and speed. The defense will be led by Calhoun,
Gaylord and Grenowich.The Broncos have gone a combined 2-19 over the past two years, but with their offensive weapons they have an outside chance to go from worst to first in the Palomar League and make a deep Division II playoff run.
THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 2014
Palomar League has new look; Ramona still favorite
B27
****
Westview â&#x2013;&#x2C6; Coach: Mike Woodward, 8th year. â&#x2013;&#x2C6; 2013 record: 3-8, 1-3 â&#x2013;&#x2C6; Division: I â&#x2013;&#x2C6; Outlook: The Wolverines struggled in every area of the game last season and no longer have QB Nate Ketteringham. Westview should have a solid ground attack with Michael Shadowen and Michael Yitayew carrying the load. The duo will have plenty of beef to run behind with 6-3, 250-pound Jack Overbey and 6-1, 265-pound Josh Tibbs manning the line. The defense returns only four starters, which means the Wolverines are likely going to have to score a lot of points to keep up.
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THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 2014
B28
Nighthawks know fast start key to solid season BY MICHAEL BOWER The Del Norte High football program has taken big strides over its four seasons of existence with a varsity team. But there is one ugly trend this yearâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s squad would like to shake â&#x20AC;&#x201D; mediocre starts. The Nighthawks have never opened a season with two straight victories, going 0-2 to start the year in 2010, 1-1 in 2011, 1-1 in 2012 and 0-2 in 2013. A fast start is more important now than ever before, because Del Norteâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s second-half schedule is brutal thanks to a move to the Avocado East from the Valley League. â&#x20AC;&#x153;It is really important to get off to a good start,â&#x20AC;? said fourthyear head coach Leigh Cole. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We would to sweep the Poway Unified School SEASON OPENER like District teams and possibly start 5-0. Del Norte But so far 1-0 is the best we have ever vs. started.â&#x20AC;? The Nighthawks open the season Horizon Christian against Horizon Christian Academy at Friday: 7 p.m. Mira Mesa High School Friday night at at Mira Mesa HS 7. Then Del Norte will host rival Rancho Bernardo, then travel to Westview, host Mt. Carmel and finally close out of the first half of the season against Escondido Charter. Those first five games could shape the entire season for the Nighthawks, who went 5-6 and were bounced by El Capitan in the opening round of the San Diego Section Division II playoffs last year. After those, itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s defending Open Division champion Mission Hills and traditional solid programs Vista, San Marcos
Quenton Meeks makes a one-handed grab in last year's season opener against Rancho Buena Vista. File photo and Rancho Buena Vista waiting in league play. â&#x20AC;&#x153;It is going to be a challenge,â&#x20AC;? said senior cornerback/receiver Quenton Meeks, who has scholarship offers from over 10 schools including Stanford and UCLA. â&#x20AC;&#x153;But we are looking forward to the challenge. It is going to help push our program to another level and that is what we want to do.â&#x20AC;? Meeks will be the go-to receiver for senior quarterback Parker Lappin, who threw for over 1,850 yards and 18 touchdowns last season. The Nighthawks expect teams to double Meeks, which means Nathan Marin on the opposite side should have the opportunity to produce a great year. Del Norte will turn to senior Kayden Clements to replace star running back Marc Gallant, who graduated in June. Clements
will be playing safety, too, so the Nighthawks hope to find a strong second option in the backfield for when Clements needs a breather. Quarterback Lappin has shown flashes of being nimble in the past and will likely run more this season. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We are going to ask Parker to run the ball a little more,â&#x20AC;? Cole said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;He ran a few times last year and was able to rip off a few big runs. This year we will tell him to pull the ball down more and run it.â&#x20AC;? The Nighthawksâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; defense is anchored by linebacker Christopher Labrador and defensive lineman Jack Packwood. The secondary is strong with speedsters Meeks and Marin out there. The big question mark is Del Norteâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s run defense. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Our front four is what we are worried about,â&#x20AC;? Cole said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We are definitely going to have to do some stuff to help those guys out with stopping the run.â&#x20AC;? Playing schools with rosters almost twice as big certainly will not help. Del Norte carries 33 players on the varsity team. Every team in the Avocado East carries more than that, making this yearâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s schedule arguably the toughest the Nighthawks have ever had.
Del Norte â&#x2013;&#x2C6; Coach: Leigh Cole, 4th year. â&#x2013;&#x2C6; 2013 record: 5-6, 3-1 â&#x2013;&#x2C6; Division: II â&#x2013;&#x2C6; Key players: WR/DB, Quenton Meeks, Sr.; QB, Parker Lappin, Sr.; RB/S, Kayden Clements, Sr.; OL, Anthony Forte, Sr.; LB, Christopher Labrador, Sr.; WR/DB, Nathan Marin, Sr.; DL, Jack Packwood, Sr.; K, Grayson Farnham, Jr.; DE/TE, Montrice Johns, Jr.
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He ended up leading the team in rushing with 356 yards and four touchdowns. The defense will have to deal with losing its top motor in Josiah Rubia to graduation. The do-it-all linebacker easily led the team with 90 tackles. The hope is a group of guys, including linebacker Daniel Trent and safety Matt DeWildt will help fill the leadership void. â&#x20AC;&#x153;You knew Josiah would put guys in their position and make sure they are lined up right,â&#x20AC;? Cole said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Once he left it was like we lost our head lion. But we have a couple guys that can take the reins and our defense has gotten much faster. We are not huge, but we are fast and can get to the ball really quick.â&#x20AC;? The Eagles will play just eight games this season, because they were unable to fill a few weeks of their schedule. As a result, between Sept. 13 and Oct. 9 Maranatha plays just one game. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Hopefully we can use that time to get better,â&#x20AC;? Cole said. The Eagles open the season Friday at Capistrano Valley Christian at 7 p.m.
