Encinitas Advocate 07 21 17

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Volume 3, Issue 47

Community

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Building group files another lawsuit against city BY BARBARA HENRY The Building Industry Association of San Diego County has filed a second lawsuit against Encinitas over the city’s failure to adopt a state-mandated plan for future housing growth that was rejected by city voters in November. The lawsuit, filed last month in

Q&A with female university pioneers past and present. A3

Lifestyle

■ See inside for a variety of photos of community events.

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Parents demand solution for ‘unequal’ classrooms BY KAREN BILLING The San Dieguito Union High School District (SDUHSD) board continues to face questions on how it plans to address the issue of the ATP (adult transition program) portables on the Earl Warren Middle School campus. Parents feel that the conditions are “separate and unequal” with two portables on the brand new middle school campus that they contend place students with special needs into what amounts to “cramped tool sheds” with limited windows. At the July 13 board meeting, the board split 2-2 on spending $33,000 to add two windows and two doors with windows to improve the condition of the existing portables with board members Mo Muir and John Salazar voting against the proposal. In voting in favor of the proposal, SDUHSD Board President Amy Herman and board member Beth Hergesheimer acknowledged that there are capacity issues with the ATP portables but they were aiming for a short-term solution for the coming school year. Herman said she has concerns about making the existing facilities safe and light. “It will not get better if we don’t have ventilation and windows,” Herman said. “I’m committed to making sure that as we move SEE CLASSROOMS, A18

Superior Court, notes that the BIA sued the city in 2014 over its lack of a housing plan and, as part of a settlement agreement in that case, the city agreed to get the document done. The new lawsuit says the city has “failed to do so” and has been out of compliance with state housing law for years because it hasn't updated its

original housing plan, which dates from the 1990s. The BIA wants the court to compel the city to enact the plan as it appeared on the November ballot, without any amendments. The group also seeks payment of attorneys' fees and any other relief that the court "may deem just and

proper under the circumstances." "Our suit aims to cause compliance on a time table that differs materially from the city's feet-dragging record," the organization's CEO, Borre Winckel, wrote in an e-mail July 12. He later added, "We think the city should comply now. It's up to the SEE SUIT, A17

17 tons of donated pet food delivered to Rancho Coastal Humane Society BY BRITTANY WOOLSEY Thousands of needy animals will have full bellies soon thanks to a donation of 17 tons — or 34,400 pounds — of dog and cat food at the Rancho Coastal Humane Society. Fourteen pallets of Special Kitty cat food and 21 pallets of Sam's Club dog food, which were carried on a big rig from Reno, were delivered to the Humane Society July 18 from the Rescue Bank, operated by GreaterGood.org. "What happens in situations like this is they'll get an overstock,” explained John Van Zante, public relations director at the Humane Society. “The food has a 'best by' date, but it's actually still good for a year after that. Those still won't sell in the stores. They trust us to distribute that food." The food will then be given to registered, pre-approved San Diego County nonprofit animal rescue organizations, he said. Van Zante said in San Diego County alone there are more than 200 registered rescue groups. He said this is one of the largest donations in the center's 57-year history. He estimated the food will provide more than 100,000 meals for dogs and cats in San Diego and surrounding counties. "Last year, we had two shipments of 38,000 pounds each,” he said. “Those went to

BRITTANY WOOLSEY

Greg Westermeyer, a three-year volunteer with the Chihuahua Rescue of San Diego, begins loading up 1,200 pounds of dog food the rescue organization received from the Rancho Coastal Humane Society on July 18. rescue groups in San Diego, Orange, Riverside and Imperial counties." The food is offered free of charge to the nonprofits, but the groups must pay 10 cents per pound they're given to help with shipping costs. "Ten cents a pound might seem like a lot," Van Zante said. "If you figure a rescue will get six tons of food for about $115, that's a great price." Greg Westermeyer, a three-year volunteer with the Chihuahua Rescue of San Diego, was the first rescuer to arrive July 18. He

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PAGE A2 - JULY 21, 2017 - ENCINITAS ADVOCATE

Carlsbad joins cities in community choice energy study BY PHIL DIEHL Carlsbad is the third North County city to join a regional study that will look at the feasibility of forming a joint powers authority that could provide an alternative to buying energy from San Diego Gas & Electric Co. The Carlsbad City Council unanimously agreed July 11 to help fund the study into a community choice energy program — also known as community choice aggregation or CCA. Encinitas is leading the effort, and Del Mar is already on board. Oceanside has been asked to participate, but hasn’t yet decided. In CCAs, local governments form nonprofits that allow participants to choose the sources of their electricity, with the goal of taking most from renewable sources such as solar, wind and hydroelectric. Residents are typically automatically enrolled in the programs, but given the option to withdraw if they want to stay with a traditional utility. SDG&E is already an industry leader in renewable energy, with 43 percent of its power coming from renewable sources — the largest share among any utility in the western United States. Carlsbad council members had little to say July 11 about the study, except that it should look at all the risks and

whether the CCA would genuinely increase the percentage of renewable energy consumed. “We would all like something like this to work,” said Mayor Matt Hall. More than 40 people waited more than four hours for the council to vote on the proposal, and applauded loudly after the decision. About 15 people had asked to speak on the issue, but because of the late hour the council agreed to hear only one. “We’ve worked hard for the past one-and-a-half years to educate business people and residents about the benefits of community choice energy,” said Paige DeCino, a Carlsbad resident who represents 775 members of the city’s chapter of the Sierra Club. “Thank you for your support.” A request for proposals from companies that would like to do the study should be out no later than this fall, said Crystal Najera, the Climate Action Plan program administrator in Encinitas. The study is expected to cost a total of up to $100,000, and cities will bear a proportional share of the expense. It will take about one year to complete, she said. The study will look at factors such as the potential costs of purchasing renewable energy from various sources to determine whether the idea SEE ENERGY, A17

Encinitas City Council approves $95.6M budget The City of Encinitas will invest more than $95 million in the new fiscal year (FY 2017-18) to provide residents with important city services and a variety of capital improvement projects, according to a press release. The budget was approved by the Encinitas City Council on June 28 and went into effect on July 1. It took six months to develop and included resident feedback from four public workshops. A total of $82.2 million will be spent on operational costs like public safety, parks and recreation, street improvements, maintenance services and administration – a 3.9 percent increase over last fiscal year. More than $29 million of that amount is earmarked for law enforcement, fire operations and marine safety services. More specifically, the operating budget will provide enhanced levels of service for urban forestry maintenance, street striping and cleaning and maintenance services, including sidewalks and public bathrooms. It will also add four more organically managed parks (Sun Vista, Mildred MacPherson, Hawkview and Las Verdes); continue the “Open Doors” program to end veteran homelessness; add holiday lighting upgrades for South Coast 101 and El Camino Real; and add a new public art/sculpture installation program with rotating displays at four locations. The city will also explore initiatives to improve efficiencies and customer service. No additional full-time employees were added this year and the operating budget includes funding for all required debt and pension payments. In addition to operational costs, the city will invest $13.4 million in several capital improvement projects (CIP), including $3.7 million for wastewater collection

rehab and improvements; $3 million for street overlays; and $1.2 million for park and beach related projects including the development of two additional trails and the installation of shade structures at city parks. More than $2.2 million will be invested in mobility improvements this fiscal year, with $10.2 million budgeted over a six-year period. Other fully funded CIP projects include phase one of the North Highway 101 Streetscape project, construction of a new lifeguard tower at Moonlight Beach, a pedestrian at-grade railroad crossing at Montgomery Avenue and the design and development of a neighborhood park at Piraeus and Olympus streets. A complete list of CIP projects is available at www.encinitasca.gov/government/city-projects. Finally, city reserves are fully funded at $13.9 million and provide for emergencies and recessionary revenue impacts. “The city continues to experience positive revenue growth thanks to increasing property values, solid development activity and growth in the tourism industry,” explained Tim Nash, the city’s finance director. “This has allowed us to provide residents with a balanced budget that promotes fiscal sustainability, enhances city services and provides a variety of much-needed capital projects around town.” The city’s prior year financial results and current annual budget are available to review at www.encinitasca.opengov.com, a web-based application that makes the city’s finances more easily accessible and understandable to the public. For more on the City of Encinitas, visit — Submitted news release www.encinitasca.gov.

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ENCINITAS ADVOCATE - JULY 21, 2017 - PAGE A3

Q&A: Female university pioneers past and present BY SEBASTIAN MONTES Over four decades as a university administrator, Marvalene Hughes amassed one of the most storied careers in the nation, blazing trails that few women of color had been down before — or have since. One of her most landmark positions came when she was appointed president of California State University-Stanislaus in 1994, becoming only the second African-American woman to earn the distinction in the CSU system. Hughes left Stanislaus in 2005 to lead Dillard University, a historically black college in New Orleans, until her retirement in 2011. Ellen Junn, CSU-Stanislaus’s current president, came to Hughes’ local home for two days at the end of June to finally meet her storied predecessor and soak up as much institutional memory as possible. The two talked about the long road they both faced as pioneers in their profession, especially in fundraising, closing the achievement gap for minority students, reaching underrepresented populations and reviving initiatives that faded after Hughes left Stanislaus. Capping the visit off, the two coordinated plans to get the Hughes back to the Stanislaus campus one more time: Junn has decided to commemorate the reflecting pond at the school’s main entrance in Hughes’ honor. This newspaper joined the two women over a cup of tea on June 26. Answers below have been edited for length and clarity. Q: Last year marked a milestone for the CSU

SEBASTIAN MONTES

Ellen Junn, president of California State University-Stanislaus, visits with her accomplished predecessor Marvalene Hughes in Hughes’ Del Mar home last month. system: of five presidencies that opened up, five women were appointed to the posts. Does it feel like a turning point? Junn: When Marvalene was there, she was one of only two women out of the 21 presidents. Today we have 11 out of 23. It is unprecedented in any university system in the nation. It feels amazing. Marvalene can tell you what it’s like to be in a room full of trustees who are all white males. Having more women and a larger age range has made the discussion richer and more authentic and more spontaneous.

