Residential Customer Del Mar CA, 92014 ECRWSS
Volume XVII, Issue 29
www.delmartimes.net
July 25, 2013 Published Weekly
Caribbean Nights Gala
PRSRT STD U.S. POSTAGE PAID SAN DIEGO, CA PERMIT NO. 1980
Harassment claim made by third woman against Filner BY CITY NEWS SERVICE A third woman stepped forward July 24 to accuse San Diego Mayor Bob Filner of sexual harassment, while a group of women military veterans announced that it has rescinded an invitation for the former congressman to speak at its conference next month. According to KPBS, San Diego Unified School District psychologist Morgan Rose said she met with Filner in 2009 at a restaurant across from his congressional office to discuss her initiative dedicated to the well-being of America’s children. She said that during their discussion, he told her ``your eyes have bewitched me’’ and moved next to her. Rose said Filner tried to kiss her four times and only stopped when he received a phone call. She told the station that he said he wouldn’t move See FILNER, page 6
■ Father-sons writing team publishes second book. See page 14
Male suspects burglarize CV home
On Friday, July 19, between 10:20-11 a.m., a home on the 3700 block of Overpark Road in Carmel Valley was burglarized. The suspects gained entry to the home through a broken glass door. Two male suspects were seen in the area by residents who called in to the police. A police helicopter and patrol units checked the area for the suspects but were unable to locate them. The San Diego Police Department issued a statement reminding “people how important it is for neighbors to watch for and call in suspicious activity. You never know, your call could prevent, stop, or help arrest someone in a crime.” For updates on this story, visit www.delmartimes.net.
The Boys & Girls Clubs of San Dieguito held the inaugural Caribbean Nights Gala July 20 at the Del Mar Fairgrounds infield pavilion. The evening included horse racing, silent and live auctions, dinner, entertainment and dancing. The fundraiser will help to provide the funds for “POSITIVE” activities that will reach more than 20,000 local youth. (Above) Ed Wallace (BGCSD board member), Amanda (Curry) Mascia (host and creator of Emmy-winning children’s program “The Good Food Factory”), Ann Ray (garden coordinator), Dawn Mayeda (program director, the Sage Garden Project). Photo/Jon Clark See page B16 for more. See photos online at www.delmartimes.net
■ CCA athlete competes in World Maccabiah Games in Israel. See page B1
Local resident leading effort to recall Mayor Filner BY ASHLEY MACKIN Attorney and land surveyor Michael Pallamary of La Jolla is at the front of the charge to recall San Diego Mayor Bob Filner. A longtime Filner foe, Pallamary said he created a “Recall Bob Filner” Facebook page in May (before the sexual assault allegations were an-
nounced against the mayor) and on July 19 held a rally at City Hall to recruit volunteers. Of the Facebook page, Pallamary said, “I put the page up just to see if there was interest (in recalling Filner) and to solicit comments.” Seeing plenty, he started asking for legitimate
reasons for the recall to incorporate into the legal statement he intended to file. Suggestions, and “likes,” came in gradually before the allegations were announced on July 11. Pallamary reports there were approximately 300 likes on the Facebook page before the al-
legations, and as of July 22, there were more than 5,000 likes. At the rally, Pallamary spoke about the recall effort along with KFMB radio host Mike Slater. “This is not about party, it’s about principle,” Slater said. “It’s not about right
and left, it’s about right and wrong.” Slater noted that Filner is demanding due process in the investigation into the sexual harassment allegations, and said, “This recall effort is due process.” Pallamary’s 10-year-old granddaughter, Paige, also spoke at the rally and said See RECALL, page 6
Forgotten Del Mar Airport central to racetrack’s glamorous heyday
■ Volleyball spiker proves herself to be a big-game player. See page 22
The Del Mar Airport. Photo courtesy of the Del Mar Historical Society BR/BA City
Status
List Price
Represented
3/3 4/3 4/4 LAND 4/4
SOLD SOLD ACTIVE ACTIVE ACTIVE
$1,185,000 $1,075,000 $3,448,000 $2,475,000 $2,375,000
Seller Buyer Seller Seller Seller
Del Mar Del Mar Del Mar Del Mar Point Loma
SURE Real Estate 30 Day Activity Report Buying or selling…make the SURE choice!
BY ROB LEDONNE The biggest stars in Hollywood, the richest people in the country, and businesses so glamorous that they ignited a tremendous growth and interest in Southern California. That was Del Mar in the 1930s, a time of glitz and glamor thanks largely in part to the Del Mar Racetrack in its heyday. However, central to the racetrack’s exploding notoriety was an airport, long forgotten, located right in Del Mar. “We don’t know much about specifics,” explained Mac
McBride, the director of media for the Del Mar Thoroughbred Club. “It was refereed to as the Del Mar Airport, and it was made up of a few hangers and a landing strip.” At one point in the 1930s, the airport ran multiple flights a day in and out of Burbank (now known as Bob Hope Airport,) on DC-3 planes operated by private airlines. One person who remembers the airport fondly is Bill Scherlis, who was the racetrack’s resident photographer from 1945 until the 1970s. Scherlis, who turns 90 this October, recalls that the airport
BR/BA City
Status
List Price
Represented
3/2 3/2 3/2 4/3 5/4
SOLD SOLD PENDING SOLD SOLD
$744,000 $744,000 $890,000 $665,000 $1,047,000
Seller Buyer Buyer Seller Buyer
Solana Beach Solana Beach Solana Beach Encinitas Encinitas
858-755-6070 :: SURERealEstate.com
See RACETRACK, Page 6
STEVE UHLIR Broker/Founder (DRE #01452695)
PAGE 2
NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013
Strong home sales and continued tight inventory push up San Diego County’s home prices in June High demand, tight inventory and low interest rates continue to drive up San Diego County’s home prices and sales. For the first time since January 2008 the median price for a single-family detached home in North San Diego County increased to $565,000 compared to $555,500 in May 2013, the North San Diego County Association of REALTORS® reported. Signaling a healthier market, June’s price was up 20.21 percent from $470,000 recorded in June 2012, marking the 11th month of year-over double digit gains; the last four months exceeding 20 percent. The median is the middle priced home sold; half the homes sold for more than the median, and half sold for less. •Low inventory and market competition significantly decreased the time a home spent on the market compared
with a year ago. Homes sold faster in June 2013, with the median number of days it took to sell a single-family home at 19 days in June, slightly up from 18 days in May, and down from 46 days in July 2012. •SFD listings (active and contingent) in North San Diego County increased 5.97 percent from May 2013 to June 2013 and decreased 26.1 percent year-over from June 2012.
•The percentage of households that could afford a median-priced SFD home in North San Diego County remained at 28 percent in June 2013 compared to May. Affordability percentages assume homeowners place 20 percent down and spend no more than a third of their income on housing- an amount earned by 38 percent of county households for the median priced home. •The available supply of unsold inventory for singlefamily detached homes in San Diego County continues to impact price appreciation of homes. Inventory for May 2013 in San Diego County was 2.8 months, down from 3.1 months in April 2013. The May 2013 inventory is down from a 4.2 months supply in May 2012. A six to seven month supply of unsold inventory is considered normal. •Mortgage rates increased in June, with the 30year fixed-mortgage interest rate averaging 4.07 percent, up from 3.54 percent in May 2013 and up from 3.68 percent in June 2012, according to Freddie Mac. Adjustablemortgage interest rates in June averaged 2.60 percent,
up from 2.55 percent reported in May, and down from 2.76 reported in June 2012. The North San Diego County Association of REALTORS® HomeDex Reports provides housing statistics each month on 100 San Diego County ZIP codes. NSDCAR is one of the largest trade associations in San Diego County dedicated to providing advocacy, professional development and tools to REALTORS® - www.nsdcar.com.
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IMPRESSIVE CUSTOM HOME CARDIFF | 4BR/4.5BA| $1,996,000
PRISTINE CONDITION - GATED COMMUNITY DEL SUR| 4BR/4.5BA | OFFERED AT $1,550,000
858.755.2280 ShawnHethcock.com55R55ShawnRodger.com
FINELY APPOINTED & PRIVATE
CARMEL VALLEY | 5BR/4.5BA | OFFERED AT $1,775,000
CHARMING COTTAGE IN THE HEART OF VILLAGE LA JOLLA | 1BR/1BA | OFFERED AT $1,200,000
Shawn Hethcock Shawn Rodger
NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013
(619) 857-9884 Doug Springer
(858) 243-1122 Sally Shapiro
(619) 606-9111 Tom Varga
(760) 525-6703 Ian Wilson
(858) 525-2291 Kyle Belding
CA DRE#00972487
CA DRE# 00603491
CA DRE# 01314883
CA DRE#01413422
CA DRE#01202788
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Del Mar Realty Associates Celebrating 27 Years!
OCEAN VIEW DEL MAR HEIGHTS HOME
DEL MAR TERRACE
LARGEST FLOORPLAN IN SEA VILLAGE
FORMER MODEL
Tom Varga (619) 606-9111
Tom Varga (619) 606-9111
Sally Shapiro (858) 243-1122
Ian Wilson (760) 525-6703
Open 3BR main house plus a detached 2BR guest house. The gourmet kitchen and Master Suite are upstairs, which offers views out over Crest Canyon Preserve and ocean. Rooms are oversized with closet built-ins. Terrific location near beaches, schools, shopping, restaurants and cinema. Offered at $1,598,800
Easy access to Torrey Pines Beach and hiking trails. 2BR, single story condo with underground parking. Updated kitchen and bathroom. Classic beach home with peek ocean view from private patio. Offered at $475,000
Great ocean, lagoon and sunset views from this end-unit split-level home. 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, 1984 SqFt. Light and bright with nicely remodeled kitchen and baths. Good cul-de-sac location. Complex has 2 pools, 2 tennis courts, putting green & playground. Near Torrey Pines beach and Reserve. Offered at $1,100,000
Beautiful 4BR, 4.5BA home with optional 5th BR. 3,998 SqFt. Granite counters & backsplash, stainless appliances. Upgraded bathrooms with marble, travertine and designer touches. Large Master Suite with bonus room. 3 car garage. Near beaches, schools, Whole Foods, equestrian center and more. Offered at $1,189,000
COMING SOON!
GOLDEN HILL CARRIAGE HOUSE
Doug Springer (619) 857-9884 Great views of downtown from both levels! 2+BR, 1.5BA. Open floorplan with remodeled kitchen. French doors to view deck. Upstairs was completely opened up to create large master loft (could be made into two rooms upstairs). Minutes to all downtown has to offer. $469,000
RARELY AVAILABLE OCEAN VIEW BEAUTY IN DEL MAR WOODS
Kyle Belding (858) 525-2291 This renovated 2BR, 2.5BA townhome is located on the second row from bluff front on a private cul-de-sac with no thru traffic and no street to cross to go to beach. Near beach and village, this home has had the ceiling raised, Brass railings added, stone & hardwood flooring, granite kitchen island and window added in kitchen to open to dining room. Master Bath has a steam shower tub combo. Lower level was excavated to add a laundry room off the finished garage. Resort-style amenities such as pool, spa, sauna, tennis, and exercise room. $1,595,000 - $1,655,000
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LA JOLLA SHORES
SUNNY F PLAN AT SEA VILLAGE
LISTED AND SOLD IN 3 DAYS!
VILLAGE PARK STUNNER
Tom Varga (619) 606-9111
Sally Shapiro (858) 243-1122
Ian Wilson (760) 525-6703
Ian Wilson (760) 525-6703
Near La Jolla Shores beach and UCSD. Lower level, corner unit tucked away in back of complex. 2BR, 2BA, 1,240 SqFt. Nice, large rooms and updated kitchen. Washer and dryer in unit. Community pool, spa, exercise room, tennis and gated, underground parking. $398,000
Roomy 2BR plus den, 2BA, split-level floor plan. Ocean view from vaulted living room with fireplace and spacious dining area. Well-sized kitchen upgraded with skylight, cabinets with pull-outs, and tile floors. Lovely rear patio and large front deck. Extra storage in 2 car garage.
Fantastic 4BR, 2.5BA San Elijo Hills home. Over $65,000 in builder upgrades, great floorplan, pool sized lot. Gourmet kitchen. Generous master suite with 2 walk-in closets, granite tub, shower & dual vanity. $599,000
Beautiful single story 3BR, 2BA townhome in Village Park. This home greets you with a voluminous vaulted ceiling and excellent natural light. Remodeled kitchen and baths, wood flooring, newer dual pane windows and doors. Minutes to beaches, golf, shopping and restaurants.
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IN THE HEART OF UNIVERSITY HEIGHTS
Doug Springer (619) 857-9884 Charming 3BR, 3BA craftsman home zoned for commercial and residential uses. Five years of unparalleled rental history! Exquisitely appointed, eclectic furnishings, distressed hardwood floors, ++. Too much to list!
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REPRESENTING BUYER
Doug Springer (619) 857-9884 Highly upgraded, single level, 3BR, 2.5BA home in the gated community of Bernardo Santa Fe in Escondido. Call Doug for information on other homes available in this area.
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WHITE WATER OCEAN VIEW LOT
PANORAMIC OCEAN VIEW HOME!
Sally Shapiro (858) 243-1122
Tom Varga (619) 606-9111
Views of Del Mar beaches and lagoon. A rare opportunity to build your dream home on this flat, half-acre lot. This hilltop gem is nestled in a prime secluded location overlooking racetrack. Private, gated entrance, utilities in place.
This exceptional 3+BR, 3.5BA home offers views, class and décor. Custom built in 2010 with the finest of materials. Great for entertaining with multiple decks, a private pool and spa, gazebo/bar and inviting fire pit. Solana Beach.
Office conveniently located in the heart of Del Mar at 832 Camino Del Mar, Suite 3, Del Mar CA 92014
PAGE 4
NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013
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Del Mar to remove Torrey Pine trees from Seagrove Park The City of Del Mar will be removing two Torrey Pine trees from Seagrove Park. The tree removals are required due to the trees’ declining physical condition and their subsequent hazard presented to park visitors, according to the city. Public Works is collaborating with the Parks and Recreation Committee and the Del Mar Garden Club to select appropriate replacement trees. Additional recent park enhancements include a Seagrove Park planting area and a new cable fence adjacent to the Tot-Lot. The public may contact the City of Del Mar’s Public Works Department at GroupPublicWorks@delmar.ca.us, or contact Public Works Deputy Director Joe Bride at 858-755-3294, with any questions related to the enhancements at Seagrove Park.
Oversized vehicle parking continues to be a problem in Carmel Valley, elsewhere BY KAREN BILLING On July 8, San Diego City Council passed an oversize vehicle ordinance preventing large vehicles, such as motor homes and trailers, to be parked overnight on any public street in San Diego. Oversized vehicle parking is a complicated issue that the city has dealt with for a long time and Carmel Valley residents have complained about oversized nuisances before the Carmel Valley Planning Board over the last year on streets such as Quarter Mile Drive and Carmel Vista. While the ordinance passed, it may take some time before it goes into effect, according to Mo Kantner, a representative for District 1 Council President pro-tem Sherri Lightner. Kantner reported at the Torrey Hills Community Planning Board meeting on July 16 that the ordinance now travels to the Coastal Commission for approval, which could take anywhere from six to 24 months. According to a report by District 2 Councilman Kevin Faulconer, who led the effort on passing the ordinance, illegally parked oversized vehicles impact public safety as well as quality of life. City residents have reported vehicles parked in front of homes and businesses for weeks or even months taking up parking spaces, blocking views and limiting access to driveways. There is also a public safety concern as residents have reported the dumping of human waste in public streets from illegally parked vehicles The ordinance prevents large vehicles from parking on city streets between 2 a.m. and 6 a.m. A permitting process is included in the ordinance for residents who wish to park recreational vehicles on their streets while preparing for trips for up to 24 hours. No more than 72 permits could be issued to any one address in a calendar year and permits could not be issued for consecutive periods longer than 72 hours. The suggested fee is $1 per 24 hour permit. Violations would come with a $100 fine. City Council passed the ordinance with a 6-2 vote, with Lightner representing one of the two votes against it.
New public park planned for Torrey Hills 4904 San Elijo | Rancho Santa Fe | Sold at $3,125,000
BY KAREN BILLING A new public park is currently on the drawing table for the Torrey Hills community, now named Ocean View Park. The one-acre park comes with the new 384-unit Garden Communities, now under construction on Calle Mar de Mariposa and East Ocean Air Drive. According to project manager Dee Snow, Ocean View is very early on in the design process and they do not have a schedule for completion yet. She said they aim for Ocean View to be a passive use park for both the apartment residents and the community. “It will have a play area for children but the primary focus is the lookout, that’s why it’s called Ocean View,” said Snow. “It has a vantage point where you can see the ocean.” Snow said there are tentative plans for the park to include a walking path and work-out stations. In addition to the 384 apartment units and the park, the Garden Communities development will also include 4,000 square feet of retail, likely four “neighborhood service” tenants yet to be determined, such as a coffee shop or dry cleaners. The construction of the project’s underground garages has been completed and the framing on the buildings just started last week. Snow could not give any firm completion timelines for the park or when the first residents might move in but told the Torrey Hills Community Planning Board a possible completion date for the entire project could be 2016.
Former bookkeeper to be sentenced for embezzlement 510 Torrey Point | Del Mar | Offered at $2,995,000
858.759.6502
dshort@coldwellbanker.com CA BRE: 01199071
www.DanielleShort.com
BY CITY NEWS SERVICE Sentencing was postponed July 24 until Aug. 21 for a former bookkeeper who embezzled more than $545,000 from the Leucadia Pizzeria chain. Susan Dawn Seibert, 49, pleaded guilty last month to one count each of embezzlement and forgery and admitted an allegation that she took more than $500,000 from her employer. Judge David Berry is scheduled to sentence the defendant to four years in prison. Authorities said Seibert forged checks to herself during her four years with the company. The defendant quit her job last year when she learned that the restaurant planned to audit the books, according to Deputy District Attorney Anna Winn. The audit showed that Seibert had written 172 checks to herself from the Leucadia Pizzeria account, Winn said, adding that the checks were forged with an owner’s signature. Winn said Seibert covered up the embezzlement by listing legitimate vendors as the recipients of the checks. The prosecutor said Seibert told the Leucadia Pizzeria owners that she took the money to pay back a previous employer who had sued her for embezzlement. Leucadia Pizzeria has stores in Encinitas, La Jolla and Rancho Santa Fe.
NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013
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Del Mar screenwriter shares real online dating experience in first short film BY KRISTINA HOUCK Two people meet online and go on a date. Although the premise of “Rolling Romance” sounds familiar, the two main characters in this short film have muscular dystrophy. Written by Del Mar screenwriter Michael Carnick, “Rolling Romance” is a dark comedy about sex, drugs and disability. The 22-minute film, which was shot in 2012 in Los Angeles, was inspired by Carnick’s real experience with online dating. “The event was so surreal — two people in wheelchairs dating,” said 31-year-old Carnick. “It’s not something you see in movies, so I thought it would make a really good movie.” Born with a rare muscular dystrophy-like condition known as congenital fiber-type disproportion, much of Carnick’s work focuses on disability awareness and the experience of being a minority. “I wanted to get across the idea that people with disabilities are just like everybody else,” Carnick said. “We do go on dates, we have bad dates, we act stupid, we do drugs, we talk about sex and we act like [jerks].” Always a storyteller, Carnick discovered his passion for writing stage plays and screenplays after enrolling in a set design class at the University of California, San Diego. The class inspired him to change his major. “It’s a very visual storytelling as opposed to a book,” Carnick said. “You tell it with visuals, and I’ve always really enjoyed that.” In a screenwriting class, Carnick wrote “Who’s Driving Doug?”, a feature-length script that won first place at the 50th Anniversary Samuel Goldwyn Writing Awards. He was the first undergrad to receive the award. After graduating from UCSD, Carnick went on to get his MFA in creative writing for the performing arts from the University of California, Riverside. “Rolling Romance” follows Orson, portrayed by David Holt, and Janice, portrayed by Emily Goss, who meet online and go on a horrible, yet hilarious date. The film is produced by Melissa Harkness, whom Carnick met while they both were in the MFA program at UCR. The dark comedy was directed by David Conley, who used his own camera equipment to shoot the film, which was funded by Carnick’s family and more than $5,000 in donations from Kickstarter, an online funding platform. Carnick said he believes the project had 93 backers on Kickstarter because the topic is “universal.” “It touches people,” he said. “We’re all trying to find love, whatever color or shape we are.” A private screening of “Rolling Romance” took place at 6 p.m. on July 21 at La Paloma Theater in Encinitas. There
Michael Carnic
was a Q&A with select cast and crew after the screening. “It’s a good movie. I think people are going to like it,” Carnick said. “It’s a short movie, but it goes through a range of genres and emotions, from sad, to heartwarming to funny. I think you get a big experience out of it even though it’s a small investment of your time.” For more information about “Rolling Romance,” visit www.rollingromancefilm.com.
Community Open House to be held for Watermark Del Mar project A development team is in the early stages of planning a residential project called Watermark Del Mar for the vacant property southwest of the intersection of Jimmy Durante Boulevard and San Dieguito Road. In order to introduce the proposal to the community and get early feedback, the team is holding a Community Open House on Monday, July 29, from 5-7 p.m. at the Powerhouse Community Center in Del Mar (1658 Coast Boulevard, Del Mar, 92014).
FBI raids business in Carmel Valley BY CITY NEWS SERVICE Federal agents served a search warrant July 24 at a Carmel Valley high-tech business as part of an ongoing investigation of undisclosed nature. The FBI raid at Torrey Pines Logic Inc. in the 12600 block of High Bluff Drive began about 8:30 a.m., said Darrell Foxworth, a spokesman for the government agency. The probe into the operations of the firm — which sells lasers, sensors, optical-communication products and image-processing equipment — involves a court order that has been sealed by a judge, Foxworth said. There were no immediate arrests, he said.
Free electronic waste collection and shredding event to be held in Solana Beach Aug. 10 The City of Solana Beach and EDCO are sponsoring a free electronic-waste collection event and a free shredding event on Saturday, Aug. 10, from 10 a.m. - 1 p.m. at Solana Beach City Hall, 635 S. Highway 101, Solana Beach. Limited to two bankers boxes per household. Available at the event: Paper shredding; E-waste collection: computer monitors, hard drives/CPUs, scanners, keyboards, televisions, VCRs, radios, printers, fax machines, etc.
92130 plus One. It all adds up. When you take the most desirable zip code in San Diego – and all the interesting, accomplished folks that inhabit it – and add a stylish destination in its midst that provides a suitable place to chill, revel, savor and celebrate, you’ve got the perfect combination. Can we count on you to help make it happen?
