Encinitas advocate 11 18 16

Page 1

Volume 3, Issue 15

Community

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Council tackles Leo Mullen, Pacific View

Encinitas author turns sturggles into stories, A6

Lifestyle

November 18, 2016

CHRIS SAUR

The Encinitas City Council agreed Nov. 16 to a draft of a compliance agreement that would allow the Encinitas Express soccer club to put up temporary lights at Leo Mullen Sports Park.

BY CHRIS SAUR At its Nov. 16 meeting, the Encinitas City Council took steps toward resolution in a pair of situations that have been the subject of citywide debate in recent months. First, the Council agreed to a draft of a compliance agreement that would allow the Encinitas Express soccer club to put up temporary lights at Leo Mullen Sports Park. Next, the City Council approved three separate actions, which are all related to possible future consideration of a lease for the Encinitas Arts, Culture and Ecology Alliance (EACEA) at the Pacific View School site. The three actions included extending the current right-of-entry agreement until July of 2018; authorizing the Mayor to execute an exclusive negotiating agreement

with the EACEA; and authorizing the EACEA to proceed with seeking entitlements on city property. Together, the three actions allow the EACEA and the city to take the next steps in the long process of opening an arts center at the site. The agreement for the lights at Leo Mullen came after the Council told the soccer club earlier this year that it had to remove the gas-powered portable lights that it had been using in the park for 13 years. The temporary lights were a casualty from when the club and the surrounding homeowners from the adjacent Cambria at Encinitas Ranch neighborhood sparred over putting up permanent lights at Leo Mullen. It SEE COUNCIL, A20

Encinitas robbery suspect arraigned Parkin was shot six times after leading deputies on chase

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CITY NEWS SERVICE A robbery suspect who was shot a half-dozen times by a deputy after allegedly pulling a gun on the lawman at the end of a road chase through Encinitas, was scheduled to be arraigned Nov. 16 at the Vista Courthouse. Robert Thomas Parkin, 53, suffered bullet wounds to his legs and buttocks along with a graze injury to his scalp in the shooting near San Elijo Lagoon County Park early in the morning on Nov. 14, according to sheriff’s officials. The events that led to the gunfire began about 5:30 a.m., when deputies responding to a reported armed holdup at El Pueblo restaurant on Birmingham Drive spotted Parkin, who matched the description of the bandit, riding a blue motorcycle in the area of Santa Fe Drive and El

Camino Real, about a mile from the eatery. Parkin refused to yield and led a short pursuit before losing control of his two-wheeler and crashing it in the 1700 block of El Camino Real in Cardiff, Lt. Kenneth Nelson said. The suspect then got up and ran off. Deputy Noah Zarnow gave chase on foot and caught up with Parkin near the entrance to the Pacific Pines apartment complex. At that point, the suspect allegedly drew a loaded silver .45-caliber pistol from his waistband and began to point it at Deputy Zarrow, who responded by firing several rounds from his department-issued handgun, Nelson said. Parkin fell to the ground and dropped his weapon, but began reaching for it once more, the lieutenant alleged. The patrolman then fired on him again. Zarnow, who is assigned to the North Coastal Sheriff's Station and has been SEE SUSPECT, A20

STRANGE

COURTESY

Director Brad Golden, left front, poses with the LCC student cast of “The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee” last spring.

Teacher brings excitement back to La Costa Canyon theatre Golden’s background allows him to connect with students BY CHRIS SAUR s La Costa Canyon High School’s production of “The Crucible” finishes a successful two-week run with its final show Nov. 18 at 7 p.m., it’s clear the program is on the right track. That recent success is due in large part to the leadership of acting teacher Brad Golden, who also serves as director for shows like “The Crucible,” which are put on by the school’s drama club, LCC Thespians. Though Golden is just in his second year guiding LCC drama, his previous experience as an actor and in film production in Hollywood, as well as a longtime babysitter to

A

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pay the bills during that time, makes him the perfect person for the position. “(This job) is a marriage of my passion for acting and theatre, and my experience working with young people. I’m so lucky and I love my job,” the 36-year-old Torrey Pines graduate told The Encinitas Advocate. While he was pursuing acting and screenwriting in L.A. — Golden graduated from UCLA’s Theatre, Film and Television school in 2002 and then was heavy on the audition circuit with a little success, including a line in the 2004 movie “The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement” — he also worked with SEE THEATRE, A21

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PAGE A2 - NOVEMBER 18, 2016 - ENCINITAS ADVOCATE

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Gaspar chips away at Roberts’ lead in County Supervisor Race BY CHRIS SAUR As more votes get counted, Encinitas Mayor Kristen Gaspar is cutting into incumbent Dave Roberts’ lead in the race for San Diego County Supervisor. Initial counts on Nov. 9 had Roberts ahead by around 2,200 votes with 620,000 mail and provisional ballots left to be counted by the San Diego Registrar of Voters. However, an update on Nov. 15 showed Roberts with 50.53 percent of the vote and Gaspar closing in with 49.47. With just under 400,000 ballots still needing to be counted, Roberts leads Gaspar by 1,735 votes. At one point, Roberts lead with 50.9 percent. The standings in races sometimes fluctuate as votes are counted and in some cases the leader changes. In 2012, Scott Peters was a port commissioner trying to unseat 12-year-incumbent Rep. Brian Bilbray. Early returns put Bilbray in the lead with 51.6 percent, but by the time votes were counted, the standing had flipped and Peters won the

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County Supervisor candidate Kristin Gaspar at Golden Hall on Nov. 9. seat with 51.2 percent of the vote. While it’s certainly possible for final results to differ from early returns, Gaspar’s campaign manager Jason Roe has said that Democrats tend to prevail 75 percent of the time in subsequent vote counts. — San Diego Union-Tribune writer Joshua Stewart contributed to this report

Leucadia Main Street to host Small Business Saturday Event The Leucadia 101 Main Street, along with more than 35 locally-owned businesses along Leucadia’s North Coast Hwy 101 corridor, will be hosting Small Business Saturday all day on Nov. 26. “These business owners are your neighbors, friends and they are definitely some of the hardest working people you can find,” Nick Winfrey, president of the Leucadia 101 Main Street Association said in a news release. “Take some time to get to know your local business owners and you are sure to uncover a unique story about your community and learn a little about local history.” The Leucadia 101 Main Street will be kicking off this

day of events with a morning Highway 101 cleanup meeting at 9 a.m. at Leucadia Floral & Plant, 1114 N. Coast Hwy 101. Then throughout the day, shoppers can expect a festive atmosphere with live music, major in-store promotions and gifts in exchange for purchases. The first 150 customers to make a $50 purchase at a participating business will receive a free limited edition “Leucadia” print by artist Daniella Manini. In addition, Leucadia Main Street and scavenger hunt sponsors will be hosting 13 mini scavenger hunts for $100 gift cards totaling over $1,300 in prizes hidden throughout Leucadia that day. Be sure to

follow @leucadia101mainstreet on Instagram as all clues will be given through that feed, starting early on Nov. 26. The goal of Small Business Saturday in Leucadia is to encourage residents to shop where they live. One study from Civic Economics found that for every dollar spent in a small business, 48 cents recirculate into the community as compared to only 14 cents spent at a chain retailer. Enticing new customers to visit established and newly-opened local businesses is central to the campaign’s goals. For full details on participating business offers, visit leucadia101.com — Submitted press release

Another fire on Balour Drive, this time at Saint Andrews Church At around 5 a.m. on the morning of Nov. 12, the Encinitas Fire Department and North Coastal Sheriff’s Deputies responded to a structure fire inside the preschool at the rear of Saint Andrews Church at 890 Balour Drive in Encinitas. The fire was contained to the preschool and was quickly put out by the fire department with only minor damage done. No other structures were damaged. According to deputies, a witness reported seeing a male subject flee from the church at the time of the incident. A perimeter was established by the deputies and a Sheriff’s K9 Unit, who tried to track the suspect down but no suspects were located. The Sheriff’s Bomb Arson Detectives responded to conduct their investigation. All available

resources are being utilized and the investigation is ongoing, a sheriff’s department spokesman said. The fire was the third in that area since Oct. 22. According to sources, a fire was reported at Saint Andrews that day at 5 a.m., though no further information was immediately available. Then on the morning of Oct. 29, a two-alarm fire gutted Oak Crest Middle School, which is located at 675 Balfour. Deputies investigating the cases have not disclosed whether any of the fires are related. Anyone with information on the fires should call Crime Stoppers at 888-580-8477. They can remain anonymous and will be eligible for up to a $1,000 reward for information leading to a felony arrest.


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PAGE A4 - NOVEMBER 18, 2016 - ENCINITAS ADVOCATE

Students at Encinitas school walk out in Trump protest BY DEBORAH SULLIVAN BRENNAN Too young to vote but old enough to voice opinions, several hundred students at San Dieguito High School Academy walked out of class Nov. 10 to protest the election of Donald Trump to the U.S. presidency. “The moment I realized that Trump was the person we chose to elect, I cried for an hour,” said Cordelia Degher, 16, one of the organizers of the walkout. “I was disappointed that our country would vote for someone like that.” Students at the Encinitas campus poured out of classes at 1 p.m. and sat down together at an amphitheater, facing about two dozen counter-protesters holding Trump signs or American flags. Degher had texted invitations to friends, urging them to protest Trump’s “racism, sexism and intolerance” by leaving their third period classes to assemble on campus. “Guys don’t know what it feels like for us to hear the things he’s said about women,” said Colleen Coveney, 16. Male classmates said they do understand that distress. “I know you are angry, and I know you’re hurting,” senior Austin Dilley told the anti-Trump

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Students walked out of class on Nov. 10 to peacefully protest the outcome of the presidential election, gathering at an amphitheater at San Dieguito Academy. Other students who support Trump hold an American flag. crowd. “This is not the future we want for our country or our state or our school. We need to reject their hate and meet it with compassion.” Others said they opposed Trump but questioned the protest, telling classmates that unwelcome election results are the price of democracy.