Hughes: And far less stressful, I’m sure. Junn: Oh yes. Hughes: It was a very lonely place to be. Q: Dr. Hughes, what was it like to try to get your ideas forward, surrounded by that stark demographic, and represent the school the way you wanted to represent it? Hughes: I was very fortunate to have been at SDSU when affirmative action was introduced. In an academic institution and culture, for women to come in mandating equality, both as students and administrators, was just an amazing political

time. SDSU while I was there created the first women’s studies program in the nation. It created the image for the rest of the country. I wasn’t in women’s studies, but I was very connected those women and I was able to carry out their agenda in interesting ways because I was on the administrative team. It was a time that was a changing political climate for the CSUs and for universities everywhere. Once I became president at Stanislaus, the CSU system didn’t know quite what to do with the fact that they had these two women presidents, but I am so blessed to be a part of it. It was a life-changing experience. Junn: She was a pioneer, a true pioneer forging a path. Q: When you’re on campus now, Dr. Junn, do you see a lasting impact? Junn: Yes, especially in terms of the physical landscape. When she started as president, there were only two buildings on campus. So nearly all of the buildings now are there as result of her vision and her extraordinary fundraising ability. She really set the landscape and then grew the programs. We now have nearly 70 degree programs. She really did set the stage and was critical in making that campus a successful and strong presence in the Central Valley. We have a branch in Stockton due to her vision. That was a satellite that she saw as having an important role in the university. Stockton has had a checkered history; they are the second-largest city in America to go SEE UNIVERSITY PIONEERS, A18

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PAGE A4 - JULY 21, 2017 - ENCINITAS ADVOCATE

San Diego-based Tribal Seeds to kick off Del Mar Racetrack concert series BY ROB LEDONNE The renowned Del Mar Racetrack concert series has featured the likes of musical legends from Jack Johnson to Weezer. Come July 21, Tribal Seeds joins that esteemed list to kick of the track’s 2017 season. “I’m stoked Tribal Seeds is a part of the series,” said the band’s co-founder and keyboard player Tony-Ray Jacobo, who’s visited the series before - as a spectator. “I’ve personally been a couple of times to see Ziggy Marley and The Offspring.” The Seeds’ plum kickoff performance slot is just the latest coup for the San Diego-based band who released its debut EP in 2005. Founded by Tony-Ray and his brother Steven Rene Jacobo, the band built a successful career based on a unique sound that combines both reggae and rock into one tidy musical package. Along the way, they’ve built an intense following thanks to a bevy of recordings (recent track “Rude Girl” is based on a mean dog, oddly enough) and a busy slate of tour stops, the resulting success of which can be traced back to a pivotal tropical excursion during their humble beginnings. “The first time we went to Hawaii as a band we gave some of our music to a radio station in Maui,” remembers Tony-Ray of the landmark moment in the band’s rise. “Soon after, people were requesting it and it got on rotation. That was big.” Just as important was the fact that established bands soon took a liking them, with acts ranging from Soja to Rebelution early champions. “Slightly Stoopid took us

COURTESY

Tribal Seeds will perform at the Del Mar Racetrack’s Seaside Stage on Friday, July 21. on our first amphitheater tour which was huge,” says Tony-Ray of the fellow famed San Diego act. “They are the big hometown band and we got to open for them on big stages all around the country.” Since then, the members of Tribal Seed have gotten used to the hectic nature of life on the road. “I feel blessed and honored to be able to do this for a living,” said Steven

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Rene. “Not a lot of people get to make a living playing and making music. When times get hard out on the road, I just try to remember how blessed I am do be in the situation I’m in.” As of late, the Seeds have plenty to be blessed about, the most notable of which is being awarded Artist of the Year at the recent San Diego Music Awards. (“That

definitely was unexpected for me,” says Tony-Ray. “We were honored to be recognized by our city in that way.”) In addition, the group also has a new album on the horizon, slated for release in 2018. “I think this next album will be more roots (based),” reveals Steven. “At this point in my career, I’m not too concerned with trying to appeal to as many people as possible, I don’t like worrying about trying to get bigger. I just play what I like and I love roots music.” Playing what they love has worked so far as a strategy for the band, translating into chart success. The Tribal Seeds band enjoyed securing the number one slot one the Billboard reggae charts when its 2014 album, Representing, was released – a coup made all the more impressive considering the band is proudly independent, building a monster fan base without the help of a major label machine behind them. “We’ve been independent since day one,” said Steven. “It is definitely nice to have the freedom to make music how we want and when we want and not have the pressure of a label or corporation dictating what we do.” For now, they’re gearing up for their grand Del Mar Racetrack debut. Says Tony-Ray: “It’s a big event that the whole city looks forward to. Gonna be awesome to take that stage.” Tribal Seeds heads to the Del Mar Racetrack’s Seaside Stage on Friday, July 21, with their set tipping off following the last race of the day. For more information, visit dmtc.com/concerts and tribalseeds.net

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ENCINITAS ADVOCATE - JULY 21, 2017 - PAGE A5

Former stand-up comedian creates new laughs in first book

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BY BRITTANY WOOLSEY When Robbie Pickard came across nearly 40 narratives he had written over the years, he didn’t want to just flush the ideas down the toilet, so to speak. But the Encinitas-based former stand-up comedian didn’t feel like turning them into jokes either. So, Pickard decided to take his humor skills into another venture: writing his first book. “Toilet Material: Very Short Stories for Very Short Attention Spans,” which was released last month and supported by a Kickstarter fundraising campaign, includes the 38 short stories Pickard wrote over the years. Pickard, who began his comedy career working at the Irvine Improv in Orange County while studying journalism at UC Irvine, described the work as “if Saturday Night Live was a book.” “I was looking at this backlog of standup ideas on my laptop, thinking these things could either die or I could try to do something else with them,” said the 33-year-old former comedian who was a regular performer at Hollywood and Orange County clubs for eight years before moving away from the profession two years ago. He is now a senior copywriter in the advertising/marketing field. “After toying around with how to transfer these standups into short stories, it finally clicked.” However, realizing the costs of publishing his own book, Pickard decided to leave his work’s fate into the hands of fans. Luckily, they liked his idea, too, raising more than $11,000 in a 30-day online fundraiser on

COURTESY PHOTOS

“Toilet Material” by Robbie Pickard is available on Amazon.com.

Robbie Pickard delivers 350 copies of his book “Toilet Material” to people who supported him on Kickstarter.

Kickstarter.com. Pickard considers Kickstarter a “wonderful tool” for today’s emerging artists. “There are so many avenues now to get things done, whatever you want to do,” he said. “If you want it bad enough, there’s always a way. Kickstarter was a great way to prove that there was an audience for this idea.” Reviewers on Amazon.com, where the book is available for purchase, have praised “Toilet Material.” Pickard also received testimonials from former SNL cast members and other professional stand-up comedians. Former SNL performer Brooks Wheelan considered the book “such a fun, easy read. Like for

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children, except don’t let children read this.” The stories, which include fiction and non-fiction, range from between one and five pages long. They are unrelated and can be read in any order. “Toilet Material’s” short length, at about 120 pages, is aimed at the common short attention spans people possess today, Pickard said. He added that the stories are ideal for quick reads in places like the bathroom, at an airport or at a doctor’s office. “The whole idea of calling it ‘Toilet Material’ was trying to find some structure,” he said. “It was kind of a way to play up the fact that people today are used to getting a lot of content really quickly and our

attention spans are very short. I wanted to write the kind of book that got read by today’s audience.” Pickard, who is in the early stages of writing his second release, a comic novel, said he hopes his “Toilet Material” book offers readers an escape. “It’s sort of the idea that this world is so busy and we’re always surrounded by tasks. Being in the bathroom is sort of the quietest time people have now,” he said. “I make the joke that it’s really the only ‘you’ time that we have left.” To purchase “Toilet Material” visit amzn.to/2uegCLu. For more information about Pickard, visit robbiepickard.com.

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After 40 years, MCASD’s annual benefit takes on new life within the Jacobs Building at MCASD Downtown. Join fellow art supporters, artists, and MCASD Members for a night of dining, dancing, and philanthropy as the Monte Carlo gala moves downtown. All funds raised provide vital support for MCASD’s exhibitions and education programs. Get your tickets now at www.mcasd.org/POPfactory

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PAGE A6 - JULY 21, 2017 - ENCINITAS ADVOCATE

CCA volleyball coach focuses on mental, emotional aspect of being an athlete BY GIDEON RUBIN Considering her background, Rachel Morris might not on the surface appear to be the best candidate to coach one of the area’s most competitive high school volleyball programs. As a promising Division I prospect, Morris quit the sport midway through her junior year of high school. She’d had enough of the yelling, the screaming and the insensitivity of coaches who micromanaged every part of the game but didn’t pay much attention to what their players experienced as human beings. She’s channeled those sentiments into a coaching philosophy that emphasizes the mental and emotional parts of being a competitive athlete that she believes is frequently overlooked. Morris has put that philosophy into practice at Canyon Crest Academy, where she serves as co-head coach of the volleyball program with Ariel Haas. “I got into coaching to give to young athletes what I didn’t receive when I was growing up as a young athlete,” Morris said. Morris grew up in Manhattan Beach and started playing club volleyball when she was 7 in one of the nation’s most competitive regions. She was playing high school ball at Mira Costa High when the burnout got to be too much. Morris went on to play college ball at Oregon, walking on as a freshman and eventually earning a scholarship to play in the elite Pacific-12 Conference. Morris is in her fifth year coaching at

CCA. To say that she herself never envisioned her current role would be an understatement. “When I was a young athlete I remember telling my mom, I will never coach volleyball,” Morris said. “It seemed so boring, like why would I want to spend my weekends and my time doing that? “I remember that very vividly. I had zero interest in coaching.” Morris’ attitude towards coaching changed at Oregon, where she found a coaching staff pushed athletes without pushing them out to the door. She found herself enjoying coaching summer camps towards the end of her collegiate career in Eugene. “That’s kind of what motivated me to be the coach that I am, having people that were there to lift me up in tough times really showed me that this isn’t just a game, that there are so many life lessons, so many ups and downs,” Morris said. Morris uses motivational quotes and has a reading list for players on the high school and club teams. Tops on her reading list right now is Ryan Holiday’s “The Obstacle Is the Way: The Timeless Art of Turning Trials into Triumph.” But the most important element of coaching in Morris’ view is relationship-building. She does what she can to keep up with daily challenges her players face, everything from illnesses and injuries to tests and schoolwork. “If you have an athlete that truly believes that you believe in them they’ll run

San Dieguito Cotillion continues to help mold the next generation The San Dieguito Cotillion enhances children’s lives by molding them into young ladies and gentlemen. Accepting enrollment from 5th grade to 12th grade, the San Dieguito Cotillion “has been proven through time and interviews to provide a competitive advantage through teaching the proper handshake, manners, conversation topics and a mix of ballroom and Latin dances, resulting in a heightened self confidence. This class is a necessity to help the ladies and gentlemen of the next generation become leaders in social situations and provides leadership opportunities for those passionate,” according to a press release. For more information or to register for classes, visit http://bit.ly/2udpjDC.

