Del mar times 02 09 17

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Volume 20, Issue 6

February 9, 2017

Residents have plenty to say on DM road project

Community

Carmel Valley Middle School wins San Diego Regional Science Olympiad. A2

Lifestyle JON CLARK

TPHS BOYS LACROSSE FUNDRAISER

T

he Torrey Pines High School boys lacrosse team held its first fundraising event, the “Face-Off Golf Tournament,” with an auction and dinner, Feb. 4 at Morgan Run Club & Resort. See page A15 for more photos. (Above) Back: Susie Mikolajewski, Sue Friedland, Jaime O'Brien, Jono Zissi, Cathryn Ramirez, Missy Lienhart. Front: Kat Botkiss, Julie Mines. Online: www.delmartimes.net

Brixton Capital purchases DM Plaza ■ See inside for a variety of photos of community events.

Del Mar Times An Edition of

380 Stevens Suite 316 Solana Beach, CA 92075 1011 Camino del Mar Suite 120 Del Mar, CA 92014 858-756-1403 delmartimes.net

BY JOE TASH At a meeting in early January, the Del Mar City Council ordered city staff to do more work on a proposed $1.5 million road and sidewalk project on Camino Del Mar, and also to seek more comments from community members. When the discussion resumed on the project at a council meeting on Monday, Feb. 6, the council members got an earful, as some two dozen residents of the neighborhoods surrounding the project in south Del Mar and along Carmel Valley Road spoke out, mostly against the city’s plans that include Don’t take shutting down one lane of traffic on that lane out. northbound Camino Del Mar, the Once you do that primary road into the city from the all hell is going south. to break loose Residents also were concerned and these people about a proposal to eliminate a “free are gonna have right turn” for motorists heading pitchforks. from westbound Carmel Valley Road to northbound Camino Del Mar, as Cody Sears, resident well as potential elimination of a left turn lane from Camino Del Mar onto westbound 4th Street in Del Mar. Following three hours of testimony, presentations and council discussion, the council voted unanimously to appoint council members Dave Druker and Sherryl Parks to work with staff and community groups, and come up with a plan that can satisfy residents’ concerns. The new plan, along with options, will go back to the city’s Traffic and Parking Advisory Committee, as well as the Torrey Pines Community Planning Group, before coming back before the City Council for consideration at an unspecified date. The project runs from 4th Street in Del Mar, south to Carmel Valley Road, along Camino Del Mar. According to city staff reports, among its key elements are the creation of a new multi-use path on the west side of Camino Del Mar, elimination of one northbound lane from Camino Del Mar as a traffic calming measure; bike lane additions, widening and buffers; and intersection improvements. Although residents seemed concerned about several elements of the plan and their potential impacts on traffic congestion, the proposed closure of one northbound lane of Camino Del Mar seemed to draw the most ire. “Don’t take that lane out. Once you do that all hell is going SEE ROAD, A18

An affiliate of Brixton Capital recently purchased the Del Mar Plaza from Munich, Germany-based GLL Real Estate Partners for an undisclosed sum, according to a press release. Del Mar Plaza is located at 1555 Camino Del Mar at 15th Street in the heart of Del Mar. The 76,000-square-foot shopping center has panoramic ocean views from its spacious outdoor patio, along with seven upscale dining options and national retailers such as Banana Republic and Lorna Jane. Brixton plans to revitalize and reimagine the well-known center by modernizing and elevating the overall appearance, tenant SEE PLAZA, A18

COURTESY

The exterior of the Del Mar Plaza.

CCA students march to protest Trump immigration policies BY JOE TASH Students at Canyon Crest Academy peacefully protested President Donald Trump’s immigration policies during lunchtime on campus on Thursday, Feb. 2, carrying signs and marching silently through common areas at the school. Between 100 and 150 students took part in the

march, said Safi Jafri, 16, a junior at CCA who organized the event, using social media to promote it to his friends on campus. School officials made sure that marchers followed education code guidelines, which they communicated to Jafri and his fellow students, and said afterward that the event went smoothly.

“The student-led free speech activity was calm, quiet, and respectful. They followed our expectations and their actions were consistent with the law. There were no issues of any concern between this group of students and other students,” said CCA Principal Brett Killeen in an e-mail. SEE PROTESTS, A18

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PAGE A2 - FEBRUARY 9, 2017 - NORTH COAST

Carmel Valley Middle School wins San Diego Regional Science Olympiad

CVMS takes top spot for sixth consecutive year BY ANGELA LIU

Staff writer for the Torrey Pines High School newspaper, the Falconer

Carmel Valley Middle School (CVMS) took home the first place trophy at the San Diego Regional Science Olympiad competition on Saturday, Feb. 4 at Carlsbad High School. This is the sixth consecutive year that CVMS has won first place at the regional competition. Ninety students on six teams from CVMS competed in the competition out of the total 117 teams from 35 schools that day. Over 1,500 students participated in the regional competition this year. At 6:30 a.m., students, parents and volunteers were already at the school getting ready to compete. At the evening awards ceremony the top 20 teams were announced for each event and the top 10 school trophies were awarded. Each year, the top eight schools advance to the state competition. Twenty-three different events that focused on different science topics were hosted at the competition by professional volunteers, and CVMS students each competed in two to four events. The topics covered by each event ranged from life science (Anatomy and Physiology,

Ecology) to chemistry (Crime Busters, Food Science) to engineering (Towers, Wind Power). All events are partner events, meaning that two students competed for each team in all 23 events, with the exception of Experimental Design, which has three students competing for each team. Each event was coached by a CVMS parent volunteer or a former CVMS student. Coaches donated numerous hours of their own time preparing and teaching material for their students, and many of the parents have professional backgrounds in the subjects they taught and have been coaching Science Olympiad events for many years. Most of the student coaches had also previously participated in the event they coached and received awards when they competed. For example, April Cheng, a ninth-grader at Canyon Crest Academy, coached the event Reach for the Stars for CVMS this year, and her students received first, second, third, fifth, seventh and 12th place in this event at the competition. Many parent volunteers were also present at the event for the entire day, helping to check-in students and ensure they were

ROBERT PISOR

Carmel Valley Middle School team members celebrate their win at the San Diego Regional Science Olympiad competition. ready to compete, organizing food and drinks for the students, and setting up and cleaning up the CVMS base camp where participants stayed when they were not competing. The CVMS Science Olympiad coordinators, Yabin Su and Joan Chen, were also present for the whole day, ensuring that everything ran smoothly and

assisting students, parents and volunteers with miscellaneous tasks. These two volunteers also spent a remarkable amount of their own time organizing classes for the students and coaches, registering the participants for the competition and placing them on the six CMVS teams, and working with every member of the CVMS

Science Olympiad team to ensure that CVMS was able to do its best at the event. The CVMS Science Olympiad team’s success would not have been possible without the continuous support from the CVMS staff and community. Cara Dolnik, the principal of CVMS, SEE OLYMPIAD, A17

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PAGE A4 - FEBRUARY 9, 2017 - NORTH COAST

Police, school officials urge vigilance on teen drug use

BY JOE TASH Police and school officials in Carmel Valley and surrounding communities want parents to know that teen drug use is a problem that can be reduced through awareness and engagement. Sgt. Wes Albers and Officer Robert Briggs, who work with juveniles in the San Diego Police Department’s Northwestern Division, which encompasses the communities of Sorrento Valley, Torrey Preserve, Del Mar Heights, Carmel Valley, North City, Torrey Highlands and Black Mountain Ranch, say the problem can get worse if steps are not taken. They point to several incidents in recent months that resulted in six teenagers being taken to hospitals for treatment of drug- or alcohol-related issues. In one instance, two teens were found passed out in a car in front of a

high school, and a third was found passed out at a skate park. In another case, three students who ate gummy bears, possibly laced with the hallucinogenic drug LSD, which they got at a party, also ended up at a local hospital emergency room. While all of the students recovered, the incidents did raise concerns, the officers said. “We don’t want people to feel panicked,” said Albers. “But we have to be careful not to live in a bubble and think these problems can’t impact us here. That’s our big challenge.” The officers urge parents to pay attention to their teens and be aware of changes in behavior that could signal a problem. Those include changes of dress or in their friends, or increasing isolation. Angry outbursts or a sudden drop in grades could also be indicators of a

problem, they said. One way to keep tabs on what is happening with youths is to monitor their social media use. “You need to be intimately aware of your child’s social media,” said Albers. “They can so quickly end up in something way over their head. Often, the first contact police have with a minor comes over something less serious, such as a curfew or truancy violation. In those cases, and also when drugs are involved, students can be placed in a diversion program, in which they attend classes, do community service or other tasks, which allow them to avoid prosecution and a record with the juvenile justice system. “We want to help kids make appropriate choices so as not to affect their future,” said Albers. SEE TEEN DRUG USE, A17

Train hits SUV in Del Mar, 1 injured

BY PAULINE REPARD A Coaster train hit an SUV in Del Mar Saturday, Feb. 4, injuring the driver who went around a railroad crossing arm, authorities said. The collision occurred shortly before 2:30 p.m. where the tracks cross Coast Boulevard north of 15th Street. The northbound SUV driver crossed the tracks, but then made a U-turn just as the railroad crossing guard arms began to lower, with bells clanging and lights flashing, sheriff’s Sgt. Jason King said. He said the driver, then heading south, went around the barrier arm but not fast enough to avoid being hit by

the southbound train. The train hit the driver’s side of the SUV, knocking it off the roadway. The injured driver was taken to a hospital but his passenger was not hurt, King said. The extent of the man’s injuries was not known. Train service was disrupted until nearly 5:30 p.m. while deputies investigated the collision. The Sheriff’s Department investigates accidents involving trains. — Pauline Repard is a writer for The San Diego Union-Tribune

CRIME REPORT Jan. 30 • DUI-12600 block of El Camino Real, Carmel Valley, 3:26 p.m. • Drunk in public-Del Mar Shores Terrace and S. Sierra Avenue, Solana Beach, 6:15 p.m. • Sex crime-15th Street and Camino Del Mar, Del Mar, 11 p.m. Jan. 31 • Motor vehicle theft-1400 block of Camino Del Mar, Del Mar, 1:45 p.m. • Vehicle break-in/theft-400 block of S. 101, Solana Beach, 4:30 p.m. • Commercial burglary-200 block N. Cedros Avenue, Solana Beach, 5 p.m. • Vehicle break-in/theft-12600 block of Crest Knolls Court, Carmel Valley, 7 p.m. • Vehicle break-in/theft-5600 block of Willowmere Lane, Carmel Valley, 9:50 p.m. Feb. 1 • Fraud-13000 block of Caminito Bautizo, Carmel Valley, 4 p.m. Feb. 2 • Commercial burglary-12700 block of Carmel Country Road, Carmel Valley, 3:43 a.m. Feb. 3 • Vehicle break-in/theft-2000 block of Gatun Street, Del Mar, 11:45 p.m. • Possession of narcotic controlled substance-100 block of S. 101, Solana Beach, 2:03 a.m. Feb. 4 • Fraud-3700 block of Rosecroft Court, Carmel Valley, 10:30 a.m. • Motor vehicle theft-100 block of N. Cedros Avenue, Solana Beach, 7:10 a.m. • Simple battery-100 block of Cozumel Court, Solana Beach, 3:40 p.m. Feb. 5 • Vehicle break-in/theft-600 block of San Rodolpho Drive, Solana Beach, 2:50 p.m.

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PAGE A6 - FEBRUARY 9, 2017 - NORTH COAST

Parents Night Out Feb. 24 supports CCA club's home-building efforts BY KAREN BILLING The Canyon Crest Academy Casas de Luz Club is hosting a Parents Night Out on Friday, Feb. 24 to raise funds to build a home in Tijuana, Mexico. The club is offering parents a chance to take a break and drop off their children anytime from 6-10 p.m. at the Univertarian Universalist Fellowship of San Dieguito in Solana Beach — the teens will entertain the children with games, activities, movies and snacks for $30 a child ($50 for two children). Mariella Gauvreau, CCA senior and president of the club, said the teens are pretty confident they can handle a lot of kids. With the fundraiser, the club is looking to raise the $4,500 needed in order to build a home. Casas de Luz was founded by Kathy Faller in 2005 and has built over 60 homes and two community centers, delivered over 500 truckloads of donations and has provided communities the possibility to achieve their true potential. The organization is an affiliate of the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship and works to “create self-sustaining change through youth empowerment, cross-cultural relationships and leadership development.” CCA has had a Casas de Luz Club for the last five years and Mariella has

been a member since her sophomore year. She was so drawn to the cause that she wanted to have a bigger role and applied to be an intern for the organization when she was a junior. For the last two years she has been a part of the internship program, working to get fundraisers started and build more homes. Mariella said she is

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Volunteers at work on a Casas de Luz home build in Tijuana.

High School Academy’s club, each raising half of the funds and sending 20 volunteers each to Tijuana. This year CCA Club members are aiming to raise the entire funds for a home on their own. “I’ve gotten used to how it all works,” said Mariella, who has participated in five home builds with Casas de Luz in Mexico. “When we go down there it’s just a slab of concrete and a bunch of two by fours…You get to see what it looks like from the start, building something from nothing.” Around 40 people are involved on a build and are broken into groups — some taking on the walls, others building the trusses and others focus on painting. Local contractors are on site ensuring that everything is safe and stable. “The people we’re building the home for are with us the entire time. They help work on the house and usually it’s a family with kids and the kids help us too,” Mariella said. “We spend a lot of time together so it’s so personal for us to be involved in building their house. It makes it really hard to leave because you form all these friendships. It’s amazing.” To register for Parents Night Out, e-mail ccacasasdeluz@gmail.com. To make a donation toward CCA’s efforts to build a home, visit gofundme.com/casas-de-luzhome-build

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NORTH COAST - FEBRUARY 9, 2017 - PAGE A7

Israeli Ambassador offers advice to San Diego Jewish students BY BRITTANY WOOLSEY Danny Danon, Israeli Ambassador to the United Nations, offered words of support and advice to students at San Diego Jewish Academy in Carmel Valley on Jan. 31. Danon, who was in town for another speaking engagement, was invited to speak to students from San Diego Jewish Academy, Torah High and Southern California Yeshiva High School, said San Diego Jewish Academy Head of School Chaim Heller. The Ambassador referred to Israel as “the only free country in the Middle East,” and encouraged the students to take pride in their heritage. “Be proud to come from this country,” Danon said in front of hundreds of students. “We should minimize the damage of this change of resolution and start to do a real dialogue.” Students asked Danon questions about the state of the U.N., and he responded by saying he would like to

see the U.N. be more effective. According to the New York Times, President Donald Trump has been looking at ways to change the United States’ commitment to the U.N., including the possibility of ending funding for any U.N. agency that engages in certain activity. The criteria for the defunding includes “organizations that give full membership to the Palestinian Authority or Palestine Liberation Organization, or support programs that fund abortion or any activity that circumvents sanctions against Iran or North Korea,” according to the Times. Danon suggested a reform of the U.N. instead. “The U.N. is on high alert because of the new president,” he said. “I spoke with the new American Ambassador yesterday... and I told her we need to reform the U.N. We shouldn’t shut down the U.N. We do need the U.N. but we need to

BRITTANY WOOLSEY

Danny Danon, Israel's Permanent Representative to the United Nations, speaks to high school students at San Diego Jewish Academy on Jan. 31.

reform the U.N. to make sure the money goes to the right places.” Damon also told students that if they see reporting that they believe is biased, they should write letters to the editor to voice their opinions and “be unafraid to make the change.” “These students should be very proud and not listen to what they hear in the media,” Danon said in an interview after his presentation. “They need to take a stand. It was absolutely important that they know that now more than ever.” Heller said he was grateful the Ambassador could inspire the students to be more proactive. “It’s incredibly moving that the Ambassador of the United Nations from Israel would take time out of an incredibly busy schedule to come and meet with students in San Diego who care so deeply about Israel,” he said. “I hope the students know that each of them makes a difference. If you see something that is wrong, you send a letter to the editor, call up a newspaper, call up the television station and become an active participant in this democracy.” Beny Mizrachi, student government president at San Diego Jewish Academy, said he was thankful Danon could speak to the students. “It was really cool to have him speak and get his perspective on the issues that Israel and the world are facing,” the 12th grader said. “It’s a really unique thing that we don’t get often in high school.”

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PAGE A8 - FEBRUARY 9, 2017 - NORTH COAST

Del Mar Hills Academy PTA to present award-winning author Del Mar Hills Academy PTA will present Dr. Catherine Steiner-Adair, internationally-recognized clinical psychologist and award-winning author of The Big Disconnect: Protecting Childhood and Family Relationships in the Digital Age, to speak to the community on Thursday, Feb.16, at 6 p.m. in the school Performing Arts Center at 14085 Mango Drive, Del Mar. Steiner-Adair examines ways in which technology and media can change how children learn and grow, and shows parents and educators ways to harvest the benefits of technology while reducing the risks it poses at every stage of child development. Today’s families spend many hours in front of screens – children playing on devices, texting their friends while going online to do homework, and parents working online or using social media on a continual basis. Steiner-Adair will spend some time with the upper grade students of Del Mar Hills Academy during the school day discussing their home technology usage and what problems they, as children, perceive. That evening, she will offer insights and advice that help parents achieve greater understanding, authority and confidence as they engage with the technology revolution unfolding in their lives. Steiner-Adair’s warmth, humor and compassionate understanding of children and the adults who care about them makes for an extremely compelling presentation. All members of the community are welcome to attend this , which is free and open to the public.

