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Vol. 103, Issue 33 • August 13, 2015

INSIDE

First ‘La Jolla Nights’ draws a crowd, A5

n Crime, A9 n Calendar, A10 n Business, A14 n Opinion, A18 n Weekly Poll, A18 n Obituaries, A19 n Sports, A21

ENLIGHTENING LA JOLLA SINCE 1913

ONLINE DAILY AT lajollalight.com

ResidentIal Customer La Jolla, CA 92037 ECRWSS

Group wants Let the Show Begin! city to plug ‘McMansions’ loophole n Committee mulls Los Angelesstyle development moratorium By Pat Sherman La Jollans concerned with what they consider oversized, boxy homes detracting from the character of their neighborhoods are hoping to take a page from the City of Los Angeles in their mission to curb the proliferation of “McMansions.” During its July 27 meeting at La Jolla Rec Center, the La Jolla Community Planning Association’s (LJCPA) Ad Hoc Committee on Residential Single-Family Zoning discussed several strategies for putting the brakes on such development. After much discussion, the group decided to draft a letter for the LJCPA to review and forward to the mayor and the city’s Development Services Director, Robert Vacchi, imploring the city to place a moratorium on its 50 percent “categorical exemption,” which the group believes has led to the so-called “mansionization” of Bird Rock. Meanwhile, the group continues to solicit the participation of residents, city staff and the building industry to come to a mutually agreeable solution. See Mcmansions, A6

Silent movies set in La Jolla to screen at Wisteria Cottage, B1

M

usic Director Cho-Liang Lin kicked off La Jolla Music Society’s 29th annual chamber festival, SummerFest, Aug. 5 with a sunset concert in Scripps Park. Families and friends brought picnics, lounge chairs and blankets to make the most of the free musical event at the Cove. SummerFest runs through Aug. 28 with performances at Sherwood Auditorium in the Museum of Contemporary Art, 700 Prospect St. For this week’s program lineup, see Best Bets, B14.

n Let Inga Tell You, B3 n Theater, B4 n Social Life, B12 n Best Bets, B14 n Classifieds, B19 n Real Estate, B22 The former Copley estate sits on 8 acres.

Courtesy

La Jolla

Doug Manchester buys Copley’s Foxhill estate for $17 million

An Edition of

By Susan DeMaggio The Foxhill estate in La Jolla, formerly owned by the Copley Publishing Family at 7007 Country Club Drive, was sold Aug. 6 for $17 million to Manchester Foxhill, LLC. The property, listed by Greg Noonan & Associates, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices California Properties was originally priced at $25 million in February 2015. The buyer was represented by Andy Nelson, president and CEO of Willis Allen Real Estate. See Foxhill, A11

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The summer night concert drew Carol Matthews-French, Hiram French and Michelle Graham, and three generations of their family. Photos by Greg Wiest

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©2015 Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Each Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage office is owned by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker® and the Coldwell Banker Logo are registered service marks 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. * Based on information total sales volume from California Real Estate Technology Services, Santa Barbara Association of REALTORS, SANDICOR, Inc. for the period 1/1/2013 through 12/31/2013 in Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego, Santa Barbara and Ventura Counties. Due to MLS reporting methods and allowable reporting policy, this data is only informational and may not be completely accurate. Therefore, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage does not guarantee the data accuracy. Data maintained by the MLS’s may not reflect all real estate activity in the market.


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LA JOLLA LIGHT - august 13, 2015 - Page A3

Residents gather for annual Bird Rock picnic

Left: Barrett Bundonis enjoys a slice of juicy watermelon. Below:

A

Sophia Parker

t the Bird Rock Community Council summer picnic Aug. 4, the next generation of Bird Rockers came out with parents and friends to enjoy the annual summer celebration. Although open to residents of all ages, the youngest ones took advantage of the sunny day in Calumet Park to play with friends and neighbors and form solid summer memories. u Photos by Ashley Mackin

gives a piggyback ride to her little cousin Brixton Sillman.

Bird Rockers arrive at Calumet Park to celebrate the sunshine, the company and some tasty hamburgers.

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Page A4 - august 13, 2015 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

Hillary Clinton campaign holds breakfast in La Jolla By Pat Sherman Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton was in La Jolla Friday, Aug. 7 for a fundraising breakfast at the home of Qualcomm co-founder and Clinton supporter Irwin Jacobs and his wife, Joan. Former Congressmember and La Jolla resident Lynn Schenk and Marcy Krinsk hosted the breakfast, reporting tickets went for $1,000 up to $2,700 (the maximum contribution for an individual donor) for a pre-breakfast VIP “meet and greet.” Schenk said she was happy to have Clinton in San Diego so early in the campaign. Typically the last few days before a political fundraiser Schenk said she’s “frantically calling people to make sure they’re coming” with check in hand, but Clinton’s La Jolla breakfast, which drew more than 250 people, was sold out days before. “There were a lot of La Jollans — Democrats and Republicans,” Schenk said. “I’ve been doing these things for a long time and would rate it a 10 out of a 10. Everybody was in a great mood.” Schenk said the former First Lady, U.S. Senator from New York, and Secretary of State spoke for about 45 minutes “without notes, as usual,” touching on “every major domestic policy issue we are facing,” and some foreign policy issues, such as her support for the Iran nuclear deal. Clinton also touched on Obamacare. “She talked about how good it is, but there obviously are fixes that need to be made and she’s looking to work on that.” Schenk said Clinton didn’t use the event to take jabs at the Republican presidential contenders who held their first televised debate the evening prior. “After seeing the 10 men up there (in the Republican debate), it really is wonderful that on the Democratic side we have the most qualified, experienced, thoughtful and clearly nuanced (candidate). … She was warm and genuine and talked about being a grandma and how it changes people.” The fundraiser was Clinton’s first public appearance in La Jolla since announcing her candidacy in April. Last summer she signed her memoir, “Hard Choices,” at Warwick’s bookstore. u

Hillary Clinton and event co-chair Lynn Schenk

Clinton and a ‘selfie’ with Mark Arabo. Courtesy

Courtesy

Protesters, spectators and TV news crews stand outside the home of Joan and Irwin Jacobs’ estate Aug. 7, waiting for the Democratic frontrunner to arrive. Pat Sherman

La Jolla residents Dr. John and Lola Ross with Jessica Ellis await Clinton’s arrival.

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LA JOLLA LIGHT - august 13, 2015 - Page A5

Focus is on fun at first La Jolla Nights event H undreds of locals and tourists strolled Prospect Street and beyond Aug. 8 to enjoy the warm summer evening and partake of great deals at some of La Jolla’s top shops and restaurants. Billed by participating merchants as “La Jolla Nights,” the event was a celebration that included music, food and drinks, as well as the chance to mix and mingle. u Photos by Greg Wiest

Nichole McDaniel works on her next ‘etching’ project.

Elisabeth King, co-owner/curator of The La Jolla Gallery, with some of the art available for sale.

A family poses by CJ Charles Jewelers’ ‘selfie mirror,’ providing attendees with free photo souvenirs.

Visitors peruse artwork on display at La Valencia Hotel.

Eliza Rose Vera performs for passersby on Prospect Street.

We Olive manager Amanda Sarich tends to the register as another round awaits pick up.

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Page A6 - august 13, 2015 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

This La Jolla home at 1685 Marisma Way (left) was gutted to make way for what the city considers an ‘addition and remodel.’ On July 24 an over-the-counter permit (requiring no community review) was issued for the project, using the city’s 50 percent categorical exemption, which allows applicants to avoid community review for maintaining 50 percent or more of a house’s exterior walls. Above is what remained of the structure Aug. 5. Under the categorical exemption, the city says, all siding, stucco, insulation, plumbing, electrical, roofs and roof joists are not considered part of an exterior wall and may be removed or replaced, though not moved. The replacement house will include a second story with decks, new covered porch and ‘garage expansion.’ From Mcmansions, A1 San Diego’s categorical exemption allows builders remodeling or adding onto homes in the coastal zone to bypass the city’s requirement for a coastal development permit — and accompanying community notification and review — in exchange for retaining at least 50 percent of a structure’s existing, exterior walls. The ad hoc committee says this exemption was intended for modest home additions and remodels, though it’s now being used as a workaround to fast-track demolition of existing homes to build new structures that are sometimes two to four times larger.