ANNA SCIPIONE

CCA volleyball coach Rachel Morris through walls for you,” Morris said. Morris’ coaching style has won her high marks from players who appreciate a coach who’s in tune with the pressures and demands today’s high school athletes face. “She’s very involved in each kid and she really cares about each player individually, not only in their volleyball but personally

in a way that helps the player-coach connection be stronger,” said Hannah Martin, a USC-bound outside hitter who’ll be a senior this year.” Morris has fostered relationships that outlast the coaching. Former Torrey Pines standout Savvy Simo, who now plays at USC, and Kalie Wood, who’s now at Columbia, are among the growing list of top-level athletes she’s coached at CCA and the Wave club team. Haas believes Morris’ ability to build trust with players makes her a better coach. “She relates really well to the players,” Haas said. “She understands what they’re going through with their feelings and emotions and is able earn their trust. “A lot of teaching and coaching is about trust.” Morris said she learned through her own experience as a player how important an element of coaching compassion can be. She recalls one occasion when a coach found her sitting by herself in the locker room minutes before warmups, tears streaming down her face as she was grieving the death of her friend days earlier. “I remember being an absolute wreck,” Morris said. “One of my coaches came in there and was literally sitting in there holding me. “Wiped my face, got on the court, got out there and started playing,” Those are the types of memories that she believes aren’t easily forgotten. “I don’t remember the games, I don’t remember how many assists I had or many digs I had or aces,” Morris said. “Those are the things I remember.”

Taste of Encinitas to take place Aug. 8 The Encinitas 101 MainStreet Association announces 19 local wineries and breweries to be featured at “Sip Stops” during its 29th Annual Taste of Encinitas, presented by Sea Coast Exclusive Properties. In addition to cuisine samples from 30+ restaurants, retail shops and salons will host Sip Stops, where participants can enjoy samples of local wine and craft beer. This year’s Taste of Encinitas will be held on Tuesday, August 8, from 5:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m., along Coast Hwy 101, throughout Downtown Encinitas. The local craft breweries and wineries participating this year include: PRP International, Karl Strauss Brewery, Lost Abbey Brewery, Duck Foot Brewery, Fall Brewery, Arcana Brewery, Culture Brewery, Lagunitas Brewery, Prohibition Brewery, White Fence Brewery, and Kombucha Culture with more to be added. In addition to the wine and beer choices, this Taste of Encinitas will offer various locations serving

COURTESY

Attendees try food at a past Taste of Encinitas event. non-alcoholic beverages, such as coffee, organic juice drinks, and a hydrating water station, provided by Palomar Mountain. Encinitas 101 is also excited to welcome Irish recording artist JP Hennessy to the Lumberyard Courtyard stage. At the north end, on the patio of the Roxy Encinitas, Linda Berry & John January will play the blues and a number of classics. While experiencing the Taste, don’t forget to

make your way to Moonlight Yogurt to watch Stephanie Brown perform. One block south, Andy & Rob will entertain Taste of Encinitas participants in front of Bier Garden with the sounds of authentic Spanish guitar. Stop by Sea Coast Exclusive Properties, one of the 19 Sip Stops, and enjoy classic oldies and surf music from local Encinitas band Superwave. In front of Pacific Sotheby's, folks can enjoy the fun beats of the young, unique and talented Sea Monks. Meanwhile, anchoring the south end of town, outside Encinitas Fish Shop, Jason Matkin will perform his own originals and popular cover songs with his own flare. Visit www.encinitas101.com for more information and to purchase tickets online. Tickets are also available at the Encinitas 101 office (818 S. Coast Hwy 101). The $45 per person price includes all food and drink samples. Same day tickets (if available) will be $50, but the event is expected to sell out in advance.

Sheriff's Department: Don't fly drones near fire operations COURTESY

The San Diego Cotillion teaches a mix of ballroom and Latin dances.

It is wildfire season and the Jennings Fire in East County recently showed just how fast a spark can ignite a massive fire. The San Diego County Sheriff’s Department, CAL FIRE and U.S. Forest Service are reminding the public to stop

flying drones near fire operations. To watch a public safety video about drones, follow the Sheriff’s Department on VIMEO: vimeo.com/225615450. When a drone is in the sky, firefighting planes and helicopters are grounded

because a collision could be disastrous. This delay in air support also puts ground crews battling the fire at risk. It is against federal law to interfere with firefighting efforts to put out a fire. Remember: “If You Fly, We Can’t.”


www.encinitasadvocate.com

ENCINITAS ADVOCATE - JULY 21, 2017 - PAGE A7

Circle Of Life 100 awards celebration will honor volunteer leaders Volunteer leaders involved in the campaign that raised $60 million for the expansion of Scripps Memorial Hospital Encinitas will be honored at the Circle of Life 100 12th annual Distinguished Achievement Awards, Thursday, Aug. 3 at the Del Mar Country Club in Rancho Santa Fe. The Circle of Life 100 event will mark the completion of the eight-year campaign for Scripps Encinitas. Funds raised helped build the Leichtag Foundation Critical Care Pavilion, including a new 36-bed emergency department. Other funded projects

included six state-of-the-art operating rooms (two new, four redesigned and upgraded); new pre-operative care unit and post-anesthesia Unit (PACU); a “Healing Arts” collection and soonto-be-built new endoscopy suites. Circle of Life 100 is a service organization that advocates for health education and philanthropy in support of Scripps Encinitas. The volunteer leaders to be honored are Paul Ecke III and Kevin Crawford, Kitchen Cabinet; Ruby Edman, Community Advisory Board; Janice Riggins, Circle of Life 100;

Nina Eaton, Healing Arts Collection; Scripps Drs. Michael Lobatz, Randall Goskowicz, and Eric Lovell, Physician Champions; and the La Costa Glen Retirement Community, LC Glen Volunteer Committee. Each will be recognized in a video that will also cover the hospital’s history and highlights of the Campaign for Scripps Encinitas. The event is from 5:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the Del Mar Country Club, 6001 Clubhouse Drive, Rancho Santa Fe. For more information, please call 760-633-7722 or email RSVPenc@scripps health.org

Assistance League of Rancho San Dieguito to hold Operation School Bell at Camp Pendleton Since 2005, Assistance League of Rancho San Dieguito (ALRSD) has been providing children of enlisted military families at Camp Pendleton with a unique shopping experience as they start a new school year. Along with several Southern California chapters of National Assistance League, ALRSD provides new school clothes and supplies to children at Camp Pendleton. Operation School Bell (OSB) is Assistance League’s signature philanthropic program. Last year, 677 children of military families were provided new jeans, shirts, underwear, socks, toiletries, sweatshirts, shoe vouchers, a backpack and even a ready-to-love stuffed animal during their school shopping event. Operation School Bell will return to Camp Pendleton this year on Aug. 5 and Aug. 6. Large event tents will be set up and Assistance League chapter volunteers

will be on-hand to guide the children and their parents through the maze of delightful choices. ALRSD encourages the public to join the efforts to alleviate some of the financial difficulties facing military families. Assistance League of Rancho San Dieguito is an all-volunteer, nonprofit organization. Monies to offer programs like Operation School Bell are provided by surplus funds generated by sales at the ALRSD Thrift Shop in Encinitas, through grants from corporations and local government agencies, an annual fundraiser, membership and individual donors. You may learn more by visiting the ALRSD Thrift Shop, 1542 Encinitas Blvd, www.alrsd.org. or on Facebook: Assistance League of Rancho San Dieguito, Thrift Shop. In addition, you may contact ALRSD at 760-634-1091 or alrsd@yahoo.org.

Village Church Community Theater to host auditions for upcoming production The Village Church Community Theater in Rancho Santa Fe will hold auditions for “Murder By The Book,” by Craig Sodaro, a murder mystery dinner theater show. Audition dates and times: Sunday, Aug. 6, 2-4 p.m. and Monday, Aug. 7, 6-8 p.m. Roles: Four men and six women for actors ranging from 18 to 80 years of age. Characters are: Edgar Allen Poe, Mark Twain, Charlotte Bronte, Louisa May Alcott, Mary Shelley, Arthur Conan Doyle, Agatha Christie, Emily Dickinson, William Shakespeare and Viola Danglon. The Raven Society holds its annual

meeting to select the best mystery book of the year. All members of the club who will choose the coveted prize winner, and are not known to each other. They each attend the meeting disguised as a famous author. The mystery grows with its romance and humor to its climactic closing. The characters portray the authors in period language, at least partial accent/dialect, and clothing. Performances will be: Friday through Sunday, Sept. 22, 23 and 24. To sign up for an audition appointment, visit www.villagechurchcommunity theater.org

The Leichtag Foundation Critical Care Pavilion.

