La jolla light 06 15 17

Page 1

VOL. 106, ISSUE 24 • JUNE 15, 2017

Silent Wings

Gliderport use threatened by UCSD growth Father’s Day Sunday, June 18

INSIDE ■ ■ ■ ■ ■

Calendar, A10 Business, A12 Natural La Jolla, A19 Opinion, A22 Crime News, A27

Vikings Class of 2017 graduates this week, A4

■ One for the Road, B1 ■ Let Inga Tell You, B3 ■ People in Your Neighborhood, B4 ■ Social Life, B10 ■ Best Bets, B14 ■ Summer Camps, B16 ■ Kitchen Shrink, B19 ■ Classifieds, B20 ■ Real Estate, B22

LA JOLLA

LIGHT An Edition of

565 Pearl St., Suite 300 La Jolla, CA 92037 (858) 459-4201 lajollalight.com

A sailplane glides over the Torrey Pines cliffs in La Jolla.

University says it looks for ‘best use’ of the land BY MARÍA JOSÉ DURÁN hen the famed pilot Charles Lindbergh launched a motorless sailplane from Mount Soledad in 1930 and headed north above the coast, he was the first person to realize the cliffs at Torrey Pines generate a lift that

W

COURTESY OF GARY FOGEL

can be used for gliding, writes Gary Fogel in his book, “Images of America: The Torrey Pines Gliderport.” Since the 1930s, sailplanes have been taking off from the Torrey Pines Gliderport (with a three-year break for World War II) until 2009, the last year a license agreement was signed between the Associated Glider Clubs of Southern California (AGCSC) and UC San Diego — the owner of the land where the runway sits.

Prior to that, the sailplanes that once flew “whenever the wind was good,” were restricted to flying the windiest month of the year, February. “It’s a fantastic thing to have a historic site operating the way it always had, so it would be a huge loss, not only for San Diego but the country, to shut one of the last glider operators,” said Save Our Heritage Organisation (SOHO) director Bruce Coons. “We’ve been supporting the effort to keep SEE GLIDERPORT, A24

Just push the ‘Airnoise’ button La Jollan creates app to make filing noise complaints easier BY MARÍA JOSÉ DURÁN Lower Hermosa resident Anthony Stiegler, who first noticed an increase in airplane noise sometime between March and April, had been calling in complaints to the San Diego Airport Authority every time he heard a commercial jet pass by. “It took a long time to make the phone call,” he told La Jolla Light. “You had to make the call, leave a

20- to 30-second voicemail message to give them the data they were requesting … you had to do that for any and every flight that came by.” Acknowledging the frustration, Chris McCann, a software developer and former Air Force pilot, and the La Jolla rep on the Airport Noise Advisory Committee (ANAC) subcommittee, started testing and ultimately released an easier system

for filing complaints automatically. “It simplified the process,” Stiegler attested. “Instead of me having to make a phone call or get online to make the complaints, it now just takes a second as opposed to minutes or much longer.” Another user, Lee Miller of La Jolla agreed. “It’s a sanity saver,” she said. Airnoise, as the platform is called,

The airnoise button allows residents to input airplane noise complaints by pressing on it.

SEE AIRNOISE, A14

GREG NOONAN

LaJollahomes.com

Representation You Can Trust.

©2017 Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices California Properties is a member of the franchise system of BHH Affiliates LLC. CalBRE 01317331

COURTESY


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LA JOLLA OFFICE | 1299 Prospect St. | 858.459.0501 ©2017 Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices California Properties (BHHSCP) is a member of the franchise system of BHH Affiliates LLC. BHH Affiliates LLC and BHHSCP do not guarantee accuracy of all data including measurements, conditions, and features of property. Information is obtained from various sources and will not be verified by broker or MLS. *This report (Total sales volume) is published April 2017 based on data available from January 1, 2000 through December 31, 2016 for the top five offices/brokerages in La Jolla, CA. **This report (Total homes sold in La Jolla, 92037) is published June 2017 based on data available from June 1, 2016 through May 31, 2017 for the top four offices/brokerages in La Jolla, CA. Trendgraphix, Inc. CalBRE# 01317331


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Town Council passes the ball to City to help save bees BY MARÍA JOSÉ DURÁN The UC San Diego student-run organization CALPIRG made a presentation June 8 during the La Jolla Town Council (LJTC) meeting at the Rec Center to convince trustees to join its fight to save bees and declare La Jolla a “Bee City USA.” However, citing concerns about their authority to self-proclaim as a bee-friendly city, trustees approved a motion to recommend the City of San Diego become one. “Some people view bees as a simple summer annoyance, but they help pollinate 90 percent of our native crops,” said CALPIRG volunteer Ron Pacheco. La Jollan Diane Bush, who is a member of the San Diego Beekeeping Society, said she’s been a beekeeper for 20 years. “I inherited my dad’s two hives,” she said. “I’ve been talking about this (issue) since 2002 when I noticed my hives go from day to night.” Bush described how, in her experience, pesticides and GMO (genetically modified organism) crops can be detrimental to bees. “They eat the (contaminated) pollen, they feed their babies, they go out, they forget how to get back, and that’s how they die.” Pacheco confirmed that yes, “there have been mysterious disappearances of bees since 2006.” There are 47 cities listed on the Bee City USA register, from States such as North Carolina, Wisconsin and California. To become one, a City must: 1)help raise awareness, 2) enhance habitats for bees and 3) celebrate achievements as a bee-friendly area.

In other LJTC news:

MARÍA JOSÉ DURÁN

Five student reps from the CALPRIG organization at UCSD attend the La Jolla Town Council meeting to seek its support for saving bees through a Bee City USA designation. UCSD chemistry student and CALPIRG volunteer Steven Russum said one of the biggest factors decimating the bee population is the fragmentation of their habitat, “which is something you can help with.” He told trustees that, for La Jolla to become a Bee City USA, all that was needed was control over the landscaping. “I’d like to support your efforts, but whether we can certify if we control landscape in La Jolla, is an open question,” said LJTC president Ann Kerr Bache. Trustees agreed that landscaping requirements are divided among the City of San Diego Urban

Forestry Division and the La Jolla Community Plan. Trustee Gail Forbes offered, “the Community Plan requires certain kinds of landscapes and trees on certain streets, so that might be another place where if you do have a list of plants that are bee-friendly, might be added in (but it’s) a long, slow process.” A motion to encourage the City of San Diego to enter the Bee City USA register was approved unanimously. A second motion to contribute to raise awareness about bee conservancy in La Jolla was also approved.

■ Organizations Forum: There are 13 boards that guide community life within La Jolla. According the Kerr Bache, “Sometimes it’s difficult for the public to know what functions they provide and which one to turn to with a problem, or how to get involved.” To help, the Town Council hosted a forum where the leaders of the key community boards summarized their responsibilities. • La Jolla Community Planning Association (LJCPA). Member Patrick Ahern represented the association saying, “It’s a very juicy powerful group, and we like juicy.” LJCPA meets 6 p.m. first Thursdays at the Rec Center and overlooks land-use issues. “We do about 90 projects a year. Eighty-one percent get approved (by the City), so I guess they listen to us,” Ahern said. Contact: info@lajollacpa.org or lajollacpa.org • La Jolla Traffic & Transportation (T&T). Chair Dave Abrams stated its focus as “providing a local point for community input on traffic and transportation matters.” The topics dealt with range from special events to traffic circles. T&T meets 4 p.m. third Wednesdays at the Rec Center. Contact: manana@san.rr.com • La Jolla Parks & Beaches (LJP&B). President Ann Dynes introduced the group and delegated member Patrick Ahern to present its features. “Our focus is the parks SEE TOWN COUNCIL, A16

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Greg Noonan & Associates · 1-800-LA JOLLA (525-6552) · LaJollahomes.com · Greg@LaJollahomes.com ©2017 Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices California Properties (BHHSCP) is a member of the franchise system of BHH Affiliates LLC. BHH Affiliates LLC and BHHSCP do not guarantee accuracy of all data including measurements, conditions, and features of property. Information is obtained from various sources and will not be verified by broker or MLS. *Copyright Trendgraphix, Inc. Total sales in units published January 2017 based on data available from 01/01/16 – 12/31/16 for total sales in La Jolla, CA (92037) for the top five agents. CalBRE 01317331.


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PAGE A4 - JUNE 15, 2017 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

378 Students Strong

La Jolla High Class of 2017 graduates with honors

MARÍA JOSÉ DURÁN

La Jolla High School Class of 2017 Salutatorian Matt Romero and Valedictorians Heloise Carion and Lorenzo Calvano pose in front of a Viking-themed mural a week before graduation day.

BY MARÍA JOSÉ DURÁN The Class of 2017 will leave La Jolla High School from Edwards Stadium on June 14 with 378 graduating seniors (183 girls, 195 boys). Of the graduates, 56 percent are receiving a “Senior with Academic Distinction” designation — that’s 215 of them. Top-of-the-classers, Valedictorians Lorenzo Calvano and Heloise Carion (GPA 4.87) and Salutatorian Matt Romero (GPA 4.82), talked with La Jolla Light last week about their academic success. “My senior year has been really good, but it was probably my hardest year because of college applications. That was really stressful, but overall, it’s been fun!” Heloise said. Lorenzo agreed, “It was my hardest year of high school, but also the year I’ve had the most fun on, because of all the senior year activities and doing things with my friends.” Matt begged to differ, for him senior year was a breeze. “It just felt easier because I didn’t have to take my ACTs, and by December all my applications were in, so I just felt a release when I was finished, not as much pressure. The class load was about the same.” Like most of the graduating Vikings, the trio is moving on to college. Heloise is going to UC Berkeley and hopes to major in bioengineering. Similarly, Matt will join the bio-med program at UC San Diego. Lorenzo is looking at a major in chemistry at Harvey

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LA JOLLA LIGHT - JUNE 15, 2017 - PAGE A5

La Jolla High Class of 2017 Honors ■Seniors with Academic Distinction: 215 ■ Cum Laude Society Inductees: 74 ■ National Merit Commended Students: 14 ■ National Merit Finalists: 9 ■ National Merit Scholarship Awarded: 2 ■ Eagle Scout Awards: 5 ■ California Scholarship Federation Life Members: 21 ■ San Diego Promise Scholarship (Full ride to a San Diego Community College): 41 ■ U.S. Naval Academy Letter of Appointment: 1 Mudd College in Claremont. Heloise said she chose bioengineering “because it’s a really broad field and you can do a bunch of different things; you can do the more chemistry side or the more mechanical engineering side, you can do genetic modification or medical devices.” For Matt, bio engineering is his option because “I like the idea that it’s in medicine, but it’s a type of engineering where you’re doing new things in that field. It’s not only clinical practice or research, you can do either.” For Lorenzo, who realized he wanted to be in chemistry while missing the subject in a biochemistry class, “I like the mathematics side of sciences a lot, and chemistry is based on math and proofs, so I’m interested in exploring that side of chemistry.” His advice for incoming freshmen is to not be shy about asking counselors for help. “Talk to your school more because the staff is definitely trying to help you. It will make it a lot easier if you don’t just go in on your own and try to figure things out by yourself.”

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Lorenzo said if he could give one piece of advice to incoming freshmen, that would be to choose their subjects with their hearts. “I’d recommend to take classes that interest you, even if not everybody is taking them. Take classes you’re passionate about because then it will be easier for you to do well.” For Heloise, the secret to academic success was an organized schedule. “Work on your time management because those are the behaviors that are going to reflect through the next four years of high school. Starting to manage your time well from the beginning is really important.” As to what’s the best thing about high school, the three agreed that their friends are what made it all worthwhile. The worst thing, they also agreed, was not being able to focus on their areas of interest. “You have to be here every day and you have to take six classes and you have to do all these things ... there’s not a lot of freedom,” Matt explained. ■ See photos from La Jolla High School’s graduation in the next issue of the Light.

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PAGE A6 - JUNE 15, 2017 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

Planners back a Torrey Pines Road landscape program OK a homebuild project on Calle Chiquita

BY ASHLEY MACKIN-SOLOMON The La Jolla Community Planning Association (LJCPA) on June 1 narrowly voted to support a request for a City maintenance program to regularly trim the vegetation along the west side fencing on Torrey Pines Road between Prospect Street and Coast Walk, for the purpose of preserving the ocean views. In March 2015, the City lowered the height of the chain-link fence to four feet tall and removed the vegetation that had grown around it. However, nearby residents have since replanted varying vegetation, some that has grown above and around the fence. At the LJCPA meeting, resident Melinda Merryweather made a presentation in favor of the increased landscaping program. “I’m asking the LJCPA make a request to the City to preserve the public ocean views … by keeping vegetation trimmed to the height of the new fence, trimming the vegetation at the ‘paper street’ known as Charlotte Street (on the west side of Torrey Pines Road, across from Almalfi Street) to the ground, and removing the piece of plywood blocking an otherwise see-through fence.” LJCPA trustee Ray Weiss noted that taxpayer money went into lowering the fencing and trimming the vegetation to open the view, but the activity of private citizens re-blocked the view soon after. The vegetation was planted by residents seeking privacy,

A section of ocean-facing Torrey Pines Road; the view from which has been partially blocked by vegetation. At left, a piece of plywood is posted against a gate. sound mitigation and slope stabilization. Land-use consultant Michael Pallamary, representing the residents, emphasized that the plants are necessary for hillside stability. “This particular section of Torrey Pines Road is structurally dangerous. It’s very steep and the importance of this vegetation cannot be overstated. In order to keep this slope safe, you need vegetation. It serves to secure the soil and hold the hillside together. You should be very cautious about attacking these plants without recognizing the value they add to stabilizing the slope,” he advised. Further, there is a gate adjacent one of the houses, and a piece of plywood has been placed against it for privacy and noise mitigation. LJCPA trustee Patrick Ahern said keeping the fence and vegetation at four-feet was

“reasonable,” as was lowering the plywood to four feet to be consistent with the fencing, but still maintain privacy. However, trustee Phil Merten said, “The reason we’re talking about lowering the vegetation to four feet is because that is the height of the fence. But anytime you have an oceanfront property along an identified view street, the maximum height for landscape material and fencing is three feet because someone sitting in a car can see over a three-foot fence.” After a brief discussion, enough board members said they were comfortable with a four-foot fence, and a motion to support Merryweather’s request passed 7-6-1. Some of those who voted against the request said they would rather support the request, but with a three-foot fence.

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In other LJCPA news: ■ Calle Chiquita approved: After a narrow vote at the La Jolla Shores Permit Review Committee (approved 5-3 in April), the Calle Chiquita homebuild project was heard and approved at LJCPA. The project would demolish an existing 4,453-square-foot house and construct a new 8,697-square-foot single-family residence at 2326 Calle Chiquita in La Jolla Shores. The project includes a turn-around driveway, pool and garage; and is described as a “Traditional” style with elements of cottage/ranch/farmhouse architecture. When heard previously, issues of the setbacks and the proximity of the pool to the nearby neighbor’s house were addressed. Nevertheless, they were re-heard at LJCPA.


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LA JOLLA LIGHT - JUNE 15, 2017 - PAGE A7

PHOTOS BY ASHLEY MACKIN-SOLOMON

Calle Chaquita architect Laura DuCharme

Melinda Merryweather refers to a map to point out the area she would like landscaped, and provides a brief history of the area. In presenting the project, architect Laura DuCharme said the proposed home’s footprint is similar to the existing house, that she and the property owner met with neighbors to find solutions, and that the proposed setbacks are comparable if not larger than surrounding properties. She added there is a steep slope between the two properties, and short retaining walls and trees would be used in lieu of a 20-foot retaining wall. She also said there is a pool at the edge of the property closest to the neighbor’s house. LJPCA trustee Phil Merten, who requested the project be fully reviewed, said he appreciated the design but did not think the project conformed to the La Jolla Shores

Planned District Ordinance (blueprint for design). “Laura has designed a really handsome building here. I think it’s one of the nicest pieces of work I’m aware of that she has ever done. However, it’s just too darn close to the neighbor’s property and the massiveness of this property to the one next door (is inconsistent with the Planned District Ordinance),” he said. “I happen to live across the street from a house with a swimming pool like this. The pool is above the street like this project proposes. When I’m on the other side of my house, I hear the noise from the pool. It becomes a major entertainment area and when people bring out radios or music, the sound carries.”

Merton also read from the Shores Planned District Ordinance to argue that the project is not in conformance. However, DuCharme said it was an “interpretation” and that she felt the project was in compliance. Agreeing, trustee Tom Brady said he thought the property was “beautiful” and would be a “great addition” to the neighborhood. LJCPA voted to ratify the Permit Review’s Committee findings, 8-3-1. ■ Soundwall discussion coming: A presentation (and likely a vote of support) for a “soundwall” extension along La Jolla Parkway will be heard at a future meeting. Ardath Road resident Mark Pretorius attempted to garner support for the idea at the June meeting, but because of a clerical error, the trustees did not receive all the pertaining information and asked for a rescheduled hearing. As a resident of the street that runs parallel to La Jolla Parkway, Pretorius would like to

Board member Phil Merten asks that the Calle Chiquita project be fully reviewed. see the soundwall extended to decrease noise for residents. He presented four points he would like LJCPA to carry out: 1) request the City perform an updated “engineering and traffic survey” and “noise contour survey” for La Jolla Parkway along the Ardath Road frontage; 2) request the City conduct a feasibility study to extend the noise and safety barrier, and budget and plan accordingly; 3) request the City better enforce the speed limit and fix the potholes on La Jolla Parkway (between Torrey Pines Road and I-5/CA-52) and prioritize the extension of this noise and safety barrier, based on their analysis of traffic, safety, risk and liability; and 4) request the City explore and determine La Jolla Parkway’s eligibility for federal funding. — La Jolla Community Planning Association next meets 6 p.m. Thursday, July 6 at La Jolla Recreation Center, 615 Prospect St. sandiego.gov/planning/community/cpg

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PAGE A8 - JUNE 15, 2017 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

Artistic makeover aims to boost school spirit

T

hrough the dedication of the Muirlands Middle School (MMS) Administration, the MMS Foundation, the San Diego Unified School District staff, and parent and community volunteers, Muirlands Middle School received new landscaping along the front entranceway, new school signage, a new color paint scheme (front of school and lunch quad area), lunch tables, umbrellas and a stunning new mural. The project goal was to provide students, faculty and staff with a beautiful, welcoming environment that encourages community and participation in the school’s social and academic life. -Jori Mendel

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Carmel Valley 3810 Valley Centre Drive, Suite 906, San Diego, CA 92130 858.259.0555 | Del Mar 3790 Via De La Valle, Suite 301, Del Mar, CA 92014 858.755.0075 ©2017 Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Owned by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker, the Coldwell Banker Logo, Coldwell Banker Global Luxury and the Coldwell Banker Global Luxury logo service marks are registered or pending registrations owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Broker does not guarantee the accuracy of square footage, lot size or other information concerning the condition or features of property provided by seller or obtained from public records or other sources, and the buyer is advised to independently verify the accuracy of that information through personal inspection and with appropriate professionals.