“I’m a Democrat,” said Matt Benowitz, 17. “But we have a system in place that allows us to choose our president. I’m holding that American flag not because I’m a Trump supporter but because I’m an American. You cannot silence those who oppose you.” Aris Lazerson, 16, said he is

Jewish and had family members who died in the Holocaust, but warned against over-reacting to Trump’s polarizing stances. “Trump is not Hitler,” he said. “Trump is Democratically elected. I don’t agree with his policies. I know you don’t agree with what he stands for ... I want to assure you

that you are safe.” Holding a Trump sign, Skyler Terry, 17, said he didn’t fully support either candidate, but the controversy over Hillary Clinton’s e-mails swayed him toward Trump, who he hopes will reform tax policy and improve the economy. Jill Butler, 17, said she turns 18 on Sunday and missed the chance to vote by days, but still wanted to voice her objections to Trump’s election. “No matter what race you are, what religion you are, we’re all brothers and sisters,” Butler said. “This is a way we can make our opinions heard, even though we are too young to vote.” Principal Bjorn Paige sent an e-mail to parents and students notifying them of the planned walkout. He said the school wouldn’t prevent the students from gathering, but that their absence from class would be unexcused. Linnea Leidy, 17, who helped organize the walkout, said it was worth it. “People think teenagers are the most stupid part of our population, but I’m really proud of what we did (Nov. 10),” she said. – Deborah Sullivan Brennan is a writer for The San Diego Union-Tribune

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Botanic Garden talk features scientist from Jerusalem Dr. Ori Fragman-Sapir, from Jerusalem Botanic Gardens, will present a fascinating talk on Ancient Food Plants on Tuesday, Nov. 22 at San Diego Botanic Garden. The event runs from 5 to 6 p.m. and is free and open to the public. The Fertile Crescent within Israel has been a major center for food plant cultivation for thousands of years. The amazing and (nutritious) carbohydrate-protein diet combination was found in cereals and legumes grown in this region centuries ago. Local residents are COURTESY invited to come learn Dr. Ori Fragman-Sapir is more and meet the head scientist at the Fragman-Sapir, who Jerusalem Botanic has been the head Gardens. scientist at the Jerusalem Botanic Gardens — San Diego Botanic’s sister garden — since 2001. For more information, visit www.sdbgarden.org.

ENCINITAS ADVOCATE - NOVEMBER 18, 2016 - PAGE A5

Nov. 15 EUSD board meeting is the final one for 24-year trustee Carol Skiljan BY CHRIS SAUR After 24 years on the Encinitas Union School District Board of Trustees, Carol Skiljan was honored at her final meeting on Nov. 15. The former EUSD President, Vice President and Clerk decided not to run for re-election this fall. On Nov. 8, Patricia Sinay held on to her seat but challenger Rimga Viskanta received the most votes and will take over for Skiljan. At the final meeting of the old board on Nov. 15, the trustees adopted a Resolution of Appreciation for Skiljan in recognition of her service. The resolution was read by board member Marla Strich, who called Skiljan a mentor. And with the amount of work Skiljan has done for children and teachers at the local and state level, Strich is likely one of many who consider her a mentor. Though a longtime member of the EUSD board, which has only K-6 schools, Skiljan’s work with kids spans all ages, a fact that Sinay mentioned in thanking Skiljan for everything she’s done. The retiring trustee has represented EUSD on the city of Encinitas School Liaison Committee and worked with the EUSD’s Preschool Learning Center, which was recognized with the 2004 California School Boards Association (CSBA) Golden Bell Award. Two years later, Skiljan received the San Diego County HHSA Public Health Regional Champion Award for her work as a founding member of the nonprofit San Diego Chapter of Yellow Ribbon Suicide Prevention Program. She was named the San Diego County School Boards Association School Board Member of the Year in 2007, and went on to be appointed to represent the county association on the CSBA Board of Directors in 2010. Skiljan supported the implementation of the one-to-one digital technology initiative in K-6 and, in recognition of these efforts, EUSD was named an Apple Distinguished

CHRIS SAUR

Retiring EUSD board member Carol Skiljan, right, sits with fellow Trustees Patricia Sinay and Marla Strich at the Nov. 15 meeting. Program District in 2013-2015 and again in 2015-2017. In addition, she led EUSD in the successful Proposition O and Proposition P campaigns, resulting in the modernization of district properties and related technology upgrades Skiljan also advocates for the health and well-being of younger children as she currently serves as the Vice Chair of the San Diego County First 5 Commission and the Chair of the First 5 Technical and Professional Advisory Committee. A 34-year Encinitas resident, Skiljan and her husband Jeff have seen their two daughters go through Encinitas schools and become educators themselves, and her two grandchildren recently started school at Ocean Knoll. EUSD Superintendent Tim Baird said the resolution — and brief reception — at the Nov. 15 board meeting was just the beginning of the celebration for Skiljan’s years of great service.


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PAGE A6 - NOVEMBER 18, 2016 - ENCINITAS ADVOCATE

Clark turns struggles into stories for new book “Damsel in Dis Mess” is out now BY CHRIS SAUR etween divorce, the economy tanking her business and a cross country move, Encinitas author Patty Clark has faced a lot of difficulties in her 63 years. But out of her struggles has always come creation, first in the form of art and design, and more recently in her writing. At first, Clark was just taking her frustrations out on paper and then typing her stories up and saving them to her computer, After a couple of years, she began emailing the stories to her friends, posting them to Facebook and then creating her online blog “damsel in dis mess.” Now, a collection of those blog posts has been published in her book “Damsel in Dis Mess: Girlie Antics and Other Shenanigans,” which is available now on Amazon and CreateSpace. Clark’s stories find humor in daily situations, and she has been compared to a modern-day Erma Bombeck. “Ever since I’ve been writing I’ve had similar comments from people. First, ‘how do you come up with this stuff?’ and second ‘your stories are so relatable, that’s why we like reading,’ ” Clark told the Encinitas Advocate. “Even though I’m writing about frustration, I try to make it uplifting so people enjoy reading it.” A blurb on the back of the book has a

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comment from a reader who says “you write stuff no one would have the guts to say.” Clark, who moved to Encinitas last year and lives with her boyfriend Bob, was born in Detroit, Mich. Drawing from an early age, she found herself in a career as a wall designer. While struggling in her marriage, Clark used art as a way to get her feelings out in a positive way. “(Art and writing) have always been about the outlet,” she said. “When I was married and frustrated, I saw these miniature wooden chairs on vacation in Colorado and came home and made 40 of them myself. They sat in the attic until my divorce and then I ended up selling those to a store.” She also paints and does other wood art pieces and, while still living in Michigan, enjoyed side work she picked up creating displays for stores and whole malls. But living as a single mother, Clark was still struggling to find her way and eventually moved to California, where her two oldest daughters, Avril and Lindsay, had already migrated. “When my youngest (Hannah who is now 25) was just entering middle school, I thought to myself I have to move to California because if I don’t now, I never will,” Clark said. “People thought I was out of my mind but I packed it up and moved.” Originally moving to Upland in the early 2000s, Clark set up a new wall design company, but five years in, it was hit hard by the recession. “It blew me down to nothing. I was pulling my hair out thinking, what am I going to do?”

all of these stories. I was just taking my frustrations out on paper, it was better than therapy, which I couldn’t afford anyway.” Clark joined writers’ groups and kept up writing off and on through a series of different careers. After Hannah went off to college, Clark moved to Oceanside where she worked at a bed and breakfast. At the end of the summer, the peak season, the job ended and she was again struggling to figure out what was next. At that time, with many stories saved up, a friend helped her set up a blog … and it took off quickly. “Once I started the blog, I was picked up by a Kansas newspaper after just four posts,” Clark explained. “I wrote for them for two years.” That opportunity came from word of mouth, a friend passing some of her pieces to an acquaintance who was the publisher at the Parsons Sun newspaper. At this point, many people had encouraged Clark to turn her work into a book so she spent a year sending query letters without success. That is until she partnered with Aionios Books, an upstart publisher in Carlsbad. Teaming with Aionios was the perfect marriage and the “Damsel in Dis Mess” book was soon a reality. Clark and her publisher will be at a booth promoting the book at the Encinitas Street Fair on Nov. 20 from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Her book launch is set for Dec. 10 at Emerald C Gallery in Coronado and “Damsel is Dis Mess” is scheduled to come out on Kindle and audiobook by the end of the year.