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PAGE A8 - JULY 21, 2017 - ENCINITAS ADVOCATE

iPalpiti Festival

E

ncinitas hosted the annual iPalpiti Festival July 13-16 for the sixth consecutive year. The 23 world-class young musicians from 18 different countries who performed at the event exemplify the true spirit of iPalpiti: “to touch the lives of all who hear them through their gift of music.” The festival began with four different Soloist Concerts at the Encinitas Library, by six virtuoso iPalpiti Soloists. Photos from the concert on this page were taken at the 2 p.m. concert on July 16. On July 19,the community heard the full 23-member iPalpiti Orchestra, conducted by Eduard Schmieder, in a performance at St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church.Visit www.ipalpiti.org. Online: encinitasadvocate.com

iPalpiti musicians Stephanie Appelhans (violin), Peter Mezo (violin), Victor de Almeida (viola), Francisco Vila (cello), Ofer Canetti (cello)

Musician host Carolyn Cope, Richard Hawk, musician host Tricia Smith Bootsie Lynch, Ellie Eigen

Retired Deputy Mayor Lisa Shaffer, John Kirwan, Al and Sheila Rodbell

PHOTOS BY MCKENZIE IMAGES

Mary Poteet, Roy Glass

City of Encinitas' Arts Administrator Jim Gilliam, Assistant Arts Administrator Cheryl Ehlers, Eduard Schwan (www.SchwanSongs.com). Front row: Encinitas Friends of the Arts President/musician host Naimeh Tanha Woodward, Encinitas Commission for the Arts Chair Judy Thum

Encinitas Parks and Recreation Director Jennifer Campbell

Lois Martin, Pam Pacilio, Janet Placido

Seattle visitors Angelica and Carlos Golborne, Mr. and Mrs. Viveros


www.encinitasadvocate.com

ENCINITAS ADVOCATE - JULY 21, 2017 - PAGE A9

Hidden treasure Henry Herz building side career as children’s book author BY KAREN BILLING Children’s book author Henry Herz will launch his fifth traditionally published book, “Cap’n Rex and his Clever Crew” this summer. The fantasy picture book’s official release date is Aug. 1—“Cap’n Rex” can be pre-ordered on Amazon.com and once it sets sail it can be found at barnesandnoble.com as well as in independent bookstores. Following “Cap’n Rex,” published by Sterling Publishing, Herz will have three children’s books released in 2018. Pelican Publishing will print “How the Squid got Two Long Arms”; Schiffer Publishers will release “Good Egg and Bad Apple,” a wordplay book all about food-based puns and idioms; and Familius Publishing will print “Alice’s Magic Garden,” a prequel to “Alice in Wonderland.” Herz is a children’s book author thanks to a “mid-life epiphany”— by trade he is a process improvement engineer. He first got into writing children’s books in 2011 when he self-published the fantasy book “Nimpentoad,” which he wrote with his young sons, Josh and Harrison. “I wrote the first book as way to get my kids into reading fantasy, my favorite genre,” Herz said. “It ended up turning into more.” After he self-published the first book, he

was bit by the writing bug and they self-published three more books together. Going out on his own, he found publishers for his next four books — Pelican Publishing put out “Little Red Cuttlefish,” “When you Give an Imp a Penny” and “Monster Goose Nursery Rhymes.” “Mabel and the Queen of Dreams” was published by Schiffer Publishers. “They’re teenagers now and I’m off and running doing it on my own,” Herz said. “It’s an unpredictable career. I hope to keep honing my craft and be the best writer I can be and keep putting out great work. I like my day job and luckily, I can do both.” Typically authors submit ideas to publishers and then wait for a response — to Sterling, Herz had originally submitted a rhyming picture book about a yeti and some spaghetti. Sterling responded that they really liked the story but had done too many monster books lately. Herz saw an opportunity to pitch his tale about Cap’n Rex, a pirate dinosaur. Herz liked dinosaurs and he liked pirates — he thought putting them together made for the ultimate combination, like peanut butter and chocolate. Sterling agreed and acquired the story. “I snatched victory out of the jaws of defeat,” Herz said. In the book, Rex commands a four-dinosaur crew looking for treasure.

Gary Martin C a l B R E Li c e n se # 0 0 9 6 2 1 0 4

BROKER

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Local children’s book author Henry Herz COURTESY

Author Henry Herz releases “Cap’n Rex” on Aug. 1. The crew hits many obstacles on their journey, from pea soup fog or giant sharks. Whenever they come across an obstacle, the crew always thinks can’t do it. Cap’n Rex always responds, “Can’t ye?” With a “big, sharp-teeth smile,” he helps his crew come up with a clever way to solve their problem. “It encourages creativity and perseverance in young readers,” Herz said. “When you encounter obstacles, sometimes you see difficulties, but there’s almost always a way around it.” Herz said he is getting used to the book publishing business and learning to be

patient with a process that can be lengthy. Once a story is acquired, the publisher has to find an illustrator, go through the process of illustrating and editing and building a marketing plan. It can sometimes be a two-year process, but Herz said it is always worth the wait. “There is nothing like the feeling of something that you’ve written and worked on for hundreds of hours show up in a hard-bound book,” Herz said. “It’s a great feeling.” Herz has two local book readings and signings scheduled for the coming months. On Saturday, Aug. 19, he will be at Barnes & Noble in Mira Mesa at 11 a.m. and on Sunday, Sept. 10 he will be at Mysterious Galaxy Bookstore at 3:30 p.m. To learn more about “Cap’n Rex,” visit henryherz.com

760.436.2219

gary@garymartin.com | www.garymartin.com

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PAGE A10 - JULY 21, 2017 - ENCINITAS ADVOCATE

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www.encinitasadvocate.com

PAGE A10 - JULY 21, 2017 - ENCINITAS ADVOCATE

FOR THE BEST TREES ON THE PLANET - GO TO THE MOON!

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www.encinitasadvocate.com

ENCINITAS ADVOCATE - JULY 21, 2017 - PAGE A11

PALM PARADISE BUY 5, GET 1FREE! Reg. Individual Price per tree applies. In stock only. Not valid with package pricing. Excludes wholesale. Lowest price tree“free”See store for complete details.

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Reg. Individual Price per tree applies. In stock only. Not valid with package pricing. Excludes wholesale. Lowest price tree “free” See store for complete details.

YOU BUY IT! WE PLANT IT!

FLOWERING TREES

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SHADE TREES

oak varieties

CUSTOM LANDSCAPE PACKAGES

All packages include a FREE design with professional installation at one of our nurseries with choice of trees and plants. All packages also come with a custom blend of our own Moon Valley Mulch and proprietary Moon Juice. SAMPLE PACKAGES

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PACKAGE PRICING WITH AD ONLY FOR YELLOW SELECT TREES. RED SELECT TREES, SPECIALTY VARIETIES, FIELD DUG TREES AND JUMBOS CAN BE INCLUDED FOR AN ADDITIONAL FEE PER TREE. CRANE OR ADDITIONAL EQUIPMENT IF NEEDED IS EXTRA. OTHER RESTRICTIONS MAY APPLY. PRICES SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE

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NO INTEREST FINANCING!

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Orders of $499 and up, based on approved credit. See store for details.

Get a beautiful yard in 3 easy steps...

Kraig Harrison: 619-320-6012

1. Start with an expert design at your place or ours.

Murrieta, Temecula, Hemet, Wine Country & nearby

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2. Hand select the exact trees for your project.

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3. Relax while we do the rest!

Timothy Burger: 760-990-1079

PROFESSIONALY PLANTED & GUARANTEED

Naia Armstrong: 760-444-4630

DESIGN ALWAYS FREE AT NURSERY WITH MIN. PURCHASE AT JOBSITE. CALL FOR DETAILS.

• 2 Free Jugs ofMoon Juice • 2 Bags of Moon Soil Conditioner

WITH MOON VALLEY PROFESSIONAL BRAND FERTILIZERS & NUTRIENTS

<EVEN BIGGER... COME SEE 20’-25’ MASSIVE HEDGES!

GET INSTANT PRIVACY

Each Package Includes:

ULTIMATE YARD PACKAGE • 2 GIANT Trees or Palms • 3 BLOCKBUSTER Trees or Palms WAS • 6 HUGE Instant Trees or Palms $ 19,000! • 7 SUPER Trees or Palms • 12 BIG Shrubs of Choice

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PAGE A12 - JULY 21, 2017 - ENCINITAS ADVOCATE

EVENT BRIEFS Thursday Family Fun Night On Thursdays through Aug. 31, from 4:30 to 8 p.m., families are invited to enjoy outfoot fun at the San Dieguito Heritage Museum, 450 Quail Gardens Drive. Activities include live, kid-friendly entertainment from 6 to 7 p.m. For more information, visit http://bit.ly/2vviUD0.

Botanic Garden Insect Festival Aspiring entomologists are invited to San Diego Botanic Garden’s Insect Festival on Saturday and Sunday, July 22 – 23 from 10 am – 4 pm. This one-of-a-kind festival is sure to intrigue bug-devotees of all ages. The event features thousands of fascinating creepy-crawlies, including live lizards, snakes and the famous Madagascar hissing cockroaches. Bug collecting, interactive insect arts and crafts, as well as tasty cooked mealworm larva – in various flavors including mesquite, teriyaki and barbeque – are just some of the engaging activities scheduled at the Festival. Local bug experts will be available for questions and more than 20 educational booths will instruct and entertain children and adults alike. The Insect Festival is presented by the Rancho Santa Fe Garden Club and sponsored by K&M Pest Solutions. This event is free with paid admission or membership. Children under 12 are free. For more information, visit sdbgarden.org/insect.htm

Exhibit tours: Jorge Pardo The Lux Art Institute presents afternoon tours of the artist’s exhibit on Saturdays in July at noon at 1550 S. El Camino Real. Admission is $5. For more information, call 760-436-6611.