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PAGE A10 - JUNE 15, 2017 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

published in the 2017 Kids San Diego Poetry Annual. (858) 552-1657. Register: ksdpa.com ■ Pen to Paper writing group meets, 1 p.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 552-1657. lajollalibrary.org ■ iPad class, 1:30 p.m. La Jolla Community Center, 6811 La Jolla Blvd. $10-$15. (858) 459-0831. ■ Poetry Workshop, 2 p.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 412-6351. lajollalibrary.org

15 Thursday, June 15

Friday, June 16

■ Sunrise Rotary Club of La Jolla meets, 6:55 a.m. The Shores Hotel, 8110 Camino Del Oro. $20. (619) 992-9449. ■ Small business consulting, 9 a.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 552-1657. lajollalibrary.org ■ Exercise class for adults, 9:30 a.m. United Methodist Church of La Jolla, 6063 La Jolla Blvd. jbale@sdccd.edu ■ Summer reading program begins at Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. Program lineup: lajollalibrary.org/events ■ Qi Gong, 9:30 a.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 552-1657. lajollalibrary.org ■ Children’s poetry workshop, presented by San Diego Poetry Annual magazine, 10:30 a.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. By donation. Poems will be

■ La Jolla Golden Triangle Rotary Club breakfast meeting, 7:15 a.m. La Jolla Marriott, 4240 La Jolla Village Drive. $20. (858) 395-1222. lajollagtrotary.org ■ Exercise class for adults, 9:30 a.m. United Methodist Church of La Jolla, 6063 La Jolla Blvd. jbale@sdccd.edu ■ Juggling show, 10 a.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 552-1657. lajollalibrary.org ■ Tai Chi, 10 a.m. beginner, 10:45 a.m. advanced, La Jolla Rec Center, 615 Draper Ave. (858) 552-1658 ■ Computer Help Lab, 11 a.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 552-1657. lajollalibrary.org ■ Kiwanis Club of La Jolla meets, noon, La Jolla Presbyterian Church, 7155 Draper Ave. First three meetings free, then $15. (858) 900-2710. kiwanisclublajolla.org ■ Lunchtime Guided Meditations, noon, PDG Health, 909 Prospect St. $8, first time free. Drop-ins welcome, RSVP: (858) 459-5900. ■ “Escape Room” for teens and tweens, solve puzzles and riddles, 7 p.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858)

552-1657. lajollalibrary.org

552-1657. lajollalibrary.org

Saturday, June 17

■ Ikebana flower arranging, 9:15 a.m. advanced, 11:30 a.m. beginner/intermediate, Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 552-1657. lajollalibrary.org ■ Seniors Computer Group, 9:30 a.m. Wesley Palms, 2404 Loring St., Pacific Beach. How to use computers and smartphones safely. Free for guests, $1 monthly membership. (858) 459–9065. ■ Informed Prostate Cancer Support Group meets, 10 a.m. Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Center Auditorium, 10905 Road to the Cure. Patients and loved ones welcome. ipcsg.org ■ Dog adoption event with Operation Greyhound, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Ark Antiques, 7620 Girard Ave. (858) 459-7755. ■ Writer’s Block writing group meets, noon. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 552-1657. ■ Tween writing workshop, 3 p.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 552-1657. lajollalibrary.org

Sunday, June 18

Happy Father’s Day ■ La Jolla Open Aire Market, 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Girard Avenue at Genter Street. (858) 454-1699. ■ E-clinic, 1 p.m. 7555 Draper Ave. Riford Library, (858) 552-1657. lajollalibrary.org ■ Music, Father’s Day classical-music concert, “From Vienna, to Moscow, to Prague.” 2 p.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 552-1657. lajollalibrary.org ■ Girls Aerospace Workshop, 2 p.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858)

Monday, June 19

■ Ico-Dance class, 9 a.m. La Jolla Community Center, 6811 La Jolla Blvd. $7 members, $12 non-members. amandabanks.com/ico-dance ■ Exercise class for adults, 9:30 a.m. United Methodist Church of La Jolla, 6063 La Jolla Blvd. (858) 459-3870. ■ La Jolla Shores Planned District Advisory Board meets (pending items to review), 11 a.m. La Jolla Rec Center, 615 Prospect St. bit.ly/planningagendas

Tuesday, June 20

■ Exercise class for adults, 9:30 a.m. United Methodist Church of La Jolla, 6063 La Jolla Blvd. jbale@sdccd.edu ■ Lunchtime Guided Meditations, noon, PDG Health, 909 Prospect St. $8, first time free. Drop-ins welcome, RSVP: (858) 459-5900. ■ Rotary Club of La Jolla, noon, La Valencia Hotel, 1132 Prospect St. Lunch $30. Guests welcome. lora.fisher@usbank.com ■ Mind/body fitness for older adults, 12:30 p.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 552-1657. lajollalibrary.org ■ Intro to Access Bars Class, 7-8 p.m. La Jolla Wellness Studio, 7580 Fay Ave., Suite 103. Unblock limitations for a life of bliss, abundance and ease, $10. (858) 414-1531. accessitall.biz ■ 3-D Design Workshop, 3:30 p.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 552-1657. lajollalibrary.org ■ Development Permit Review Committee meets (pending items to review), 4 p.m. La Jolla Rec Center, 615

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LA JOLLA LIGHT - JUNE 15, 2017 - PAGE A11

Prospect St. info@lajollacpa.org ■ Soroptimist International of La Jolla dinner meeting, 5:30 p.m. Location to be given upon RSVP: 858-337-8090 (call or text). soroptimistlj.org ■ Lecture, “Stronger, Fitter, Faster: How to Optimize Your Energy to Reach Your Goals,” Mona Ezzat-Velinov, 6:30 p.m. Pacific Pearl La Jolla, 6919 La Jolla Blvd. RSVP: (858) 459-6919.

Wednesday, June 21

■ Soroptimist International of La Jolla breakfast meeting, to help women and girls succeed, 7:15 a.m. The Shores Restaurant, 8110 Camino Del Oro, First two meetings complimentary, then $16. (858) 454-9156 or soroptimistlj@gmail.com. ■ Kiwanis Club of Torrey Pines meets, 7:20 a.m. Good Samaritan Episcopal Church, Roetter Hall, 4321 Eastgate Mall. First three meetings free, then $15. tbilotta1@gmail.com ■ Exercise class for adults, 9:45 a.m. United Methodist Church of La Jolla, 6063 La Jolla Blvd. (858) 459-3870. ■ Torrey Pines of La Jolla Rotary

Club meets, 11:30 a.m. Rock Bottom Brewery, 8980 La Jolla Village Drive. $20. (858) 459-8912. gurneymcm@aol.com ■ Alzheimer Caregiver Support and Discussion Group meets, 1:30 p.m. La Jolla United Methodist Church, 6063 La Jolla Blvd. Alzheimer’s San Diego provides comprehensive, compassionate, knowledgeable and free resources to families impacted by Alzheimer’s disease and other forms of dementia or memory loss. (858) 454-3745. ■ La Jolla Traffic & Transportation Board meets, 4 p.m. La Jolla Rec Center, 615 Prospect St. manana@san.rr.com ■ Panel discussion, “Preparing your family for the journey ahead,” with Monarch Cottages, 6 p.m. La Jolla Country Club, 7301 High St. RSVP by June 16: (619) 955-0492. ■ Congregation Beth Israel Men’s Club, dinner forum with speaker associate rabbi Alyson Solomon speaker, open to men and women, 6:30 p.m., 9001 Towne Centre Drive. $15 with an RSVP; $18 without. (858) 900-2598. cbimensclub@gmail.com

Thursday, June 22

■ Sunrise Rotary Club of La Jolla meets, 6:55 a.m. The Shores Hotel, 8110 Camino Del Oro. $20. (619) 992-9449. ■ Small business consulting, 9 a.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 552-1657. lajollalibrary.org ■ Exercise class for adults, 9:30 a.m. United Methodist Church of La Jolla, 6063 La Jolla Blvd. jbale@sdccd.edu ■ Qi Gong, 9:30 a.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 552-1657. lajollalibrary.org ■ Pen to Paper writing group meets, 1 p.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 552–1657. lajollalibrary.org All events are free unless otherwise noted.

Did we miss listing your community event?

■ E-mail information to: ashleym@lajollalight.com ■ The deadline is noon, Thursday for publication in the following Thursday edition. Questions? Call Ashley Mackin-Solomon at (858) 875-5957.

Guitar master Fred Benedetti

COURTESY

Community Concert ■ The Music Series at Mount Soledad Presbyterian Church will present Fred Beneditti in ‘The Rhapsody of the Guitar,’ 7 p.m. Saturday, June 17 at 6551 Soledad Mountain Road. Tickets are $5-$10. (858) 248-9300.

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PAGE A12 - JUNE 15, 2017 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

The Enchantress sells lingerie, swimwear that fits right!

COURTESY

Getting the right fit for a client is paramount to customer service at The Enchantress.

BY DAVID L. CODDON “Everybody loves pretty lingerie,” said Nicola Rodney-Crook, owner of The Enchantress lingerie and swimwear emporium in Pacific Beach. “We don’t think anybody should be discriminated against.” By “anybody,” Rodney-Crook is referring to full-busted women or those with, in general, fuller figures. “These women feel that they’re not being catered to, that they’re different from the ideological way people see ‘normal,’ ” she said. So after operating an online business in her native U.K. that sold “pretty bras and swimwear in large cup sizes,” Rodney-Crook decided to go the brick-and-mortar-store route not long after she and her husband moved to San Diego. It turned out that a store called The Enchantress had been in business for 25 years and was up for sale. “We thought this was perfect for us,” she recalled. Rodney-Crook took ownership in 2015. Today she’s not only serving customers in Pacific Beach but now in Mission Valley, where a second store has opened, this one called Bras and Honey Boutique. “We get a really wide range of clients at both stores,” she said. “We get high school ladies through ladies who’ve retired. We get a lot of people who when they find us say, ‘We never knew you existed’ or ‘We don’t have this where we are. We need this.’ ” Rodney-Crook recognized this need from personal experience. “I had breast augmentation,” she said, “and once I had it, I thought ‘I’ll go shop for some pretty bras,’ and I couldn’t find any. What was I supposed to do? There was no one out there selling (articles that fit her).”

Getting the right fit is paramount to customer service at The Enchantress. “It’s been ingrained in a lot of women that they should use tape measures because that’s how it’s done at large chain stores. We don’t use tape measures. We use the analogy that if you’re a woman and you’re going to buy jeans, you don’t just measure. You try them on. We can tell you it looks fine, but ultimately, you’re the one who’s wearing it. You really need to be sure.” So it’s not uncommon for The Enchantress customers to spend an hour or more on the premises when shopping. “We don’t rush anybody out,” she explained. “It’s such a personal thing you’re doing that we’re sharing with you.” Besides serving full-busted and full-figured women, The Enchantress staff is going through certification training that will qualify them to offer bras and swimwear for women who’ve gone through mastectomies, lumpectomies or other forms of reconstructive surgery. “We feel that is another group that is undeserved,” said Rodney-Crook. As at chains like Victoria’s Secret, The Enchantress gets its share of male customers coming to shop for their girlfriends or wives. They are welcome, but it doesn’t always work, said Rodney-Crook. “What the boyfriend likes and what the girlfriend wants are two different things.” The Enchantress is at 4125 Mission Blvd. in Pacific Beach, (619) 294-4544. Also at: 4242 Camino del Rio North, Mission Valley, (619) 282-1178. Online: getbras.com or theenchantress.com — Business Spotlight features commercial enterprises that support La Jolla Light.

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LA JOLLA LIGHT - JUNE 15, 2017 - PAGE A13

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PAGE A14 - JUNE 15, 2017 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

FROM AIRNOISE, A1 features two options: 1) A $5 monthly membership to create an account and use the service, which may be activated through the website or a switch; 2) A “noise button” that can be purchased for $20 and is a physical switch connected to the user’s Wi-Fi that sends a signal to a remote computer when the user hits it. “When the button is pressed, it transmits a signal over the Internet to a system I set up,” McCann began. “People have already signed up from their website, put their address in, and we geo-code that address, figure out the latitude and longitude, and that info is used to look for air traffic that’s near you, in about a 5-mile radius of you, up to 10,000 feet.” Once the system has found the airplane likely generating the noise, the user receives a report with information about the flight and a complaint is automatically input into the Airport Authority’s system, Flight Tracker. The Airport Authority recently switched from WebTrack to Flight Tracker, a system that came with enhanced features but removed the option to input complaints by e-mail. Staff member Sjohnna Knack said at a past ANAC meeting that eliminating the e-mails freed up time for employees to analyze the data. “When we get that info, we can do some investigation, when previously, all we were doing is inputting data,” she explained. Beatriz Pardo of Bird Rock said she used to input her complaints by e-mail before she started using the Airnoise button. “It’s like a dream,” she told the Light, “before it took so much time. And not only that, but I wasn’t able to identify the aircraft, and now I press the button and it tells me what aircraft it is, how far it is from my house, the altitude, the airline.” That kind of information is what the Airport Authority needs to create analysis and reports. However, San Diego Airport public relations specialist Rebecca Bloomfield wrote in an e-mail to the Light, “Some of the airnoise.io app complaints are not as helpful because they lack sufficient detail (precise location, precise time of event, etc.) needed to accurately investigate the cause of the concern.”

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Chris McCann is a software developer, former Air Force pilot and the La Jolla rep on the Airport Noise Advisory Committee subcommittee. However, Airnoise creator McCann responded, “Regarding ANAC’s comments about the complaints, the system fills in their Web form with all fields that they say are required to investigate a complaint. At one point, they made a change to the format of the date field that I wasn’t aware of, but that was easily detected and corrected. In fact, Airnoise adds more information than is required about the specific flight the user is complaining about, when that information is available to the system.” When asked why he decided to create this service, McCann explained, “(The Airport Authority) doesn’t understand how emotionally draining it is for people who are inundated by aircraft noise for three to five hours a day in their homes to go on its website and file a complaint. I’m

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■ Go to the website airnoise.io, and click on “learn more.” E-mail questions to info@airnoise.io

To log a noise complaint directly to the Airport Authority: ■ Visit flighttracker.casper.aero/san hoping to provide a mechanism to raise the signal from people over the noise.” As to the cost, he said, “I’d love to make it completely free to people, because I didn’t get into this as a business, I got into this to solve a problem, but it costs money to do this stuff and I don’t want to be in a hole for providing a service.” He added that more than 4,000 complaints have been generated and sent to the Airport Authority since May, and some 20 users have already signed up.

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LA JOLLA LIGHT - JUNE 15, 2017 - PAGE A15

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PAGE A16 - JUNE 15, 2017 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

FROM TOWN COUNCIL, A3

MARÍA JOSÉ DURÁN

New and returning trustees Michael Dershowitz, Julio de Guzmán and John Shannon are sworn in by La Jolla Town Council president Ann Kerr Bache at the June 8 meeting.

and the beaches of La Jolla,” he related. “What we do is, if there’s a great plan, we get it funded, either publicly or privately.” LJP&B meets 4:30 p.m. fourth Mondays at the Rec Center. Contact: lajollaparksandbeaches.org or lajollaparksandbeaches@gmail.com • La Jolla Parks & Recreation, Inc. (LJPRI). Trustee Bill Robins informed, “We are La Jolla’s back yard,” he said. The board is working on a plan to renovate the playground at the facility. LJPRI meets 5 p.m. fourth Wednesdays at the Rec Center. Contact: bit.ly/ljreccenter • Bird Rock Community Council (BRCC). Vice-president John Newsam said BRCC’s chief function is to handle the funds of the Maintenance Assessment District (MAD) established in 2000. “We also run the Bird Rock Neighborhood Watch that’s been in place for many years now,” he added. BRCC meets 6 p.m. first Tuesdays at local venues. Contact: info@birdrockcc.org or birdrockcc.org • La Jolla Shores Association (LJSA). Chair Nick LeBeouf said the Association is a

forum for matters affecting The Shores’ community and reporting them to the City. “We also give recommendations about the City parks within our boundaries,” he said. LJSA meets 6:30 p.m. second Wednesdays at 8840 Biological Grade. Contact: ljsa@gmail.org • La Jolla Shores Business Association (LJSBA). President Angie Preisendorfer said the group banded together three years ago as a response to the City construction projects that took over The Shores (Sewer & Water Group 809). “We’re working to get over 3 million visitors to come to Avenida de la Playa, the only business district in The Shores,” she said. LJSBA meets 9 a.m. third Thursdays at local businesses. • Community groups not present at the forum included La Jolla Village Merchants Association, Development Permit Review Committee, La Jolla Planned District Ordinance Committee, La Jolla Shores Permit Review Committee and La Jolla Shores Planned District Advisory Board. — La Jolla Town Council meets 5:30 p.m. second Thursdays at La Jolla Recreation Center, 615 Prospect St. lajollatowncouncil.org

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PAGE A18 - JUNE 15, 2017 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

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LA JOLLA LIGHT - JUNE 15, 2017 - PAGE A19

Another species of frangipani with more yellow on the flowers

KELLY STEWART

The fragrant frangipani is in bloom!

A

ssociated with tropical climates and swaying palm trees, the frangipani (Plumeria rubra) is a beautiful flowering tree that can be found here in La Jolla in a more shrubby version of itself. The gorgeous flowers vary in color from pure delicate white, to white tinged with yellow, to pinks and oranges. The flowers have five distinct curling petals.

The plumeria is a great drought and heat tolerant plant, and it adapts easily to San Diego’s summer climate; the trees lose their leaves in the springtime. The flowers are often used to make leis in Hawaii and may be worn in the hair as a decoration. Some say wearing a frangipani flower over your left ear signals that you are married, while wearing it over the right

The caterpillar that dines on the plumeria flowers and leaves, turns into a large brown moth.

JEREMY SMITH

means you are available! In some parts of the southeastern United States and in the tropics, the frangipani is preyed upon by a spectacular caterpillar of the hornworm moth (Pseudosphinx tetrio). It’s an impressive caterpillar, too! Striped yellow and black, with accents of red, the voracious caterpillar will eat every leaf and flower on the plant, but it doesn’t kill it. Once the caterpillars have gone to turn into drab brown moths, the leaves will sprout again. Now is the season here in San Diego to enjoy these fragrant blooms! — Kelly Stewart is a marine biologist with The Ocean Foundation who writes about the flora and fauna of La Jolla. She may be reached by e-mail at NaturalLaJolla@gmail.com

KELLY STEWART

A fragrant cluster of white and yellow frangipani flowers on the tree

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PAGE A20 - JUNE 15, 2017 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

LA JOLLA NEWS NUGGETS Tony Awards for Playhouse directors Christopher Ashley and Rebecca Taichman

JASON KEMPIN, GETTY IMAGES FOR TONY AWARDS PRODUCTIONS

Christopher Ashley holds his Tony Award for Best Director of a Musical for ‘Come From Away.’ Ashley graduated from Yale University in 1984. In 1997, he completed The Drama League program for directors. In 2007, he was appointed Artistic Director of the La Jolla Playhouse.