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Doctor-led talk on how eating disorders can develop in ‘tweens’ Feb. 28 A free doctor-led talk presented by Sharp Rees-Stealy Medical Centers will be held Tuesday, Feb. 28, from 6-7:30 p.m. at Earl Warren Middle School on “Not Too Young: How Eating Disorders Can Develop in Tweens.” If you think your child is too young to be at risk of an eating disorder, think again. Eating disorders are increasingly diagnosed in children as young as 5 to

12 years of age. And it’s not just girls who are at risk - the rates of eating disorders in boys are also rising. As parents, you may have questions about how your child perceives cultural messages of anti-obesity, diet and exercise. Attend this free event and hear Dr. Rachel Klein from Sharp Rees-Stealy Del Mar discuss how social pressures can contribute to issues of body image in

children, red flags that might indicate an eating disorder, and tips on preventing eating disorders in your child. You’ll also have the chance to ask questions and get health information at various booths. Earl Warren Middle School is located at 155 Stevens Ave., Solana Beach, 92075. For more information or to register, call 1-800-82-SHARP or visit sharp.com/schooledonwellness.

TPHS Scholarship Fund 30th year award season has arrived Are you a TPHS college-bound senior with character, initiative and creativity, who maintains a 2.5 GPA and is engaged in school and/or community activities, including employment? If so, please apply for one of the many available TPHS Scholarship Fund (TPHSSF) one-time grants ranging from $500- $1,000. Some scholarships are designated for students with financial need or other specified donor guidelines. Applications for the 2017 TPHSSF scholarships will be available beginning Friday, Feb. 10 at 3 p.m. at www.tphssf.org

and close on Sunday, March 12 at midnight. Complete the online application, write one short essay and hit send to submit your application. After applications are reviewed, finalists are interviewed and recipients selected. Awards will be presented at 6:30 p.m. on Wednesday, May 17. As TPHSSF celebrates 30 years of awarding scholarship grants to TPHS students, any contributions or tax deductible donations are welcome. Please visit www.tphssf.org for more details or to make a contribution.

Community meeting on Skyline School reconstruction to be held March 7 Thanks to voter approval, Measure JJ, the Solana Beach Schools GO Bond initiative, passed in November 2016. A number of school construction projects will begin in June 2017. One of those projects will be the complete reconstruction of Skyline Elementary School. The reconstruction of Skyline includes demolition of current structures, grading, and rebuilding of classrooms, administration, parking, multipurpose room, and other elements of a comprehensive elementary school. Solar panels

will be placed in parking lots, walkway canopies, and the lunch shelter. The reconstruction project will begin June 2017. The school will be ready for occupancy in Fall 2018. These are exciting times in the district, which looks forward to providing students with greatly enhanced learning environments. Please attend a “Community Informational Meeting” which will provide more details about Skyline’s reconstruction. The meeting will be held Tuesday, March 7 at 5:30 p.m. in the Skyline Activity Center.

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NORTH COAST - FEBRUARY 9, 2017 - PAGE A9

‘Not the Last Butterfly’ inspires hope at SD Jewish Film Festival Feb. 12 BY KAREN BILLING For 11 years, Carmel Valley artist Cheryl Rattner Price has been sharing a glimpse of hope, a lesson for life and giving voice back to the anonymous child through The Butterfly Project, an effort to create 1.5 million ceramic, painted butterflies to represent the 1.5 million children killed in the Holocaust. Now a film documenting the project’s inspiring mission is taking flight. “Not the Last Butterfly” will be screened at the San Diego Jewish Film Festival on Sunday, Feb. 12 at 10:30 a.m. at Edwards San Marcos Stadium 18 and at 1:30 p.m. at the Lawrence Family Jewish Community Center in La Jolla. Each screening will include the opportunity after the film to paint a butterfly that will be featured in an art installation at Jewish Family Service’s Joan & Irwin Jacobs Campus. Student tickets for the film are free courtesy of the Lipinksy Family Foundation. Rattner Price co-directed and co-executive produced the documentary with Emmy-nominated documentary filmmaker Joe Fab. Rattner Price and Jan Landau started The Butterfly Project in 2006 at the San Diego Jewish Academy. Landau had been inspired by the Holocaust poem “The Butterfly.” After the war, the butterfly became a symbol of hope for survivors, that there can be renewed life, there can be a transformation. Landau had also been inspired by a documentary film called “Paper Clips,” about a Holocaust memorial created in

COURTESY

Terezin survivor Ela Weissberger and filmmaker and co-founder of The Butterfly Project Cheryl Rattner Price. Tennessee where students committed to collecting one paper clip for each of the six million people who perished during the Holocaust, writing letters to ask for paper clips and getting an entire community involved. They ended up receiving paper clips from all over the world, filling a rail car with 11 million paperclips representing the six million Jews and 5 million gypsies,

homosexuals and other victims of the Holocaust. The car stands as a permanent memorial in their schoolyard. Rattner Price, a ceramics artist, was SDJA’s artist-in-residence at the time when Landau approached her about doing the project. The lesson of The Butterfly Project is not scary and doesn’t shut kids down in the “awful” way that Rattner Price said her

generation was taught about the Holocaust. The project created a way to teach children about the history of the past in a way that let’s them feel hope. “I fell in love with the process of helping other people to learn about this topic and expressing something personal,” Rattner Price said. “You’re breaking children’s hearts when you share this story with them, they feel powerless and sad. The idea is to make a butterfly and join with others who have learned that through their voice they can make a difference and stand up when somebody else is being hurtful. “It makes us so motivated. It’s so important. We need to help our young generation to know everything they can about history and learn when we come together around a common idea we can not only honor and tribute but change lives.” Rattner Price calls herself an “obsessive photographer” and since 2006 has documented every step of The Butterfly Project through photos and video — from the installation at SDJA using boxes of ceramic butterflies received from all over the country and world, how they have spread the project to schoolchildren throughout the country and beyond, overseeing art installations in other communities. “All of these cities did amazing, gorgeous installations and I felt responsible to share those stories. As a mosaic artist, I collect bits and pieces and keep everything and that’s how I started making this film,” Rattner SEE BUTTERFLIES, A18

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PAGE A10 - FEBRUARY 9, 2017 - NORTH COAST

Helen Woodward Animal Center seeks special home for purebred puppy suffering medical challenges Animal welfare workers worldwide are known to be strong proponents for the licensing and regulation of purebred animal breeders. Much of this advocacy stems from the many abandoned purebred pets that come through shelter doors, left homeless due to chronic illnesses, disabilities and deformities caused by unsanitary conditions and abusive breeding practices of unlicensed individuals. In September 2016, Helen Woodward Animal Center became home to four such puppies. The purebred, female, German Shepherds, ranging in age from 4 to 6 months, were pulled from a deplorable east Los Angeles backyard breeder and transferred to the center by a rescue partner based in the area. The health problems of the puppies were many but by October, three of the four pups (Romilde, Rosa and Renata) were in good shape and happily went off to their forever homes. For one puppy

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COURTESY

Rolanda was one of four puppies who were pulled from an unlicensed backyard breeder. named Rolanda, however, the damage done may have longer lasting repercussions. The Humane Society of the United States’ (HSUS) latest studies show an approximate number of 10,000 puppy mills in the U.S. with fewer than 3,000 regulated by the U.S.

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NORTH COAST - FEBRUARY 9, 2017 - PAGE A11

Local McDonald’s All American basketball player recognized at Cathedral Catholic Cathedral Catholic High School student Brandon McCoy joined the ranks of high school basketball’s elite as he was selected to join the 2017 McDonald’s All American Boys Team. In celebration of McCoy’s achievement, a special press conference event, including a McDonald’s All American Games jersey presentation, award ceremony and media interviews, took place at Cathedral Catholic High School on Friday, Feb. 3. The event was attended by his family, team members, students, coaches and McDonald’s representatives. McDonald’s All American Hometown Heroes, presented by American Family Insurance, will traverse the country recognizing the 24 boys and 24 girls selected to play in the 40th Annual McDonald’s All American Boys Game. The McDonald’s All American Games, the

nation’s premier high school basketball all-star event, will take place March 29 at Chicago’s United Center. “The boys and girls selected to the McDonald’s All American Games 2017 rosters represent the future of basketball,” said Morgan Wootten, Hall-of-Fame basketball coach and McDonald’s All American Games Selection Committee chairman. “We’re excited to see their talent on display in Chicago and look forward to following their respective careers.” The McDonald’s All American Games selection committee, led by Wootten, selected this year’s teams from more than 750 nominees. Since 1978, nearly 1,300 players have competed in the McDonald’s All American Games. They form an elite group of some of the top names in basketball history, including Magic Johnson,

Michael Jordan, Kobe Bryant, LeBron James, Anthony Davis, James Harden, Candace Parker, Maya Moore, Elena Delle Donne and Breanna Stewart. Alumni include current college standouts Lonzo Ball of UCLA, Malik Monk of Kentucky and Crystal Dangerfield of UConn. Since their inception, the Games have benefitted Ronald McDonald House Charities through its network of local chapters. At RMHC, programs like the Ronald McDonald House and Ronald McDonald Family Room provide comfort and compassion to families with sick children so they are fully supported and able to be a part of their children’s care. For more information about the McDonald’s All American Games or game week activities in Chicago, please visit McDAAG.com and follow @McDAAG.

COURTESY OF MCDONALD’S ALL AMERICAN GAMES

(Left) Brooks Hoven, a San Diego County McDonald’s representative, presented Brandon McCoy (center) with a jersey and hat at the Feb. 3 event. (Right) Brandon’s mom, Mildred Davis

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PAGE A12 - FEBRUARY 9, 2017 - NORTH COAST

VINCENZO PELUSO

MJ Metz dunking the ball at the La Costa Canyon game.

CCA basketball prepares for next games after tough loss to La Costa Canyon The CCA boys basketball team ended the week last Friday, Feb. 4, with a 64-54 win at home against Carlsbad High School (12-12). The win came after the team suffered a heartbreaking 60-59 loss in overtime against La Costa Canyon High School earlier in the week. In the La Costa game, Ryan Michaels scored on a three-point play late in the fourth quarter to send the game to overtime. The Ravens jumped to an early 4-point lead in OT before the Mavericks scored the final 5 points, including a baseline jump shot with three seconds remaining , that gave the visitors the win. Michaels and senior forward Jakob Travis led the scoring with

22 and 14 points respectively. MJ Metz led in rebounding with 8, and electrified the home crowd with a break away slam-dunk in the second half. Against Carlsbad, Canyon Crest led by 16 at half and held on for a 10-point win. Hot three-point shooting from junior Tyler Elsom gave the Ravens the early advantage who never trailed in the game. CCA moved to 17-6 overall and 4-2 in conference play. The Ravens face first place Torrey Pines (21-3) on Tuesday, Feb. 7 (after presstime for this newspaper) and Sage Creek (9-14) on Friday, Feb. 10. Both games are on the road.

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The CCA JV boys soccer team has had a strong season to date.

COURTESY

Canyon Crest Academy boys JV team is rock solid The CCA JV boys soccer team is showing great promise. The team started off strong right from the beginning by winning the Parker Cup Tournament back in December. Since the tournament, the team has a record of 6 wins, 2 loses and 1 tie. This team has determination and drive along with great chemistry

among the players. The team is composed with an aggressive mid-field line-up that supports the defensive team, which has only allowed an average of one goal per game, complemented by a strong offense that has scored 27 goals all over 14 games. The season is coming to an end with only 5 games left. Go Ravens!


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NORTH COAST - FEBRUARY 9, 2017 - PAGE A13

TPHS sisters thrive competing against more seasoned opponents in Ultimate Frisbee BY GIDEON RUBIN There’s a fear factor that comes with competing against those who are older, more experienced, bigger, stronger and faster. “At first it’s a little bit intimidating, but you get used to it,” Lauren Hanna said. Lauren and her twin sister, Ava, both juniors at Torrey Pines High School, have adjusted to competing against more seasoned ultimate Ava Hanna opponents just fine. The sport is known to most as Ultimate Frisbee, but it’s now played with a disc made by discraft. The Frisbee is made by Wham-O. The game mirrors football, with players passing the disc down the field and scoring PHOTOS BY KATYA when a player catches a pass LAVROVSKY in the end zone. It’s high-intensity but Lauren Hanna non-contact. “It’s amazing to play ultimate, you get this adrenaline rush when you’re going against another person.” Ava said. The Hanna sisters went up against world class adult competition, playing on Long Beach Legacy teams that won several games at the U.S. Beach Open’s Pro Division in November. In September they were part of a team that won first place at an adult Beach Ultimate tournament in Long Beach. Last month Ava was named tournament MVP at the Beach of Dreams Tournament in Santa Monica, helping lead the La Canada Disc

Demons to a first place finish. Lauren was on a team that finished third. They played on different co-ed teams in a tournament that emphasizes gender equality. They will compete with elite collegiate programs this weekend at the Stanford Open (Feb. 11-12). Ava and Lauren will play for a high school all-star team. “They are so much bigger than me, so it’s intimidating at first, but I’ve gotten used to it now,” Lauren said. “I get accustomed to their playing style, I’m not as intimated by the end of the game.” The Hanna sisters have a good mentor. Their father, Cliff Hanna, played club ultimate at Georgia Tech in the late 1970s, in the early days of a sport that at the time was associated with counter-culture. Their older sister, Inesse Hanna, is a freshman who plays club ultimate at Drexel. The sport has grown since its inception at Columbia High in Maplewood in 1969, with opportunities to compete internationally for Team USA, and play professionally, too. “It was always competitive but it was competitive counter-culture,” Cliff said. “Now it’s gotten a lot more legitimacy.” It nevertheless remains true to its roots, emphasizing a spirit of community and friendship, and sportsmanship ahead of most competitive sports that are inherently adversarial. Those were some of the qualities that Ava said attracted her to the sport. Ava and Lauren both came to the sport with backgrounds in competitive sports. Both ran cross country and played tennis on the junior varsity team. Ava also played basketball

COURTESY

Lauren Hanna making a catch. competitively. “I really enjoyed it because there were a lot of friendly people there and it was a lot of running around, it made me feel fit and happy for myself overall, there was a lot of encouragement,” she said. The sport is played on fields of varying sizes on grass fields and on the beach, 7-on-7 on big grass fields to 4-on-4 and 5-on-5 on beaches and smaller grass fields. It’s sometimes played

with mixed-gender teams, part of the sport’s stated commitment of promoting gender equality. “It’s all on your honor, all the calls and all the fouls come from the players, that kind of reassures me that I’m not going to get injured,” Lauren Hanna said. At the elite club and college games “observers” are hired to referee in a passive role. But the game functions on an honor system at every level. “The beach world championships still doesn’t have officials, you call your own fouls at the the highest level,” Cliff said. “It’s very unique.” Sportsmanship isn’t treated as a platitude. “It’s actually incorporated into the rules,” Ava said. “That’s just as important as the competition level.” Each game concludes with both teams gathering in a ultimate spirit circle to encourage camaraderie. “In other sports when you’re competing you only see other people as your opponents and you don’t really get to know them very much,” Ava said. The Stanford tournament will offer the Hanna sisters exposure to some of the elite club programs on the West Coast. It figures to be among the biggest challenges of their career. “There’s definitely going to be teams that are more cohesive,” Lauren said. “I’m there to compete,” she said. “We can still go that kind of tournament, I know usually people our age don’t do that, but we can go ahead and compete against college players.”

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PAGE A14 - FEBRUARY 9, 2017 - NORTH COAST

Del Mar Times Solana Beach Sun Carmel Valley News 380 Stevens Suite 316 Solana Beach, CA 92075 858-756-1451 1011 Camino del Mar Suite 120 Del Mar, CA 92014

delmartimes.net The Del Mar Times (USPS 1980) is published every Friday by UnionTribune Community Press. Adjudicated as a newspaper of general circulation by Superior Court No.GIC 748533, December 21,2000. Copyright © 2016 Union-Tribune 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 UnionTribune Community Press. Subscriptions available for $125 per year by mail.

President & General Manager • Phyllis Pfeiffer ppfeiffer@lajollalight.com (858) 875-5940 Executive Editor • Lorine Wright editor@rsfreview.com (858) 876-8945 Staff Reporters • Karen Billing, (858) 876-8957 • Brittany Woolsey, (858) 876-8939 News Design • Michael Bower, Lead, Edwin Feliu, Crystal Hoyt, Daniel Lew Vice President Advertising • Don Parks (858) 875-5954 Advertising Manager • AnnMarie Gabaldon (858) 876-8853 Media Consultants • April Gingras (Real Estate) (858) 876-8863 • Gabby Cordoba (Real Estate) (858) 876-8845 • Sue Belmonte Del Mar/Solana Beach/Encinitas (858) 876-8838 • Michael Ratigan Carmel Valley/Sorrento Valley (858) 876-8851 • Jill Higson Rancho Santa Fe/Encinitas (858) 876-8920 Ad Operations Manager • Colin McBride Advertising Design • John Feagans, Manager Laura Bullock, Maria Gastelum, Bryan Ivicevic, Vince Meehan Obituaries • (858) 218-7237 or inmemory@ myclassifiedmarketplace.com Classified Ads • (858) 218-7200 ads@MainStreetSD.com

OPINION

www.delmartimes.net

OUR READERS WRITE The following letter was sent to the Del Mar City Council and to this newspaper for publication.