Los Angeles: We have a problem

size and scale of residential development. “With the resurgence of the economy, we’ve just had complete neighborhoods decimated by these things,” Bayliss said. He said the problem was exacerbated by “bonuses and exemptions” afforded to homeowners and builders under the BMO, similar to what is concurrently happening in La Jolla. In addition to San Diego’s 50 percent rule, further exemptions are allowed so that basements, covered porches and accessory structures tacked onto residential projects in La Jolla’s coastal zone are not counted as livable floor area (though some say these spaces are often converted to living spaces after the home is complete). In Los Angeles, there is an established, maximum, residential floor-area ratio (FAR) of .5, Bayliss said (by comparison, the

maximum established floor-area ratio for San Diego and La Jolla — excluding La Jolla Shores — is already greater, at .6). Los Angeles’s BMO allows a homebuilder to get an additional 20 percent of square footage by doing one of three things: building to a specified environmental standard — “basically, already required through our green building standards,” Bayliss said; adding articulation to the front; or making the second story 25 percent smaller than the first story. Other areas excluded from floor-area ratio calculations under the BMO include: the first 400 square feet of a garage; 250 square feet of covered breezeways, walkways and patios; and 400 square feet of pool houses, sheds or other accessory structures. “While that’s not living space, it’s bulk, it’s stuff,”

s

In Los Angeles, public outcry over perceived mansionization was so pervasive

that earlier this year the city imposed a moratorium on demolition and certain kinds of development in 15 neighborhoods. In March, the Los Angeles City Council unanimously approved the Neighborhood Conservation Interim Control Ordinance (ICO), which places a maximum two-year limit on the size of new, single-family dwellings that can be built in those neighborhoods. “We’ve got a big problem, so much so that 15 ICOs (temporary moratoriums) have been proposed, which is something that I don’t think has ever been done,” said Shawn Bayliss, director of planning and land use for Fifth District Los Angeles City Councilmember Paul Koretz. Although in 2008 Los Angeles passed a Baseline Mansionization Ordinance (BMO) to curb the trend, it did little to control the

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www.lajollalight.com Bayliss said. “All of a sudden you have 4,800 square feet of stuff on this 6,400-square-foot lot (and an FAR of .75). When I go out in my backyard, I’m now looking up at a two-and-a-half-story wall, complete with windows and balconies overlooking my backyard — six feet away from my property line — and there’s some extreme examples of … what a lot of people refer to as a Kleenex box.”

Bird Rock’s big bad developer? Nearly all of the projects that La Jolla’s residential zoning ad hoc committee have cited as examples of mansionization in north Pacific Beach, Bird Rock and La Jolla have been developed by two companies: Tourmaline Properties and Pump House Builders, each owned by Bird Rock resident Ben Ryan (see photos on A6 and A8). UC San Diego professor and Bird Rock resident Anne Wallace said she and her husband bought a small home in Bird Rock in 1995, which they later rebuilt, “staying with the original style, including redwood trim and a craftsman flavor. It’s still a quaint small house — 2,000 square feet — (where) we have raised our sons,” she said. Although the ad hoc committee admits the categorical exemption and additional exclusions follow the letter of current San Diego Land Development Code, Wallace and others contend Ryan’s projects “defy everything that has made our neighborhood flourish. “My biggest concern isn’t the track home, oversized, cosmetically unappealing nature of his houses,” she said. “My biggest worry is that he is deliberately seeking out owners often before they even put their homes on

LA JOLLA LIGHT - august 13, 2015 - Page A7

the market, knocking on doors of some of our elderly ... and thus buying up the market. He then puts $400,000 into it and sells what would’ve been affordable to a young couple for close to $2 million, which is now not affordable to a couple like my husband and I would’ve been. … I truly believe this is interfering with the free market and will change the entire social structure of our neighborhood.” Ryan, whose company, Tourmaline Properties, San Diego Business Journal rated one of the “100 Fastest Growing Private Companies of 2015,” reached out to La Jolla Light late last month in response to the ad hoc committee’s concerns with his projects. “Tourmaline Properties and Tourmaline Construction are our two primary companies,” said Ryan, who is president of both. “Tourmaline Properties is the vehicle that buys loans for properties and sells them when we’re done and contracts to our affiliated company, Tourmaline Construction, which builds primarily for Tourmaline Properties. ... “We’re not using any loopholes and we’re not gaming the system,” said Ryan, a retired Navy SEAL who has four children attending La Jolla schools and maintains he is “very invested” in the community. “We’re using what the City of San Diego put in place to offer relief from the burden of the cost and time of going through a coastal development permit. It’s an expensive and a time-consuming process. … There’s more reviews and more material that’s required (in La Jolla). It’s a quicker process in other areas.” Ryan said the “vast majority” of residents and neighbors in the area where he is

Next Residential Single-Family Zoning ‘McMansion’ meeting ■ 5:30-7 p.m., Monday, Aug. 24, La Jolla Rec Center, 615 Prospect St. building have reacted positively to his projects. He said the people who purchase his houses are generally families that need more space. “When we’re in the design stages of a house, we generally are designing it for a family and for them to have room — and that’s what there is demand for. A lot of families wouldn’t be able to move into a 1,000-square-foot house,” he said. Ryan said he doesn’t believe the loss of “really small houses built in the 1940s and ’50s” is deconstructing the fabric of La Jolla. “The urban landscape is in a continual state of change, and I don’t feel that change is inherently bad,” he said, noting that his projects and related city fees boost the economy and help fund local schools. “The changes we impart to the community are, by and large, very positive. Generally, the houses we’re replacing are small and in very poor condition. They’ve reached the end of their useful (lives) as structures. I can’t think of an instance where we’ve built and then seen property values drop.” Although the city did not respond by press time when asked how many residential projects were approved last year using the categorical exemption, Ryan said the majority of the homes built or

remodeled in Bird Rock are done using this provision. “That’s simply because you can add up to 12 months to a job and then tens of thousands of dollars in additional consultant fees,” seeking a coastal development permit, he said, noting he believes removing or modifying the categorical exemption would have a “very strong, negative impact on home values in our community. “Any limitation you place on the ability of people to remodel in accordance with the code is going to have a negative impact on values. It makes it more difficult to remodel your house and it puts limitations and restrictions on what you’re able to do,” he said. “It makes it more expensive for people to remodel and ultimately it will drive people away from the coastal development review process.”

La Jolla can count its blessings? Unlike La Jolla, in the majority of its neighborhoods, the city of Los Angeles does not require developers to notify the public about their projects, or have the community design review La Jolla does, despite many citizens “clamoring for it,” Bayliss said. “A lot of people get skittish when you talk about architectural review — committees put together to tell you how your house should look, or could look,” he said. “It’s a completely predictable scenario. The more pressure, the more difficult you make it to build, the more pressure there is to try to figure out a way around it. … We have found that you can get mired in the weeds with that kind of stuff. We’re just so darn big that it’s better for us to codify the See McMansions, A8

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Page A8 - august 13, 2015 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

This home at 5628 Waverly Ave. (left) is in the process of being redeveloped by Pump House Builders (right). It is classified by the city as a ‘remodel and addition.’ The city issued an over-the-counter (ministerial) permit for the project on March 19 via its 50 percent categorical exemption rule. According to a city inspection plan, the finished dwelling will include new living, kitchen, dining and office areas, a new deck, stairway to a second floor, four bedrooms and three baths, a roof deck, new garage, basement level ‘kids area’ and garage accessed via the alley. Photos by Pat Sherman From Mcmansions, A7 rules: here are the rules — and either you (follow them) or you don’t.” The ad hoc committee says part of the problem in La Jolla is a misalignment between city code and the La Jolla Community Plan, the latter of which calls for reasonable transitions between old and new development and defines community character and scale. It can be interpreted subjectively, where the city’s Land Development Code involves hard numbers the city can easily confirm and enforce. “It’s those hard numbers that are important for the community to come up with and agree to … because that’s what

(city) staff can implement easily,” said ad hoc committee member Angeles Liera during the group’s July 27 meeting. Liera said a moratorium on the categorical exclusion might be the only way to coerce the building industry to the table for collaborative discussions on reform. (Ryan, who has not yet attended an ad hoc committee meeting, said he questions how productive the discussions would be.)