COURTESY

Encinitas author Patty Clark just released her first book “Damsel in Dis Mess: Girlie Antics and Other Shenanigans.” She will have a booth at the Encinitas Street Fair on Nov. 20. Clark said. In looking at what to do, Clark took an offer from a former client in real estate who invited her to come learn the business. Within a week, Clark realized it wasn’t for her, but she also discovered something else: “I was sitting there and jotting all of my frustrations down on little notes, then when I got home I would throw it all on the computer. Before long I had

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ENCINITAS ADVOCATE - NOVEMBER 18, 2016 - PAGE A7

Encinitas woman to compete at Miss California USA Jourdyn Aiken, who was born and raised in Encinitas and graduated from San Dieguito Academy, will represent the city in the Miss California USA pageant, set for Dec. 2 through 4 in Long Beach. While attending St. James Academy, Cathedral Catholic High School for ninth grade, then SDA, Aiken was an honor student, ASB officer, participated in club soccer and volleyball and varsity track and volleyball. She then earned a bachelor’s degree in Organization Communications, along with a Certificate in Entertainment Management, as she graduated with High Honors from the University of Montana, where she was a member of the Delta Gamma sorority. After college — which included a semester abroad in Barcelona, Spain — Aiken returned to Barcelona for an internship with a nonprofit organization assisting with a Paralympic qualifying event that included 23 participating European countries. Aiken currently works as a program coordinator and volleyball coach for the Encinitas Ecke YMCA, where she is a two-time Employee of the Month. In addition, she has been the Ambassador to the San Diego County Fair and twice earned the Friend of the Fair Award. Miss California USA, which will be held

COURTESY

Jourdyn Aiken of Encinitas will compete in Miss California USA beginning Dec. 2. in conjunction with Miss California Teen USA at the Terrace Theater, will be Aiken’s first pageant. The pageants are under the umbrella of the Miss Universe Organization, which works internationally to showcase the world’s most glamorous, poised and stunning women to provide them with an opportunity to serve as spokeswomen for various cause alliances. Tickets for the pageant shows will be available at Ticketmaster.com, and a live steam of the crowning will be available at pageantvision.com beginning at 4 p.m. on Dec. 4. — Submitted press release

Encinitas Coastal Rotary Club leads improvements at Boys and Girls Club For the past few decades, Encinitas Coastal Rotary Club has worked to make improvements at the Ray Griset Boys and Girls Club, and that tradition continued on Nov. 9 with the help of 150 sailors from the U.S.S. Theodore Roosevelt, which was docked in Coronado. With ECR club members serving as supervisors, and some Rotarians from other clubs in the mix as well, the military manpower enabled an ambitious agenda of improvements to the Boys and Girls Club, including the renovation of the Center for a Healthy Lifestyle’s half-acre garden. The volunteers moved the raised beds, cleared the hillside, planted new crops and refurbished the herb garden, orchard and several other garden areas. Teams also installed a fence, painted some picnic tables for the outdoor patio area and put a fresh coat of paint on the walls of the clubhouse entry. “Encinitas Coastal, they’re my go-to guys,” Jessica Ellis, the Director of the Center for a Healthy Lifestyle said in a news release. “I just dream up the projects and they show up for work.” Marla Elliot, a former Boys and Girls Club board member and ECR club member, teamed up with fellow ECR member Art Jones to help organize the Club’s role in the special day of service. “The Encinitas Coastal Rotary Club is honored that our work with the Boys and Girls Club was selected as one of the 14 best community service projects in the West,” Jones said.

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More than 230 volunteers, including Encinitas Coastal Rotarians and sailors from the U.S.S. Theodore Roosevelt, gathered for a day of service at the Ray Griset Boys and Girls Club in Encinitas on Nov. 9. Elliott added, “This recognition has given us another tremendous opportunity to work with the Boys & Girls Club, and this time it was a real team effort. Thanks to the hard-working volunteers from the U.S.S. Theodore Roosevelt and some of our fellow Rotarians, we got a terrific amount of work done.” The Griset branch of the Girls and Boys Club and the Center for a Healthy Lifestyle are located at 1221 Encinitas Blvd. and serve thousands of youth every year, offering day care, a computer lab, technology classes, ceramics and other arts and crafts. The Healthy Habits/Gardening curriculum at their Center for a Healthy Lifestyle and outdoor garden classroom teaches young people about gardening, eating smart and being physically active.

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PAGE A8 - NOVEMBER 18, 2016 - ENCINITAS ADVOCATE

Bestselling author Mary E. Pearson is keynote speaker for CCA Writers’ Conference

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anyon Crest Academy’s Creative Writing Club recently announced that New York Times bestselling author Mary E. Pearson will give the keynote address at the 6th Annual Canyon Crest Academy Writers’ Conference on Saturday, March 11, 2017. Pearson is the NYT bestselling and award-winning author of young adult novels, novellas and short stories. Her works include the recently completed trilogy The Remnant Chronicles, which, in a starred review, Publisher’s Weekly called “masterfully crafted.” The first book in the trilogy, The Kiss of Deception, was chosen by teens as a 2015 YALSA Top Ten title. Her novel, The Adoration of Jenna Fox, has won numerous awards, is used in classrooms across the country, and has been optioned for film and slated for theaters in 2018. Her other novels include Golden Kite winner A Room on Lorelei Street, The Miles Between, and Scribbler of Dreams. Pearson writes from her home in Carlsbad. You can learn more about Pearson and her books at www.marypearson.com. Because of the generosity of conference sponsors, as well as extensive fundraising by the Creative Writing Club, this event is free to high school students. This is the only free writing conference for high school students in the country. Over 200 students from 24 different high schools attended the 2016 conference, participating in workshops by 23 speakers, including young adult authors, screenwriters, journalists, songwriters, poets and more. Natalie Lakosil, literary agent at Bradford Literary Agency, and long-time conference speaker notes, “There is no other conference like CCA; everyone involved is approachable, thorough and informative, and the event provides a dedicated space for teens to hone craft, interact with fellow teen authors and bestsellers alike, and learn about the publishing industry in a fun and interactive way.” Julia Camilleri, president of the CCA Creative Writing Club and coordinator of the conference, said, “The club is very excited to host the conference, and we can’t wait to be inspired by our keynote speaker, Mary Pearson.

Mary E. Pearson

COURTESY

So many of our attendees say they’ve ‘found their tribe’ here – fellow students who love the written word. We welcome high school students from all over San Diego to come together and learn from the best in the business.” Julia notes, “In order to continue to provide this free experience to high school students, the CCA Creative Writing Club is looking for individual and corporate sponsors. You can sponsor a student for as little as $25, or become a Gold Sponsor for more. Please can contact me at ccawritersconference@gmail.com for more information on sponsoring the conference.” The Mysterious Galaxy Bookstore will sell speakers’ books with a portion of the proceeds going to the conference. Students can learn more about the conference at ccawritersconference2017.weebly.com, by liking the CCA Writers Conference page on Facebook, or following it on Twitter. Online registration will be open on Jan. 5. 2017. The 6th Annual CCA Writers’ Conference will be held from 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. on Saturday, March 11, 2017, at Canyon Crest Academy, Proscenium and Media Center, 5951 Village Center Loop Road, San Diego, 92130. The event is for high school students only and is free.

John Lennon artwork at Flower Hill Nov. 18-20 A historic exhibition of John Lennon’s artwork and lyrics will be on display for the public at Flower Hill Promenade on Nov. 18-20. The free Del Mar exhibit is the last in a tour that has been traveling for 26 years and has included over 100 exhibits across the U.S. and Canada. The exhibit features over 120 serigraphs, signed lithographs and song lyrics by the legendary Beatles member. It will also include many rare artworks, as well as individually hand-signed lithographs from the Bag One Portfolio, which Lennon drew as a wedding gift in 1969 for wife Yoko Ono

Lennon. This portfolio has become increasingly rare to find in its entirety. A complete set is in the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York. The exhibition is being produced by Pacific Edge Gallery, with the full cooperation of Yoko Ono and the John Lennon estate. A catalog will be on sale and the artworks will be available for purchase. The display will be open to the public Friday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. and Sunday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Flower Hill Promenade’s lower level: 2720 Via de la Valle, Del Mar.


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ENCINITAS ADVOCATE - NOVEMBER 18, 2016 - PAGE A9

Author searches for people to illuminate his chosen subjects BY JOE TASH Tracy Kidder has focused his keen skills of observation and talent for storytelling on numerous topics during his career, from the early days of the computer industry to medical care for the poor in Haiti to elementary education in America. “What a great privilege it’s been,” he said during a recent stop at the Fairmont Grand Del Mar for a luncheon/author event hosted by the Rancho Santa Fe Literary Society. “It’s been fun to explore the world and get paid for it.” Kidder’s newest book, “A Truck Full of Money,” published by Random House, tells the story of Paul English, a genius computer programmer who suffers from bi-polar disease, who is also a co-founder of the Kayak travel website, which has been used by millions of people around the world since its inception in 2004. While all of Kidder’s books focus on a theme or subject, his talent lies in finding people who bring those stories to life. They include Dr. Paul Farmer, an infectious disease specialist who built a system of medical clinics in Haiti, as detailed in Kidder’s book, “Mountains Beyond Mountains,” and a Boston schoolteacher and her students, as chronicled in “Among Schoolchildren.” “I don’t write about subjects. I write about people,” Kidder said. Kidder’s efforts have garnered a slew of honors, from the Pulitzer Prize to the National Book Award. And his latest book is just as personal as its predecessors – he follows Paul English from his

MCKENZIE IMAGES

Standing: Torrey Pines High School Principal Rob Coppo (left) with author Tracy Kidder (center), Torrey Pines High School students and (sitting, far right) English Department Chair Lisa Callender. school days, when he wrote a program that allowed him to surreptitiously obtain his teacher’s user name and password, to the period after he sold Kayak for $1.8 billion to the mega-travel site Priceline, and then worked to “recover” from the success of suddenly finding himself a multi-millionaire. In order to get inside the skin of his subject, Kidder practically lived with Paul English for the better part of a year, and stayed close touch with him for a couple of years after that. The portrait of English that emerges in Kidder’s book is a driven, gifted, generous man who battles the demons of his own mental

Gary Martin C a l B R E L i c ens e # 0 0 9 6 2 1 0 4

BROKER

illness while achieving great success in the turbulent and competitive world of software programming and digital technology. While English has shown a knack for making money – he once sold a company for $33.5 million before it had created a product – he also is known for spreading it around, both through generosity to his co-workers and his philanthropy, supporting such causes as fighting homelessness and improving education in Haiti. In fact, English has said his true passion is for assembling teams through his businesses. In the book, Kidder wrote, “Travel was just

something Paul liked to do. What he really cared about was building new engineering teams. In a jaunty moment once, he said, ‘For me businesses exist as an excuse to get a team together, and product is what a team does. You have to pay salaries, so, unfortunately, you have to make a profit.’ Creating teams and managing them were his version of the business romance. He loved his own large biological family, he would say, but at times he felt as though at Kayak he was building another family, better in the sense that he could choose its members and fire those who didn’t work out.” As for Kayak itself, English installed large monitors in the company’s engineering office that displayed only a single number, which would climb into the millions each day, and represented the number of travel searches conducted by Kayak visitors. “Paul had meant the number on display as a message to his team, his way of saying to them, ‘Good job. Let’s do more.’ And it was also one of his ways of trying to put them in vicarious touch with customers. If you knew that the number at the center of the screen signified searches, it was bound to dawn on you that watching the digits grow was the same as watching millions of people typing at computers and swiping fingers over the screens of smartphones and electronic notepads as they brought up the Kayak website on their browsers and began to look for information about flights, hotels, rental cars. And you were also watching a machine at work, responding to all those people – a SEE AUTHOR, A20