Lane plan should be further analyzed Dear Mayor and City Council, Regarding the removal of the northbound traffic lane on Camino Del Mar from Carmel Valley Road to Del Mar Heights Road: I am concerned that the evening rush hour traffic loads using just one lane will cause severe congestion and should be further analyzed prior to implementation of the plan. Although the traffic analysis indicates that the single lane can accommodate the traffic, I do believe that traffic control cones imitating just one lane should be placed along the entire distance for a period of one week so that the real-time traffic impacts can be observed prior to approval by your body. From what I have read in the staff analysis, I now know that during the Anderson Canyon street repair there was a single lane created northbound for a short distance and it was thereafter determined that one lane of traffic would be sufficient for the entire distance. If that was the case, I believe that was an insufficient analysis and conclusion. Given that fact that once the entire distance is reduced to one lane, it will be in place for many years into the future – for better or for worse – shouldn’t you take just a little more time to make sure you are making the right decision for the future of our community by implementing this suggestion? Hershell Price Del Mar

Schools should be made safe for all On Jan. 20, during a Torrey Pines/Canyon Crest Academy basketball game, a group of students began chanting “Build that Wall.” When I heard about this, I contacted the school administrators, who confirmed the incident occurred. As this was the second time a San Dieguito Unified High School District (SDUHSD) athletic event featured a group of students chanting “Build that Wall,” I also asked the administration to send out a public notice indicating they were aware of the incident and reaffirming the district’s commitment to a safe and supportive school environment for all students. Unfortunately, school administrators chose to remain silent. And not only silent, but somewhat disingenuous. When Marsha Sutton wrote her article after the election titled “Stop the Hate,” she indicated she had asked school administrators if there were any issues that had occurred on any of the SDUHSD school campuses involving harassment or hate speech. She was told that there were none. This despite the fact that at the last board meeting it was acknowledged that before the election the administration was aware of an incident at a Torrey Pines football game in which students also chanted “Build that wall.” Fast forward to Feb. 2 when students at Canyon Crest Academy coordinated an event on campus protesting the President’s travel ban. Parents were

aware of the event before it even happened. How and why? Because the principal at CCA sent out an e-mail to the parents notifying them of the “peaceful, silent march” – and those are his words, not mine. Furthermore, in addition to notifying parents, he assured us that he had “met with the students involved and discussed appropriate parameters” for their activity. This doesn’t make sense to me. A peaceful event supporting a safe, supportive, and inclusive school environment regardless of ethnicity mandates an email in advance warning parents? And even offering students who might be offended by the protest an alternate location to eat lunch? But chant “Build that wall” – there is no email, no notification, no affirmation that SDUHSD schools are safe for all, and no public acknowledgment of the event or that administration even met with the students who yelled this form of hateful speech. But, apparently (and for which they want us to be thankful), our administration is concerned enough about our children that when a peaceful event occurs, they make sure to talk to the students involved ahead of time and warn the parents via e-mail. It appears that if they are truly concerned about making schools safe they are doing so only for some -- but not for all. Rajy Abulhosn Carmel Valley

County vote on clean energy The County Board of Supervisors is scheduled to vote next Wednesday on a staff recommendation to authorize a feasibility study for a county-wide Community Choice Energy (CCE) program. The City of Del Mar has sent a letter to the board supporting the CCE study. A CCE (also known as Community Choice Aggregation) has been used in other California communities to procure cleaner energy and offer customers more choices in the cost of the energy they use. A CCE allows local control of electricity procurement, while the existing utility handles distribution and billing. The savings in a CCE program can be reinvested in local energy generation and energy efficiency. The Del Mar Climate Action Plan has a goal of 100 percent clean energy by 2035, and joining a CCE is key to reaching that goal. Cleaner energy translates to cleaner air, and that has major health benefits. Diseases linked to air pollution include cancer, heart disease, asthma, and even Alzheimer’s disease. Building more local sources of clean energy contributes to the economy by creating jobs and saves money in avoided health care costs. Please support Del Mar’s position on this issue, and urge your supervisor to vote yes on the CCE feasibility study. Donald Mosier, MD, PhD Bruce Bekkar, MD

Media and government failure The community spoke loud and clear against One Paseo, collecting more signatures than necessary to put it on the ballot. Then the

Community Planning Board members, the media and the City Council conspired against the community by taking action so that the project could not be stopped or substantially reduced to the existing community plan limits. The project will permanently alter the fabric of the community by introducing high density housing (608 units) into an area already notorious for its inadequate roads and excessive traffic without requiring that permanent governmental mass transportation be put in place before the project is built. This is a massive media and government failure. John Fiscella Carmel Valley

Unbalanced In the weeks following the presidential election, I held out a desperate hope that checks and balances would prevail and that our representatives would uphold a sense of decency, balance, and commonly held Californian ideals. Alas, in one short week, Darrell Issa destroyed my hopes by voting successfully to implement two extreme measures that affect the health and safety of the American public. First, Issa voted to overturn regulations that prohibit the dumping of coal mining waste into streams. Issa bragged to Wolf Blitzer, on CNN, that he was returning coal mining to the “status quo.” When Blitzer responded that, “that status quo was not very good, a lot of debris was going into rivers and nice waterways,” Issa went on to say, “People in West Virginia drink that water. They are acutely aware that they do have clean drinking water.” A quick Google search will convince you that they do not have clean drinking water. In common West Virginia practice, polluted coal wastewater is pumped into the ground where it can leech into the water table, turning water orange and sometimes black. What was West Virginia’s “solution” to the problem? Legislate a change to the way pollution is measured to make it easier to say the water is clean. Second, Issa voted to scrap a rule meant to keep guns from the severely mentally ill. This was a rule prompted by the Sandy Hook Elementary shooting that left 20 little children dead. Three quarters of California’s representatives wisely voted to keep this common sense rule in place, not Issa. So where do these actions come from? How is it that Issa is so far out of step with the rest of California? Big special interest lobbies pushed these rollbacks. Energy companies were behind the stream pollution initiative and the NRA was behind the guns for the mentally ill initiative. If you look at Issa’s donor base, you see that Sempra Energy is a top donor, while The San Diego Union Tribune reports that Issa is the 7th largest recipient of NRA funds in all of California. If we are to have any hope of pulling together as a nation, we need to find a middle ground on at least those issues that are simple common sense, particularly those that protect the health and safety of our children. If our representative chooses to do the opposite, to push forward extremist agendas promoted by special interests, then we need to change our representative. Joel Martin Del Mar

LETTERS POLICY Topical letters to the editor are encouraged. Submissions should include a full name, address, e-mail address (if available) and a telephone number for verification purposes. We do not publish anonymous letters and there are length limits (about 450 words maximum). E-mailed submissions are preferred to editor@delmartimes.net. Letters may be edited. The letters/columns published are the author’s opinion only and do not reflect the opinion of this newspaper.


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NORTH COAST - FEBRUARY 9, 2017 - PAGE A15

TPHS boys lacrosse fundraiser

T

he Torrey Pines High School boys lacrosse team held its first fundraising event, the “Face-Off Golf Tournament,� with an auction and dinner, Feb. 4 at Morgan Run Club & Resort. Online: www.delmartimes.net and www.rsfreview.com

Chris Wallace, Tom Doolin

Deborah Hagen, Juliann Ford

Bud Delgado, Cathryn Ramirez, Scott Rasmussen

Lynda Kerr, Marie Green, Abeer Hage, Rita Hannah, Richard Kerr, Maria Delgado, Rocio Flynn, Colleen Lyons; Courtesy photo

Kevin and Jolane Crawford

A tournament participant takes a swing.

Randi Crawford, Mary Djavaherian, Leslie DeGoler

Greg and Theresa Hill, Melissa Myrhum

COURTESY

David Hytken, Anthony Gonzales, Evan Vapnek

Cameron James, Elise Molin

PHOTOS BY JON CLARK

Patrick Weathers, Roberto Wallace, Erin Coons


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PAGE A16 - FEBRUARY 9, 2017 - NORTH COAST

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NORTH COAST - FEBRUARY 9, 2017 - PAGE A17

FROM OLYMPIAD, A2

FROM PUPPY, A10

provided a significant amount of support and dedication to the Science Olympiad program. The CVMS assistant principal, Robert Shockney, was also present during the awards ceremony to congratulate the CVMS students on their achievements and he also assisted in handing out medals to all of the students during the ceremony. The CVMS Science Olympiad program also received a number of sponsorships to help fund them from local companies, such as Pfizer, Torrey Hills Technologies, LLC, SAP and Qualcomm. This year, CVMS’ six teams were named after constellations: Cosmos, Avalanche, Galaxy, Eclipse, Shockwave and Thunder. Each team had 15 students. Students began studying and working for their events in September 2016. Before the San Diego regional competition, they also competed in a CVMS mini competition in December and different teams also participated in different invitational competitions hosted by other middle schools in Southern California to give students the chance to experience what the regional competition is like and gain exposure to more types of tests that could be similar to those at the regional competition. For example, one week before the regional competition on Jan. 28, the Shockwave and Thunder teams competed at the Mesa Robles School invitational tournament in Hacienda Heights. John F. Kennedy Middle School and Winston Churchill Middle School, who have both had their teams advance to the national Science Olympiad competition as the representatives for Northern California, also participated at the competition. CVMS received fifth place overall at this invitational tournament. The CVMS Science Olympiad state team selection process is currently under way, where 15 students are chosen that will represent CVMS and advance to the Southern California state competition on April 8 at the California Institute of Technology. The school that places first overall at the state competition will represent Southern California at the national Science Olympiad competition at Wright State University in Dayton, Ohio on May 19.

paws, high ammonia levels lead to breathing problems, and the lack of sanitation results in pathogens that are very difficult to permanently eradicate. Caging set-ups designed to require the most minimal hands-on care possible often lead to treatable injuries or infections becoming severe or even deadly.” The four rescued purebreds all arrived with signs of the difficult lives they had already endured. None of the puppies had been spayed or vaccinated, one was suffering a serious eye-infection, another – potential hip-dysplasia, and all were dealing with extreme GI infections. But what touched center staff the most, was how little the puppies personalities were affected by their illnesses. “They were so

FROM TEEN DRUG USE, A4 When teens get involved in more serious drug use or violence, prosecution is also a possibility. “We always want to work with the carrot first, but there are times when the stick comes into play,” Briggs said. Joe Olesky, who has run an alcohol and drug abuse prevention program for the San Dieguito Union High School District for the past 12 years, said parents must talk to their children, and be aware of what is going on in their lives. “It’s about parents being in the know,” said Olesky. “Parents need to sit their kids down (and tell them) this is a drug-free environment.” Each year, the San Dieguito district

eager to trust us,” stated Helen Woodward Animal Center Adoptions Services Manager Amy Barnes. “Animals don’t feel sorry for themselves and they continually demonstrate their beautiful capacity to forgive and to love with their whole hearts.” As weeks passed and her sisters’ treatments proved successful, Rolanda continued to struggle. As months went by, the center veterinary team was forced to confirm that Rolanda’s neglect in early life indicated potential challenges for the rest of it. Rolanda’s current diagnosis includes the coronavirus (the most common symptom is diarrhea) which may or may not go away over time, a Cobalamin deficiency (Vitamin B deficiency) which may require injections for life, and GI/intestine sensitivity, which may require medication and a

veterinary diet for life. “We are looking for a compassionate adopter who is willing to demonstrate true love to a dog that did nothing to deserve the struggles she is currently living with,” stated Barnes. “She is a wonderful puppy and we want her to get the happy ending her sisters experienced. Her illnesses may or may not go away but, for now, the ideal family should be comfortable providing her daily medication and a special diet. Other than that, she is a loving, happy girl ready to take on the world.” Rolanda is currently available for adoption. For more information or to adopt Rolanda, please contact the Adoptions Department at: 858-756-4117 ext. 1, visit www.animalcenter.org or stop by at 6461 El Apajo Road in Rancho Santa Fe. - Submitted press release

sees about 150 to 220 students in its drug prevention program, said Olesky. Most have been caught with drugs or paraphernalia, or found to be under the influence. About 20 percent attend voluntarily or at the behest of their parents. The program includes classes, community service, journal-writing and follow-up treatment. Parents also are given drug-testing kits and told to have their children use them, Olesky said, and parents must attend weekly meetings. Among the drugs being used by teens today are marijuana, LSD, xanax and opioids, which include prescription pills and heroin, said Olesky. Particularly troubling are highly concentrated extracts of marijuana that are much

stronger than the leafy form of the drug. “The biggest thing we have to talk about in the entire country is the opioid epidemic. Heroin, fentanyl and narcotic prescription pills are still very much being used by our kids,” Olesky said. Xanax is a prescription drug used for anxiety or stress relief, and often can be counterfeit, officials said. From the law enforcement perspective, an effective intervention by parents, school officials and the police can prevent relatively minor offenses by teens from spiraling out of control into more serious crimes. “Bad decisions start to compound,” Albers said. “We try to interrupt that compounding effect whenever possible.”

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PAGE A18 - FEBRUARY 9, 2017 - NORTH COAST

FROM BUTTERFLIES, A9

JOE TASH

Safi Jafri, (second from left, front row), the event organizer, with fellow CCA juniors and seniors after the Feb. 2 March, in front of the school. FROM PROTESTS, A1 Members of the media were not allowed on campus to observe the march, but afterward, about 20 students, all juniors and seniors, came out to the sidewalk in front of the school, carrying their signs and speaking to reporters. Freshmen and sophomores are not permitted to leave campus at lunchtime, school officials said. Safi had printed and distributed T-shirts with the phrase, “1984 = 2017 #THISISHOWITSTARTS,” a nod to George Orwell’s dystopian novel, “1984,” which chronicles a futuristic society where leaders manipulate facts and the truth to control the population. Safi and other students said Trump’s executive order banning entry to the U.S. by anyone from seven Muslim-majority nations, as well as his rhetoric before and after the election, prompted them to speak their mind. After the march, Safi, who is Muslim and the child of parents who emigrated to the U.S. as young children from Pakistan and India, said he has been troubled by both the anti-immigrant rhetoric in recent months, and the new president’s official actions on immigration. “This is the country I love, I pledge allegiance every morning at school. I would fight for this country,” he said, but that some of Trump’s statements have seemingly questioned the loyalty of himself and millions of other Muslim-Americans. He and his fellow students said such actions as the immigration ban could be the beginning of far worse discrimination, and compared it to the Holocaust and internment of Japanese-Americans during World War II. Safi said he decided earlier this week, “I have to do something bold but yet respectful. I have to speak out when I feel injustice to me, my brothers and sisters and mankind.” The march, he said, “was truly amazing for me. a very heart-warming feeling.” Other students who took part in the march

FROM PLAZA, A1 mix and community outreach in order to better meet the needs of residents and visitors, the press release said. According to Marc Brutten, chairman of Brixton Capital and long-time Del Mar resident, “The shopping center was built with a tremendous amount of community input in a timeless and irreplaceable location. The Plaza now needs to recapture that original sense of community purpose

echoed his feelings. “No refugee should be turned away from this country,” said Saumya Khanna, a CCA junior. Referencing the World War II era, when Jewish refugees from Europe were banned from entering America, some of whom were subsequently murdered by the Nazis, she said, “No one wants to see that happen again.” Junior Luca Giles, a transgender student, said, “No one deserves to be discriminated against for who they are or things they can’t control.” And Alex Poplawsky, also a junior, said she also sees disturbing similarities between the World War II era and today’s anti-immigrant rhetoric. “As a minority, I know what it’s like to feel discriminated against,” said Poplawsky, who has Jewish and Mexican heritage. “I don’t want anyone else to go through that.” Junior Kane Bush said, “I’m marching in solidarity with people who are repressed.” While many students cheered on the marchers, some students opposed their message, said Safi, and held up signs saying, “Build the Wall,” and “Make America Great Again,” which was Trump’s campaign slogan. But the marchers continued silently on their way, he said. On a Facebook page Safi set up to spread the word about Thursday’s silent march, posts later Thursday said some students were planning a pro-Trump rally at CCA for the next day, Friday, Feb. 3. Killeen, in a statement issued Thursday, said he and other administrators became aware of Thursday’s planned march through social media. School officials notified CCA families and let them know that if they wanted a quiet space for lunch, away from the event, they could go into classrooms, the gymnasium or other places. Killeen also said in an e-mail that San Diego police school resource officers and extra administrative staff were on hand Thursday to “ensure for a safe and largely normal day.” with a more defined tenant mix and active event calendar.” A major part of Brixton’s plan for the center will be attracting greater community involvement in the center with frequent events and entertainment activities on the plaza level patio with its surrounding vista of the Pacific Ocean, according to the press release. Travis King, CEO of Brixton Capital, stated, “Del Mar Plaza presents a unique opportunity to unlock value in one of San