Deja Vu? Bird Rock previously identified a trend with oversized development in conflict with the La Jolla Community Plan. About a decade ago, some residents met with the city to express frustration over the

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issue, recalled LJCPA board member Joe LaCava. “The city suggested that a solution was to modify the generic zoning to make allowances to reflect the La Jolla Community Plan,” he said, however noting that “the idea was rejected locally at the time, thinking that it would be too hard to carve out the zoning to reflect the community plan.” The ad hoc committee is reaching out to planning groups in other coastal areas such as Ocean Beach, Point Loma and Pacific Beach, to see if they have similar issues, and in North Park, where its committee is also seeking a stay on development while the city considers updating its community plan to address the problem. Some North Park residents say developers are pushing the

limits of existing city code to build condos that are too tall, bulky and out of character with the neighborhood (read more at bit.ly/ NorthParkcodequandary). Architect Michael Morton, of Marengo Morton Architects, who attended the July 27 ad hoc meeting, suggested the committee obtain a list of all homes built or remodeled using the categorical exemption to determine if it is being abused systemically, or if these are isolated instances. “There’s a lot of use of the categorical exemption that nobody has any problem with,” he said. “There are some exceptions, but it’s up to your committee to do that research before you jump to a conclusion without any basis for that conclusion.” u

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LA JOLLA LIGHT - august 13, 2015 - Page A9

Diners robbed at Shores restaurant

A

n unidentified couple stole money from two women’s purses while they were having dinner at Piatti Italian restaurant in La Jolla Shores July 30. A manager at the restaurant on Avenida de la Playa told La Jolla Light the suspects were a young Hispanic couple with heavy accents and medium builds, each about 5-foot, 5-inches tall. The man had short, cropped hair, she said. “These guys were super brazen,” the manager said, noting that the couple stood at the bar for several minutes during a particularly busy period before walking through the restaurant to an empty table. “I noticed them, because it looked like they were going to sit down at a dirty table,” the manager said. “I asked if I could help them and they said, ‘Oh no, we’re looking for friends of ours.’ ” Diners at another table witnessed the theft on the outside patio, interrupting the robbers as they went through the women’s purses, one slung over the back of a chair and the other set on the ground close to one of the victim’s seats. The robbers got only half the cash from the second victim’s purse. The manager said the women were engrossed in conversation and didn’t notice they were being robbed. “The (suspects) walked outside, walked around our tree,” she said. “Another table witnessed it and brought our attention to it almost immediately.” Employees ran after the suspects, “but by the time we hit the sidewalk they were already gone,” the manager said. “They had like an escape route planned out.” The manager said police wouldn’t take a report because the victim did not witness the crime. “We were embarrassed and shocked and the first thing we did was reimburse (one of the victims) for everything,” she said. The other victim, who did not accept the restaurant’s offer to reimburse her theft, said general manager Tom Spano was gracious and “very upstanding” in responding to the incident. “It was really shocking that in this inner courtyard of this very popular restaurant you still have to watch very carefully, because these thieves were obviously professionals,” the victim said. — Pat Sherman

CRIME AND PUBLIC-SAFETY NEWS Police Blotter Aug. 2-3

n Residential burglary, 900 block Coast Boulevard, 12 a.m. n Motor vehicle theft, 8500 block La Jolla Shores Drive, 8 p.m. n Motor vehicle theft, 400 block Bonair Street, 5 p.m.

Aug. 4

n Persons under the influence of a controlled substance, 6600 block Neptune Place, 1 a.m. n Grand theft, 7600 block Draper Avenue, 11:20 a.m. Theft of tennis bag with tennis equipment and an expensive watch inside. The victim set the bag down unattended for five minutes while at La Jolla Tennis Club. When he returned the bag was gone. n Vehicle break-in/theft, 8300 block Via Sonoma, 6 p.m. n Vehicle break-in/theft, 2800 block Iverness Drive, 10 p.m.

Aug. 5

n Vehicle break-in/theft, 8200 block Prestwick Drive, 1 a.m. n Vehicle break-in/theft, 2300 block Paseo Dorado, 10 a.m. n Vandalism ($400 up), 5600 block Beaumont Avenue, 3 p.m. n Vehicle break-in/theft, 200 block Nautilus Street, 6 p.m. n Vehicle break-in/theft, 400 block Nautilus Street, 10 p.m.

Aug. 6

n Vandalism ($400 up), 7400 block Girard Avenue, 4:14 a.m. n Vehicle break-in/theft, 600 block Bonair Street, 8 p.m.

Aug. 7-8

n Vehicle break-in/theft, 300 block Nautilus Street, 1 a.m. n Street robbery (no weapon used), 7900 block La Jolla Shores Drive, 11:19 a.m. The victim said she was pushed to the ground and her cell phone stolen while she was walking along the foot path that connects Torrey Pines Road to La Jolla Shores Drive near the Hotel La Jolla. She described the perpetrator as white male in his 40s, dressed casually with brown wavy hair. n DUI, 1000 block Genter Street, 11:09 p.m.

Aug. 9 n Grand theft, 7700 block Fay Avenue, 8:10 a.m. A victim’s road bike worth $4,000 was taken from the front of The Cottage restaurant, where it was locked to a bike rack. n Vehicle break-in/theft, 600 block Nautilus Street, 12 p.m. n Note on auto burglaries: San Diego Police community relations officer Larry Hesselgesser said police have no evidence at present linking the rash of vehicle thefts in the area round Nautilus Street in South La Jolla, although he said most of the incidents noted above occurred overnight. Items taken included wallets, iPads, sunglasses, cell phones and a computer. n Apple computer thefts: Hesselgesser also said police are seeing thefts of Apple computers in commercial businesses where the computer can be seen from the front window. New Apple computers are targeted because the screen and computer are all in one, making them easy for thieves to transport. Police ask business owners to keep these computers hidden from view and to take them with them when they close shop. n Maserati thief faces sentencing: Marcus Lee Allen, 30, a San Diego man who plead guilty in June to stealing a Maserati from Maserati of San Diego on Girard Avenue was scheduled for sentencing Aug. 11 at the downtown courthouse. He faces a four-year split sentence between local prison and community supervision. Police said Allen entered the dealership on April 30, introduced himself to a staffer as “J.T.” and began checking out the autos for sale as if considering buying one. After wandering through the showroom for a half-hour, Allen snatched an ignition key from a desk, went outside to where a white 2015 Maserati Ghibli was on display, got behind the wheel and drove off. The Italian-made luxury sedan remained missing for two weeks, until officers spotted it parked in the 1900 block of Ninth Avenue in a neighborhood south of Balboa Park. They impounded the vehicle, which appeared undamaged, and returned it to the dealership, SDPD spokesman Matt Tortorella said. On May 18, detectives tracked down Allen in the 1300 block of Ninth Avenue and took him into custody. u — City News Service

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Page A10 - august 13, 2015 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

Friday, Aug. 14

13 Community

Calendar Thursday, Aug. 13

n Sunrise Rotary of La Jolla meets, 6:55 a.m. The Shores Hotel, 8110 Camino Del Oro. $20. (619) 992-9449. n Qi Gong, 9:30 a.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 453-6719. lajollalibrary.org n iPad class, No experience necessary, walk-ins welcome. Basics 10 a.m., beginner 11 a.m. $5-$10. La Jolla Community Center, 6811 La Jolla Blvd. (858) 459-0831. n Pen to Paper writing group meets, 1 p.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 5521657. n Medical lecture, “Learn How Holistic Integrative Medicine Can Transform Your Health & Wellbeing,” 4 p.m. Pacific Pearl La Jolla, 6919 La Jolla Blvd. (858) 459-6919. n Kiwanis Club of La Jolla Young Professionals gathering, 5 p.m. Hennessey’s Tavern, 7811 Herschel Ave. rawsom@kw.com n La Jolla Town Council meets, 5 p.m. La Jolla Rec Center, 615 Prospect St. (858) 454-1444.

n 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 n Tai Chi, 10 a.m. beginner, 10:45 a.m. advanced, La Jolla Rec Center, 615 Prospect St. (858) 552-1658 n Computer Help Lab, 11 a.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 552-1657. n Dog adoption event with Operation Greyhound, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Ark Antiques, 7620 Girard Ave. (858) 459-7755. n Kiwanis Club of La Jolla meets, noon, La Jolla Presbyterian Church, 7155 Draper Ave. First 3 meetings free as a member’s guest, then $15. (858) 945-2280. frankbeiser@gmail.com

Saturday, Aug. 15 n Computer Genealogy Society of San Diego meets 9 a.m. program at 10:20 a.m. UCSD, 9500 Gilman Drive. Directions: cgssd.org n Seniors Computer Group, 9:30 a.m. Wesley Palms, 2404 Loring St. How to use computers and smart phones safely. Free for guests, $1 monthly membership. (858) 459–9065. n Dog adoption event with Second Change Rescue of San Diego, 2-6 p.m. Unleashed by Petco 8843 Villa La Jolla Dr. Ste. 203. (858) 457-2036 n Atheists La Jolla meets, 3:45 p.m. outside Starbucks, 8750 Genesee Ave. Suite 244. Repeats Sunday, 7 p.m. Peet’s Coffee, 8843 Villa La Jolla Drive, Suite 202. RSVP: teddyrodo@hotmail.com n Art exhibit, “Some Sort of XXX,” featuring work of Richard ChauDavis (18 and older event, contains nudity) 6 p.m.

Dolphin and Hawk Fine Art Gallery, 7742 Herschel Ave. Suite M. (858) 401-9549.