R

La Jolla Playhouse Artistic Director Christopher Ashley won the 2017 Tony Award for Best Director of a Musical for his work on the Playhouse-born “Come From Away,” June 12 at the annual ceremony at Radio City Music Hall. Additionally, the Playhouse’s world-premiere of “Indecent” received two Tony Awards for Best Director of a Play for Rebecca Taichman and Best Lighting Design of a Play for Christopher Akerlind. Ashley’s nomination for “Come From Away” was his third for directing, and his first win. “This award is truly a shared honor — with our extraordinary writers David Hein and Irene Sankoff, our amazing cast, crew and band, as well as La Jolla Playhouse, my artistic home for the last 10 years,” he exclaimed. “I couldn’t be more proud of our production teams and staff, who help develop and support these new works here in San Diego and propel them to continued life on Broadway.” “Come From Away” had its world-premiere at the Playhouse in May, 2015, winning six San Diego Critics’ Circle Awards. The show then went on to Seattle Repertory Theatre, DC’s Ford’s Theatre and Toronto’s Royal Alexandra Theatre, before opening at Broadway’s Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre in March, 2017. It is a fact-based story of how the tiny town of Gander, Newfoundland, took in thousands of stranded travelers after the 2001 terror attacks. “Indecent,” co-produced with Yale Repertory Theatre, is Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Paula Vogel’s decades-spanning saga of the story behind the controversial Sholem Asch play, “The God of Vengeance.” It had its world premiere at the Playhouse in November, 2015, a subsequent Off-Broadway run at the Vineyard Theatre, and later opened at Broadway’s Cort Theatre in April, 2017, marking the 28th Playhouse production to transfer to Broadway.

WINDANSEA BEACH

! E IC TIO N R P C U ED

There are plans for the Playhouse’s 2016 world-premiere of Ayad Akhtar’s “JUNK” and the current Ashley-directed production of “Escape to Margaritaville,” to open on Broadway next season. In addition to the Playhouse nominees, this year’s slate included three UC San Diego MFA graduates: Jefferson Mays, nominated for Best Actor in a Play for “Oslo”; Paloma Young for Best Costume Design of a Musical for “Natasha, Pierre and the Great Comet of 1812”; and former Playhouse Artistic Director Michael Greif, nominated for Best Director of a Musical for “Dear Evan Hansen.” The Playhouse was founded in 1947 by Gregory Peck, Dorothy McGuire and Mel Ferrer, and reborn in 1983 under the artistic leadership of Des McAnuff. It has seen 28 productions transfer to Broadway, garnering 38 Tony Awards.

Public review period open for Scripps Institution’s Marine Conservation Facility Project The UC San Diego Campus Planning Office has posted a draft Mitigated Negative Declaration (MND) and a Notice of Completion (NOC) for the Scripps Institution of Oceanography (SIO) Marine Conservation Facility Project at bit.ly/sioplans The public review period for the draft MND began June 2 and closes July 3, 2017. Direct any comments on the project to: Alison Buckley, Campus Planning, UCSD 9500 Gilman Drive, MC 0074.

City Council rejects Mayor’s November special election With a 5-4 vote on June 12, San Diego City Council

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www.lajollalight.com representatives turned thumbs down on Mayor Kevin Faulconer’s proposal to hold a November special election to let voters decide the fate of a Transit Occupancy Tax to fund an expansion to the Convention Center downtown and provide money for the homelessness crisis and road repair. District 1 Council member Barbara Bry (La Jolla) voted “nay” to the proposed tax because, as she reasoned, even though she supports all the items on the proposal, she would like to see “a thoughtful, well-crafted measure on the November 2018 ballot.” The City Council had previously struck out the $5 million budget line to fund such a special election, but on June 9 the Mayor used his veto power to restore it. “The Mayor also decided to slash district office funds that support the tax-paying residents of only City Council Districts 1 and 3,” Bry said, referring to the reduction in discretionary funds of $311,838 to District 1 and $362,957 to District 3 (the only districts mentioned in the veto memo). “District 1 and District 3 have the largest unallocated discretionary funds in their office budgets,” the City memo reads. Bry added, “this first-of-its-kind tactic, aims to derail thoughtful political discourse and has serious implications for this City Council and administrations to come,” A discussion to add the Soccer City initiative to the November ballot was scheduled for June 19, but after the rejection of the special election, the vote on Soccer City is unlikely to occur.

New La Jolla Elementary School PTO Board set The La Jolla Elementary School PTO Board was selected for the 2017-2018 School Year as follows: Mira Costello, president; Jamie Flynn, secretary; Kendall Goldstein, treasurer; Zhene Lejuwaan, auditor; Kat Peppers, Aimee Lansky, VP programs; Kelly Thomas, Amanda Zilke, VP volunteers; Ali Murphy, Megan DeMott, VP Room Parents; Nina Hall, Mary Morrow-Trevellyan, Tidings news; Katy Siddons, PTO/Friends Liason; Erin Sullivan, teacher representative.

Report: La Jolla Elementary School water is lead-free Following protocols established by the State Water Resources Control Board, City staff drew up to five water samples at La Jolla Elementary School on May 12. In an follow-up e-mail to parents Principal Donna

LA JOLLA LIGHT - JUNE 15, 2017 - PAGE A21

PEARL PREIS

Participants in the student-run La Jolla Film Festival include: host Donovan Griffin, Nathan Hacker, Sajan Alagiri, Hong Joon Kim, Andrei Sebald, Una Smoole, Kyung Min Na and William Dorst. Tripi reported, “I am pleased to inform you the results show our water does NOT contain levels of lead outside the allowable levels set by environmental agencies (State Water Resources Control Board via the Department of Drinking Water and the Environmental Protection Agency). Testing also shows there is no need for further mitigation. “While our school results are below the action level, we will continue to implement the drinking water flushing protocol as a proactive measure. This measure includes flushing all drinking water fountains and faucets on campus for a minimum of one minute prior to first use.” Detailed results of the testing are available on the district website at: sandiegounified.org/watersampling.

The sixth annual La Jolla Film Festival premiered eight student shorts to an excited crowd on June 7 at the Price Center Theater on the UC San Diego campus, reports organizer Jacob Ohara. The winners were Nathan Hacker for Best Overall and Andrei Sebald for Audience Choice. The La Jolla Film Festival is a student-run event, which will return next year. For information on how to become involved, send an e-mail to lajollafilmfestival@gmail.com

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How Marine Biology Created & Destroyed 19th-Century Natural Selection The e nineteenth etee t ce century tu y was as tthe ee era ao of marine biology. The debate over natural selection, as a dominant biological question of the age, originated from the study of the oceans. This lecture traces the ways that evolutionary theories were tied to marine science, especially the newer fields of deep-sea biology and marine geology—and even the birth of the Scripps Institution itself.

Rodolfo John Alaniz, PhD Department of History, University of California, Berkeley

11 a.m. June 16, 2017

Robert Paine Scripps Forum for Science, Society & the Environment: 8610 Kennel Way, La Jolla, CA 92037 Admission is free. For more information: (858) 534-5604.

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Darwin n in the Deep

Eight students show shorts at film fest

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PAGE A22 - JUNE 15, 2017 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

LA JOLLA

LIGHT 565 Pearl St., Suite 300 La Jolla, CA 92037 (858) 459-4201

lajollalight.com La Jolla Light (USPS 1980) is published every Thursday by Union-Tribune Community Press. Adjudicated as a newspaper of general circulation by Superior Court No. 89376, April 1, 1935. Copyright © 2017 Union-Tribune Community Press. All rights reserved. No part of the contents of this publication may be reproduced in any medium, including print and electronic media, without the expressed written consent of Union-Tribune Community Press. Subscriptions available for $125 per year by mail.

President & General Manager • Phyllis Pfeiffer ppfeiffer@lajollalight.com (858) 875-5940 Executive Editor • Susan DeMaggio susandemaggio@lajollalight.com (858) 875-5950 Staff Reporters • Ashley Mackin-Solomon ashleym@lajollalight.com (858) 875-5957 • María José Durán mduran@lajollalight.com (858) 875-5951 News Design • Michael Bower, Lead, Edwin Feliu, Crystal Hoyt, Daniel K. Lew Vice President Advertising • Don Parks (858) 875-5954 Media Consultants • Jeff Rankin (858) 875-5956 • Jeanie Croll (858) 875-5955 • Sarah Minihane (Real Estate) (858) 875-5945 • Dave Long (858) 875-5946 Ad Operations Manager • Colin McBride Production Manager • Michael Bower Advertising Design Laura Bullock, Maria Gastelum, Bryan Ivicevic, Vince Meehan Obituaries • (858) 218-7228 or mwilliams@mainstreetsd.com Service Directory • (858) 218-7228 or mwilliams@mainstreetsd.com Classified Ads • (858) 218-7200 or placeanad.utcommunitypress.com

OPINION

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OUR READERS WRITE Keep traffic moving, but add pedestrian features

believe. Taxpayers deserve a more proactive police department. Bill Smith

I’d like to respond to various letters on the topic of Torrey Pines Road and La Jolla Parkway. Stop whining about speeds, noise and pedestrian crossings on La Jolla’s major thoroughfares. The residents and tourists of La Jolla should not have to pay for people moving into houses next to or across the street from our major access roads and then wanting to turn them into convenient city streets for their walking and listening pleasure. What La Jolla needs is not to slow down the traffic on the one access road in and out of The Village. We need to speed it up! If people want to walk more, add pedestrian bridges, not more stop lights. La Jolla traffic has become arduous enough over the past few years. Do not make it worse! Joanie Connell

Planning board too important to neglect

La Jolla Shores Drive needs some attention In your recent story about the speed limits in La Jolla, you left out La Jolla Shores Drive. The traffic along La Jolla Shores Drive, north of Poole and Azul Streets, is the worst in town. I have lived here since 1974, and at age 86, I and can honestly say that nobody cares about this stretch of town. People drive by at 40 to 50 mph, and huge trucks and tankers are also driving on the stretch — unbelievable! I must walk the neighborhood (taking my life in my hands) to clean up all the discarded cups and bottles laying around. It’s absolutely terrible! Isabella Miriam

Your coverage of the La Jolla Community Planning Association (LJCPA) in the June 1 is accurate. I attended the La Jolla Kiwanis-Rotary joint luncheon the next day and that article was all everyone was talking about. The point was well-taken. The group needs a strong leader. Minus a strong leader, it caves under its own weight. The solution to that is obvious to the community. At the LJCPA meeting in May, Cindy Greatrex was re-elected (while absent) to another term as chair by the board of trustees. But now, the City says she can’t serve because of its arbitrary rule that you lose your board seat if you have three absences. Three is just a number. It has no meaning. I asked for the records of her absences in a FOIA (Freedom of Information Act) and was told she was absent zero times in 2014, zero in 2015, and one in 2016. Thus far in 2017, she’s had a death in her family and three absences, and the City says that is too many. Why? The board disagrees. One trustee suggested they fight the rule. That solution is obvious to the community. Greatrex ran the board for two years without the slightest problem. Without her there now, it is just bickering and confusion, which will continue, all because of an arbitrary absentee number set forth by the City. Once again, the City has its foot on our necks. Restore order! Bring back Greatrex before all credibility is lost. And if she will not do it, somebody had better quickly beg Joe LaCava to do it. Rob Thornton

People should know what public conduct is illegal Live from La Jolla! Your recent article about San Diego It’s ‘Thursday Night!’ panhandling laws quoted Police Officer Larry Hesselgesser, who seemed to suggest that, unless the homeless person is being aggressive, we as La Jollans simply have to tolerate their antics. This is just not true. The relevant law, Penal Code 647(c), says absolutely nothing about aggressiveness. Rather, the law states that if a homeless person “accosts” you for the purpose of “begging or soliciting alms,” he/she is guilty of a misdemeanor. To accost someone doesn’t necessarily mean that the person is approaching you in an aggressive manner; it could simply mean that the person approaches you and asks for money. Moreover, Officer Hesselgesser’s remarks gave the impression that accosting someone is the only thing for which La Jollans can contact the police. This is not true. The following is from the City of San Diego website, and it states: “While being homeless is not a crime, many kinds of public conduct are illegal and should be reported to the SDPD. These include being intoxicated, loitering, prowling, fighting, trespassing, aggressive panhandling, soliciting, urinating/defecating, consuming alcoholic beverages in certain public places, camping or sleeping in parks, littering, obstructing sidewalks, living in a vehicle parked on a public street, disturbing the peace by loud and unreasonable noises, using offensive words, behaving in a threatening manner and more.” Obviously, La Jollans are more empowered than Officer Hesselgesser would like us to

I recently read the La Jolla Light article regarding leadership issues with the La Jolla Community Planning Association (LJCPA). I would like to offer my opinion as to why there is a shortage of leadership. Many qualified people in our community, although angry, have chosen not to get involved with this group due the absence of credibility and transparency in the community planning process. Given the option, most people would prefer to watch a train wreck than be in one. What’s happening with our community group is excellent material for a new cable TV reality show. “Thursday Night Live in La Jolla” might be a suitable name. The director would have a difficult time selecting which stars and material to use for the season’s premiere episode. Conceivably, he or she could start with the LJCPA election in which two LJCPA trustees ran for re-election, despite being termed-out and disqualified, but went on to claim victory. Only after an election challenge was filed, did one of the termed-out trustees admit to his error and step down. The other, while repeatedly admitting he was not duly-elected, refused to step down. Or perhaps the premiere episode could be about the infamous LJCPA trustee who has gone to the dark side, now seemingly making money opposing applicant’s projects rather than approving them. Nevertheless, in one of his senior moments, he mistakenly divulges his true

intentions at a Planning Commission meeting exposing how (convoluted) the planning approval process is in La Jolla. Maybe the episode would be about the time a former LJCPA president, despite an 8-4 LJCPA vote to appeal a home he designed, refused to file the LJCPA’s appeal in the 10-day period allotted. His deliberate omission of not filing this appeal saved his client thousands of dollars and months of environmental review. Possibly the premiere should introduce one of the many stealth “save our community groups” strategically used by some of the LJCPA trustees to add cost and delay to an applicant’s project. The star of this episode would have to be their exclusive go-to attorney who is always willing to file an appeal or a frivolous lawsuit when this group of LJCPA trustees don’t get their way. No, all the above-mentioned episodes will have to wait. The premiere episode must be two hours long. The first hour will feature a LJCPA trustee and the go-to attorney and bogus community group “Save La Jolla” opposing the beach front expansion of his neighbor’s deck. But due to his neighbor’s persistence, the parties end up in Federal Court, twice! The first hour will end with the court slapping the trustee’s hand and warning him not to trespass on his neighbor’s property again. The second hour will end with a video from the neighbor’s security camera showing our LJCPA trustee trespassing, not once, but seven different times between 11:59 p.m. and 1:38 a.m. The combination of the neighbor’s video and the associated police report, describing a 68-year-old LJCPA trustee in his nightshirt and slippers trying to explain to the police why he was playing “ding-dong-ditch” at his neighbor’s front door were so compelling the jury awarded the neighbor $121,000 in damages! Anyone in our community angry enough to be the next star of “Thursday Night Live in La Jolla”? Bob Whitney

Guardrail needed along Coast Walk It was just a matter of time before a car went off the cliff on Coast Walk; it happened back in the 1970s, but somehow the report disappeared from police records. (See related story, page A27) The Light has quoted me many times over the last 20 years saying someone is going to go over this bluff due to no guardrail. The real guardrail is inside the parking lot that is now filled with bushes and boulders. The City has been warned about this for years, but never chose to do anything about it. I’m surprised it took this long, but I am so relieved no one was in that car. Coast Walk will someday need to be widened to its true width of 50 feet before it falls into the ocean. Melinda Merryweather

Please don’t ditch your doggy doo bags I love walking around our Village, but lately I’ve noticed that though the dog owners ARE picking up their dogs’ poop, they’re throwing the full bags into the bushes, lawns and on streets. Come on owners! Please keep our Village clean and tidy. You may love and care for your dog, but that includes cleaning up after them, too. Their waste carries disease and odor, as we all know.


OPINION

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LA JOLLA LIGHT - JUNE 15, 2017 - PAGE A23

OUR READERS WRITE (CONTINUED) Don’t be just plain lazy, don’t be halfway helpful. Susie Holub

Vikings Cheer Team seeks funds for camp My name is Emily and I recently joined the La Jolla High School Cheer Team. We are preparing for a wonderful competition season, but are in need of funds for cheer camp materials and uniform costs.

Community support is vital to our success. We are fund-raising on snap.com, so I am hoping La Jolla Light would be interested in helping us succeed by printing a link to our page: bit.ly/ljhscheer Emily Talerman

CORRECTION The story in the June 8 issue about historical designation for Helen Copley’s house contained two errors. It should have said Copley was born in Cedar Rapids, Iowa

COURTESY PHOTOS

Troop 4 Cub Scouts work to remove dead plants from the Salt Bush site of Whale View Point.

(not Cedar Rapids, Michigan as published) and it should have stated her birth year as 1922 (not 1951 as published). A thank you goes out to the two readers who called in the mistakes. The next bit of information from Cara Cadman speaks to the home’s ownership lineage: “I wanted to let the La Jolla Light know that Mark and Sherri McMahon purchased the house in 2010 and preserved it with the copper and renovations, and then sold it to Sandra Saw and Jeff Marchioro in 2016.”

What’s on YOUR Mind? ■ Letters published in La Jolla Light express views from readers in regard to community issues. To share your thoughts in this public forum, e-mail them with your name and city of residence to editor@lajollalight.com or mail them to La Jolla Light Editor, 565 Pearl St., Suite 300, La Jolla, CA 92037. Letters reflect the writers’ opinions and not necessarily those of the newspaper staff or publisher.

Cub Scouts and parents from Wolf Den 5 of Pack 4, La Jolla include: Doug Bradley, Mac Bradley, Patrick Calhoon, Addison Calhoon, Andrew Fates, Ted Fates, James Cameron, Steve Banowit, Cameron Banowit, Ted Gergurich and Zach Gergurich. Other helpers not pictured include Lisa Banowit, Tara Cameron, Wyomi Yockey, Logan Yockey, Hudson Yockey.