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PAGE 6
NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013
FILNER continued from page 1 until she kissed him. Rose said she has called a hotline set up by the Sheriff’s Department to take complaints against the mayor. The department has been designated as the lead law enforcement agency for investigating the claims. On Tuesday, a former campaign staffer told KPBS that Filner patted her bottom at a 2005 fundraising event, also when he was a congressman. Laura Fink said she demanded an apology from Filner in an email, and received a mumbled ``I’m sorry’’ a couple of days later. On Monday, Filner’s former communications director became the first woman to publicly describe Filner’s alleged actions toward her. Irene McCormack Jackson, 57, said that during her around six months employment in the mayor’s office,
Filner held her in a headlock while demanding kisses. She also alleged the mayor told her she should work without her panties on, that he wanted to see her naked, that he could not wait to consummate their relationship, and that he wanted to marry her. A poll by 10News said 72 percent of respondents found McCormack Jackson’s allegations to be credible. Another 12 percent said they were not, while 16 percent were undecided. In another development, Voiceofsandiego.org reported that an unidentified woman has lodged a complaint with the state Department of Fair Employment and Housing, claiming she was sexually harassed by Filner. The website’s report says the woman filing the complaint sought an investigation. It was unknown whether the new complainant was Fink, Rose or a fourth person. The agency
REAL ESTATE DIRECTORY Charles & Farryl Moore Coldwell Banker, Carmel Valley Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage Del Mar & Carmel Valley offices Danielle Short Coldwell Banker, Rancho Santa Fe Del Mar Realty Associates Del Mar HardenWright Associates Prudential CA Realty, Carmel Valley Jeri Hine Prudential CA Realty, LaJolla Jessica Foote Pacific Sotheby’s Inernational Realty, Del Mar Julie Split-Keyes Prudential CA Realty, Del Mar Kilroy Realty Corporation Carmel Valley Office Kramer Martin Prudential CA Realty, Rancho Santa Fe Marla Zanelli Allison James Real Estate, Del Mar Maxine & Marti Gellens Prudential CA Realty, LaJolla Michael Taylor Group Prudential CA Realty, Rancho Santa Fe Nancy White Coldwell Banker, Rancho Santa Fe Open House Directory Prudential CA Realty San Diego offices Sampson CA Realty Carmel Valley Shawn Hethcock & Shawn Rodger Willis Allen Real Estate Toni Cieri & Associates RE/MAX Distinctive, Del Mar SURE Real Estate Del Mar The Rande Turner Group Willis Allen Real Estate WIllis Allen Real Estate Del Mar
did not immediately respond to an inquiry from City News Service. McCormack Jackson’s lawyer, Gloria Allred, said a complaint was filed with the department on her client’s behalf and they were given the go-ahead to file a lawsuit against Filner. In response to the lawsuit, Filner issued the following statement: “I am saddened by the charges that were leveled against me today. Once due process is allowed to unfold, I am certain there will be a better understanding of this situation,” Filner said. “I remain committed to the people of San Diego and the work that needs to be done. My dreams and plans for moving this City to new heights are continuing. I humbly ask that through this vicious storm of controversy, people take a moment and temper their rush to judgment. “I do not believe these claims are valid,” Filner added. “That is why due process is so important. I intend to defend myself vigorously and I know that justice will prevail.”
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she supports her grandfather’s efforts. After her comments, Pallamary said, “People ask me why am I doing this, you’ve just seen the reason.” Though the sexual harassment allegations were not at the foundation of his recall efforts, Pallamary told this newspaper group, “I’m tired of explaining to my 10-year-old granddaughter what sexual harassment is.” Actually at the foundation of his campaign are the claims in a 300-word statement he prepared and will file to show his intention to start the recall. Some of the claims include: Filner used police officers overseas for his personal security team at taxpayer expense; Filner repeatedly ignored city council votes and moved in a direction contrary to its wishes; and Filner punished the city attorney by slashing the attorney’s budget. The rally served as a way to sign-up volunteers who, when the recall effort officially begins in the coming weeks, will collect signatures from members in all the communities of San Diego. Once the volunteers are assembled and all the communities have representation, the formal notice of a recall will be filed.
Meanwhile, the National Womens Veterans Association of America announced that it has rescinded an invitation to Filner to speak at its conference in San Diego next month in light of the sexual harassment allegations against him. Filner, the leading Democrat on the House Veterans Committee when he was in Congress, was originally slated to be the keynote speaker at the association’s benefit gala Aug. 30 at the U.S. Grant hotel. He was also set to receive a lifetime achievement award from the organization. NWVAA President Tara Jones said Filner is still invited to attend, but will no longer be allowed to speak. ``After much careful thought and consideration, my board and I have determined and decided that Mayor Bob Filner will be removed as guest speaker on the topic of military sexual assault, sexual harassment and violence against women and children,’’ Jones told reporters. The award has also been withdrawn, she said.
From there, volunteers will have 31 days to collect 101,000 signatures on a petition. Though it is not yet available, there will also be a digital petition found at RecallBob.com Pallamary said his quandaries with Filner started more than 20 years ago. In 1991, Pallamary led the effort to recall San Diego City Councilmember Linda Bernhardt. At that time, Filner was on the city council, where Pallamary said he observed Filner and four other council members attempt to redistrict San Diego in a way that would “punish his enemies and reward his allies,” he said. Pallamary said under Filner, the city council began to fall apart. “Because of Mr. Filner’s misconduct and his harsh, unreasonable personality, the city shut down the same way it’s shutting down now,” he said. After his success in recalling Bernhardt, and history observing Filner, Pallamary said he is confident he will succeed in this recall. “I’ve been here before; I battled Mr. Filner 20 years ago. I prevailed in the court of public opinion (and) I prevailed in a court of law,” he said. “We’re in the gutter; I don’t want to see San Diego go into the sewer pipes.”
RACETRACK
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was originally built by the United States Navy. “It was intended to be a pilot training facility. There was one at the Naval Air Station on North Island, but there was too much traffic so they constructed a few hangers and a concrete runway in Del Mar.” Referred to then as the San Dieguito Air Field, most estimates pin the airport’s construction to around the early 1920s, a few years after the 1917 opening of the Naval Air Station on North Island. It wasn’t until 1938 when the property was renamed the Del Mar Municipal Airfield, and turned over for racetrack use. The racetrack had only opened a year earlier. “The people that flew in and out of the airport were not regular people, you had to be very wealthy,” explained Scherlis. “You’d land there and then take cabs to the racetrack,” which was a few minutes away. At the time, horse racing was only second in popularity to baseball and Del Mar instantly became one of the trendiest places in the country. After the U.S. became involved in World War II in 1941, the country put fun and entertainment on hold and the racetrack, as well as the airport, were used by the U.S. Military between 1942 and 1945. Parts for B-17 bombers were manufactured at the track, and the airport was used for blimp flights, housed up to 130 people in barracks, and became a home base for anti-submarine patrols around the Western United States. Once the war ended, the property was decommissioned once again; the racetrack and airport picked up right were they left off for civilian use. It was around this time that Scherlis remembers flying in and out of the airport himself. “I went up in a Cessna to take some aerial pictures of the fairgrounds,” he remembers. “It was interesting.” In the 1950s, flights between Del Mar and Burbank were $16 round trip and were operated by the former Pacific Southwest Airlines, then in its infancy. Del Mar was still attracting the biggest stars of the day, including (perhaps the track’s biggest fan) Bing Crosby, who Scherlis photographed on one of his very first assignments. “He was with (fellow movie star) Pat O’Brien. I went to take his picture, and Crosby looks at me and asks ‘What do you want me to do?’ I was floored, here’s the biggest star in the world asking me what to do,” he remembers with a laugh almost 70 years later. As time went by, the area slowly started to change as did popularity for the airport, which experienced its last summer season in 1959, closing that September. It was then partly demolished to make room for Interstate 5, which currently runs right through the property, southeast of the current fairgrounds and at the end of Grand Avenue. It wasn’t until 2006 when many of the remaining traces of the airport disappeared during the restoration of the San Dieguito Lagoon by Southern California Edison — a historical marker was then erected. Today, the only other surviving evidence of the airport is immortalized in a song by Bing Crosby himself. “It’s called “Where the Turf Meets the Surf,” and is now the racetrack’s theme song. McBride explains, “If you listen to the lyrics, at one point he sings ‘take a plane’ ... he’s referring to the airport.”
Motorists jailed for DUI on racing season’s Opening Day BY CITY NEWS SERVICE Ten motorists were jailed on suspicion of driving while intoxicated around the Del Mar Racetrack on opening day, July 17, of this summer’s horse-racing season at the oceanfront venue, authorities reported. Law enforcement personnel from around the county made the arrests Wednesday as part of a DUI ``saturation patrol’’ in Del Mar and nearby areas in Encinitas, Solana Beach and northern San Diego, sheriff’s Lt. Julius Faulkner said. During the operation, which ran from late afternoon until midnight, officers and deputies made 111 traffic stops, performed 25 field sobriety evaluations, issued four traffic tickets and impounded 10 vehicles, the lieutenant said. The special detail was funded by a grant from the state Office of Traffic Safety, through the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013
Frontline: Cancer
The courage to ask questions BY SCOTT M. LIPPMAN Think of a very serious cancer. You can reduce the risk of that cancer to almost zero, but to do so, you must undergo major surgery. Now imagine that a very good genetic test exists that can determine your risk for that cancer and help you decide whether to pursue the riskreducing surgery. Would you take the test? Actress and celebrity Angelina Jolie did. She tested positive for the BRCA1 gene and underwent a double mastectomy to reduce her risk of breast cancer. She also announced plans to undergo an oophorectomy, or removal of her ovaries, to reduce the high risk of ovarian cancer associated with BRCA1. Her actions have prompted new questions and conversations about genetic testing for cancer risk. The recent headlines focused on Ms. Jolie’s surgery, reconstruction and recovery, but her story has an equally important message for all of us: Know your family history of cancer. Ms. Jolie had genetic testing for BRCA1 and BRCA2 because of a strong family history of ovarian and breast cancer. Her mother succumbed in 2007 to ovarian cancer; an aunt died of breast cancer just two weeks after the actress announced her surgeries. Genetic testing for
Dr. Scott Lippman cancer risk, however, isn’t for everyone. It’s for people in families with a measurable predisposition to cancer. Genetic testing is a very personalized way to sort out which family members have a high cancer risk, and what they can do about it. Experts who conduct genetic testing are called genetic counselors. Their goal for families at high risk is to steer them toward cancer prevention and early detection. Prevention and detection experts then figure out what cancer screening tests or procedures are appropriate, considering factors like a person’s age, which gene is increasing his or her cancer risk, and what other medical issues may be involved. For example, options for women who test positive for BRCA1/2 may include mastectomies and reconstruction, as Ms. Jolie chose, which reduces the risk of breast cancer as much
as possible. Alternatively, many women opt for increased monitoring for indications of disease by adding a breast MRI to yearly mammograms. Like deciding to get tested for genetic cancer risk, these options take courage, too. It’s tougher to deal with the risk of ovarian cancer in BRCA1/2-positive women. There is no accurate current test to detect ovarian cancer at an early stage, so most of these at-risk women have their ovaries removed when no longer wishing to bear children, as they approach menopause. Genetic counselors are specialists in evaluating a family’s history, determining whether genetic testing could be useful, and coordinating the genetic testing process for the family. They also understand a very real and important concern for many people: It is emotionally difficult to discuss your relatives’ cancers, especially when your family has had more than its share of cancer cases. Lisa Madlensky, Ph.D., is a board-certified genetic counselor specializing in cancer genetics at the UC San Diego Moores
Cancer Center. A counseling appointment with her usually lasts at least an hour. She goes through the family history in detail and then provides an accurate assessment of the family’s cancer pattern. Although Ms. Jolie has drawn attention to BRCA1/2 and the risks of ovarian and breast cancer, it’s important to know that other genes can increase the risk of other cancers. For example, four genes in a rare condition called Lynch Syndrome increase the risk of colon, uterine and other cancers. Families with Lynch Syndrome receive a personalized medical management plan designed by high-risk specialist teams (including doctors from multiple disciplines) that can include yearly colonoscopies and other tests. Other syndromes are associated with some pancreatic cancers, melanomas or endocrine cancers. Although most of these syndromes are fortunately quite rare, when they happen in your family, it’s important to connect with a cancer genetics specialist to get the most up-to-date and personalized information. There is no “one size fits all� approach. Just as more personalized approaches are increasing in cancer treatment, they are
RELIGION & spirituality
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PAGE 7
increasing in cancer prevention and early detection, too. Another example of personalized breast-cancer risk assessment and prevention that I’ll visit in a future column is the Athena Breast Health Program at the five UC medical centers. The first step, though, can be the toughest. It takes courage to begin asking questions about family cancer history or genetic testing for cancer risk, as Ms. Jolie and others have done. Fortunately, Dr. Madlensky and other expert cancer genetic counselors throughout San Diego are available to help. They guide people through this complicated process, ultimately reducing the toll of cancer on families who have inherited a high risk. Scott M. Lippman, MD, is Director of UC San Diego Moores Cancer Center. His column on medical advances from the front lines of cancer research and care appears in this newspaper the fourth Thursday of each month. You can reach Dr. Lippman at mcc-dir-lippman@ucsd.edu.
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NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013
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‘Adopt-A-Spot’ Del Mar program helps to beautify public areas An area filled with weeds, foxtails and other neglected plant materials lining a fence along a city-owned alleyway has been beautified as the latest project in the City of Del Mar’s Adopt-A-Spot program. Scott and Alexis Kurtz, who live on Stratford Court adjacent to the fence, are the newest residents to present a design plan under the Adopt-A-Spot program and undertake the work to improve the public area along an alley leading to the Winston School baseball field. Their project follows others by residents who have taken on public areas, such as a landscaping area between the Beach Safety Center and Del Mar Motel, two areas of Seagrove Park, the vacant lot west of Crest Reservoir, the Zapo Street ravine, a divider along Camino del Mar, the southwest corner of 9th Street and Stratford Court, pathways along Jimmy Durante Blvd. and the Grand Ave. bridge platform. “The program gives caring neighbors an opportunity to propose ways to beautify neighborhood ‘spots’ on public property by tree trimming, removal of invasive species, sweeping, removing trash and clearing weeds,” said Del Mar Mayor Terry Sinnott. “The goal is a neighborhood-friendly program to support citizen and business participation while improving the beauty of the Village of Del Mar.” The City’s Parks and Recreation Committee encourages citizens and businesses to participate in the Adopt-A-Spot program and will assist with the review of those projects planned by adoptees that encompass significant modifications to a “spot.” City Public Works’ staff will assist through providing safety vests, traffic cones or Waste Management containers for green waste disposal. Applications are available for download on the City website, through the Public Works Department by calling 858 755-3294 or emailing grouppublicworks@delmar.ca.us.
Local residents graduate, named to Dean’s List • Carmel Valley’s Melissa E. Woolpert has been named to the dean’s list for the spring 2013 semester at the University of Vermont. Woolpert is a senior Animal Sciences major in the College of Agriculture & Life Sciences. To be named to the dean’s lists, students must have a grade-point average of 3.0 or better and rank in the top 20 percent of their class in their respective college or school. •Berklee College of Music announces that Allie Moriarty of Solana Beach has earned placement on the Dean’s List for the spring semester of the 2013 academic year. To be eligible for this honor, a full-time student must achieve a grade point average of 3.4 or above; a part-time student must achieve a grade point average of 3.6 or above. •Del Mar’s Jamie Landman received a Bachelor of Business Administration from the Goizueta Business School of Emory University in Atlanta, Ga., at its 168th commencement ceremony on May 13.
NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013
PAGE 9
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NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013
Veterans for peace seek donations to buy sleeping bags for homeless
Eddie Read Stakes winner A determined Jeranimo bursts by horses to post a 1 1/2-length victory in the $300,000 Eddie Read Stakes on July 20 at Del Mar, the first Grade I race of the current meet. Vagabond Shoes got up for second, while Fly Lexis Fly held on for third. The 7-year-old Jeranimo, who was sent off as the favorite, covered the 1 1/8 miles in 1:44.79, a second off the course record. He is owned by B.J. Wright and Robert LaPenta and trained by Mike Pender. Closing Range won the day’s supporting feature, the Osunitas Stakes (not pictured). Photo by Kelley Carlson
Since 2010, the San Diego Veterans For Peace, the local chapter of the national 501-C-3 veterans educational organization, has been raising money and buying sleeping bag sets for homeless veterans and others on the streets in downtown San Diego. To date, 1,700 sets have been purchased and individually distributed by chapter veterans from all five services, who head downtown late at night with sleeping bags sets (a sleeping bag, a nylon stuff sack, and a poncho) and find those most in need who have no sleeping gear. Each $33 donated buys one set, in bulk and below wholesale cost from the Coleman Company. The veterans are seeking donations for the cause, and report that 100 percent of all donations go to purchase gear because there are no overhead or administrative expenses. Donations are tax deductible and each donor receives a card of thanks and a receipt for tax purposes. Donations may be made online at: www.SDVFP.org or checks may be mailed to: SDVFP, 12932 Sunderland Street, Poway, CA 92064. For more information, call (858) 342-1964 or visit www. SDVFP.org
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NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013
PAGE 11
Foster youth share inspirational stories of support provided by Promises2Kids 50 students in Guardian Scholars program honored BY KRISTINA HOUCK Having missed more than a year of elementary school between foster homes, Jennica Rebelez struggled academically as a child. With the help of Promises2Kids’ Guardian Scholars program, the 25-year-old is now pursuing her doctorate degree at UC Santa Barbara and training to be a school psychologist. Promises2Kids’ Guardian Scholars program encourages former foster youth like Rebelez to pursue higher education. The program provides participating students with academic scholarships, financial aid workshops, and college planning and mentoring support. “They’ve really been with me and seen me through my hardest times of undergrad, as well as my master’s and doctorate programs,” said Rebelez, who was placed into foster care with her younger siblings after years of severe neglect. “They’ve been a constant support.” Promises2Kids celebrated the program’s 50 students, including nine recent graduates, during the Guardian Scholars Awards Reception recently at a local event.
According to Promises2Kids, more than half of the youth in foster care do not graduate from high school, and only 3 percent go on to earn a college degree. Guardian Scholars has an 85 percent success rate with more than 200 students having graduated from the program since it launched a decade ago. “I consider them all very strong individuals,” said Promises2Kids CEO Tonya Torosian. “I can’t imagine myself making it through college with some of the things I went through without my family support. Just looking at the accomplishments of some of the young individuals — it’s truly inspiring to me.” During the reception, David Odum thanked Torosian and the rest of the Promises2Kids staff for their support since he was a 19-year-old at Cuyamaca College. Odum, now 26, graduated in December 2012 with a bachelor’s in business from San Diego State University. He is an assistant manager at Sherwin-Williams and plans to one day own his own automotive shop. “They instill a sense of family in how much they care,” Odum said. “It feels like you’re important and that they care for you as a person, not as a number or statistic as
the world depicts us. “My name is David; I’m not 3,752. My name is David, and they instill that sense of importance in us.” Odum battled depression and wanted to quit school three times, but he said Promises2Kids staff encouraged him to stay in college and pursue his dreams. Torosian even allowed him to change her vehicle’s oil because she knew he wanted to work with cars, Odum added. “They support you in any way, shape or form that they can, in whatever dream you have,” Odum said. Since its inception in 1981, Promises2Kids, formerly known as Child Abuse Prevention Foundation, has distributed nearly $25 million for the care and protection of abused and neglected children, and provided services for more than 175,000 foster children in need. “You may think that you’re not good enough, but they motivate you to do your best and they don’t compare you to anybody else,” Rebelez said. “They’re here for your unique journey, and I think that’s really special about the program.” To learn more about Promises2Kids, visit www. promises2kids.org.
Above: Guardian Scholars Left: Tonya Torosian and David Odum Far left: Jennica Rebelez. For more photos online, visit www.rsfreview. com PHOTOS/KRISTINA HOUCK
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July 25, 2013
Carmel Valley father-sons writing team publishes second book BY KRISTINA HOUCK To share his love of fantasy with his then 5- and 7-yearold sons, Henry Herz of Carmel Valley wrote a book. He didn’t anticipate his sons to name some of the characters and suggest plotlines. “Over time, they gave me some feedback,” Henry said. “What I thought was just going to be, ‘Hey, let’s get them interested in reading,’ turned into a collaboration.” At the suggestion of family members, Henry and his sons published “Nimpentoad” in 2011. The early chapter book tells the story of Nimpentoad, who leads his fellow Niblings through the Grunwald Forest, overcoming obstacles and encountering strange creatures along the way. “That started us down a long path of finding the artist, getting the artwork done and publishing the book,” said Henry, a member of the Society of Children’s Book Writers & Illustrators. “It’s been very well received.” Not long after “Nimpentoad” was published, Henry, Josh, 13, and Harrison, 11, began working on their second book, “Twignibble.” Aimed at second, third and fourth graders, the 1,000-word easy reader was published in June. “Twignibble” is a conservation-themed book about a sloth that helps his animal friends when faced with threats to their habitats. “A lot of kids grow up not really knowing about the environment,” said Harrison, a sixth grader at Ocean Air Elementary. “They can do a lot of things that pollute and kill a lot of animals. This is getting the word out to people that you shouldn’t pollute.” Although self-publishing was “much smoother the second time around,” Henry said it’s still a lot of work to write, illustrate, self-publish and promote a book. The Herz family is set to sign copies of “Twignibble” during a book release party on Aug. 4 at Mysterious Galaxy. In addition, Henry and his sons plan to promote the book at local bookstores, farmers markets, libraries and schools like they did with “Nimpentoad.” “We’re our own editors, art directors and promoters,” said Henry, a self-employed management consultant. “We
L-R: Josh Herz, Henry Herz and Harrison Herz. Courtesy photo have to be involved in every aspect, which is good because it started as a way to get them interested in reading, and it turned into this huge development opportunity. “They’ve gotten so many skills from this, not just writing, but meeting new people, handling money, public speaking. It’s just been a great developmental project for us all.” Despite the long hours at book signings, readings and other promotional events, Henry said he enjoys working with his sons and writing books for children. “I did it initially just to interest my boys in reading fantasy. Then I realized how much I enjoyed the storytelling,” Henry said. “I like writing children’s books. For me, the juice is getting kids excited about reading and telling fantasy and science fiction stories to spark their creativity.” Josh, an eighth grader at Carmel Valley Middle School and a parkour enthusiast, said he’s enjoyed discovering and working with artists.
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“I’ve really liked working with the artists, seeing pictures and telling what I liked and didn’t like,” Josh said. “I really like the art.” Harrison, a basketball fanatic, enjoyed meeting Kareem Abdul-Jabbar while promoting “Nimpentoad” at the Orange County Children’s Book Festival. The retired professional basketball player was at the festival signing copies of his children’s book, “What Color Is My World?” Harrison said he’s also appreciated the time he has spent with his co-authors. “I get to spend a lot of
time with my dad and my brother,” said Harrison, who plays basketball for the Carmel Valley Stingrays. “It’s also fun writing it and seeing other people enjoying it.” Henry hopes his creative journey with his sons inspire more children to write, whether or not they publish their stories. “We want to encourage kids to read and we want to encourage kids to write,” Henry said. “It’s got to start somewhere. Write a short story and submit it to magazines. You never know if it will get published, but just the process of writing is great to spark creative expression and to develop a skill that will serve you at almost any career you choose.” The book release party for “Twignibble” will take place on Aug. 4, from 2-4 p.m., at Mysterious Galaxy. The independent bookstore is located at 7051 Clairemont Mesa Blvd. in San Diego. For more information about Twignibble, visit www.twignibble.com. For more information about Nimpentoad, visit www. nimpentoad.com.