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PAGE A10 - NOVEMBER 18, 2016 - ENCINITAS ADVOCATE

CCA teen captures attention of Mark Zuckerberg BY DIANE BELL few high-tech titans have created what could be likened to a mini version of the XPRIZE that rewards visionary innovators able to resolve seemingly unsolvable problems. The Breakthrough Junior Challenge, backed by Facebook co-founder Mark Zuckerberg and his entrepreneur wife Priscilla Chan, and Russian internet mogul Yuri (and Julia) Milner, rewards innovative approaches to understanding a concept or theory in the life and physical sciences. The grand prize is $400,000, and a San Diego teen is in the running. From about 6,000 entries from students age 13-18 living in 148 countries, Anne Berry, 16, a junior at Canyon Crest Academy, was named one of 30 global semi-finalists (12 are from the United States) in this year’s competition. “She is blown away,” said her mom, Julie. “She is really proud and happy to represent her school.” Julie added that, during the judging, her daughter was interviewed by an engineering director from NASA about her Breakthrough Challenge topic: explaining the relationship between space and time. If Berry wins in December, she will receive a $250,000 scholarship; her school will get a $100,000 science lab, and the chemistry teacher who inspired her to enter will be given $50,000. Not bad for someone barely old enough to legally apply for a job. The budding scientists each created a video presentation illustrating their concept. These are posted online at: facebook.com/BreakthroughPrize/videos/ as well as on YouTube. As with many competitions, social media play a

A

COURTESY

Ria Chockalingham, Phoebe Kreps, Claire Marie Killeen, Sonia Burns and Natalie Baumbach

Assisteens Auxiliary members raise funds for Komen Foundation

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he Assisteens Auxiliary of Assistance League of Rancho San Dieguito recently participated in the Susan G. Komen Foundation Race for the Cure in Balboa Park and raised $520 for the Foundation. One of the goals of Assisteens Auxiliary is to raise money to fund ongoing philanthropic programs to benefit the community. For more information about Assisteens, visit assistanceleague.org/volunteer-opportunities/assisteens

COURTESY OF ANNE BERRY

Anne Berry, 16, entered her video explaining the space and time continuum in a breakthrough challenge created by high-tech entrepreneurs. From 6,000 entries, the Canyon Crest Academy junior is one of 30 global finalists. role. The viewers’ favorite (voting ended on Nov. 9) will automatically become a finalist. The winner will then be determined by a panel that includes Pulitzer Prize recipient Siddhartha Mukherjee, author Lucy Hawking (the daughter of renowned physicist Stephen Hawking), former astronaut Mae Jemison, past winners, and others. Whatever the Breakthrough Junior Challenge outcome, Julie said the interviewer from NASA encouraged Anne to do her next video about black holes. — Diane Bell is a writer/columnist for The San Diego Union-Tribune

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ENCINITAS ADVOCATE - NOVEMBER 18, 2016 - PAGE A11

Local lawyer asks readers ‘How Would You Rule?’ BY KAREN BILLING Local author Daniel Park hopes to get readers testing their intuitions and playing judge with his new book, “How Would You Rule? Legal Puzzles, Brainteasers and Dilemmas from the Law’s Strangest Cases” published by University of California Press. The book helps demystify fundamental concepts of law through a collection of strange but true legal cases, interesting stories that illustrate important legal concepts in a way that is accessible. “The book is meant for anyone with an interest in learning about the law or thinking about the problems and dilemmas that arise when people argue about right and wrong in court,” Park said. “It was really fun to write because this is what the law is, really great stories about people living their lives and getting into unusual situations.” Park is a graduate of Yale Law School and serves as the chief campus counsel of UC San Diego. His first book, “The Legal Mind: How the Law Thinks, ” was published three years ago and provides a “backstage pass” to the COURTESY logic of the law and “How Would You legal system. Rule?” was written With his second by local attorney book, Park wanted to Daniel Park. go a step further and answer the questions of what are the right rules for particular cases and how do the courts come up with the right rules? “It’s easier to explain if you experience it so the book puts the reader in the position of the judge. They hear the facts of the case and then make a judgment,” Park said. After coming up with their own solutions, the readers can learn about how the actual judges resolved the disputes.

“The best way to learn the law is by practicing it. This book gives you that chance,” Park writes. “By working your way through the stories in the book, you will get the chance, just as real COURTESY judges do, to try your Author Dan Park. hand at teasing out the strands of justice from tangles of competing claims and contentions.” Over the two years he took writing the book, Park’s challenge was to find the most interesting cases. There are some that are more quirky, such as the case about someone who purchased a house, decided it was haunted and wanted their money back. Another is more serious: does a person with a terminal illness have the right to end their own life? Each case is written in a compelling way by Park — “dry and stodgy legalese has been stripped out, leaving only the essence of the legal question” — and each chapter ends with questions to help generate more thinking. He hopes that the cases will lead to healthy debates at the kitchen table or within a book club. “Ideally the reader will walk away with more insight of how the legal system works, how they think about what’s right and what’s wrong and how they would explain it other people,” Park said. “The book helps you think critically and understand what you think more clearly.” Park said he thinks he may have a third book in him as there are so many parts of the law to explore. “The law is something that should be understood by more people because it controls so much of their lives,” Park said. “A lot of people have misconceptions about how it works and what’s really going on.” “How Would You Rule?” is available on Amazon.com

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PAGE A12 - NOVEMBER 18, 2016 - ENCINITAS ADVOCATE

Local cross country high school runners shine at North County Conference Finals

COURTESY PHOTOS

Medalists from R-L: Kristin Fahy finished first in a time of 18:14.2 for La Costa Canyon. 2. Kira Loren ran 18:15.7 CCA. 3. McKenna Brown 18:33.5 LCC. 4. Skyler Wallace 18:34.5 Sage Creek. Hannah Hartwell 18:36.4 Carlsbad. 6. Jessica Riedman 18:53.3 LCC. 7. Claire Bernd 19:19.6 CCA. 8. Carlie Dorostkar 19:25.2 CCA.9. Isabella Aguiar 19:27.4 TP. 10. Natalie Schroeder 19:42.4 LCC. 11. Vanessa Beeler 19.45.7 TP. 12. Gabi Dinkin 19:52.2 TP. 13. Kendall Drisko 19:54.5 Carlsbad. 14. Michaela Fromme 20:01.1 LCC. 15. Ines Ramirez 20.06.8 TP. 16 Naomi Smitham 20:08.8. 17. Claire Szymanski 20:18.8 TP. 18. Habeeba Kamel 20.27.3 TP. 19.Kylie Preske 20.28.2 TP and Amanda Kindel finished 20th in a time of 20:32 for LCC.

The local high school boys varsity cross country teams ran a 3.1-mile course in the Avocado West League during the North County Conference Finals on Nov. 12 at Guajome Park in Oceanside. La Costa Canyon’s team won with 43 points, with Sage Creek in second at 52 points, Torrey Pines in third place with 77 points, Canyon Crest Academy in fourth with 92 points, Carlsbad fifth with 107 points and San Dieguito Academy taking sixth place with 160 points. The fastest 20 boys received a medal and are pictured above.

The varsity girls cross country teams from six local high schools competed in the Avocado West League race on Nov. 12 at Guajome Park in Oceanside. The girls hit the ground running for the North County Conference finals on the challenging 3.1- mile course. The official team scores headed up by first-place La Costa Canyon with 34, followed by second-place Canyon Crest Academy (54), Torrey Pines in third place with 64 points, Carlsbad taking fourth with 97, Sage Creek in fifth place with 124 and San Dieguito Academy in sixth with 175 points. The fastest 20 girls are pictured above and received a medal.

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ENCINITAS ADVOCATE - NOVEMBER 18, 2016 - PAGE A13

New location, same great clothes at Double Take consignment boutique BY CHRIS SAUR While only at its current location on El Camino Real for about a year, Double Take — a women’s clothing consignment store — has a rich history in North County. In fact, when owner and operator Layne Lozano first opened Double Take on Highway 101 in downtown Encinitas in 1999, she was the third member of her family to run a local consignment boutique. Around 1990, Lozano’s mother Sue Phillips bought a consignment store in Vista. Lozano’s sister, Renn Plsek, opened Double Take Solana Beach five years later. Though Phillips sold her shop to a family friend, her two daughters are still going strong. Lozano’s Double Take in Encinitas offers gently worn, fashionable clothes at an affordable price for women of all ages and styles. “Variety is our big thing, we take pride in having a little bit of everything so anyone can walk into the store and find something they like,” Lozano explained. “That’s the goal. “We get generations shopping here, grandma, daughter and

granddaughter, so that’s fun.” Double Take’s collections include dresses, jackets and coats, handbags, shoes, athletic attire and accessories, among other things, as Lozano understands that women want new clothes in their closets as frequently as possible, but knows retail prices are scary. She sifts through the bags and bags of clothes brought in to find the best pieces to offer her customers. And now, after 15 years downtown, Lozano decided she could best serve those customers by moving to her new location at 204 N. El Camino Real, Suite E, Encinitas. Lozano likes her boutique’s current location because it is more of a shopping area, including near some other consignments stores, which she welcomes. “The downtown is changing, retail is disappearing and the parking, which was bad to begin with, is getting worse,” Lozano said. “(The new location) is also more convenient for people. “We are less visible, so it was slow at first, but I think in the long run it will be better. “I love Encinitas, it’s a great community because there are a lot of

CHRIS SAUR

Layne Lozano owns and operates Double Take, a women’s clothing consignment boutique on El Camino Real in Encinitas. different types of people. And we get a lot of customers from outside Encinitas too. We have people that come into town once a year and they have to come in every time they visit.” Though running consignment shops runs in the family, Lozano took an interesting journey to get there. After growing up in Vista, she went to West Point, then served five years in the military. She was stationed at Fort Campbell in Tennessee for four years and spent another year in Georgia.