BY MICHAEL BOWER Maranatha Christian Schools football coach Michael Cole knew the transition from 8-man football to 11-man was going to be tough. He was right. In two seasons at the new level, the Eagles went a combined 6-13 and have struggled to score points and stop opposing offenses. But that could be old news considering the roster has expanded and the pieces are starting to fall into place. â&#x20AC;&#x153;When we first made the switch it was a hard transition,â&#x20AC;? said Cole, who enters his fourth year as head coach. â&#x20AC;&#x153;But we have been planning for this little window we are going to have ... We are gaining kids and we have the biggest team in our league (with 31 kids on the roster). It has been a rocky first couple of years, but I think getting beat builds character in you and last year we had to fight to win games.â&#x20AC;? The Eagles moved from the Pacific League to the Ocean League, where they will face Lutheran, Calvin Christian, Rock Academy and preseason favorite Calvary Christian Academy. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I feel like we have a shot at the league title,â&#x20AC;? Cole said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I think Calvary Christian is the team to beat right now. Realistically, I think we are going to have to win the Ocean League in order to make the (Division V) playoffs and that is our goal.â&#x20AC;? The talent has really come together for the Eagles. Quarterback Christian Cortes, who led the Pacific League in passing last season as a freshman, will get a chance to start the entire season after taking over the role with five games to go last year. He will lead the half-hurry up, half-regular speed spread offense. The attack will be a dangerous one with the emergence
This will be Maranatha Christian Schools' third year playing in 11-man football. The Eagles made the move from the Pacific League to the Ocean League this year. Photo by Sherri Cortez
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â&#x2013;&#x2C6; Coach: Mike Cole, 4th year. â&#x2013;&#x2C6; 2013 record: 3-7, 2-3 â&#x2013;&#x2C6; Division: V â&#x2013;&#x2C6; Key players: WR/S, Isaac Schwan, Jr.; TE/DE, Corey Adkins, Sr.; WR/DE, John Bothe, Jr.; RB, Jake Bronson, Jr.; QB, Christian Cortes, So.; OL, Casey Moore, Sr.; S, Matt DeWildt, Jr.; LB, Daniel Trent, Jr.
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of wide receiver Isaac Schwan and a few members of the basketball team coming out to catch passes. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s not even that we have Isaac,â&#x20AC;? Cole said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We got a bunch of kids from the basketball team to come out and they play receiver, too. So now we have a lot of guys to throw the ball to.â&#x20AC;? The running game will be led by Jake Bronson. The 5-8, 170-pound junior started last season at quarterback, but it became pretty clear to Cole he was built to run the football.
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Eagles feel window of opportunity starts this year
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HURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 2014
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INDEX 10 - FOR RENT Houses Office Rentals
60 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; PETS & ANIMALS Lost & Found Pet Connection
20 - REAL ESTATE For Sale
70 - JOBS & EDUCATION Help Wanted
30 - BULLETIN BOARD Lost & Found
90 - HOME SERVICES Handyman
40 - BUSINESS SERVICES Services Health And Beauty
100 - LEGALS CROSSWORD/SUDOKU
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100 - LEGAL NOTICES FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2014-021685 Fictitious Business Name(s): Riya Catering Located at: 9836 Mercy Road, #3, San Diego, CA, 92129, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 9836 Mercy Road, #3, San Diego, CA 92129. This business is registered by the following: 1. Vikram Mahajan, 9836 Mercy Road, #3, San Diego, CA 92129 2. Shikha Mahajan, 9836 Mercy Road, #3, San Diego, CA 92129 This business is conducted by: A Married Couple. The first day of business was 08/01/2014. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 08/12/2014. Vikram Mahajan. RB1004. Aug. 28, Sept. 4, 11, 18, 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2014-022545 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Ace Garage Door Co.
NOTICE OF CITY COUNCIL PUBLIC HEARING AND PUBLIC REVIEW PERIOD FOR A MITIGATED NEGATIVE DECLARATION Notice is hereby given by the CITY OF POWAY DEVELOPMENT SERVICES DEPARTMENT of the availability for public review of a MITIGATED NEGATIVE DECLARATION. A PUBLIC HEARING on the following item will be held before the POWAY CITY COUNCIL at the time and location noted below. Environmental Assessment and Tentative Parcel Map 13-002, E & M Holdings, LLC, Applicant: A request to divide a 4.69 acre property into two (2) parcels. The property is located at 15547 Markar Road, within the Rural Residential B zone. The site is not on any of the lists compiled pursuant to Section 65962.5 of the Government Code. This includes, but is not limited to, lists of hazardous waste facilities, land designated as hazardous waste property, and hazardous waste disposal sites, and the information in the Hazardous Waste and Substances Statement required under subsection (f) of that Section. DATE OF MEETING: October 7, 2014 TIME OF MEETING: 7:00 p.m.