Cub Scouts earn badges sprucing up Whale View Point

BY ASHLEY MACKIN-SOLOMON roop 4 Cub Scouts working on two badges — Environmental Education and Grow Something — helped with the Whale View Point Shoreline Enhancement Project on May 28, trimming back dead

T

growth and planting 13 new plants at the Salt Bush site near 200 Coast Blvd. Moving forward, the Scouts will water the plants until they are established. The Whale View Point project (more at whaleviewpoint.org) is a long-term plan to

improve the area that starts to the south at 274 Coast Blvd., and ends at the cobblestone structure known as The People’s Wall to the north. Since the project began, an ADA-compliant sidewalk has been installed, overgrown aloe surrounding the Wedding

Bowl has been removed (also with the help of Boy Scouts), new trashcan lids were added and more. Established in 1912, Troop 4 is reportedly the oldest Troop west of the Mississippi. The Scouts meet at La Jolla Presbyterian Church. troop4lajolla.com

TARNISHING OUR JEWEL

Where’s the Business Permit?

I

find it very offensive and illegal for a company to be conducting a business in the Village of La Jolla by taking up much-needed parking spaces and not paying a permit fee or rent to run this business like all the other businesses in the La Jolla Village. Is there anything that can be done to make this company take its golf carts to a paid rental location and keep these golf carts off the streets of La Jolla where they are getting free advertising? In this picture, they are on Girard Avenue in front of Cody’s restaurant, but I’ve seen them all over Prospect Street and on Girard Avenue, near the Grande Colonial and La Valencia hotels. Kathryn Murphy ■ Fellow La Jollans: Please send La Jolla Light your leads of Village eyesores and we will go after the perpetrators. E-mail the scenarios and attach a photo, or call us and we’ll investigate who or what is Tarnishing Our Jewel! Reach Editor Susan DeMaggio at (858) 875-5950 or e-mail: editor@lajollalight.com (and include a related photo, if possible).

PHOTOS BY KATHRYN MURPHY


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PAGE A24 - JUNE 15, 2017 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

FROM GLIDERPORT, A1

Gary Fogel, historian for the Associated Glider Clubs of Southern California, poses with a motorless sailplane. and several academic and community buildings) on North Torrey Pines Road is slated for completion in 2020, and although the likely 10-story buildings won’t affect the runway, in Fogel’s opinion, “What would (affect us) is the construction staging for those projects because the Gliderport is a great place for them to store their equipment.” At the project’s Environmental Impact Review scoping meeting in May, Fogel said he wrote a comment for the use of the sailplane runway to be taken into consideration when planning construction at the university’s new hub.

What’s a sailplane?

A sailplane or glider is an airworthy vehicle that flies without an engine, manned by a pilot. To make that possible, Fogel said, the secret is in the takeoff. “If you’re flying a kite, and you have a tight string and pull on it, (the kite) goes up. If you pull on that line really quickly, it will go up really quickly. It’s the same thing for the gliders,” he explained. On a windy day, Fogel continued, a sailplane can be launched by a truck or a car, but in general pilots use a winch mechanism. “When they get to the top of the line, they release it, and then they’re free to fly as a bird,” he added. In the Torrey Pines wind lift,

COURTESY OF GARY FOGEL

a glider may soar all day or “until they need to go to the bathroom.” Without an engine, the flight of a sailplane is silent. “A glider has no motor, so it’s always falling,” Fogel explained. “If you have wind that’s going up, you can keep flying. Good pilots know where to find that. To someone who doesn’t know, it looks like magic, but if you know, as long as you can find that current, you stay up.”

Torrey Pines lift

“Most days in San Diego, we have the ocean next to us, which remains cool, SEE GLIDERPORT, A26

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OPP34A ©2017

the Gliderport working for 10 years now.” The flying of sailplanes at Torrey Pines Gliderport was first curtailed in 2009, when UCSD built the Stem Cell Core Facility at 10010 North Torrey Pines Road. AGCSC historian Fogel told La Jolla Light between construction staging and trying to meet the requirements the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) demands, “We haven’t been able to operate.” UCSD’s director of marketing and communications Laura Margoni wrote in an e-mail to the Light that the Regents of the University of California have issued licenses “periodically for more than 20 years (stemming) from requests made by AGCSC, which uses the university land to launch and land their fixed-wing gliders. AGCSC has not signed a license agreement since 2009.” For Coons, who has been at most meetings between the associated gliders and UCSD, “(The university) assures us they want to continue operations, but they’ve been putting so many restrictions on it, they’ve made it impractical.” Some of those restrictions include a runway redesign that took place in 2009 with CalTrans approval, financial obstacles and high insurance requirements. “Their insurance requirements are higher than anything that’s ever happened in the world of soaring in America,” Fogel said. With UCSD’s growing development in mind, Fogel fears the future of the sailplanes at the Torrey Pines Gliderport is doomed. The construction of the university’s proposed Living & Learning Neighborhood (2,000 residential beds, 1,200 parking spots


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Associated Glider Clubs of Southern California ■ Established in 1929 by sailplane enthusiasts, it is the oldest continuously existing glider club in the nation. ■ Club mission: To further the “art and sport” of soaring in Southern California by providing access to equipment and facilities. ■ Membership: 70 ■ Flight spots: Rural airports in Jacumba, Warner Springs, Ocotillo Wells and Torrey Pines Gliderport (not since 2009) ■ Contact: President Bud Robinson (619) 436-8010, online at agcsc.org

COURTESY OF GARY FOGEL

This graphic shows various types of soaring. Ridge soaring, for which Torrey Pines is popular, happens when sea breezes deflect upward creating a lift. Thermal currents under the clouds provide experienced gliders the opportunity to gain higher altitude. During the 1950s, lenticular cloud flight was discovered, making use of high-altitude stationary waves in the atmosphere.

FROM GLIDERPORT, A24 cooling the air above it, while the desert to the east is heating the air. That combination creates a sea breeze from 1 to 4 p.m. almost every afternoon traveling west to east. When it hits the tall and almost perpendicular Torrey Pines cliffs, it has to go up and then goes over the cliff, and that upward current extends very high over the cliffs, and further than you might think,” he added. The upward-moving air is used by all types of gliders to experience motorless flight at Torrey Pines Gliderport.

Gliderport history in La Jolla

Reassured by Lindbergh’s discovery of the Torrey Pines lift, high school students began trying out their gliders at Torrey Pines Gliderport in the 1930s. “Some of them learned to build gliders in woodshop class at San Diego High School,” Fogel explained. Woodbridge “Woody” Brown, a La Jolla resident known for his surfing and surfboard shaping, was also a gliding pioneer at the spot. Gliding was taking off at Torrey Pines when in the early ‘40s, the area was occupied by Camp Callan, a training center operational during World War II, “ironically, for anti-aircraft training,” Fogel pointed out. After the conflict ended in 1946, the sailplanes came back. In the ’50s, San Diegans visited the Gliderport to watch the airborne men and women soar. Tournaments and gliderclubs were organized. In 1956 and 1958 elections, San Diegans voted to give away (at no cost) 500 acres of City land to UCSD for its expansion. “The sailplane club at the time went to the City and said, ‘Do you realize you’re giving away part of the Gliderport?’ They tried to stop that from happening, but not successfully,” Fogel said. “Roger Revelle recognized this Gliderport issue with the property use. There are newspaper clips about him saying he wanted the flying to continue.” (Revelle, who died in 1991, was a scientist and scholar who was instrumental in UCSD’s formative years.) During the early ’70s, other forms of gliding reached the Torrey Pines Gliderport. Hang gliding (a foot-launched flying apparatus where the operator is suspended from a harness) enthusiasts arrived in La Jolla, recognizing the superior soaring conditions that exist at the location, Fogel reports. Paragliders — where the pilot sits in a harness suspended below a fabric wing comprised of interconnected cells — and model sailplane experts, who fly miniature versions of sailplanes with no engine controlled by radio, took advantage of the wind conditions at Torrey Pines, slowly making up the four Gliderport uses: sailplanes, hang gliders, paragliders and model gliders. The last three occur in the City park portion of the Gliderport, while the sailplane runway still sits on UCSD land. “There’s a lot of traffic at that Gliderport because you have those four forms of flying. There are times when it’s pretty crowded. There are specific rules for that, and when enforced, allow for safe operations to continue,” Fogel said. The 1989 long-range plan for UCSD first threatened the existence of the flying resource. “The plan had half of the Gliderport slated for development,” he related, adding that the sudden threat helped spur interest in saving the area, and the

historical designation process began. In a 1993 letter signed by then-President Bill Clinton, the traditional flying spot was designated “historical” at the national level. “As the only remaining Gliderport in America that’s directly adjacent to the Pacific Ocean, Torrey Pines Gliderport serves as an extraordinary site for the enjoyment of all Americans who are interested in the wonders of human flight,” the letter reads. As a “historical” resource, the Gliderport couldn’t be built upon, and so UCSD changed its plans, sending its growth to the eastern side of campus. Since then, the Torrey Pines UCSD-owned side has remained largely untouched. UCSD marketer Margoni, wrote in an e-mail to the Light, “UC San Diego has used this university land in the past for construction staging, parking, fixed-wing glider operations and other activities, which is allowable under the Coastal Development Permit issued by the California Coastal Commission.”

The future of flying

UCSD is in the process of finishing the Environmental Impact Review for its long-range development plan. The draft, which was presented to community attendees at two meetings, will be available by early 2018, and will cover the direction the campus will move on until 2035. Fogel pressed, “My hope would be that in next long-range development plan, the University could make the entire Gliderport a recreational asset rather than an academic reserve. I’m fine with them doing construction staging on their property, it makes sense, there’s a value to them using it like that, but I’d rather say if there’s construction staging, it’s done in a way that allows sailplanes to continue operations.” For him, an ideal outcome includes a 10-year agreement between UCSD and AGCSC to lease the runway yearly in February rather than negotiating a new deal every year. When asked if the university’s planning department would consider this option, Margoni wrote, “The (California Coastal) Commission does not issue long-term permits for occasional and temporary use.” California Coastal Commission (CCC) senior planner Diana Lilly told the Light the use of the area as a sailplane runway predates the California Coastal Act of 1976, and therefore, does not require a permit. “As long as they’re doing what they’ve always been doing, they wouldn’t need any permits from us. The operation of these sailplanes ... is not something we have regulated,” she explained. She added that in the past, the CCC has reviewed a number of use permits, but it wouldn’t be involved in a lease agreement between AGCSC and UCSD, unless the use of the land was changed. Similarly, CalTrans division of aeronautics has been issuing yearly “Temporary Airport Authorizations” for the use of the runway. Aviation safety officer Michael Smith told the Light when it comes down to authorizing use, the most important requirement is that the applicant owns or controls the property at the time. “It doesn’t matter how long it is, you have to own or control the property,” he said. As for the future of the Torrey Pines Gliderport, Margoni stated, “Through the long-range development plan process, UC San Diego continues to look at the best use of university land for future academic and recreational use to meet its educational mission for all Californians.”


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LA JOLLA LIGHT - JUNE 15, 2017 - PAGE A27

CRIME AND PUBLIC-SAFETY NEWS Police lack details on car pushed off cliff

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n unoccupied car was pushed off a cliff in La Jolla and fell 100 to 200 feet, landing on the beach below. San Diego Police believe the incident was deliberate. “On Thursday, June 8 at 7:36 a.m., a man was walking by the intersection of Torrey Pines Road and Coast Walk when he noticed a vehicle on its roof at the bottom of a cliff,” Communications Officer Billy Hernandez told La Jolla Light. The incident happened between the popular tourist spot of La Jolla Cove and La Jolla Shores Beach, in the area known as The Caves. The beach where the car landed, was empty at the time. The vehicle’s license plates had been removed and a search of the vehicle identification number (VIN) came back as “no record found.” “The vehicle was recovered and (we) have not been able to locate the owner,” Hernandez added. Lifeguards used a heavy crane to lift the car out and it was taken to a tow yard.

Police Blotter May 25 ■ Residential burglary, 1600 block Crespo Drive, 4 p.m. May 27 ■ Vandalism (less than $400), 1300 block Muirlands Drive, 8 p.m.

Police believe this unoccupied car was deliberately thrown off a La Jolla cliff June 8, near Coast Walk and Torrey Pines Road. June 1 ■ Vehicle break-in / theft, 2800 block Torrey Pines Road, 2 p.m. June 2 ■ Residential burglary, 2000 block Caminito El Canario, 9:30 p.m. ■ Commercial burglary, 7700 block Bishops Lane, 9:30 p.m. June 3

■ Vehicle break-in / theft, 8400 block Whale Watch Way, 11 a.m. June 5 ■ Fraud, 400 block Prospect St., 1:20 p.m. ■ Fraud, 8500 block El Paseo Grande, 5 p.m. June 8 ■ Vehicle break-in / theft, 8300 block Camino del Oro, 8 a.m. ■ Vehicle break-in / theft, 2800 block

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Meet Vikings’ retiring art teacher

B4

LIFESTYLES

Thursday, June 15, 2017

St. Germaine Children’s Charity awards grants

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lajollalight.com

SECTION B

Daniel Månsson an d t he tw o 19 6 0 s El Ca mi no’s i n hi s La J oll lla garage. ASHLEY MACKIN-SOLOMON

Tu r n i n g

Things Around

Restoration hobby leads La Jollan to two 1960 El Camino classics BY ASHLEY MACKIN-SOLOMON Editor’s Note: In response to an invitation to classic car owners to share their vehicle love stories, more than a dozen car buffs contacted La Jolla Light to be interviewed about their prize possessions. In this series, we present their delightful roadster experiences.

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aniel Månsson, a La Jolla resident and native of Sweden, is what you might call “a classic car flipper.” He takes older cars in good (not perfect) shape, drives them around for a while, restores them and sells them. “If you’re good at restoring cars, it’s not necessarily an expensive hobby,” he said.

“I’ve made money on all my cars, but I do a lot of research and know what I’m getting into. The most difficult thing is when the work that needs to be done isn’t visible right

away. The only time you really get into trouble is when you fall in love and want to keep them all.” Such is the current case. Månsson has two 1960s Chevrolet El Camino classics — one he bought to fix up and sell (but hasn’t done so yet) and the other he plans to keep and drive. “When I walk into the garage, I see these beautiful El Camino’s and know they were built before the Digital Age and before safety requirements went into effect that limit what you can do with a car,” he said. “There is a lot that is not the most practical, but it’s aesthetically amazing. As a creative person and a photographer, I want to be around things that inspire me. It’s like driving a piece

of art, especially when the paint is well maintained. It’s a treat to be able to jump into a 50-year-old car.” While he is working on the El Camino’s presently, in the past, he has worked on a surf van, a ‘70s classic sports car and a vintage truck. “I do some of the stuff myself, and though I’m not a big mechanic, I have some idea as to what’s going on,” he explained. “But the amount of time you spend on a vehicle depends on how much you want to learn. Sometimes I toy with it and if I can’t fix something, I’ll take it in. There are two schools of thought: Some people love to do SEE ONE FOR THE ROAD, B18


PAGE B2 - JUNE 15, 2017 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

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Dells and dales and vales

W

La Jolla Cultural Partners

hen Olof and I lived in Sweden and had the opportunity to take a trip above the Arctic Circle, we were not surprised to learn that the Sami (formerly known as Lapplanders) had some 1,000 words related to reindeer. (The word tundra, by the way, is Sami). The Sami traditionally lived by following the reindeer herds but now lead a more settled existence with reindeer farming, hunting, fishing and craft-making. Having pondered reindeer at a Sami farm, I confess I was at a loss to imagine 1,000 different descriptors of them. Years ago, my friend Linda Morefield and I, co-chairing the Pinewood Derby for our Cub Scout troop, decided in true mom fashion that “everybody is a winner,” and set out one evening to create 60 different awards. There’s really only so much you can say about a five-inch block of pine whittled into a car shape, and the kids quickly figured out that “The Batmobile Award” was the only one with any real cachet. So 1,000 words for reindeer impresses me greatly. I’m guessing the Sami didn’t start out with more than 10, but those winters are really long, cold, and dark, and probably by the end of each winter, they had acquired five

more. It was probably what the Sami moms did to keep from strangling the kids who were racing around the tent and driving her nuts. “OK, kids. Here’s an idea. Let’s sit quietly and think of new names for reindeer!” It’s what I would have done. I got to thinking recently, what do Americans have a lot of terms for? OK, we maybe don’t have 1,000 different terms for it, but I’ve noted for some time that English seems to have an inordinate number of words for topographical depressions, i.e. valleys. This first came to my attention when my parents moved to suburban New Jersey when I was in college, to a secluded home that the Realtor described as featuring a “bosky dell.” It was seriously clever marketing because my mother, who liked the house anyway, fell absolutely in love with the idea of living in a bosky dell, even though none of us quite knew what it meant. The bosky part seemed pretty clear from the Spanish “bosque” or forest (and the lot was indeed nicely wooded). But what the hell was a dell? One immediately thinks of the children’s song “The Farmer in the Dell,” but that doesn’t make much sense either. As it turns out, the song came over from Europe and

one theory is that the “dell” is a corruption of the Dutch “deel,” which can mean a workspace in a farmer’s barn. As it turns out, a dell in English is a small valley, usually among trees. So, OK, that little area behind the house could, if you were a realtor in a slow housing market, qualify as a dell. (We suspected she was an English major which, like my major in psychology, had left her uniquely qualified for a lifetime of low-paying jobs.) But over the years, I would wonder: Why wasn’t it a bosky glade? Or a bosky glen? A bosky ravine? Or even a bosky vale or dale? (I’ve never understood the difference between the two of them even though they come up on crossword puzzles a LOT.) So I have taken it upon myself to educate both you and myself on all those topographic holes our landscape seems so replete with. Vale: a valley (used in place names or as a poetic term). Dale: a valley, especially a broad one. Dell: a small valley, usually among trees. Glen: a narrow valley. Glade: an open space in a forest (no valley required). Basin: a large or small depression in the surface of the land or in the ocean floor. Hollow: a small valley or basin. Trough: any long depression or hollow. Ravine: a deep, narrow gorge with steep sides. Gorge: a narrow valley between hills or mountains, typically with steep rocky walls and a stream running through it. Canyon: a deep gorge, typically with a river flowing through it. Coulee: a deep ravine. Gully: a water-worn ravine.

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My father in the ‘bosky dell,’ December 1974 Couloir: a steep, narrow gully on a mountainside. OK, so pretty wimpy in comparison to the Sami who even have a word for a bull reindeer with a single, whopper-sized testicle (busat). I guess if you’re walking behind them for a few hundred miles on the otherwise scenery-less tundra, you’d have plenty of opportunity to notice. (Inquiring minds want to know: What happened to the other one?) I’m willing to concede after this research that my parents did legitimately live in a bosky dell. And by the way, there will be a quiz. — Inga’s lighthearted looks at life appear regularly in La Jolla Light. Reach her at inga47@san.rr.com

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PAGE B4 - JUNE 15, 2017 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

Meet retiring La Jolla High art teacher Carol Shamrock BY MARÍA JOSÉ DURÁN Editor’s Note: The “People in Your Neighborhood” series shines a spotlight on notable locals we all wish we knew more about! La Jolla Light staff is out on the town talking to familiar, friendly faces to bring you their stories. If you know someone you’d like us to profile, send the lead by e-mail to editor@lajollalight.com or call (858) 875-5950.

been here. I think principals could learn something from the teachers, but they don’t usually ask (laughs), they continue with what they think.”