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NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013
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NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013
New graphic novel ‘Head Smash’ El Agave Restaurant and Tequileria to open at Del Mar Plaza in November to become a feature film
years of street cred under his belt working on such classic comics as “Blade” and “The Punisher.” For now, Yudin (who grew up in Russia) and Mejia (who grew up in New York) are both basking in the acclaim that “Head Smash” is garnering by critics across the nation and are hard at work trying to spread the word. Said Yudin: “So far we’ve been to comic book conventions in Philadelphia, Chicago, Miami, Houston, Detroit and New York. San Diego is obviously the biggest, though.” There’s no telling how
El Agave Restaurant and Tequileria will bring traditional “Hispanic-Mexican” cuisine, award-winning tequilas, and indigenous flavors to Del Mar Plaza. Since 1996, El Agave has been serving San Diegans their trademark “Mexican Nouvelle Cuisine” from its original location in Old Town. The new Del Mar location, El Agave’s third in San Diego, will also feature a comprehensive tequila museum stocked with over 2,000 premium tequilas. Scheduled to open in November 2013, El Agave will be open for lunch and dinner, seven days a week, and will feature a special Happy Hour menu and tequila tastings. Known for its bold, authentic flavors, El Agave’s menu is inspired by the cooking styles of ancient cultures, including the Aztecs and Mestizos. Popular menu items such as a variety of mole sauces which blend flavors native to Mexico with ingredients of Spanish and Arabic orgin, crispy chalupas, tamales, enchiladas and the infamous filet mignon in tequila with a red wine reduction sauce, will join the menu offerings at the Del Mar location. “We’ve been waiting for just the right location to expand into other popular areas of San Diego,” said Carlos Aceves, director of operations. “Del Mar Plaza couldn’t be a more perfect location in which to blend our unique menu offerings with a beautiful ocean view location.” In addition to serving authentic Hispanic-Mexican food, El Agave is equally well known for their selection of rare and premium tequilas. Housed inside the restaurant, the Tequila Museum features a collection of over 2,000 tequilas from all over the world. Included in the museum is the restaurant’s own award-winning Tequila Agave Artesenal. For tastings in the tequila museum, guests are seated amongst a variety of agave tequilas and served tastings from the featured tequila flight. For more information, and to see the lunch, dinner, wine, tequila, and Happy Hour menus, please visit www.elagave.com. El Agave will be located on the Plaza Level of Del Mar Plaza, across from Pacifica Del Mar, at 1555 Camino Del Mar. big “Head Smash” will become, but judging by past fandom for hot graphic novel properties, the sky’s the limit. “We just had the actor Bill Paxton record some really cool narration for some special trailers we put together,” said Yudin, who notes that with the graphic novel complete, now they can start on the film adaptation. Perhaps for next year’s fest, if history repeats itself, they’ll unveil the next part of the “Head Smash” saga. After all, as Yudin sums up: “Comic Con is basically a huge celebration for everyone who embraces entertainment.” For more on “Head Smash,” check out http://headsmash.net/.
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Charming 3Bd, 2.5Ba + loft former model home. Master bedroom balcony. Cul-de-sac location. Sold for $685,000
Impeccably maintained family home features 4Bd/2.5Ba, plus a bonus room upstairs. Offered at $849,000 to $899,876
Beautiful 5Bd, 3Ba home on a large lot with plenty of room to play. Downstairs bedroom. 3 car garage. Sold for $951,500
PALISADES
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IN ESCROW This 4Bd/4Ba, Plan 2, home located close to Carmel Knolls park. Spacious backyard and spa. Offered at $975,000 to $1,025,000
SOLD Newly built 5Bd/4.5Ba Mediterranean style masterpiece situated on a huge usable, flat yard. Sold for $1,265,000
THE SHORES
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BEACH BARBER TRACT
SOLD Spectacular panoramic canyon views. 4Bd, 3.5Ba home with tropical landscape, spa, firepit and built-in BBQ. Sold for $1,380,000
Charming 3Bd/3Ba storybook English Tudor home built in 1929 and historically designated as the Florence Palmer House. Offered at $1,799,000 to $1,950,876
Scan for Property Details
BY ROB LEDONNE Last weekend’s Comic Con drew thousands from all over the world; many of them in the entertainment industry who work in publishing, film, television and other fields. Vlad Yudin and Edwin Mejia are two of the countless people who come every year to check out all the festival has to offer and even push their own project. “It’s a big event, not just for comic books but for entertainment in general,” Yudin explained before the festival from a car in the middle of the New Mexico desert on the way to San Diego. “It’s a great way to learn what’s happening in the world of entertainment and, for me, to introduce new projects.” This year, Yudin and Mejia hawked a brand new graphic novel called “Head Smash,” a post apocalyptic science fiction thriller which is turning heads — not only in San Diego, but across the world and in Hollywood as well. Mark Morgan and Michael Beckor, the producers of the “Twilight” franchise, optioned the story to turn it into a feature film and Yudin is hard at work on the movie script. “The story started out as an idea for a new superhero with a cool twist,” Yudin explains concerning the origins of “Head Smash.” “We wanted to create a very relatable superhero with a power that’s also a gift and a curse.” Yudin and Mejia always knew they wanted to turn “Head Smash” into a feature film, and figured a graphic novel was a great way to drum up interest. “It made sense for us to turn it into a graphic novel,” Yudin notes. “It’s such a visual piece.” Last year at Comic Con, they announced their intent to publish the story and since then have been working hard putting together the pieces for its release exactly one year later, this July 31. “It all took quite some time,” says Yudin, who recruited a variety of the most notable people in the world of art and graphic novels. Among them was Joe Perez, best known as Kanye West’s art director; another artist, Tim Bradstreet, has
NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013
PAGE 17
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PAGE 18
NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013
Del Mar Times Solana Beach Sun Carmel Valley News 3702 Via de la Valle Suite 202W Del Mar, CA 92014 858-756-1403
www.delmartimes.net The Del Mar Times (USPS 1980) is published every Friday by San Diego Suburban News,a division of MainStreet Communications. Adjudicated as a newspaper of general cir-culation by Superior Court No.GIC 748533,December 21,2000.Copyright © 2010 MainStreet Communications. All rightsreserved. No part of the contents of this publication may be reproduced in any medi-um,including print and electronic media,without the express written consent of MainStreet Communications..
PHYLLIS PFEIFFER Publisher LORINE WRIGHT Executive Editor editor@delmartimes.net editor@rsfreview.com KAREN BILLING Senior News Writer KRISTINA HOUCK Reporter MARSHA SUTTON Senior Education Reporter JON CLARK Photographer DON PARKS Chief Revenue Officer/General Manager RYAN DELLINGER, SARAH MINIHANE, COLLEEN GRAY, ASHLEY GOODIN, CHRISTINA RAINE, DAVE LONG, MICHAEL RATIGAN, KATHY VACA, ASHLEY O’DONNELL
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LETTERS POLICY Topical letters to the editor are encouraged and we make an effort to print them all. Letters are limited to 200 words or less and submissions are limited to one every two weeks per author. Submission must include a full name, address, e-mail address (if available) and atelephone number for verification purposes. We do not publish anonymous letters. Contact the editor for more information about submitting a guest editorial piece,called Community View, at 400 words maximum. We reserve the right to edit for taste, clarity, length and to avoid libel. E-mailed submissions are preferred to editor@ delmartimes.net. Lettersmay also be mailed or delivered to 565 Pearl St., Ste. 300, La Jolla, or faxed to (858) 459-5250. LETTERSPOLICY
Letters to the Editor/Opinion Importance of right to free speech and peaceful public demonstrations cannot be overstated I have a friend who, following the George Zimmerman verdict and resulting demonstrations recently, chose to lump together the thousands of peaceful protestors nationwide with the few criminals who broke the law in two cities. He feels it was up to the protestors to stop the criminal acts, but, in fact, stopping someone intent on causing physical harm or destruction of property, whether in a public gathering or in private, is the very reason we have police. George Zimmerman forgot that. I hope the rest of us won’t. This friend went on to condemn the demonstrations because sometimes this sort of thing can lead to negative or unintended consequences. But that’s true of anything and everything we do. In my opinion, this is a red herring that has suddenly gained momentum, thanks to the media. It is affecting the public’s opinion of the right to protest in general, which concerns me greatly. It concerns me because the right to gather in public, to peacefully protest injustice, to dissent, is protected under the constitution and it plays an important role in a free and democratic society. It has helped to effect positive change in our country for over 240 years even though it is absolutely true that, on occasion, there can be unintended consequences as well. I am also concerned that the right to protest is being inexorably fused and confused with the criminal acts of a very few. We do not condemn an entire football stadium full of people wildly yelling in support of one team or the other because of the overly rowdy or at times even criminal or violent behavior that is exhibited by a few for “their” team. These few are the guilty parties, not everyone rooting for the same team. This awareness should apply to public gatherings protected by the First Amendment as well. While it’s extremely worrisome to see the media and now more of the public framing and condemning public demonstrations in a negative way, most disturbing of all is that this attitude has been used by our government for the last 11 years to justify methodically chipping away at this all-important civil and constitutional right. Talk about consequences, this is the most disturbing and frightening consequence of all. The importance of preserving freedom of speech and the right to gather in public; to rally, protest, and dissent, cannot be overstated. It is one of the cornerstones in a free and democratic society. So to see public opinion turning on those who are legally standing up for their rights, is worrisome indeed. Kim Perl, Carmel Valley
Merge project should be downsized My home is very near to the undeveloped 4.11-acre lot at Carmel Mountain Road and Carmel Country Road in Carmel Valley. The developer Gary Levitt is in the planning stages of the proposed Merge project. Many of us in the neighborhood are concerned. We have signed petitions, we have sent our concerns to the developer and we have requested the project be downsized. The proposed mixed-use development is too dense. It is so dense that Gary Levitt can’t build his massive plan, with the City required parking, without an underground parking lot. The underground parking garage adds an additional safety issue. I am concerned about the potential for crime due to the parking garage. We do not want an underground parking garage this close to our homes. Originally the lot was approved for 28,000 square feet of retail, five stand-alone buildings with potential for a nice neighborhood meeting place, known as the “highland village center” (the original name which is more fitting to our neighborhood than the Merge). Mr. Levitt has purchased the property and is proposing a plan for mixed use. With all the project’s elements considered, not just the retail, it is just less than 90,000 square feet, including: •13,000 sq. ft. of retail •22,000 sq. ft. of commercial office space •10 townhomes with separate garages (approx. 20,000-plus square feet) •21 rental residences above the commercial office space (approx. 25,000 square feet) •Underground parking (undisclosed square footage) According to the original Carmel Valley Community Plan, the lot should be developed as a pedestrian-oriented neighborhood center with an open design and relevant retail for the neighbors of district 10. We want a small “highland village center,” not a commercial office and residential fortress known as the Merge that Mr. Levitt has planned. The current proposal should be developed somewhere downtown, not in our quiet bedroom community. Nowhere in Carmel Valley are there residences on top of retail. Our area was designed to be lower density with open spaces. Why do we need the additional townhomes and additional residences on top of retail? Just because he can does not mean he should. We do not want our neighborhood center to be another commercial business center we do not need. The concerns of the people in the neighborhood should be heard. Mr. Levitt talks about his rights as a property owner. What about the rights of the people of neighborhood? The proposed development will increase Mr. Levitt’s profits but it will be at the expense of the residents in district 10, who will see a decrease in property values. We are hopeful that Mr. Levitt and the Carmel Valley Planning Board will take our concerns to heart and find a compromise. Anne Marie Devine Carmel Valley
Growing problem: People are not picking up after their dogs We have an 18-month-old golden retriever and we walk him in our Carmel Valley neighborhood twice a day. We have noticed that people are not picking up after their dogs and it is becoming a real problem. Now that school is out and more of the kids are walking their dogs, the lawns and sidewalks are covered. You actually have to watch very carefully as you are walking so as not to step in the dog droppings. When we offer these kids bags, they refuse. Parents need to either talk to their kids about this or walk their dogs themselves. We are hoping that adults have more sense and cleanup after their dogs. We just got home from the park at Carmel Knolls and our dog slid and fell into a big pile of dog feces. I cannot tell you how disgusting this was. We had to take him home and bathe him. Patti Passov, Carmel Valley
The One Paseo Loop Road BY GORDON CLANTON Here is an idea to mitigate traffic impacts of the proposed One Paseo shopping center in Carmel Valley. This idea is independent of very important ongoing discussions about density and the mix of businesses. My proposal assumes that, no matter how large the final project, it will bring enormous new traffic burdens to both Del Mar Heights Road exits from I-5 and to the surface streets that border the new shopping center – and, further, that it is desirable to get as much of this new traffic as possible off of the adjacent thoroughfares as quickly as possible. Here is the proposal: Imagine a one-way clockwise loop around the perimeter of the One Paseo site, built on One Paseo property at the developer’s expense. Cars heading for the shopping center from eastbound Del Mar Heights Road would enter the loop via a new right-hand lane beginning at the end of the eastbound freeway off ramp. Cars also could enter the loop diagonally from eastbound Del Mar Heights Road and southbound El Camino Real. Once on the one-way loop, cars could exit diagonally to the right through several passages into the parking lots nearest their destinations or exit diagonally to the left to exit the center and merge with eastbound DMH Road or southbound ECR. The loop could be three lanes wide – a center lane for through traffic, a right lane for easy entry to parking, and a left lane for
re-entering adjacent surface streets. Because cars would enter and leave the loop diagonally, there would be no new traffic signals and no left turns at the entrances to and exits from the loop. The section of the loop parallel to Del Mar Heights Road could be separated from the thoroughfare by a landscaped berm running parallel to the street and the existing sidewalk. Pedestrians could enter the center from the landscaped southwest corner of DMH Road and ECR through a pedestrian tunnel under (or bridge over) the loop road. I am not planning professional. I offer these ideas for what they are worth and welcome feedback from the professionals, the developers, the opponents of the current proposal, and the general public. Just as new residential developments must pay for the roads, schools, and sewers they will need, why not require big new shopping centers to absorb onto their property the extra traffic they generate, thus minimizing traffic on adjacent public thoroughfares? Gordon Clanton teaches Sociology at San Diego State University. He welcomes comments at gclanton@mail.sdsu.edu.
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. E-mailed submissions are preferred to editor@rsfreview.com. Letters may be edited. The letters/columns published are the author’s opinion only and do not reflect the opinion of this newspaper.
NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013
PAGE 19
Crossing the six-month mark Education Matters/Opinion BY SUPERVISOR DAVE ROBERTS Earlier this month, I completed my first six months in office and during that half-year, I have made strong progress in advancing reforms for mental health services, adoptions of foster children and renewable energy. I also voted in June to adopt a balanced budget which maintains strong reserves. My colleagues and I were frugal as ever with public money, but we still managed to expand service levels and create jobs. Also in June — to add transparency and additional scrutiny to Community Enhancement Grant applications — I created a board of community volunteers to review the voluminous submissions and make recommendations to me. Earlier, in April, Vice Chairwoman Dianne Jacob and I brought forward legislation calling for an audit of the county’s mental health system. We expect to see the findings of the audit at our July 30 meeting. We want to help mentally ill people who are unable to help themselves. We want to protect them, their families and the public. Accordingly, we have called for a thorough examination of Laura’s Law, which allows for the involuntary treatment of any person with a mental disorder who, as a result of that condition, presents a danger to others or to himself or herself, or is gravely disabled. Laura’s Law requires that judge to certify the need for involuntary treatment. Another program I am determined to improve is adoptions for foster children. For that initiative, I have found a strong partner in Chairman Greg Cox. We launched our Exceptional Families initiative in May, and in June, we received a unanimous vote to streamline adoption programs. We also requested that the county’s staff prepare a report that recommends legislative reforms to improve the adoption process.
‘Come pick up your camper’
Dave Roberts In another collaboration, Vice Chairwoman Jacob and I have called for updates to the county’s strategic energy plan. One of our goals is to promote guaranteed financing for property owners who wish to install solar panels or make other energy improvements to their property. Known commonly as PACE, Property Assessed Clean Energy allows property owners to pay for energy-efficiency investments over time on their property tax bills. PACE programs are available to commercial property owners in the unincorporated area. Our goal is to make PACE accessible to residential property owners. Looking ahead, community outreach and accessibility will remain as top priorities for me. My electronic newsletter – From Dave’s Desk – summarizes my activities for the week. We have published more than two-dozen of the reports to date. Constituents can follow my Facebook and Twitter posts to stay current with the meetings and events I attend. My Web address is www.supervisordaveroberts. com. For the convenience of our constituents, we have opened a full-time office in Escondido. We also keep monthly office hours in Rancho Bernardo and Del Mar. Contact us to schedule a meeting at one of those locations. Supervisor Dave Roberts represents the Third District and can be reached at (619) 531-5533.
‘Concerts at the Cove’ continue in Solana Beach The City of Solana Beach and the Belly Up Tavern continue to hold the summer “Concerts at the Cove” series. Concerts at the Cove bring local musicians to the Fletcher Cove Park stage in performances designed for audiences of all ages. Concerts are held every Thursday night throughout the summer until Aug. 22, from 6 p.m. to 7:45 p.m. July 25: Palominos; August 1: Mike Mydral; August 8: Brawley; August 15: Kevin Miso; August 22: Bayou Bros. For more information, visit the City’s website at www.cityofsolanabeach.org or call the Parks and Recreation Department at 858-720-2453.
BY MARSHA SUTTON T h e first call came at 7 p.m. Marsha Sutton Monday night. It was an automated announcement saying everything was fine and the fire was not affecting any camp activities. Fire? What fire? We had dropped off our son at his favorite camp in Idyllwild last Sunday, July 14, for a 12-day stay. This was his last year there before he aged out. After hours of planning and map-gazing – debating possible destinations, travel times, sights along the way – my husband and I decided to use those 12 days to take a driving trip throughout the Southwest, something we’ve always wanted to do. The number of hours spent planning the trip – booking and re-booking hotels, and solidifying the final itinerary – was mindboggling. But once done, we were more than ready to hit the road. Driving along the highways through the wide open spaces is something I grew up with in the Midwest. That was the era of “See the USA in your Chevrolet” – although we always traveled in Oldsmobiles. I still find it the most relaxing way to travel and love the freedom from inconvenient airline departure times, crowded airports, ridiculous security checks, claustrophobic planes and costly rental cars. That was then, last week. Today, if I ever see the inside of that car for more than 15 minutes, I’ll go crazy. All was well until two hours after leaving camp in Idyllwild, when the left rear bumper on our two-year-old Lexus popped loose, rattling enough to cause worry. We persevered until the banging got so loud that we became apprehensive that the piece of bumper might rip off and crash through another car’s windshield. In retrospect, we should have regarded this setback as an omen and returned home at once. A second inspection on the side of the freeway, as vehicles sped along inches from us at 80 miles per hour,
revealed that the bumper was flapping hard enough to begin to tear. So my husband just ripped the damn thing off and threw it in the back seat where it stayed for the duration of our Southwest adventure. Problem solved, although the car looked ready for the junkyard, with a gaping hole where the bumper used to be. Our first night was a stop-over in Sedona, just a place to sleep before heading the next day to Albuquerque and Santa Fe, New Mexico, for the next four days and nights. Never having been to Santa Fe, I considered it the highlight of the trip, and two full days of driving was going to be worth it. After settling into our hotel quarters (upgraded to a suite when the room we booked was unavailable), bliss over our spacious surroundings was interrupted by the call from camp. Quick check on the Internet revealed a growing fire out of control near Idyllwild that began less than 24 hours after camp got underway. The Mountain Fire was moving away from camp, so not to worry, the recording said. So we didn’t. The next day, although overcast with scattered showers, we plotted out a walking tour of Santa Fe that covered all the high points of this charming town. Some unexpected intestinal distress about an hour into our walk gave me the unwelcome opportunity to visit some of the nicest bathrooms in Santa Fe – La Posada Resort, Loretto Inn and Spa, La Fonda, and my favorite (or at least most frequented) – the Eldorado Hotel. Popping Imodium like M&Ms, I lasted until midafternoon when Santa Fe lost its charm and we called it a day. After staggering back to our luscious suite, we retreated, rested and nibbled on carrots and crackers for dinner (forget all that refined, delectable cuisine at renowned restaurants for which Santa Fe is famous). Later that night, we tried to ignore the gnawing feeling of dread after receiving another update from camp which advised us not to worry, even though the fire was spreading. Again overcast and chilly despite the promised
90-degree weather, the next day we decided to drive to Taos, explore the town and tour the famous Taos Pueblo. Although it was an all-day affair to drive there, spend several hours, and drive back the long scenic route, the Taos Pueblo was fascinating and memorable. It is about 1,000 years old and was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1960. In 1992 it was named a World Heritage Site and is a living monument to what is considered to be the oldest continuously inhabited community in the country. The Taos Pueblo community is known for being one of the most private in existence. The people’s religion, language, practices, traditions and culture are kept secret. With no running water or electricity, the people of Taos Pueblo live simple lives and can trace their ancestry back to a time before the arrival of the Spanish conquerors. About 150 people live in the historic complex full-time. Friendly but somewhat guarded, residents of the pueblo go on about their lives as tours are conducted around them. Upon our return to Santa Fe later that evening, after being booted out of our suite and moved (forcibly, almost) to a regular room, another update came from camp. This time it was the same chipper voice saying everything was still fine. But then this piece of news: “The Riverside Fire Department has ordered a mandatory evacuation of camp.” Hmmm … a sense of foreboding. Again, forget the nice dinner. We hung by the phone. At 10 p.m., the next call was a stunner: “We have arrived safely at the Hemet Red Cross shelter. We would love for you to come pick up your camper.” Come pick up your camper?!?!? These were five dreaded words that no parent ever wants to hear, especially parents who were four days into a 12-day vacation and two days’ drive from the pick-up site. Home now under cloudy skies at the beach, I’m trying not to think
about how we were supposed to be white-water rafting today in Durango, Colorado, after leaving Santa Fe. Then there was to be a much anticipated visit to Mesa Verde National Park, then three days in Moab, Utah, and Arches and Canyonlands National Parks for hiking and more river rafting, capped by two nights in Palm Springs at a five-star resort with fantastic mid-week summer rates. But as John Lennon famously said, “Life is what happens to you while you’re busy making other plans.” Two more days of driving back home, cancelling hotel reservations along the way, translated into five of six days sitting in a car. Naturally, the day we left Santa Fe was gloriously sunny and warm at last. Meanwhile, our intrepid camper spent the first night of his evacuation in a hotel with the rest of the campers whose parents couldn’t drop everything at 10 p.m. and drive to Hemet to pick them up. This included kids from New York and one from Russia. The second night he was rescued by a friend who kept him safe in Los Angeles until we could come retrieve him. We just got the news of the official all-clear for evacuees to return to Idyllwild, six days after the fire had started. However, the decision had been made earlier to cancel camp permanently. So after two smoky days, camp was over for the summer. Conflicted about who to feel more sorry for – us for an aborted vacation or our son for a disappointingly shortened camp experience – we got word that a dear friend had just been diagnosed with glioblastoma and was recovering from emergency brain surgery. Perspective. Our son is fine, no one was injured at camp, we made it back safely, rear bumper and all, and we live in beautiful and politically torrid San Diego – where the steamy news almost makes up for the chilly weather. Meanwhile, if anyone wants a ready-made, thoroughly researched 12-day driving trip through the Southwest, I can make some recommendations. — Marsha Sutton can be reached at SuttComm@san. rr.com.