Price said, noting one particularly moving experience filming butterflies installed at a school in Warsaw, Poland. “As an artist I got in way over my head, not realizing how difficult it is to make a documentary film.” She had over 200 hours of footage when she connected with Joe Fab, the producer, director and writer of “Paper Clips,” which had inspired the whole project. Once Fab came on board, Rattner Price’s documentary tightened up and took shape — it was no longer a scattered mosaic. For the film, they were able to use the story of 86-year-old Holocaust survivor Ela Weissberger. While in the Terezin Concentration Camp in the Czech Republic, Weissberger remembered a teacher, Friedl Dicker-Brandies, who inspired the children to express their pain and deal with the shock and trauma of the camp through secret art projects. Weissberger not only placed a butterfly on the wall at SDJA but the filmmakers were able to take her back to Terezin, where she left a butterfly in memory of her teacher, who helped thousands of children at Terezin before being murdered at Auschwitz. The film was an official selection of the 2016 Virginia Film Festival in November and, in January, the film was shown at a private screening at the U.S. Embassy in

FROM ROAD, A1

Latvia and a screening at the JCC Manhattan. The film is scheduled to be shown this year at the Palm Beach Jewish Film Festival, a special screening at the Atlanta Jewish Film Festival, and the Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library in Kansas. They have also submitted to festivals as far away as Hong Kong and Australia. The Butterfly Project carries on, with the goal to reach more than 60 local schools a year, with an educational team that includes Landau and retired teachers, many of whom have family members who were Holocaust survivors. They will continue to teach this impactful lesson, not only to reach 1.5 precious butterflies made but to transform resistance through art and education and empower people to take action against injustice. As one student says in the film: “I learned that if I don’t do anything, then nothing will change.” “The beauty of this for me as an artist, I feel like I’m continuing Friedl’s legacy,” Rattner Price said. “She wanted to help the children by doing art to help them handle that trauma and have hope for the future. “I’m very lucky. It’s amazing how it has all come together and it’s really exciting what is happening.” Tickets for the film can be purchased at sdjff.org. For more on The Butterfly Project, visit thebutterflyprojectnow.org

to break loose and these people are gonna have pitchforks,” said resident Cody Sears, gesturing toward the audience at the council meeting. The city also received dozens of letters and emails about the project, most of them in opposition. One came from Barbara Bry, a newly elected member of the San Diego City Council, whose district includes residential communities along Carmel Valley Road to the east of Camino Del Mar. In her letter, Bry said three dozen people expressed concerns about the proposed changes to the intersection of Carmel Valley Road and Camino Del Mar at a recent meeting of the Torrey Pines Community Planning Group. Residents were also upset that they hadn’t had a chance to weigh on the proposed roadway changes. At Monday’s Del Mar council meeting, Eduardo Savigliano, a member of the Torrey Pines planning board, echoed Bry’s comments. “We all need to work together. This impacts us. It’s not just a city of Del Mar issue, it’s a regional issue. Please do reach out to us,” Savigliano said. While the council agreed to take another look at the project and seek more comment from residents, members came to the issue from different perspectives. “There’s a lot about this project that I like,”

said Councilwoman Ellie Haviland, such as the multi-use path from 4th Street to Carmel Valley Road. “I don’t want to see this project getting delayed and delayed and delayed.” Druker, who sent out an email to constituents before the meeting, detailing his opposition to the project, said the city should apologize for not doing a good job of notifying people who might be affected by the project. He also said the staff presentation was not thorough or understandable enough. “We need to do a better job,” he said. For example, he said, the staff presentation was not clear about the impacts of closing one of the northbound lanes of Camino Del Mar. A staff report stated that in 2016, when Camino Del Mar was reduced to one lane in each direction due to a landslide and subsequent road work, the change “did not appear to have adverse impacts to traffic circulation.” But in their testimony, residents disagreed. And Druker said more information is needed. “That’s what people want to know, will it take me 10 more minutes to get from Carmel Valley Road to 4th Street once the road is narrowed to one lane,” Druker said. “We are doing a major change to the major arterial in Del Mar,” Druker said. “We have to make sure the citizens of Del Mar and surrounding communities understand what we’re doing and why, and that they agree with it.”

Diego's finest properties. We are excited to work with tenants and the community to make that happen." Thao Tran, senior vice president at Eastdil Secured, represented both parties in the sale of the property. Brixton Capital is the private investment vehicle of BruttenGlobal, an international family office that owns and manages a diverse array of holdings valued in excess of $3.3 billion across a variety of industries, including real estate, banking, professional

sports, aviation, media and consumer products, the press release said. Brixton Capital focuses on sourcing investment opportunities that offer attractive risk-adjusted returns across a variety of asset classes. Its investment profile includes direct opportunistic and value-add real estate acquisitions, performing and non-performing loans, recapitalizations, opportunistic lending and structured finance transactions, according to the press release. Visit BrixtonCapital.com.


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NORTH COAST - FEBRUARY 9, 2017 - PAGE A19


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PAGE A20 - FEBRUARY 9, 2017 - NORTH COAST

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Larry Himmel Foundation to donate $5,000 to Free Flight sanctuary at fundraising event. B7

Billy Crystal talks comedy, Oscars and more. B2 Section B

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February 9, 2017

Paralympic gold medalist inspires Del Mar Hills students BY DEBORAH SULLIVAN BRENNAN To highlight what she can do, Paralympic gold medalist Tatyana McFadden asked a group of elementary school students at Del Mar Hills Academy what they thought she couldn’t do. Walking, jogging and running, the students guessed. Playing soccer, basketball or football. To their surprise, McFadden, 27, explained how she could do pretty much all those things, using her powerful arms to propel herself on wheels. “I walk and jog in this wheelchair,” she said. “This is like my shoes.” The chair also allows her to play sports such as basketball and soccer, she said, popping wheelies to demonstrate how she kicks a ball with her chair. With her racing chair, she can reach speeds over 20 miles per hour. That has earned her multiple gold medals in the 2004, 2008, 2012 and 2016 Paralympics, in Athens, Beijing, London and Rio. And it enabled her to win the wheelchair division in a number of prestigious races, including the Boston, New York, Chicago and London marathons. She also plays hockey in a special skating bucket, and earned a silver medal at the 2013 winter Paralympics as a cross-country skier, competing in her native Russia. Now a resident of Illinois, McFadden trains full-time while also working toward a master of education degree at the University of Illinois. She plans to eventually work with critically ill children in hospitals. McFadden visited the Del Mar school at the request of Principal Julie Lerner, who taught her to swim 21 years ago, and thought her story of perseverance offered a profound message to her students. “She was the most tenacious, precocious little girl,” Lerner said. “Even at that young age, she had so much grit and

Tatyana McFadden speaks to Del Mar Hills students about her book "Ya Sama! Moments From My Life."

JON CLARK©

Award-winning paralympic athlete Tatyana McFadden shares a picture with Ms. Hemerick's fourth grade class. determination.” McFadden was born in Russia with spina bifida, a condition in which the spine doesn’t form properly, damaging nerves in the lower body. Her birth mother was unable to care for her and surrendered her to an orphanage. Eager to keep up with other kids, she moved around on her arms, developing the upper body strength that would later be her key to athletic success. “It was really hard, but I became really strong,” she told the students. She was adopted by an American family at age 6, and moved to Maryland. There she met Lerner, a teacher who gave swim lessons

Tatyana McFadden shares a picture with Ms. Ilkhanipour's fifth grade class.

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in the summer. Lerner hadn’t taught a child with disabilities before, but agreed to give it a try. At their first lesson, McFadden plunged in the pool immediately. “I had to go to the bottom of the pool to get her,” said Lerner, who continued to instruct her in swimming and tutor her in English, as McFadden adjusted to life in America. The two recently reconnected after Lerner spotted her former student in an issue of Sports Illustrated. When she learned McFadden would visit San Diego to attend the U.S. Olympic Training Center in Chula Vista, Lerner invited her to share her story and autobiography, “Ya Sama! Moments From My Life,” as part of a campus-wide reading program. “I think it was really inspiring for my dream to become a soccer player that is famous,” said second-grader Gabriel Skolnick, 8. “It took her lots of practice, but she never stops.” Second-grader Kyla Chinowsky, 7, said the presentation encouraged her as she struggles to learn skills McFadden has already mastered. “I’m a swimmer, but I can barely swim,” Chinowsky said. “She’s better than me and she can’t use her legs.” McFadden’s talk, she said, convinced her “that anything’s possible, and I could keep trying to swim better.” - Deborah Sullivan Brennan is a writer for The San Diego Union-Tribune

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Del Mar Hills Academy Principal Julie Lerner tells her students how she taught Tatyana McFadden to swim when she was a young girl and announces the whole school will be reading Tatyana's book.

Tatyana McFadden shares a picture with Del Mar Hills Academy students in Ms. Smith's fourth grade class.

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PAGE B2 - FEBRUARY 9, 2017 - NORTH COAST

Billy Crystal talks La Jolla Playhouse, Oscars, comedy, (#$@*!) cellphones

La Jolla Cultural Partners

BY GEORGE VARGA Billy Crystal is surely not the only comedy legend who earned his first big laugh as an elementary school student, but he may be the only one who credits his initial success to being clumsy in the cafeteria line. “I had my food on my tray,” he recalled. “I tripped, by accident, and dropped the tray — and everybody laughed. The next day I came in and dropped it again! And here I am, 60 years later, still dropping trays.” What Crystal is not noted for dropping are f-bombs, whether it’s in his interviews, his books, his Broadway hit, “700 Sundays” (which got its start at the La Jolla Playhouse in 2004), or in his classic comedy movies, which include “When Harry Met Sally,” “City Slickers” and “Analyze This.” But the veteran star made a four-letter exception during a recent 30-minute phone conversation previewing his Feb. 16 solo show, “Spend the Night with Billy Crystal,” at Jacobs Music Center’s Copley Symphony Hall. His uncharacteristic expletive came during a discussion of cellphone use at concerts, plays and other live arts events. It’s an increasingly ubiquitous phenomenon that prompts the otherwise affable star to seethe with frustration and anger. “You have no idea how disconcerting and insulting it is that somebody is so short-minded as to be texting, or checking their messages, while

you’re talking on stage,” Crystal said. “It’s awful, especially in theaters. “I was performing on Broadway and someone in the second row, a woman, was on her phone — constantly — as soon as I came out. I started playing the whole show to her, saying: ‘Get the f--- off of your phone!’ ” “Pardon me,” Crystal said to his interviewer, who required no apology for the justifiable epithet. “Then I could see her mouth go, to whomever she was talking to: ‘I have to go; he’s looking at me’.” Crystal let out a loud sigh of exasperation. “Men will put their phones in their shirt pockets, and it lights up and looks like E.T.,” he lamented. “And, on stage, you hear it ring and are interrupted by it. Using cellphones is one of the worst traits about audiences and it’s like it’s accepted now. “One of the things I hate about performing is the disrespect people have. So I hope people will be more responsible. We work very hard with the ushers in the theaters I perform in to make sure people don’t use their phones.” Why audience members pay good money for their tickets, only to rudely blather on phones or text and check emails during performances, remains a mystery. Not so, the solution, which has less to do with policing by ushers than with common sense and respect from attendees. “It’s up to people to turn their phones off,” Crystal agreed.

KIRK MCKOY

Billy Crystal is no stranger to San Diego — his autobiographical Broadway hit ‘700 Sundays’ got its start at La Jolla Playhouse in 2004. “This need they have to be in touch with (other) people all the time is really sad to me. I get it if you are a doctor who’s on call. But, otherwise, if you’re coming to a show, aren’t you coming to get away from all that?” Here are highlights from our far-ranging interview with Crystal, who discussed … The La Jolla Playhouse: “My experience in La Jolla was such a great one. When we work-shopped ‘700 Sundays’ there in 2004 with Des MacAnuff, who would later direct the show, it was a turning point in my life. I think we did 14 or 15 shows there, and — five months later — we were on Broadway. It was so fast! And it was incredible to work with such talented people as the ones in La Jolla. It gave me the confidence to be funny and touching.” His “Spend the Night with Billy Crystal” tour: “We call it that because people feel like they are at the dinner table with me. It’s that personal to them, and that relaxed, and

that’s what I love about it. I’m on my feet 90 percent of the time, telling stories and recollections, showing film clips. It’s a very fun night of re-living memories.” Drawing from current events in his show: “You know, I don’t do much of that, though it’s hard not to now. These other comics out there say something, and somebody boos or yells. There’s so much anger out there. I’ll talk about current events in a certain way, but it’s not my focus. What’s funny today won’t be funny tomorrow. … It’s a very confusing time and a very edgy time now. Somehow, it doesn’t feel like this is our country — it will take some time for things to settle.” His breakthrough role on the TV series “Soap”: “I never thought about it as ‘This will make me famous.’ I thought: ‘This is a really daring show, and if we can do it right, it could be important.’ It wasn’t about what it would do for me, but what I could do for this character. I thought that, if we could play it right, we could do something that hadn’t been done before (a gay character in a sitcom) on TV. I hadn’t seen it in so many years and recently found some DVDs of ‘Soap.’ I watched it, and thought: ‘You know what? This was on 40 years ago!’ I was really proud about it.” Craving the spotlight from a young age: “I needed that attention. To get out in front of people, it’s one of the places I feel most comfortable. I’m an uncomfortable person in front of small groups. But in front of 200 people, or 2000, I’m comfortable.” His tenure as a middle-school substitute teacher: “When I would come in, I was what they called a ‘per diem floater.’ So I would report every day. If anybody was out, I’d take over any kind of class, even if It was something I wasn’t skilled at, which was SEE CRYSTAL, B17

CHECK OUT WHAT’S HAPPENING Perspectives Lecture:

Leonidas Kavakos, violin & Yuja Wang, piano

Feb. 13, 7–8 p.m. Doors open at 6:30 Isabel Rivera-Collazo, Environmental Archaeologist UC San Diego How are modern day humans adapting to climate change? To find the answer, archaeologists are studying how human societies have historically responded to environmental changes. Join us to learn how Scripps Oceanography and UC San Diego’s Department of Anthropology are changing the way we view climate change and its impacts.

Saturday, February 11 at 8 p.m. Balboa Theatre Tickets: $70, $50, $30, $20

An Archaeological Perspective on Humans and Climate Change

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Gramophone’s 2014 Artist of the Year Leonidas Kavakos joins Musical America’s 2017 Artist of the Year Yuja Wang to perform ˇ Debussy and virtuosic sonatas from Janácek, Bartók along with Schubert’s Fantasy for Violin and Piano, D.934.

(858) 459-3728 www.LJMS.org

MCASD IS EXPANDING Disney’s The Museum of Contemporary Art’s La Jolla FREAKY FRIDAY location is undergoing an extensive expansion

and renovation project that will quadruple current gallery space, making room to show MCASD’s 4,700-piece collection of world-class contemporary art. During the closure, MCASD will continue to deliver highquality exhibitions and programming at its Jacobs and Copley Buildings at MCASD Downtown, located at 1100 Kettner Blvd. Visit www.mcasd.org for more information about downtown exhibitions.

858 454 3541 www.mcasd.org

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858 454 3541 www.LaJollaPlayhouse.org


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NORTH COAST - FEBRUARY 9, 2017 - PAGE B3

CCA’s ‘Rendezvous in Paris’ gala drawing features Hamilton Broadway experience CCA Foundation online auction opens on Feb. 11 The Canyon Crest Academy gala online auction opens on Feb. 11 at 8 a.m., with many packages to bid on, including a chance to win two tickets to see Hamilton in New York City. This award-winning musical is currently the hottest ticket on Broadway, and the winner will enjoy a 3-course dinner with two cast members, two Mezzanine tickets, in-theater meet and greet with a cast member after the show, and a signed Hamilton cast photo. Only 100 tickets will be offered for this opportunity drawing. More information can be found at ccagala.com. Attendance at the gala is not required to bid on packages in the online auction. Canyon Crest Academy Foundation offered a similar opportunity drawing last year and the winners took Broadway by storm. Tina Blumenfeld, the winner, shared the following review of this once-in-a- lifetime experience. “We had a wonderful dinner at a beautiful four-star theater district restaurant with Hamilton cast members Thayne Jasperson and David Guzman. They shared all their wonderful memories from being in the original cast of SEE HAMILTON, B17

COURTESY

The Canyon Crest Academy gala online auction opens on Feb. 11 and includes a chance to win two tickets to see Hamilton in New York City.

4:48PM

The moment you would relive over and over.

Two generations of musical styles come to North Coast Rep North Coast Repertory Theatre is presenting a variety show “Hey! I’m Tha Mama,” two generations of musical styles and showbiz experience with Angela Teek and Spanky Wilson. The show will run Feb. 27-28 at 7:30 p.m. “Hey! I’m Tha Mama” is a musical journey of a showbiz mother and daughter, The internationally-renowned Jazz recording artist Spanky Wilson (Mama) and her $100,000 “Star Search” winner and Broadway Star daughter Angela Teek. If you think you like Broadway and not jazz or

COURTESY

Angela Teek and Spanky Wilson will perform at the North Coast Rep Feb. 27-28. jazz and not Broadway this show will change your mind.