“It was great, I had a great time but I just didn’t see it as a career for me,” Lozano said. “I missed home, I love California.” She was sending out her resume and looking for jobs in project management, but working at her sister’s store opened her eyes to the idea of being her own boss. So she started her own boutique, working very hard to make it work and establish a connection with the community.

“It was hard at first, you work a lot. The first two years I think I lived in the store,” Lozano explained. “It helped get (that connection with) the customer, I got to know everyone.” Those connections helped when the store moved, as many of the customers kept coming, but Lozano said she has worked long hours this past year to build up relationships with new customers at the new location. Still, she makes time for her two kids, Sophia, 12, and Kale, her 10-year-old son. Husband Rob is a dentist who operates his own business in Rancho Bernardo. “We help each other out,” Lozano said of her husband of 13 years. “We do different work, but we both have our own business so we can ask questions and give each other ideas.” And with her family’s 25 years in business, three stores and her own 15 years of experience, Lozano has lots of information to share. For more information, call (760) 479-2501. - Business spotlights are developed through this newspaper’s advertising department in support of our advertisers.

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PAGE A14 - NOVEMBER 18, 2016 - ENCINITAS ADVOCATE

EVENT BRIEFS Music By The Sea: The Mühlfeld Trio Presented by the city of Encinitas Art Division, The Mühlfeld Trio will perform at the next installment of the Music By The Sea concert series on Friday, Nov. 18. The Trio is made up of Benjamin Mitchell on clarinet, Mia Barcia-Colombo on cello and pianist Brendan White. The Los Angeles-based group is on the forefront of new chamber music ensembles and is equally dedicated to commissioning new works as performing masterworks from the past. Starting at 7:30 p.m. at the Encinitas Library, 540 Cornish Drive, The Mühlfeld Trio will perform Beethoven’s Trio in E flat Major, Op. 38 and Selections from 8 Pieces, Op. 83, by Max Bruch. Tickets cost $14 and can be purchased at encinitas.tix.com/Schedule.aspx?OrgNum= 4736 or at the door. For more information on the concert series, visit encinitasca.gov/index.aspx?page=309.

Mosaic jewelry class On Saturday, Nov. 19 and Sunday, Nov. 20 at the Blue Heron Studio, 406 La Costa Avenue, visiting Margo Anton will present a mosaic jewelry class from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Participants can create high-end, precisely laid mosaic jewelry, while learning about jewelry design, base selection, suitable tesserae (mosaic material), and cutting and laying techniques. Cost of $360 includes materials to make two silver plate pendants. For more information, send a message to agnew.monica@gmail.com

Bite San Diego Savor an array of bites at the area’s top restaurants along historical Highway 101, with stops at the Self-Realization Fellowship Meditation Gardens and Encinitas boathouses, on the Bite San Diego walking food tour. The tour is set for Saturday Nov. 19, from 2 to 5 p.m. and cost is $47. For more information, visit bitesandiego.com/portfolio/walking_ encinitas_restaurant_tour or call 619-634-8476.

La Paloma Theatre Now Showing: Harry and the Snowman, A Man Called Ove, Rocky Horror Picture Show. Tickets: $10, $9 (cash only). 471 Coast Hwy. 101. Show Times 760-436-7469.

San Dieguito Art Guild Holiday Bazaar Shoppers can find one-of-a-kind handmade items from local artists at the San Dieguito Art Guild’s Holiday Bazaar on Saturday, Nov. 19 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Encinitas Community Center, 1140 Oakcrest Park Drive. The event will feature a silent auction of artworks as well as lunchtime snacks and afternoon sweet treats like hot apple cider and coffee break bites. Admission to the Bazaar, refreshments and parking are all free.

Historic walking tour of Encinitas The Encinitas Historical Society is leading a free walking tour of Historic Encinitas on Saturday, Nov. 19 starting at 10 a.m. and leaving from the 1883 Schoolhouse, 390 F Street. A volunteer docent will guide participants, who will find out about the history of how Encinitas came to be known as the “Flower Capital,” learn why early settlers came to town in the 1880s and hear the background about buildings that were built in the 1920s by Miles Kellogg, Encinitas’ “first recycler.” The most photographed buildings in Encinitas are also a stop on the tour, which finishes around noon. For more information about the walking tour, call Encinitas Historical Society President Carolyn Cope at 760-753-4834.

Encinitas 101 Holiday Street Fair The 26th annual Holiday Street Fair returns to downtown Encinitas on Sunday, Nov. 20 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Visit the more than 450 booths and unique downtown Encinitas retailers for

holiday shopping and enjoy live music and dance performances on three stages. Local favorites 2 Tone Sounds will perform on the Beer Garden Stage. Animal lovers can receive a “Blessing of the Animals” in The Lumberyard, and Encinitas 101 MainStreet Association will sell Poinsettias at its booth as examples of Encinitas’ farming history. Parking will be available in the Civic Center lots on the east side of Vulcan, between E and F Streets, and in the Moonlight Beach lot at Fourth and C Street. For more information, visit encinitas101.com.

Coastal Club at Temple Solel On Tuesday, Nov. 22, the JFS Coastal Club at Temple Solel, 3575 Manchester Ave., has a day of free events open to all seniors. Cozy Cafe, where seniors can eat snacks, play games or read the paper while schmoozing with friends, starts the day at 9:30 a.m. and is followed by Fit and Flexible with Danyll at 10 a.m. Then at 11 a.m., Encinitas librarian William Sannwald presents the showcase: New Developments at your Local Library. Sannwald will be talking about e-Collection, give book talks on a few titles and pass out free ARC (advance review copies) of books while supplies last. That will be followed by the noon movie — East Side Sushi — about a Latin woman who aspires to become a sushi chef while working in a Japanese restaurant. Enjoy a snack from the Cozy Café while you watch the movie.

Encinitas Turkey Trot Set for Thursday, Nov. 24, the Encinitas Turkey Trot 5K and 10K will feature a costume contest and give a generous portion of its proceeds to the North County Chapter of the San Diego Food Bank and the local Community Resource Center. Registration is now open, and for the $44 (5K) or $54 (10K) fee, participants receive a soft cotton T-shirt and finisher’s medal. Water stations are provided throughout the course. Race bib and T-shirt (packet) pick-up is strongly encouraged and will be held Nov. 20-22 from 1 to 7 p.m. at Road Runner

Sports Carlsbad, 5617 Paseo Del Norte #100 in Carlsbad. Please bring any donated canned and/or nonperishable food items to packet pick-up to assist the San Diego Food Bank. For more information on the event, visit encinitasturkeytrot.org.

Center for Spiritual Living Thanksgiving ceremony The Seaside Center for Spiritual Living invites the public to a unique interactive Thanksgiving Gratitude Ceremony, followed by a dinner potluck on Nov. 24. The ceremony will run from noon to 12:45 p.m. with the potluck set for 1 p.m. at the Center, 1613 Lake Drive, for this event. Well-known local musician Earl Flores, the Romantic Cowboy who wrote the Surfing Madonna song, will performing during the dinner. For more information or to volunteer, please contact Melissa at 951-553-9843 or mspiegler@gmail.com.

Restoring Nature tour at San Elijo Lagoon Naturalist Mike Blanco will lead a Restoring Nature Tour on Sunday, Nov. 27 at the San Elijo Lagoon Conservancy. Participants in the 3 to 4:30 p.m. tour will learn about the plant protective cones and pin flags seen at restoration sites and what’s next for native plants in the ground at several conservancy native habitat restoration sites. Along the way, Blanco will explore nature’s interrelationships with bird sightings, watching insect pollinators and discussing how native plants are needed. All ages are welcome on this free tour and registered participants will be emailed trailhead information and directions. For more information, visit sanelijo.org/restoretour.