Families Make History: Painted Rocks People of all ages are invited to paint rocks, as the Native Americans did, every Saturday and Sunday during the month of July at San Dieguito Heritage Museum, 450 Quail Gardens Drive. For more information about this free event, call 760-632-9711.

San Diego Waterfront Beer Festival For the fourth year in a row, the Maritime Museum of San Diego, home to one of the world’s finest collections of historic vessels, will host its popular annual event touted as “the best beer fest in San Diego”. This year the venue expands and the museum will be closed to the public all

day Saturday, Aug. 5 to host the Beer Festival from 12 p.m.-5 p.m. Tickets include general admission to all ships and submarines. Guests may come aboard and choose from a delicious assortment of foods, and listen to live music. Festival participants will have the opportunity to sample assorted beers from popular local craft breweries. Guests are encouraged to take public transportation or use a ride-sharing service. The trolley stop is two blocks from the museum.

Eggsploitation Mind Matters presents a movie night featuring the documentary “Eggsploitation” on Aug. 4 from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at St. Mark Lutheran Church, 552 S. El Camino Real. The documentary follows the infertility industry and women selling their eggs. A discussion and Q & A will follow the controversial piece. Childcare will be provided at the screening. For more information, call 760-753-4776.

For more information, visit northcoastrep.org or call 858-481-1055.

National Night Out The San Diego County Sheriff’s Department presents National Night Out on Aug. 1 from 1 to 4 p.m. in the Encinitas Target parking lot, 1010 N. El Camino Real. People are invited to meet sheriff’s deputies, see a bomb/arson robot, view a patrol car, learn about crime prevention resources and indulge in free food and drinks provided by Target. For more information, call 760-966-3588.

Monday Night Jazz performance at NC Rep

The North Coast Symphony Orchestra will play music by Mozart, Bozza, Hummel and Dvorak on July 22 at 11 a.m. at the Encinitas Library, 540 Cornish Drive. For more information about this free event, call 760-753-3003 or visit www.northcoastsymphony.com. The orchestra is funded in part by the City of Encinitas and the Mizel Family Foundation.

North Coast Repertory Theatre will hold a Monday Night Jazz performance featuring The Peter Sprague Trio July 24 at 7:30 p.m. The Peter Sprague trio explores the jazz tradition of improvisation but with a slightly different spin — they bring their jazz viewpoint to songs that resonate with the boomers. They start with The Beatles, Stevie Wonder, Bob Marley, Jimi Hendrix, James Taylor, and Cream, and then for balance they play “Georgia” by Hoagy Carmichael or add in a Cole Porter beauty and one of Peter’s original compositions. For tickets, call 858-481-1055 or visit northcoastrep.org

Storytime Salon

West Side Story July 21-30

Dr. Virgina Loh-Hogan, local children’s book authors and pianists will share their love of stories and song on July 22 at 2 p.m. at Encinitas Library, 540 Cornish Drive. For more information about this free event, call 760-753-7376.

The Star Theatre Company will present a fantastic production of this classic Broadway musical West Side Story July 21-30. Shows are 7:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays and on Sundays at 2 p.m. Visit StarTheatreCo.com for tickets and information. 402 N Coast Hwy, Oceanside, CA 92054.

NCSO Musical Melange

La Paloma Theatre Now showing: Paris Can Wait, Beatriz at Dinner and Rocky Horror Picture Show. Tickets: $10 (cash only). 471 Coast Hwy. 101. For show times, please call 760-436-7469.

‘Love Letters’ coming to North Coast Rep Join North Coast Repertory Theatre Artistic Director David Ellenstein and actress Denise Young for an elegant and touching evening Aug. 7 at 7:30 p.m. as they read A.R. Gurney’s Love Letters. A Pulitzer Prize finalist, Love Letters “is that great work whose emotional richness requires no embellishment in order to become a full-bodied theatrical experience. Love Letters will have you laughing, sighing and possibly wiping away a few tears. A very special fundraiser featuring a champagne reception,” according to a North Coast Rep press release.

Introduction to Painting with Sandra Dodd Emerging artists will learn how to paint in this fun and supportive ongoing class on July 25 from 5 to 6 p.m. at Cardiff Library, 2081 Newcastle Avenue. Materials will be provided. For more information about this free class, call 760-753-4027.

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Summer Concerts by the Sea

L

ocal residents enjoyed a “Summer Concert by the Sea” featuring Texas-born country singer/songwriter Steve Ybarra, who performed at Moonlight Beach in Encinitas July 16. Online: encinitasadvocate.com

Steven Ybarra and band

PHOTOS BY MCKENZIE IMAGES

Oliver rocks with Steven

Patsy Alavarez, Pat Steiner

Amber and Anthony Delgado, Guillermo Barron, Andy and Tiffany Arroyo

Steven Ybarra

Kellee and Steven Ybarra, with Eliana and Levi

Encinitas Yacht club members Marcia P., Marilyn Green, John C., Ramona Batliner (front)

Encinitas Yacht club members Jan Lord, Lorri H. Jack Hill, AJ


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ENCINITAS ADVOCATE - JULY 21, 2017 - PAGE A15

Local teenage rock band to perform at Olympian Tony Azevedo’s Aquatic Games The Elements are set to rock the inaugural Aquatic Games Aug. 3 from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. at Cabrillo High School in Long Beach. Created by five-time Olympian Tony Azevedo, the Aquatic Games is an Olympic-style youth water polo tournament that will commence Aug. 2 with opening ceremonies at The Cove in Long Beach and run through Aug. 6 at Cabrillo High School. The Elements will perform their recently debuted original songs, “Lighthouse” and “Mr. Postman,” as well as cover songs from bands like Red Hot Chili Peppers, Fitz and the Tantrums, Cage the Elephant, and Talking Heads. A North County-based San Diego teenage rock band, The Elements will be diving into new waters as they perform outside of their hometown for the first time at “The Aquatic Games.” They are looking forward to this new experience and are grateful to be involved with an event created by Tony Azevedo who is regarded as one of the world’s best water polo players. “It’s so awesome to be playing at such an amazing new event Tony has created for younger players to get a higher level of experience”, said The Elements drummer/guitarist and water polo goalie Dylan Herrera. “ I attended one of Tony’s winter clinics with some of my school teammates. It was fun, and we learned how to improve our playing, learned about nutrition, met Olympians, and Tony told us stories on how he started playing water polo. It was especially cool to work with Olympian goalie Merrill Moses. We are so honored and

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The Elements will perform Aug. 3 at the inaugural Aquatic Games, an Olympic-style youth water polo tournament created by five-time Olympian Tony Azevedo. The event will kick off with opening ceremonies at The Cove in Long Beach on Aug. 2 and run through Aug. 6 at Cabrillo High School. L-R: Dylan Herrera and Julian Boyer. excited to be playing at Tony’s Aquatic Games.” The Elements attend San Dieguito High School Academy in Encinitas where they have performed on campus and are involved in school sports. The Aquatic Games is a perfect fit for the band, as Herrera is a member of the SDA Boys Water Polo Team, and Julian Boyer, vocalist, bassist and keyboardist, will be trying out for the team this fall. Herrera is also a member of the Del Mar Water Polo Club. The Elements have performed at a variety of events in San Diego this past spring, including the Encinitas Spring Street Fair, Leucadia Battle of the Bands, Fiesta del Sol, and La Costa Valley Memorial Day BBQ. They recently kicked off their summer gigs at the San Diego County Fair.

The Aquatic Games will bring together teams from across the globe and is designed to inspire the next generation of great water polo players. In addition to elite top-level play, The Aquatic Games will provide a fun, festive atmosphere complete with guest water polo Olympians, interactive workshops, on-deck entertainment and a medal/trophy awards finale. Unlike any other youth tournament of its kind, the Aquatics Games are positioned to become the most widely recognized and premier aquatic event in the world. For more information on The Elements, visit www.TheElements.band or email BookTheElements@gmail.com. Follow on Instagram at theelements.band and Twitter at @BandTheElements.

Full Moon Poets to hold Summer Poetry Slam July 30 Full Moon Poets presents its next Summer Poetry Slam Sunday, July 30, at the historic La Paloma Theatre in downtown Encinitas (471 S. Coast Highway 101). Admission is free. The slam begins at 6 p.m. Poets wishing to enter should arrive at 5 p.m. for a Poets Call at the theatre front door. Each year, Encinitas-based Full Moon Poets presents two major poetry slams at La Paloma, one in the summer and one in the winter. All are free and open to the public. These are the largest poetry slams in San Diego County, packing the theater with several hundred people. The competition is now in its 17th year and draws poets from throughout the county and beyond.

Poets who have arrived at 5 p.m. will put their names in the famous popcorn bucket and the first 12 names pulled will be the line-up for the night. There are three elimination rounds going from 12 poets to eight and the final three for the last round. Prize money collected from the audience will go to the winners. No props, musical instruments, costumes or recorded music allowed. Poets need three original poems that do not exceed 3 minutes each. For more information and rules go to fullmoonpoets.org The 2017 La Paloma Summer Poetry Slam is sponsored by 101 Artists’ Colony, Restaurant Tea Services of San Diego “The Iced Tea Lady,” The Grauer School and the Billy Stewart Foundation For The Arts.