Call 858-481-1055 or visit www.northcoastrep.org to purchase tickets.

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PAGE B4 - FEBRUARY 9, 2017 - NORTH COAST

Singer-songwriter Esmé Patterson headed to Belly Up BY ROB LEDONNE On a cold Monday afternoon in Philadelphia, Penn., singer-songwriter Esmé Patterson is on a brief respite before a tour stop later that night. Patterson, who’s tour heads out west to Solana Beach’s Belly Up on Feb. 15, has grown accustomed to the hustle of being on the road. “I don’t really live anywhere right now,” Patterson laughs with a hint of seriousness. “I used to live in Portland, Oregon, but after almost 10 years of being on the road I don’t pay rent anywhere. I feel as comfortable being on tour as other people are at home.” Patterson is at the helm of a charmed career, her most recent highlight being the release of the album We Were Wild, her third as a solo star. Released last June, it received raves with Rolling Stone’s Jon Dolan calling it “subtly charming” with “cute throwbacks” peppered throughout, while NPR chose standout track “No River” for its Songs We Love showcase. Patterson points to her nomadic lifestyle as one of the main inspirations for her alternative pop tracks. “My work is constantly evolving,” she notes. “There’s an interesting term calledbackground ` processing.’ Right when you’re trying to think of something

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Esmé Patterson will perform at the Belly Up Feb. 15. specific, you pull it out of the swamp of your brain. Songwriting is a background process for me. I’m living my life and taking in my surroundings and then write about them later.” Patterson’s journey started in Boulder, Colo., where she grew up in midst of the Rocky Mountains, later co-founding the folk rock assemble Paper Bird. From there,

she wound up in Portland and has led a life on the road ever since. When it comes to actually sitting down and crafting her deeply personal tracks, Patterson says she has not one surefire process. “There’s a lot of different ways it happens for me,” she explains. “I’ll sometimes sit down with a guitar and a piece of paper and a pen and then it kind of comes together. For

DANIEL TOPETE

me, music is very intertwined with poetry and it can’t really be separated. It’s hard to describe; each song has its own spirit and personality.” Finding songwriting “cathartic,” Patterson has turned to music as a reaction to the ongoing political upheaval in the United States. “I feel I have no illusions about the realities of where we’re at,” she

said. “I myself wasn’t surprised in the election in some ways when a lot of people around me were shocked. I feel incredibly lucky to have this unique perspective by meeting people every day around the U.S. and looking them in the eye and shaking their hand. It’s a really interesting time to be driving around America and kind of scary also, but at the same time a beautiful experience.” As for her own career, Patterson says she can’t point to one singular moment that transformed her life, whether it was her smash collaboration with the singer-songwriter Shakey Graves with “Dearly Departed” or her stints performing on shows from Late Show with David Letterman to Conan on TBS. “For me there are no levels of achievement, you just keep on doing and making. It doesn’t matter matter how many people are in the room, it just matters if you reach people or not. Not thousands. If you reach two people, you’ve done your job.” Patterson and the band Lucero will perform at the Belly Up (143 S. Cedros Ave., Solana Beach, 92075) Feb. 15. Doors open at 7 p.m., the show starts at 8 p.m. Visit www.bellyup.com and www.esmepatterson.com.


www.delmartimes.net

NORTH COAST - FEBRUARY 9, 2017 - PAGE B5

Local baker tastes sweet victory on ‘Cake Wars’ BY BRITTANY WOOLSEY Twelve years ago when she started baking, Monika Stout just wanted to impress her children with homemade birthday cakes. But last summer, the Encinitas woman impressed people who most would consider harder to please — the judges of Cake Wars. Stout, 53, won her episode of the Food Network reality competition television show last July. The episode aired last month. Keeping quiet about the win — and its $10,000 prize — was a challenge, she said. “Some people knew we had been on the show, so they wanted us to tell them what happened,” Stout said recently in her kitchen as she prepared a chocolate mocha cake. “We couldn’t tell them. I would tell them we made it past the first round.” The episode started out with four bakers and their assistants. Some bakers were eliminated after the first “Batter Up” round, in which they were asked to create a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles cake with pizza ingredients. Stout and her assistant, Louise Pass, decided to sculpt Michelangelo popping out of a pipe. The cake, which took an hour-and-15-minutes to complete, was made with tomato spice and Mascarpone frosting with a caramel drizzle and candied pepperonis with cayenne pepper.

BRITTANY WOOLSEY

Encinitas-based baker and Cake Wars winner Monika Stout prepares a mocha chocolate cake in her kitchen Feb. 3. Then came the big cake, which was Stout’s goal to create all along. (She said her victory was a nice extra accomplishment.) The winning confection was a chocolate mocha cake with candied pecans and butter cream with a butterscotch drizzle. The three-foot-tall cake displayed the four turtles battling different villains on top of two buildings.

About five winning Cake Wars creations will be on display at the San Diego Cake Show, which Stout and Pass both sit on the board for at the San Diego Cake Club. The public event will take place March 18 and 19 at the Del Mar Fairgrounds. Tickets are available now at sandiegocakeshow.com. Stout, who has never gone to a formal culinary school, said she is

hoping to use her earnings from the show toward a trip to Ireland later this year with her husband. Stout, a graphic designer who has been baking since she was 40 and took classes at La Costa Canyon High School, said the hobby was an instant love for her. “The minute I started doing it, I was like, ‘Oh, yeah. This is what I was meant to do,’” she said.

She has since taken classes all over the country and also teaches decorating classes in her home kitchen — which is a certified cottage food operation — and at Standlee’s Cake & Party Shop in Chula Vista. Stout said she enjoys baking because of how calming it can be and how exact the recipes are. She’s not as fond of cooking. Croissants are an ideal treat to create when she is stressed out, she added. “Everything has to be precise and perfect for croissants to work out,” she said. “For me, that’s like zen.” While the baking originally started out as something for Stout’s children, her now 20-year-old son’s and 24-year-old daughter’s sugar cravings have died a bit. “They’re over it,” Stout said, laughing, adding that the kitchen counters and their cabinet space are usually filled with homemade desserts. Still, she’s got her own sweet tooth to please, anyway. “I like chocolate,” she said with a smile as she stirred a generous amount of cocoa powder into her mixture. “I’m like any woman.” She said she spends about 15 hours a week baking. Reservations can be made four-to-six weeks in advance on her website, trulyscrumptiouscakes.com or by calling her at 760-803-0869.

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PAGE B6 - FEBRUARY 9, 2017 - NORTH COAST

EVENT BRIEFS JAMB bass clarinet quartet at CV Library Feb. 15 February’s free family music program sponsored by the Friends of the Carmel Valley Library will be held on Wednesday, Feb. 15 at 7 p.m. in the library’s community room. JAMB (Jim, April, Mark & Bob) is a chamber music ensemble unlike any you’ve heard before. JAMB plays classical and modern works for clarinet quartet as well as transcriptions of popular favorites, holiday music and distinctive music for special occasions. Their experience encompasses The San Diego Symphony and Opera, Orchestra Nova, San Diego Civic Theater, The Old Globe Theatre, La Jolla Playhouse, The Lawrence Welk Theater, major international chamber music festivals and more. For more information, call (858) 552-1668.

Monday-Saturday, 157 Stevens Ave., Solana Beach, 92075.

Next CV Library Symposiums for Seniors event Feb. 13 Symposiums for Seniors: “Images of Aging” on Monday, Feb. 13 at 1 p.m. at the Carmel Valley Branch Library. Seniors gather for interesting talks and presentations followed by refreshments. This event will be a presentation by Professor Joaquin Anguera of the SDSU School of Social Work.

Book drive to benefit YWCA In celebration of the upcoming International Book Giving Day, locally-based Book Buzz is holding a book drive and donation collection to benefit the YWCA San Diego. This special event is held to raise much-needed book donations and funds for local children and families. The YWCA is a foundation that supports victims of domestic violence, and recently a project (Jenny’s Jungle by The Wildflower Initiative) installed a reading space within one of the foundations safe houses. It’s called Becky’s House, and the event will be focused on making a difference to that house and reading space. The book drive event will be at 11 a.m. on Feb. 13 at Mint Studio in The Village at Pacific Highlands Ranch at 5965 Village Way Unit 105, San Diego CA 92130. For more information, visit www.bookbuzzproject.com or call 408-409-0948.

Cookbooks, jigsaw puzzle sale The Friends of the Solana Beach Library are selling a large collection of gently-used cookbooks. Prices start at $1. Come look today. These won’t last long. Also on sale are a collection of jigsaw puzzles priced from 25 cents to $5. Why not purchase a cookbook, cook a yummy meal as a family, and enjoy putting together puzzles! What could be more fun for a wintery evening family fun time? Hours 10 a.m.-4 p.m. daily

Yoga at the Birdwing Open Air Classroom on Feb. 19 Join the the San Dieguito River Valley Conservancy Sunday, Feb. 19 at 10 a.m. for a coastal yoga session at the San Dieguito Lagoon Open Air Classroom. All yoga levels welcome. Bring a mat. Instructor, Susan McCrea. Directions: From 1-5, take Via de la Valle exit and go east. Turn south on San Andres Drive and then left into the parking area. It’s a short, easy walk to the classroom. Free, $10 donations appreciated. Visit www.sdrvc.org

Expert to discuss ‘Surf, Sand and Stone’ at SB Library Please join Friends of the Solana Beach Library for a special program by Dr. Keith Heyer Meldahl on Feb. 9 at 6:30 p.m. Meldahhl will discuss the formation of the Southern California coastline, how it is constantly changing and how we can prepare for the changes. The Solana Beach Library is located at157 Stevens Avenue in Solana Beach. The program is free of charge and appropriate for adults and older students.

Festive India ‘Winter Mela’ event Feb. 12 Shiva Vishnu Temple (a nonprofit organization) will present the “2nd Annual Winter Mela” on Sunday, Feb. 12, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. at Ocean Air Park in Carmel Valley. The event is free and is open to all community members. There will be a variety of

activities taking place as well as booths, including music, dance, henna, ethnic wear, ethnic gifts, jewelry, obstacle course, face painting, balloon sculpture, carnival games and yoga. Unique this year are the Spelling bee and Rangoli competitions. One-hundred percent of proceeds go to Shiva Vishnu Temple. Ocean Air Park is located at 4770 Fairport Way, San Diego (Carmel Valley), 92130.

Hospice of the North Coast seeks volunteers for shop Hospice of the North Coast is looking for volunteers to work in its Resale Shop at 278-B N. El Camino Real (Homegoods Shopping Center). One four-hour shift per week is required. Volunteers assist with customer purchases, pricing, sorting and processing donated merchandise. All proceeds go directly to Hospice, a nonprofit organization. If you are interested, please contact Mary Jo Barry, manager, at 760-943-9921.

Great Train Show The Great Train Show will be held Feb. 18-19 at the Del Mar Fairgrounds The nation’s largest model train show, featuring dealers from across the country and operating train layouts of different sizes and scales. Many of the local clubs will be offering workshops and demonstrations, covering a variety of topics for both beginners and experienced modelers. There is also a riding train for kids. Visit trainshow.com

Auditions to be held for musical The Village Church Community Theater in Rancho Santa Fe will hold auditions for “Alice @ Wonderland - The Musical.” Auditions will be held on Sunday, Feb. 19, 2-4 p.m., and Monday, Feb. 20, 5-8 p.m. Roles are available for 14-29 actors, ages 10 and up, including chorus roles with solo opportunities. Many roles have singing solos. Most roles have flexible casting for age, gender and type. Non-singing and dancing roles will also be available. Performances will be: Friday through Sunday, May 5, 6 and 7. Email amyz@villagechurch.org for an audition SEE EVENTS, B8

2016-2017 Season

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Sinfonia

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David Bowlin, violin / kallisti, UCSD vocal octet

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Inaugural Encinitas Half Marathon runs coast March 26 The inaugural Encinitas Half Marathon will be held on Sunday, March 26. With a fast, flat course ideal for first-timers and elites, the race is 12.1 miles on Highway 101 passing through Leucadia, Encinitas, Cardiff and Solana Beach. The coastal course has seven miles of ocean views with support stations and entertainment such as bands and DJs along the way. There will be a CLIF bar zone at miles 6 and 10 and an organic smoothie station at Ki’s at mile 9. Registration includes a high-quality tech tee, goody bag, finisher’s medal and complimentary hot chocolate and organic granola agave oatmeal bowl at the finish. The race is capped at 6,000 runners. Register by Feb. 12 to get your name on your bib. To register or for more information, visit encinitashalfmarathon.com.

NORTH COAST - FEBRUARY 9, 2017 - PAGE B7

Larry Himmel Foundation to donate $5,000 to Free Flight sanctuary Donation to be made at Feb. 26 fundraising event BY BRITTANY WOOLSEY The Larry Himmel Foundation will present a $5,000 check to Free Flight bird sanctuary in Del Mar on Feb. 26 at “Larry Himmel Day,” a fundraising event. During the two-hour event, from noon to 2 p.m., guests are invited to meet Free Flight’s 50 parrots, as well as a canary and African Crowned Crane, while donating toward veterinary costs for the birds. Estimated costs for veterinary care for each bird are about $300 per year, said Mary Struble, executive director and board president of Free Flight. She said the nonprofit is an open-air sanctuary for birds, where people can drop off birds that have “outlived their welcome,” as well as learn about the animals. “Over time, since birds live so long, we realized that we needed to become more of a place where people could bring their birds back because birds can outlive their welcome,” Struble said. “There’s really no other place

like that.” Miles Himmel, who founded The Larry Himmel Foundation after his father, Larry Himmel, passed away in 2014, said the group regularly gives back to San Diego-based businesses and charities. His father, who had a regular show on CBS 8 highlighting noteworthy places in the county, profiled Free Flight on multiple occasions, Miles said. “We had someone reach out from Free Flight, and they showed me a story of my dad from about 12 to 13 years ago,” he said. “When we saw the tie with the story, we thought it would be such a cool event.” One of Larry Himmel’s segments on Free Flight will be shown at the event. Admission to the event, at 2132 Jimmy Durante Blvd., is $10 for adults and $5 for children 12 and under. It is free to Larry Himmel Foundation donors. Donations can be made at www.larryhimmel foundation.org/freeflight. For more information on Free Flight visit freeflightbirds.org. Free Flight is located at 2132 Jimmy Durante Blvd., Del Mar, 92014.

BRITTANY WOOLSEY

About 50 parrots, as well as a canary and African Crowned Crane, call Free Flight in Del Mar home.

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PAGE B8 - FEBRUARY 9, 2017 - NORTH COAST

EVENT BRIEFS (CONTINUED) FROM EVENTS, B6

international consultant with over 40 years of meditation experience will discuss how to use meditation to transform the heart and integrate this practice into your daily life. The Del Mar Branch Library is located at 1309 Camino Del Mar. For more information, call the library at (858) 755-1666, www.sdcl.org.

appointment. Visit www.villagechurchcommunitytheater.org

San Diego Pet Expo The San Diego Pet Expo will be held Feb. 18 - 19 at the Del Mar Fairgrounds. Four-legged friends can receive “spa treatments” from local groomers, sample delicious treats, and try on the latest in furry fashions; their humans will enjoy interacting with top trainers and learning pet-care tips from animal welfare organizations. Rounding out the list of activities is an agility demonstration, pet talent and costume shows, and an exciting pet/owner look-alike contest. Visit petexposandiego.com

T.E.A.M. to present film ‘The Forgotten Refugees’

SB Civic and Historical Society to present Equinox String Quartet Celebrate Valentine’s Day a few days early on Friday, Feb. 10 when the Solana Beach Civic and Historical Society will present the music of the Equinox String Quartet. Refreshments and conversation will begin at 5 p.m. and the program will begin at 5:30 p.m. at the Fletcher Cove Community Center in Solana Beach. The Civic and Historical Society welcomes everyone to this lighthearted evening of music and friendship.

Meditation workshops at Del Mar Library Learn about the transformational benefits of meditation at the Del Mar Library. Workshops will be offered in February and March. The next workshop will be held Wednesday, Feb. 15, 1:30 p.m. Transforming the Heart Through Meditation: Richard Scotti, PhD., an educator, researcher, and

T.E.A.M. (Training and Education About the Middle East) will present a film, “The Forgotten Refugees” on Sunday, Feb. 26, at 2 p.m., in the Lawrence Family Jewish Community Center Library, 4126 Executive Drive, La Jolla. The 50-minute film tells of the forced exodus of Jews from Arab countries and Iran during the last century - a mostly unknown, untold story. Afterwards, Dan Mahni, who was born and raised in Baghdad, will speak on Jewish refugees like himself and answer questions. After being imprisoned merely for being Jewish, he was able to leave Iraq and emigrate to Israel and eventually to the U.S. The program is free and open to the public. Please RSVP to teamisraelsd@gmail.com.