Families Make History: ThanksHangings In November, the San Dieguito Heritage Museum celebrates the blessings and SEE BRIEFS, A23


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ENCINITAS ADVOCATE - NOVEMBER 18, 2016 - PAGE A15

ENCINITAS CRIME REPORT Nov. 14 • Felony assault with a deadly weapon: not firearm - 1100 block Aloha Drive, 3:30 p.m. • Misdemeanor shoplifting - 1000 N. block El Camino Real, 2:18 p.m. • Misdemeanor petty theft (shoplift) - 100 N. block El Camino Real, 10 a.m. • Misdemeanor petty theft (all other larceny) - 100 block Basil Street, 6 a.m. • Felony ADW assault semiauto on officer/firefighter - 1700 S. block El Camino Real, 5:27 a.m. • Commercial robbery weapon used - 800 block Birmingham Drive, 5:20 a.m. Nov. 13 • Misdemeanor possession of controlled substance paraphernalia - 600 block Lomas Santa Fe, 9 p.m. • Misdemeanor possession of controlled substance paraphernalia - 600 block Lomas Santa Fe, 9 p.m. • Misdemeanor vandalism ($400 or less) 200 N. block Coast Highway 101, 8:12 p.m. • Misdemeanor vandalism ($400 or less) 1200 block Loch Lomond Drive, 8 p.m. • Residential burglary - 800 block Sidonia Street, 5:45 p.m. • Misdemeanor drunk in public: alcohol, drugs, combo or toluene - 1700 block Willowhaven Road, 4:16 a.m. • Felony assault with a deadly weapon: not firearm - 1700 block Willowhaven Road, 3:14 a.m. Nov. 12 • Misdemeanor drunk in public: alcohol, drugs, combo or toluene - 400 block Santa Fe Drive, 1:56 p.m. • Vehicle break-in-theft - 1500 block Lomas Santa Fe Drive, 9 a.m. • Misdemeanor petty theft (all other larceny) - 500 block Cornish Drive, 2:36 a.m. • Felony battery with serious bodily injury - 400 S. block Coast Highway 101, 12:30 a.m. Nov. 11 • Vehicle break-in-theft - 200 block Leucadia Boulevard, 11:30 p.m. • Misdemeanor drunk in public: alcohol, drugs, combo or toluene - 300 block Santa Fe Drive, 8:30 p.m. • Felony assault with a deadly weapon: not firearm - 600 S. block Coast Highway 101, 7:45 p.m. • Residential burglary - 500 block Sheffield Avenue, 5 p.m. • Misdemeanor vandalism ($400 or less) -

1600 block Villa Cardiff, 4:25 p.m. • Commercial robbery weapon used 1000 N. block El Camino Real, 3:15 p.m. • Misdemeanor exhibit deadly weapon other than firearm - Calzada del Bosque/Linea del Cielo, 3 p.m. • Misdemeanor drunk in public: alcohol, drugs, combo or toluene - Rubenstein Avenue/Santa Fe Drive, 2:37 p.m. • Misdemeanor use/under influence of controlled substance - 0 N. block Vulcan Avenue, 1:45 p.m. • Possession narcotic controlled substance - 900 block Orpheus Avenue, 1 a.m. Nov. 10 • Felony battery with serious bodily injury - 500 S. block Coast Highway 101, 10 p.m. • Vehicle break-in-theft - 2100 block Carol View Drive, 8:30 p.m. • Vehicle break-in-theft - 500 block Encinitas Boulevard, 7:25 p.m. • Vehicle break-in-theft - 200 S. block El Camino Real, 11 a.m. • Vehicle break-in-theft - 700 block Lynwood, 8:30 a.m. Nov. 9 • Misdemeanor use/under influence of controlled substance - 1500 block Leucadia Boulevard, 11:30 p.m. • Misdemeanor use/under influence of controlled substance - 1500 block Leucadia Boulevard, 11:30 p.m. • Misdemeanor use/under influence of controlled substance - 1500 block Leucadia Boulevard, 11:30 p.m. • Felony take vehicle without owner’s consent/vehicle theft - 800 block La Mirada Avenue, 9 p.m. • Misdemeanor petty theft (all other larceny) - 0 N. block Coast Highway 101, 6 p.m. • Misdemeanor petty theft (from building) - 1500 block Copper Court, 12 p.m. • Misdemeanor petty theft (from building) - 100 block Mangano Circle, 6 a.m. Nov. 8 • Felony take vehicle without owner’s consent/vehicle theft - 1600 block Edilee Drive, 9:30 p.m. • Felony assault with a deadly weapon: not firearm - 2200 block Carol View, 11:40 a.m. • Felony obstruction/resist executive officer with minor injury - Manchester Avenue/Ocean Cove Drive, 4 a.m.

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PAGE A16 - NOVEMBER 18, 2016 - ENCINITAS ADVOCATE

Classic Block Party

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PAGE A18 - NOVEMBER 18, 2016 - ENCINITAS ADVOCATE

Encinitas Elks Lodge celebrates Veterans Day

T

he Encinitas Elks Lodge celebrated Veterans Day with a 1940s-themed dinner, dance show and ceremonies saluting local veterans and active military on Nov. 12. Highlights of the evening included live entertainment by the Santa Fe Christian Dance Troop, a Tri-Tip dinner done by local BBQ competition winners and presentations of donations to Semper Fi Fund and Veterans Research Alliance. Throughout the year, the Encinitas Elks Lodge 2243 provides personal support and donations to the San Diego veterans hospitals, Veterans Village and veterans’ families. For more information, visit encinitaselks.org. Online: www.encinitasadvocate.com

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Rick and Gale Valdes, Jim Owen, Fred Schreiber

Lecturing Knight Cheryl Harloff, John Bruun, Sandy Hendren, Cheryl Fleming with the check presentation to the Semper Fi Fund


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ENCINITAS ADVOCATE - NOVEMBER 18, 2016 - PAGE A19

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PAGE A20 - NOVEMBER 18, 2016 - ENCINITAS ADVOCATE

FROM COUNCIL, A1 was discovered during that process that the Encinitas Ranch Specific Plan (ERSP) prohibited lights at the park. Most of those issues were worked out at the Oct. 19 Council meeting, when the Council members agreed to pursue the process of amending the ERSP and pushing through applications for the proper permits for permanent lights at Leo Mullen Sports Park. The city recently paid $1 million for artificial turf at the same park. During that Oct. 19 discussion, the Council directed City Attorney Glenn Sabine to draft an agreement to restore the temporary lights. Created in conjunction with the Encinitas Parks and Recreation Department, the agreement includes mentions that cost and risk will be assumed by the Express, the height shall not exceed 30 feet and that the lights should be off at 9 p.m. Monday through Friday and 6 p.m. on Saturday, among other smaller details. David Demian, the attorney for the Cambria homeowners, asked the Council to include in the agreement actions toward several concessions that had been agreed upon at the Oct. 19 meeting, most notably planting trees for light mitigation and installation of a couple of gates for safety of residents. Pursuant to that request, the Council’s

FROM SUSPECT, A1 employed as a deputy sheriff with the San Diego Sheriff's Department for four years, fired about 12 rounds, six of which struck Parkin, according to Nelson. At the site of the shooting, investigators

motion not only approved the original draft agreement, but also directed staff to go forward with a tree-planting plan and a plan for installation of locking gates. Those plans will be created by staff and brought back to the Council. Following that item, the Council agreed to the three actions recommended by staff regarding the Pacific View site. Mayor Kristin Gaspar explained that the actions were “a real win-win.” “It allows the Alliance to do what it needs to do in demonstrating that it has control over that site so that it can go out and fundraise to major donors,” Gaspar said. During his public comment on the issue, EACEA President Garth Murphy announced that the Alliance had just secured a donation of $150,000 from the San Diego County Board of Supervisors. The city of Encinitas purchased the Pacific View School site from the Encinitas Union School District for $10 million in December of 2014, then solicited for an operating partner and eventually selected the EACEA in September of 2015 as a group that could submit more detailed plans. Recently, the EACEA’s vision for the site has been described as creating a vibrant, cultural and intellectual arts and ecology center that is operationally self-sustaining and provides economic benefit to the community and beautifies the neighborhood. recovered wads of cash believed to have been stolen during the crime. Parkin was being held on $100,000 bail at San Diego Central Jail on suspicion of armed robbery, assault with a deadly weapon on a peace officer and felony evasion of police. Nelson said additional charges are probable.

Las Damas de Fairbanks presents ‘A Showcase of Holiday Homes’ Las Damas de Fairbanks, a philanthropic organization of women in Fairbanks Ranch, will present their annual Holiday Home Tour and Luncheon on Friday, Dec. 9. The Showcase of Holiday Homes will benefit DreamKeepers Project, Inc., a 501(c)(3 organization that supports the Family Recovery Center in Oceanside, which assists women in breaking the cycle of substance abuse. The FRC meets the needs of families through residential and outpatient treatment and continuing care. The event begins at 9 a.m. with check-in and welcome refreshments at the Fairbanks Ranch Clubhouse, 17651 Circa del Norte, Rancho Santa Fe. Each participant will receive a map for a self-guided tour of fabulous Fairbanks Ranch homes, which have been beautifully decorated for the holidays. Following the tour, a festive Luncheon and Holiday Shopping Boutique will be held at the Fairbanks Ranch Country Club located at 15150 San Dieguito Road, Rancho Santa Fe. The

boutique will feature unique clothing, jewelry, candles, holiday décor and artful gift items. In addition to the fabulous array of holiday vendors, there will be an Opportunity Drawing for fantastic luxury gift baskets. The luncheon is a choice of Lemon Herbed Crusted Chicken, Grilled Salmon, or Vegetarian Option and reservations must be paid for in advance. There will be a no-host cash bar. All are welcome to attend, please come and bring a friend. The cost of the Showcase of Holiday homes is $45 per ticket. The Holiday Luncheon and Boutique can be purchased for $30 per ticket. The combination of Showcase of Holiday Homes and Luncheon and Boutique is available for $75 per ticket. Reserve your ticket online at lasdamashometourweb connex.com/HomeTour2016 For more information on the Holiday Showcase or the Family Recovery Center in Oceanside, contact Sandi Chenoweth at 760-310-9080 or Vicki Barclay at 858-252-8819.

FROM AUTHOR, A9

But then he discovered a passion for writing, and after a tour in Vietnam as an intelligence officer, he wound up as a staff writer at the Atlantic Magazine. While working there, he wrote his first book, “The Soul of the New Machine,” about a team of researchers who designed a super mini-computer in the early days of the technology industry. He now has 10 books to his credit. He divides his time between Massachusetts and Maine. For more information, visit www.tracykidder.com.

complex machine made out of software and silicon that was spread across a large part of the world, connecting millions to the world,” Kidder wrote. Kidder, who is always looking for new stories to tell, and people to tell them, has himself taken a somewhat circuitous route finding his true calling. As a political science major at Harvard, he dreamt of becoming a diplomat and changing the world.