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NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013
DMCV Boys U12 White Team wins CV Manchester Boys Under 7 finalists at tournament Albion Cup Championship DMCV Boys U12 White Team are Albion Cup Champions! The boy’s went undefeated all weekend scoring 17 goals and only allowing 4 to win their division. Top Row: Coach Roy Ashcroft, Jesse Yu, Ben Antoniades, Jinwoo Kang, Brandon Kaleta, Owen Underwood, AJ Morgan, Zennon Chatwin, Will Hager; Bottom Row: Ryan Levy, Colin Duff, Christopher Tonelli, Jack Farfel, Elad Ben-Moshe, Mick Davey, Matt Levy.
The Carmel Valley Manchester Boys Under 7 competitive soccer team played in the Kick for Hope soccer tournament in Chula Vista on July 13-14. The team made it to the finals in the first tournament they played together! They lost in the finals to a very competitive team but had a great time and played very well. The team was coached by Denis Sweeney. (Above) Back row: Jaime Tawil, Fletcher Lazarus, Misha Portnoy, Ezra Mizrachi, Pete Phainual and Coach Denis Sweeney. Front row: Leo Nakazawa, Max Leong, Zack Earle. The team is looking to add to its roster. If interested, contact Coach Denis Sweeney at 858-245-8862 or email dsweeney4@san.rr.com.
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NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013
PAGE 21
Surf GU14 Academy I team tops SD Surf SC Girls Academy II U10 wins at Canyon PSA tournament Surf GU14 Academy I team coached by Beto Villela won the Canyon PSA tournament the weekend of July 13 in Anaheim Hills. Coach Beto Villela said: “It was a great showing and I am proud of the girls. They played very aggressively. We are ready for Surf Cup.” Above, left to right: Macy Decarlo, Katie Cameron, Madison Bowen, Mackenzie Navarro, Kelli McKinnon, Riley Pidgeon, Caitlin Hendricks (goalie, holding trophy), Stephanie Ward, Isabella Willyard, Katya Pourteymour, Paige Slusrek, Lauren Gross, Zoe Rodriguez. In front: Bailee Monjazeb.
2013 Albion Cup Championship
SD Surf SC Girls Academy II U10 recently won the 2013 Albion Cup Championship. The girls had a great tournament, scoring 21 goals and allowing only 2 goals in five undefeated games in the Cup Group. Top row (left to right): Lizzy Hood, Presley McDeavitt, Ashley Pham, Coach Steve Leacock, Deming Wyer, Caitlin Wilson, Corinne Wilson. Bottom row: Grace Tecca, Allison Luo, Olivia Mehran, Mia Myers, Stormy Wallace, Abby Beamer
Don’t miss the excitement: ‘Game Night!...A Fun Casino Night in Support of Falcon Football’ to be held Aug. 10
The party is called “Game Night!...A Fun Casino Night in Support of Falcon Football.” The event will be held on Saturday, Aug. 10, at the Del Mar Marriott at 11966 El Camino Real, San Diego, 92130. The party will go from 6 p.m. to 11 p.m., with a Pre-Game Tailgate Party at 5:30 p.m. in the Marriott Parking Lot. This is a great opportunity to meet all three levels of football coaches as the varsity, junior varsity, and freshman football coaches will be in attendance. Tickets to Game Night are $75 and includes entry to Game Night, food, and two opportunity tickets redeemable for drinks, casino games, or chances to win. Tailgate Beer Tasting is an additional $10. Additional opportunity tickets are available for $5 each. There will also be great raffle prizes and a Live Auction with outstanding auction items. Registering is easy and can be done by going to the Torrey Pines High School Football website and clicking on ‘Registration Form for Game Night’. For more information, contact falconfootball@tphsfootball.com. Chances are ... you’ll have a great time!
Special delivery of One World Futbols Chevrolet made a special delivery recently of 500 virtually-indestructible One World Futbols, bringing the power of play to children in San Diego with the help of the Albion Soccer Club. The initiative is part of Chevrolet’s three-year partnership with One World Futbol Project that pledges to place 1.5 million One World Futbols with youth in war-stricken zones, refugee camps, disaster areas, and other underprivileged communities around the world. To date, Chevrolet-branded One World Futbols have been distributed across five continents impacting millions of children. Visit: www.albionsoccer.org; www.oneworldfutbol. com; www.chevrolet.com.
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NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013
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BY GIDEON RUBIN Hannah Grobisen isn’t among San Diego County’s tallest high school volleyball players and she can’t jump out of the gym. But whatever the incoming junior Canyon Crest Academy middle blocker lacks in size, athleticism and raw ability, she more than makes up for with smarts, savvy, and a propensity for clutch play. Grobisen plays for the prestigious San Diego Waves club team and has started her first two years at CCA. “She has the ability to play big in big moments,” Ravens coach Ariel Haas said, summing up the intangibles that, in his estimation, make Grobisen one of the county’s top club players in her age group. “I don’t know what it is about someone’s character, but when the pressure’s on maybe she focuses more. She always plays really well during those stressful periods.” Grobisen’s coaches took note of those qualities at the end of her freshman year, when she started a San Diego Section Division III semifinal playoff against a heavily favored La Costa Canyon team. That the Ravens were swept in three games by an LCC team that went on to play in the state finals was no a big surprise. But Grobisen’s performance was. Especially considering she found herself playing opposite standout Natalie Bausback, a University of Virginiabound senior. “That experience was really challenging,” Grobisen said. “That was a really great experience for me to be able to be a starter in an LCC playoff game my freshman year. I was very intimidated because she’s such a great player and she’s going to a Division I school.” Grobisen acknowledged that the decibel levels in a packed gym did little to calm her nerves. But she showed no signs of nervousness outwardly. And Grobisen more than held her own, leading the Ravens with a .583 hitting percentage (seven kills in 12 attempts). She was the Ravens second leading kill leader in that game. “I just felt like I was David against Goliath,” she said. “It was great to be able to compete in that game.” It’s a role that Grobisen relishes. “I definitely love playing when you’re the underdog and people don’t expect to do as well as you can. It’s really nice to prove people wrong.” Grobisen’s attitude makes her a nice fit for a Ravens program that’s been proving people wrong practically since the program’s inception. The Ravens made the Division III finals last season for the second time in three years – and for the first time since graduating phenom Samantha Cash, who went on to play at Division I Pepperdine after leading CCA to its first finals appearance in 2010. CCA, which last season advanced to the Southern California Regional semifinals, was among eight teams selected to compete in the elite Open Division next year. The selection was based on the performance records of high school programs in all enrollment divisions going back five years. Grobisen said her teammates talked about what it meant to classified by the section commissioners as an elite program at a team meeting last fall. It is an especially sweet for a school known more for academics than sports, and for a program that’s existed just nine years and has fielded a varsity for seven years. “We thought it was huge honor to be moved up there,” she said. Grobisen is part of the reason they got moved up there, Haas said, noting that elite club players such as her weren’t coming to CCA in the numbers that they are now. “She’s among a good crop of young players who have continued us on our path on an elite level,” Haas said. Grobisen, who Haas believes is a potential Division I or Division II college prospect, is among at least four returnees who project to play at four-year schools. The others are setter Carly Rasmussen and opposite Caroline Lappe (incoming juniors) and incoming sophomore outside hitter Jolie Rasmussen. The Ravens graduated seven seniors, including four
Hannah Grobisen who went on to play at fouryear colleges. “In years past it would be one kid at that type of level, now we’re starting to see more of those kids,” Haas said. “With success every year brings more attention to the program and more kids wanting to come and be a part of what we’ve put together.” Grobisen’s upcoming season will be a chance to showcase her skills to scouts, Haas said. Although some of her best attributes aren’t easily measured by tape measures and stop watches, Grobisen is a solid server and excellent attacker, Haas said. Scouts also pay close attention to how top-level players perform under pressure – a quality that she’s shown herself to excel in. “I think that’s a great sign of character,” Haas said, noting the LCC playoff game her freshman year spoke volumes about what makes Grobisen the player she is. “That was kind of the moment that I think back on,” he said. “She played so well against someone who was supposed to be better than her and it didn’t matter to her, as a freshman, and as a 14-year-old.” Grobisen admits she wasn’t always able to settle herself down in pressure situations so easily. She learned how to calm herself down playing club ball in middle school, entering games mostly as a reserve with game’s on the line. “I wasn’t always the best at it,” she admits, “but I do love to compete in tough situations because it always makes it fun for me. “To be down and then to be able to come back, that’s the best feeling in the world.”
NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013
PAGE 23
Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage WHERE HOME BEGINS | ESTABLISHED 1906 | NO. 1 IN CALIFORNIA
Cardiff By The Sea | $775,000 Close to beach, village and Glen Park from great Orinda Village 3 br, 2 ba condo w/attached 2-car garage. Fantastic sunsets daily. Newer wood flrs. 130031178 858.755.0075
Cardiff By The Sea | $1,475,000 Stunning property, enclave of newer homes, a few blocks from school, market, beach, library, post office. 5 br, 4 ba. Filled w/architectural detail. 130029385 858.755.0075
Carmel Valley | $1,235,000 Gorgeous 3 br 2.5 ba w/office/bonus room. First floor master. Kitchen w/custom tile, stone counters, stainless appliances, newer fixtures & cabinetry. Beautifully landscaped yard. 130028629 858.755.0075
Carlsbad | $627,000 Immaculate 4 br, 3 ba home. Very light and bright. Open floorplan. Vaulted ceilings. Move-in ready. Cul-de-sac. Backyard is perfect For entertaining. 130036881 858.259.0555
Carlsbad | $1,315,000 Stunning 4+ br home with office, media, views, spa, wonderful theater room, landscaped yard, fountain, built-in bbq & much more. Exquisite! 130030208 858.755.0075
Carlsbad | $1,349,000 Resort living at end of cul-de-sac. Canyon and mtn views. 5 br, 3.5 ba. Kit w/granite island, brkft bar & stainless appls. 1st flr mstr. Pool, spa. 130037701 858.755.0075
Carmel Valley | $418,800 Int corner unit. 2 br, 2 ba. Close to pool. Western exposure with lots of light. Best value in Carmel Valley. 1,201 appx sf. Room for office/nursery. 130033765 858.259.0555
Carmel Valley | $799,900 Beautiful 4 br, 3.5 ba home on cul-de-sac in Costa Del Sol. Chef’s kit, balcony, lrg master suite, deep driveway. Minutes to shopping & the beach! 130031696 858.259.0555
Carmel Valley | $1,089,000 Quiet south-facing backyard shows like a model. 4 br, loft & 3 ba. 1 br/ba down. Open floorplan has volume ceilings, living/dining rms, adjt family rm. 130036898 858.259.0555
Carmel Valley | $1,250,000 Beautiful 4 br, 3.5 ba home w/pool & spa. Den on first floor. Master suite w/balcony. Newer exterior paint & carpet. Del Mar School District. 130028657 858.259.0555
Chula Vista | $275,888 Spectacular 3 br, 2.5 ba TH w/expansive, open flr plan. 1,525 appx sf, fireplace, spacious liv rm, chef’s kit w/ upgraded appl & much more. 130037681 858.259.0555
Del Mar | $989,000 Custom 1-story 3 br, 2 ba home in original condition. Wide, tree-lined street. Spacious back yard w/trees & plants. Easterly views. Wood parquet flr. 130037170 858.755.0075
Del Mar | $1,289,000 Turnkey perfection. 4 br, 3.5 ba. Gracious and dramatic entry, lushly landscaped backyard ringed by towering trees. Private and serene, close to all. 130030880 858.755.0075
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Hillcrest | $479,000 1346 esf MINT 2 br, 2 ba townhome. Two master Brs, 1-car Pvt att garage plus 1 gated garage spot. 3blks to bars, movies! Windows galore & treetop views. 130029536 858.755.0075
Carmel Valley | $499,888 Adorable 2 br townhome in Carmel Valley with nice-size patio. 2-car attached garage, very close to shopping and restaurants, award-winning schools. 130037083 858.259.0555
San Diego | $859,900 Spacious 3 br 2.5 ba home with dramatic 2-story entry. Beautiful cul-de-sac greenbelt location. Newer stainless steel kitchen appliances & paint. 130036985 858.755.0075
San Diego | $1,235,000 Gated Stratford 2 br, 2.5 ba w/panoramic views of mountains & RSF. Turnkey, highly upgraded designer accents & lush manicured landscaping. Ba updated. 130037070 858.755.0075
Carmel Valley 858.259.0555 | Del Mar 858.755.0075 www.CaliforniaMoves.com | www.SDViewOnline.com ©2013 Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Coldwell Banker®, Previews® and Coldwell Banker Previews International are registered trademarks licensed to Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. An Equal Opportunity Company. Equal Housing Opportunity. Owned And Operated By a Subsidiary of NRT LLC. Broker does not guarantee the accuracy of square footage, lot size or other information concerning the condition or features of property provided by seller or obtained from public records or other sources, and the buyer is advised to independently verify the accuracy of that information through personal inspection and with appropriate professionals. If your property is currently listed for sale, this is not intended as a solicitation.
PAGE 24
Toni Cieri
July 25, 2013
NORTH COAST
RE/MAX Distinctive Broker/Owner
Call Toni at (858) 229-4911 for free market analysis today 1217 Camino Del Mar • 858-229-4911 • tonicieri@aol.com www.delmarsnumber1realtor.com • CA DRE#00780968
Olde Del Mar This ocean view cedar retreat is secluded on a quiet, tree lined street in the heart of Del Mar. Enjoy the panoramic view stroll to Sea Grove Park and Del Mar Beach 2 blocks away. Del Mar Plaza and Starbucks are just 1 short block away. Features include 3 bedrooms, media room, soaring wood beam ceilings, 2 fireplaces, patios and ocean view balcony. A fabulous, find and lifestyle. $1,995,000 MLS #130025892
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Double Indemnity: Old Globe draws from film noir in latest production.
See page B3
LifeStyles
“Zandra Rhodes — Unseen” exhibition launched in London. Page B10
Thursday, July 25, 2013
SECTION B
Solana Beach athlete Inaugural Relay For Life of Del Mar fundraiser set for Aug. 17 competes in World Teams needed to raise funds for Maccabiah Games in Israel help the American CanBY KRISTINA HOUCK Solana Beach athlete Elliot Cohen is among the nearly 9,000 athletes competing at the 19th World Maccabiah Games in Israel July 18-30. Athletes from 78 countries are participating in 42 sports, as well as Paralympic events, at the Jewish Olympics-style competition, which is the third largest international sporting event in the world. Elliot, 15, is a starting soccer player for Team USA juniors. “I’m excited to be in Israel and play for the U.S.,” said Elliot, an attacking center midfielder, who plays soccer for Canyon Crest Academy and San Diego Surf Soccer Club. “It’s been really fun. I’m getting to meet new friends.” The team, which includes players born in 19971998, defeated Australia 2-0 in the group’s first match after the Opening Ceremonies on July 18. Elliot gave the inspirational talk in the huddle just before kickoff. “He’s such a passionate player,” said Elliot’s mother, Carolyn Cohen. “It’s very invigorating to watch him. It’s really fun.” The high school sophomore has played soccer since he was a toddler. His father, David Cohen, played for the U.S. Open Men’s soccer team in the 1985 Maccabiah Games in Israel when he was 27 years old. David, a Solana Beach chiropractor, is currently in Israel coaching soccer and treating U.S. athletes for sports injuries. Carolyn and her daughter are traveling to Israel on July 22 to watch Elliot play and attend the Closing Ceremonies on July 30. “Elliot’s very humble about what a great soccer player is,” Carolyn said. “He’s a brilliant soccer player. He’s an integral part of
cer Society.
the team.” In addition to participating in sports competitions, athletes in the World Maccabiah Games tour Israel and learn about the Jewish history and culture. “It’s a great country,” Elliot said. “I’m really glad that I get to connect with my religion. “For me, it’s interesting because in California, there’s not that many Jews so it’s kind of tough to be able to connect with people about that. But here, everyone is Jewish, so we have a common connection and I can connect with other people.” Carolyn said she’s thrilled her son has an opportunity to connect with Israel and fellow Jewish athletes. “I’m just excited for Elliot to be able to have this life experience,” Carolyn said. “He will be talking to his grandchildren about this. It’s the trip of a lifetime. It’s just unbelievable.” JLTV, a 24-hour Jewish-themed TV channel, is broadcasting the World Maccabiah Games in the U.S. For more information about the international sporting event, visit www. maccabiah.com.
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BY KRISTINA HOUCK Community members will come together to celebrate survivors, remember loved ones and fight against cancer during the inaugural Relay For Life of Del Mar on Aug. 17 at Del Mar Heights Elementary School. During the event, participants will walk on the track around the clock to raise funds for the American Cancer Society to support patients, caregivers and survivors in treatment and recovery. “Nobody is immune to cancer,” said Nathan Clookie, senior manager of Relay For Life. “Everybody is touched by it. Everybody has a friend, family member or co-worker who’s currently battling, battled and beat, or lost the battle.” A melanoma survivor, Clookie is organizing Relay For Life of Del Mar because there isn’t a local event and the closest relays take place in La Jolla and Encinitas. Relay For Life launched in La Jolla in 1996 and Encinitas in 2005. “We’ve done Relay For Life events all over San Diego County,” said Clookie, who has worked for the American Cancer Society since 2010. “There’s a big gap between La Jolla and Encinitas where there’s no event. We like to have an event in each community, so each community can participate, celebrate their local cancer survivors and also raise money to fight against cancer.” About a dozen volunteers formed a committee in June to plan the event. The
Relay For Life launched in La Jolla in 1996 and Encinitas in 2005. group hopes to recruit at least 15 teams and raise $15,000, Clookie said. Three teams have registered for the 24-hour event so far. “We’re looking for people to form teams with friends, family and co-workers to come out and spend the night with us and fundraise,” Clookie said. “We’re also looking for volunteers who want to get their hands in event planning and take on one of our many committee roles.” In honor of her cousin who died from cancer, Carlsbad resident Katie Newman is volunteering as a committee member and is leading the six-member Team Cabo. The 23-year-old sales representative hopes to raise at least $1,000. “It’s close to home for my family, and I just want to help however I can,” Newman said. Originally from London, Newman has lived with her late cousin’s family in Carlsbad for two years. This will be her first time participating in Relay For Life. “What I really like is that this is the first year,” Newman said. “Everybody is new to it. There is a learning curve for everybody. It’s an exciting opportunity.” While details are still being planned, community members can expect to celebrate local cancer survivors during the Survivors Lap at Relay For Life of Del Mar. Participants will also have an opportunity to decorate paper bags that will be lit at night to honor loved ones who have battled cancer, whether they have won or lost the fight. “No event is the same,” Clookie said. “We really want to build this one up to reflect Del Mar and be a place where cancer patients and their families, or families of those who have lost someone to cancer, can go and be with other people who have had similar experiences and fellowship with them.” Relay For Life of Del Mar begins at 10 a.m. on Aug. 17 at Del Mar Heights School located at 13555 Boquita Drive in Del Mar. For more information, and to donate or register online, visit www.relayforlife.org/delmarca. To inquire about volunteer opportunities, contact Clookie at 619-606-4855 or nathan.clookie@cancer.org.
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NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013
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NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013 PAGE B3
Double Indemnity: Old Globe stages tale of sex, murder, betrayal
La Jolla Cultural Partners
BY DIANA SAENGER Film noir fans are in for a real treat as the Old Globe prepares to stage the San Diego premiere of “Double Indemnity,” directed by John Gould Rubin, based on the book by James M. Cain, and adapted by David Pichette and R. Hamilton Wright. “Double Indemnity,” finds Walter Huff (Michael Hayden), a Los Angeles insurance man, who while selling insurance to Herbert Nirlinger (Murphy Guyer) is roped into a dangerous situation. Herbert’s wife, Phyllis (Angel Desai), seduces Walter into murdering Herbert to collect the insurance money. Rubin — a director, producer, teacher and a former actor — has worked on almost every genre of stage production, but is a real fan of film noir. As a teacher, he said he strived to lead his students to new forms of work that is more adventurous. “I wanted to give them
If you go What: “Double Indemnity’” When: Matinees, evenings July 27-Aug. 25 Where: Sheryl and Harvey White Theatre, Old Globe, 1363 Old Globe Way, Balboa Park Tickets: From $29 Box Office: (619) 23-GLOBE Website: TheOldGlobe.org an experience in class that allowed them to feel they could act in material with unusual demands, so I used scenes from film noir,” Rubin said.“In theater scenes
are literary, but in film, there are visual demands that require the actors move in certain ways to make beats happen,” he said. Film noir is associated with stylish crime dramas popular in the 1930s, ’40s and ’50s. It has specific style fundamentals — suspicious and sleazy motivations, black-and-white photography with shadowy and sharp angles, and foreboding music and sexuality. Rubin had this challenge in bringing “Double Indemnity” to the “round” Sheryl and Harvey White Theatre stage. “We have 30 scenes, and representing all of those scenes with sound, light, video, the turntable and modern theatrical devises, really attracted me,” he said. “Double Indemnity,” was a popular 1944 film starring Barbara Stanwyck, Fred MacMurray and Edward G. Robinson. It garnered seven Academy Award nominations. Rubin wants audiences to know the play is based
on the book, and is different from the film. “We’re using the original script of the play with a few changes. I presume people coming to a play based on a novel presume there will be changes to adapt it to the stage. I’m hoping that transition is so evident that when they come into the theater, it will divest them of preconceptions.” In this production, Rubin said he did want to play to style, but to the reality of the circumstances, and allow each character to analyze his or her circumstances. “Like for Phyllis; how did she descend into the kind of life she’s in and how does she psychologically engage in an act of murder?” Rubin proposed. “And what makes Walter take that step from fantasizing about — to actually committing a crime — and then taking that slide into a horrible nightmare?” Rubin’s approach to casting was to look for actors who would go at their char-
acters purely and cleanly through character analysis and not try to play a style piece. “I wanted them to let the style be a function of the way the lines dictate and the way we’re doing the play,” he said. “And also I wanted it to be really sexy, because this genre has a combination of murder and sex that I wanted to feel really palpable. I hope audiences find this version riveting and are able to identify with these characters and feel as if they’ve lived this scenario right along with them.” Phyllis (Angel Desai) and Michael (Walter Huff) form a dangerously intimate relationship in the San Diego Premiere of ‘Double Indemnity,’ based on the book by James M. Cain. Photo/Jim Cox
La Jolla Fashion Film Festival is July 26-27 Beauty, fashion, sensuality and storytelling is all part of the fashion film art movement with the best of works screening July 26-27 in Sherwood Auditorium at MCASD, 700 Prospect St., La Jolla, as part of the fourth annual La Jolla Fashion Film Festival. The opening reception will run 8-11 p.m. July 25 at Prospect Bar and Grill, sponsored by San Diego Model Management. An Academy Award-style ceremony with 12 award categories will take place 8-10:30 p.m. July 27 at MCASD. For tickets and more details, visit ljfff.com
VISIT WWW.MCASD.ORG/SPECIALEVENTS FOR TICKETS.