John Thornton to speak at M&A Groundbreaker Series event Join the Association for Corporate Growth San Diego Tuesday, Feb. 21, to hear the history of one of the region’s most celebrated careers, that of M&A Groundbreaker John Thornton (Wavetek, Micom Systems, Mitek Systems, Thornton Winery and more.) This promises to be a discussion filled with revelations of company formations, growth and development prior to a number of successful exits. The event will be held from 7-9 a.m, Tuesday, Feb. 21 at the Lomas Santa Fe Country Club. Paul Thiel, regional managing director, BNY Mellon, will moderate the event. Register at www.acg.org/sandiego

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The Spice Way in Encinitas will hold its 2nd annual Tea Party Sunday, Feb. 12, from 11 a.m.-5 p.m. The event will feature over 60 types of teas and infusions to choose from. This free event, open to the public, invites patrons to learn about a wide variety of teas, their health benefits and tips for brewing the perfect cup of tea. Visit www.thespiceway.com/sd. 260 N El Camino Real, Encinitas, 92024. (760) 634-9709.

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The San Diego Botanic Garden and Rancho Coastal Humane Society present the fifth annual 5K Paw Walk in the Garden on Feb. 18 from 8 a.m. to noon. The non-competitive event, which is open for people and their dogs, spans an optional 3.1-mile course. To register for the event and for more information, visit sdpets.org or sdbgarden.org. Day-of event registration starts at 7:30 a.m., with the first walk starting at 9 a.m.

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North Coast Repertory Theatre will present The Illusion, hailed by The New York Times as “Fantastical…takes your breath away.” Legendary playwright Tony Kushner (Angels in America) displays his brilliance in this wildly inventive tour de force, which celebrates the magic and illusory nature of theatre. The Illusion previews begin Wednesday, Feb. 22. Opening Night is Saturday, Feb. 25 and the show runs through March 19. North Coast Repertory Theatre is located at 987 Lomas Santa Fe Drive, Solana Beach, 92075. Call 858-481-1055 or visit www.northcoastrep.org to purchase tickets.

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NORTH COAST - FEBRUARY 9, 2017 - PAGE B9

Author/owner of Solana Succulents to speak at Del Mar Garden Club meeting Jeff Moore, owner of Solana Succulents, will speak at the Del Mar Garden Club Community Outreach meeting Feb 27, 9 a.m. at the Del Mar Powerhouse. The event is free to the public. Moore will be introduced by Pat Welsh, bestselling garden expert and longtime Del Mar resident. Moore’s talk and powerpoint will follow the flow of his book, Under the Spell of Succulents, which shows how we engage with succulents — growers, collectors, landscaping, container gardening, specialty niches, etc.

The interludes will show the main plant genre s— aloes, agaves,cacti,crassulas, e.g. Many beautiful images will illustrate the talk, and Moore will bring plants to show and to sell along with his books. The event will feature refreshments, including homemade items from the Garden club members. Moore was born and raised in Solana Beach, and was in the second graduating class of Torrey Pines High School. He met his wife at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, where his two sons now go to college.

Casa Aldea Senior Living to hold Open House events for professionals, public Casa Aldea Senior Living is holding two Open House events --one on Thursday, Feb. 16, from 3-6 p.m. for industry professionals, and one on Saturday, Feb. 18 from 1-4 p.m. for the public. Both events will offer an opportunity

to tour the interior of the luxury “Assisted Living and Memory Care Community” opening early spring 2017. The events will include complimentary valet parking, hors d’oeuvres, desserts, beverages, raffles and more. Location: 14740 Via Fiesta ,

San Diego, 92127 (close to Rancho Santa Fe and Santaluz). RSVP by by Feb. 13 to the Feb. 16 event for professionals at 858-756-9600. RSVP for the Feb. 18 public event at 858-284-0619. Visit www.casaaldeaseniorliving.com

Fun Java programming camp offered for upcoming school breaks The League of Amazing Programmers gives kids the advantage they need to prepare for STEM careers in the 21st century. The organization is a nonprofit school dedicated to unlocking the mysteries of coding for kids in grades 5 through 12. Come for a one-week camp and then enroll in

regular weekly classes. Weekly students learn in small classes (6-8 students), work collaboratively, earn UCSD extension credits and are prepared for AP computer science and Oracle Certified Programmer exams after completing the fundamental curriculum. Students taking spring

workshops are eligible to participate in 10th annual iAROC Robotics Competition in June 2017. Upcoming workshops are offered the weeks of Feb. 13-17, Feb. 20-24 and April 10-14 at the Carmel Valley location at 12625 High Bluff Drive. See the website for more details: www.jointheleague.org/join.

The Pacific Wind Quintet

BILL MORRIS

Del Mar Foundation hosts the Pacific Wind Quintet First Thursdays subscribers were recently treated to an evening of some of the finest music ever written for the wind quintet. From classical compositions by Debussy and Mozart to George Gershwin to a klezmer wedding arrangement, the Pacific Wind Quintet filled the Del Mar Powerhouse with wonderful music. First Thursdays is a production of the Cultural Arts Committee of the Del Mar Foundation. For more information, go to www.delmarfoundation.org.

An unforgettable musical soirée to benefit San Diego’s New Americans Museum Deborah Szekely invites you to enjoy a concert by five of the world’s most acclaimed musicians & recording artists

Julian Milkis, Clarinet & Artistic Director

Konstantin Lifschitz, Piano • Alexander Rudin, Cello • Polina Osetinskaya, Piano • Mikhail Kopelman, Violin

Listen to, as though for the first time, Bach, Beethoven & Schubert Friday, February 24, 2017 Reception 6:30pm Concert 8pm

The Abbey 2825 Fifth Avenue San Diego 92103 RSVP (619) 756-7707 Credit card processing – email rsvp@namuseum.org

All proceeds after expenses will support New Americans Museum, programs of tolerance and education. A portion of your ticket(s) is a tax-deductible donation to the extent of the law.

N E WA M E R I C A N S M U S E U M . O R G


PAGE B10 - FEBRUARY 9, 2017 - NORTH COAST

Torrey Hills School Parents Night Out

T

SOCIAL LIFE

www.delmartimes.net

orrey Hills parents gathered Feb. 3 at Arterra Marriott Del Mar for a festive PTA Parents Night Outfundraiser for school programs. Online: www.delmartimes.net

Wilfred Kearse, Lynne Champagne, Lisa and Tom Dolan

Kelly Lewis, Rebecca Hoy, Minnie DeVico

PHOTOS BY MCKENZIE IMAGES

PTA chair Teresa and Wade Erickson

Event co-chairs Mindy Lewis and Aracely Forrester

Tom and Kelly Conway, PTA President Heather Keith, PTA Vice President Susie and Joe Peterson, Lesley and Greg Mundis

Kristin Stanton, Deena Engler

John Forrester, Jim and kindergarten teacher Stephanie Cluxton

Principal Monica and Karl Sorenson


www.delmartimes.net

NORTH COAST - FEBRUARY 9, 2017 - PAGE B11

Falstaff

‘Pops and Pizza’ at Carmel Creek

GIUSEPPE VERDI

C

armel Creek Elementary School’s Dads’ Club hosted a delicious “Pops and Pizza’ event Feb. 3 themed “Warming up for the Fun Run” on the back playground. The school’s Fun Run will be held Feb. 10. Online: www.delmartimes.net

Yarden and Ofer Rosenberg

Brighton, Andy and Bailey Dotters

Colin, Andy and Kaitlyn Kirkpatrick

The Hibsman family

PHOTOS BY JON CLARK

Old, large, and lecherous, Sir John Falstaff can’t resist the ladies—but they can resist him, and have tons of fun at his expense— and you can have fun, too!

Murat and Vikram Gupta

Edie and Dave Alicandri

FEBRUARY 18 / 21 / 24 / 26M 2017 SAN DIEGO CIVIC THEATRE

Brandon and Ryan Sykes, Chris Catanzaro

Paxton, Jonathan and Joy Szymanowski

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Tickets also available at PHOTO: KINGMOND YOUNG


www.delmartimes.net

PAGE B12 - FEBRUARY 9, 2017 - NORTH COAST

‘Art Springs Eternal’exhibit

T

he Del Mar Art Center Gallery, a nonprofit co-operative of established and emerging artists, is welcoming 2017 and “soon-to-be-spring” with its first quarter art exhibition “Art Springs Eternal.” The opening art reception featuring music, refreshments, wine and art was held Feb. 4. The Del Mar Art Center Gallery is located in the Del Mar Plaza. Visit www.dmacgallery.com Online: www.delmartimes.net

Diane Malone, Marci Kissock, Christine Taylor

Anne Marie Bullock, Celeste Morhous, Stina Bullock, Maidy Morhous (President of Del Mar Art Center)

Ivaylo and Anna Vaklinov

PHOTOS BY JON CLARK

Monique Santander with her work "Mariposa"

Kelly Villasenor, Lisa and Mike Uhrhammer, Cathy Asciutto

Annette Friend, Judith Eisenberg

Ed Eginton with his ceramic creations

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NORTH COAST - FEBRUARY 9, 2017 - PAGE B13

Solana Vista Dads’ Club Pancake Breakfast

S

olana Vista Elementary School families and friends gathered Feb. 3 for a delicious Dads’ Club Pancake Breakfast. Online: www.delmartimes.net

Max, Kate Franklin and Tess, Kai and Coral Johnson

Colin Jones and Justin Fritsch from www.SnoozeEatery.com provided the pancakes

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PAGE B14 - FEBRUARY 9, 2017 - NORTH COAST

'Patriotic Performance' at Solana Highlands

S

olana Highlands Elementary School second grade students showcased their talents at a "Patriotic Performance" Jan. 27. Online: www.delmartimes.net

COURTESY

The fifth annual Bike 4 Mike will take place March 19 at the Del Mar Fairgrounds.

Foundation to host charity cycling event for ALS

PHOTOS BY MCKENZIE IMAGES

Team Godfather Charitable Foundation, based in Encinitas, has met a $1 million fundraising goal and will host the fifth annual Bike 4 Mike charity cycling event on March 19. The event, at Del Mar Fairgrounds, will benefit the foundation's goal to find a cure for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) while honoring Michael Ramirez, a Carlsbad resident who died

after a battle with the disease. Distances at the event are 10, 25, 50 and 62 miles. It will also feature an after-party with vendor booths, music, food and beverages, as well as a raffle. Gates open at 6 a.m. for late registrations, check-in and breakfast, and the first race will begin at 7:30 a.m. For more information, visit bike4mike.org.

Del Mar Hills Jogathon

D

el Mar Hills Academy held its annual Jogathon Feb. 1 to raise money to help support Del Mar Schools Education Foundation and the STEAM+ (science, technology, engineering, arts and math) programs. Online: www.delmartimes.net

Volunteers Libby Hellmann, Charles Patton, event chair Cheryl Anderson, Lori Krummen, June Chessmore, Sandra Hoyle, Jennifer Hill

Del Mar Hills Academy Principal Julie Lerner and the “Principals of the Day” Carrie K. and Livvi H.

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Event coordinator Kerry Zisook and Mrs. Barton’s 2nd grade class


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PAGE B16 - FEBRUARY 9, 2017 - NORTH COAST

50 - BUSINESS SERVICES HEALTH/MEDICAL

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80 - JOBS & EDUCATION HELP WANTED / JOBS OFFERED

ENGINEERING DIRECTOR Direct & manage engineering & production activities. Exp req. Travel to Mexico req. Send resume to HR, J&S Packaging, Inc., 9620 Chesapeake Dr, Ste 201A, San Diego, CA 92123 BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT MANAGER - Assist in financial management & policy formation of strategies for capital sourcing & potential markets penetration in Asia. Adv degree & exp. Mail resume to HR, Sorrento Therapeutics, Inc., 9380 Judicial Dr, San Diego, CA 92121 GRAPHIC DESIGNER Create, draw & print designs, concepts, samples for space & interior design of buildings & constructions. Bachelor’s degree req. Mail resume to Ikedo Design, 990 Highland Dr, Ste 110A, Solana Beach, CA 92075

100 - LEGAL NOTICES

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-001128 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Iqon Design Located at: 3757 Carmel View Road, unit 3, San Diego, CA 92130, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 3757 Carmel View Road, unit 3, San Diego, CA 92130. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Maria Neresa Fajardo, 3757 Carmel View Road, unit 3, San Diego, CA 92130. b.Tito Vincent Fajardo, 3757 Carmel View Road, unit 3, San Diego, CA 92130. This business is conducted by: a Married Couple. The first day of business was 09/12/2016. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 01/13/2017. Maria Neresa Fajardo. CV962. Feb. 2, 9, 16, 23, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-002584 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Dynamus International b. Quantum Leap Catalyst Located at: 11146 Whispering Heights Lane, San Diego, CA 92121, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 11146 Whispering Heights Lane, San Diego, CA 92121. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Terence Ostrowiak, 11146 Whispering Heights Lane, San Diego, CA 92121. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business was 01/02/2017. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 01/27/2017. Terence Ostrowiak. CV965. Feb. 9, 16, 23, Mar. 2, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-002987 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. PrideStaff Located at: 11682 El Camino Real, suite 100, San Diego, CA 92130, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 11682 El Camino Real, suite 100, San Diego, CA 92130. Registered Owners Name(s): a.

Registered Owners Name(s): a. CTYSKAPE, INC., 11682 El Camino Real, suite 100, San Diego, CA 92130, California. This business is conducted by: a Corporation. The first day of business has not yet started . This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 02/01/2017. Stephen A. Colley, Vice President . CV966. Feb. 9, 16, 23, Mar. 2, 2017

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-001400 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Ground to Overhead Physical Therapy Located at: 10999 Sorrento Valley Rd, SanDiego,CA92121,SanDiegoCounty. Mailing Address: 11124 Vista Sorrento Parkway, B205, San Diego, CA 92130. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Michael Tancini, 11124 Vista Sorrento Parkway, B205, San Diego, CA 92130. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business has not yet started . This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 01/17/2017. Michael Tancini. CV961. Jan. 26, Feb. 2, 9, 16, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-000534 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. MarTechStra, LLC. Located at: 526 Stratford Court, unit B, Del Mar, CA 92014, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Novaturience, LLC., 526 Stratford Court, unit B, Del Mar, CA 92014, California. This business is conducted by: a Limited Liability Company. The first day of business was 01/01/2017. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 01/09/2017. Marni Belnap, Managing Member. DM1720. Jan 19, 26, Feb. 2, 9, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-001719 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Layered Objects Located at: 272 Barbara Ave., Solana Beach, CA 92075, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. William Micah Baxter, 272 Barbara Ave., Solana Beach, CA 92075. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business has not yet started . This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 01/19/2017. William Micah Baxter. DM1724. Jan. 26, Feb. 2, 9, 16, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-002121 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. WesEra Engineering Located at: 272 Barbara Ave., Solana Beach, CA 92075, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Wesley Dylan Jones, 272 Barbara Ave., Solana Beach, CA 92075. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business was 01/01/2017. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 01/24/2017. Wesley Dylan Jones. DM1725. Feb. 2, 9, 16, 23, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-002188 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Elroy Guitars Located at: 9155 Judicial Dr., #5215, San Diego, CA 92122, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Joseph Jooil Kim, 9155 Judicial Dr., $5215, San Diego, CA 92122. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business was 01/18/2017. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 01/24/2017. Joseph Jooil Kim. DM1729. Feb. 2, 9, 16, 23, 2017

CLASSIFIEDS FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-002044 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. MBRC b. R. H. Cope & Sons Located at: 270 N. El Camino Real, #275, Encinitas, CA 92024, San Diego County. Mailing Address: P.O. Box 231878, Encinitas, CA 92023. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Mike Bianco Rare Coin Inc., 270 N. El Camino Real, #275, Encinitas, CA 92024, California. This business is conducted by: a Corporation. The first day of business was 01/01/2012. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 01/24/2017. Michael Bianco, President. DM1730. Feb. 2, 9, 16, 23, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-002725 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Crown Hill Ranch Located at: 23601 Crown Hill Lane, Escondido, CA 92027, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 1155 Camino Del Mar, #124, Del Mar, CA 92014. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Miller Consulting, Inc., 1155 Camino Del Mar, #124, Del Mar, CA 92014, California. This business is conducted by: a Corporation. The first day of business was 01/01/2017. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 01/30/2017. Van C. Miller, President. DM1733. Feb. 9, 16, 23, Mar. 2, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-002578 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Del Mar Tan Located at: 1555 Camino del Mar, suite 203 c/o 18, Del Mar, CA 92014, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 667 Polaris Dr., Encinitas, CA 92024. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Mackenzie Lester, 667 Polaris Dr., Encinitas, CA 92024. b.Ryan Lester, 667 Polaris Dr., Encinitas, CA 92024. 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 01/27/2017. Mackenzie Lester. DM1735. Feb. 9, 16, 23, Mar. 2, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-002406 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Forecast Ventures Located at: 148 12th Street, Del Mar, CA 92014, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 1155 Camino Del Mar, #541, Del Mar, CA 92014. Registered Owners Name(s): a. ICT 168 Capital, LLC., 148 12th Street, Del Mar, CA 92014, California. This business is conducted by: a Limited Liability Company. The first day of business was 12/01/2007. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 01/26/2017. Kim Z Belk, Manager. DM1727. Feb. 2, 9, 16, 23, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-002766 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Soble Dance Movement Located at: 13255 Luckett Court, San Diego, CA 92130, San Diego County. Mailing Address: PO Box 2570, Del Mar, CA 92014 Registered Owners Name(s): a. Jessica Soble, 13255 Luckett Court, San Diego, CA 92130. b.Jacob Soble, 13255 Luckett Court, San Diego, CA 92130. This business is conducted by: a General Partnership. The first day of business was 01/01/2017. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 01/30/2017. Jessica Soble. CV967. Feb. 9, 16, 23, Mar. 2, 2017