PEOPLE IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD

What’s your teaching style?

“A lot of kids say I’m really strict, but the reason I think they say that is because I’m structured. Even though it’s an art class, there is a curriculum to teach with a structure to it. I’m skill-based. I try to make kids understand that I want them to be able to communicate their ideas visually.”

A

fter 26 years at her post, La Jolla High School art teacher Carol Shamrock is taking the Golden Handshake and retiring in 2017. With a reputation among some students for being strict, Shamrock is adamant about the importance of the visual arts in education. Alongside local artist Jane Wheeler, she started a program where students painted murals on school walls — even in the bathrooms.

What have you learned from your students?

“That I don’t know everything I think I know. When you have to communicate to them so they understand something, you have to rethink what you think you know.”

Where are you from?

“I’m originally from Ohio. My parents moved out here in 1952. When we first came, we moved into a trailer park in Leucadia! We lived in Solana Beach and Del Mar for a while. It was really great growing up in a place where there was no freeways. There was no I-805, there was no I-5. There was the US-101, and that’s how you got to San Diego. I went to San Dieguito High School and graduated from there.”

How did you become a teacher?

“I went to Santa Barbara City College first, then to San Diego State. I didn’t really plan the way I should have because I didn’t know what I wanted to do (until) I was a

Why is it important to teach art?

“It’s a visual skill, and so much of our life is visual. We have computers now, but someone has to create those computer images.” PHOTOS BY MARÍA JOSÉ DURÁN

Art teacher Carol Shamrock near one of the murals produced by La Jolla High students sophomore. When I got out of college, there were no jobs, so I faced the question, ‘What do I do next?’ I had to support myself, so I worked as a waitress. I did a little bit of boat work. A few years later, I was working in business when I thought, ‘This isn’t for me.’ So I went back and tried to get my (teaching) credentials. That was a bit of an effort, and I was like, ‘What am I doing? I’m going into this field late!’ But I thought to keep

plugging along, and then I substituted for about a year. And then I got this job! Jake Tarvin (La Jolla High Principal 1982-1996) was an incredible principal, he chose you; it wasn’t that you just applied for the job, he saw something in the people he hired here back then that he thought would be a good fit. I was always grateful. He passed away a few years ago. (Charles Podhorsky) is the third principal who’s been here since I’ve

How have students changed through the years?

“The biggest thing that has changed in my classroom is the interference and disruption that cellphones have brought. The students are so addicted to these phones. There are times I’ve said, ‘we don’t have enough computers, you have your phone, go and use it,’ but it goes way beyond that to where they’re really detached, and they have walls up because they are so focused on these phones. I think cellphones are really

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Retiring La Jolla High art teacher Carol Shamrock in the classroom where she taught for 26 years detrimental to the advancement of learning ... it’s almost like, kids don’t think they need to learn something because they have it in their little box.”

How has your teaching changed?

“Not a lot. I had to eliminate some of the lessons I’ve had, or in some groups slightly change the expectations, but I find that kids still love art. They’re still kind of infatuated with it. They are engaged. You don’t see students waiting for the teacher to start the class in a lot of other programs.”

What was your biggest challenge?

“I have had to fight for the arts. I’ve had to defend them. I helped write the standards for the district before there were California standards. There were a couple of years when they tried to reduce programs, and then at the State level, they tried to solidify programs by building standards into them. It’s almost like to be respected, art has to look like other curriculums in terms of its standards; it has to be justifiable.”

What is your personal life like?

“I’m not married at this time. I don’t have children of my own. I have some stepchildren from a previous marriage. But basically, I have a Golden Retriever, Murphy, my favorite little buddy. I’ve been able to bring a different perspective (to teaching) because I don’t have children.”

Do you make art?

“I’m also an artist. I’ve always continued with that, and I probably will continue even more once I have the time. I work in oil, watercolor and acrylic. (My style) is all over the board; sometimes I like to paint landscapes, sometimes imagery I’d like to be realistic but isn’t, so it could be that there’s a little surrealism in what I like to paint.”

What are some of your adventures?

“I lived on a boat for eight years and did some traveling. I went to Baja, lived there along the coast for about six months, sailed to San Francisco, lived out there for about five years. I did a lot of adventurous traveling. I always had the bug to do that.”

What’s in your future?

“I’m planning on, at some point in time, moving to Arizona. I have a house in the high desert, it’s beautiful. The two things that stand out with me right now are to work more on my art and get some traveling in.”

What do you look back on and say, ‘I’m really happy I did that’?

“I’m really happy that I took the risks that I did, whatever they were. Whether it was traveling or (going) back to get my teaching credentials. The biggest lesson I’ve learned is that I have to rely on myself. It was nice that there were people in my life, but I had to look out for myself and plan for myself.”

Discuss the school mural program.

“That’s a program we were doing with the AP (senior) students. The first one we did was in the bathrooms because there was so much graffiti there. And it took a lot of effort — the last principal didn’t want to do anything with the campus, but he finally approved it. So, in the girl’s bathroom, the girls did the wall painting, and the boys did the artwork. The reverse happened in the boys’ bathroom. That was successful. Some years back, there was a Viking painted, and the class from 2014 did the murals. It can happen again. Right now it’s kind of in the water, but I do hope that the person who replaces me comes in with a little enthusiasm to want to continue that.”

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What’s something people don’t know about you?

“I have a good friend who is a Canadian citizen, and she said to me once, ‘Let’s go to Canada!’ So off we went on a trip. As we approached Canada, we needed to cross into Toronto, and as we crossed, we were detained by the Canadian police. They thought that we were Patricia Hearst and (kidnapper) Emily Harris, so we were held. It was, of course, a case of mistaken identity, but it was a really wild ride because they really thought that we weren’t who we said we were!”

What were the challenges of teaching in La Jolla?

“Most people think that the art program is really thriving here because La Jolla is a cultural community. But honestly, all the focus is toward science and math, and perhaps, it has something to do with the interests of the parents and the community. This room is not the greatest art room, and if there was a commitment, certainly money is never the problem, we could have had a fabulous art center with the music and drama departments, and the industrial arts. But that’s been hard. Sometimes you feel invisible here. But you just keep plugging along, doing what you know is right.”

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PAGE B6 - JUNE 15, 2017 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

Music-minded psychiatrist reveals Tchaikovsky’s mental anguish UC San Diego presentation explores link between depression, creativity

Dr. Richard Kogan, who studied music (his major) and completed a pre-medical curriculum at Harvard University, formed a trio with his Juilliard friend Yo-Yo Ma and violinist Lynn Chang.

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BY WILL BOWEN Do creative people — artists, musicians and writers — suffer from psychological disturbances more often than “regular” people? And if they do, are their creative productions an expression of their inner conflicts or are they an escape, a transcendence accomplished in spite of their difficulties? To shed some light on the mental issues creatives sometimes deal with hidden from public view, the UC San Diego Department of Psychiatry, in cooperation with the John A. Majda, M.D. Memorial Foundation and the UCSD Retirement Association, hosted a free, informative and highly entertaining lecture May 22, in the Conrad Prebys Concert Hall on campus. It centered on the music of the great Russian composer Peter Illich Tchaikovsky, who suffered from depression and ended up taking his own life. The speaker/performer for the evening was Dr. Richard Kogan, a Julliard graduate in piano studies, who is also a psychiatrist and co-leader of the Cornell University Music & Medicine Initiative. Dr. Harry C. Powell, a UCSD

medical school professor emeritus of pathology and member of the UCSD Retirement Association executive committee, introduced the evening’s program. Powell along with Dr. Sidney Zisook of the Healing Education Assessment & Research (HEAR) program, which is aimed at suicide prevention in health care providers, were jointly responsible for enticing Kogan to campus. Powell began by sharing the tragic story of former UCSD physician John A. Majda, a 1987 graduate of UCSD Medical School. Majda, who was a well-liked, successful and caring doctor, suffered from depression. He ended up taking his own life in 2007. As a result, the John A. Majda Foundation was formed by his wife and fellow doctors with the joint aim of recognizing outstanding research in the area of depression and suicide, and assisting professionals in the healing arts who might be prone to suicide. Dr. Igor Grant, Chairman of the UCSD Psychiatry Department, added to the introductions, “The idea for tonight’s event is to try and raise awareness of depression and bring it out into the open so people can better

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Dr. Richard Kogan understand and talk about it.” Kogan was in town to attend the American Psychiatric Association (APA) meetings being held at the San Diego Convention Center. Dr. Michael Brophy, a psychiatrist from Dallas, Texas, who was also in San Diego to attend the APA meetings, said he came to the lecture because, “I was utterly fascinated by an earlier lecture Dr. Kogan gave at the APA meetings where he discussed the life and career of composer Robert Schumann, who suffered from bipolar disorder or manic depression. Schumann unsuccessfully attempted suicide by jumping into the Rhine River, and ended up dying in an insane asylum.” Tchaikovsky, who composed timeless musical masterpieces such as the “1812 Overture,” and ballet scores for “The Nutcracker,” “Swan Lake” and “Sleeping Beauty,” suffered from lifelong depression. Evidence suggests that he took his own life,

LA JOLLA LIGHT - JUNE 15, 2017 - PAGE B7

Sidnet Zisook, Igor Grant, Harry Powell at age 53, by willfully drinking water contaminated with cholera. Although Tchaikovsky is discussed in length on Wikepedia, his depression and homosexuality, which for a long time were covered up by the Soviet government, are only lightly touched upon. Kogan took great pains to illuminate these issues which he has extensively researched through the reading of Tchaikovsky’s diaries and letters, as well as through interviews with the composer’s descendents. He said Tchaikovsky was hypersensitive and a loner who had great difficulties with relationships. Tchaikovsky was, however, according to Kogan, able to rise above his condition to express and release his great sorrow, hopelessness and frustration through composing music. As Tchaikovsky poignantly expressed in one of his letters, “I hate myself, only work saves me.” The genesis of Tchaikovsky’s problems,

PHOTOS BY WILL BOWEN

Kogan said, seems to have been his unfulfilled relationship with his emotionally distant mother, who sent him away to boarding school at an early age and who died while he was still quite young. Although Tchaikovsky was most likely homosexual in orientation, he did have one brief love affair with a female student whose name was Desiree Artot. In his letters he

wrote, “She is the only woman I have ever loved.” And Tchaikovsky was briefly married to a woman named Antonina Miliukova. That relationship ended in disaster. Tchaikovsky wrote, “I hate the sight of her naked body.” Tchaikovsky was able to manage a long-term friendship with Nadezhda von Meck, the widow of a wealthy railroad baron. Because von Meck adored his music, she supported him financially and encouraged him for more than 13 years. Kogan ended his presentation with the thought that even though Tchaikovsky suffered great mental anguish, he was such a gifted and creative artist that he was able to rise above and transcend his infirmities to create monumental music that is loved around the world to this day. “You can think of Tchaikovsky as a ballerina standing on her tip toes, defying gravity,” Kogan concluded. — For more information on the John A. Majda M.D. Memorial Foundation, which supports research on depression and suicide prevention, call (858) 246-2137 or e-mail mmacewan@ucsd.edu

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PAGE B8 - JUNE 15, 2017 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

Art exhibit fights June Gloom!

Bird Rock Coffee Roasters showcase works of local artists

David Galindo

COURTESY PHOTOS

C U S T O M S U R F B O A R D A RT by Shanna Tweedy at the La Jolla Louvre Art Gallery

BY JANE WHEELER During the month of June, Bird Rock Coffee Roasters is brightening the coast with the work of David Galindo and Scott Wright in its art collective at 5627 La Jolla Blvd. David Galindo earned a degree in physics from Point Loma Nazarene University and having grown up in the Central Valley surrounded by beautiful nature, he also developed his capacity to create art. His current medium is photography and coffee. With his lens at hand, he’s captured images ranging from genuine coffee shop moments to poetic landscapes of the National Parks. In Bird Rock, he is exhibiting a collection of photos from his recent trip to Cuba. Scott Wright, a third generation Californian, is an identical twin, born in 1952. He was raised in the San Francisco Bay and Monterrey Bay areas. He remained in California after graduating from high school and attended Diablo Valley Junior College in Contra Costa County, where he obtained an associates degree in construction design. He worked on the Alaska Pipeline and remained there for seven years, enchanted with the natural beauty of Alaska and the adventurousness of the people. He mined and panned for gold and learned the construction trade along the way. He then joined his twin brother to start a construction company in La Jolla. Since 1986, he’s been the sole proprietor of

Ivette and Scott Wright in front of his work at La Jolla Art & Wine festival The Wright Company, which specializes in custom residential construction. In recent years, he rediscovered the art abilities he exhibited as a child, sketching and drawing in the Yosemite Valley. His interest in building design and his skill at drawing plans flow easily into the art he now creates — a combination of ethereal images within fractal design. Wright works in several mediums, including pencil, charcoal, ink and watercolor. His art is in private collections and has been exhibited in West Coast galleries, including San Francisco MOMA. He was selected as the artist for the 65th annual Jewel Ball, “Sapphire.” Wright and his wife, Ivette, live in La Jolla and have five children.

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LA JOLLA LIGHT - JUNE 15, 2017 - PAGE B9

La Jolla retailers offer gift ideas for dear ol’ Dad

F

Beautifully decorated porcelain wine crocs, wine books, wine stoppers (all under $20 each) plus wine bottle trays which include cheese-themed napkins and a spreader. — Girard Avenue Collection, 7505 Girard Ave. (858) 459-7765.

rom bestsellers to a desk where he can write them, La Jolla’s retailers have plenty of great gift ideas for fabulous fathers. Here’s a sample:

Bugatti Domus Shoulder Bag in Cognac, $129.95. — Warwick’s, 7812 Girard Ave. (858) 454-0347. Large sculpture library horse, black, limited edition, L’Objet. — Bowers Jewelers, 7860 Girard Ave. (858) 459-3678.

Warwick’s recommended reading: ‘Testimony’ by Scott Turow $28; ‘Theft by Finding’ by David Sedaris $28; ‘Dragon Teeth’ by Michael Crichton $28.99. — Warwick’s, 7812 Girard Ave. (858) 454-0347.

Picnic Time Growler Tote, $53.95. — Warwick’s, 7812 Girard Ave. (858) 454-0347. Crafted from brass, plated with 24K gold, this letter opener may very well be the gift for the person who has everything. — Bowers Jewelers, 7860 Girard Ave. (858) 459-3678.

After his success at the Salon des Arts Ménagers de Paris in 1953, Pierre Paulin began collaborating with Thonet-France designing desks and chairs. His CM 141 desk was reproduced by Ligne Roset under the name Tanis. The design has been scrupulously respected, but the self-effacing finishes of the era have been updated. The writing surface is made from soft-touch, scratch-resistant FENIX laminate, while the two drawers are finished in a walnut veneer. — Ligne Roset & Poliform La Jolla, 7726 Girard Ave. (858) 869-0668.

Retro51 Classic Laquers pens, $25. — Warwick’s, 7812 Girard Ave. (858) 454-0347.

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PAGE B10 - JUNE 15, 2017 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

SOCIAL LIFE

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Charitable grants awarded at St. Germaine luncheon

T

he La Jolla-based St. Germaine Children’s Charities held its annual Membership & Grants Award Luncheon on June 2 at the La Jolla Country Club. Aid went to Angels Foster Family Network, Aseltine School, Casa de Amparo, Home Start, Inc., Kids’ Turn, North County Lifeline, Outdoor Reach, San Diego Center for Children, San Diego Rescue Mission, Solutions for Change, Voices for Children, Walden Family Services.

Jeanette Wright, Andrea Anderson, Silver Tea chair Kerri Morrison, Teri Newlee, Janice Farnow

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Claudia Johnson, Kathryn Stephens

Ann Hill, Vickie Curd Ladt, Margaret Dudas

Gail Forbes, Kathryn Murphy, Maurine Beinbrink

Kay Dean, Barbara Barr, Beth Jones

Jane Nobbs, outgoing president Wendy Neri, Christine Stevenson

Lisa Clark, Mary Lippman

Carol Rumsey, Place Tegland, Margot Jahn

Maureen Keiffer, incoming president Bronwyn Jarvis, Deborah Arnau, Jody Gunderson

Darcy Delano Smith, Carol Portman, Angie Preisendorfer

Betsy Witt, Ruth Leivers, April Winograd


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LA JOLLA LIGHT - JUNE 15, 2017 - PAGE B11

Julie Brazier, Marilynne Leadon, Dee Benson, Amy Heap

Meaghan O’Connor, Sara Lucchini, Suzanne McClain, Jeff Wiemann, Elizabeth Perlin

Laura Tancredi-Baese, Mark Lagace, past president Sheila Scaramella, Gretchen Gainor

Judith Smith, Karen Luscomb, Gigi Barber, Robin Whaley

Myrna Farkas, Jeri Horton, Marguie Bartels, Alison Beck

Michelle Serafini, Daryle and Cindy Coleman, Cindie Leonard

Dad has a thousand fond memories of you. Let’s make 1,001. Father’s Day Weekend

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Dr. Tracy Taddey’s approach to dentistry is gentle and caring, as well as sophisticated and advanced. Her knowledge of the latest cosmetic and restorative techniques represents her passion for providing the best dentistry while caring for her patients’ long-term dental health and individual needs. Following in the footsteps of her grandfather and father, Dr. Taddey is a thirdgeneration dentist. She joined her father after graduating from University of the Pacific Dental School in 1998. Dr. Taddey began her career at ELLE Magazine in New York City as a Beauty and Fashion Editor. Researching health issues for articles sparked her interest and guided her decision to pursue a career in the health field. Combining her creative Fashion and Beauty journalism background, she has focused her practice on Cosmetic Dentistry and creating beautiful smiles.

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PAGE B12 - JUNE 15, 2017 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

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LA JOLLA LIGHT - JUNE 15, 2017 - PAGE B13

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PAGE B12 - JUNE 15, 2017 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

www.lajollalight.com

LA JOLLA LIGHT - JUNE 15, 2017 - PAGE B13

YOU’VE NEVER SEEN THIS MANY PALMS IN ONE PLACE!

PALM PARADISE

Moon Valley Nurseries has the Largest Selection of Trees and Palms in San Diego County!

PERFECT TIME TO PLANT! MOONVALLEYNURSERIES.COM

The “June Gloom” weather pattern in Southern California creates ideal conditions conducive to amazing plant growth. The cool yet humid mornings giving way to sunny and warm afternoons are the near perfect conditions for planting trees and shrubs of all varieties.

YOU BUY IT! WE PLANT IT!

FLOWERING TREES

SHADE TREES

OLIVE TREES

ALL PALMS!

DATE PALMS!

RECLINATA PALMS!