JOIN US SEPTEMBER 7, 2013 FOR THE 37TH ANNUAL
MONTE CARLO CHECK OUT WHAT’S HAPPENING
SIDEWAYS By Rex Pickett Directed by Des McAnuff Now Playing through August 25 If anyone orders Merlot, I’m leaving When friends Miles and Jack head to Santa Barbara wine country for one last blowout before Jack’s wedding, their journey through wine, women and disappointment becomes the definitive mid-life road trip. Contains graphic language, nudity and sexual content.
La Jolla Music Society SummerFest
Athenaeum Summer Festival With Gustavo Romero, piano
Shark Summer at Birch Aquarium!
July 31 to August 23, 2013
Sunday, July 28 at 4:00 p.m.
FREE events throughout the Festival, including SummerFest Encounters at the Athenaeum, Coaching Workshops at The La Jolla Riford Library and Open Rehearsals at MCASD Sherwood Auditorium. Visit our website for a complete listing.
We are pleased to announce our dates for our 15th Athenaeum Summer Festival. Celebrated pianist Gustavo Romero returns this summer for a four-part concert series, celebrating composers Maurice Ravel and Sergei Rachmaninoff.
Go gills-over-tail crazy for La Jolla's legendary leopard sharks and other local marine life during Shark Summer. Celebrate these remarkable animals with a new exhibit, shark-savvy activities, field excursions, and exclusive interactions with Andy Nosal, a leopard shark researcher and Birch Aquarium's new DeLaCour Postdoctoral Fellow in Ecology & Conservation.
SummerFest 2013 Single Tickets On Sale Now! Tickets start as low as $15! (858) 550-1010 LaJollaPlayhouse.org
(858) 459-3728 www.LJMS.org
Tickets range from $35-50. Dinners with the artist are held after the concerts at the Athenaeum. Dinners are $165. (858) 454-5872 www.ljathenaeum.org/ musicfest
Celebrate with activities through August
For a day-by-day list of special shark activities visit aquarium.ucsd.edu
PAGE B4
NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013
On The
Menu
■ The Vibe: Chic, upbeat, relaxed
■ Open Since: 2012
■ Happy Hour: 4-7 p.m. and 9 p.m. to close Monday through Saturday; 4 p.m. to close Sunday
See more restaurant profiles at www.lajollalight.com
■ Reservations: Yes
■ Hours: 4 p.m. to close daily
Katsuya by Starck ■ 600 F Street, San Diego ■ (619) 814-2000 ■ sbe.com/katsuya ■ Patio Seating: Yes
■ Signature Dishes: Special Katsuya Roll, Crispy Rice with Spicy Tuna
■ Take Out: Yes
Crispy Soft-Shelled Crab with tartar sauce and chili ponzu
Chirashi Sushi is thin slices of fish over rice with ginger and sesame.
Seating for dinner begins at 5:30 p.m. in the dining room.
With BOPS, servers bring sizzling-rice hot pots to the table and mix in sweet-soy BOP sauce with Japanese mushroom, braised short rib or pork bulgogi. PHOTOS BY KELLEY CARLSON
Japanese fare served in high style at Katsuya by Starck BY KELLEY CARLSON o attract foodies and casual diners alike, Katsuya’s San Diego location recently scaled down the size of its menu — described as “Japanese fare catered to the American palate, but with a unique concentration on San Diego tastes” — along with some of the price points and made subtle alterations to the decor. “We are beyond excited to introduce our new menu, which pairs Katsuya’s sophistication with the fun-loving community of San Diego,” Assistant General Manager Pouria Malihi said in a news release. “We want customers to feel like they can dine at Katsuya in flip-flops after a ball game or in heels and cocktail attire before a night out downtown.” Located in a 6,000-square-foot space that’s part of the Andaz Hotel, the restaurant is upbeat and chic, yet casual. Decorated by renowned designer Philippe Starck, the rooms have bold, contrasting colors, but they’re softened by the glow of candles, large Japanese lanterns and illuminated geisha images. The establishment is further enhanced by small details, such as pink and silver Maneki Neko cats. Social hour is observed in the lounge, where guests can get comfortable on loveseats or make a new acquaintance at the bar. Mirrored columns boast flat-screen TVs that broadcast athletic events.
T
On The Menu Recipe Each week you’ll find a recipe from the featured restaurant online at lajollalight.com Just click ‘Get The Recipe’ at the bottom of the story. ■ This week’s recipe:
Katsuya’s Sauteed Shishito Peppers Another place for interaction is the sushi bar, where patrons can witness chefs preparing rolls of rice with vegetables and raw seafood. “You get the energy of the kitchen,” Sous Chef Jason Velasquez said. Seating for dinner begins at 5:30 p.m. For special occasions, there is a semi-private mezzanine with ornate mirrors on patterned red walls, shielded from inquisitive eyes by white, flowing curtains; and a private atrium with an open skylight that permits a peek into the heart of the Andaz. To ease into the dining experience, some guests sip on the new “Local Libation Cocktails” such as 6th & F, a brilliant red beverage with Akvinta Vodka, muddled
Sauteéd Shishito Peppers lychees and raspberries, pineapple juice, squeezed lemon and a splash of St. Germain. Or they may opt for one of the many wines and beers, including Japanese Sapporo and Stone Brewing Co. selections. There are also premiere sakes; the Sasaichi brewery created one especially for the restaurant titled Katsuya Sake-Victory, which incorporates water from Mount Fuji. All of the Katsuya locations (six in the United States, and another planned in Dubai) share the same base menu, a showcase of Master Sushi Chef Katsuya Uechi’s style. For example, there’s Sauteéd Shishito Peppers (an average of one in 10 are spicy!) and a Crispy Soft-Shelled Crab that can be
dipped in tartar sauce and chili ponzu. And there’s Robata, in which skewers of vegetables, meats or seafood are grilled over special Japanese charcoal. Yet there are a handful of selections that are exclusive to the San Diego site. One is the Double Double Roll that has a bit of zing, with rice, spicy yellowtail, spicy kanikama and cucumber rolled together and topped with more yellowtail, onion ponzu and Serrano chili. Another is the Chirashi Sushi — thin slices of fish over rice with ginger and sesame. A favorite of the chefs are the new sliders, which come in four varieties: Teriyaki Portobello, Wagyu, Spicy Pork Belly and Shrimp Gratin Croquette. Possibly the most popular “newcomer” is the BOP, in which servers bring sizzling-rice hot pots to the diner’s table and then mix in sweet-soy BOP sauce with Japanese mushroom, braised short rib or pork bulgogi. Another notable dish is the tender and juicy 6-ounce Wagyu Ribeye, served over maitake mushrooms with truffle butter. For dessert, there are sweet treats such as mini crème brûlées; mochi, a confection made from pounded sticky rice and filled with ice cream in flavors such as mango and strawberry; and the Caramel Apple — warm Fuji apples and rum raisins in a phyllo dough basket, topped with vanilla ice cream and caramel sauce.
NORTH COAST
SummerFest 2013 What: Annual chamber music festival Presenter: La Jolla Music Society When: July 31-Aug. 23 Where: Various locations in La Jolla Concert lineup, accompanying programming: .ljms.org Tickets: Single-event prices vary; season subscriptions $389-$695 Box Office: (858) 4593728 or ljms.org SummerFest Under the Stars: Free kick-off concert, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, July 31 at Scripps Park. La Jolla Cove; Musical Director Cho-Liang Lin and special guests, including the San Diego Youth Symphony’s International Youth Symphony SummerFest Gala: “A Midsummer Night,” 5:30 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 10 at the home of Hanna and Mark Gleiberman, tickets from $1,000, includes cocktails, performance and dinner, RSVP: Kristin Schert (858) 459-3724, ext. 206
July 25, 2013 PAGE B5
Lofty experiment part of 2013 SummerFest lineup BY DAVID L. CODDON Well known for bringing musicians and audiences together in interpersonal environments, SummerFest has a special treat in store for classical music lovers during the 2013 season that begins July 31. Two performances will be held on Aug. 9 at The Loft at UCSD, a casual space that seats about 150 on the fourth floor of the university’s Price Center East. SummerFest Music Director Cho-Liang Lin will emcee and also participate in a program of Bartok, Ives, Debussy, Villa-Lobos, Carter and Charles Wuorinen performed by guest artists including flutist Catherine Ransom Karoly, pianist Steven Lin, violinists Michelle Kim and Philippe Quint, and clarinetist Burt Hara. “The fundamental idea is to present a concert that is closer between the audience and the performer,” said Music Director Lin. “SummerFest is in principle already an intimate experience, but this one event that I am trying this summer takes away all the formalities. “The program itself is not a cotton candy kind of program. It’s all 20th Century, but each piece is short. It’s like a sampler. And I want
people to be right next to the performers. There’s a period before the concert where the musicians will be there, mingling with the audience.” The inspiration for the “Live @ The Loft” concert was in part the (Le) Poisson Rouge music and multimedia art cabaret in New York City, said Christopher Beach, president and artistic director of La Jolla Music Society, presenters of SummerFest. “They have been programming classical music in a much more intimate, casual setting,” he said. “It’s a great success. I wanted to give our audience a different way to hear classical music. The Loft is a perfect place.” Beach and Lin are equally excited about SummerFest 2013, the featured composer of which is Bach, perhaps the greatest figure of the baroque period. “There are three concerts (during the festival) based on Bach,” said Lin,
“but rather than having three concerts of all Bach — or even Bach and son — I decided to use Bach as a departure point and go further into Bach’s future and look at composers influenced by him. Every Bach program will involve some sort of lineage that gets passed down through history. The idea is not only to get an interesting look at this lineage but to enjoy the very beautiful music.” This dynamic can be experienced during the festival’s “Bach & Beyond” concerts Aug. 7, 14 and 21 at the Museum of Contemporary Art’s Sherwood Auditorium in La Jolla, SummerFest’s principal venue. As usual, the SummerFest roster of guest artists is populated with notables. On Aug. 6, pianist Jonathan Biss will perform three pieces by Beethoven, with accompaniment by cellist Fred Sherry and violinist Joseph Swensen.
Beach praises Biss for his “deep musicality.” Aug. 20 brings the return to La Jolla of another pianist, 22-year-old Russian Daniil Trifonov. “We have a special relationship with him,” recounted Beach, who discovered Trifonov at St. Petersburg’s Tchaikovsky competition in 2011. “One of his very first concerts in America was in our Discovery series. He’s an old soul with this youthful passion.” At SummerFest, Trifonov will perform works by Schumann, with accompaniment by violinists Stephanie Jeong and David Chan, cellist Gary Hoffman and Richard O’Neill on viola. As for Cho-Liang Lin, “The first two concerts (of SummerFest) are very interesting for me. The opening night (‘Let’s Dance!’) is all about dance music through the ages, so we’re starting with German dances from Schubert through Stravinsky and Ravel. Most festivals tend to open with the tried and true, the war horses. It’s a calculated gamble that I hope people will find interesting and enjoyable.” Then there’s “Salieri’s Vienna” the next evening, Aug. 3. “We don’t hear Salieri’s music very much at all these days,” said Lin. “This pro-
gram is a microcosm of what Salieri would have heard in his own time in Vienna.” Antonio Salieri is known to many for being in the shadow of Mozart, but, said Lin, “Salieri was a respected musician. He taught both Schubert and Beethoven, and the works in the first half are all dedicated to Salieri.” “Salieri’s Vienna” will feature works by Salieri, Mozart, Schubert and Beethoven. “This program is the very core of chamber music,” said LJMS’s Beach. “There’s something for everyone.” SummerFest 2013 may be some classical music fans’ deepest immersion in baroque music, which Beach said is misunderstood. “A lot of people who don’t like it have the impression that it’s precious or boring,” he said. “They couldn’t be more wrong.” In fact, the evening of Aug. 13 should be anything but boring, when the Arcadian Academy conducted by Nicholas McGegan will perform works by Vivaldi, Handel, Purcell and others. “It’s our very first concert with baroque music played on period instruments,” said Lin. “It will be a new adventure for both me and for the audience.
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PAGE B6
NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013
SPOTLIGHT on LOCAL BUSINESS
New Cardiac Fitness and Weight Loss clinic offers Bod Pod •Th e Bod Pod is the “most technologically advanced device for measuring body fat and lean mass.” BY KAREN BILLING The only commercial Bod Pod in San Diego can be found in Del Mar. The Bod Pod, the most technologically advanced device for measuring body fat and lean mass, is one of the featured tools of Dr. Marian Holland’s new Cardiac Fitness and Weight Loss clinic off Carmel Valley Road. As seen on TV shows such as “The Biggest Loser,” patients climb aboard the space age-looking Bod Pod in form-fitting clothing and a head cap for testing that is quick and accurate — the time spent inside is the length of two 50-second measurements and results are printed within minutes. Bod Pod provides accuracy within 1-2 percent using air displacement plethysmology and is considered more accurate than underwater weighing or skin fold caliper testing. “Body Mass Index alone is not the best measure for a lot of people,” Holland said. “It can be a little bit deceiving.” Holland said that over time people can build or lose
The Bod Pod. muscle and gain or lose fat; their weight may increase or stay the same and simply stepping on a scale doesn’t tell the whole story. Holland said it’s more important to measure body composition than weight — body fat percentage can be one of the best indicators of health, giving people the whole picture of what’s going on in your body. Excess body fat increases the risk of diseases such as heart disease, type-2 diabetes, stroke and cancer, and it’s the excess that troubles Holland
Dr. Marian Holland the most. “More than one-third of Americans are overweight. It’s expected over 40 percent of Americans will be overweight by 2030. It just keeps going up and up,” Holland said. With her clinic, the board-certified internist, cardiologist and electro physiologist aims to fight the obesity epidemic and help clients with weight loss and cardiac health. Holland was a staff cardiology physician at the VA Hospital and it was her experience with one of the veterans that led her to shift her focus and open her new practice. Fine Art
The veteran worked as a janitor on her floor and he could barely breathe as he walked because he was so heavy. In the first five weeks of working with him, Holland helped him change his diet and get down from 315 pounds to 281 pounds. Where he once drank six sodas and smoked three packs of cigarettes a day, he is now down to no sodas and just a half a pack a day. “He’s my inspiration on weight loss,” Holland said, noting that while he has lost a total of 60 pounds and still has a ways to go, he is sleeping better, is happier, healthier and has found a support system he didn’t have before. “Some people just need a little help, a little attention.” At her clinic, Holland does EKG exercise and cardiopulmonary stress testing to assess exercise tolerance, as well as echo cardiology using ultrasound imaging of the heart to assess cardiac size and function. Holland is “big on fitness”— she ran cross-country during her undergraduate work at the University of | Specialty Gifts |
Illinois and has competed in all the big marathons in the country, including New York City, Boston and Chicago. At her clinic, she can do VO2 testing on either a treadmill or stationary bike to determine overall fitness, and anaerobic thresholds to help patients learn how they can exercise more efficiently and maximize weight loss. Paired with Bod Pod testing, clients can arm themselves with information they need to stay motivated and inspired to tackle weight loss and health goals. “I want to promote health and try to prevent obesity and all of the bad diseases that come with it,” Holland said. In a special offered through the end of July, clients will get their first Bod Pod measurement for $75. To learn more, visit www. wellcardio.com or call (858) 792-2395. The clinic is located at 2262 Carmel Valley Road, suite F, Del Mar, 92014. The Business Spotlight features commercial enterprises that support this newspaper.
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July 25, 2013 PAGE B7
Opening Day in Del Mar, Rotary style: New president Pat Dougherty takes over the club and Joe Harper of DMTC pays a visit BY EMILY FIGUEIREDO, CLUB PUBLICITY CHAIR July 11 marked a different type of “Opening Day at Del Mar” for the Del Mar Rotary Club. New President, Pat Dougherty, kicked off the new Rotary year with his first day as the club leader. And who better to celebrate an “opening day” with than Joe Harper, president of the Del Mar Thoroughbred Club, who paid a visit to speak to the group. Pat opened his first meeting by thanking those mentors that have prepared him for stepping into the leadership role and gave Past President, Sharyn Daly, a pin for her appreciated support. He addressed the club saying, “It’s an honor to serve you this year. I hope to make it an experience you’ll enjoy as I look to your patience and service. Thank you!” Pat was also presented with a white cowboy hat as fellow board members congratulated him on becoming the “new sheriff in town.” Pat’s brother and fellow Rotarian, Bill Dougherty, introduced the first speaker
SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY
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FRI & SAT, JULY 26 & 27, 7:30pm President of the Del Mar Thoroughbred Club Joe Harper addresses new President of the Del Mar Rotary Club, Pat Dougherty. of the 2013-2014 year, Joe Harper. Joe is an honorary member of the Del Mar Rotary Club and has spoken annually to the club for over 25 years. Additionally, Joe generously supports the club’s annual social event at the racetrack’s exclusive Turf Club. As expected, Joe gave a very humorous speech to the club, poking fun at his varied education, growing up in Hollywood as Cecil B. DeMille’s grandson, the upcoming race season and the infamous Cougar Contest.
P ROUD S PONSOR
Multi Grammy® Award-winning artist, Amy Grant performs Baby Baby, My Father’s T H IS WEEKEN Eyes and more! D!
Joe also mentioned some interesting highlights to look for at the racetrack, including additional winter race dates due to the Hollywood track closing, and a chance at the Breeder’s Cup – considered the most important day in racing next to the Kentucky Derby – coming to Del Mar. The Del Mar Rotary Club sincerely thanks Joe for his exciting visit. If you would like more information about the Del Mar Rotary Club, visit www.delmarrotary.org or please join us for lunch on Thursdays at noon in the Fellowship Hall of St. Peter’s Church in Del Mar.
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NATHAN PACHECO Nessun Dorma to Hallelujah SUN, JULY 28, 7:30pm Rising star Nathan Pacheco performs exciting classical and pop favorites.
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Hat Contest for the Del Mar Thoroughbred Club
Don’t miss broadway’s biggest hits including Les Misérables, Wicked, Phantom of the Opera and more!
BURT BACHARACH I Say a Little Prayer SUN, AUGUST 4, 7:30pm Burt is back with his trio of singers performing his greatest hits including I Say a Little Prayer, Always Something There to Remind Me and more!
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PAGE B8
July 25, 2013
Friends of the Powerhouse to hold ‘Thank You Celebration Luau’ Aug. 7 The Friends of the Powerhouse invites one and all to a celebration on Aug. 7. The event is designed to thank the community, volunteers and the many generous sponsors for participation in completing the Safety Center/Lifeguard project. The work of fundraising, planning and building was a success and now it is time to enjoy a Luau complete with Tiki Torch Surfing, Steel Drum Band and Hawaiian-inspired cuisine and refreshments. Beginning at 6 p.m. and ending at 10 p.m., the celebration takes place at the
Powerhouse Community Center in Del Mar. Tickets are $60 each and are available on the Web Site: Friendsofthepowerhouse.org. or by calling 755-1641. Space is limited so please reserve now!
Ocean Air Recreation Center to present ‘The Croods’ at Summer Movies in the Park July 26 The Ocean Air Recreation Center is holding Summer Movies in the Park: •“The Croods” Friday, July 26, Ocean Air Park, 4770 Fairport Way •“Madagascar 3” Friday August 9, Sage Canyon Neighborhood Park, 5252 Harvest Run Drive Enjoy a safe and special night under the stars. Come early and enjoy activities for all ages. Events start at 6 p.m., movies start at dusk. Snack and beverages will be available for sale. Registration for summer classes and summer camps are now open. To register and for a full program guide, including prices and dates/times for classes and camps, visit: http:// www.sandiego.gov/park-and-recreation/pdf/programguide/oceanair.pdf
Musician Robin Henkel to perform at Zel’s Del Mar in August Musician Robin Henkel will perform solo blues and jazz at Zel’s Del Mar on Saturday, Aug. 3, 17 and 31, from 8-11 p.m. Zel’s Del Mar is located at 1247 Camino Del Mar, Del Mar; (858) 755-0076.
Wranglers Square Dance Club celebrates student graduation; New classes to be held in Solana Beach, Rancho Penasquitos The Wranglers Square Dance Club announced its 40th anniversary student graduation this June, with 18 students now able to square dance at a “Plus” level. The club started on April 9, 1973 when nine couples finished square dance instruction taught by Sherm Barth. Those couples quickly recruited others and graduated the club’s first “class” of dancers in September, 1974. There has been a new Wrangler class taught every year since, and this year’s class enjoyed their new dancing skills at a graduation dance at the Rancho Bernardo Community Center Gazebo on June 22. Class members learn about 115 “calls” over a nine-month period, which qualifies them to dance at the club’s “Plus” level. Club members serve as “angels” (dancing helpers) for the students during the Wednesday night classes. A new Wrangler class will start on Sept. 11, at 7 p.m. at Rolling Hills Elementary in Rancho Penasquitos. Students who might prefer to meet on Tuesday nights can attend the Sandpipers Square Dance Club classes at the La Colonia Community Center, 715 Valley Avenue in Solana Beach. Those classes start Tuesday, Sept. 10 at 7 p.m. In addition to teaching classes and holding monthly dances, the Wranglers also participate in community events, and do demonstrations to bring others into the activity. The club is run by a volunteer board of officers. The current presidents are Mary Sundberg Whealdon and John Coffin. The Wranglers are an affiliate of the Palomar Square Dance Association, http://palomarsda.org More information can be found at: www.TheWranglers.org and www.Facebook.com/ WranglersSquareDanceClub
Upcoming regional events Flicks on the Bricks The Athenaeum Music & Arts Library’s film and wine series returns for a seventh year. Guests meet on the patio 7:30 p.m. Thursday nights at 1008 Wall St., La Jolla, for screenings of classic cinemas al fresco. Series tickets include four films and wine pairings selected by Barbara Baxter. Guests must be 21 years or older to attend. Aug. 1: “The Big Sleep” (1946); Aug. 8: “Rear Window” (1954); Aug. 15: “Cinema Paradiso” (1989); Aug. 22: “The Big Easy” (1986). Tickets: From $17. (858) 454-5872. ljathenaeum.org La Jolla Playhouse The summer marquee features “Sideways” to Aug. 25 (the story of two friends — a frustrated novelist, and a no-name TV actor and director — and their journey through wine, women and disappointment) and The Second City Theatricals’ “The Good, The Bad, and The I-5,” (San Diego satire) Aug. 6-Sept. 1. UCSD campus via the Revelle Entrance, 2910 La Jolla Village Drive. Tickets: (858) 550-1010. lajollaplayhouse.org
NORTH COAST
The Academy for Public Speaking offers free public speaking classes for children in San Diego Would you like to help your child gain more confidence and improve his or her public speaking and leadership skills? The Academy for Public Speaking offers fun, interactive classes to empower teens and pre-teens to become confident, effective communicators. Your child will learn the value of not being afraid to express his or her ideas while developing confidence, leadership experience, and public speaking skills. These essential communication skills will support your child in doing well in school and achieving his or her goals in life. During a free introductory class, your child will learn why public speaking skills are important, how common the fear of public speaking is, and how he or she can quickly overcome the fear of public speaking. Your child will also have the opportunity to meet some Academy for Public Speaking graduates who will present speeches and share about their experiences. The graduates will explain how they initially felt about public speaking, what they liked about the classes, and how the skills they have acquired have helped them in school and life. The Academy for Public Speaking offers three levels of courses. During the level one course, your child will learn how to write and deliver speeches, give effective peer evaluations, and reply to impromptu questions. The speech projects include introduction, storytelling, inspirational, and persuasive speeches. The free public speaking classes are open to students in 3rd-12th grade and will be offered on July 27 and Aug. 10 from 1:30-2:30 p.m. at the Hampton Inn Del Mar. A limited number of seats are available, and advance registration is required. For more information and to register your child for a free public speaking class, please visit www.TeenSpeakingSkills.com.