Sunday, Aug. 16 n San Diego County Diversity & Inclusiveness Group meets to affect a faithneutral name for the La Jolla December parade, 8:15 a.m. Starbucks, 1055 Torrey Pines Road. Free with RSVP: (858) 454-2628. sdcdig.org n La Jolla Open Aire Market, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Girard Avenue at Genter Street. Food vendors and farmers market. (858) 454-1699. n Pacific Coast Chorale presents “Choral Gems: A collection of choral favorites,” 2 p.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. Donations accepted. (858) 552-1657.

Monday, Aug. 17 n Ico-Dance class, 9 a.m. La Jolla Community Center, 6811 La Jolla Blvd. $7 members, $12 non-members. amandabanks. com/ico-dance n La Jolla Pen Women & Friends meets for afternoon of stories, audience members encouraged to read their self-written short stories, 1 p.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. Refreshments. (858) 245-1677. n Raja Yoga class, guided by the Nataraja Yoga and Meditation Center, 4:30 p.m. Congregational Church of La Jolla, 1216 Cave St. By donation. (858) 395-4033. n Open Mic Cabaret, 7 p.m. Hennessey’s, 7811 Herschel Ave. (858) 232-1241.

A Visit to Astana ■ La Jolla Photo Travelers Club will explore ‘The Amazing New Capital of Kazakhstan’ at its next meeting, 7:30 p.m. Monday, Aug. 17 at Wesley Palms, 2404 Loring St. Member Faye Girsh recently spent time visiting Astana, in the predominantly Muslim country in Central Asia. christam10@icloud.com Hotel, 1132 Prospect St. Lunch $30. Guests welcome. russellk1615@gmail.com n Hatha Chair Yoga, 12:30 p.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 552-1657. n Development Permit Review Committee meets, 4 p.m. La Jolla Rec Center, 615 Prospect St. info@lajollacpa.org n Community Balance Class, 6 p.m. Ability Rehab, 737 Pearl St., Suite 108. Free for MS Society members, $10 for nonmembers. (858) 456-2114. n Distinguished Speaker series presents San Diego Opera’s new general director David Bennett, 6 p.m. La Jolla Community Center, 6811 La Jolla Blvd. (858) 459-0831.

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s

n La Jolla Shores Planned District Advisory Board meets, 9 a.m. La Jolla Rec Center, 615 Prospect St. info@lajollacpa.org n Rotary Club of La Jolla, noon, La Valencia

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LA JOLLA LIGHT - august 13, 2015 - Page A11

n Toastmasters of La Jolla meets to improve public speaking skills, 6:30 p.m. La Jolla Rec Center, 615 Prospect St. Free for guests, and $85 six-month membership. president@tmlajolla.org

Wednesday, Aug. 19 n Kiwanis Club of Torrey Pines meets, 7:15 a.m. Torrey Pines Christian Church, 8320 Scenic Drive North. First three meetings free, then $15. essheridan@aol.com n Torrey Pines of La Jolla Rotary meets, 11:30 a.m. Rock Bottom Brewery, 8980 La Jolla Village Drive. $20. (858) 459-8912. gurneymcm@aol.com n Tapping to the Stars, dance classes for women, noon advanced; 1 p.m. beginners, Ooh La La Dance Academy, 7467 Cuvier St. $70-$87 a month. nancy@tappingtothestars.com n Beth Israel of San Diego Men’s Club Dinner Forum, with speaker Bert Lazerow, Professor of Law “Recovering Holocaust Art,” 6:30 p.m. Deli dinner. $15 with an RSVP, $18 without. (858) 900-2598. cbisd. org/event/mcforum-july

Thursday, Aug. 20 n Sunrise Rotary of La Jolla meets, 6:55 a.m. The Shores Hotel, 8110 Camino Del Oro. $20. (619) 992-9449. n Qi Gong, 9:30 a.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 453-6719. lajollalibrary.org n iPad class, No experience necessary,

walk-ins welcome. Basics 10 a.m., beginner 11 a.m. $5-$10. La Jolla Community Center, 6811 La Jolla Blvd. (858) 459-0831. n Lecture, “This month in La Jolla history,” 11:30 a.m. La Jolla Community Center, 6811 La Jolla Blvd. $5. (858) 459-0831. n Pen to Paper writing group, 1 p.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 5521657. n Poetry Workshop, 2 p.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 412-6351. lajollalibrary.org n Office hours with Asseblymember Toni Atkins’ representatives, 4 p.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 552–1657. n Medical lecture, “Learn How Holistic Integrative Medicine Can Transform Your Health & Wellbeing,” 4 p.m. Pacific Pearl La Jolla, 6919 La Jolla Blvd. (858) 459-6919. n American Legion La Jolla Post 275, 6:30 p.m. The Shores Hotel, 8110 Camino Del Oro. (619) 572-1022. u All events are free unless otherwise noted.

Did we miss listing your community event? n E-mail information to: ashleym@lajollalight.com n The deadline is noon, Thursday for publication in the following Thursday edition. Questions? Call Ashley Mackin at (858) 875-5957.

From Foxhill, A1 “Foxhill is a magnificent, unique jewel in La Jolla, with panoramic sea views and eight acres of vast lawns, orchards, rose and cutting gardens, and more. No one would even believe the treasure chest of luxuries found inside those gates,” said Noonan. “It has been a tremendous honor to represent the property, the sales proceeds of which will benefit charities right here in San Diego according to David Copley’s wishes.” David C. Copley died at age 60 in 2012 without heirs. Of the purchase Manchester has said, “This is an opportunity to return to the Muirlands (in La Jolla) in an unparalleled setting originally built by Jim Copley.” Manchester, who built a La Jolla home not far from the estate 30 years ago, sold it in 1990. The French country-style manor, the crowning the pinnacle of the Country Club neighborhood, was home was built in 1959, and has handcrafted woodwork, a paneled library office and a formal dining room with a hand-painted mural and built-in cabinetry. There are seven bedrooms and 9.5 bathrooms. A guesthouse, pool pavilion, staff quarters and a fitness/center office are included in the 20,000-square-feet of living space. A swimming pool, a greenhouse, a garden shed, garages for 12 cars and an entry gatehouse are also on the acreage. Orchards, terraced gardens, lawns and walkways complete the manicured grounds. Foxhill owners, James and Helen Copley, were publishers of The San Diego Union-Tribune. Their son, David, sold the paper to the Platinum Equity Group in 2009. “Papa” Doug Manchester bought the Union-Tribune from Platinum in 2011 and earlier this year sold it to Tribune Publishing (parent company of the Los Angeles Times). The transaction also included the La Jolla Light, part of the U-T Community Press Group. u

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Page A12 - august 13, 2015 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

Over 1 billiOn in sales in 2014 * l

2000 • 2001 • 2002 • 2003 • 2004 • 2005 • 2006 • 20 pRice ReDUceD

LA JOLLA VOLU

July 1, 2014 - Ju

4BR/3BA · 8315 cAmino del oRo, lA JollA $3,800,000 – $4,295,000 · 858-454-7355 SpecTacULaR Home iN La pLaya

Berkshire Hath California Prop Total Sales: $1

Coldwell Banke Total Sales: $40

Willis Allen Rea Total Sales: $38

7BR/7.5BA · 1329 West mUiRlAnds dRive, lA JollA · $5,495,000 · 858-405-9100

3BR/3BA · 3208 lUcindA stReet, Point lomA $2,895,000 – $2,949,000 · 619-994-7653

Keller Williams Total Sales: $17

NeW pRice

4BR/4BA · 1237 toRRey Pines RoAd, lA JollA $1,395,000 – $1,450,000 · 619-813-8626

4BR/2.5BA · 8227 cAminito mARitimo, lA JollA $1,595,000 – $1,625,000 · 619-994-7653

Kate Adams 858-775-0007

Jeanette Amen 858-551-3332

gina Hixson and elanie Robbs 858-405-9100 • 858-456-0144

monica Baxter 858-752-7854

Andrew Jabro 858-525-5498

susana corrigan and Patty cohen 858-229-8120 • 858-414-4555

Randy lawrence 303-550-4837

Pacific Sotheby Total Sales: $32

3+BR/2.5BA · 1478 cAminito solidAgo, lA JollA $975,000 – $1,025,000 · 858-459-4300

tammy davis 858-699-3765

marc and craig lotzof – the lotzof group 619-994-7653

doris “day” dirks 619-813-9503

carol doty 858-997-8151

craig gagliardi 619-813-9557

claire melbo 858-551-3349

Jim sayour 858-344-4851

Joan schultz 619-261-3804

Homeservices of America, inc., a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate, and a franchisee of BHH Affiliates, llc. Berkshire Hathaway Homeservices and the Berkshire Hathaway Homeservices symbol are registered service marks of Homeservices of America, inc.® equal Housing opportunity. Berkshire H lot size or other information concerning the condition or features of property provided by the 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 profess on data available at the end of June 2015 for the top five brokerages in la Jolla, cA. calBRe# 01317331