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Stress and Your Vein Health Most people live with some stress; for many people, managing daily life can induce occasional periods of stress. For some people, however, stress becomes persistent or even chronic. While most people experience stress with symptoms of fatigue, heartburn, stomach aches, and headaches, chronic stress can take a significant toll on the body, exacerbating the previous symptoms as well as adding anxiety and depression. Furthermore, chronic stress can have an impact on the body’s vascular system. Some patients even present an increase in varicose veins during this time. But can stress cause varicose veins? Here’s the thing: varicose veins are a form of vein disease and for the most part are

hereditary. Varicose veins are caused by a weakening of the venous walls and valves, which cause blood to pool in the lower extremities. Stress itself won’t have much of an effect on healthy veins, but long-term stress can take its toll—especially when the veins become compromised for other reasons. Long term stress can cause extra pressure on the veins, and if the veins are having a hard time pumping blood back up to the heart, that blood will collect and pool, swelling the weak veins. When people experience stress, they are less likely to take care of their body. Stress eating may occur, or people may be under too much pressure, leaving no time to exercise. Either (or both) of these situations can lead to weight gain, which can add pressure to the veins and weakening the venous walls. Stress eating can involve salty foods, which, in large quantities, can increase blood pressure. In already susceptible people, this too can adversely affect vein health. Some people even begin (or increase) smoking as a coping mechanism for stress. While this may seem to provide temporary stress relief, smoking only increases the

chances of vein disease, not to mention the myriad other health issues that can ensue. If a person has a family history of varicose veins, there isn’t much that can be done to prevent it, and they likely will appear regardless of stress levels. However, there are always ways to minimize the chances of the appearance of varicose veins, as well as the severity. First, make choices that can help reduce stress. Prioritizing essential tasks at work to better manage a workload, or taking up some kind of daily relaxation technique won’t in and of itself prevent varicose veins, but these strategies can reduce stress levels and lower blood pressure. Either sitting or standing at work for long periods of time can also increase the chances of experiencing varicose veins. Low impact movement can help improve circulation, and an increase in varied activity can help the body pump the blood from the legs back up to the heart. Taking the long way to the break room, the restroom, or taking the stairs instead of the elevator are just a few strategies for boosting physical activity when there isn’t time to work out. Additionally, stress eating may seem

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satisfying in the short-term, but overall, overeating or eating too much unhealthful foods makes the body lethargic, or can cause water retention. Couple the physical effects of the bad food with the accompanying guilt that happens when people know they’re eating food that isn’t good for them, and stress levels can increase further. If possible, it’s always best to reduce temptation to reward with junk food and instead opt for the more healthful and still satisfying snacks. Some people will see varicose veins appear and experience additional stress over health concerns (an increased risk of deep vein thrombosis, or DVT), or just feel unhappy over the appearance of the unsightly veins. The good news is that varicose veins can be easily treated with a short office visit for sclerotherapy, a nearly painless injection of the chemical sclerosant directly into a varicose vein in order to damage the inside lining of the vein, which will scar the vein and cause it to close. That is something that we at San Diego Vein Institute can take care of for you; the rest of the stress reduction is up to you.


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ENCINITAS ADVOCATE - NOVEMBER 18, 2016 - PAGE A21

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TWINKLE, an 8-year-old Boxer/ American Staffordshire Terrier mix, is looking for her new best friend. She was found as a stray and has proven to be such a sweet, old soul. She’s easy-going, mellow and can’t wait to find a family to share her love with. Twinkle loves everyone, but we think she would prefer older children in a quiet home, where her family can understand when she needs her naptime. She would love to go for leisurely walks and snuggle on the couch with her new family. November is Adopt-A-Senior-Pet Month. On average, senior pets spend four times longer in shelters than younger animals. Open your heart to the ageless love of a senior pet today! Twinkle is available for adoption at the San Diego Humane Society’s Oceanside Campus located at 2905 San Luis Rey Road. To learn more about making her part of your family, please call (760) 757-4357.

FROM THEATRE, A1 nearly 30 different kids of all ages and backgrounds, from a 14-month-old baby to older kids who were dealing with issues such as divorce and drug abuse. “I was a ‘manny’ before that was a popular phrase,” Golden said. “I had this exposure to a wide spectrum of kids. I saw so many families, so many kids, I call those my daddy training years.” While that job was the perfect training for his new career as a teacher, Golden also has the necessary technical experience to guide a drama department. In addition to acting and writing — he sold an animation pilot and had a TV show optioned though neither broke out — he began working on the film production side. Golden did production work well enough to emerge as a candidate for the Director Guild of America’s prestigious training program. He traveled to New York and was just about to interview for the huge opportunity. But before the interview was a personality test and it was that test that caused Golden to re-think his life’s goals, eventually leading to him back to San Diego, where he got his teaching credential in 2013. He started as a long-term substitute for English at his alma mater Torrey Pines High School for 2014-15 and that year he also took over ASB and the cheerleading team after the tragic death of another teacher. Following that school year, Golden came to LCC to teach acting and run the drama club. “I love theatre and I’m really inspired by students and I really enjoy inspiring them,” Golden said. “So there’s this give and take of inspiration that lifts me up and lifts them up. High school is a tough time in a person’s life, there is a lot of guidance and support needed, and I genuinely embrace that role. His LCC career got off to a strong start last fall when the student production of “Almost Main” was a huge success, something the LCC Theatre crew really needed. “This is a wonderful school, it’s like a college campus and there’s a lot of pride put in the academics and the athletics of La Costa Canyon High School,” Golden said. “And now we are just trying to boost the perception, which is reality, that the drama department is right there too. I think the work we are creating here has been beautiful so far.” The run of “Almost Main,” which included several sellout shows, seems to have made theatre cool again at LCC. “Now I have football players in my acting classes,” Golden said. “I genuinely believe that everyone is creative. Theater is a place where we embrace our differences and we become a family. That welcoming atmosphere is really important to me. “I’m really proud of the shows we are doing, but I’m exceptionally proud of the fact that our club is growing and we are pulling in a diverse (cross-section) of the student body.” Following “Almost Main,” Golden directed the students in a musical called “The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee” last spring. Golden teaches eight theater classes — from Acting 1 to Intermediate Acting and Musical Theatre to Advanced Acting Honors — but there are also classes on stage production. A collection of kids from all of those classes make up the LCC Thespians drama club, which puts on the big shows. Golden is the club adviser and directs the shows. “The club is totally paid for by the students … it is essentially a production company,” he explained. “And all of the decisions that go into it — which show should we do, what it will cost, what can we do safely … are a collaboration between us. If it were a real theatre company, I would be the artistic director and the students would be the board.” For “The Crucible,” the costumes were designed and sewed by a student, students were in on the directing, students did the makeup, worked on the lightning and sound, built the stage and are the stage hands, in addition to the actors. It takes around 40 students to put on the show. While Golden guides the actors, technical director Fernando Robles leads the production side, an area where Golden sees the potential for a lot of expansion because of Robles’ expertise. “He’s just awesome,” Golden said of Robles. “He teaches them how to build sets, lights and sound, everything.” For “The Crucible,” Robles guided student construction of a rotating set with four different set pieces covering all 360 degrees. A few student backstage technicians can rotate the stage and change the scene location in a matter of seconds. “It’s really cool and it was really fun for us to build,” Golden said in a statement that could apply to the entirety of LCC theatre. Tickets for the final showing of “The Crucible” — Nov. 18 at 7 p.m. — can be purchased at lacostacanyontheatre.com or at the door.


OPINION

PAGE A22 - NOVEMBER 18, 2016 - ENCINITAS ADVOCATE

Encinitas Advocate

Stop the hate

380 Stevens Suite 316 Solana Beach, CA 92075 858-756-1451

encinitasadvocate.com Encinitas Advocate is published every Friday by Union-Tribune Community Press. Copyright © 2016 Union-Tribune Community Press. No part of the contents of this publication may be reproduced in any medium, including print and electronic media, without the expressed written consent of Union-Tribune Community Press. Subscriptions available for $125 per year by mail.

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I

t’s as if the floodgates have suddenly been opened. Hate is flowing freely in schools across the nation since Donald Trump was elected. This tweet from a parent sums it up: “Passive racism is quickly turning into open harassment now that Trump won the election.” In our nation’s high schools, middle schools and even elementary schools, sexist vulgarities and chants of “build the wall” and “white power” echo through many halls and classrooms. A sampling of tweets and Facebook posts from students and parents across the country, collected by The 74, a nonpartisan education news site whose name references the 74 million children in the United States, is – can I use this word? – deplorable. • “Muslim California student says she was attacked for wearing hijab.” • “Swastikas drawn on walls at Maryland middle school.” • “LAUSD [Los Angeles Unified School District] substitute teacher told student her parents could be deported.” • “It’s disappointing to hear that four male white students told an innocent black student that she will be lynched.” •A sign posted in a school bathroom announcing a blood drive asks people to “schedule your life-saving donation.” Scrawled beneath that – “P.S.: not for ni****s.” • A comment from a student to another at an elementary school in Ann Arbor, Michigan: “Because Trump won, Jews will need to leave the country.” • At a Florida high school, signs posted above two water fountains – “colored” and “whites only.” •“Apparently, some kid in Redding thought it would be funny to pass around deportation passes to kids of immigrant families.” • From a school teacher: “I have dozens [of examples] of young girls who had their vaginas grabbed yesterday in the name of Trump.” One was 10 years old. When she asked one boy why, he said, “If a president can do it, I can too.” • “Due to multiple reports of Muslim students being harassed on campus, KU is looking for volunteers to give rides/escort students from class.” • “Saw one girl [second grade] ask another when was she leaving back to Mexico.”