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PAGE A16 - JULY 21, 2017 - ENCINITAS ADVOCATE

ArtWalk @ Liberty Station returns to San Diego Aug. 12-13

Beachwalk at Madison opens to rave reviews with One Home sold this past weekend

The 12th annual ArtWalk @ Liberty Station is back with a new theme, “Liberate Your Senses,” and will be held Saturday, Aug. 12 and Sunday, Aug. 13 in the Arts District at Liberty Station. The free, weekend-long event offers fine art, food, live entertainment and excitement for all ages. This annual art festival is produced by the same team that brings Mission Federal ArtWalk to San Diego’s Little Italy each year in April. “ArtWalk @ Liberty Station will be celebrating its 12th year and we are delighted to host our fine art festival at one of San Diego’s premier arts and culture venues,” said Sandi Cottrell, ArtWalk San Diego’s director. “Artists of all mediums will be taking over the beautiful rose garden in Ingram Plaza to showcase their artwork to seasoned collectors as well as first-time fine art buyers. We create a festive, beautiful setting, so that attendees can enjoy browsing for art and the interactive art activities surrounded by natural beauty.” Over 200 international, national and local San Diego artists will be featured at ArtWalk @ Liberty Station. Attendees can view and purchase every medium of art including painting, sculpture, glass work, fine jewelry, photography and more. The arts festival will also include live music; KidsWalk, which offers interactive art for families; street food options and a wine and beer pavilion benefitting ArtReach, a nonprofit that has provided free art classes to over 20,000 students who wouldn’t normally have access to art programs in San Diego County. New to this year’s event will be an interactive activity put on by Artist & Craftsman Supply were attendees can create a vibrant mixed media artwork project they can take home. Using watercolor paper from Shizen, Marabu Art Sprays and stencils attendees can create any design layering colors to let the creativity take over. ArtWalk @ Liberty Station will be held at Liberty Station’s Ingram Plaza, 2751 Dewey Road, San Diego, 92106.The fine art festival will run from 10 a.m. until 6 p.m. on Aug. 12 and 10 a.m. until 5 p.m. on Aug. 13 and attendance is free. Visit artwalksandiego.org/libertystation.

With the official unveiling of the latest Beachwalk series of homes this past weekend, interested visitors had the first chance to take a close look at what is the newest addition to the Village of Carlsbad. With only 6 homes being built in this community, one home was snapped up immediately, two others are under serious buyer consideration, leaving only three homes available for purchase. Within walking distance from Beachwalk are relaxing pristine beaches, dining at the area’s most popular restaurants, and a diverse array of shopping and recreational opportunities to discover and explore. A quick sell-out is anticipated due to the overwhelming interest noted since the inception of Beachwalk. These luxurious 3-bedroom/3-bath condominium homes embody all the features that top every buyer’s wish list. Homebuyers are not only purchasing a home, but a fulfilling lifestyle at Beachwalk at Madison. The condominium homes provide spacious and open floorplans with a beautifully appointed gourmet kitchen, master suite retreat with walk-in closet, private decks and private 2-car garage. Gourmet kitchens are a work of art with Shaker and European-style

Beachwalk at Madison

COURTESY

cabinetry, quartz countertops with 6” backsplash, dual compartment sink, GE stainless steel appliances including a 5-burner range, built-in microwave ventilation hood and Energy Star multi-cycle dishwasher. Master suite features a large walk-in closet, dual bath vanities, quartz countertops with 4” backsplash, handset ceramic tile shower surround and polished-edge mirrors. The impressive interiors at Beachwalk at Madison offer contemporary custom style with details adding sophisticated flair and urban chic throughout: ceramic tile flooring, 2-panel doors with brushed nickel hardware, Kohler fixtures in gleaming chrome, and thicker baseboards that stylishly frame the rooms. Like to entertain? The private decks and spacious great room will perfectly accommodate every special gathering.

Plan A features 1,607 square feet of living space with a private deck off the living room, expansive great room, gourmet kitchen. Plan B is 1,594 square feet with gourmet kitchen and pantry, large deck off master suite and dual walk-in closets. Carlsbad is known for its captivating coastal beaches of scenic and diverse terrain, numerous recreational activities, nightlife and dining hot spots and popular shopping destinations. Its convenient, central location makes it a highly commutable area in which to live. Vesta Pacific has perfectly captured the spirit of beach city living at a location where everyone wants to be. Beachwalk at Madison is open Saturday and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and by appointment only. Discover what the premier Beachwalk at Madison coastal living experience is all about and what it can mean for you. These new homes are anticipated to start from the $800,000’s. For more information, visit beachwalklife.com/madison or call 619-838-0660. Beachwalk at Madison is located at 2660 Madison Street Carlsbad, Ca. 92008.

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Summer Legs and Beyond: Exercising with Varicose Veins It’s summer, there are record temperatures, and you want to be in shape for all those warm-weather clothes. But if you also suffer from varicose veins, not all exercises will be beneficial to fitness and your venous health. The problem with varicose veins When you see varicose veins, the big purplish ropes under the skin, that is blood buildup in veins due to weak venous valves. Varicose veins usually appear in the legs because the veins have to work harder to pump the blood from the feet back up to the heart. The heart, then, has to work harder to pump that blood through the weaker veins.

Sometimes, high blood pressure can develop or be exacerbated by varicose veins. Why not all workouts are ideal for people with varicose veins The general rule of thumb is that exercise is a good way to improve venous health. So while varicose veins are mostly the result of genetics, keeping up proper blood flow will help the appearance of the varicose veins and improve your overall vascular health.The key is to use exercise to improve circulation, especially throughout the legs. There is even a chance that moderate exercise may reduce the chances of forming new varicose veins or worsening the already weakened veins.The veins in the calf muscle are especially useful in pumping blood back into the heart, so exercises that strengthen the calf muscles should be a part of your workout plan. Riding a bike, especially a stationary bike, is particularly effective. Walk, don’t run Walking stimulates circulation and burns plenty of calories, and the same applies for low-impact jogging. However, a high-impact

run or workout can actually increase the swelling of the veins and add stress to your joints. If you are a runner, consider moving your workout to a soft surface and wearing compression stockings to stimulate blood flow. That gut feeling Blood flowing back up the leg veins to the heart passes through the vena cava in the abdomen. Increasing the abdominal pressure by such activities as heavy lifting or straining impedes blood from traveling back to the heart. That’s when venous blood pools in the leg veins, causing the unsightly—and sometimes harmful—spider and varicose veins. So weightlifting and lots of sit-ups can do more harm than good for varicose vein sufferers. However, if weightlifting is an important part of your workout regimen, consider less weight with more reps, and avoid putting too much strain on your abdomen. The same is true for strenuous yoga; some poses can put extra pressure on the vena cava, impeding rather than improving

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

circulation. Low-impact yoga that involves smooth transitions and lots of stretching is a better plan. Remember, you should stop immediately any exercise that causes leg pain or even discomfort. Exercises is about doing good, not harm, and there can be too much of a good thing, especially when your vascular health has been compromised by varicose veins. There is no prevention for varicose veins, and no failproof cure. But a healthy, lowimpact, cardiovascular-boosting routine is a great ally for healthy legs. And while varicose veins are common enough and may not always be life-threatening, a good solution to accompany exercise is removing those varicose veins with sclerotherapy, which can be done in just a short office visit. If working out has given you symptomatic vein disease, and if you’re tired of your varicose veins and are ready for treatment or just want some more information on sclerotherapy, contact us at 760-944-9263 or visit our website.


ANSWERS 7/13/2017

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ENCINITAS ADVOCATE - JULY 21, 2017 - PAGE A17

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FROM SUIT, A1 judge as to when." Encinitas Mayor Catherine Blakespear said that the city is trying to get the job done. "We know there's urgency," she wrote in a text. "We're working on it." Encinitas is the only city in the county that lacks a current, state-certified Housing Element, a state-required document that details how each city proposes to accommodate its future housing needs, particularly those of low-income people. Over the years, the city has drafted several replacement options for its original, outdated housing plan, but all of them faced opposition and were later dropped. The latest proposal — the the Measure T "At Home in Encinitas" plan that voters turned down in November —- took two years to produce and the city is now attempting to tweak it to make it more palatable to voters. It calls for allowing additional housing on various sites along busy roadways in all five of the city's communities. In order to meet state housing targets, the plan proposes easing the city's building height restrictions and allowing 20 to 30 dwelling units per acre on the various sites. Opponents have argued that the plan will allow the construction of huge, oversized structures, particularly in the city's downtown corridor, and those buildings will destroy the city's small-town charm. They've been participating in a series of city-sponsored meetings aimed at revising the housing document, with the next set for 5 p.m. Aug. 10 in City Hall's Poinsettia Room. Blakespear said the August meeting will go forward as planned, despite the new lawsuit.

"We're already proceeding as fast as possible, so the new lawsuit doesn't have an effect on our timeline," she said. Bruce Ehlers, one of the leaders in the No on T campaign, said that one of the guarantees they want to get out of this revise process is that the upzoning of the properties will actually result in a substantial increase in housing for low-income people. Measure T increased housing density on various properties, but there was no guarantee that the extra housing would go to low-income people, he said. "We want to get this done, but we want to get it done right," he said, adding that it's untrue that opponents don't want any extra housing density in town. That's not the way the San Diego Tenants United —- a group that's been active in the rent-control movement in San Diego —- sees the situation. One of the group's organizers, Rafael Bautista, said that the group believes Encinitas is trying to get out of accommodating its low-income housing needs and that's why it hasn't met its state housing plan requirements for years. The tenants' group filed suit against Encinitas in April over its lack of a certified housing plan, saying the city was failing to meet the needs of low-income people. A preliminary hearing has been scheduled for late August and the group plans to hold a rally in San Diego on the Encinitas issue at that time, Bautista said. Bautista said he wasn't aware that the BIA had filed its lawsuit. Winckel said the BIA hopes the two cases will eventually be consolidated by the courts. – Barbara Henry is a freelance reporter for The San Diego Union-Tribune in Encinitas.

FROM ENERGY, A2 is practical for the participating cities, Najera said. SDG&E would continue to provide and maintain the transmission lines that carry the power to the customers. Carlsbad’s share of the study would be about $32,000 if Oceanside participates, or up to $60,000 if only the three cities

FROM HUMANE, A1 grateful when this happens because the food goes a long way." Van Zante said he is happy the Humane Society can offer this food to the rescues, which mainly rely on donations. This food means more

COURTESY

The 11th Annual Holes for Heroes Golf Tournament and Military Appreciation event on will be held Friday, Sept. 15 at the Lomas Santa Fe Country Club in Solana Beach.