Rancho Santa Fe Foundation to move to Rancho Santa Fe Plaza The Rancho Santa Fe Foundation recently announced its move from the Union Bank Building in the Village of Rancho Santa Fe to the Rancho Santa Fe Plaza on the corner of Manchester and Rancho Santa Fe Road in Encinitas. The Foundation plans to be in its new space by early September, and will welcome the community with an Open House on Sept. 30. The Rancho Santa Fe Foundation was founded in 1981 by a group of community-minded residents who sought a more efficient and effective channel for local philanthropy. Today, it is the third largest community foundation in San Diego. “The Foundation and its donors support nonprofits throughout San Diego County, the nation and the world,” said Christy Wilson, executive director. “Our priority is to provide excellent and cost-effective stewardship of the philanthropic funds entrusted to us, and this move enables us to do that,” said Neil Hokanson, board chairman. “We are providing for the long-term, sustainable growth of the Foundation and our mission to serve others with this move to Rancho Santa Fe Plaza.” Grants from the Rancho Santa Fe Foundation have supported many nonprofit organizations in North County communities, including Interfaith Community Services, Scripps Memorial Hospital Encinitas, San Pasqual Academy, San Diego Botanic Garden, Veterans Association of North County, CSU San Marcos Veterans Student Support Fund, REINS and Vista Community Clinic, among others. In 2012, donors with donor advised funds at the Foundation gave $1.8 million to nonprofits – 20 percent to organizations in Rancho Santa Fe; 53 percent to nonprofits in San Diego County (outside of RSF); 24 percent to organizations in the US beyond San Diego County; and 3 percent to international nonprofits. “Our strong roots in Rancho Santa Fe and North County help us understand and serve these communities,” Wilson said. “We will continue to rely on this support, and that of others throughout San Diego County, to provide the philanthropic assets necessary to support and enhance a viable region.” To learn more, visit www.rsffoundation.org.
Solana Beach to hold summer ‘Family Camp Out’ Aug. 3-4 The 2013 Solana Beach Family Campout Program will be held Aug. 3-4. The program is designed for families that have little or no experience camping. The program introduces families to the great experiences that can be had in the great outdoors. This weekend introductory adventure is taking place in Solana Beach at La Colonia Park, 715 Valley Avenue. Activities will include family games, spaghetti dinner, and a campfire program with real s’mores and a “Hullabaloo” concert on Saturday night. A delicious pancake and sausage breakfast will be served on Sunday morning by City of Solana Beach Firefighters, with fire truck tours included. Pre-registration is required online by visiting the City of Solana Beach website at www. cityofsolanabeach.org and clicking on the “Register Now” button, then entering the “Activity Registration Site.” You can pay the $25 per family fee using your credit or debit card on this secure website. No alcohol, tobacco, pets or personal barbecues allowed. For more information, visit the City’s website at www.cityofsolanabeach.org or call the Parks and Recreation Department at 858-720-2453.
Coastal Artists to present multimedia exhibit in Solana Beach Coastal Artists will exhibit multimedia artworks at La Vida Del Mar from Aug. 1 through Aug. 31, titled “Songs Without Words.” Local photographer Steve Gould is among the artists whose work will be displayed at the exhibit. A reception for the artists will be held on Friday, Aug. 2, from 4:30 to 6 p.m., with light refreshments. The exhibit is free and open to the public daily from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. La Vida Del Mar, a senior community, is located at 850 Del Mar Downs Road, Solana Beach, CA 92075, two blocks east of the Coast Road and half a block north of Via de la Valle. For more information online, visit coastal-artists.org, and/or srgseniorliving.com, or call the Program Department at 858-755-1224.
NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013 PAGE B9
Del Mar heats up with three concerts and Miss Cougar competition •Sa mmy Hagar, Fitz and the Tantrums, and Los Tucanes de Tijuana take the Seaside Stage Miss Cougar Del Mar 2013 – Friday, July 26: Del Mar’s longest stakes race, the mile-and-a-half Cougar II Handicap, will run on Friday, July 26, honoring its namesake Hall of Fame runner. Finalists for Del Mar’s signature Miss Cougar Del Mar contest will also be on the prowl throughout the day. A panel of local personalities will select the winner. Contestants can submit their best cougar photo with a one-sentence explanation as to why she should be crowned Miss Cougar to misscougar@dmtc.com. Four O’clock Fridays: Fitz and the Tantrums – Friday, July 26: After Miss Cougar is crowned and the horses have retired to their stables, Fitz and the Tantrums will take the Seaside Stage for the second Four O’Clock Friday performance of the year. With chart-topping hits and retro-soul vibe unlike any other, they are sure to get music fans dancing. Sammy Hagar Concert and Beer Fest – Saturday, July 27: Indulge in some
of Southern California’s tastiest beers at the Del Mar Beer Fest, featuring more than 40 top-rated San Diego beers. Meet local brewers and purchase tastes of your favorite suds starting at 1 p.m. Ten tastings will be available for $20. Following the last race, enjoy a live performance of former Van Halen lead singer Sammy Hagar and the Wabos as the band rips through some classic rock tunes. Latin Concert – Los Tucanes de Tijuana – Sunday, July 28: Close out the weekend with a day of racing and live music as renowned Norteña band Los Tucanes de Tijuana take the stage for a special Sunday performance. Racing at Del Mar happens Wednesdays through Sundays, with post time for the first race at 2 p.m. On Fridays first post is at 4 p.m. For more information, call 858755-1141 or visit www.dmtc.com. You can follow the Del Mar racetrack on Twitter, @ DelMarRacing or become a fan on Facebook at www.facebook.com/DelMarRaces.
Public invited to CV Library 20th Anniversary Celebration Please join the Carmel Valley Branch Library for its 20th Anniversary Celebration on July 27 from noon-2 p.m. Join Councilmember Sherri Lightner and Friends of the Library for the festivities. Enjoy refreshments and airbrush tattoos for the kids. The library is located at 3919 Townsgate Drive, 92130 (Carmel Valley). For more information, call (858) 552-1668; www.carmelvalleylibrary.org.
Bridge Club for seniors offered at Carmel Valley Library The Carmel Valley Library’s free Party Bridge Club meets every Tuesday from 1 p.m.-3 p.m. The Carmel Valley Library is located at 3919 Townsgate Dr., CA 92130. Library phone: 858-552-1668.
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Family Night in Carmel Valley July 28 to feature music of Upstream, Caribbean Jem Dancers and movie ‘Wreck-It Ralph’ The Carmel Valley Recreation Council, along with sponsors Pardee Homes, Kilroy Realty and Sampson California Realty, will host Family Night on Sunday, July 28, at 5 p.m. at the Carmel Valley Recreation Center. The evening will be filled with lots of great music, dancing, food and a movie for all to enjoy. Put this night on your calendar – you will want to be here! Kicking off the evening, as part of the Summer Serenades Concert Series, will be Upstream along with the Caribbean Jems Dance Entertainment Showcase, playing their special brand of island music. Upstream started on the twin islands of Trinidad and Tobago and they have been performing in the U.S. for over 15 years. The band plays an indescribably fascinating blend of Reggae, Calypso, Soca and Steelpan music that will have everyone on their feet moving to the music. Joining the band this year are the Caribbean Jem Dancers, an Afro-Caribbean dance group that will bring the entertainment to a whole new level. Once the singing and dancing are over, more family fun is in store for those who enjoy the annual “Movie in the Park” featuring “Wreck-It Ralph” this year. The movie will start as soon as it is dark enough, but there will be lots of fun booths with food and games until then. Join the Carmel Valley Rec Council for an evening of fun at the Carmel Valley Rec Center, 3777 Townsgate Drive, starting with the Upstream concert at 5 p.m.
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PAGE B10
NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013
Del Mar resident’s special exhibition — ‘Zandra Rhodes: Unseen’ — launched in London BY DIANE WELCH The Fashion and Textile Museum (FTM) in Bermondsey, London brimmed over with guests who attended a VIP champagne reception on July 11, launching a special exhibition, “Zandra Rhodes: Unseen.� The color-drenched show brought into clarity Rhodes’ dramatic haute couture fashion career, which has spanned almost five decades. Curated by Dennis Nothdruft, the exhibition is also a celebration for the 10-year anniversary of FTM founded by Rhodes – a resident of Del Mar and London – in May 2003. Rhodes first bought the building – which is now painted bright pink and orange – in 1995 and hired leading Mexican architect Ricardo Legorreta to do the remodel. Three months in development, Rhodes had to hunt out individual pieces for the exhibition, she said. Rhodes’ workroom studio printed out the fabric designs that served as the backdrop for the collections and hours of footage of Rhodes’ fashion shows were transferred to DVD to show at the museum. Several of Rhodes’ lesser-known archived fashion creations were on display with her most recent collections and new lines of handbags, accessories, shoes and make-up. Hand-beaded dresses from the 1980s were pulled from archived trunks and private collections. Several of these designs were inspired by Rhodes’ landmark trip to India; natives hand-worked the exquisite embroidery and bead work that is as fresh today as it was almost 30 years ago. Rhodes’ line of punk-inspired garments from the Conceptual Chic Collection, with artfully-cut, slashed and safety-pinned details, were no less shocking than the 1977 launch which ensured Rhodes’ fame as the “Princess of Punk.� Several pieces of this collection are currently on display at New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art, said
Rhodes. Videos of Rhodes’ 1980 catwalk events, and vignette showcases of her conceptual “style bibles� and notebooks – never seen before publicly – were also exhibited, along with more recent garments from Rhodes’ 2012 Sketchbook Collection. At the reception, museum director Celia Joicey introduced Rhodes, flanked by fashion designer to the British royals David Sassoon and fashion jewelry designer Andrew Logan. Despite the over-sized joke scissors failing to cut the pink ribbon, the exhibition was officially opened and will run until Aug. 31. Photographer Barry Lategan, acclaimed for his fashion shots featured in Vogue, captured the evening’s event on film with his camera. The reception brought together many notable figures from London’s vibrant fashion scene, including interior and textile designer Sue Timney, actress Fenella Fielding and fine artist Duggie Fields, who commented that the show was “inspired, surprising, and varied,� and that Rhodes’ output “crossed cultures, trends, and tastes with an always unique and optimistic, colorful, vision.� Rhodes, 72, was animated, wearing a purple two-piece satin garment, Logan’s bold jewelry, and sporting her signature bubble-gum pink hair and theatrical makeup. “It was wonderful to be able to celebrate the 10-year anniversary of the museum with this exhibition,� said Rhodes. The exhibition was very well presented visually, said guest Vicky Ogden, head of accessories and footwear, Pure London. “The excitement knowing that Zandra is launching her footwear and handbag range makes the journey complete.� Visit http://ftmlondon.org/ for information on the exhibition and the museum.
(Top row, l-r) Sketchbook Collection; Beaded Garments —1980s; Cocoon Coat and Dress 2012; (Second row, l-r) Dress from Conceptual Chic Collection — 1970s; Andrew Logan mural installation; Zandra Rhodes, Andrew Logan ; (Bottom) Overshot of the reception. Photos/Diane Welch
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NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013
Artist offers provocative glimpse at past 70 years during August exhibit BY PAT SHERMAN As an artist, actor, screenwriter, photojournalist and former UC San Diego fencing coach, Christopher Canole has seen a lot during his 6.6 decades on Earth. Now, Canole is sharing close to 1,000 unforgettable people and images that have shaped the world during that time, as rendered by hand in pencil and charcoal during a retrospective at Pannikin Coffee & Tea in La Jolla during August (with an opening reception 4-6 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 3). The central focus of the installation is a series of seven 18- by 24-inch collages, each representing a decade in Canole’s life, from the 1940s through the 2000s. Each piece took about a month to complete, and includes about 130 images, chronicling everything from World War II and the birth of Rock ‘n’ Roll to the digital revolution and the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. Roots as an artist While earning his undergraduate degree in physics at UCSD, Canole took an art class with John Baldessari, the revered artist who taught there, 19681970, and went on to produce many groundbreaking works, including “Brain/
If you go • 6.6 Decades: 33 Drawings by Christopher Canole • When: Aug. 1-31 (opening reception 4-6 p.m. Aug. 3) • Where: Pannikin Coffee & Tea, 7467 Girard Ave., La Jolla • Information: (858) 454-5453 or canole.com
Cloud (with Seascape and Palm Tree),” one of the public art installations in the La Jolla Community Foundation’s “Murals of La Jolla” project. During his time at UCSD, Canole honed his chops sketching iconic images such as Peter Fonda in the 1969 counterculture classic, “Easy Rider” (the dominant image in Canole’s collage of the ’60s). Canole followed Baldessari when he left UCSD to teach at California Institute of the Arts (CalArts) in Valencia. “That’s when my life really turned around and went in that direction,” said Canole, who would go on to
do design the exterior of the “Fortress of Solitude” in the 1978 “Superman” movie. Canole’s seven decades will be displayed linearly along the rear wall of the Pannikin, inviting people to look closely for details and subtext, such as the images of black musicians in his collage of the 1950s. The unsung African American progenitors of rock music appear to be segregated in the lower left corner of the piece, below the dominant image of Elvis Presley and a Sun Records 45-RPM. Each piece has such a dominant image. For the ’70s, it’s a yin-yang symbol blending the era’s iconic smiley face with that of President Richard Nixon. For the ’80s — a decade Canole said he found puzzling — it’s a three-dimensional Rubik’s Cube puzzle. “It became a metaphor for trying to fit everything together that was going on,” Canole said. Naturally, the dominant element in the piece representing 2000s was the World Trade Center, as seen while the towers were engulfed in smoke and flame. “I really wanted to sort of remind people that that’s going to influence us for the rest of our lives,” said
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Above: Clockwise, l-r: Christopher Canole drawings: The 1960s; Angelina Jolie; Oprah Winfrey and Michelle Obama; Albert Einstein Canole, who drew the towers as seen unscathed in a photograph taken from the New Jersey Shore, with the Statue of Liberty in between. After completing the towers, he then had to destroy them with sandpaper and other artist’s tools. “That was about the most emotional that I ever got during this whole process,” he said. “Remember how much paper rained down on the street? I wanted it to physically (represent that).” About 50 of the images appear in more than one of
the collages, including Lady Liberty. “It’s not an overt visual connection because I want each decade to stand out by itself,” Canole said, noting that the person who can identify the most duplicated images will win a print representing the decade of their choice. The exhibition will also include about 33 single image drawings, including everyone from Junior Seau and Mahatma Gandhi to Peter O’Toole, Michelle Obama and the late La Jollan actor Cliff Robertson (whom Canole met while the Academy Award recipient was serving as Grand Marshal of the La Jolla Christmas
parade). He would Robertson’s close friend and personal photographer in the latter years of his life. These days, to subsidize his artistic and literary pursuits, Canole is caretaker for the home once inhabited by UCSD’s founding chancellor, the late physicist, Herb York (his widow, Sybil, still lives there). Canole can be found regularly doing sketches on the Pannikin patio, and speaking with seniors about their “marvelous lives.” “I just love sitting there and having them relate their stories to me, so at least somebody’s going to keep that going,” he said. “If I do drawings, it sort of opens the door to them being more chatty about their lives and revealing what’s going on.”
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NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013 PAGE B13
CCA Foundation’s Carmel Valley Farmer’s Market hosts ‘Music and Movies at the Market’ Canyon Crest Academy Foundation presents “Music and Movies at the Market” this summer. In conjunction with its weekly Carmel Valley Farmer’s Market, Canyon Crest Academy Foundation (CCAF) is proud to host Music and Movies at the Market. Building on wonderful entertainment to date, more great entertainment is planned, including Scott Roberts and his jazz band, CCA’s own Emily Laliotis and Joef Fargier. To add to the fun, there will be another movie on Aug. 15. The community is invited to attend and encouraged to bring chairs and blankets to enjoy the outdoor movie. Shoppers are also encouraged to visit the market manager’s tent on Thursdays to vote for their favorite movie for the Aug. 15 show. The Carmel Valley
Executive Director Joanne Couvrette. The Farmer’s Market is located in the parking lot of Canyon Crest Academy at 5951 Village Center Loop Road, San Diego, 92130. Please like us on Facebook at Carmel Valley Farmer’s Market. Visit www.canyoncrestfoundation.org.
Del Mar’s Ashley Fox Linton performing in ‘Sunset Boulevard’ at Karen and Richard Carpenter Theatre
The Carmel Valley Farmer’s Market is a source of farm fresh produce and innovative, fun food trucks. Farmer’s Market, a source of farm fresh produce and innovative, fun food trucks is a local community gathering place filled with music and family-friendly fun, will continue to be held throughout the summer on Thursdays beginning at 3:30 p.m. to sunset. Movies will start at 7:30 p.m. “The community participation at the market has grown significantly over the summer. Last Thursday’s soccer clinic was enjoyed by dozens of pre-schoolers, while their parents sat on blankets nearby enjoying the music and their market dinners. Everyone seemed to be enjoying themselves immensely, while benefitting the students of CCA,” said CCAF
Del Mar native Ashley Fox Linton is currently playing Betty Schaefer in Musical Theatre West’s “Sunset Boulevard” at the Karen and Richard Carpenter Theatre in Long Beach through July 28. Raised in Del Mar and a participant in San Diego Junior Theatre for 10 years, Linton attended Santa Fe Christian High School and received her Bachelor of Fine Arts in musical theatre at The Boston Conservatory. Linton has performed in national tours of Les Miserables and Wicked, and performed locally at The Old Globe (The Grinch), Cygnet Theatre (Sweeney Todd) and North Coast Rep (Baby). Linton lived in New York for nine years and moved to Los Angeles last year. She recently released her first CD titled “First Real Love,” which is available at www.ashleyfoxlinton.com. In addition to Linton, “Sunset Boulevard” stars Valerie Perri as Norma Desmond, David Burnham as Joe Gillis, and Norman Large as Max Von Mayerling. Music by Andrew
Ashley Fox Linton Lloyd Webber and based on the film by Billy Wilder. For tickets or more information, call 562-8561999, ext. 4, or visit www. musical.org.
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PAGE B14
NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013
Annual Ashley Falls Neighborhood Garage Sale to benefit Ashley Falls Elementary PTA Mark your calendar for some of the most incredible buys at the Annual Ashley Falls Neighborhood Garage Sale, which will be held Saturday, Aug. 24, from 7 a.m. to 11 a.m. Shoppers will have a splendid time making their rounds to each participating homeowner’s “booth” (driveway) which will have a variety of merchandise displayed. Chris Lin, a licensed broker and local Realtor with CHRIS LIN Real Estate of Prudential CA Realty (a Berkshire Hathaway Homeservices Affiliate) is sponsoring and promoting this charity event. Lin remembers what it was like, “ I understand how important it is to support our local school’s PTA. I am a mom myself and have been actively involved in my child’s school for many years. Every dollar and every volunteer hour are invaluable to our schools and our children’s education.” Lin is providing numerous hours with her staff preparing for this event, in addition to advertising, providing/installing directional signs and garage sale pricing stickers for the participants. We would like to encourage the homeowners and all the participants to donate a portion of their proceeds to Ashley Falls Elementary PTA, the designated benefactor of this neighborhood garage sale. Lin will be matching total contributions donated by the homeowners, up to $1,000. Come and shop at the largest garage sale event by following Del Mar Heights Road east to Ashley Falls Drive and turn right or go straight and make a right at Seagrove. Fol-
Chris Lin
(L-R) Charles Foster, Joe LaBreche, Bill Murphy, Bob Halleck, George Sousa
low the garage sale signs. As an option, follow signs from Carmel Country Road where it meets freeway 56, north to Carmel Canyon, make a right to Carmel Knolls. Follow the garage sales signs. Maps will be available at both entrances.
Time to register for lung cancer 5K Champion the lung cancer cause by registering for the fourth annual Free to Breathe San Diego 5K Run/Walk on Saturday, Aug. 17 at Liberty Station Park. Proceeds support the National Lung Cancer Partnership, a non-profit organization dedicated to doubling lung cancer survival by 2022. Registration and check-in at 7:15 a.m. Opening rally and warm-up at 8:10 a.m. 5K runners start at 8:30 a.m. 5K walkers start at 9 a.m. Closing ceremonies at 10 a.m. Online registration is $15 for children and $25 for adults (closes Aug. 14). Event Day registration is $15 and $30. For more information visit www.FreetoBreathe.org/delmarva
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($4500 value)
Perfect Your Smile!
(L-R) Joe LaBreche, Susheela Narayanan, Jan Parsons, Susan Hennenfent, Mark Hennenfent, Charles Foster
Tons of water handed out to homeless vets and volunteers at ‘Stand Down San Diego’ More than three and a quarter tons of water – actually 6,200 half-liter water bottles – were presented with this country’s thanks to over 1,000 homeless veterans (and volunteers) at “Stand Down San Diego” during the three warm days of July 12-14. The chilled bottles were handed out by 39 members and friends of the Del Mar-Solana Beach Rotary Club during its sixth year of running the “Water Tent” at Stand Down. Active duty Marine Major David Cote, who flew in from the Pentagon to volunteer again at Stand Down, said that “the Rotary Water Tent provides a very important service to the vets every year.” Funding for the water came from the Rotary Club’s annual Bocce Tournament, and transportation for the heavy water load was provided by BSD Builders. Stand Down is an annual three-day tent city held on the athletic field of San Diego High School and staffed with approximately 3,500 volunteers who provide a wide range of assistance to the vets. It is organized by the Veterans Village of San Diego and supported by a large number of organizations, including the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. For more information, see www.vvsd.net. The Del Mar-Solana Beach Rotary Club is one of over 34,000 Rotary Clubs worldwide working toward a better world for all persons through education, mentoring, job training, microcredit funding, improved water and health, and the eradication of Polio. DMSB Rotary meets on Fridays over breakfast at the Marriott Hotel in Carmel Valley. For more information, call Richard Fogg (858-693-7556) or see www.DMSBRotary.com.