LOCATION OF MEETING: City Council Chambers 13325 Civic Center Drive Poway, CA 92064 PROJECT NAME: Environmental Assessment and TPM 13-002 APN: 278-180-44 PROJECT PLANNER: Carol Rosas E-MAIL: crosas@poway.org PHONE NUMBER: 858-668-4659 or 858-668-4600 PUBLIC REVIEW PERIOD: The Mitigated Negative Declaration will be available for public review and comment from August 28, 2014 to September 28, 2014. The Initial Study identified substantial evidence that the project may have a significant effect on the environment in the area of Cultural Resources and Hazards and Hazardous Materials; however, mitigation measures incorporated into the project reduce the impacts to a level less than significant and therefore, a Mitigated Negative Declaration has been prepared and is recommended for approval. Copies of the Mitigated Negative Declaration, and all reports and documents referenced in it, are on file in the Development Services Department at the address noted below. All comments concerning this environmental document must be submitted in writing to the Director of Development Services prior to September 28, 2014. The City is required to consider all written comments received during the noticed public review period prior to approving the project. ANY INTERESTED PERSON may review the staff report and the plans for this project and obtain additional information at the City of Poway Development Services Department, 13325 Civic Center Drive, Poway, CA, or by visiting the Cityâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s website at www.poway.org. If you wish to express concerns in favor of or against the above you may appear in person at the above-described meeting or submit your concerns in writing to the City Clerk, City of Poway. If you challenge the matter in court you may be limited
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CELL - 619/813-9988 HOME - 858/495-0548 chiripasl@aol.com to raising only those issues you or someone else raised at the public hearing described in this notice, or in written correspondence delivered to the City Council at, or prior to, the public hearing. If you have special needs requiring assistance at the meeting, please call the City Clerk at (858) 668-4530 at least 24 hours prior to the meeting so that accommodations can be arranged. Published in the Poway News Chieftain August 28, 2014. Order No. 14-098. P4219. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2014-021984 Fictitious Business Name(s): XT Wheelz Located at: 16340 Avenida Nobleza, San Diego, CA, 92128, San Diego County. Mailing Address: same as above. This business is registered by the following: Travis L. King, 16340 Avenida Nobleza, San Diego, CA 92128. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The first day of business was 02/01/2014. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 08/15/2014. Travis L. King. RB1000. Aug. 21, 28, Sept. 4, 11, 2014 CITY OF POWAY NOTICE INVITING BIDS Sealed bids will be received at the Customer Services Counter, Poway City Hall, 13325 Civic Center Drive, Poway, CA 92064 until 3:00 p.m. on September 18, 2014, at which time they will be publicly opened by a representative from the Administrative Services Department and read. They shall be submitted in sealed envelopes marked on the outside with the project title: CITY OF POWAY REPAIR OF TWO MIDLAND ROAD BUS SHELTERS BID NO. 15-004. PROJECT DESCRIPTION: This project is to replace damaged structural timbers and provide overall repair at two MTS bus stop shelters located on the east side of Midland Road
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b. The Garage Door Ace Located at: 12778 Calle de las Rosas, San Diego, CA 92129, San Diego County. Mailing Address: same as above. This business is registered by the following: 1. Brian Wallace Recore, 12778 Calle de las Rosas, San Diego, CA 92129 2. Katie Scarlett Recore, 12778 Calle de las Rosas, San Diego, CA 92129 This business is conducted by: A Married Couple. The first day of business was 05/18/2005. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 08/21/2014. Katie Recore, CoOwner. RB1003. Aug. 28, Sept. 4, 11, 18, 2014.
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north of Poinsettia Drive and on the west side of Midland Road south of Janette Lane. The project includes, but is not limited to, the removal and replacement of six (6) damaged 8â&#x20AC;&#x2122; x 8â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Douglas fir posts and decorative wood column bases and trims, and concrete surface remnants of Simpson CB88â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s post bases. Before construction begins and at no cost to the contractor, the following permits and applications must be obtained from the City: a Right-of-Way Permit, a Building Permit and the processing of a Construction Waste Management Plan (CWMP). No bid will be received unless it is made on a bid form which is included as part of the Special Provisions for the project. Each bid shall be accompanied by cash or a cashierâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s check or a certified check, or a satisfactory bid bond issued by a California admitted surety insurer in the form as included in the bid documents,
and in any event in an amount not less than 10% of the total amount of the bid. Plans, Specifications, and other Contract documents are available at the Public Works Administration Building, at 14467 Lake Poway Road, Poway, CA 92064 during regular business hours for a non refundable fee of $10.00 for each set of Contract documents or free of charge on our website at www.poway. org. A pre-bid meeting is scheduled for September 8, 2014, at 9:30 a.m. at the bus shelter on Midland Road and Poinsettia, Poway, CA 92064. The meeting is to answer biddersâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; questions on the REPAIR OF TWO MIDLAND ROAD BUS SHELTERS project. Please direct all questions during the bidding process to Diane Mann, Public Works Supervisor at (858) 668-4704. PRELIMINARY ESTIMATE: $11,000 - $15,000. Published in the Poway News
Chieftain August 28 and September 4, 2014. Order No. 14-097. P4218. CITY OF POWAY NOTICE AND SUMMARY OF ADOPTED ORDINANCE NO. 771 which was introduced at the City Council meeting of August 5, 2014, and adopted at the Regular City Council Meeting of August 19, 2014, by a roll call vote. Full text is available in the City Clerkâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Office at 13325 Civic Center Drive, Poway, CA or at www.poway.org. ORDINANCE NO. 771 entitled: â&#x20AC;&#x153;AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF POWAY, CALIFORNIA, AMENDING CHAPTERS 17.08, 17.18, AND 17.20 AND ADDING CHAPTER 17.31 TO TITLE 17 OF THE POWAY MUNICIPAL CODE PERTAINING TO AMATEUR RADIO ANTENNA INSTALLATIONS (ZONING ORDINANCE AMENDMENT (ZOA) 14-002).â&#x20AC;? This proposed ordinance pertains to amateur radio installations and
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would add and clarify regulations (i.e. setback and height), establish permitting regulations and establish noticing procedures. Councilmembers voting aye: VAUS, MULLIN, GROSCH, HIGGINSON Councilmembers voting noe: NONE Councilmembers absent: CUNNINGHAM Councilmembers disqualified: NONE /s/:Sheila R. Cobian, CMC, City Clerk Published in the Poway News Chieftain, Thursday, August 28, 2014. Order No. 14-096. P4216.