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LA JOLLA LIGHT - august 13, 2015 - Page A13

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al Estate 80,103,000

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3BR/2.5BA · 734 BonAiR stReet #1, lA JollA $895,000 – $985,000 · 619-988-7799

maxine and marti gellens 858-551-6630

goldie sinegal 858-342-0035

Renee gild 619-339-6000

michelle silverman 619-980-2738

Hathaway Homeservices does not guarantee the accuracy of square footage, sionals.*copyright trendgraphix, inc. this report is published July 2015 based

Jamaica grace 619-316-0423

Karla and mark stuart 858-454-8519

5BR/3BA · 293 viA tAviRA, encinitAs $875,000 – $975,876 · 858-551-3349

lauren gross 619-778-4050

Janicke swanson 858-733-4433

lynda gualtier 619-988-7799

3BR/2.5BA · 2243 cAminito PReciosA noRte, lA JollA $799,000 · 858-405-9100

Anthony Halstead 619-813-8626

sandie Ross and John tolerico 858-775-7677 • 858-876-4672

Karen Hickman 858-459-4300

Brant Westfall 858-454-7355

marie Huff 619-838-9400

vernon youngdale 858-442-4541

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Page A14 - august 13, 2015 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

Business

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Spotlight on Local

Major Kaaa-ching not needed at Play It Again Sports

Hit the surf with a board from Play It Again Sport’s extensive collection of new and used surfboards for every style and budget. Courtesy

By Marti Gacioch For parents who see a child’s passion for one sport wane when he or she decides on another game, a visit to Play It Again Sports may be in order. Play It Again Sports stocks a large inventory of both new and used sporting equipment for a wide variety of games and in a range of prices to suit every customer’s budget. Be it a new or used paddleboard, surfboard, skateboard, basketball, bicycle, etc, Play It Again Sports can help customers save money. First opened in Pacific Beach in 1992, Fred Princen and his wife, Brigitte Nicolas, bought the new 4,500-square-foot store at 1401 Garnet Ave. earlier this year. “I always wanted to own a shop like this because I’ve always been a customer here, just like many other people in Pacific Beach,” Fred Princen said. “It was always great to buy good, used equipment to try out a sport — or sell or trade some used sports equipment from my closet that I didn’t use any more and then buy something new.” Like many parents, Princen said he found out how fickle kids can be with sports. “My kids would go signup for a sport like baseball, and I never knew if they were going to stick with it for long or if they’d go

into soccer instead,” he said, adding, “and then there’s the bicycle situation.” Since bicycles are often changed as children grow, Play It Again Sports offers an extensive collection of bikes for all ages, sizes and prices. “Just like with all of our equipment, a lot of customers come in to buy used bikes and other equipment, and often come back to trade it in for something new — that happens all the time with bikes,” Princen said. Action sports equipment such as surfboards, paddleboards, body boards and skateboards are popular purchases this summer, along with inline skates and golf equipment. To browse all the many sports equipment categories listed on the website, visit playitagainsportssd.com Those who join Play It Again Sport’s mailing list receive a $10 store credit. u n Play It Again Sports is at 1401 Garnet Ave. Hours are 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. MondayFriday; 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday and 10:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday. (858) 490-0222. playitagainsportssd.com The Business Spotlight features commercial enterprises that support the La Jolla Light.


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LA JOLLA LIGHT - august 13, 2015 - Page A15

Business

Spotlight on Local

Dentist opens Beautiful Smiles of La Jolla Debbie Kim, DDS, has opened Beautiful Smiles of La Jolla, a dental practice focused on high-quality, relationship-based dentistry at 8861 Villa La Jolla Drive. Dr. Kim is accepting new patients, and her practice is equipped to treat the whole family. Dr. Kim offers all aspects of general dentistry including fillings, crowns, bridges, veneers, teeth whitening, extractions, soft tissue laser treatment, periodontal disease management, and family dental services. She is particularly passionate about cosmetic dentistry and the use of dental implants as a highquality, permanent solution to missing teeth. She also sees emergency cases. “One of my favorite aspects of working in a dental practice is meeting new patients and creating long-lasting relationships with them and their families,” she said. “It’s a privilege and an honor to earn their trust and to treat them as needed.” Prior to becoming a dentist, Dr. Kim’s family and friends believed she was well on her way to becoming a professional

golfer. She caught the golf bug almost immediately after moving to California at age 12, and she traveled and competed in junior golf tournaments across the country. She was ranked the No. 1 female junior golfer in her age division five consecutive years. She also was named San Diego’s Player of the Year two consecutive years. Dr. Kim continued to play competitively at University of California, Los Angeles while pursuing a Debbie Kim, DDS psychology degree. A Cleveland, Ohio native, Dr. Kim graduated from the Herman Ostrow School of Dentistry of University of Southern California with honors in 2002. She received the Terrance Donovan Dental Material Award, she was a member of Pi Beta Phi Sorority, and served as President of Panhellenic.

Dr. Kim has practiced in San Diego since 2002, and served as a clinical instructor and lecturer for dental hygiene students at Concorde College for four years. She has a heart for the community and believes in using her skills to benefit those in need. Dr. Kim volunteers for TeamSmile and the Fallbrook Smiles Project, both of which provide free dental services to underprivileged children. When she retires, her goal is to volunteer, complete missionary work, and provide her dental services to underserved people around the world. She is a member of the Korean-American Dental Society, and attends North Coast Calvary Chapel. She also is a member of the San Diego Dental Golf Club. u n To schedule an appointment with Dr. Debbie Kim at Beautiful Smiles of La Jolla, call (856) 926-2332. — Press Release The Business Spotlight features commercial enterprises that support the La Jolla Light.

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LA JOLLA NEWS NUGGETS

- Sponsored Content -

trends & events Improving Patient Experience through Technology We all can relate to the experience of that goopy, runny, pink impression material used at the dentist. It’s not the most appealing taste or feeling, right? For decades, those conventional impressions were the standard in dentistry and remain a common technique for capturing information for dental crowns and orthodontic planning. The impressions were in fact very accurate, but, there was always the Dr. Joe D’Angelo and Dr. Olson dimensional concerns related to the making of dental models. As technology has advanced, digital impression taking has substantially improved and has been growing rapidly. We now have the ability to create accurate digital models directly from a patient’s mouth via a scanner. In our continuing effort to offer the latest and best technology in our office, we have found that digital scanning has improved dramatically and provides a superior level of accuracy in impression taking that we could not achieve with old vinyl impressions. With our iTero digital scanner, we quickly and accurately capture digital images of our patient’s teeth using the hand held scanner. Instantly, images of our patient’s mouth and teeth show up on the computer. This gives us the ability to immediately examine the impression chair-side and to magnify and manipulate it to ensure that it is as ideal as possible. If we’re not happy with a scan, it’s easy to make adjustments in real-time, re-take or go over an area we may have missed—unlike with traditional impressions. This reduces the potential for unnecessary additional patient appointments. Beyond their accuracy, digital impressions are more comfortable for patients. In just a few minutes, the scanning process is complete without having your mouth full of goop. Once a digital scan is completed in the office, the file is sent electronically to our lab allowing direct and efficient communication with our master ceramist. Simultaneously, a precise computer generated model is fabricated for detailed work on the final restorations. Labs don’t have to wait to receive impressions in the mail, which cuts down turnaround time. For our Invisalign patients, the development of individual Invisalign treatment plans and fabrication of the clear aligners occurs much more accurately and efficiently with a digital workflow. Our iTero digital scanner also includes an outcome simulator that helps our patients visualize how their teeth will look after Invisalign. The dual view layout shows patients their current dentition next to their expected outcome. If you have any questions regarding our digital technology or our other technological advancements, we welcome you to contact our office or come in for a tour.

For more information, call Dr. D’Angelo & Dr. Olson at 858-459-6224 1111 Torrey Pines Road www.joethedentist.com

Bougainvillea can grow up to 40 feet tall. The signature pink/purple ‘flowers’ are actually spring leaves surrounding its tiny white flowers. Find this bougainvillea on the 2500 block of Ardath Road. Ashley Mackin

Bourgeoning Blossoms

O

ne very large purple bougainvillea plant has grown to towering heights in La Jolla, drawing oohs and aahs from residents on the 2500 block of Ardath Road. The signature pink/purple “flowers” on its reaching vines are actually spring leaves ensconcing its tiny white flowers. Bougainvillea can grow up to 40 feet tall and can range in color from deep purple to pink, yellow and white. Due to its thorns and likelihood of shedding, neighbors were concerned the plant would be trimmed down, so La Jolla Light got a photo while we could! —Ashley Mackin

Back-to-school bell rings in 25 days County issues vaccination reminder California law requires children to receive certain immunizations. This requirement is for students who attend private and public schools from kindergarten through grade 12. Children ages 4-6 are due for boosters of four vaccines: DTaP (diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis — whooping cough), chickenpox, MMR (measles, mumps and rubella) and polio. Older children, like preteens and teens, need a Tdap booster shot to protect them against tetanus, diphtheria and whooping cough. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention also recommends that teens get vaccinated against human papillomavirus and meningococcal disease. Lastly, a yearly flu vaccine is recommended for all children 6 months and older.