KING PALMS!

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.

Moon Valley Nurseries guarantees everything we plant!

GIANT NEW YARD PACKAGE • 1 GIANT Tree or Palm • 2 BLOCKBUSTER Trees or Palms • 3 HUGE Instant Trees or Palms • 8 BIG Shrubs of Choice PACKAGE PRICE

MASSIVE SPECIMEN TREES NOW FROM $999 W/FREE PLANTING GUARANTEED!

$

WAS 10,000!

4,999

$

Bonus! Each Package Includes:

BUY 5 $799

NEW!

LUXURY OUTDOOR FURNITURE

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

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

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Bring pics or drawings of your yard for free design

9,999

$

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EACH PACKAGE PROFESSIONALLY DESIGNED, PLANTED & GUARANTEED TO GROW!

WITH AD THIS WEEK

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

SUCCULENTS

UNIQUE PALMS!

KENTIA PALMS!

POTTERY 50% OFF

SHRUBS & VINES

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With Coupon - Expires 6-15-17

SUPER FROM

PLANTED & GUARANTEED!

BUY 5$ HUGE FROM 2299

Plant Now! Pay Later!

FREE PROFESSIONAL PLANTING

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

GET INSTANT PRIVACY

Not all varieties available in all packages. Jumbo, specialty and red select varieties may be additional.

FREE PROFESSIONAL LANDSCAPE DESIGN CONSULTATIONS Let our experts create the perfect assortment of trees, palms, plants and more for your landscape project. Call our designers direct for an appointment.

Rancho Santa Fe, Encinitas, La Jolla, La Costa, Del Mar, & nearby

San Diego, Rancho Bernardo, Poway, Carmel, East County & nearby

John Allen: 760-301-5960

Naia Armstrong: 760-444-4630

Fallbrook, Escondido, San Marcos, Oceanside, Carlsbad, Vista & nearby

Murrieta, Temecula, Hemet, Wine Country & nearby

San Diego, El Cajon, Pacific Beach, Chula Vista, South County & nearby

Kraig Harrison: 619-320-6012

Zack Heiland: 619-312-4691

Dave Schneider: 951-331-7279

Paradise Palms Expert - County Wide

Timothy Burger: 760-990-1079

12 MONTH NO INTEREST FINANCING!

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

WHOLESALE TO THE TRADE

2 GIANT NURSERIES OVER 100 ACRES! OPEN DAILY Mon - Sat 7:30 - 6:00 Sundays 9-5 Just 119 delivers any order within 20 miles radius of nursery. Other areas higher.

PALM PARADISE

760-291-8223

Oceanside

Vista

Carlsbad

$

78 San Marcos

La Costa Encinitas La Jolla

Rancho Santa Fe

Escondido

Rancho Bernardo

26437 N. City Centre Pkwy. - Escondido, CA 92026 I-15 Exit Deer Springs Rd. Easet to City Centre then South 1.5 mi.

Landscapers, Designers, Architects, Project Managers, Developers & Large Quantity Orders SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA WHOLESALE MANAGER

KRAIG HARRISON 760-742-6025

SAN DIEGO •ESCONDIDO

760-316-4000

Oceanside

Vista 78

Carlsbad

San Marcos

La Costa Encinitas La Jolla

Rancho Santa Fe

Escondido

Rancho Bernardo

26334 Mesa Rock Rd. Escondido, CA 92026

I-15 Exit Deer Springs Rd. West to Mesa Rock

PROFESSIONAL

TREE SERVICES REMOVALS & MORE

760-291-8949

All offers exclusive to this ad and require ad to be present. Unless noted, prices are for yellow select trees, ad is valid 10 days from issue date and all offers are for in stock items. Offers not valid on previous sales. Some restrictions apply. See store for details. Largest box tree grower claim based on industry knowledge and box size trees in production. Challenges welcomed.


www.lajollalight.com

PAGE B14 - JUNE 15, 2017 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

La Jolla Library’s Summer Reading Program starts June 15.

Sugarloaf Mountain, Iceland

Meet Me in Iceland

Pass the Popcorn

■ Why has Iceland been nominated as the “Most Peaceful Country in the World?” Find out at the La Jolla Photo Travelers Club meeting, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, June 21 at Wesley Palms, 2404 Loring St., Pacific Beach. Christa McReynolds shares photos from a hike through Iceland. Free. christam10@icloud.com

■ A screening of “Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children,” will take place 6 p.m. Wednesday, June 21 at La Jolla Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. Directed by Tim Burton, the 2016 film is based on the dark fantasy novel of the same name. Free with complimentary pizza, candy and soda. (858) 552-1657. lajollalibrary.org/events

Read All About It!

‘Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children’ will screen June 21 at La Jolla Riford Library.

■ The Summer Reading Program at La Jolla Library runs June 15 to Aug. 15, for ages toddler to 18. For the first time, there will also be an adult summer reading program. Sign up at sandiegolibrary.org or at the library. Throughout the summer, read 10 books (or 10 hours for teens) and come in the library to claim your backpack full of prizes, including museum passes, science-to-go packs, restaurant coupons and more. Adult readers can claim Chipotle coupons. For every 10 books or hours read, participants can pick a book to keep and be entered into a raffle for a chance to win an iPad. 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 552-1657. lajollalibrary.org/events

Congratulations

to the sDFas Class oF 2017! Félicitations aux élèves de la classe de 2017 !

There’s Music in the Air! ■ A Father’s Day concert titled, “From Vienna to Moscow to Prague” will be performed by violinists Ray Mak and Andy Helgerson; Lee Wolfe on viola; Cliff Thrasher, violoncello and Erica Poole and Glenn Vanstrum, pianoforte, 2 p.m. Sunday, June 18 at La Jolla Library, 7555 Draper St. The program will include Johannes Brahms’ “Variations on a Theme by Schumann,” Op. 23 Piano Four Hands; Anton Arensky’s “ Piano Trio in D minor,” Op. 32 and Antonín Dvorák’s “Piano Quintet in A Major,” Op. 81. Free. (858) 552-1657. lajollalibrary.org

Your DireCt ConneCtion to FrenCh For College Restez connecté au FRançais pouR pRépaReR l’univeRsité

2017-2018: AP (Advanced Placement) French PreP clASSeS: For Students 9th Grade & up : Saturdays from 9.00-10.15 a.m. Year round Boot camp – 8 classes before exam

international language sChool at sDFas For Students age 5-14:

French (W-F-S) Mandarin (T-TH-S) Italian (M) Spanish (T) German (S)

For Young and Adult:

French - Beginners, Intermediate and Advanced (T-TH-S)

1:8 Ratio - Individualized attention. All classes taught by experienced native instructors, year round.

We are very proud of this year’s high school admission results and wish every single one of our twenty four, 8th graders the very best for their high school years and beyond. Bravo to our students who have received offers of admission at: Bishop’s - Cathedral Catholic - Canyon Crest Academy - Coronado School of the Arts - Francis Parker School - Grauer School - La Jolla Country Day - La Jolla High School - Mission Bay High School for IB Program - La Costa Canyon - San Diego High School for IB Program - Awty International School (Houston) - Dallas International School - Lycée Français de Valence (Valencia, Spain).

For more information, please email languageschool@sdfrenchschool.org or call (858) 456-2807 ext. 307 6550 soledad Mountain Rd, la Jolla, ca 92037


www.lajollalight.com

LA JOLLA LIGHT - JUNE 15, 2017 - PAGE B15

Jazz trumpeter Ambrose Akinmusire

Social Bridge and Dinner at La Jolla Rec Center

■ Indie rock band Cracker will perform 6 p.m. Wednesday, June 21 at the Green Flash Concert Series at Birch Aquarium, 2300 Expedition Way. The show will feature fan favorites from Cracker’s 25-year recording history, including material from “Berkeley To Bakersfield.” This will be the semi-acoustic version of Cracker with co-founders David Lowery and Johnny Hickman, along with Pistol on pedal steel. Tickets: $30.95-$35.95. (858) 534 3474. aquarium.ucsd.edu ■ The Farrell Family Jazz summer concert series continues with the Ambrose Akinmusire Quintet, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, June 21 at Athenaeum Music & Arts Library, 1008 Wall St. Tickets: $21-$26. (858) 454-5872. ljathenaeum.org

Card Party ■ To celebrate the social nature of the game of Bridge, La Jolla Recreation Center will host monthly Bridge and Dinner events, 4:30 p.m. third Mondays (the next one is June 19). For intermediate players, “Chicago” scoring will be used. Participants must sign up with a partner. $15. RSVP: (858) 552-1658. bit.ly/ljreccenter

Festival of Yoga takes place Saturday, June 17 in in Balboa Park.

Strike a Yoga Pose ■ The free community Festival of Yoga runs 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, June 17 on the lawn in Balboa Park at Park Blvd. and Presidents Way, San Diego. Join 500 yogis for a morning of yoga, music and meditation in celebration of the United Nations International Day of Yoga. Register: (619) 727-4930. festivalofyogasandiego.org

Something to See ■ The work of jazz photographer Grace Bell, who has been photographing jazz musicians and performances for some 35 years, is on exhibit June 17-July 29, at Athenaeum Music & Arts Library, 1008 Wall St. Free. (858) 454-5872. ljathenaeum.org ■ Glass art by Dick Ditore and photography by Lisa Ross comprise the works in the “Africa North/South” exhibition, on view June 20-July 2 at La Jolla Art Association, 8100 Paseo Del Ocaso. A free, opening reception is set for 5:30 p.m. Saturday, June 24. (858) 459-1196. lajollaartassociation.org

Watercolor works by Dora Chen

■ Watercolor works by Dora Chen and paintings in oil and acrylic Marjo Reser make up “Visual Treats Through Paintings,” on display June 16-30 at Gallery 23, 1770 Village Place in Balboa Park’s Spanish Village, San Diego. Gallery hours 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. (619) 323-3522. spanishvillageart.com

Poets on Parade ■ The 2017 San Diego Poetry Annual begins at 7 p.m. Friday, June 23, in the San Diego Art Institute, 1439 El Prado in Balboa Park, San Diego. Editors and authors published in the anthology will read poems from this year’s edition. Guest appearances by Anthony Blacksher, Judy Reeves, Adam Greenfield and Jimmy Jazz. Franco Z will perform “A Brief History of Jazz.” People’s Choice Poem Performance Awards follow. Beverages, snacks and time to mingle. Tickets: Members free, non-members $5. Bring a snack/beverage to share and get in free. Writers/artists who would like to participate in the People’s Choice Poem Performance Awards can get their names in the hat ahead of time at mkklam@gmail.com or text (619) 957-3264. poetryandartsd.com or sandiego-art.org

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PAGE B16 - JUNE 15, 2017 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

SUMMER CAMPS GUIDE

www.lajollalight.com

2017 San Diego’s No. 1 surf camp for children

Awarded Nickelodeon’s Parents’ Choice for surf schools, Surf Diva’s La Jolla Surf Camp & American Surf Academy provides the No. 1 co-ed surfing program for kids, tweens and teens in San Diego. Girls and boys ages 5-9,

10-12 and 13-17 learn to surf with an emphasis on ocean and beach awareness. The camp takes place at La Jolla Shores beach. Surf Diva instructors are all First Aid, CPR and Lifesaving certified. (858) 454-8273. SurfDiva.com

Have the best summer ever at the Y!

The La Jolla YMCA is again hosting a summer filled with fun through camps for ages 5-17 that begin June 15. Whether your child loves sports, the arts, animals, science or LEGOs — the Y has a

camp program that will help your child build confidence, meet new friends and make memories that will last a lifetime! View and register for all camps at ymca.org/lajolla or call (858) 453-3483.


SUMMER CAMPS GUIDE

www.lajollalight.com

LA JOLLA LIGHT - JUNE 15, 2017 - PAGE B17

G3 Kids: Summer camp and beyond

School is out, and that means summer camp is in session. The fantastic staff at G3Kids prepared for this season all year long, combining educational fun, confidence building gymnastics, and creating activities that take advantage of the best that San Diego has to offer. G3Kids, located on Garnet Avenue, about 2 blocks from Pacific Beach, takes full advantage of being close to the ocean. Not only will kiddos of all ages enjoy beach-filled fun, but G3Kids also takes a special interest in teaching kids about the ocean. Take for example the first week (June 5-9) themed Under the Sea Adventure, their staff of California Credentialed Teachers will take part in educating youngsters about marine life and ocean safety. “It truly takes a village to raise a child,” says Nicole Britvar, who founded G3Kids with her husband Paul. “G3Kids hopes to be the playground in that village.” She lives like she preaches, as a mother of three in La Jolla, G3Kids is built around her dream of bringing her passion for gymnastics together with an opportunity to grow her children’s developing minds. “At a very young age, children learn a lot through kinesthetic development and spatial and body awareness, and these are things that just aren’t taught in the classroom,” Britvar adds. In other words, G3Kids is attempting to connect children’s minds with their bodies.

With this powerful connection comes an ability to learn their strengths, overcome difficulties, power over-above-through-and-beyond obstacles and challenges - not to mention have some good old-fashioned fun while doing so. Thirteen weeks of summer camp fun is about to kickoff, and each week brings a different theme to connect your child’s expanding mind with their growing body. Whether it’s learning about events in the Olympic Games during G3 Olympics (July 17-21), or learning about wildlife in Zoo and Jungle Exploration Week (Aug. 21-25) there’s something for everyone! And every kiddo gets the benefit of lunch and snacks each day, handpicked by G3Kids’ certified nutritionists (quite yummy too!). They will also thrive among the child safety trained staff and coaches who are experts in child care. Don’t take their word for it, check out their website at www.g3kids.com for a complete listing of all summer camp themes and schedules. Partial and full day options are available, but space is limited so call today at (858) 333-9009. If you’re still not convinced, come see for yourself at an Open Gym event to celebrate G3Kids’ One Year Anniversary, 9 a.m. to noon, Sunday, June 11. It’s free for all ages, and kids who attend will place their handprint on the gym walls to leave their mark on G3Kids for many years to come.

We have world-class instructors teaching the kids how to sing, dance and do arts & crafts.

SUMMER CAMP

For Kids Ages 2-5 & Ages 6-15 is so much fun!

Weekly Camps with Shows June 19 – September 1 Look online for camp dates and to register:

www.OLLDA.com or 858.456.4500 7467 Cuvier St., La Jolla, CA 92037

MONDAY - FRIDAY 9AM - 1PM Hip Hop Camp Jazz Camp Broadway Jazz Camp Ballet Camp Contemporary Camp Acrobatics Camp

100 OFF

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FULL WEEK CAMP ENROLLMENTS*

Call to enroll in San Diego’s most happening camp NOW! Hurry, spots are limited and filling up fast! *Offer valid now through June 30th, 2017.

G3kids.com (858) 333-9009

929 Garnet Ave. San Diego 92109


www.lajollalight.com

PAGE B18 - JUNE 15, 2017 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

FROM ONE FOR THE ROAD, B1 everything themselves, some like to take it in. I’m in the middle.” Månsson noted that some cars can be purchased for a few thousand dollars but that parts are expensive. Conversely, there are some car parts that are manufactured by the millions and are cheap and accessible. Another trick he uses is to find cars that are in good shape so there are only minor repairs to make. “I don’t want something brand new. I want something I can use for a while, drive around, take to the beach, put bikes in and enjoy — and not be afraid to ding it. I want it to be well-maintained, but time-accurate. I want it to look good, but if you look up close, you’ll see some marks on it. It doesn’t have to be perfect,” he said. He joked that his wife, Anissa, wants a ‘50s pickup truck, so that will likely be his next project. When it comes to finding cars and getting repair tips, Månsson said he does research online, keeps an eye out on the street, and talks to fellow car enthusiasts. “I want to know things, but I’m not a mechanic, so I learn from people I talk with. I’ve met car guys who know a lot about (whatever I’m driving) and can tell me what’s special about it. People are happy when they see my cars, which makes me happy. These vehicles are a door-opener and help introduce me to others in the surf community. I surf, and I like to meet people and talk to people,” he said. Anissa added, “Especially when he came here from Sweden, he didn’t know anyone and he got to get to know people through his car. Now when he goes surfing at Tourmaline, people always want to come up and talk about it, share stories and so on.” She said she likes to cruise the beach and that having older cars makes every day errands “an event.” She’s no stranger to classic cars — Anissa’s father owned a 1949

THIS JUST IN

If you’re good at restoring cars, it’s not necessarily an expensive hobby. I’ve made money on all my cars, but I do a lot of research and know what I’m getting into.

“There were so many surfers to choose from, I’m so honored to have been chosen!” Flynn was awarded a new SUPER Brand surfboard in honor of his achievement.

Church to launch Sunday evening Youth Service

La Jolla Lutheran Church will begin a Sunday night Youth Worship service that starts at 7:30 p.m. on June 18 with social time afterward featuring foosball, pool and more. The church is at 7111 La Jolla Blvd. (858) 454-6459. lajollalutheranchurch.com

— Daniel Månsson

Flynn Dartland, 13

COURTESY

Surf’s up for Muirlands School eighth-grader Mercury and a few older Corvettes. Månsson’s interest in classic cars started back home, and grew when he moved to San Diego. “I always liked ‘50s post-war culture — the surf scene, the hotrod culture and the cars that came out of it. There are car festivals in Europe and Sweden, but the roots are here in California,” he said. “For me, classic cars have always run parallel to the surf culture. A lot of my surfing friends are also into older cars. They go hand in hand. “A lot of people ask about the engine and want to hear how it sounds when I start it. It’s mostly guys who think it’s cool. I like that this is a part of my everyday life.”

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Flynn Dartland, 13, an eighth-grader at Muirlands Middle School, rode the waves to victory at the Scholastic Surf Series State Championships held May 6-7 in Oceanside Harbor, where he won the contest’s Sportsmanship Award. More than 250 middle school surfers, including 27 middle school teams, came to compete in search of a State Championship Title. The 3-day contest included some intense conditions with big waves and winds testing the competitor’s abilities. Flynn’s award was a result of his display of sportsmanship to fellow surfers during the event. His positive attitude and encouragement of both his teammates and other competitors caused him to stand head and shoulders above his peers. Flynn said,

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Rabbi Graubart joins San Diego Jewish Academy Rabbi Philip Graubart, former Senior Rabbi of La Jolla’s Congregation Beth El, has been named as the next Director of the Advanced Institute for Judaic Studies and San Diego Jewish Academy’s (SDJA) first “Chief Jewish Officer.” “Rabbi Graubart has had a stellar career as a congregational rabbi for Congregation Beth El in La Jolla,” said Chaim Heller, SDJA’s Head of School. “He has also been a teacher and consultant at the Shalom Hartman Rabbi Philip Institute in Jerusalem, and Graubart has been a frequent lecturer and teacher at SDJA over the past few years. He will be engaging with students in a variety of ways, including direct teaching, weekly sessions of ‘Ask the Rabbi,’ teaching our faculty, leading drop-in Torah study for parents and more.”