• “White students in DeWitt, Michigan formed a physical wall of students to block Latino kids from entering the school.” • “One parent I spoke with says kids who support Trump are telling African-American students to go back to Africa.” • “Today at middle school a 6th grader was walking behind a group of girls and said he was going to ‘grab them by the p***y’ cause of Trump.” • “A little blonde white boy just decided to tell me that since Trump is his president he can grab me by the p***y.” • Scrawled on a bathroom wall: “You black ppl better start picking y’all slave numbers – KKK 4 lyfe – go Trump 2016” • Principal in Pennsylvania admits white students were chanting: “Cotton Picker, You're a N****r, Heil Hitler.” • “I’m going to school today crossing my fingers that the Trump supporters at my table don’t try and fight me like they said they would.” • “Somebody on the bus grabbed my chest today and said it was his right.” • “Black friend had his tires slashed.” • “Yesterday two Trump supporters smashed the windows of a black student’s car and wrote, ‘Make America Great Again n****r’ in car paint.” • “Aren’t you people supposed to be sitting in the back of the bus now?” There are hundreds more examples – and local incidents as well. A statement by the Anti-Defamation League condemned an occurrence at UCSD, where a trolley stop defaced with graffiti included a red swastika and the painted words “Heil Trump.” The other incident, at San Diego State University, is being investigated as a hate crime, the ADL said. At SDSU, a Muslim student wearing a hijab was robbed by men making comments against Muslims and in support of Trump. Protests Hundreds of San Dieguito High School Academy students displayed their courage and passion when they walked out of their third-period class last Thursday to protest Trump’s election. According to an article in The Mustang, SDA’s school newspaper, “One of the organizers, junior Cordelia Degher, said the event was organized to ‘spread love and stand

www.encinitasadvocate.com against the hatred that Donald Trump stands for and has expressed over the past year.’” After learning of the proposed walkout, SDA principal Bjorn Paige emailed parents to inform them that students are allowed to do this, that safety is his top concern, and that the absence from class would be unexcused. The protest, accompanied by a few dozen pro-Trump counter-protesters, was by all accounts peaceful and respectful. “From what I could see, I was very pleased with the respect students showed each other,” said Paige [in the article]. “It really felt like a community coming together to share opinions.” These students, who can’t yet vote, care enough about their future to make their voices heard, despite the consequences, and that’s a hopeful sign. Several hundred marchers carrying signs at a rally last Sunday walked along Highway 101 at Encinitas Blvd., regrouped at Moonlight Beach, and chanted, “The people united will never be divided” and the familiar “Not my president.” Although Trump actually is their next president, as one young surfer on the beach pointed out, it’s encouraging to see passion, expressed peacefully, about the future of the country. Nonviolent protests are part of our American fabric and represent the embodiment of our right to free expression. But instead of commending citizens for active civic engagement, Scott Pelley, anchor of the CBS Evening News, chose a different path. After a segment on the many protests across the country on Nov. 11, and without any indication that the protesters did not vote, Pelley let loose with this snarky remark: “It does make you wonder how many of those people bothered to vote.” In one arrogant instant, Pelley dismissed their passion, trivialized their motivation, and promulgated a completely unsubstantiated idea that none of them voted. He made it sound like they were a whiny bunch of sore losers only looking for a reason to stop traffic. America, love it or leave it To those of us old enough to remember the turbulent 60s, this feels vaguely familiar. During that pivotal decade, Vietnam War protesters were gassed, jailed, spit upon and verbally and physically harassed. Cries of “My country right or wrong” and “America, love it or leave it” were part of the daily news. So were attacks on civil rights marchers and supporters, many of them deadly. There was social upheaval then, but somehow this feels different. Trump ran a campaign that seemed focused on intolerance, hate and isolationism. It was all about fear of “the other.” SEE SUTTON, A23

Local Dream Dinners locations to host fight against hunger event Dream Dinners, the national meal-assembly company that helps bring families together around the dinner table through an easy, homemade meal, along with its nonprofit organization, the Living the Dream Foundation, and Friends and Family Community Connection (FFCC), a nonprofit organization that strives to bring awareness to the issue of hunger, will host a San Diego area Fight Against Hunger event on Sunday, Nov. 27, from noon to 4 p.m. Hosted at the local SYSCO (12180 Kirkham Rd., Poway), organizers hope to package 140,000 meals that day, one-third of which will stay in the local

community, and the remaining two-thirds transported abroad to Haiti. During the event, community volunteers will assemble food packages that have been scientifically designed to reverse the effects of malnutrition and starvation. The Encinitas, Solana Beach, Poway, La Mesa and San Diego stores will all be participating in this event. Some key event sponsors include Sysco and Johnstone Supply. “Dream Dinners has a deep commitment to the communities we serve,” said Tina Kuna, Dream Dinners co-founder and CFO. “Through our work with the Living the Dream Foundation and FFCC, we will be able to package nutritious meals for so many

community members in need in the San Diego area and beyond. It’s amazing what can be accomplished in just a few hours if we have enough manpower. This is our largest meal packaging event yet, and with the recent hurricane in Haiti, it couldn’t have come at a better time.” For more information or to volunteer, visit www.goo.gl/3mbKe3. To make a donation, contact Encinitas Dream Dinners storeowner Valerie Bass at 858-259-0156 or Valerie.Bass@dreamdinners.com. Additional information about the Fight Against Hunger event can be found at www.livingthedreamfoundation.com.


www.encinitasadvocate.com

ENCINITAS ADVOCATE - NOVEMBER 18, 2016 - PAGE A23

Childhelp to hold 30th Annual Holiday Fantasia event Childhelp will hold its 30th Annual Holiday Fantasia event Saturday, Dec. 3 at the Del Mar Country Club. Greater San Diego Chapter of Childhelp raises funds for abused and at-risk youth with its holiday fundraiser. Emceed by Childhelp Celebrity Ambassador Jen Lilley, the holiday luncheon will feature boutique shopping, a fashion show presented by Gretchen Productions, silent and live auctions, and more. The prestigious “For the Love of A Child” award will be presented to Mary and Gordon Ceresino. The boutique and silent auction begin at 10 a.m.; the lunch at noon and the fashion show at 1:30 p.m. The ultimate goal of Holiday Fantasia is to raise funds crucial to the support of Childhelp’s life-saving programs and services.

Individual tickets are $125 each. To RSVP or obtain more information, visit www.childhelp.org/holidayfantasia-2. Since 1959, Childhelp has brought the light of hope and healing into the lives of countless children as a leading national nonprofit organization dedicated to helping at-risk children. Childhelp’s programs and services include residential treatment services, children’s advocacy centers, therapeutic foster care, group homes and child abuse prevention, education and training. Childhelp created the Childhelp National Day of Hope, held each April during National Child Abuse Prevention Month that mobilizes Americans to join the fight against child abuse. For more information, log on to www.childhelp.org, facebook.com/childhelp or twitter.com/childhelp.

WEEK IN SPORTS Water polo San Dieguito Academy is in unchartered waters. Literally. The third-seeded Mustangs became the first team in program history to advance to the San Diego Section semifinals after defeating No. 6 Classical Academy, 11-7, in a quarterfinal game on Nov. 12. The Mustangs were scheduled to meet Olympian on Thursday, Nov. 17 at 7:30 p.m. at La Jolla High School. Against CA, Matheus Gensler scored three goals to lead SDA and Sam Dumont and Kekoa Wheeler each had two goals. Zach Lewis, Wes Tyler, Max Van Loan and Carl Winner added one goal apiece. Mustangs goalie Dylan Herrera had seven saves.

FROM SUTTON, A22 Some (not all) of my Republican friends voted for Trump, and none of them are racist, misogynistic, anti-Semitic, xenophobic, anti-immigrant, uneducated bigots. To borrow from Trump’s own colorful language, “Some, I assume, are good people.” I know that to be true. These people certainly didn’t support Trump because he made fun of the disabled, war veterans like John McCain, or Carly Fiorina’s face. They surely didn’t support him because he bragged about assaulting women, belittled widely respected national figures, or called Mexicans rapists and drug dealers. Can these followers be persuaded to denounce the hate speech, especially in our schools where it’s directed at young children? The president-elect has unleashed a torrent of repressed hatred and

FROM BRIEFS, A14 abundance in our lives using branches, paper, strings, paint, glitter and imagination to create a fun hanging featuring drawings and words that represent the people, places and things for which you are grateful.

SDA improved to 19-12 overall for the season.

Field hockey La Costa Canyon defeated Torrey Pines, 5-1, in an Avocado League West game on Nov. 8. Kendall Nicholas scored two goals to lead the Mavericks and C.J. Jones scored one goal and had one assist. Lindsay Fessinger and Jenna Greer each scored one goal and Summer Borsack had two assists. LCC goalie Marina Keller had five saves. Skylar Sage scored one goal and Arielle Shahrabani had one assist to lead Torrey Pines. Falcons goalie Jaden Watkins had 12 saves. The Mavericks improved to 6-2 in league and 19-5 overall for the season. Torrey Pines fell to 5-3 in league and 12-10-1 overall for the season. intolerance, and legitimized it. He can stanch the flow of such horrific language in our schools, by condemning it in the strongest possible way. But so far, crickets. In our schools, no minority is safe – girls and women (who technically are not a minority), Muslims, Jews, African-Americans, Latinos, gays, the disabled – all are targets now of shameful bullying and vicious verbal attacks. Once sanctioned, it’s spread like an infectious disease through social media. This trauma, psychologists say, can damage children emotionally and scar them for life. “These things stay with us,” said Dr. Ken Druck, local author and internationally recognized expert on trauma and traumatic loss. “How we protect kids from this and how we send the antidote message is a critical issue that’s on the table right now for our nation, for our kids, for our world.” – Sr. Education Writer Marsha Sutton can be reached at suttonmarsha@gmail.com. The free event runs from noon to 4 p.m. every Saturday and Sunday at the Heritage Museum, 450 Quail Gardens Drive. For more information, call 760-632-9711 or visit sdheritage.org. Check out the city’s newsletter at http://bit.ly/2emAyol for more information.

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


www.encinitasadvocate.com

PAGE A24 - NOVEMBER 18, 2016 - ENCINITAS ADVOCATE

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Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.