Sammy’s Woodfired Pizza collecting school supplies All Sammy’s Woodfired Pizza & Grill locations throughout California, including 702 Pearl St. in La Jolla, are collecting school supplies for children in need. Drop boxes are set up for the requested supplies, which include binders, highlighters, notebooks, pencils, pens and backpacks. Sammy’s will also offer a $5 coupon to those who donate at least $5 worth of supplies. The offer is valid once per person and restrictions apply. u


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LA JOLLA LIGHT - august 13, 2015 - Page A17

we need your support Your generous voluntary donation helps us offset the cost of mailing the La Jolla Light directly to your home, and allows us to qualify for a lower postal rate!

Your Quarterly Contribution is Important to Us!

Four times a year, we ask our readers to make a $5 contribution to help us defray the high cost of postal delivery. Along with the best local news we can provide, we are committed to providing quality distribution - with the Cadillac of carriers - your local post office. This way we are not littering the streets, dropping your paper in puddles or letting it pile up in the driveway when you are out of town.

We also want your feedback!

While the Light has been enlightening La Jolla for more than 100 years, your feedback informs us on how we can best serve you. Let us know how we are doing - what you’d like to see us cover or improve. Your comments help us provide La Jolla with the newspaper it deserves. So send us your comments, or call us at (858) 459-4201 or go to www.lajollalight.com

YES! I enjoy receiving the La Jolla Light in my mailbox and would like for it to continue. Enclosed is my $5 voluntary contribution to help supplement a portion of the delivery expense. Or save a stamp and send us $20 for the year. NAME: _____________________________________________ ADDRESS: __________________________________________ CITY: __________________________ ZIP: _________________ PHONE: _______________________ My suggestions and comments about the La Jolla Light: ___________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________ MAIL TO: The La Jolla Light 565 Pearl Street · Suite 300 · La Jolla, CA 92037 Look for the envelope in today's paper!

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visit us at www.lajollalight.com, which is updated daily. And now lajollalighthomes.com has up-to-the-minute open house listings that supplement the in-paper guide.


OPINION

Page A18 - august 13, 2015 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

www.lajollalight.com

OUR READERS WRITE

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 U-T Community Press. Adjudicated as a newspaper of general circulation by Superior Court No. 89376, April 1, 1935. Copyright 2015 U-T 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 U-T Community Press.

President & General Manager •P hyllis Pfeiffer ppfeiffer@lajollalight.com (858) 875-5940 Executive Editor •S usan DeMaggio susandemaggio@lajollalight.com (858) 875-5950 Staff Reporters • Pat Sherman pats@lajollalight.com (858) 875-5953 • Ashley Mackin ashleym@lajollalight.com (858) 875-5957 Page Designer / Photographer • Daniel K. Lew daniel@lajollalight.com (858) 875-5948 Contributors • Vincent Andrunas, Will Bowen, Lonnie Burstein Hewitt, Linda Hutchison, Inga, Catharine Kaufman, Milan Kovacevic, Diana Saenger, Carol Sonstein, Kelly Stewart Chief Revenue Officer • Don Parks (858) 875-5954 Media Consultants • Jeff Rankin (858) 875-5956 • Jeanie Croll (858) 875-5955 •S arah Minihane (Real Estate) (858) 875-5945 • Kathy Vaca (858) 875-5946 Business Manager • Dara Elstein Administrative Assistant • Ashley O’Donnell Graphics • John Feagans, Production Manager • Maria Gastelum, Graphic Designer • Sharon Robleza, Graphic Designer Obituaries • ( 858) 218-7237 or inmemory@ myclassifiedmarketplace.com Classified Ads • ( 858) 218-7200 ads@MainStreetSD.com

BEFORE

Why the plant removal at WindanSea? My husband and I often walk down to the beach at WindanSea. Sometime after January, we noticed that the shrubs and groundcover disappeared in front of “One Neptune Place,” perhaps around the time it began selling condos, leaving very unsightly stubble (and incidentally no cover for the ground squirrels and birds or anchor for the small bluff there). I’ve lived in the area for nearly 50 years and have never seen anything quite like it. I took a picture of the pruned area, which borders a storm drain, sort of a canal, at the bottom of Playa del Sur. I have an older picture from December 2013, showing the shrubs/trees on the north side of the storm drain (before construction began on the condo complex) for comparison. I wasn’t sure if the city had done the pruning — and if so, why? Jo Kiernan

AFTER Editor’s Note: Reporter Ashley Mackin contacted the office of District 1 City Councilmember Sherri Lightner, to learn that the Department of Park & Rec removed the trees and bushes in the area at the recommendation of the city’s park arborist. “Apparently, they were ‘cow itch’ bushes that can cause severe itching when they are trimmed, and several maintenance staff members had pretty severe reactions while maintaining them,” said Jennifer Kearns via e-mail, Lightner’s director of communications. Added Tim Graham, senior public information officer with the city’s storm water department, “There are currently no plans to replace the vegetation due to a lack of irrigation available in that location. (Staff) may be looking to plant some drought-tolerant native plants in that area if there are favorable weather conditions in the future.”

Art museum expansion project conforms to code

Help! What caused leg welts Taco shop’s ‘yellow’ tone after Natural Park walk? has a festive appeal

Please correct the misconception promoted in your Aug. 6 issue. You stated that the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego (MCASD) project passed Proposition D but was slightly over 30-feet. Proposition D was the people’s referendum that limits structure height to 30 feet in the Coastal Zone. Proposition D does not allow heights over 30 feet — slightly or otherwise. “Slightly” is not defined in the San Diego municipal code. The good news is the project does conform to Proposition D. Not every possible case could be written on the voter’s referendum. The city added code indented to honor the intent of Proposition D. The Museum of Art project satisfies this code and so effectively conforms to the 30-foot height limit. David Little

On July 23, you described a walk in La Jolla Natural Park, which I took with my son last week. Shortly after returning home, we both found bright red, intensely itchy welts just below the sock line on both ankles, about 20 each. Research on the Internet points to chiggers, which I’ve never associated with this part of the world. Did anyone else doing the walk experience anything similar or can anyone else suggest a cause? The welts were a little blistery after a day, but not poison oak. Itchiness took four or five days to subside. Because we think of La Jolla as mosquito-free, we do not use DEET when we walk, one of the blessings of living here. The walk was good and the views marvelous but when you suggest walks, please warn us if nature is going to be hostile and we will take precautions. Perhaps the thunderstorms brought more moisture to the area than normal and chiggers moved in? Clare Friedman

I was taken aback last Thursday evening to hear three members of the La Jolla Community Planning Association (LJCPA) board complain about the color yellow painted as an accent on the smaller, west-side structure of the new Galaxy Taco restaurant in the Shores. The three said it was out of character with the unique quaintness of the community, and asked that the planning group consider weighing in on this issue. I think the pop of color energetically highlights the architectural details of the structure while adding a festive personality to the neighborhood. After all, yellow is the color of optimism, enlightenment, creatively and, of course, margaritas. Do we really want 50 shades of tan dictating our community character? Let’s be a bit more open-minded and allow our new businesses to thrive and flourish. Kim Whitney

POLL OF THE WEEK at lajollalight.com n Last week’s poll: Would you like to see parking time limits standardized throughout La Jolla? n 85% No. Different streets/businesses need varied time limits. n 15% Yes. Various time limits are too confusing.

n This week’s poll: Do you think the character of Bird Rock is marred by large remodels? See story on Page A1

o Yes

o No

Answer on the homepage at

lajollalight.com


OPINION

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LA JOLLA LIGHT - august 13, 2015 - Page A19

OUR READERS WRITE (Continued)

Dog owners need to scoop the poop Municipal regulations require that dog walkers clean up the poop of their dogs — or face a hefty fine. Yet some owners disregard the rules. I’m sparing you a photo of what a group of boot camp exercisers found Monday morning (Aug. 10) near the entrance of the La Jolla Rec Center. Perhaps the owner was not aware of the City of San Diego regulations. Perhaps the owner had forgotten to bring a plastic bag. Perhaps the owner did not care that dog poop spreads disease. Perhaps the owner does not have children who play in the grass at the Rec Center. For whatever reason, leaving dog poop in a city park is illegal and unsanitary. City officials

have been requested to place a sign to remind dog-walkers of their legal obligations: San Diego Municipal Code (section §44.0304.1) notes that no person shall allow a dog in his/her custody to defecate or to urinate on public property … It shall be the duty of all persons having control of a dog to curb such dog in order to carry out the intent of this section. The failure to do so and to immediately remove any feces to a proper receptacle constitutes a violation of this section. Failure to do may be subject to a fine of $100,000. Sue Rutledge

Why was my card late? On Aug. 5 I received a birthday card from Phoenix, Arizona postmarked July 7 — not

as dramatic a failure as last week’s story about the letter delivered 38 years late, but come on Post Office, what gives? Rima Singer

Lifeguard tower project is becoming a joke This letter was also sent to the City of San Diego engineering department: Please tell me why the contractor is tearing up a newly constructed ramp at the still uncompleted lifeguard station project at La Jolla Cove? Why aren’t construction projects led with hard completion deadlines? Finish late, pay penalties. Finish early, get bonus. This relatively small project is taking an unreasonable amount of time. Most of the time there are very few workers on the site.