Lease a 2013 Chevy Camaro 1LT for only:
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199 PER MO +TAX*
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NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013 PAGE B15
Good.
Better.
Best.
Scripps Green Hospital and Scripps Memorial Hospital La Jolla are ranked among the nation’s best hospitals by U.S. News & World Report. We’re nationally and regionally ranked in 13 specialties. And we’ve been honored twice as one of the Top Five Large Health Systems in the country by Truven Health Analytics. This recognition is just one more reason you can trust us with your care. For more information and to find a Scripps physician who is right for you, call 1-800-SCRIPPS (727-4777) or visit scripps.org.
PAGE B16
NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013
Caribbean Nights Gala The Boys & Girls Clubs of San Dieguito held the inaugural Caribbean Nights Gala July 20 at the Del Mar Fairgrounds infield pavilion. The evening included horse racing, silent and live auctions, dinner, entertainment and dancing. The fundraiser will help to provide the funds for “POSITIVE” activities that will reach more than 20,000 local youth. For the first time, an outstanding “Youth of the Year” was chosen from 10 outstanding individuals who attend the Boys and Girls Clubs of San Dieguito. The “Youth of the Year” selected was Daisy Aguilar from the Boys & Girls Clubs La Colonia branch in Eden Gardens, Solana Beach. In addition, Jill Coughlin of Del Mar was honored as the “Community Volunteer of the Year” for her many years of dedication to the youth of San Diego County. She has reached thousands of children by teaching them the joys of gardening. Pho- Andrea Mayadag, Lynn Valentine, Wendi Cunningham, Barbara Harper, Sandy Weaver, Sandi tos/Jon Clark; Photos online: www.delmartimes. Schroeder, Maile D’Arcy net
Jennifer Burchell
John Jimenez David Goodell places his bet
Eileen Davis, Joseph Davis, Samantha Fomon
(Left) Jerry Mahoney, Liza Rogers; (Above) Steve Bollert, Sophie Bollert, David Thomas; (Below) Tom Ryan, Carol and David Goodell
Carmen Fernandez, Beth Misak
Sandy and Tracy Weaver
Marie Green, Charna Sugar, Patricia Simmons
Laura Leoni, Chris Joseph Kate Stordahl, Pat Vergne, Barbara Harper
Linda Little, Stephanie Wood, Genevieve Wood Rick Schroeder, Kent Feldman
Horace and Nancy Dietrich
Diane and Gary Cox review the silent auction items
Jim Law, Sandi Schroeder, Chris Law
Carol More, Dale Forbes, Jim Schmidt
Nina Detrow, Russ T. Nailz, Gretchen Jimenez, Sully (from KOGO), Sandy Weaver
Fabian Vincent, Laurel Del Pozo, Kennedy Vincent
Dale Forbes, Barbara Harper
Donna Lenherr, Martha French, Leila Armstrong
NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013 PAGE B17
Hat Contest Winners As reported last issue in a photo spread, the “One and Only Hat Contest” was held July 17 to kick off racing season. On this page are some of the contest winners. The racing season continues through Sept. 4. For more on the racing season, visit dmtc.com. Photos/Susie Talman Photography
Amber Thorne of Costa Mesa won the Best Flowers category.
Kayla Carnevale of San Diego won first place in the Most Glamorous category.
(Right) Katy Helen Stockinger of San Diego won first place in the Funniest/ Most Outrageous category. (Left) Deena Von Yokes of Studio Savvy Salon. Opening Day attendee.
Chris Banner of Valley Center won the Grand Prize.
Lori Shelton of San Diego took second place in the Best Flowers category.
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Meg Davis of Carlsbad won second place in the Best Racing Theme category.
PAGE B18
NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013
Revamped restaurant Morada now open at The Inn at Rancho Santa Fe Morada offers fresh look, taste BY KAREN BILLING The Inn at Rancho Santa Fe has now opened its revamped restaurant named Morada. The new restaurant took over the old ballroom space, expanding from about 130 to 260 seats spread among the scenic front patio, a luxurious main dining area, inviting bar/ lounge and private dining rooms. Morada’s look and the food are unmistakably fresh. “I’m ecstatic, I can’t be happier with what we got,� said Executive Chef Todd Allison, who was gifted with everything new from a brand new kitchen down to new table linens. “We’re super excited about it and ready to start packing the place in.� After eight weeks of renovation, the restaurant opened softly on July 3. Adam Martindale, The Inn’s director of food and beverage who comes to Rancho Santa Fe from Bacara Resort and Spa in Santa Barbara, said that after the Fourth of July parade residents flooded in to check out the new digs. In re-imagining The Inn, the new owners tried to stick closely to their brand pillars of “comfortable sophistication� and “modern nostalgia.� The restaurant’s design embodies both of those pillars, from the striking wall covered in silver-
A Morada cocktail framed black and white photographs of vintage Ranch to the studded-suede chairs that belly up to beautiful wood tables with clay pot succulents as their centerpieces. It’s a dramatically different view as you step down into the restaurant from the lobby, as glossy, espresso-colored hardwood floors replace the old ballroom’s patterned carpet. “What’s nice about the place now is we’ve turned the bar into a really great lounge area and gathering space,� said Martindale, noting that they recently hosted a wedding with 170 guests who enjoyed utilizing the spot. The bar area features roomy booths decked out in gray Ikat fabric and sparkling chandeliers, as well as
crystal light fixtures that play light off the walls. A pair of dark leather chairs face a fireplace that was built into a new dividing wall that separates the main area of the restaurant from the bar/lounge. The bar/lounge opens out into the front patio of the restaurant — with views looking down The Inn’s freshly leveled and landscaped lawn into the village. New fire pits have been added to the corners of the patio. Behind the bar, Martindale is excited about the taps — they never had draft beers before at The Inn and now they have three taps to showcase local craft beer. Martindale said he is also proud of their wine list, which offers all California wines from Sonoma County to Temecula Valley vineyards. Martindale said they hope to feature wineries owned by Rancho Santa Fe locals and have already got a start on that goal by serving Gen 7 sparkling wine in one of their signature cocktails, the Sparkling Santa Fe. The refreshing drink features Gen7 sparkling wine, lavender-infused syrup, Hangar One vodka and fresh squeezed lime juice all garnished with a lemon twist and sprig of candied lavender. Their cocktail list also includes a watermelon margarita and The ‘M,� starring Woodford Reserve bourbon, sweet vermouth, angostura
'3&& "113"*4"- &7&/54 FREE ANTIQUE APPRAISAL EVENTS )*#% ," . *0 - + 0 July 30th and Every Tuesday by Appointment ', ,* , ' # !( %# (*'# To schedule your appointment please call Kyle Husoen
at 760-902-6317 ¡ 5171 Santa Fe Street ¡ San Diego ¡ CA
Above: Morada customers Right: The Morada bar bitters, maraschino cherries and an orange twist. The old restaurant area still has finishing touches to be done but the large room has been broken up into smaller, flexible spaces for meetings and private dinners. The library remains mostly the same and thoughts are still swirling on what the old bar will be. It remains the same right now but its future may depend on community feedback. “We want people who live here to say ‘If I’d done it myself, that’s exactly how I would’ve done it’,� Martindale said. A brand new ADA (Americans with Disabilities Act)-accessible ramp connects the bar and old restaurant with the new. As far as the menu, Chef Allison has placed an emphasis on fresh and local ingredients, “from farm to fork.� His kitchen receives several of its ingredients grown right on site at The Inn from
three gardens. One of his gardens is the most visible right off the lobby, flourishing with herbs, tomatoes, corn, peppers, melons, berries and, soon, artichokes. “It shows that I’m serious about the farm to table concept, it’s not just a slogan,� Allison said. Morada’s menu is completely new and will shift with the seasons — the only holdover being the Royce Salad, long a town favorite with lettuce, avocado, bacon and Parmesan ranch dressing. Breakfast options in-
clude items such as an acai berry and yogurt bowl, egg white frittata or bananas foster French toast with bananas sautĂŠed in dark rum, topped with chantilly whipped cream. Lunchtime visitors can enjoy starters such as pan seared albacore ceviche, steamed black Carlsbad mussels or baked macaroni and cheese with black truffle, speck ham and Beemster gouda. Meal options include salads, sandwiches, flatbreads, burgers and en-
See MORADA, page B26
SHOP LOCAL
Fine Art, Glass, Silver, Lamps, Porcelain, Medals, Decorative Art, Photography, Daguerreotypes, Chinese Antiques, Scrolls, Jade and more! ! "
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NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013 PAGE B19
Del Mar Has It
Featured Business
Explore the world through handmade home decor, furniture, art, gifts and personal accessories at Fair Trade Decor. Your purchases provide safe work at a living wage for artisans from around the globe.
Fair Trade DĂŠcor 1412 Camino Del Mar, Del Mar CA 92014
858.461.1263 | www.FairTradeDecor.com
Walnut Shrimp
Enjoy the best Japanese dining experience. SHIMBASHI Izakaya offers a inspirational and unique touch to Japanese cuisine. We offer an extensive seasonal menu, fresh sushi and sashimi, a wide selection of sake and Japanese beer.
SHIMBASHI Izakaya 1555 Camino Del Mar, Del Mar CA 92014
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Welcome to Del Mar! To this wonderful little romantic seaside village that has it all. Do you need a stroll on the beach to enjoy a little fresh sea air? Del Mar has it! A girls’ day out for shopping and a little lunch to just enjoy your friendship. A mother-daughter day to mend a fence or build on the love that is there. Del Mar has it! A day of relaxing and just enjoying being alive. Come to Del Mar. Del Mar has it! New to the city and want to discover the gems that abound? Come to the romantic village of Del Mar and find a diamond and a pearl. Del Mar has it! A special weekend, lunch or dinner for you and your love, in a quiet romantic place? Del Mar has it! A day of reflection to plot your new year? Del Mar has it! Del Mar welcomes you to come and enjoy the ambience and calming energy of the sea, the wonderful selection of restaurants, shops and hotels. Just a block from the ocean, so close you can smell the sea.
PAGE B20
NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013
Memory Care Plant, Herb and Vegetable Garden dedication at Emeritus at Carmel Valley A dedication of the Memory Care Plant, Herb and Vegetable Garden was held July 19 at Emeritus at Carmel Valley (Senior Living). The garden was made possible by the support of Grace Point Church, and Susan and Tom Carpenter. Emeritus at Carmel Valley held the ceremony held in appreciation of their support. For more information, visit www.emeritus.com. Photos/Jon Clark
Lizzie De La Fuente, Charlotte McCloud
Bob Johnson (Pastor of Grace Point Church), Marjolein Grootenhuis (Community Director of Grace Point Church), Susan Carpenter, Tim Burg, Kathi Burg, Tom Carpenter
Terri Gagaran, Hortensia Llanio
Janet Yoder, Ty Doi
Carol Pisnieski, Activity Director
Bob Hans, Louise Westover
Musical entertainment by Matt and Jasmine
Fred Jackson, Executive Director of Emeritus
Elsa Watson, Alicia Almanon
T HE O RIGINALV ILLA C ApRI We at Villa Capri Ristorante and Villa Capri Poway wish to advise you that we have terminated our affiliation with Villa Capri 2.
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NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013 PAGE B21
Spinoff Gala raises funds for Scripps Cancer Center The 22nd annual Spinoff: Auction for Life was held at the Hyatt Regency La Jolla Aventine this spring. Proceeds will benefit patient support services, early detection, education and outreach at Scripps Cancer Center, Stevens Division. Patrons were treated to dinner and entertainment, the chance to bid on luxury items, oncein-a-lifetime experiences and lavish getaways. Teresa and Randy Cundiff served as cochairs. Photos/Nancee Lewis
Joe Cordts with Lisa and Mark Perlmutter and their daughter, Flora Gina Mertz, Wendy Fanucchi, Lori Heitman and Amy Hughes
Tom and Karen Gammiere and Marilyn and Jaye Park
Siblings Wendy and Andy Hutchison
Tamilee Webb and Randy Cundiff
(Above) Bill and Sheila Cockerell and Dan and Brooke Koehler
Tom and Rosemary Rodger show off the electronic device for bidding on the silent auction.
(Right) Suzy Westphal and Judith Goodwin
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PAGE B22
NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013
Benefit for 02 For Life Rainforest Foundation
A
fundraiser was held this spring for O2 For Life Rainforest Foundation at the Belly Up in Solana Beach. on April 28. The event is the main fundraiser for the nonprofit, which was founded by Del Mar resident Steve Blumkin in the 1990s to conserve and protect the land of Costa Rica’s Osa region, which is said to contain one of the most diverse ecological systems on Earth. For more information visit http://www.o2forlife.org/ For photos online, visit www. delmartimes.net. PHOTOS/MCKENZIE IMAGES
Kevin Shiloh, Valerie Vickers
Baba, Steve and Cindy Blumkin, Janis Rothbard, Dominque Aubin
Amelia Lukas, Judy Leff, Lynda Holeva, Marta Zamelli
The Rainforest Angels, from left, Diana Tarquin, Ashley Tarquin, Amber Sliper, Lisa Landers, Meredith Flavin
O2 For Life Rainforest Foundation founder Steve Blumkin with Jeff Keeping and Steve Goldberg of the Belly Up Tavern
Paul Needelman, Nick Binkley Kerry and Julie Kusiak Mike Wade, Lane Stewart
The Belly Up hosted the event.
Greg Shockro, Mike Step
Dominque Aubin, Education Director Ashley Tarquin
Pame Warnuck, Michael Napier
Joan Gardner, Alan Friedman
Amanda Ferguson, Susan Wheeler
NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013 PAGE B23
‘The Knife’s Edge’ book release party
A
reception was held at the Rancho Valencia Resort to celebrate the release of TPHS alumnus Matt Wolf’s debut epic fantasy novel “The Knife’s Edge.� The event featured an author book signing, fresh seasonal hors d’oeuvres, full bar, and themed entertainment from a cast of lively characters from the book. Wolf is a graduate of UC Santa Barbara with a literature degree, specializing in medieval and Japanese works. For photos online, visit www. delmartimes.net. PHOTOS/JON CLARK
Robin Duncan, Nate McCay, Jacqueline Bridge
Kim Ware, Brian Ware, Emily Christensen
Author Matthew Wolf, Ryan Wilson
Author Matt Wolf with ‘The Knife’s Edge,’ the first book in his Ronan series
Larry Fink, Doug Duncan, James Mendoza, Robin Duncan, Nancy Fink
Kathy and Steven Bell
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PAGE B24
July 25, 2013
NORTH COAST
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LEGAL NOTICES FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2013-019092 Fictitious Business Name(s): Belle La Vie Salon and Spa Located at: 3251 Holiday Ct., Ste. 203, La Jolla, CA, 92037, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 8555 Station Village Ln., #3135, San Diego, CA 92108. This business is conducted by: A Limited Liability Company. The ďŹ rst day of business has not yet started. This business is hereby registered by the following: Belle La Vie Day Spa LLC, 3251 Holiday Ct., Ste. 203, La Jolla, CA 92037, CA. This statement was ďŹ led with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 07/01/2013. Viktoriya Velasquez, Member. DM970. July 25, Aug. 1, 8, 15, 2013 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO 325 South Melrose Dr.
Vista, CA 92081 North County Regional Center PETITION OF: MENGJIE MAO for change of name. ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER 37-2013-00058530-CU-PT-NC TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner: MENGJIE MAO ďŹ led a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: Present Name MENGJIE MAO to Proposed Name JASON MENGJIE MAO. 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 ďŹ le a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely ďŹ led, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. Notice of Hearing Date: Sept. 17, 2013. Time: 8:30 am Dept 26. The address of the court is same as noted above. A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: Carmel Valley News. Date: Jul 22, 2013. K. Michael Kirkman Judge of the Superior Court CV488. July 25, Aug. 1, 8, 15, 2013 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2013-020949 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Believe Training b. Believe Running Located at: 5737 Cape Jewels Trail, San Diego, CA, 92130, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 5737 Cape Jewels Trail, San Diego, CA 92130. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The ďŹ rst day of business has not yet started. This business is hereby registered by the following: Sheri Takeuchi Kono, 5737 Cape Jewels Trail, San Diego, CA 92130. This statement was ďŹ led with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 07/22/2013. Sheri Takeuchi Kono. CV487. July 25, Aug. 1, 8, 15, 2013. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2013-020919 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. eMeDIAte Learning Solutions b. The Casmar Group c. Expat Survival Kit d. Triple I Systems Located at: 6857 Camino de Amigos, Carlsbad, CA, 92009, San Diego
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NORTH COAST County. Mailing Address: 7668 El Camino Real, Suite 104-257, Carlsbad, CA 92009. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The first day of business has not yet started. This business is hereby registered by the following: Stephen Casmar, 6857 Camino de Amigos, Carlsbad, CA 92009. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 07/22/2013. Stephen Casmar. DM969. July 25, Aug. 1, 8, 15, 2013. SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO 330 West Broadway San Diego, CA 92101 Central Division Hall of Justice PETITION OF: SAEID SAFAVI and MAHBOOBEH MONSEF parents of minor, DORNA SAFAVI, for change of name. ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER 37-2013-00057617-CU-PT-CTL TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner: SAEID SAFAVI and MAHBOOBEH MONSEF, parents of minor, filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: Present Name DORNA SAFAVI to Proposed Name SARINA SAFAVI. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. Notice of Hearing Date: 9/6/13. Time: 8:30 am Dept 52. 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: Del Mar Times. Date: Jul 16, 2013. Robert J. Trentacosta Judge of the Superior Court DM966. July 25, Aug. 1, 8, 15, 2013 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2013-020411 Fictitious Business Name(s): Habit Brands Located at: 4685 Rancho Sierra Bend, San Diego, CA, 92130, San Diego County. Mailing Address: P.O. Box 675264, Rancho Santa Fe, CA 92067. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The first day of business has not yet started. This business is hereby registered by the following: Michelle Pius-Dorosewicz, 4685 Rancho Sierra Bend, San Diego, CA 92130. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 07/16/2013. Michelle Pius Dorosewicz. CV486. July 25, Aug. 1, 8, 15, 2013
ANSWERS 7/18/13
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2013-020191 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. National Pitching Association – DBA NPA b. National Pitching Association – DBA 3DQB
c. National Pitching Association – DBA Velocity Shaft Located at: 12794 Via Felino, Del Mar, CA, 92014, San Diego County. Mailing Address: P.O. Box 2350, Del Mar, CA 92014. This business is conducted by: A Corporation. The first day of business was 7/12/13. This business is hereby registered by the following: National Pitching Association, 12794 Via Felino, Del Mar, CA 92014, California. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 07/12/2013. Marie E. House, Secretary. DM968. July 25, Aug. 1, 8, 15, 2013 CITY OF DEL MAR NOTICE OF ORDINANCE INTRODUCTION An Ordinance amending the Development Standards for Lot #27 of the Carmel Valley Precise Plan (CVPP) at property commonly known as 425 Torrey Point Road (APN 301-033-07) The above referenced ordinance was introduced by action of the City Council on July 15, 2013. Adoption of the above listed ordinance will be considered on September 3, 2013. Date: July 17, 2013 Mercedes Martin, City Clerk OrdNtro198. DM967. 7/25/13 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO 330 W. Broadway San Diego, CA 92101 PETITION OF: VICENTE CORTES PALMA for change of name. ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER 37-2013-00047519-CU-PT-CTL TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner: VICENTE CORTES PALMA filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: Present Name VICENTE CORTES PALMA to Proposed Name MARITZA CORTES PALMA. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days
before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. Notice of Hearing Date: Aug. 30, 2013. Time: 8:30 am 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: Del Mar Times. Date: Jul 12, 2013. Robert J. Trentacosta Judge of the Superior Court DM965. July 18, 25, Aug 1, 8, 2013 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2013-019993 Fictitious Business Name(s): Simply Delicious Personal Chef Services Located at: 6106 Alida Row, San Diego, CA, 92130, San Diego County. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The first day of business has not yet started. This business is hereby registered by the following: Michelle Koenig, 6106 Alida Row, San Diego, CA 92130. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 07/11/2013. Michelle Koenig. DM964. July 18, 25, Aug. 1, 8, 2013. NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE APN: 301-033-39-00 Trustee Sale No. 1382552-31 [ATTENTION RECORDER: PURSUANT TO CIVIL CODE Section2923.3, THE SUMMARY OF INFORMATION REFERENCED BELOW IS NOT ATTACHED TO THE RECORDED COPY OF THIS DOCUMENT BUT ONLY TO THE COPIES PROVIDED TO THE TRUSTOR.] NOTE: THERE IS A SUMMARY OF THE INFORMATION IN THIS DOCUMENT ATTACHED TRA:11001 REF: ROSENBAUM, BARBARA UNINS Property Address: 490 WEST OCEANVIEW AVENUE, DEL MAR CA 92014 IMPORTANT NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNER: YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST, DATED
February 14, 2007. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE OF THE PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER On August 07, 2013, at 10:30am, CAL-WESTERN RECONVEYANCE LLC, as duly appointed trustee under and pursuant to Deed of Trust recorded February 21, 2007, as Inst. No. 2007-0117732, in book XX, page XX, of Official Records in the office of the County Recorder of SAN DIEGO County, State of CALIFORNIA executed by: BARRY ROSENBAUM AND BARBARA JO ROSENBAUM, AS CO-TRUSTEES OF THE ROSENBAUM FAMILY TRUST DATED DECEMBER 14, 1995 WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH, CASHIER’S CHECK DRAWN ON A STATE OR NATIONAL BANK, A CHECK DRAWN BY A STATE OR FEDERAL CREDIT UNION, OR A CHECK DRAWN BY A STATE OR FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION, SAVINGS ASSOCIATION, OR SAVINGS BANK SPECIFIED IN SECTION 5102 OF THE FINANCIAL CODE AND AUTHORIZED TO DO BUSINESS IN THIS STATE: AT THE ENTRANCE TO THE EAST COUNTY REGIONAL CENTER BY STATUE 250 E. MAIN STREET, EL CAJON, CA 92020, SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA all right, title and interest conveyed to and now held by it under said Deed of Trust in the property situated in said County and State described as: COMPLETELY DESCRIBED IN SAID DEED OF TRUST The street address and other common designation, if any, of the real property described above is purported to be: 490 WEST OCEANVIEW AVENUE DEL MAR CA 92014 The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the street address and other common designation, if any, shown herein. Said sale will be held, but without covenant or warranty, express or implied, regarding title, possession, condition, or encumbrances, including fees, charges and expenses of the Trustee and of the trusts created by said Deed of Trust, to pay the remaining principal sums of the note(s) secured by said Deed of Trust. The total
DAN McALLISTER TREASURER-TAX COLLECTOR / SAN DIEGO COUNTY
IF YOU’VE DONE BUSINESS WITH THE COUNTY IN THE PAST... You may be entitled to get money back!