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER 37-2014-00027499-CU-PT-NC TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner LEAH LEONG, JOHN LEONG (on behalf of) filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: a. Present Name: ZYAN KEAHI RICHARDSON LEONG to Proposed Name: ZYAN KEAHI LEONG THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be
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SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO North County Division 325 South Melrose Drive Vista, CA 92081-6627 PETITION OF: LEAH LEONG for change of name.
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granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. Notice of Hearing Date: OCT 14, 2014 Time: 8:30 AM Dept 26. The address of the court is: same as noted above. A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: Poway News Chieftain. Date: AUG 18, 2014. K. Michael Kirkman Judge of the Superior Court P4217. Aug. 28, Sept. 4, 11, 18, 2014 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2014-021158 Fictitious Business Name(s): Blossom Music Tree Located at: 1240 N. Coast Hwy. 101, Encinitas, CA, 92024, San Diego County. Mailing address: 3471 Jefferson St., Carlsbad, CA 92008. This business is registered by the following: Daveen DiGiacomo, 347 Jefferson St., Carlsbad, CA, 92008. 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 08/06/2014. Daveen DiGiacomo. RB1001. Aug. 21, 28, Sept. 4, 11, 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2014-021738 Fictitious Business Name(s): Sorrento Valley Business Park Located at: 6565 Nancy Ridge Drive, San Diego, CA, 92121, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 6565 Nancy Ridge Drive, San Diego, CA 92121. This business is registered by the following: Applied Clinical Research, 6565 Nancy Ridge Drive, San Diego, CA 92121, California. This business is conducted by: A Corporation. The first day of business was 07/10/2014. This statement was
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2014-021927 Fictitious Business Name(s): Garage Door Man Located at: 129 Green Ave., Escondido, CA, 92025, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 129 Green Ave., Escondido, CA 92025. This business is registered by the following: James Vernon Teague, 129 Green Ave., Escondido, CA 92025. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The first day of business was 8/1/04. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 08/14/2014. James Vernon Teague, Owner. RB999. Aug. 21, 28, Sept. 4, 11, 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2014-021548 Fictitious Business Name(s): Subway #2457 Located at: 12624 Poway Rd., #A14, Poway, CA, 92064, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 10453 Galena Canyon Rd., San Diego, CA 92127. This business is registered by the following: Healthy Spirit, LLC, 12624 Poway Rd., #A-14, Poway, CA 92064, California. This business is conducted by: A Limited Liability Company. 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 08/11/2014. Ruchika Singh, Secretary. P4213. Aug. 21, 28, Sept. 4, 11, 2014.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2014-021577 Fictitious Business Name(s): Pro-Cleaners Cleaning Services Located at: 16436 Avenida Venusto, Unit C, San Diego, CA, 92128, San Diego County. Mailing Address:
Mailing Address: 12656 Sora Way, San Diego, CA 92129. This business is registered by the following: Catherine G. Britain, 12656 Sora Way, San Diego, CA 92129. 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 08/06/2014. Catherine G. Britain. RB996. Aug. 21, 28, Sept. 4, 11, 2014.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2014-021547 Fictitious Business Name(s): Cyber Aerial Located at: 11697 Aspen View Drive, San Diego, CA, 92128, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 11697 Aspen View Drive, San Diego, CA 92128. This business is registered by the following: George Mancuso, 11697 Aspen View Drive, San Diego, CA 92128. 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 08/11/2014. George Mancuso, Owner. RB997. Aug. 21, 28, Sept. 4, 11, 2014.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2014-021367 Fictitious Business Name(s): T3 Consulting Services Located at: 17106 Ralphs Ranch Rd., San Diego, CA, 92127, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 17106 Ralphs Ranch Rd., San Diego, CA 92127. This business is registered by the following: Thanh Tran, 17106 Ralphs Ranch Rd., San Diego, CA 92127. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The first day of business was 7/15/2009. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 08/08/2014. Thanh Tran, Owner. P4210. Aug. 14, 21, 28, Sept. 4, 2014.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2014-021515 Fictitious Business Name(s): JMA Luxury Travel, Inc. Located at: 14623 Sunrise Canyon Rd., Poway, CA, 92064, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 14623 Sunrise Canyon Rd., Poway, CA 92064. This business is registered by the following: JMA Luxury Travel, Inc., 14623 Sunrise Canyon Rd., Poway, CA 92064, Nevada. This business is conducted by: A Corporation. The first day of business was 06/11/2007. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 08/11/2014. James G. Myers, President. P4211. Aug. 21, 28, Sept. 4, 11, 2014.