Register now for Holes for Heroes Golf Tournament The San Diego Downtown Breakfast Rotary Foundation will host its 11th Annual Holes for Heroes Golf Tournament and Military Appreciation event on Friday, Sept. 15 starting at 10:30 a.m. at the Lomas Santa Fe Country Club: 1505 Lomas Santa Fe, Solana Beach, 92075. Holes for Heroes has raised over $1 million since 2006 and hopes to continue the mission of honoring, celebrating and supporting the men and women of the military. The fundraising goal of $150,000 supports San Diego military charities. Th reception/dinner runs from 4-7 p.m. “Rotary has a long tradition of supporting the local San Diego military community. Holes for Heroes is 100 percent volunteer based, which allows for all proceeds to benefit local military charities,” said Larry Potter, president of San Diego Downtown Breakfast Rotary. “The tournament is a great opportunity to support an important cause, enjoy an excellent golf course and spend a day honoring the men and women of the military who made the

commitment of Service Above Self.” The tournament and military appreciation event provides a unique opportunity to spend a day on the links and dining with the troops. Veterans, friends and their family members and event attendees enjoy a fun, relaxing day of golf and use of the Country Club grounds, including the pool, gym, tennis and spa facilities. This fantastic day concludes with the Holes for Heroes Recognition Dinner with over 200 in attendance honoring World War II and Vietnam former POWs. Special honorees for this year are WWII veterans and families of those lost. All monies raised from the event directly benefit local charities including: Freedom Dogs, Honor Flight, Pegasus Rising and One More Wave Surf Corporation, Veterans Village, Physicians Advocates for Veterans, USO and other military community service organizations. Visit www.sdrotary.org to register or contact Donald Willis at 480-323-6217 or via dwillis@holesforheroes.org for sponsorship information.

support the effort. Solana Beach took a different route when it voted in May to enter the first phase of a program that would lead to a CCA partnership with two private companies — The Energy Authority (TEA) and Calpine Energy Solutions. At least eight CCAs are fully operational in the state, and several more are in the process of forming.

The city of San Diego released a report recently comparing rates for a proposed CCA compared with what SDG&E currently offers. Los Angeles County voted earlier this year to form a CCA that could include half a million residents and 200,000 businesses in unincorporated areas. – Phil Diehl is a reporter for The San Diego Union-Tribune.

money for medical treatment, foster care, vaccinations, spaying, neutering and other operational costs, he noted. He said one of his favorite memories was two female rescuers driving away in vans full of dog food. "You know what this means?" Van

Zante recalled one of the ladies saying to the other. "This means we don't have to choose which dogs get to eat tonight. All of them do." For more information about the Rancho Coastal Humane Society and ways to donate, visit rchumanesociety.org.


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FROM UNIVERSITY PIONEERS, A3 bankrupt. It has a very underserved population and we, at CSU, have a responsibility, especially for the underserved areas, to provide greater access to education. Marvalene was one of the first people to see that importance and she was one of the few presidents who worked closely with legislators at the state and federal level. Hughes: I was told that it was going to be the most conservative part of the state. They also told me that the people in the Central Valley would not support the university and that there was not enough money in the area. Well, I did my research and guess what, we had more millionaires in the Valley than almost anywhere else. My predecessors did not understand how to do their research and how to understand the wealth of the community. They thought they were in the poorest area of California when, in fact, they were in one of the richest. Those people just had to be cultivated. Q: As the leaders of large academic institutions, do you feel that the lessons remain the same, or is the political and cultural environment different now? Hughes: We really have some challenges politically. In the present federal administration, there’s a lot of fear about the status of equity and whether or not we are regressing or progressing. I think many forward-thinking universities are concerned that we may be regressing because politically we can’t move forward, either nationally or internationally, as we did when we

FROM CLASSROOMS, A1 forward we come up with better solutions.” “Regardless of who gets put in this room, I want it to be the best room it can be,” Hergesheimer said. “If it’s space we’re going to be using, I want it to be the best it can be.” Tensions ran high among parents in the audience, who chanted “vote no” and shouted out their frustrations with the board, “doors and windows don’t increase space!” Muir said she thought an emergency meeting should have been called to make sure the issue was addressed and continued to advocate for a special board meeting the following week, a request echoed by Salazar and several community members via emails to the board. “I’m afraid if we vote yes, nothing will be done for 20 years,” Muir said. “I’ve seen portables last forever on school campuses.” The two 1,400-square-foot portables have a total of three small windows — only one window in the students’ instructional space as the other two are in the conference room and teachers’ offices. There are no windows in the bathrooms, no windows in the kitchenette and no windows in the sensory room. The four-year program currently has three teachers, 20 students and 10 aides. Next year there could be as many as 47 students — along with the needed support staff there could be approximately 62 adults in the two portables with only two bathrooms. Parent Lucile Lynch said after a recent tour of the new Earl Warren campus last week, many parents of ATP students left in tears after seeing the “expansive” middle school classrooms with high ceilings, multiple white boards and LED light “chandeliers” compared to the small portables with florescent lighting, one white board and little natural light. One parent said it smelled badly in the portables and another said it was unbearably hot inside.

had the momentum going. Junn: When I was announced as president last year, I did worry. Asians make up the largest minority of university teachers, but the number that make it into administration is vanishingly small. There are fewer than 10 female Asian presidents at a four-year college in all of the United States. But I’m happy to say that the people at Stanislaus have been very genuine and sincere. Everyone has been so warm and welcoming. Hughes: It was easier for me to diversify that campus than any other campus for some reason. I didn’t go in with any expectations. And I was in an interracial marriage, but the community decided that we were the ideal couple. They really embraced us. Still, I had to really, really struggle just to get the student body up 25 percent Latina, which was more representative of the community. Junn: We’ve doubled it, now it’s 50 percent. Q; You must have taken a tremendous amount of pride in being able to push things forward, Dr. Hughes, and yet, despite those successes, the disparities in race and gender are still… Hughes: Entrenched. Deeply entrenched. The American political system grinds slowly, in geologic time, and does not transform itself unless some inward force is really pushing. I think that’s probably why I fell in love with the women’s studies program at San Diego State. They surrounded themselves with a multidisciplinary academic approach and grounded that in research and literature. But we have not experienced that kind of multiplicity and growth in the Central

Valley. Junn: Well let me ask you, Marvalene, when you became president were there challenges that you faced as an African American woman? Hughes: Yes, but I was prepared. I learned a lot from San Diego State. I learned a lot from the University of Minnesota. I’m almost more worried about how things are now. There was a time when there was a vibrancy in political movement and I don’t see that anymore. That really concerns me. That means that we, as university presidents, must get involved. If we treat ourselves as a silo in the United States, where everyone ought to emulate us, then we have lost the future. Because the future is in internationalism, and the future is in being able to compete here and make your identity known as a CSU leader. Q: Can you talk yet about the ceremony in honor of Dr. Hughes? Junn: We haven’t settled on a date yet, but it’ll be later this year. We’re going to have 600 people help us commemorate naming it (the reflecting pond) in Marvalene’s honor. There are a lot of wonderful memories people have about Marvalene and they haven’t seen her in a while so they’ll be very happy to see her. In my 31 years in the CSU system, I have visited every campus except for Humboldt and in my mind Stanislaus has always been the most beautiful in terms of the exterior and landscaping. We have six water features and lakes, more than 2,800 trees and 95 different species of wildlife. That’s all because of her.

“I feel the district is not hearing or sharing our message right. It’s not about windows, it’s not about portables, it’s about equality plain and simple. Equality in design, equality in programming, equality in your investment,” said parent Joanne Stress. “Someone made a choice not to provide equal housing…This is the most environmentally-sensitive population and yet they were given the least design consideration of anyone on campus.” Whether the board added windows or not, Lynch said there is still the issue of whether or not there’s enough capacity for the students to even be in them. “Our population was put in portables, we were not part of Prop AA master planning or funding,” Lynch said of special education in general. “We don’t have the space to teach all of these kids at the same time in this facility... and accommodate future needs.” Salazar said as a board they did not pick to put the ATP facilities on the middle school campus. “These are not acceptable buildings at all. Whoever picked these really let you all down and did a very, very poor job. If we had to go portable, which I don’t know why we had to, there are many high quality portable classrooms,” Salazar said. “This is something you’d see at a construction site.” Salazar suggested options such as moving ATP into the auditorium or suggesting an Earl Warren class goes into the portables and ATP gets a brand new classroom on campus. “If this board votes no then we will finally send a real message to the administrators here and say stop being administrators and bureaucrats and fix it now,” Salazar said. “It is a horrible message to say we approve this. “These are the people we work for, we don’t work for the administrators. We’re working for these children. And it just annoys me so much that we have to go along to get along. Let’s make a stand right now that we support special education,” Salazar said. Herman said she understood the parents’

frustrations and said the district has been working on many of the issues that have been brought before the board — the portables were part of the complaints in a petition submitted by special education parents to the board in June that alleged unequal treatment and facilities. Sitting in for Superintendent Eric Dill, who had fallen ill before the meeting, Assistant Superintendent Michael Grove said they have the challenge of working on a very tight timeline to get the facility ready before school begins in August. Grove said the district recognizes that there needs to be ongoing conversations, both about the short-term capacity needs for ATP and the best options for long-term solutions. Grove said they are listening to the feedback and determining what they can do in the immediate term given that the facility has to open in a month. “I think all of us believe that our best option likely is to try and work with Mira Costa to try and get the program hosted there, but that is not going to happen in the next month,” Grove said. “We need to engage our families, have discussions around what are the short-term needs and what can we do now and what are the long-term needs and how do we get there.” Meredith Wadley, the new director of school and student services, said she has found an available classroom in a satellite Mira Costa Community College facility that ATP might be able to utilize. She said she is committed to finding a solution and engaging parents — she was expected to set up a site visit at the Mira Costa facility in the coming week to see if it might be suitable for the program. In her efforts to find a positive solution, Lynch contacted Mira Costa on her own and has a visitation scheduled on July 24. The board is holding a special education workshop prior to next month’s board meeting.