Today (Aug. 8) I only saw the one breaking up the new concrete ramp. Getting Saturday overtime? What is the new expected completion date? What was the bid cost? What is the expected cost? Larry McCracken

See More Letters, A20

n Letters to the Editor for publication should be 250 words or less, and sent by e-mail to editor@lajollalight.com and must include the full name of the sender, city of residence and phone number for verification. Note: Letters are not the opinions of La Jolla Light.

OBITUARIES

Dr. Richard C. Cassin 1941 – 2015

Dr. Richard Cassin passed away in La Jolla on July 17, 2015, at age 74, from Multiple Myeloma. His beloved dog of 15 years, Sophie, followed him in death less than two weeks later. Dr. Cassin received his Ph.D. in Molecular and Cellular Biology from Stanford University, followed by a postdoctoral fellowship in Marine Biology at Scripps Institution of Oceanography. He studied the molecular genetics of bioluminescence and chemiluminesence in marine bacteria, and the impact of agricultural wastewater on marine algal communities. As the Executive Director of the Ocean Sciences Research Institute, Dr. Cassin was the Principal Investigator on an Office of Naval Research grant to study the molecular genetics of nitrate metabolism in marine phytoplankton. As a Visiting Scholar

at Colombia’s National Oceanographic Research Institution, the Centro de Investigaciones Oceanográficas e Hidrográficas in Cartagena, he managed a subsea mapping project off Colombia’s Caribbean coast, advised the Colombian Navy on protection and conservation of historic shipwrecks in Colombian waters. He served as Chairman of the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Technical Advisory Committee overseeing treatment and disposal of nuclear weapon wastes from 25,000 nuclear weapons decommissioned in compliance with SALT and START agreements with the former Soviet Union, and served as a member of DOE’s Committee on Redirection of the National Laboratory System. Over the years, Richard provided advisory services in coastal zone management, marine and aquatic ecosystems restoration, and policy development to public and private sector clients worldwide. Richard is survived by Lynn, his wife of 23 years; step daughter, Tammy Reese, her son, Derek, and her grandson, Paul. Please sign the guest book online at www. legacy.com/obituaries/ lajollalight.

missed by friends and family. Please sign the guest book online at www. legacy.com/obituaries/ lajollalight.

Marietta Shannon Powers

Bridge League. She will be greatly missed by her children; grandchildren; and a multitude of friends. Mass of the Christian burial will be held in Omaha, NE. Memorials made be made to Christ the King Church, 654 So. 86th St., Omaha, NE, or to her family. Please sign the guest book online at www. legacy.com/obituaries/ lajollalight.

1933 – 2015

Memorial Services will be held Saturday, August 29, 2015, at 4:30pm at St. James by-the Sea Episcopal Church, 743 Prospect St., La Jolla 92037, followed by a Celebration of Life at the SD Contemporary Museum Patio. Please, if you plan to attend, kindly bring a written memory dear to you of Marietta and her family that will be collected in a binder to be treasured forever. Thank you. Charitable contributions may be made to St. James Health Ministries Outreach Fund and mailed to the church. It was formerly named St. James Memorial Fund, Inc, and Marietta’s late husband, Dr. Louis H. Powers’ efforts established a closer bond with Scripps Memorial Hospital and the church to provide financial assistance to needy patients in San Diego County. She was born October 31, 1933, and died May 31, 2015. The Beautiful Marietta will be deeply

Coleen Ann (Casserly) Donovan 1934 – 2015

Coleen Donovan gracefully entered into the merciful arms of Our Lord on July 25, 2015, at her home in La Jolla. She was preceded in death by her beloved husband of 56 years, Dr. James Donovan. She was fondly known as “Cass” to her dear and closest friends. Cass was an Iowan native and received her RN degree at St. Joseph Hospital in Omaha, NE, where she met Jim. They moved to La Jolla in 1978, After raising her children she returned to work at Rady’s Children’s Hospital. Coleen had a great amount of love and passion for her family, friends and playing bridge. She obtained her Life Master in 2008 from the American Contract

Joseph Clarence Ferrara 1940 – 2015

Joe was born April 13, 1940, in Modesto, California, to Paul and Helen Ferrara. Joe was an accomplished graphic artist who worked for UCSD, San Diego Zoo, San Diego State University, Larsen Construction, and Sea World. He retired from Sea World in 2005 and moved to Rio Rancho, New Mexico, with his wife, Heidi. Joe attended La Jolla Elementary School and La

Obituaries call Cathy Kay at 858-218-7237 or email InMemory@MyClassifiedMarketplace.com

Jolla High School. While at La Jolla High, Joe designed the “Viking” logo that was used for many years after Joe graduated. He also designed the T-Shirt art for the La Jolla Rough Water Swim. Joe’s personal art was usually focused on nature, cowboys or American Indians. After his marriage to Virginia Crocker, Joe lived in Julian, CA, for many years. Joe and Ginny had three children. Following their divorce, Joe moved back to San Diego, where he met and married his second wife, Heidi McCassey. Heidi and Joe were married 32 years until her passing in January 2015. Joe passed away on Monday, June 22, 2015, of natural causes. He is survived by his children, Bryan, Dayna and Chad; four grandchildren, Shane, Kelly, Trevor and Cole; and his younger brother, Dennis. A Celebration of Life will be held for Joe on September 5, 2015, at 11:00 AM at Pathways Church, 9638 Carlton Hills Blvd., Santee. In lieu of flowers, please donate to Joe’s oldest son, Bryan, who is battling brain cancer, at: gofund.me/ wa4w7k. Please sign the guest book online at www. legacy.com/obituaries/ lajollalight.


OPINION

Page A20 - august 13, 2015 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

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OUR READERS WRITE (CONTINUED FROM A19)

Solid reporting job on cell towers issue Reporter Pat Sherman did a great job on the Aug. 6 article about the invasion of communication towers. While I am generally in favor of government legislation that promotes the public good, I’m afraid my NIMBYism is coming through on this issue. The whole thing seems like an end run. I wonder what our congressional delegation has to say? Richard Wolf

Costs driving quick wireless installations This is the first time I’ve ever sent a letter to the editor anywhere. But I saw the La Jolla Light article “Residents troubled by relaxed limits on cellular installations,” in a national wireless daily and had to respond. For background, I am Richard Edwards, president of CityScape Consultants, Boca Raton, a national government-only wireless facility consultant operating in our third decade. I know of few who do not want improved wireless facilities; but with moderation and especially void of any private industry dictating any pre-arranged control over virtually every citizen’s property or to have their voice heard. The placement of wireless facilities is a complex science. The industry has been successful in getting what they want

through lobbying, not to construct their facilities, but to construct them cheaply. That is the simple fact. There is little cooperation from the industry to work with communities to install infrastructure in a manner that is minimally offensive. The federal law (Middle Class Act) as stated here is greatly misinterpreted and relates only to existing support structures, not new structures. From my perspective, it appears the city administrators have taken lockstep exactly what the wireless industry wants communities to believe. The federal law begins by stating: “The new law preserves local zoning authority, but clarifies when the exercise of local zoning authority may be preempted by the FCC.” While in my experience I have seen the overwhelming number of government officials have a commitment to do what is right, in this case, I can only think someone stuck a ring through their nose and is leading them to the slaughter house. Richard L. Edwards

Light got San Salvador docking dates wrong I’d like to make some clarifications to your short article in the July 30 issue about the launch of the 1542 replica ship San Salvador. Most importantly, the galleon was built in San Diego, across from the airport on North Harbor Drive. The ship was transferred onto a barge on July 22, which transported the