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE TS No. CA-13-608306-JP Order No.: 130324080-CA-MAI YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST DATED 7/15/2005. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE OF THE PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. A public auction sale to the highest bidder for cash, cashier’s check drawn on a state or national bank, check drawn by state or federal credit union, or a check drawn by a state or federal savings and loan association, or savings association, or savings bank specified in Section 5102 to the Financial Code and authorized to do business in this state, will be held by duly appointed trustee. The sale will be made, but without covenant or warranty, expressed or implied, regarding title, possession, or encumbrances, to pay the remaining principal sum of the note(s) secured by the Deed of Trust, with interest and late charges thereon, as provided in the note(s), advances, under the terms of the Deed of Trust, interest thereon, fees, charges and expenses of the Trustee for the total amount (at the time of the initial publication of the Notice of Sale) reasonably estimated to be set forth below. The amount may be greater on the day of sale. BENEFICIARY MAY ELECT TO BID LESS THAN THE TOTAL AMOUNT DUE. Trustor(s): PAUL-JOSEPH JOHNSTON, A MARRIED MAN AS HIS SOLE AND SEPARATE PROPERTY Recorded: 7/20/2005 as Instrument No. 2005-0612797 of Official Records in the office of the Recorder of SAN DIEGO County, California; Date of Sale: 9/4/2014 at 10:00:00 AM Place of Sale: At the entrance to the east county regional center by statue, 250 E. Main Street,
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2014-021482 Fictitious Business Name(s): Robot Dragon Games Located at: 10532 Hollingsworth Way, San Diego, CA, 92127, San Diego County. Mailing address: 10531 4S Commons Dr. #497, San Diego, CA 92127. This business is registered by the following: bytevision, LLC, 10532 Hollingsworth Way, San Diego, CA, 92127, California. This business is conducted by: A Limited Liability Company. The first day of business was on 08/07/2014. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 08/11/2014. Ben DeLamare, member. RB995. Aug. 14, 21, 28, Sept. 4, 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2014-021108 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. C. Britain Photography & Designs b. Cathy Britain Photography & Designs Located at: 12656 Sora Way, San Diego, CA, 92129, San Diego County.
El Cajon, CA 92020 Amount of unpaid balance and other charges: $467,817.16 The purported property address is: 12834 REO REAL DR, POWAY, CA 92064 Assessor’s Parcel No.: 317-75018-00 NOTICE TO POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If you are considering bidding on this property lien, you should understand that there are risks involved in bidding at a trustee auction. You will be bidding on a lien, not on the property itself. Placing the highest bid at a trustee auction does not automatically entitle you to free and clear ownership of the property. You should also be aware that the lien being auctioned off may be a junior lien. If you are the highest bidder at the auction, you are or may be responsible for paying off all liens senior to the lien being auctioned off, before you can receive clear title to the property. You are encouraged to investigate the existence, priority, and size of outstanding liens that may exist on this property by contacting the county recorder’s office or a title insurance company, either of which may charge you a fee for this information. If you consult either of these resources, you should be aware that the same lender may hold more than one mortgage or deed of trust on the property. NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNER: The sale date shown on this notice of sale may be postponed one or more times by the mortgagee, beneficiary, trustee, or a court, pursuant to Section 2924g of the California Civil Code. The law requires that information about trustee sale postponements be made available to you and to the public, as a courtesy to those not present at the sale. If you wish to learn whether your sale date has been postponed, and, if applicable, the rescheduled time and date for the sale of this property, you may call 714-573-1965 for information regarding the trustee’s sale or visit this Internet Web site http://www.qualityloan.com , using the file number assigned to this foreclosure by the Trustee: CA-13-608306-JP . Information
about postponements that are very short in duration or that occur close in time to the scheduled sale may not immediately be reflected in the telephone information or on the Internet Web site. The best way to verify postponement information is to attend the scheduled sale. The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the property address or other common designation, if any, shown herein. If no street address or other common designation is shown, directions to the location of the property may be obtained by sending a written request to the beneficiary within 10 days of the date of first publication of this Notice of Sale. If the Trustee is unable to convey title for any reason, the successful bidder’s sole and exclusive remedy shall be the return of monies paid to the Trustee, and the successful bidder shall have no further recourse. If the sale is set aside for any reason, the Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only to a return of the deposit paid. The Purchaser shall have no further recourse against the Mortgagor, the Mortgagee, or the Mortgagee’s Attorney. If you have previously been discharged through bankruptcy, you may have been released of personal liability for this loan in which case this letter is intended to exercise the note holders right’s against the real property only. As required by law, you are hereby notified that a negative credit report reflecting on your credit record may be submitted to a credit report agency if you fail to fulfill the terms of your credit obligations. QUALITY MAY BE CONSIDERED A DEBT COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. Date: Quality Loan Service Corporation 2141 5th Avenue San Diego, CA 92101 619-6457711 For NON SALE information only Sale Line: 714-573-1965 Or Login to: http://www.qualityloan.