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ENCINITAS ADVOCATE - JULY 21, 2017 - PAGE A19

FROM BRIEFS, A12 desperados, and a few hungry old buzzards on July 28 and 29 at 7 p.m. at Ocean Knoll School, 910 Melba Road. The cost is $4. For more information, call 760-672-3581.

Timken Museum Collector’s Dinner A Collector’s Dinner at the Timken Museum of Art will be held Saturday, July 29, 6:30 p.m. The event will feature “Private Devotions: Italian paintings and sculptures highlight magnificent Italian artworks from the 13th through the 17th century.” A semi-formal evening with an elegant summer white dress code starts with a private gallery viewing of the exhibition by Director of Curatorial Affairs Derrick Cartwright, followed by dinner catered by Pamplemousse and finishing with dessert and a salon-style conversation with private collector Robert Hoehn and Cartwright. Timken Museum of Art is located at 1500 El Prado, Balboa Park, San Diego, CA, 92101 Register at timkenmuseum.org or rsvp@timkenmuseum.org. The museum is located at Star of India Wharf in downtown San Diego at 1492 North Harbor Drive, San Diego, 92101-3309. sdmaritime.org.

Carousel Day: July 25 National Carousel Day at the historic Balboa Park Carousel, located next to the San Diego Zoo in Balboa Park, will be celebrated 10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Tuesday, July 25 with carousel rides, circus performers, face painting, music and more. Presented by Friends of Balboa Park. Free. friendsofbalboapark.org

Fashion Films screened July 20-22 at UCSD La Jolla International Fashion Film Festival, the world’s largest gathering of fashion filmmakers, is July 20-22 in La Jolla. While the Festival is invitation-only, there is a free screening of fashion films for the public, 3-5 p.m. Saturday, July 22 and the public is invited to view the red carpet

2-7:30 p.m. July 22 at Mandeville Auditorium on the UCSD campus, 9500 Gilman Drive. (858) 534-2230. ljfff.com

Bayside Summer Nights concerts •Australian rock duo Air Supply, known for hits such as “All Out of Love” and “Lost in Love,” take the stage as part of the San Diego Symphony’s Bayside Summer Nights, 7:30 p.m. July 14-15 at the Embarcadero Marina Park South, 200 Marina Park Way. Tickets from $18. (619) 235-0804. sandiegosymphony.org •The one and only Tony Bennett performs 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 15 as part of San Diego Symphony’s Bayside Summer Nights concert series. Embarcadero Marina Park South, 200 Marina Park Way, downtown San Diego. Tickets from $18. (619) 235-0804. sandiegosymphony.org

‘Guys and Dolls’ at The Old Globe “Guys and Dolls,” the quintessential Broadway musical, is on stage with matinee and evening shows at The Old Globe in Balboa Park through Aug. 13. It stars Terence Archie as Sky Masterson and J. Bernard Calloway as Nathan Detroit (roles made famous in film by Marlon Brando and Frank Sinatra). Tickets: $40. (619) 234-5623. theoldglobe.org

‘A Midsummer Night’s Dream’ There’s mischief in the woods! The Theatre School @ North Coast Repertory Theatre presents William Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Magical fairies with love juice complicate two teen couples’ relationships in this “First Folio” Shakespearean comedy. Benjamin Cole directs his theatre school students in this entertaining summer performance, from Aug. 2 - 6. Performances are free, outdoors at La Colonia Community Center & Park, Aug. 2 - 6 at 6 p.m., 715 Valley Ave. Solana Beach, 92075. For more information, call 858-481-1055, visit northcoastreptheatreschool.org

Encinitas Homes Sold July 1 - 17 Address / Bed / Bath/ Selling price

564 Beach St. / 4 / 2 1/2 / $895,000 1814 Avenida Mimosa / 3 / 2 / $810,000 408 Glen Arbor Dr. / 2 / 2 1/2 / $665,000 1810 S El Camino Real 203 / 1 / 1 / $335,000 Source: RealQuest

OPEN HOUSES CARLSBAD

$1,489,000-$1,549,000 4BD / 4.5BA

6845 Tanzanite Drive Sat & Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Brent Ringoot, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices CA Properties 858-243-3673

$649,000 2BD / 2.5BA $659,000 3BD / 2.5BA $865,000 3BD / 2.5BA $1,150,000 4BD / 2.5BA $1,349,000 4BD / 3BA $1,429,000 4BD / 3.5BA $1,579,000 5BD / 4.5BA $1,799,000 4BD / 4.5BA $1,949,725 5BD / 5.5BA $6,995,000 5BD / 6.5BA

10667 Golden Willow Trail, Unit 153 Sam Fakih, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices 7525 Flower Meadow Drive Dan Conway, Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty 6725 Lopez Glen Way Dan Conway, Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty 13293 Larkfield Court Dan Conway, Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty 5238 Southhampton Cove Charles & Farryl Moore, Coldwell Banker 5034 McGill Way Charles & Farryl Moore, Coldwell Banker 5280 White Emerald Drive Charles & Farryl Moore, Coldwell Banker 5346 Foxhound Way Charles & Farryl Moore, Coldwell Banker 6472 Meadowbrush Circle Dan Conway, Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty 4920 Rancho Del Mar Trail Becky Campbell, Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty

$1,295,000 3BD / 2.5BA $1,379,000 3BD / 2.5BA $2,295,000 4BD / 4BA $2,399,000 3BD / 3BA $2,499,000 3BD / 3BA $3,175,000 3BD / 3BA $3,595,000 3BD / 3.5BA $3,695,000 3BD / 3.5BA $3,950,000 3BD / 4BA $3,950,000 3BD / 4BA $4,499,000 4BD / 5BA $5,995,000 4BD / 6BA $7,965,000 4BD / 4.5BA

1210 Ladera Linda Sat & Sun 12 p.m.-3 p.m. Geof Belden, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices 858-752-1000 15011 Tierra Alta Sat & Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Teri Kohn, Berkshire Hathaway/Host: Jessica Riley 858-518-5787 2123 Demayo Road Sun 1 p.m.-3 p.m. Wendy Escobar-Menghini, California Custom Realty 858-692-6124 239 22nd Street Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Peggy Foos, Berkshire Hathaway Home Services 858-354-7503 325 13th Street Sat & Sun 1 p.m.-5 p.m. Stan McNiel, Windermere Homes & Estates 760-224-2292 318 La Amatista Sat & Sun1 p.m.-4 p.m. Holly Hermanson, Willis Allen Real Estate 619-417-8974 922 Stratford Court Sat 1 p.m.-3 p.m. Nicole Edgington, Willis Allen Real Estate 925-413-6564 920 Stratford Court Sat 1 p.m.-3 p.m. Nicole Edgington, Willis Allen Real Estate 925-413-6564 555 Zuni Drive Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Maxine & Marti Gellens, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices 858-551-6630 555 Zuni Drive Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Kerry Shine, Berkshire Hathaway 858-382-5496 1216 Luneta Drive Sun 12 p.m.-3 p.m., Tues 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Anna M. Larsson, Strategic Legacy Realty, Inc. 858-888-5673 963 Klish Way Sun 2 p.m.-5 p.m. Monica Sylvester, Willis Allen Real Estate 858-449-1812 2998 Sandy Lane Sat 12 p.m.-4 p.m. Toni Cieri, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 858-229-4911

$1,795,000 4BD / 4.5BA

748 Rancho Santa Fe Rd – Olivenhain Christie Horn, Berkshire Hathaway/Host: Nicholas Wilkinson

$1,425,000 3BD / 2.5BA $1,595,000 4BD / 4BA $1,865,000 5BD / 5.5BA $1,995,000-$2,095,000 5BD / 3BA $2,645,000-$2,745,000 5BD / 4.5BA $2,695,000-$2,850,000 4BD / 4.5BA $3,380,000 4BD / 5BA $7,300,000 5BD / 6.5BA

8443 Run of the Knolls – Santaluz Gloria Shepard & Kathy Lysaught, Coldwell Banker RSF 7957 Purple Sage – Santaluz Eileen Anderson, Willis Allen Real Estate 7951 Nathaniel Court – The Crosby Colleen Roth, Coldwell Banker 4611 El Mirlo Joanne Fishman, Coldwell Banker 14910 Encendido – Santaluz Gloria Shepard & Kathy Lysaught , Coldwell Banker 7560 Montien – Santaluz Danielle Short, Coldwell Banker 14830 Encendido – Santaluz Eileen Anderson, Willis Allen Real Estate 17501 Via de Fortuna Tom DiNoto, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage

$719,000 2BD / 2.5BA

530 Via de la Valle, Unit F Sat & Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Chris Lin, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices/Host: Mickey McBratney 858-605-8355

CARMEL VALLEY

DEL MAR

ENCINITAS

RANCHO SANTA FE

SOLANA BEACH

Sat 12 p.m.-3 p.m. 858-255-1010 Sat & Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 858-243-5278 Sat & Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 858-243-5278 Sat & Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 858-243-5278 Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 858-395-7525 Sat & Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 858-395-7525 Sat 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 858-395-7525 Sat & Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 858-395-7525 Sat & Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 858-243-5278 Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 858-449-2027

Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 858-775-9817 Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 619-417-5564 Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 858-245-9851 Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 858-357-6567 Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 858-945-8333 Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 619-417-5564 Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 619-708-1500 Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 858-245-9851 Fri, Sat & Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 858-888-3579

For the most up-to-date list of open houses, mapped locations, and premium listings with photos, visit rsfreview.com/open-houses-list/

Contact April Gingras | april@rsfreview.com | 858-876-8863


PAGE A20 - JULY 21, 2017 - ENCINITAS ADVOCATE

Nestled in the Santaluz area next to Rancho Santa Fe

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