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www.lajollalight.com

LA JOLLA LIGHT - JUNE 15, 2017 - PAGE B19

Dad’s Day menus for your special guy savory snacks on hand throughout the day from pita, root and kettle cooked chips to a variety of nuts, pretzels and colorful crudités for the palate that craves salt. Serve with assorted dips, such as roasted red pepper hummus, black bean and toasted corn salsa, avocado with grilled shrimp and poblano chiles, or curried Greek yoghurt. A Grill Seeker: Attention barbecuephiles! Start Father’s Day festivities with a grilled breakfast feast of smoky poached eggs, heirloom sausages, wild caught salmon fillets and mesquite-flavored waffles. For the cooking surface use an aromatic hardwood plank to infuse an outdoorsy essence to all animal and vegetable offerings. Mild alder and cedar woods pair well with delicate fish, seafood and vegan fare, maple, apple and pecan planks complement more robust-flavored pork and fowls, while mighty oak and hickory woods are a good match for beef and gamey meats. Vegetarian Vince: For those dads who don’t do meat, pick a peck of pickled peppers, along with sauerkraut, kimchi, salads and slaws to accompany an assortment of mock meats and cheeses. Tofu or bean curd has a neutral flavor profile,

RELIGION SPIRITUALITY LA JOLLA

UNITED METHODIST Open Hearts, Open Minds, Open Doors

Rev. Dr. Walter Dilg, Pastor | 6063 La Jolla Blvd. 858-454-7108 | www.lajollaunitedmethodist.org

■ Method: Combine ingredients in an airtight jar and store up to 4 months. Generously season meat, fish or fowl with rub mixture and wrap in cheesecloth. Refrigerate for several hours before grilling. Cook’s tip: Use 2 tablespoons of dry rub per pound of meat.

La Jolla Presbyterian Church

ALL HALLOWS Catholic Church

Weekday Masses:

M, T, W & F Mass at 7am Communion: Th 7am & Sat at 8am Reconciliation: Sat at 4:30pm

Sunday Masses:

Sat Vigil at 5:30pm • 8am & 9:30am LAST CALL Register this week for our Annual Musical Theater Camp “Avalanche Ranch”. Call Jennifer at 858-200-2058

Rev. Raymond G. O’Donnell

PASTOR

6602 La Jolla Scenic Drive So., La Jolla, California (858) 459-2975 • www.allhallows.com

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$0%1+%-+ #"++)23)%0+ Sunday, June 18, 3:00PM La jolla Presbyterian church Sanctuary • 7715 Draper Ave. 858-454-0713 • ljpres.org/concert-series

7715 Draper Ave. (underground parking on Kline St. between Draper and Eads)

858-454-0713 www.ljpres.org

Sunday Services: 8:45 & 11:00 Traditional with the choir & organ 10:00 Contemporary with the band

esbyteria Pr

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Childcare available

Chapel Open, Monday-Friday 9 a.m.-1:30 p.m.

■ Ingredients: 1/3 cup finely ground coffee; 2 tablespoons sea salt; 2 tablespoons each of brown and white sugar; 2 tablespoons cumin; 2 tablespoons cracked black pepper; 2 tablespoons smoked paprika; 1 tablespoon ginger powder; 2 tablespoons chopped cilantro or parsley; 1 tablespoon garlic powder; cayenne pepper to taste.

n

10 a.m. Worship Service and Sunday School

Smokin’ Coffee Dry Rub

La Joll a

W

hile some guys experience culinary nirvana scarfing down a heap of guacamole and pile of corn chips washed down with a can of fizzy fluid welded to their palm, others first inquire about food’s provenance, and choose judiciously from both the sea (sustainable, wild caught, omega-3 rich fish), and the land (grass fed, organic, GMO-free). Whatever dad’s druthers, degree of social consciousness and culinary habits here is a round up of delights to keep him happy and satiated for Father’s Day. Caffeine Fiend: For the man who needs a java jolt to kick-start his day, start with a high-octane espresso, foamy cappuccino or iced coffee. Add mocha French toast, nutty pancakes with coffee whipped cream or a dark roast hazelnut quick bread to hit the spot for a Dad’s Day breakfast or brunch. For savory bites use your bean by concocting a coffee and black peppercorn dry rub (recipe provided) to dial up strip steak, grilled fish and chicken, a wet marinade for lamb and pork roasts, or a coffee vinaigrette as an all-purpose dipping sauce or salad dressing. And end the day with a buzz from a classic tiramisu. A Salty Dog: Have plenty of spicy and

adaptable to an array of sweet and savory dishes, including egg scrambles, frittatas, stir-fries, soups, curries, or as a pan-fried patty, burger-style. Tempeh made from fermented soybeans is a densely-packed firm wedge. This zesty meat substitute lends well to kebobs, and dials up Cobb, Caesar and chopped salads. Or for a non-soy option try seitan, it’s reminiscent of lunch meat. This hearty gluten protein is popularly used to assemble deli-like sandwiches particularly a Reuben, while vegan bacon called “facon,” coconut jerky and Tofurkey are other knockoff meat alternatives. Spreadable veggie pates that resemble chopped liver and foie gras, such as eggplant caviar, Mediterranean olive tapenade, “meaty” nuts blended with tahini, cannellini beans with Meyer lemon juice and virgin olive oil, or a marinated mushroom paste are scrumptious slathered on a variety of crackers or breads. Paleo Papa: Those embracing the cave-dweller diet — sheavy on meat, fish, fruits and vegetables, hold the grains and dairy, would appreciate protein burgers of all manners. Juicy patties of beef, lamb, chicken, wild boar or other exotic game topped with grilled onions, wrapped in crispy lettuce leaves will please the most refined Paleo palate. A Dairy Dad: For cheese heads, assemble a platter of assorted soft and aged ones, from cow, goat and sheep milk, paired with slices of seasonal melons, figs, apricots and piles of almonds, cashews and other nut favorites. Or whip up southwest quesadillas, personal pizzas, gourmet grilled cheese sandwiches, a bubbly lasagna or baked ziti to warm the cockles of this guy’s heart.

%&$( )$!'*#!" christianscience.com Midweek Service, Wednesday • 7:30pm Sunday Service & Sunday School • 10am 1270 Silverado Ave. La Jolla • 858-454-2266 24/7 hear weekly Sentinel Radio Program 817-259-1620 Explore A New Perspective, VISIT… Christian Science Reading Room 7853 Girard Ave. La Jolla • (858) 454-2807


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100 - LEGAL NOTICES FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-12710 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. ACCMax Solutions LLC Located at: 1202 Morena Blvd, Suite 100, San Diego, CA 92110, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 1202 Morena Blvd, Suite 100, San Diego, CA 92110 Registered Owners Name(s): a. ACCMax Solutions LLC, 1202 Morena Blvd, Suite 100, San Diego, CA 92110, CA. This business is conducted by: a Limited Liability Company. The first day of business was 05/10/2017. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 05/10/2017. Allen F Maxwell, Managing Director. LJ 4969182 6/1, 6/8, 6/15, 6/22/17 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-012711 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. PalmettoMax, LLC Located at: 1202 Morena Blvd, Suite 100, San Diego, CA 92110, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 1202 Morena Blvd, Suite 100, San Diego, CA 92110 Registered Owners Name(s): a. PalmettoMax, LLC, 1202 Morena Blvd, Suite 100, San Diego, CA 92110, CA. This business is conducted by: a Limited Liability Company. The first day of business was 05/10/2017. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 05/10/2017. Allen F Maxwell, Managing Director. LJ 4969744 6/1, 6/8, 6/15, 6/22/17 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-013361 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. MIRAMAR NAIL SPA Located at: MCAS MIRAMAR BLDG #2275, San Diego, CA 92145, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 10293 Royal Ann Avenue San Diego, CA 92126

Ann Avenue San Diego, CA Registered Owners Name(s): a. Remedios Celones, 10293 Royal Ann Avenue San Diego, CA 92126. b.Celso A. Celones, 10293 Royal Ann Avenue San Diego, CA 92126. This business is conducted by: a General Partnership. The first day of business has not yet started . This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 05/18/2017. Remedios A. Celones. LJ4986263 6/1, 6/8, 6/15, 6/22/17

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-013486 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. VEVI TECH Located at: 8775 Costa Verde Blvd. #213, San Diego, CA 92122, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 8775 Costa Verde Blvd. #213, San Diego, CA 92122 Registered Owners Name(s): a. Emilia Veronica Vicente, 8775 Costa Verde Blvd. #213, San Diego, CA 92122. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business was N/A. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 05/19/2017. Emilia Veronica Vicente. LJ4977045 5/25, 6/1, 6/8 & 6/15/2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-013912 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. The Shores Dental Located at: 7855 Fay Ave Suite 260, La Jolla, CA 92037, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 7855 Fay Ave Suite 260, La Jolla, CA 92037 Registered Owners Name(s): a. Alwan DDS, INC, 550 Front St Unit 503, San Diego, CA 92101, California. This business is conducted by: a Corporation. The first day of business was 03/01/2017. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 05/25/2017. Khaled Alwan, Owner/ President. LJ 4995020 6/8, 6/15, 6/22, 6/29/17 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-014439 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. The Lean Machine Meal Prep Located at: 4178 Cartagena Dr., San Diego, CA 92115, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 4265 Mount Culebra Ave. San Diego, CA 92117 Registered Owners Name(s): a. LeRoico LLC, 4265 Mount Culebra Ave. San Diego, CA 92117, California. This business is conducted by: a Limited Liability Company. The first day of business was 02/14/2014. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 05/31/2017. Anthony Lero, CEO/Owner. LJ4998236 6/8, 6/15, 6/22, 6/29/17 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-013126 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Needlepoint of La Jolla Located at: 5685 La Jolla Blvd, La Jolla, CA 92037, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 5685 La Jolla Blvd, La Jolla, CA 92037 Registered Owners Name(s): a. Michelle London, 11188 1/2 Portobelo Drive, San Diego, CA 92124. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business was 05/01/2017. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 05/16/2017. Michelle London. LJ 4957310 6/1, 6/8, 6/15, 6/22/2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-013390 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. B Lash Studio Located at: 7542 Fay Ave. Suite A, La Jolla, CA 92037, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 10255 Melojo Lane, San Diego, CA 92124 Registered Owners Name(s): a. Billie Jeanne Gonzalez, 10255 Melojo Lane, San

CLASSIFIEDS

Gonzalez, 10255 Melojo Lane, San Diego, CA 92124. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business was 05/18/2017. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 05/18/2017. Billie Jeanne Gonzalez. LJ4991319 6/1, 6/8, 6/15 & 6/22/2017

COMPLAINT ADVERSE TO PLAINTIFFS’ OWNERSHIP, OR ANY CLOUD UPON PLAINTIFFS’TITLE THERETO: YOU HAVE BEEN SUED. THE COURT MAY DECIDE AGAINST YOU WITHOUT YOUR BEING HEARD UNLESS YOU RESPOND IN WRITING WITHIN 20 CALENDAR DAYS. READ THE INFORMATION BELOW VERY CAREFULLY.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-015057 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. La Jollas Man About Town (UTCP) b. San Diegos Man About Town Located at: 439 Belvedere Street, La Jolla, CA 92037, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 439 Belvedere Street, La Jolla, CA 92037 Registered Owners Name(s): a. Kurt Iuli-Kinsey, 439 Belvedere Street, La Jolla, CA 92037. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business has not yet started . This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 06/07/2017. Kurt Iuli-Kinsey. 6/15, 6/22, 6/29, 7/6/17

A civil complaint or petition has been filed by the plaintiffs against you for the relief as set forth in that document (see complaint or petition). When service is by publication, add a brief statement of the object of the action. See Nevada Rules of Civil Procedure, Rule 4(b). The object of this action is: QUIET TITLE UPON THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED PROPERTY.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-015316 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Solomon 2.0 Located at: 7514 Girard Ave. #1155, La Jolla, CA 92037, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Debra Solomon, 1056 Pearl St. Unit #5, La Jolla, CA, 92037. b.Howard Solomon, 1056 Pearl St. Unit 5, La Jolla, CA, 92037. This business is conducted by: a Married Couple. The first day of business has not yet started . This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 06/12/2017. Debra Solomon. LJ5018439 6/15, 6/22, 6/29 & 7/6/2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-014363 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Debra Dailey Meetings To Go! Notary Public Located at: 6455 La Jolla Blvd, Suite 149, La Jolla, CA 92037, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Debra Dailey, 6455 La Jolla Blvd, Suite 149, La Jolla, CA 92037. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business was 01/01/2017. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 05/30/2017. Debra Dailey. LJ4995965 6/8, 6/15, 6/22, 6/29/2017 JOHN J. GEZELIN, ESQ. Nevada Bar No. 81 NICOLE N. TING, ESQ. Nevada Bar No. 12289 Gezelin & Associates 405 Marsh Avenue, Main Floor Reno, NV 89509 Telephone (775) 337-9597 Email: john@gezelinaw.com Attorneys for Plaintiffs IN THE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT OF THE STATE OF NEVADA IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF CARSON CITY

1. A general description of the property subject of this action is as follows: 550 Mallory Way, Carson City, NV 89701, APN: 009-551-28 2. A legal description of the property subject of the action is as follows: All that certain real property situated in the County of Carson City, State of Nevada, described as follow: Parcel 1 of the Parcel Map for Harry R. Eberlin recorded at Book 7, Page 2104, Document No. 175253 recorded in the Official Records of Carson City, Nevada on May 4, 1995. 3. If you intend to defend this lawsuit, you must do the following within 20 calendar days after service of this summons, exclusive of the day of service: a. File with the Clerk of the Court, whose address is shown below, a formal written answer to the complaint or petition, along with the appropriate filing fees, in accordance with the rules of the Court, and; 4. Serve a copy of your answer upon the attorney or plaintiff(s) whose name and address is shown below. 5. Unless you respond, the court shall proceed to hear the case and determine the legality of Plaintiffs’ title and must thereafter direct judgment to be entered in accordance with the evidence and the law and this Court may enter a judgment against you for the relief demanded in the complaint or petition. DATE this 17 day of May, 2017 Issued on behalf of Plaintiff: Name: Cal Storage Inc. Address: 405 Marsh Avenue Reno, NV 89509 Phone Number: (775) 337-9597 /s/ Susan Merriwether CLERK OF THE COURT By: Carson City First Judicial District Court 885 East Musser Street, Suite 3031

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LA JOLLA LIGHT

-O0OCASE NO.: 17RP000071B DEPT. NO.: I CAL STORAGE, INC., a Nevada Corporation, Plaintiffs,

(858) 218-72"!

vs. HARRY R. EBERLIN, an individual; and DOES I through X, inclusive Defendants, _____________________/ SUMMONS TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE NAMED AND ALSO ALL OTHER UNKNOWN PERSONS CLAIMING ANY RIGHT, TITLE, ESTATE, LIEN OR INTEREST IN THE REAL PROPERTY DESCRIBED IN THE COMPLAINT ADVERSE TO PLAINTIFFS’

ANSWERS 6/8/2017

PAGE B20 - JUNE 15, 2017 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

885 East Musser Street, Suite 3031 Carson City, Nevada 89701 LJ5010168 6/15, 6/22, 6/29 & 7/6/2017 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO Central Division, Hall of Justice, 330 W. Broadway San Diego, CA 92101 PETITION OF: Justin Carlo Cornelison for change of name. ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR A CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER: 37-2017-00018344-CU-PT-CTL TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS Petitioner(S): Justin Carlo Cornelison filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: a. Present Name : Justin Carlo Cornelison to Proposed Name: Justin

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Cornelison to Proposed Name: Justin Carlo Cipriani THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING Date: 7/7/17 Time: 9:30 AM Dept: 46 The address of the court is: 220 West Broadway San Diego, CA 92101. A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once

crossword


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100 -beLEGAL NOTICES shall published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: La Jolla Light Date: May 2, 2017 Jeffrey B. Barton Judge of the Superior Court LJ 4980116 5/25, 6/1, 6/8, 6/15/17 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO 330 West Broadway San Diego, CA 92101 PETITION OF: Han-Chi Yang a/k/a Susan Yang for change of name. ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR A CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER: 37-2017-00019259-CU-PT-CTL TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS Petitioner(S): Han-Chi Yang a/k/a Susan Yang filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: a. Present Name : Han-Chi Yang a/k/a Susan Yang to Proposed Name: Susan Han-chi Yang THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING Date: 7/14/17 Time: 9:30 AM Dept: 46 The address of the court is: 220 West Broadway San Diego, CA 92101.

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San Diego, CA 92101. A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: La Jolla Light Date: May 30 2017 Jeffrey B. Barton Judge of the Superior Court LJ 4999197 6/8, 6/15, 6/22/17

SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO 330 W. Broadway, room 225 San Diego, CA 92101 PETITION OF: LINDA ANN FORSHA for change of name. ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR A CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER: 37-2017-00017979-CU-PT-CTL TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS Petitioner(S): LINDA ANN FORSHA filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: a. Present Name : LINDA ANN FORSHA to Proposed Name: LYNDA FORSHA BLANCHARD THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING Date: July 7, 2017 Time: 8:30am Dept: 46 The address of the court is: 220 West Broadway San Diego, CA 92101. A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: La Jolla Light Date: May 18, 2017 Jeffrey B Barton Judge of the Superior Court LJ4982370. Jun. 1, 8, 15, 22, 2017 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO 220 West Broadway San Diego, CA 920101 PETITION OF: Schultz for change of name. ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR A CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER: 37-2017-5139-CU-PL-CTL TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS Petitioner(S): Schultz filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: a. Present Name : Lisa Renee Schultz to Proposed Name: Lisa Renee Travis THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING Date: 6/30/17 Time: 8:30 AM Dept: 46 The address of the court is: 220 West Broadway San Diego, CA 92101. A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: La Jolla Light Date: 2017 May 12 Jeffrey B. Barton Judge of the Superior Court LJ 4992278 6/8, 6/15, 6/22, 6/29/17

LA JOLLA LIGHT - JUNE 15, 2017 - PAGE B21

Reservation time for summer meals at The Marine Room

T

he Marine Room, a San Diego landmark and award-winning coastal treasure for more than 75 years, provides sweeping, panoramic views of La Jolla Shores, culinary excellence and uncompromising service. Here’s a list of its summer celebrations: ■ Father’s Day Sunday Brunch will feature Hazelnut Chocolate Brioche French Toast, Berkshire Pork Cheek Casserole and Cracked Pepper Cacao Nib Crusted Angus Ribeye. The desserts include Agrumes Cheesecake, Spicy Mayan Chocolate Square and the Signature Marine Room Spindrift Bread Pudding. ■ Father’s Day Weekend Dinner Specials include Line Caught Local Swordfish and Wild Caught Prawns, American Kobe Beef New York Steak or Country Meadow Rack of Lamb, in addition to the seasonal dinner menu. ■ High Tide Dinners feature eye-level waves crashing against the thick, protected floor-to-ceiling windows of the Marine Room. High tides typically range between 4 and 5 feet above sea level, so the predicted 6to over 7-foot high tides during these special evenings make dining at The Marine Room a memorable experience. Enjoy a seasonal menu with à la carte choices and nightly dinner specials including Red Walnut Crusted Alaskan Halibut and Nebraska Center Cut Prime Angus New York. Dates: June 19-24, July 5-9,

COURTESY

Summer celebration fare at The Marine Room in La Jolla July 18-23, Aug. 4-7, Aug. 16-21, Sept. 3-6, Sept. 15-20. ■ The Marine Room, 2000 Spindrift Drive, La Jolla. Reservations: (858) 459-7222. marineroom.com — Business Spotlight features commercial enterprises that support La Jolla Light.