com Reinstatement Line: (866) B33 645-7711 Ext 5318 Quality Loan Service Corp. TS No.: CA-13-608306JP IDSPub #0069662 8/14/2014 8/21/2014 8/28/2014. P4209. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2014-019217 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. The San Diego Music And Art Cooperative Located at: 9474 Black Mountain Rd., San Diego, CA, 92126, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 13209 Betty Lee Way, Poway, CA 92064. This business is registered by the following: SDMAAC, LLC, 101 Convention Center Dr., #700, Las Vegas, Nevada 89109, Nevada. This business is conducted by: A Limited Liability Company. The first day of business was 07/16/14. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 07/16/2014. Mathew Rakers, Manager. P4206. Aug. 14, 21, 28, Sept. 4, 2014. STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF USE OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME File No. 2014-020403 Fictitious Business Name(s) to be Abandoned: a. Linda Vista Smoke Shop b. LV Smoke Shop Located at: 6954 Linda Vista Rd., San Diego, CA, 92111, San Diego County. Mailing Address: same. The fictitious business name referred to above was filed in San Diego County on: 01/15/2014, and assigned File no. 2014-001254. The fictitious business name is being abandoned by: 1. Gilbert Gorou, 10665 Weatherhill Ct., San Diego, CA 92131 2. Chris Gorou, 6354 Caminito Tenedor, San Diego, CA 92120 This business is conducted by: Co-Partners. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions code that
CITY OF POWAY NOTICE OF NOMINEES FOR PUBLIC OFFICE November 4, 2014 General Municipal Election NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the following persons have been nominated for the offices designated to be filled at the General Municipal Election to be held in the City of Poway on Tuesday, November 4, 2014. For Mayor Don Higginson Steve Vaus
Vote for one
For Members of the City Council Christopher Olps Dave Grosch John Mullin
Vote for no more than two
Sheila R. Cobian, CMC, City Clerk City of Poway 13325 Civic Center Drive Poway, CA 92064 858-668-4530 Dated: August 18, 2014 Published in the Poway News Chieftain Thursday, August 28, 2014. Order No. 14-095 P4215
THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 2014
August 14, 2014. Caveat. Islam, Pursuant to Case number 37-2014-00020644-CL-UD-NC is fraud pursuant to the Hurd’s Religious Society Act. Noble K. Patrick El is the Divine Minister assigned as Custodian for this Ecclesiastical Body Politic. The property located at PIN 209-111160, at said address of 5519 Foxtail Loop, Carlsbad California 90210 is Ecclesiastical Trust Corpus of the Moorish Science Temple of America located at 259 North Pulaski Road, Chicago Illinois 60624; Pursuant to Hurds Religious Society Act Ch. 32 paragraphs 170 and 172. Evidence of said conveyance is found in San Diego County Recorder of Deeds Document 2014-0229356. Any Trustee of MERS or CHASE have been revoked as well as their ownership as of 12/01/2013. The owner of said parcel is THE MOORISH SCIENCE TEMPLE OF AMERICA. No mortgage can impede the gift of grant, pursuant to paragraph 172 of the same Hurds Religious Society Act Ch. 32. Peace. I AM K. Patrick El, Divine Minister of the MSTA, Ex Rel. Kenneth Allen Patrick. P4212. 8/21, 28, 9/4, 11, 2014.
16436 Avenida Venusto, Unit C, San Diego, CA 92128. This business is registered by the following: Dianne C. Lorido, 16436 Avenida Venusto, Unit C, San Diego, CA 92128. 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 08/11/2014. Dianne C. Lorido, Owner. RB998. Aug. 21, 28, Sept. 4, 11, 2014.
POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP
filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 08/13/2014. Kimberly M. Graas, Treasurer - CFO. P4214. Aug. 21, 28, Sept. 4, 11, 2014.
HURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 2014
POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP
B34 the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000).)This statement was filed with the Recorder/County Clerk, Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., of San Diego County on 07/30/2014. Gilbert Gorou. P4198. Aug. 7, 14, 21, 28, 2014.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2014-020850 Fictitious Business Name(s): Donutopia Located at: 14149 Twin Peaks Rd., Poway, CA, 92064, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 4728 Mt. Etna Dr., San Diego, CA 92117.
CROSSWORD
This business is registered by the following: 1. Tek Triv, 4728 Mt. Etna Dr., San Diego, CA 92117 2. Chy Triv, 4728 Mt. Etna Dr., San Diego, CA 92117 This business is conducted by: A Married Couple. The first day of business was 8/1/04. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 08/04/2014. Tek Triv. P4205. Aug. 14, 21, 28, Sept. 4, 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2014-020799 Fictitious Business Name(s): Beauty by Chanel Located at: 13146 Poway Rd., Poway, CA, 92064, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 13146 Poway Rd., Poway, CA 92064. This business is registered by the following: Chanel Sortomme, 12540 Oak Knoll Rd., #B4, Poway, CA 92064. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The first day of business was 6/24/14. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 08/04/2014. Chanel Sortomme. P4203. Aug. 14, 21, 28, Sept. 4, 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2014-020723 Fictitious Business Name(s):
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Living Neat Located at: 16757 Santanella St., San Diego, CA, 92127, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 16757 Santanella St., San Diego, CA 92127. This business is registered by the following: Angelita Barbera, 16757 Santanella St., San Diego, CA 92127. 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 08/01/2014. Angelita Barbera, Owner. RB1002. Aug. 28, Sept. 4, 11, 18, 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2014-020703 Fictitious Business Name(s): La Vang Restaurant Located at: 6755 Mira Mesa Blvd., Suite 113, San Diego, CA, 92121, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 6755 Mira Mesa Blvd., Suite 113, San Diego, CA 92121. This business is registered by the following: 1. Hien H. Nguyen, 11391 Lott Point, San Diego, CA 92126 2. Pamela C. Tran-Nguyen, 11391 Lott Point, San Diego, CA 92126 This business is conducted by: A Married Couple. 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 08/01/2014. Hien H. Nguyen. P4204. Aug. 14, 21, 28, Sept. 4, 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2014-018611 Fictitious Business Name(s): Crying Cougar Press Located at: 3559 Ruffin Rd., #155, San Diego, CA, 92123, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 3559 Ruffin Rd., #155, San Diego, CA 92123. This business is registered by the following: Kevin Gerard Kilpatrick, 17453 Plaza Cerado, #105, San Diego, CA 92128. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The first day of business was 05/19/99. This statement was