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-000911 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. MHR Golf Services Located at: 174 S. Willowspring Dr., Encinitas, CA 92024, San Diego County. Mailing Address: P.O. Box 230162, Encinitas, CA 92023. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Paul T. Moher, 1828 Forestdale Dr., Encinitas, CA 92024. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business has not yet started . This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 01/11/2017. Paul T. Moher. DM1722. Jan. 19, 26, Feb. 2, 9, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-000739 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Gi Services International Located at: 10681 Village Haven Trail, Suite 119, San Diego, CA 92130, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. H. Jurgen Lenz, M.D., 10681 Village Haven Trail, suite 119, San Diego, CA 92130. This business is conducted by: an Unincorporated Association (not a Partnership). The first day of business has not yet started . This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 01/10/2017. H. Jurgen Lenz, President. CV959. Jan. 19, 26, Feb. 2, 9, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-002807 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Transportation Engineering Consultant Located at: 6379 Alexandri Cir., Carlsbad, CA 92011, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 6379 Alexandri Cir., Carlsbad, CA 92011. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Amir Etezadi , 6379 Alexandri Cir., Carlsbad, CA 92011. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business was 01/31/2017. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 01/31/2017. Amir Etezadi. DM584. Feb. 9, 16, 23, Mar. 2, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-003041 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Luxe Events, LLC b. Luxe Located at: 924 R Valley Ave., Solana Beach, CA 92075, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Luxe Events, LLC., 924 R Valley Ave., Solana Beach, CA 92075, California. This business is conducted by: a Limited Liability Company. The first day of business was 01/03/2017. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 02/01/2017. Cara North, CEO. SB102. Feb. 9, 16, 23, Mar. 2, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-001270 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Ultrasound Technologies Located at: 821 Stevens Ave., #3, Solana Beach, CA 92075, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Candace Goldstein, 821 Stevens Ave., #3, Solana Beach, CA 92075. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business was 12/01/2015. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 01/17/2017. Candace Goldstein. DM1728. Feb. 2, 9, 16, 23, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-002105 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. RealEstateSwag.net Located at: 4039 Carmel View Road, #110, San Diego, CA 92130, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s):

County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Michael O. Braunstein, 4039 Carmel View Road, #110, San Diego, CA 92130. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business was 01/24/2017. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 01/24/2017. Michael O. Braunstein. CV963. Feb. 2, 9, 16, 23, 2017

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-002107 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Swag Dog Promotions Located at: 4039 Carmel View Road, #110, San Diego, CA 92130, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Michael O. Braunstein, 4039 Carmel View Road, #110, San Diego, CA 92130. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business was 10/24/2011. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 01/24/2017. Michael O. Braunstein. CV964. Feb. 2, 9, 16, 23, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-002317 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Flourish by Blues and Shoes Located at: 2971 State Street, Carlsbad, CA 92008, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Ragz Enterprises Inc., 425 Carlsbad Village Dr., Carlsbad, CA 92008, California. This business is conducted by: a Corporation. The first day of business has not yet started . This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 01/25/2017. Megan Oborski, President. DM1732. Feb. 2, 9, 16, 23, 2017 CITY OF DEL MAR NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on Tuesday, the 21st day of February, 2017, at 6:00 p.m., (or as soon thereafter as practicable) in the City Hall, Temporary Council Chambers, 2010 Jimmy Durante Blvd., Suite 100, Del Mar, California, the City Council will conduct public hearing(s) on the following: Status Update of the Second Dwelling Unit Regulations per Ordinance 900 and Council Direction on Potential Amendments Those desiring to be heard in favor of or in opposition to this item, will be given an opportunity to do so during such hearing or by writing to the City Council at 1050 Camino del Mar, Del Mar, CA, 92014. Attention: Administrative Services Director. On any correspondence, please reference the hearing title and date. Materials related to this public hearing are available at the temporary City Hall, 2010 Jimmy Durante Blvd, Suite 120, Del Mar, CA 92014, during normal business hours. Under California Government Code 65009, if you challenge the nature of the proposed action in Court, you may be limited to raising only those issues you or someone else raised at the public hearing, described in this notice, or written correspondence delivered to the City at, or prior to, the public hearing. DATE: February 3, 2017 Ashley Jones, Administrative Services Director DM1737. 2.9.17 CITY OF DEL MAR DESIGN REVIEW BOARD AGENDA Del Mar (Temporary) Council Chambers 2010 Jimmy Durante Boulevard Suite #100 Start Time: 6:00PM, Wednesday, February 22, 2017 ROLL CALL, APPROVAL OF MINUTES, UPDATE, HEARING FROM THE AUDIENCE ON ITEMS NOT LISTED ON THE AGENDA, DESIGN REVIEW BOARD/ STAFF DISCUSSION (Non-Application Items); DISCUSSION AND BRIEFING (Application Items) 1.Recommendations to City Council for Shoreline Protection Permits and a Setback Seawall

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tection Permits and a Setback Seawall Permit to reconstruct seawalls located at 1) 2928 Camino del Mar/ 29th Street street end (SPP-16-01) ; 2) 2838 Sandy Lane (SPP-16-02); and 3) 2828 and 2820 Ocean Front (SSP-16-01)., CONSENT CALENDAR, CONTINUED APPLICATION(S): ITEM 1 DRB-024 CDP16-005 LC16015 APN: 300-030-26 Location: 539 15th Street Applicant/Owner: Matthew Haydinger Applicant Agent: The Paul Company, LLC Zone: R-10 Environmental Status: Exempt Contact Person: Matt Bator, AICP, Senior Planner Description: A request for Design Review, Coastal Development, and Land Conservation Permits to demolish a one-story, single-family residence and construct a new (replacement) onestory, single-family residence over basement with a new pool/spa and associated grading, landscaping and site improvements. NEW APPLICATION(S): ITEM 2 DRB16-020 CDP16-013 LC16-015 APN: 300-030-61 Location: 424 Carolina Road Owner: Ernest & Jennifer Belezzouli Zone: R1-10 Environmental Status: Categorically Exempt pursuant to Section 15303 (a) (Class 3 – New Construction or Conversion of Small Structures). Contact Person: Breann Guzman, Assistant Planner Description: A request for Design Review Permit, Coastal Development Permit, and Land Conservation Permit to allow the demolition of an existing singlefamily residence and the construction of a new, single-story, single-family residence with a partial subterranean garage and basement, in conjunction with associated grading and landscaping. ITEM 3 DRB16-040 CDP16-025 LC16-013 TRP16-024 APN: 300-174-12 Location: 120 8th Street Owner: Joseph Bevash Zone: R2 Environmental Status: Categorically Exempt pursuant to Section 15303 (a) (Class 3 – New Construction or Conversion of Small Structures). Contact Person: Evan Langan, AICP, Associate Planner Description: A request for Design Review, Coastal Development, Land Conservation and Tree Removal Permits to allow the demolition of an existing single-family residence and the construction of a new, two-story, single-family residence with attached garage and basement, in conjunction with associated grading and the removal of one Torrey Pine Tree. *This project is located within the Coastal Commission’s appeal jurisdiction. ITEM 4 DRB16-041 APN: 300-390-18 Location: 1253 Luneta Drive Owner: Robert Sundquist Zone: R1-10 Environmental Status: Categorically Exempt pursuant to Section 15301 (Class 1 – Existing Facilities). Contact Person: Breann Guzman, Assistant Planner Description: A request for a Design Review Permit, to install a second-story patio cover on the west side of an existing singlefamily residence. ITEM 5 DRB16-042 CDP16-026 LC16-014 APN: 300-030-85 Location: 441 Carolina Road Owner: Jeff & Bernadette Moore Zone: R1-10 Environmental Status: Categorically Exempt pursuant to Section 15303 (a) (Class 3 – New Construction or Conversion of Small Structures). Contact Person: Breann Guzman, Assistant Planner Description: A request for a Design Review Permit, Coastal Development Permit, and Land Conservation Permit to allow the demolition of an existing single-family residence and the construction of a new, two-story, singlefamily residence with a basement, partial subterranean garage, and new pool area in conjunction with associated grading and landscaping. ITEM 6 DRB16-043 APN: 299-093-18 Location: 218 22nd Street Owner: Doug Simpson Zone: RME Environmental Status: Categorically Exempt pursuant to Section 15301 (Class 1 – Existing Facilities). Contact Person: Evan Langan, AICP,


100 - LEGAL Contact Person:NOTICES Evan Langan, AICP, Associate Planner Description: A request for a Design Review Permit to allow modifications to the roof of an existing single-family residence in conjunction with an interior and exterior remodel, and the construction of a new, detached accessory structure. ITEM 7 DRB17-006 APN: 300-263-08 Location: 725 Amphitheater Drive Owner: Rick Ray Zone: R1-10 Environmental Status: Categorically Exempt pursuant to Section 15301 (Class 1 – Existing Facilities). Contact Person: Breann Guzman, Assistant Planner Description: A request for a Design Review Permit to install a patio cover over an existing brick patio on the south side of an existing single-family residence. ADJOURNMENT DM1736. 2.9.17 NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF: JAN SPILLER CASE NUMBER: 37-2017-00003041-PR-PL-CTL To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both, of JAN

in the will or estate, or both, of JAN SPILLER. A Petition for Probate has been filed by CHRISTINE GEISSBERGER in the Superior Court of California, County of SAN DIEGO. The petition for Probate requests that CHRISTINE GEISSBERGER be appointed as personal representative to administer the estate of the decedent. The petition requests the decedent’s will and codicils, if any, be admitted to probate. The will and any codicils are available for examination in the file kept by the court. The petition requests authority to administer the estate under the Independent Administration of Estates Act. (This authority will allow the personal representative to take many actions without obtaining court approval. Before taking certain very important actions, however, the personal representative will be required to give notice to interested persons unless they have waived notice or consented to the proposed action.) The independent administration authority will be granted unless an interested person files an objection to the petition and shows good cause why the court should not grant the authority. A hearing on the petition will be

crossword

CLASSIFIEDS

A hearing on the petition will be held in this court as follows: Date: March 9, 2017 Time: 1:30 p.m. Dept.: PC-2. Judge: JULIA C. KELETY Address of court: 1409 Fourth Avenue, San Diego, CA 92101. If you object to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney. If you are a creditor or a contingent creditor of the decedent, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within the later of either (1) four months from the date of first issuance of letters to a general personal representative as defined in section 58(b) of the California Probate Code, or (2) 60 days from the date of mailing or personal delivery to you of a notice under section 9052 of the California Probate Code. Other California statutes and legal authority may affect your rights as a creditor. You may want to consult with an attorney knowledgeable in California law. You may examine the file kept by the court. If you are a person interested in the estate, you may file with the court a Request for Special Notice (form DE-154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code section 1250. A Request for Special Notice form is available from the court clerk. Attorney for Petitioner: Law Offices of Mark A. Homen Mark A. Homen 1728 B Street Hayward, CA 94541 (510) 538-8089 DM1734. Feb. 9, 16, 23, 2017.

SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO PO Box 120128 San Diego, CA 92112 PETITION OF: SHERRY ANN BROWN for change of name. ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR A CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER: 37-2017-00001419-CU-PT-CTL TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS Petitioner(S): SHERRY ANN BROWN filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: a. Present Name : SHERRY ANN BROWN to Proposed Name: SHERRY BROWN PRICE 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 days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING Date: Mar. 10, 2017 Time: 8:30am Dept: 46 The address of the court is: 220 West Broadway San Diego, CA 92101. 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: Carmel Valley News Date: Jan. 13, 2017 Jeffrey B Barton Judge of the Superior Court CV960. Jan. 19, 26, Feb. 2, 9, 2017

ANSWERS 2/2/2017

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SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO 325 S. Melrose Dr. Vista, CA 92081 PETITION OF: KAY LYNN MATTHEWS for change of name. ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR A CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER: 37-2017-00003617-CU-PT-NC TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS Petitioner(S): KAY LYNN MATTHEWS filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: a. Present Name : KAY LYNN MATTHEWS to Proposed Name: KAELYN MATTHEWS GOMEZ 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 days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING Date: Mar. 21, 2017 Time: 8:30am Dept: 26 The address of the court is: 325 S. Melrose Dr. Vista, CA 92081. 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: Solana Beach Sun Date: Jan. 30, 2017 William S. Soto Judge of the Superior Court SB101. Feb. 9, 16, 23, Mar. 2, 2017

DO YOU NEED TO PUBLISH A LEGAL AD? Let Us Help! Fictitious Business Names ! Name Changes ! Lien Sales ! Alcoholic Beverages License ! Petitions for Probate ! Trustee Sales ! Summons - Divorce ! Annual Report ! Non-Responsibility ! Dissolutions of Partnership !

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NORTH COAST - FEBRUARY 9, 2017 - PAGE B17

FROM CRYSTAL, B2 everything! But mostly, I’d teach was English and phys ed. I’d take questions from the students and sometimes break in new material. Because I was just starting out in comedy. And if somebody is in a chair, looking at you in a classroom, it’s really no different than in a comedy club.” Doing a Spinal Tap reunion: “Hey, yeah, of course. One last tour! But I want the royalties on the ‘Mime is money’ hats! (Crystal’s character in the 1984 movie, “This is Spinal Tap,” was “Morty, the mime, waiter,” who memorably declared: “Mime is money! Come on, move it!”). Advice for Jimmy Kimmel on hosting the Oscars: “I was talking to Kimmel the other day. He’s very witty and did a really good job on the Emmys. When everybody asks me about hosting the Oscars eight times. I tell them: ‘Just look like you want to be there. Work hard to write good jokes and don’t over-stay your welcome. Just pick your spots and make sure the show moves along.’ The most important thing is having a really good time. And it’s difficult for the audience, because they’re all nervous and uncomfortable. So pick jokes that work.” Jack Palance doing one-armed push-ups during his 1992 Oscars Best Supporting Actor acceptance speech: “I think it was the greatest set-up for a joke in Oscars history. Plus, I

FROM HAMILTON, B3 Hamilton since day one, including backstage stories. The show was every bit as amazing as the hype, and lived up to its reputation of being the most exciting thing on Broadway in decades.” Other unique packages include an Escape Room Party, a Disneyland trip for four students with Canyon Crest Academy teacher Tim Stiven, restaurant gift certificates, trips and much more. Rendezvous in Paris is the Canyon Crest Academy Foundation’s annual gala, and this year features Tony-nominated performer Susan Egan, the original Belle in Broadway’s Beauty and the Beast singing with 50 of CCA’s most talented students and alumni. The Rendezvous in Paris gala will be held on Feb. 25 at Canyon Crest Academy and will include dinner, a live auction, and an amazing show. Tickets are expected to

was one who had helped create that part (for Palance) in ‘City Slickers.’ Jack was in the first movie I ever saw as a kid, ‘Shane.’ And here I was in ‘City Slickers,’ acting with him in a role he won an Oscar for doing. It was such a thrill. And that happened to be one of the better shows in the history of the Oscars. Because he did (the push-ups). it gave me a running start for the rest of the show. Did I send him a thank-you card? Um, no — he already had the Oscar!” His creative impetus: “I haven’t stopped working since high school; I really haven’t stopped. I love to tell stories. I love to create things from out of the blue, and create new people, characters, stories, movies. Whatever they end up becoming is just an extension of the stories you tell from the time you’re a little kid. I was always imitating my relatives. … I was always interested in creating someone else and becoming someone else.” Retirement: “I never even use the word. I got to know (comedy pioneer) George Burns pretty well. I was with him in Las Vegas when he was 95, and I watched him do an hour and a half performance. Afterward, I asked him: ‘Will you ever retire?’ And he said: ‘To what? What would I do?’ ” ■ IF YOU GO: “Spend the Night with Billy Crystal,” 8 p.m. Feb. 16. Jacobs Music Center’s Copley Symphony Hall, 750 B St., downtown San Diego. Tickets: $71-$221 at (800) 745-3000 or ticketmaster.com sell out, and although VIP seats are already sold out for this event, there are still general admission seats and after-party tickets. The after-party will be held at Dolce at the Highlands and features a meet and greet with Susan Egan, dessert, and bubbles. For more information and VIP packages, Athletic and Proscenium Theater Plaques, opportunities for business and personal sponsorships and donations, go to www.ccagala.com. The Canyon Crest Academy Foundation is a parent-led 501(c)(3) organization providing fantastic opportunities across academics, athletics, and the arts, and creating an environment where students can thrive. Tax-deductible donations to the CCA Foundation are needed to continue the foundation’s support of these programs. Donations can be made online at www.canyoncrest foundation.org.