NOTICE OF UNCLAIMED MONEY Notice is hereby given by the Treasurer of San Diego County that money, not property of this County, now on deposit in the Treasury of San Diego County which has remained unclaimed for over three years will become the property of the County unless a claim is filed on or before September 23, 2013. For further information, call the Treasurer-Tax Collector toll-free at (877) 829-4732. Please visit our website for the list of unclaimed money sorted by individual at:
www.sdtreastax.com You can also visit one of our convenient locations: COUNTY ADMINISTRATION CENTER 1600 Pacific Highway, Lower Level, Room 061 San Diego, CA 92101 EL CAJON 200 South Magnolia Avenue El Cajon, CA 92020
SAN MARCOS 141 East Carmel Street San Marcos, CA 92078
KEARNY MESA 9225 Clairemont Mesa Blvd. San Diego, CA 92123
CHULA VISTA 590 3rd Avenue Chula Vista, CA 91910 P3648, July 25, 2013
amount of the unpaid balance of the obligation secured by the property to be sold and reasonable estimated costs, expenses and advances at the time of the initial publication of the Notice of Sale is: $3,754,688.24. If the Trustee is unable to convey title for any reason, the successful bidder’s sole and exclusive remedy shall be the return of monies paid to the Trustee, and the successful bidder shall have no further recourse. The beneficiary under said Deed of Trust heretofore executed and delivered to the undersigned a written Declaration of Default and Demand for Sale, and a written Notice of Default and Election to Sell. The undersigned caused said Notice of Default and Election to Sell to be recorded in the county where the real property is located. NOTICE TO POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If you are considering bidding on this property lien, you should understand that there are risks involved in bidding at a trustee auction. You will be bidding on a lien, not on the property itself. Placing the highest bid at a trustee auction does not automatically entitle
PAGE B25
you to free and clear ownership of the property. You should also be aware that the lien being auctioned off may be a junior lien. If you are the highest bidder at the auction, you are or may be responsible for paying off all liens senior to the lien being auctioned off, before you can receive clear title to the property. You are encouraged to investigate the existence, priority, and size of outstanding liens that may exist on this property by contacting the county recorder’s office or a title insurance company, either of which may charge you a fee for this information. If you consult either of these resources, you should be aware that the same lender may hold more than one mortgage or deed of trust on the property. NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNER: The sale date shown on this notice of sale may be postponed one or more times by the mortgagee, beneficiary, trustee, or a court, pursuant to section 2924g of the California Civil Code. The law requires that information about trustee sale postponements be made available to you and to the public, as
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PAGE B26
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a courtesy to those not present at the sale. If you wish to learn whether your sale date has been postponed, and, if applicable, the rescheduled time and date for the sale of this property, you may call (714)730-2727 or visit the Internet Web Site WWW.LPSASAP. COM using the ďŹ le number assigned to this case 1382552-31. Information about postponements that are very short in duration or that occur close in time to the scheduled sale may not immediately be reďŹ&#x201A;ected in the telephone information or on the Internet Web Site. The best way to verify postponement information is to attend the scheduled sale. FOR SALES INFORMATION: (714)730-2727 CAL-WESTERN RECONVEYANCE LLC 525 EAST MAIN STREET P.O. BOX 22004 EL CAJON CA 920229004 Dated: July 08, 2013 CALWESTERN RECONVEYANCE LLC A-4399874 07/18/2013, 07/25/2013, 08/01/2013. DM963
Calle Jalapa, San Diego, CA 92126. This statement was ďŹ led with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 06/25/2013. Khoat Dam. DM961. July 11, 18, 25, Aug 1 2013
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2013-017362 Fictitious Business Name(s): Petventures San Diego Located at: 506 E 9th Ave, Escondido, CA, 92125, San Diego County. This business is conducted by: Joint Venture. The ďŹ rst day of business was 3/01/2013. This business is hereby registered by the following: #1 Marlie Johnson, 506 E 9th Ave, Escondido, CA 92025. #2 Justin Robinson, 506 E 9th Ave, Escondido, CA 92025. This statement was ďŹ led with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 06/13/2013. Marlie Johnson. CV485. July 11, 18, 25, Aug 1 2013
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2013-018355 Fictitious Business Name(s): Aodhan Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Misteal Located at: 5525 Caballos Place, San Diego, CA, 92130, San Diego County. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The ďŹ rst day of business has not yet started. This business is hereby registered by the following: Aidan Mitchell, 5525 Caballos Place, San Diego, CA 92130. This statement was ďŹ led with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 06/22/2013. Aidan Mitchell, Aodhan Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Misteal. CV483. July 11, 18, 25, Aug. 1, 2013
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2013-018197 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Clover Marketing b. Prime Marketing Located at: 9524 Kearny Villa Rd. #113, San Diego, CA, 92126, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 9524 Kearny Villa Rd. #113, San Diego, CA 92126. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The ďŹ rst day of business was 5/31/13. This business is hereby registered by the following: Jeannett Lovings, 12161 Travertine Ct., Poway, CA 92064. This statement was ďŹ led with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 06/20/2013. Jeannett Lovings, CEO. CV481. July 4, 11, 18, 25, 2013 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2013-018521 Fictitious Business Name(s): KD Gardening Services Located at: 11337 Calle Jalapa, San Diego, CA, 92126, San Diego County. Mailing Address: P.O. Box 26268, San Diego, CA 92196-0268. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The ďŹ rst day of business was 6/21/2013. This business is hereby registered by the following: Khoat Dam, 11337
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2013-018825 Fictitious Business Name(s): Fused Integrated Marketing Located at: 12553 El Camino Real, Unit C, San Diego, CA, 92130, San Diego County. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The ďŹ rst day of business has not yet started. This business is hereby registered by the following: Heidi Kinney, 12553 El Camino Real, Unit C, San Diego, CA 92130. This statement was ďŹ led with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 06/27/2013. Heidi Kinney. CV484. July 11, 18, 25, Aug. 1, 2013
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2013-018876 Fictitious Business Name(s): Del Mar Luxury Transportation Located at: 2705 Worden, San Diego, CA, 92110, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 2658 Del Mar Heights #121, Del Mar, CA 92014. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The ďŹ rst day of business has not yet started. This business is hereby registered by the following: Louie Cicciarelli, 2705 Worden, San Diego, CA 92110. This statement was ďŹ led with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 06/28/2013. Louie Cicciarelli, Owner. DM960. July 4, 11, 18, 25, 2013 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2013-018594 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. OH! Juice (Two Words) b. OH! Located at: 343 W. Date St., San Diego, CA, 92101, San Diego County. This business is conducted by: A Corporation. The ďŹ rst day of business was 06/01/2013. This business is hereby registered by the following: Lux Radius, 343 W. Date St., San Diego, CA 92101, California. This statement was ďŹ led with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 06/25/2013. Khaled Azar, CEO. CV482. July 4, 11, 18, 25, 2013
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Coastal Premier Properties is very happy to welcome agent Xiaoping â&#x20AC;&#x153;Rebeccaâ&#x20AC;? Logan. Rebecca is fluent in both English and Mandarin. Rebecca prides herself on being a great consultant to her clients, one who listens, never pushes. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Sheâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s energetic, professional, and offers great advice to her clients,â&#x20AC;? says coowner Susan Meyers-Pyke. A real community member, Rebecca possesses an in-depth knowledge of the areas she serves. She lives locally with her family. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Rebecca particularly excels at building long-lasting client relationships,â&#x20AC;? adds co-owner Amy Green. â&#x20AC;&#x153;And being bilingual is a wonderful asset.â&#x20AC;?
MORADA continued from page B18 trees such as steak and duck fat fries, grilled local halibut tacos and housemade bulls blood beet fettuccine. Dinner is when Morada may shine brightest. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Right now the Chilean sea bass is the winner,â&#x20AC;? Allison said of the bass glazed with local honey and served alongside grapefruit and bok choy, kaffir polenta and aged soy. The dinner menu includes salads and small plates like farm tomato and watermelon salad, housemade ricotta gnudi, natural beef tartare and seared ahu tuna street tacos. Entrees include Maine lobster carbonara, ovenroasted monkfish puttanesca, braised natural prime beef short ribs, and herbcrusted Maryâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s fried chicken served with crème fraiche potatoes, broccolini, and a morel and sage gravy. Allison said if he were to sit to dine in his own restaurant, heâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d opt for the
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For more information, contact Coastal Premier Properties: 858-755-4663; marketing@coastalpremieronline.com. Colorado lamb loin chops. The chops are available ĂĄ la carte or as an entrĂŠe paired with cous cous, ratatouille, spearmint and pistachio gremolata. Morada is open for breakfast daily from 7 a.m. to 11 a.m., and lunch from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Weekend brunch is served from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Morada is open for dinner daily from 5-9:30 p.m. and the bar is open Sunday through Thursday from 11:30 a.m. to 10:30 p.m., and until 11 p.m. from Friday through Saturday. The restaurant is just a small slice of the overall renovation of The Inn. Guest rooms have elegant new dĂŠcor, there are new cabanas poolside, new furniture in the lobby and the brand new spa was scheduled to pamper its first patrons on July 15. For more information, visit www.theinnatrsf.com or call (858) 381-8289. The Inn is located at 5951 Linea Del Cielo, Rancho Santa Fe, 92067.
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NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013 PAGE B27
Break the ice and cool your heels this summer The Kitchen Shrink
Carmel Valley News, Del Mar Times & Solana Beach Sun
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BY CATHARINE KAUFMAN Ice has been used to put the chill on food and drinks, and ease bruises, shiners and pulled muscles for thousands of years. Today it’s a bed for fishmonger’s best choices, a soda fountain’s common denominator, coffee’s new summer accessory, and a key ingredient in low-fat, lactosefree dessert options. Now, thanks to the modern cocktail culture, creative mixologists, talented ice sculptors and shaved ice vendors, frozen H2O has shaken up the culinary world. The Ice Ages People of ancient Egypt and India harvested ice by storing water in large porous vessels left outside to freeze on chilly nights. In the 19th century ice was still being naturally formed by cold temperatures, chopped up and stored in insulated icehouses to be used throughout the year. This cool concept caught on and Americans began furnishing their homes with insulated cabinets called iceboxes. They were filled with solid blocks of ice to keep perishables from spoiling and other food items nice and chilled. In 1932,Guy Tinkham patented the model for the first ice cube tray. Cubism As a general principle, the larger the surface area of the ice, the slower it melts, and in turn, the less it dilutes the beverage or libation. So cubes are best for lemonades, ice teas, juices, sodas, punches and libations “on the rocks” (like Scotch or whiskey) and cracked ice is more desirable for drinks, like margaritas and daiquiris. Cracked ice can be easily formed by placing cubes in a canvas bag and smashing it with a mallet, baseball bat or rolling pin — also therapeutic for alleviating frustrations and stress! Chip off the old block Large blocks, moulds or rings of ice that melt at a glacial pace are ideal for punch bowls and other communal help-yourself party drinks.
A Close Shave Shaved or crushed ice, which can be easily formed by using the ice-crushing mode of a blender, is the ice of choice for smoothies, mint juleps, pina coladas and that ilk of cocktail. You can concoct kid-friendly or adult snow cones by packing the shaved ice into a paper cone or cocktail glass and drizzling with fruity syrup or your favorite liqueur from almond-flavored Amaretto or hazelnut nuanced Frangelico to tutti-frutti’s like cherry brandy or Crème de banane. A tropical riff on snow cones is Hawaiian shave ice, an import from the Heian Period of Japan. This frozen delight made from finely grated blocks of ice resembles fluffy snow crystals tightly packed and drizzled with tropical syrup favors including guava, coconut, pineapple, passion fruit and mango. Italian ice is a nondairy treat blending fruits, juices, purees and other flavorings after they are frozen, much like the recipe for making ice cream. Frozen Fakes Freeze a Ziploc bag full of green, purple or black grapes and use as a colorful, edible, iron-rich and hearthealthy substitute for ice cubes. Silicone balls stuffed with shaved or cracked ice or reusable, fast-freezing plastic cubes or slices keep drinks cold, and add a touch of color without diluting the drinks. Ice Capades When making ice cubes, blocks or moulds, use either distilled or spring water, (never tap water) to produce pristine tasting ice. Keep ice far and away from stinky foods so it doesn’t absorb the odors. Consider swapping out
water altogether and using watermelon, pomegranate, apple or orange juices in the trays for sweet sips — or tomato and vegetable cocktails for savory drinks like Bloody Mary’s. As a fun and pretty changeup place rind twists from Meyer lemons or tangerines, giant olives, a fresh blueberry, raspberry, strawberry, peach or cucumber sliver in the cube tray compartments. Try a fresh basil, cilantro or Italian parsley leaf, or concoct these heavenly fragrant rosemaryinfused ice cubes to dial up and cool down everything from fresh squeezed lemonades to sun-brewed iced teas. Rosemary-Scented Ice Cubes 3 cups spring water 8 fresh organic rosemary sprigs Juice from 1 Meyer lemon (strain out seeds and pulp) Snip off the tips from the sprigs and set aside. In a small pot, bring the water, juice and sprigs to a slow boil, and simmer for 10 minutes. Let cool. Add tips to ice cube trays, and pour rosemary water into the trays. Freeze until solid. For additional summer sips and tips email kitchenshrink@san.rr.com.
Attention all culinaryinspired kids: Join The Kitchen Shrink for a fun, funky (and delicious) Iron Chef competition: Wednesday, July 31, 6 p.m. - 7 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 7, 6 p.m.-7 p.m. Carmel Valley Branch Library: 3919 Townsgate Drive, San Diego, CA 921302584. For more information contact: Emily Derry, youth services librarian, at (858) 552-1668.
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July 25, 2013
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July 25, 2013
Torrey Pines Awards Night
T
PHS students were honored for a variety of achievements at the recent Torrey Pines Awards Night. PHOTOS/ANNA SCIPIONE
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AVID
HOME OF THE WEEK
OPEN SUNDAY 1-4
136 23rd Street Del Mar, CA
5453 Colt Terrace, Carmel Valley
The Villa Mirabella, a classic Italian Villa just 2 houses from the ocean front in Del Mar’s sought after Beach Colony! Sunlight galore, 3 fireplaces, ocean views, large backyard, 11 ft ceilings, exceptionally inviting.
Offered at $3,800,000
This 5 bedroom home boasts a spacious floor plan with high ceilings, hardwood floors, formal living & dining rooms, an office, and a dramatic paneled library. Family room showcases a designer stone fireplace and a wet bar - perfect for entertaining. The light, bright kitchen offers a center island, stainless appliances, 2 walk-in pantries and breakfast nook. Offering a spacious yard, a custom patio with built-in BBQ & firepit, a gated front entry located on a cul-de-sac with westerly views.
Offered between $1,395,000 - $1,495,876
M Marla Z Zanelli
Selling The Ranch & Coast Since 1989
Jeri Hein
(858) 922-1341
Prudential CA Realty 858-775-5374
www.MarlaZanelli.com | CA BRE Lic#01040946
BRE #01172144
NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013 PAGE B31
OPEN HOUSES CARMEL VALLEY $499,888 2BR/3BA $799,000 3BR/2BA $1,089,000 4BR/3BA $1,199,000-$1,289,000 6BR/4BA $1,349,000 5BR/4.5BA $1,349,000 5BR/4BA $1,450,000 6BR/4.5BA $1,495,000 5BR/4.5BA $1,585,000 4BR/4.5BA $1,590,000 5BR/4.5BA $1,615,000 4BR/4.5BA $1,985,000 5BR/3BA
12133 Caminito Mira Del Mar Connie Cannon,Coldwell Banker 3965 San Leandro Way Charles & Farryl Moore ,Coldwell Banker
5471 Sonoma Place Charles & Farryl Moore, Coldwell Banker
6289 Quail Run Street Pattie Conway, The Guiltinan Group 4991 Concannon Ct. R. Podolsky & S. Poplawsky Coastal Premier Properties
4514 Saddle Mountain Ct Charles & Farryl Moore,Coldwell Banker
10875 Craven Ridge Way Joseph Sampson, Sampson CA Realty
4695 Smith Canyon R. Podolsky & S. Poplawsky, Coastal Premier Properties
13132 Winstanley Way Charles & Farryl Moore, Coldwell Banker
4889 Bayliss Ct. Mary Heon,Coldwell Banker 5172 Seagrove Place Julie Split-Keyes, Prudential CA Realty 13505 Glencliff Way Polly Rogers/host: G. Wildeson & A. Ashton, Prudential CA Realty
Sat-Sun 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm (858) 354-5538 Sat-Sun 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm (858) 395-7525 Sat-Sun 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm (858) 395-7525 Sun 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm (858) 243-5277 Sat-Sun 2:00 pm - 4:00 pm (858) 877-3657 Sun 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm (858) 395-7525 Sat-Sun 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm (858) 699-1145 Sun 2:00 pm - 4:00 pm (858) 877-3657 Sat 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm (858) 395-7525 Sat-Sun 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm (619) 888-7653 Sat 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm (858) 735-6754 Sat-Sun 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm (858) 756-1113
DEL MAR $375,000 2BR/2BA $699,000 2BR/2BA $975,000 3BR/2BA $979,500 2BR/2BA $1,219,000 3BR/2BA $3,850,000 5BR/3.5BA
13724 Ruette Le Parc #C Melina Camey,The Guiltinan Group 424 Stratford Court A30
Sat-Sun 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm (858) 353-8806 Sat-Sun 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm Julie Split-Keyes, Prudential California Realty (858) 735-6754 14227 Pinewood Sat 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm Debbi Levis, Coldwell Banker (858) 442-6066 12866 Caminito de Los Olas Sat-Sun 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm Joseph Sampson,Sampson CA Realty (858) 699-1145 13654 Calais Dr. Sat-Sun 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm Jake Mumma,Prudential CA Realty (858) 342-4522 222 Ocean View Avenue Sun 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm Lisa LaRue,Willis Allen (760) 419-2212
RANCHO SANTA FE $1,099,000 3BR/2BA $1,950,000 4BR/5BA $3,199,000-$3,699,000 5BR/5.5BA $3,390,000 6BR/7.5BA $3,400,000 8BR/10.5BA $3,450,000 4BR/5BA $3,495,000 6BR/5BA $3,795,000 4BR/4.5BA $3,950,000 4BR/4BA $3,950,000 4BR/4BA $3,995,000 4BR/4.5BA $4,695,000 4BR/5BA $7,100,000 6BR/9BA
16135 Via Madera Circa E Sat 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm Mary Heon,Coldwell Banker (619) 888-7653 17155 Reflections Circle Sun 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm Katie Hawkes,Prudential CA Realty (858) 922-2226 6036 Rancho Diegueno Sat 12:00 pm - 4:00 pm Sun 1:00 pm - 5:00 pm Hoff Ghani,Prudential CA Realty (858) 519-2329 4540 Los Pinos Sun 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm K. Ann Brizolis/host: B. Bornstein,Prudential CA Realty (858) 756-6355 7012 Rancho La Cima Sat 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm K. Ann Brizolis/host: D. Henry, Prudential CA Realty (858) 756-6355 6261 Clubhouse Drive Sat 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm Cindy Mort/host: K. Drolson, Prudential CA Realty (858) 692-3350 7024 Rancho Cielo Sat-Sun 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm Jana Greene,Prudential CA Realty (619) 277-4609 7030 Caminito De Conejos Sun 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm Gary Wildeson,Prudential CA Realty (858) 692-0242 17555 Avenida de Acacias Sat 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm Larry Russell/host: K. Lahtov,Coldwell Banker (858) 610-3863 17555 Avenida de Acacias Sun 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm Larry Russell/host: S. Alavi,Coldwell Banker (858) 405-9941 4476 Los Pinos Tue 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm Linda Sansone/host: R. Cushman, Willis Allen (858) 945-6037 6024 LaGranada Sun 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm Susan Loban,Pacific Sotheby’s (858) 204-9481 15146 Las Planideras Sat-Sun 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm Veronica De Saracho,Prudential CA Realty (619) 805-6861
We Can Beat >MPPS[ My team and I have been winning in the market for our clients, selling their homes for prices above Zillow.
7SPH 0IEWIH ,SQIW (YVMRK XLI *MVWX ,EPJ SJ
3156 Old Oak Tree Lane
14103 Brent Wilsey Place #2
13398 Via Mark
12229 Carmel Vista Road #255
17024 Cloudcroft Drive
13528 Candy Tuft Path
7718 Acama Street
9969 Cummins Place
16024 Big Springs Way
12216 Juniper Way
8425 Kern Crescent
18675 Old Coach Drive
16903 Silvercrest Drive
8455 Ednalyn Lane
14114 Brent Wilsey Place #1
11414 Creekstone
12530 Heatherton Court #28
5470 El Camino Del Norte
,SQI ZEPYIW EVI FEGO Let a professional tell you how hot this market is. 'EPP YW XS ½RH SYX [LEX ]SYV LSQI GER WIPP JSV
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To see a full list of open house listings go to rsfreview.com/homes and delmartimes.net/homes
IF IT'S SHOWN IN BLUE, IT'S NEW!
CA BRE LIC# 01861694 ` )EGL SJ½GI MW MRHITIRHIRXP] S[RIH ERH STIVEXIH
PAGE B32
NORTH COAST
July 25, 2013
We want to sell your home!
Charles Moore (858)395-7525 Charles@HeListsSheSells.com
Farryl Moore
DRE# 01488836 DRE# 01395425
(858)395-5813
Farryl@HeListsSheSells.com
13132 Winstanley Way
Sales Awards - Top 1% Internationally Carmel Valley Specialists 9 out of 10 of our listing are in Carmel Valley Carmel Valley residents since 1988 Customized Marketing Program Staging Services Good Communication - speak directly with us Strong Negotiators Relocation Specialists
$1,585,000
Call 858-395-7525 for showing
Spectacular Promontory home with western canyon views. The new gourmet kitchen has custom wood cabinets with roll out shelving, commercial grade Viking appliances in stainless steel, large center Prep Island with extra storage and sit-up bar. The adjacent informal dining nook has a built-in buffet with matching granite countertop to the kitchen. Peering out the windows, you are drawn to the backyard with built-in fire pit, large pool/spa with amazing canyon view beyond the lush tropical landscape. Beds: 4+2 Baths: 4.5 Sq. Ft. 4,008
HeListsSheSells.com - To see more photos, virtual tour, floorplan & features. G N I D N PE 4514 Saddle Mountain $1,349,000 Beds: 5 Baths: 4 Sq. Ft. 3,659
5471 Sonsoma Place $1,089,000 Beds: 4+ Baths: 3 Sq. Ft. 2,629
13578 Ginger Glen $1,249,000 Beds: 5 Baths: 4.5 Sq. Ft. 3,622
3965 San Leandro Way $769,000 Beds: 3 Baths: 2 Sq. Ft. 1,821
Stay Informed - Look for our Market Report!
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Carmel Valley Market Report
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