SUDOKU
filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 07/10/2014. Kevin G. Kilpatrick, Owner. P4202. Aug. 7, 14, 21, 28, 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2014-020788 Fictitious Business Name(s): High Country Located at: 11977 Allbrook Drive, Poway, CA, 92064, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 11977 Allbrook Drive, Poway, CA 92064. This business is registered by the following: Stephen M. Parish, 11977 Allbrook Drive, Poway, CA 92064. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The first day of business was 7/1/14. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 08/04/2014. Eva M. Talbert, Secretary. P4201. Aug. 7, 14, 21, 28, 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2014-020405 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Linda Vista Smoke Shop b. LV Smoke Shop Located at: 6954 Linda Vista Rd., San Diego, CA, 92111, San Diego County. Mailing Address: Same. This business is registered by the following: Shabo Moshi, 303 S. Mollison Ave., #2, El Cajon, CA 92020. 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 07/30/2014. Shabo Moshi, Owner. P4199. Aug. 7, 14, 21, 28, 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2014-018769 Fictitious Business Name(s): Helping Hands Senior Home Care Located at: 16870 W. Bernardo Dr., #411, San Diego, CA, 92127, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 14203 Midland Rd., Poway, CA
92064. This business is registered by the following: Helping Hands Senior Home Care L.L.C., 14203 Midland Rd., Poway, CA 92064, California. This business is conducted by: A Limited Liability Company. The first day of business was 8/20/2009. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 07/11/2014. Terry Wery, President. P4197. Aug. 7, 14, 21, 28, 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2014-020278 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Nack USA Inc. b. Best USA Vitamin Located at: 12809 Montauk St., Poway, CA, 92064, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 12809 Montauk St., Poway, CA 92064. This business is registered by the following: Nack Promotion USA Inc., 12809 Montauk St., Poway, CA 92064, California. This business is conducted by: A Corporation. The first day of business was 08/16/1996. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 07/28/2014. Shizuko Kinoshita, Secretary. P4196. Aug. 7, 14, 21, 28, 2014. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2014-020061 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. IAMERIKA B. Homeserf Located at: 2347 Avenida Del Diablo, Escondido, CA, 92029, San Diego County. Mailing Address: PO Box 461406, Escondido, CA 920461406. This business is registered by the following: Erika J. Sheppard, 2347 Avenida Del Diablo, Escondido, CA, 92029-2907. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The first day of business was 2/29/2000. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 07/25/2014. Erika J. Sheppard, Owner. RB993. Aug. 7, 14, 21, 28, 2014.
Menu
See more restaurant recipes at www.bit.ly/menurecipes
A.R. Valentien ■
11480 N. Torrey Pines Road, La Jolla ■ (858) 777-6635 ■ arvalentien.com
■ The Vibe: Elegant, intimate. ■ Signature Dishes: Wilted Bloomsdale
■ Happy Hour: No
■ Hours: • 7 to 11 a.m., 11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m., 5:30 to 10 p.m. Monday through Friday;
■ Open since: 2012
• 7 to 11:30 a.m., noon to 2:30 p.m., 5:30 to 10 p.m. Saturday and Sunday
Homemade Granola and Straus Yogurt
A.R. Valentien begins daily breakfasts On The
Menu Recipe
Each week you’ll find a recipe from the featured ‘On The Menu’ restaurant at www.bit.ly/menurecipes This week’s recipe: Lemon Ricotta Pancakes
sweet-and-nutty Homemade Granola over organic Straus Yogurt, decorated with a berry medley; and the warm Peach and Pecan Sticky Bun with Housemade Caramel Sauce and Fresh Peaches, which pairs well with a steaming cup of java. Those who prefer a more substantial breakfast can choose from selections such as the Wilted Bloomsdale Spinach, layered with pancetta, sliced torpedo onion, poached egg and a dollop of creamy homemade ricotta, plus crushed red pepper for a bit of a kick; “Bull’s Eyes,” featuring two sunny side up eggs on a base of a slow-roasted eggplant (which practically melts in the mouth), thin slices of artisan-cured La Quercia prosciutto
and tomato sauce; and the light, fluffy and aromatic Lemon Ricotta Pancakes with raspberry syrup. For a unique beverage, guests can select from freshly squeezed juices that include Strawberry Orange and Carrot Ginger. Those who dine at A.R. Valentien later in the day will find an array of charcuterie, cheeses, seafood and meats. Patrons who aren’t seated on the popular patio will find an elegant dining room setting of California Craftsman-style architecture and stainedglass lanterns, and a display of artworks by the restaurant’s namesake. Among the dinner menu highlights are the house-made charcuterie Platter of Three, with short rib terrine, duck and pistachio pate and chicken liver pate; the moist, tender and crispy Chicken “Under a Brick”; and the Roman Style Duck Breast and Confit Leg, with roasted pluot, fennel shortbread, anise hyssop, caramelized fennel, watercress and verjus vinaigrette. As for desserts, Pastry Chef Elena Palma whips up a variety, from the Peach Flan with Sweet Corn Cake, Fried Peaches, Corn Ice Cream and Chili Anglaise, to the Chocolate & Hazelnut Trifle.
POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP
By Kelley Carlson here’s nothing like starting the day with “tee” time and a gourmet breakfast. The Lodge at Torrey Pines’ fine dining restaurant, A.R. Valentien, recently expanded its menu to offer morning meals daily. Previously served on weekends only, breakfast has been revamped, but the dishes maintain the high level of quality and freshness that has garnered the establishment a number of accolades. “It doesn’t get much more farm-to-table than us,” said Julia Geis, media relations manager for The Lodge at Torrey Pines. “Our chefs have a great relationship with the farmers. They prepare the foods simply, but let the ingredients shine.” And because breakfast is Executive Chef Jeff Jackson’s favorite meal, the dishes really seem to sparkle. Patrons can begin their experience with something light, perhaps sitting on the patio that overlooks the famous Torrey Pines Golf Course and the ocean — a prime time to take advantage of the views, as there is less of a crowd. Among the choices is a bowl of
T
A.R. Valentien has an elegant dining room setting of California Craftsman-style architecture. Photos by Kelley Carlson
■ Patio Seating: Yes
■ Reservations: Yes
Spinach, “Bull’s Eyes,” Lemon Ricotta Pancakes, Chicken “Under a Brick,” Roman Style Duck Breast and Confit Leg, Charcuterie
Wilted Bloomsdale Spinach, with pancetta, sliced torpedo onion, poached egg and a dollop of creamy homemade ricotta, plus crushed red pepper. Peach and Pecan Sticky Bun with Housemade Caramel Sauce and Fresh Peaches.