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PAGE B18 - FEBRUARY 9, 2017 - NORTH COAST

Smart tips for the inquiring foodie

R

eaders are constantly e-mailing this Kitchen Shrink for advice on assorted culinary crises. I recently received one from a panicked cook who was hosting a holiday gathering. When she inserted a first generation-style meat thermometer into a crown roast of lamb — and it snapped in half — I recommended Chinese take-out for dinner. Here’s a batch of tried-and-true food handling, storing and cooking tips for your collection. Some of these I stumbled upon by serendipity while searching for help to prevent or repair culinary glitches. The rest were gathered from other food-impassioned solution seekers and, of course, thoroughly tested in my kitchen before being added to the list.

Say Cheese: When shredding hard and semi-soft cheeses, coat the grater with a non-stick olive oil spray for faster clean-up and less wastage. Chill Out: For easier handling of beef, lamb, chicken or fish for soup, stew and stir-fry preparations, pop in the freezer for an hour or two. This makes it more manageable to slice or

cube without shredding the fibers. Onions are also kinder on the eyes when frozen — no more tears when dicing or slicing these icy bulbs. Herbal Essence: Enrich the flavor of soups and sauces by adding the herbs and spices during the last five minutes of cooking so they maintain their potency. Your Main Squeeze: To get the most juice out of a lemon, keep at room temperature for a day (or immerse into a bowl of hot water for a few minutes), then, with your palm, roll on a hard surface until the rind feels supple and the lemon softer. Cook’s Tip: After you have squeezed the last drop, plastic-wrap tightly the remaining pulp and rind, then freeze to use later for cake batters, risottos, or other lip-puckering dishes. Flour Power: So that bugs don’t take up residence in your flour stash, store it in a wide-mouth glass jar and add a bay leaf. Use Your Noodle: To prevent pasta from its maddening tendency of sticking together, add a couple of

tablespoons of olive oil to the boiling water before immersing the noodles. Strain when done, and gently blend another tablespoon or two of olive oil (per package) into the pasta. Cook’s Tip: Prepare al dente any pasta you intend to bake or cook further — such as lasagna, ziti or stuffed shells. Eat, Drink and Be Berry: The easiest way of preventing pesky mold from forming on berries is to rinse only the amount you plan to eat or serve right away. If, however, you intend to keep berries in the refrigerator for a few days, give them a quick rinse first in a weak dilution of water and apple-cider vinegar, drain in a sieve and air-dry for an hour, then refrigerate in an open bowl. Brown Out: To stave off sliced apples from oxidizing and turning brown simply squirt with lemon juice before storing or serving. Spud Smarts: Keep potatoes in a cool, dark place until ready to be cooked. Spuds tend to rot faster when onions are stored nearby. Use potatoes before they get a chance to germinate. Scrub them with a brush and rinse with cold water. Examine the root carefully and gouge and discard each sprouted “eye” before cooking. (Sprouting tendrils contain a mild toxin the plant creates to protect its offspring). In A Nutshell: Since nuts and seeds have a high fat content and tend to go rancid rather quickly, store in tightly closed glass containers in the refrigerator or freezer to keep light and

Sweet & Savory Toasted Nut Combo ■ Ingredients: 1 cup assorted shelled nuts (walnuts, almonds, cashews, your choice); 1/4 teaspoon sea salt; 1/4 teaspoon cinnamon; Cayenne pepper (to taste); 1/4 teaspoon powdered cumin; a dash of nutmeg; 1/4 cup brown sugar; 2 tablespoons butter (low-cholesterol version: use walnut, almond, sesame or sunflower oil); 1/2 cup dried cherries, cranberries or raisins (optional); 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce. ■ Method: In a mixing bowl, combine salt and spices. Set aside. In a skillet, melt butter or heat oil on medium, add nuts and toast. Add remaining ingredients and teaspoon of water. Cook on low until sugar is melted. Spread mixture on parchment-lined cookie sheet and cool. Store in airtight containers. — kitchenshrink@san.rr.com

moisture out. They generally last four months in the fridge, and eight in the freezer with their texture intact. Nuts and seeds also have a habit of picking up tastes and odors of nearby foods, so it’s best to keep them in solitary confinement. Taste before use because a few rancid pieces can ruin a dish.

SPONSORED COLUMNS DR. VAN CHENG San Diego Vein Institute 760.944.9263

Tips for Your Sclerotherapy Treatment for Varicose Veins If you have varicose veins, you already may have been scheduled for sclerotherapy treatment to remove your varicose veins. But maybe you still have some questions about the sclerotherapy procedure and you want tips on maximizing the healing process. A quick refresher: The sclerotherapy procedure happens right in the doctor’s office. Depending on the severity of the varicose vein—or veins—the procedure can

take only thirty minutes or it can even be done in as little as five minutes’ time. Sclerotherapy is an injection of the chemical sclerosant directly into a varicose vein in order to damage the inside lining of the vein. The subsequent scarring causes the vein to close. After the injection, pressure is applied over the veins in order to prevent the blood from returning once you stand up. Repeated sessions are sometimes necessary, depending on the extent of the varicose veins. Once the procedure is over, there are some common tips for post-treatment recovery. All doctors and therapists will recommend that patients wear compression stockings after sclerotherapy treatment. Some will recommend that patients wear them for several days, while others will extend the recovery time with compression stockings to several weeks. Compression stockings help maintain pressure throughout the legs

(and veins), promoting healthy circulation and reducing the bruising. It is always best to follow the recommended time frame for wearing compression stockings after treatment. Bruising around the injection site or sites is common among sclerotherapy patients, and the appearance of bruises can last up to two weeks—the bruising period is almost always longer for patients who are on blood thinners. But just as every patient is different, so are the healing times. A small bruise, post-treatment, for a couple of weeks is nothing to worry about. If the bruise increases in size and deepens in color more than a few days or a week after treatment, or an abscess appears around the injection site, go immediately to the hospital, as you may have an underlying condition that causes such a rare reaction. To be extra cautious, some doctors and vein treatment centers recommend avoiding any over-the-counter medications that act

as anti-coagulants or blood thinners, such as aspirin, ibuprofen, and even omega 3s. While there is no “down time” required after sclerotherapy treatment, it is good to avoid any strenuous activity or exercise. That being said, regular low-impact exercise, especially walking, is encouraged by most doctors and vein treatment centers beginning immediately after treatment. It will be important to report to your doctor any slow or lack of healing, either at the injection site or any localized clotting. There may be some discoloration of the skin at the injection site, but this is generally nothing to worry about and can be corrected with topical creams or even laser therapy. Remember, there are plenty of fake remedies out in the world, which are a waste of money and could delay potentially crucial treatment. Varicose veins are a medical condition and could be a symptom of a much bigger vascular problem, and they are a condition best treated early on.

HEIDI BARTOLOTTA Moms Making Six Figures 858.837.1505 Momsmakingsixfigures.com

Look to these local authorities for professional guidance on daily living at delmartimes.net/columns


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NORTH COAST - FEBRUARY 9, 2017 - PAGE B19

Monica Nash of Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices’ Del Mar office named 2016 REALTOR of the Year by Women’s Council of REALTORS Thanks to her superior real estate knowledge, willingness to help clients and colleagues alike, amazing positive attitude, and outstanding relationship Moncia skills, Monica Nash Nash of Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices California Properties has received the 2016 REALTOR of the Year Award from the Women’s Council of REALTORS (WCR). “We are so proud that the WCR’s San Diego chapter’s board unanimously agreed that Monica deserves this prestigious honor,” Del Mar office Branch Manager Liz Piccolomini said. “Her drive to work hard for clients comes with a high degree of professionalism and honesty. Her background in leadership with numerous philanthropic, educational, and community organizations creates an ability to connect with people and build meaningful, trust-based relationships.”

Monica is among the company’s 50 top-producing San Diego County agents for 2016 transactions. She joined forces with Mary Chaparro in 2016 to form Chaparro & Nash Real Estate Group in the Del Mar office, committed to providing excellent service in all real estate disciplines. Monica’s passion for delivering great results for buyers and sellers has earned her numerous sales and production awards from Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices California Properties. “Effective marketing skills set me apart as a real estate professional. I am constantly educating myself to keep up to date with trends and cutting-edge tools,” Monica said. “I'm an expert with social media and have a background in graphic design and marketing, ensuring that listings’ advertising gets the furthest reach. Most importantly, my relationship with my clients and their needs is my first and top priority. It’s not just about the transaction. I am committed to providing excellent service throughout Southern California.”

Monica is complemented by 20 years of design and construction knowledge, which she acquired working with her husband, John Nash, who helped create and manage world-class architectural projects throughout Southern California, including the extraordinary Del Mar Plaza. Active in the community she serves and loves, Monica supports the San Diego Center for Children, and is the creator/organizer of the annual Santa visit and “Light Up a Life” event each December at Del Mar Plaza for fundraising and gifts for underprivileged children. She is also an ongoing donor to Giveback Homes, a community of real estate professionals committed to creating social change by helping build homes for deserving families around the world. To benefit from Monica’s extensive network of resources, and experience a smooth and positive transaction every time, contact Monica at 760-672-2166 mobile, 858-259-6400 office, or monica@monicanash.com.

First San Diego Film Week to begin Feb. 10 After the sold-out success of the 3rd Annual San Diego Film Awards, the Film Consortium is expanding into a full week celebrating film in America’s Finest City taking place Feb. 10-19. “We couldn’t be happier to honor our seven festival partners during the first-ever San Diego Film Week. The San Diego International Film Festival, Latino Film Festival, Asian Film Festival, GI Film Festival San Diego, the 48-hour Film Project San Diego, Horrible Imaginings Film Festival, and NewFilmmakers LA will be participating with their own curated evenings at the Museum of Photographic Arts in Balboa Park.” said Film Consortium President Jodi Cilley. “We have come to agreements with seven popular and diverse film festivals and we are looking forward to having workshops with some of the best film organizations San Diego has to

offer,” added Cilley. The week-long film event will kick off with an “Old Hollywood”-themed red carpet gala to be held Feb. 10, 6 p.m. at the Lafayette Hotel, 2223 El Cajon Boulevard, San Diego. Guests are invited to “look the part” to celebrate film and community in this beautiful and historic venue. The evening will include appetizers, mingling with San Diego’s finest television and filmmaking professionals, a New Actor Showcase, and a New Filmmaker Pitchfest. Tickets for opening night are $30 per person and can be purchased via the Film Week website atwww.sdfilmweek.com/2017/ For more information about the films, filmmakers, sponsors, schedule of events, festival ticket prices or venues, visit www.sdfilmweek.com/2017/

5950 AVENIDA CHAMNEZ La Jolla, California An architectural classic home of the late architect Loch Crane. Loch was a student of Frank Lloyd Wright (1940). The home features a hexagon form with five levels which offers a concept of spaciousness and freedom with many Japanese accents. Offered at $2,750,000

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$875,000 3BD / 2BA $999,000-$1,049,000 4BD / 3BA

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$349,000-$364,900 1BD / 1BA $989,000 4BD / 3.5BA $998,000 4BD / 3BA $1,028,000 4BD / 4.5BA $1,325,000 4BD / 3BA $1,375,000 5BD / 3BA $3,150,000 5BD / 5BA $3,250,000 5BD / 5.5BA $7,495,000 5BD / 6.5BA

12291 Carmel Vista Road, 110 Marianne Amerine, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices 6749 Solterra Vista Parkway Dan Conway, Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty 7048 Via Agave Dan Conway, Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty 7078 Via Agave Dan Conway, Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty 5150 Via Avante Becky Campbell, Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty 5134 Pearlman Way Charles & Farryl Moore, Coldwell Banker 5623 Meadows Geeta Antony, Bankers Realty & Mortgage 5747 Meadows Del Mar Julie Split-Keyes, Berkshire Hathaway/Host: Maggi Kawasaki 4920 Rancho Del Mar Trail Becky Campbell, Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty

$2,200,000 3BD / 3BA $2,650,000 3BD / 2.5BA $3,100,000 4BD / 3BA $3,995,000 4BD / 3.5BA

12934 Via Grimaldi Sat 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. Mary Chaparro, Berkshire Hathaway 619-884-4477 12729 Via Felino Sat & Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. Dan Conway, Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty 858-243-5278 860 Crest Road Sat 1:30 p.m. - 3:30 p.m., Sun 2 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. Jennifer Anderson, Willis Allen Real Estate 858-524-3077 209 Torrey Pines Terrace Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. Jean Logan, Berkshire Hathaway 858-442-0499

$1,895,000-$2,195,000 4BD / 4.5BA $1,525,000 5BD / 4.5BA

748 Rancho Santa Fe Rd C. Horn, Berkshire Hathaway California Prop/Host: B. Swanson 1408 Lauren Ct. Danielle Short, Coldwell Banker/Hosts: E. Bustillos & C. Gifford

$1,325,000 4BD / 3BA $1,329,000 4BD / 4BA $1,450,000 3BD / 2.5BA $1,775,000 5BD / 4.5BA $2,495,000 5BD / 5BA $2,975,000 4BD / 4.5BA $2,995,000 4BD / 4.5BA $2,995,000 4BD / 5.5BA $3,799,000 4BD / 3.5BA $3,895,000 8BD / 7.5BA $3,950,000 4BD / 5.5BA $7,495,000 5BD / 6.5BA

5150 Via AvanteRancho Santa Fe Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. Becky Campbell, Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty 858-449-2027 8239 Santaluz Village Green N – Santaluz Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. Shaun Worthen, Berkshire Hathaway 619-518-9701 14530 Caminito Saragossa Sat & Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. Shannon Biszantz, Pacific Sothebys International Realty 619-417-4655 7961 Camino De La Dora Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. Joanne Fishman, Coldwell Banker 858-945-8333 5424 El Cielito Sun 1 a.m. - 3 a.m. Erica Peterson, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 858-395-4981 7052 La Palma Sun 12:30 p.m. - 3:30 p.m. K. Ann Brizolis & Associates, Pacific Sotheby’s/Host: Bree Bornstein 858-405-2003 6011 Lago Lindo Sat & Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. Garret Milligan, Pacific Sotheby’s/Host Sunday: Larry 858-692-3308 8007 Entrada De Luz W – Santaluz Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. Gloria Shepard & Kathy Lysaught, Coldwell Banker 619-417-5564 5380 La Glorieta Thurs 10 a.m. - 4 p.m., Fri, Sat & Sun 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. Doug Harwood, Coldwell Banker 858-381-0559 17615 Via de Fortuna Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. Cecilia G Zavala, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices 858-699-6646 7912 Entrada De Luz E – Santaluz Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. Gloria Shepard & Kathy Lysaught, Coldwell Banker 619-417-5564 4920 Rancho Del Mar Trail Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. Becky Campbell, Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty 858-449-2027

$1,675,000-$1,695,000 2BD / 1BA $1,999,000 3BD / 2.5BA $2,095,000 4BD / 3BA

315 Clark Street Csilla Crouch, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices 164 Solana Point Circle Jennifer Anderson, Willis Allen Real Estate 465 Rosa Sreet Elizabeth Reed, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices

CARMEL VALLEY

DEL MAR

ENCINITAS

RANCHO SANTA FE

SOLANA BEACH

Sat 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 858-382-5496 Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 858-414-4695 Sat & Sun 12 p.m. - 3 p.m. 619-518-6043 Sat & Sun 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. 858-243-5278 Sat & Sun 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. 858-243-5278 Sat & Sun 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. 858-243-5278 Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 858-449-2027 Sat & Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 858-395-7525 Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 858-349-4844 Sat 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 858-735-6754 Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 858-449-2027

Sat & Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 858-775-9817 Sat & Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 619-708-1500

Sat & Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 858-245-6793 Sun 11 a.m. - 1 p.m. 858-524-3077 Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 858-344-9092

For the most up-to-date list of open houses, mapped locations, and premium listings with photos, visit rsfreview.com/open-houses-list/ Contact April Gingras | april@rsfreview.com | 858-876-8863


www.delmartimes.net

PAGE B20 - FEBRUARY 9, 2017 - NORTH COAST

AUTOMOTIVE GROUP

After deciding to replace my 2 ageing BMWs with more fuel efficient vehicles with lower cost of ownership, I purchased a new vehicle from Mossy Honda, and then went to Mossy Ford to check out their plug-in hybrids. My salesman was very knowledgeable...hands down the most knowledgeable salesperson I have ever dealt with.

Throughout the process, everyone we came into contact with was awesome. They worked hard to get the terms that we felt comfortable with and explained all of the contracts and other options that were available to us.

-

John I.

All around, this was a 5 star car buying experience. I’d recommend Mossy to anyone looking for a new car.

* Actual Mossy customer review. Models used in photo.

THERE’S A MOSSY NEAR YOU!

NOW INTRODUCING: INFINITI of Oceanside

Mossy Ford Pacific Beach • Mossy Toyota / Scion Pacific Beach • Mossy Nissan Escondido Mossy Nissan Chula Vista • Mossy Volkswagen El Cajon • Mossy Nissan National City Mossy Fiat / Alfa Romeo National City • Mossy Nissan El Cajon Mossy Volkswagen Escondido • Mossy Honda Lemon Grove • Mossy Nissan Poway Mossy Nissan Oceanside • Mossy Nissan Kearny Mesa

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