PEOPLE IN THE NEWS New manager for Estancia La Jolla Mairead Hennessy has been named general manager of Estancia La Jolla Hotel & Spa, overseeing all operations of the 210-room luxury property at 9700 North Torrey Pines Road. A statement from the hotel’s owner, Pacific Hospitality Group of Irvine, said Hennessy has more than 20 years of hospitality industry experience, most recently serving as an executive with Aramark Parks and Destinations. At that company, she oversaw operations of Northern California venues including Hearst Castle and Asilomar Conference Center. Prior to Aramark, she served in executive leadership positions with Hyatt Hotels in cities including San Diego, Pittsburgh and Huntington Beach. In the local market, she served as senior director of food and beverage at the Manchester Grand Hyatt San Diego. Hennessy also previously served as chairman of the Monterey Convention and Visitors Bureau. The 10-acre, hacienda-style Estancia La Jolla includes more than 47,000 square feet of event space, a 7,000-square-foot, full-service spa, a saltwater pool and four dining venues. The property is operated as part of the Meritage Collection, a portfolio of six luxury hotels and resorts in California and Hawaii.

Mairead Hennessy

Stacey Studebaker

Stacey Studebaker merges rock ’n’ roll ‘n’ real estate After an 18-year career as a Los Angeles- and Nashville-based music publicist, Stacey Studebaker transitioned to real estate and set up shop in her hometown of San Diego in 2010. Now she has made another transition, joining Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices California Properties in La Jolla after six years with another national brokerage. “I’ve found numerous parallels between my former career as a record-label publicist and in my current career as an agent, most of which were completely unexpected,” she said. “Particularly when representing new artists, I was very aware that their dreams of success rested in large part in my hands. The pressure to perform was intense. Assisting a homebuyer with a purchase of such magnitude feels very much the same. I am always

conscientious of the tremendous trust people have in me to make their dream of homeownership come true.” Stacey worked Andrew with such artists Fargo as Sublime, Lyle Lovett, Elton John, Tom Petty, B.B. King, Reba McEntire, Vince Gill, and local favorites Blink 182. She can be reached at (858) 349-3075, sstudebaker@bhhscal.com and bhhscalifornia.com

Torrey Pines High celebrates a West Point grad Cadet Andrew Nicholas Fargo, a 2012 Torrey Pines High School graduate and son of Jeff and Bernadette Fargo of Solana Beach, graduated from the U.S. Military Academy, May 27. While at West Point, he concentrated his studies in Environmental Science. He was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the U.S. Army within the Air Defense Artillery branch. The U.S. Military Academy at West Point is a four-year, co-educational, federal liberal arts college 50 miles north of New York City. It was founded in 1802 as America’s first college of engineering. westpoint.edu


LA JOLLA HOMES & REAL ESTATE

PAGE B22 - JUNE 15, 2017 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

all nt! e c tme s a n ple ppoi a for

Luxury La Jolla Beach Access! 100 Coast Blvd – 2 bed/2 bath penthouse. New windows, flooring, appliances, window coverings, light fixtures, skylights, tank less on-demand hot water heater, toilets, fireplace, air conditioner, custom countertops and cabinetry. Pet-friendly with 2 garage parking spaces. Best Buy! $1,695,000 $1,795,000

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858-361-2556 | marylajolla@gmail.com Latitude Realty 32 | CalBRE#00851130

Mid-Century Modern Gem!

LD,000 O S 00 ,4 $1

6261 DOWLING DR., LA JOLLA 2BR, 1BA (1,177) sq.ft.

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2469 AVENIDA DE LA PLAYA JUST LISTED! · $4,350,000 Classic mid-century designed by noted architect Russell Forester, FAIA. Single-level, La Jolla Shores within walking distance of restaurants, B&T Club, shops and beach. Floor-to-ceiling walls of glass, expansive outdoor living with a pool. Architecture, location, and an ocean view makes this truly on of a kind!

SUSANNE LÖDL 619.507.9995 lodlsusanne@gmail.com CalBRE# 01129209

HOME OF HOME OFTHE THEWEEK WEEK

5780 Soledad Road La Jolla, CA 92037

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Brian Wallace joins Willis Allen Real Estate Willis Allen Real Estate welcomes Realtor Brian Wallace to its flagship La Jolla office. A former family law and estate planning attorney, Wallace has an in-depth understanding of the various issues both buyers and sellers may face in a complex real estate transaction. “Brian is a creative problem-solver, and as an attorney who is licensed with the State Bar of California, he offers his clients complete confidence that he can usher them through their transaction, no matter how challenging,” said Jane Granados, Chief Operating Officer & Managing Broker. “We are excited to have him on the Willis Allen team.” Wallace, who also has experience in television news, sales and marketing, said Willis Allen’s reputation made it impossible for him to hang his license with any other brokerage. “Willis Allen is the preeminent brokerage in La Jolla, and has an impeccable

reputation of diligent representation of its clients, coupled with high integrity,” he said. “From the outside looking in, I always held Willis Allen in high regard, and I’m thrilled to now call Brian Wallace myself a Willis Allen agent.” Wallace is a fourth-generation Southern Californian who grew up in Orange County. He’s lived in the La Jolla area since the early 1990s. His wife is part of a real estate-oriented family that has run an appraisal business in San Diego for nearly 40 years. “This has provided me an in-depth knowledge of the San Diego and La Jolla markets that offers me a unique perspective when pricing a home and knowing how to get the most value available,” Wallace noted. He can be reached at (858) 603-0129 and brian@willisallen.com

Denny Oh joins Pacific Sotheby’s La Jolla office FROM PACIFIC SOTHEBY REPORTS Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty announced that Realtor Denny Oh is working out of its Global Headquarters at 1111 Prospect St. in La Jolla. Oh, who originally started his real estate career in the La Jolla area, is looking forward to this next chapter, after spending several successful years in the firm’s downtown San Diego office. “I know this area very well,” said Oh, “and have an in-depth understanding of the various neighborhoods here. My top priority is to continue to bring my clients unparalleled service, whether they are buying or selling a home.” As a successful real estate agent for more

than 13 years, Oh has sold more than 250 homes totaling over $115 million. Originally from Redondo Beach, he was introduced to the San Diego area as a college student at UCSD where he graduated in 2002. Denny Oh Realizing he wanted to make his home in the La Jolla area, he began a career in real estate, where his passion and hard work connecting with his clients, has led him to be one of San Diego’s top real estate agents. Oh can be reached at (858) 243-2092 and denny@sandiegoh.com

RENTAL OF THE WEEK ■ 2BR/1BA ■ Weekly $3,495.00 Monthly $9,500.00 (+tax)

Just steps away from the beach Relax on this large and modern 2-bed, 1 bath Ocean View La Jolla home. Furnished, high ceilings, fire place, master bedroom private patio. Wi-fi, cable TV, laundry room and parking.

Mariela Torres DeStout Mediterranean architecture blended with contemporary coastal lifestyle design in this stunning newer construction home atop Mt. Soledad. • Ocean and canyon views from every room. • Indoor/outdoor living with courtyards and loggias. • Sited on an 11,700 sq. ft. lot with room for a pool. • Residence features 4BR/3.5BA, an elevator and 3 car garage. • Features smart home wiring. • Custom finishes throughout including rich hardwoods and imported stone. Offered on a value range of $2,885,000 - $3,185,000

Michelle Serafini | Rosa Buettner 858.829.6210 | 858.945.7314 www.coastandranchproperty.com CalBRE #01411969 | CalBRE #01089718

Chief Operating Officer Capital Asset Management 3100 Ocean St, Carlsbad 760-720-1400 760-613-1104 Mariela@capitalassetmgt.com To view please call for an appointment at 760-720-1400


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LA JOLLA LIGHT - JUNE 15, 2017 - PAGE B23

OPEN HOUSES More open house listings at lajollalight.com/homes

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Seaside Masterpiece - Steps to the Beach 412 MARINE | 3 BD | 3.5 BA | 2,172 SQ FT | $3,148,000

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$850,000-$900,000 3BD / 2.5BA

5435 CAMINITO HERMINIA, LA JOLLA KAREN HICKMAN, PACIFIC SOTHEBY'S INTERNATIONAL REALTY

SUN 1 P.M.-4 P.M. 858-459-4300

$870,000 3BD / 2.5BA

2044 CAMINITO CIRCULO SUR, LA JOLLA SAT & SUN 1 P.M.-4 P.M. GINA HIXSON & ELAINE ROBBS, BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY HOMESERVICES 858-405-9100

$959,000-$989,000 2BD / 2BA

7633 DRAPER AVE, LA JOLLA LALEH & NILOO MONSHIZADEH, COLDWELL BANKER RESIDENTIAL

SAT & SUN 1 P.M.-4 P.M. 858-518-4209

$998,000-$1,150,000 3BD / 3BA

6429 PANEL CT. – UTC, LA JOLLA MYRIAM LARA HUNEKE, ASSOCIATED BROKERS

SAT & SUN 1 P.M.-4 P.M. 619-246-9999

$999,995-$1,199,995 4BD / 4BA

7656 CAMINITO COROMANDEL, LA JOLLA PETER MIDDLETON, COLDWELL BANKER RESIDENTIAL

SAT & SUN 1 P.M.-4 P.M. 858-764-4808

$1,000,000-$1,150,000 3BD / 3BA

1676 CAMINITO ALIVIADO, LA JOLLA KAREN HICKMAN, PACIFIC SOTHEBY'S INTERNATIONAL REALTY

$1,379,995 3BD / 2.5BA

1056 PEARL ST. #8, LA JOLLA THURS & FRI 2 P.M.-5 P.M., SAT 1 P.M.-4 P.M. PETER MIDDLETON, COLDWELL BANKER RESIDENTIAL 858-764-4808

$1,399,000 4BD / 4BA

8088 GILMAN CT, LA JOLLA ALISON SORLEY ATWOOD, COLDWELL BANKER RESIDENTIAL

SAT 11 A.M.-2 P.M. 619-200-0801

$1,599,000 3BD / 3.5BA

424 BONAIR STREET, LA JOLLA TEAM CHODOROW, BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY HOMESERVICES

SUN 1 P.M.-4 P.M. 858-456-6850

$1,650,000-$1,750,000 3BD / 3.5BA

7571 HERSCHEL, LA JOLLA LYNDA GUALTIER, BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY HOMESERVICES

SAT & SUN 1 P.M.-4 P.M. 619-988-7799

$1,775,000 3BD / 3.5BA

7573 HERSCHEL AVENUE, LA JOLLA LYNDA GUALTIER, BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY HOMESERVICES

SAT & SUN 1 P.M.-4 P.M. 619-988-7799

SUN 1 P.M.-4 P.M. 858-459-4300

$1,995,000-$2,275,000 1635 CALLE CANDELA, LA JOLLA 4BD / 3BA JUSTIN RUTHERFORD, TORREY GROVE REAL ESTATE

SUN 1 P.M.-4 P.M. 858-245-7227

$2,395,000 4BD / 3.5BA

1230 NAUTILUS STREET, LA JOLLA LINDA DANIELS, WILLIS ALLEN R.E.

SAT 1 P.M.-5 P.M. 858-361-5561

$2,495,000 3BD / 2BA

5979 VIA ZURITA, LA JOLLA MAXINE & MARTI GELLENS, BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY HOMESERVICES

SAT 1 P.M.-4 P.M. 858-551-6630

$2,495,000 3BD / 3BA

777 LA CANADA, LA JOLLA KRISTIN SLAUGHTER, COLDWELL BANKER RESIDENTIAL

SAT 1 P.M.-4 P.M. 858-395-1359

$2,500,000 4BD / 3.5BA

5970 LA JOLLA MESA DRIVE, LA JOLLA RACHAEL KAISER, CANTER BROKERAGE

$2,600,000 6BD / 4BA

8473 PRESTWICK DRIVE, LA JOLLA MAXINE & MARTI GELLENS, BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY HOMESERVICES

$2,700,000 4BD / 4.5BA

6845 LA JOLLA SCENIC DR S, LA JOLLA FRAN MINGURA, COLDWELL BANKER RESIDENTIAL

$2,865,000 3BD / 2BA

842 MUIRLANDS VISTA, LA JOLLA MOIRA TAPIA, WILLIS ALLEN R.E.

FRI 2 P.M.-5 P.M., SAT 10 A.M.-4 P.M. 619-302-2363 SAT & SUN 1 P.M.-4 P.M. 858-551-6630 SAT & SUN 12 P.M.-3 P.M. 619-990-7283 SUN 1 P.M.-4 P.M. 858-337-7269

$2,885,000-$3,185,000 5780 SOLEDAD RD, LA JOLLA 4BD / 3.5BA SERAFINI BUETTNER GROUP, COLDWELL BANKER RESIDENTIAL

SAT 12 P.M.-3 P.M. 858-829-6210

$2,885,000-$3,185,000 5780 SOLEDAD RD, LA JOLLA 4BD / 3.5BA BRENDA WYATT, COLDWELL BANKER RESIDENTIAL

SUN 12 P.M.-3 P.M. 858-775-7333

$2,895,000 3BD / 3BA

7945 ST. LOUIS, LA JOLLA MAXINE & MARTI GELLENS, BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY HOMESERVICES

SAT & SUN 1 P.M.-4 P.M. 858-551-6630

$2,898,000 4BD / 4.5BA

1555 SOLEDAD AVE, LA JOLLA MAXINE & MARTI GELLENS, BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY HOMESERVICES

SAT & SUN 1 P.M.-4 P.M. 858-551-6630

$2,995,000 3BD / 3.5BA

6887 AVENIDA ANDORRA, LA JOLLA IRENE CHANDLER & JIM SHULTZ, COLDWELL BANKER RESIDENTIAL

SAT & SUN 12 P.M.-3 P.M. 858-354-0000

$3,695,000 5BD / 4BA

8327 LA JOLLA SHORES DR, LA JOLLA FERNANDO MENEZES, BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY HOMESERVICES

SAT & SUN 12 P.M.-4 P.M. 619-929-8474

$3,799,900-$4,499,900 1222 MUIRLANDS VISTA WAY, LA JOLLA THURS 1 P.M.-4 P.M., SUN 11 A.M.-2 P.M. 4BD / 5.5BA PETER MIDDLETON, COLDWELL BANKER RESIDENTIAL 858-764-4808

THE BRETT DICKINSON TEAM

858.822.9699 • brett.dickinson@sothebysrealty.com • CalBRE# 01767484

La Jolla Office : 858-926-3060 1111 Prospect St. | La Jolla, California | 92037

$4,325,000 3BD / 3.5BA

7025 NEPTUNE PL, LA JOLLA MARC LIPSCHITZ, CANTER BROKERAGE

SUN 1 P.M.-4 P.M. 619-857-2882

$4,795,000-$5,395,000 7773 STARLIGHT DRIVE, LA JOLLA 5BD / 6.5BA THE BRETT DICKINSON TEAM, PACIFIC SOTHEBY'S INTERNATIONAL REALTY

SAT 1 P.M.-4 P.M. 858-822-9699

$5,750,000 4BD / 6BA

6331 CAMINO DE LA COSTA, LA JOLLA ARLENE SACKS, WILLIS ALLEN R.E.

SAT 12 P.M.-3 P.M. 858-922-3900

$5,850,000 5BD / 5.5BA

6460 LA JOLLA SCENIC DRIVE SOUTH, LA JOLLA RACHAEL KAISER, CANTER BROKERAGE

SUN 1 P.M.-4 P.M. 619-302-2363

$6,998,000 4BD / 4BA

5316 CALUMET AVENUE, LA JOLLA MAXINE & MARTI GELLENS, BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY HOMESERVICES

SAT & SUN 1 P.M.-4 P.M. 858-551-6630

For the most up-to-date list of open houses, mapped locations, and

PacificSothebysRealty.com

*premium listings with photos, visit lajollalight.com/open-houses-list/

©MMVII Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates LLC. All Rights Reserved. Sotheby’s International Realty® is a registered trademark licensed to Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates. An Equal Opportunity Company. Equal Housing Opportunity. Each Office is Independently Owned and Operated. CA DRE#01767484

Contact Sarah Minihane • sarahm@lajollalight.com • 858.875.5945


www.lajollalight.com

PAGE B24 - JUNE 15, 2017 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

Peggy Chodorow

Eric Chodorow

OPEN HOUSE Sunday 1-4: 424 Bonair Street $1,599,000 Newly Remodeled Muirlands

The Lotus House

Panoramic, unobstructed ocean and sunset view from most rooms of this lovely 4,300 square foot single level home renovated in 2016, situated on just under an acre with a pool in the heart of the Muirlands. $3,895,000

Designed by noted “organic” architect Kendrick Bangs Kellogg, this 300 degree ocean view home sits on a .9 acre site perched on the edge of Pottery Canyon. The structure lays out in a sprawling flower shape resembling a blooming lotus flower and features walls of glass, molded concrete, and curved laminated engineered wood beams. $3,495,000

W G NE TIN LIS

Mt. Soledad Gem

Blackhorse Beauty

We proudly present this marvelous two-story home with tremendous curb appeal on a cul-de-sac located just off Soledad Mt. Road with five or six bedrooms and four baths, a grand travertine entrance, high ceilings, and multiple skylights. The backyard is ideal for entertaining with a pool and spa, slide and recreational area. $2,450,000

Stunning Plan 1, 2BR/2.5BA, in the much sought after gated community of Blackhorse across the street from UCSD. Special features include hardwood flooring, custom cabinetry, two master suites with fireplaces, and more. Blackhorse residents may purchase a membership to use the facilities at the Estancia Hotel next door. $1,100,000

7780 Girard Avenue, La Jolla, CA BRE #00992609 | BRE #00409245

©2017 Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices California Properties (BHHSCP) is a member of the franchise system of BHH Affiliates LLC. BHH Affiliates LLC and BHHSCP do not guarantee accuracy of all data including measurements, conditions, and features of property. Information is obtained from various sources and will not be verified by broker or MLS. CalBRE 01317331


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