■ Take Out: Yes
THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 2014
On The
B35
THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 2014
B36
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424 POWAY | $1,125,000-1,225,000 Exceptional 4 br, 4 ba custom 1-story Mediterranean beauty on quiet cul-de-sac in desirable Valle Verde Ranch. Spanish hacienda feel, open, light, bright. Spacious kitchen, backyard has pool, spa, fireplace, BBQ and more. Mature landscaping.
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Silvana Freestone
Coldwell Banker
(858) 945-5403
Competitor 1
Competitor 2
Based on information from SANDICOR, Inc. for the period of 5.18.2013 through 5.17.2014.. Data maintained by the MLS may not reflect all real estate activity in the market. Coldwell Banker does not guarantee the data accuracy. Stephanie Kosmo Linda Harbert
257
256
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Competitor 4
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POWAY | $779,000-$849,000 Fantastic horse property in Old Poway. Single level home with 4 br, dual pane vinyl windows and sliders. Hardwood floors, new carpeting, designer paint. Stunning kitchen and baths. Barn and tack room for 2 horses plus a riding arena and corral.
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Lisa McAfee
(858) 243-3722
4S RANCH | $859,000
RANCHO BERNARDO | $979,000
POWAY | $649,000-$699,000
RANCHO PEÑASQUITOS | $675,000-$695,000
RANCHO PEÑASQUITOS | $675,000
Spacious, 3,438 esf, 4+ bedroom, 4 1/2 bath home including a 1 bedroom, 1 bath Casita. Gourmet kitchen with butler’s pantry. Huge loft upstairs and an additional room that could be used for an office, game or breakfast room. 3-car tandem garage.
3437 sq ft Custom home with VIEW and no Mello Roos! High quality 4 bedroom 3.5 bath plus downstairs den/bedroom. Cul-de-sac location with pool and spa. Entertainer’s back yard with fabulous lighting. 3-car garage. Poway schools.
One of the best streets in Vineland Hills. Single level with no homes behind. Large, private back yard with pool and spa. This 4 br, 2 ba, 2120 esf home had interior wall removed to make a huge great room. Kitchen was remodeled in 2005.
Delightful 4 br 3 ba split level home with living, dining room and kitchen on the main level. Family room, br, bath, laundry on the lower level with the garage. 3 br upstairs. Large front and back yard with sparkling pool and spa, deck with privacy.
This floorplan lends itself to wonderful get-togethers. The open living/dining combo can accommodate a large group at a long table. The kitchen/ family room allows everyone to be included and the private back yard with pergola is great for relaxing.
Eric Matz Team
Marilyn Hanes
Todd Fortney
Amy Farber
Toni Church
(858) 676-6122
(619) 540-6750
(858) 676-5229
(858) 676-6141
(858) 354-5820
ESCONDIDO | $549,000
RANCHO BERNARDO | $539,000
ESCONDIDO | $499,000
4S RANCH | $427,000-$437,000
RANCHO BERNARDO | $429,000
Gorgeous views in southeast Escondido at end of cul-de-sac. This one-story, with exception of additional 610+ sq ft downstairs that can be family room, office or bedroom. Remodeled kitchen and master br. Unique landscaping. No Mello Roos or HOA.
Attractive updated home in the 55+ golf course community of Oaks North. Home is on an oversized lot and features a 16x11 sunroom off the family room, kitchen. Two master br’s, fireplace, 2-car garage, upgraded kitchen. Low maintenance yard.
Lovely single story 3br home in a peaceful neighborhood featuring a remodeled kitchen, flowing floorplan with step-down living/family room, 2 master bedrooms. The back yard is an oasis for relaxing. Covered patio area and room to lounge by the pool.
Move-in ready 2 br 2ba townhome in the 4S Ranch community of Gianni. This corner end unit offer a spacious living room, upgraded kitchen featuring granite counter tops with stainless appliances. Covered patio/balcony. Attached 1- car garage
Desirable 2 br, 2 ba Masters Hill beauty. This single story is move-in ready. Great location with very private rear patio with view of golf course. Updated kitchen with custom cabinets. Updated master bath shower. Full size 2-car garage.
Terri Fehlberg
George Cooke
Edith Broyles
Rich Teeter
Carla Molino
(858) 705-1739
(858) 674-1222
(858) 676-5213
(858) 676-5284
(858) 382-2282
Claudia Adams
Susan Baker
Sam Blank
Sherrie Brewer
Edith Broyles
Mary Ann Buckley
Toni Church
George Cooke
Ginger Couvrette
Maribel Dewey
Angela Dunsford
Anwar El-Mofty
Amy Farber
Terri Fehlberg
Brian Finneran
Todd Fortney
Silvana Freestone
Karin Gentry
Cathe Gigstad
Susan Griffith
Marilyn Hanes
Dee Dee Hill
Sallie Hite
Vickie Hoey
Jeff Jenkel
Patti Keller
Brandi Loper
Sandy Lu
Danielle Malham
Eric Matz
Lisa McAfee
Barbara McAree
Carla Molino
Shirley Napierala
Ward Nelson
Debby Palmer
Gary Webb
Diana Webber
Michelle Peters
RANCHO BERNARDO
Kip Peppin
Laura Reindel
Vivi-Anne Riordan
Paul Rode
16363 BERNARDO CENTER DR
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©2014 Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC.All Rights Reserved.Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC fully supports the principles of the Fair HousingAct and the Equal OpportunityAct.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 EstateTechnology Services,Santa BarbaraAssociation 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.