More fun with curb stencil anomalies In response to Ralph Allen’s letter to the editor Aug. 6, on curb stencil anomalies, I see your six examples and raise you one: Rosmont Ave (Rosemont St) on the southwest corner of Rosemont and La Jolla Boulevard is the latest one I’ve found. Stay tuned for more and, on a positive note, it looks like the city has decided to preserve old street names, contractor names and dates, as well as property markers, when they do updates to sidewalks. This is evidenced by the white markings at various corners scheduled for ADAaccess ramps on Draper Avenue. Let’s hope they do! Rita Alanis galleon to Marine Group Boat Works in Chula Vista, where she was christened and launched (and will stay for further fittingout.) The construction took more than 4.5 years and 50 percent of the workforce consisted of some 400 volunteers, several from out of state. The San Diego Community, including many prominent La Jollans and several organizations such as Las Patronas, gave substantial support for this historic project. The 16th-century galleon will be moored at the Maritime Museum of San Diego and

used for education, eventually retracing Cabrillo’s route north and recreating a history that has long been neglected. San Salvador will be in the Parade of Sail, Sept. 4, viewable from Shelter Island, Harbor Island, Embarcadero and the city front, and then on view at the Maritime Museum for the Labor Day Weekend Festival of Sail, Sept. 5-7. Thank you for anything you can do clarify that the ship did not arrive in San Diego on July 22. sdmaritime.org u Neva Sullaway Maritime Museum of San Diego

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SPORTS

www.lajollalight.com

Snapping the Surf

Young photographer takes photos of La Jolla seascape By Ashley Mackin ew La Jolla resident and Muirlands Middle School student Aiden Rothschild is doing everything he can to explore his new home. A lifelong photographer, 13-year-old Aiden has taken to surf and landscape photography and is learning to advance his skills. “I grew up with my mom being a professional studio photographer, and she would take me to her studio. They had a little playroom, but instead of playing with the toys, I wanted her assistants to take pictures of me and let me play with the camera,” he said. He credits his mother, Laura, with being his teacher and mentor. Having moved to La Jolla in March, Aiden said the Jewel is his favorite place — possibly because of the surf opportunities. “I love to surf, so when I wanted to explore my passion for photography, I figured I would start with something that I love to do,” he said. Aiden shares his love of surfing with his father, Ryan. Aiden often takes his Canon camera (in water-safe housing) out when he goes surfing. But for him, it never ends there. Aiden has learned how to use editing software to perfect his work. He’s also learned about different lenses and settings by watching photography tutorials on YouTube.com “Everything is on YouTube,” he said. Laura joked, “He doesn’t watch TV, he doesn’t play video games, he just watches these how-to videos on YouTube.” Furthermore, the social-media savvy Aiden uses Instagram and his website to showcase his work. “I would love for my work to be hung up or printed in books, but so long as someone has seen it and can see it in their mind, that’s the most powerful place,” he said. While social media has provided helpful tools for selfpromotion, it has also opened the floodgates for would-be

SPORTS SHORTS

La Jollan Bridgette Souza earns spot on Spain’s water polo team La Jolla native Bridgette Souza has been named to the National Water Polo team of Spain. Having honed her skills while playing for La Jolla High School (Class of 2010) and on the San Diego Shores club team, she said she is excited and honored to have been selected. Souza will travel to Spain in September for nine months of training and competing against other pro teams. “I can’t wait to get out there and prove myself,” she said. While in college, Souza played against some of the country’s best, even against players who went on to compete in the Olympics. With graduation approaching and an amazing year behind her, Souza said, “I realized I wasn’t ready to be done and wanted to get my name out there abroad.” She contacted coaches for international teams and fought for a spot on the Spain team. She said she will continue to play as long as she can. “It was a lot of hard work and I put in the time and effort but it’s worth it,” she said. “I love water polo and couldn’t imagine my life without it.”

N

Aiden Rothschild with his camera in its waterproof housing, poses with mom, Laura. Ashley Mackin

Viking baseball star named to All American team

photographers. “A year ago, there were probably half as many people out in the water doing surf photography with Gopro (cameras),” Aiden observed. “Last time I went out, there were like 10 people out taking pictures, when last year there would be two or three.” But, he argues, photos simply taken on a phone and uploaded to the Internet “don’t pop,” and can lose some of their finer qualities — hence his extra work on editing and refining. n To see Aiden’s images, visit instagram.com/aiden9/ or aarphotography.vsco.co/ (Note: no ‘m’ at the end the website address.)

La Jolla High School Viking senior Tim Holdgrafer was named in July to the MaxPreps 2015 Medium Schools All American baseball team — the reported first for the school — for his sensational 2015 season. Holdgrafer, who graduated in June, was instrumental in getting the Vikings to the CIF Division II Championship, which they ultimately lost. MaxPreps commended Holdgrafer for his statistics in pitching, including a 10-1 pitching record, 0.87 Earned Run Average, 86 strikeouts, seven walks, 88.1 innings pitched; and hitting for his .364 batting average, 21 runs, 24 Runs Batted In, five doubles and two triples. u — Compiled by Ashley Mackin

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Page A22 - august 13, 2015 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

Carissa blooms all year with pretty white flowers that smell of gardenia. Photos by Kelly Stewart

I made some jelly out of the bright red fruits last fall. Strands of plant latex are visible as the fruits cook, but are strained out before getting the juice to make jelly.

Natural La Jolla Kelly Stewart

Thorny Natal plums make excellent fences

T

he Natal plum (Carissa macrocarpa) is a widespread and popular landscaping plant, named for the southeastern province in South Africa where it originates, now called KwaZulu Natal.

In some places, Carissa plants are also called num-nums, in reference to the delicious fruit. Although all parts of the plant are poisonous with a milky sap (a natural plant latex), once the fruits have

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The paired thorns on Carissa are unmistakable, helping to make this an excellent hedge plant!

ripened to bright red and purple, they are edible. Natal plums can be eaten raw or cooked. The plums are very soft and fragile, and are readily made into juice or jelly. Because Carissa is a hardy plant and blooms all year, fruits are available nearly year round in San Diego, with bumper crops produced in early fall. Carissa has an interesting flavor, mild with a strawberry/ cranberry taste. The plant itself is a bright green shrub with waxy leaves. It is fairly salt tolerant, and grows well near the shore. It’s also an excellent drought tolerant plant. Delicate white flowers are sprinkled throughout for most of the year and the blooms are fragrant,

smelling like a lighter version of gardenia. However, it’s not as easy as it looks to pick the fruit. Paired woody thorns are wickedly camouflaged and very spiky, making it difficult to get the fruit without becoming impaled. When planted on a property line, Carissa can be just as good as a fence!u — Kelly Stewart is a marine biologist with The Ocean Foundation, working with NOAA’s Southwest Fisheries Science Center in La Jolla. Her column about the floral and fauna of La Jolla appears second Thursdays in La Jolla Light. She may be reached at NaturalLaJolla@gmail.com


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LA JOLLA LIGHT - august 13, 2015 - Page A23

Casa de Mañana offers full-service retirement living in a historic setting on the La Jolla coast. Here, the views are breathtaking all times of day. Down-to-earth, inclusive, engaging and warm, it’s all the best of Southern California living. With a rich collage of exhibits, lectures, theatre, art and music nearby, Casa de Mañana is a world by the sea. It’s resort-style living and old-world charm that’s surprisingly attainable. A history overlooking the Pacific, Casa de Mañana has stories to tell. Come write your own. 8 4 9 C OA S T B LV D . L A J O L L A , C A 92037

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Rock musical ‘Up Here’ at Playhouse

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LifeStyles Thursday, August 13, 2015

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Las Patronas sparkles at Jewel Ball

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section b 10 Questions

Mimi Guarneri, MD, FACC (pictured at right with Deepak Chopra, MD) is ranked the No. 1 U.S. Female Integrative Medicine Physician by Newsmax Health for 2015.

Dr. Mimi Guarneri is proud to lead charge for intergrated medicine

M

imi Guarneri, MD, FACC, founder and president of the Academy of Integrative Health and Medicine (AIHM), is an award-winning La Jolla physician specializing in cardiology and integrative holistic medicine. Board-certified in cardiovascular disease, internal medicine, nuclear medicine and holistic medicine, she founded Scripps Center for Integrative Medicine in 1999, serving 15 years as medical director. Senior advisor to the Atlantic Health System in New Jersey, she helped launch The Chambers Center for Wellbeing in 2014. She is expanding integrative healthcare into large systems including the US Veterans Health Administration by teaching hospital staff at the VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System. Locally, at Guarneri Integrative Health at Pacific Pearl La Jolla, she created a membership model combining MDs with naturopathic doctors (NDs) and internal medicine, cardiology and psychology. It features a comprehensive assessment with an MD/ND team and has acupuncture, healing touch, massage, bodywork, hypnotherapy and skincare providers. What brought you to La Jolla? I came to La Jolla in 1994 to train in interventional cardiology. Stents were pioneered by Scripps cardiologists Paul Teirstein, MD and Richard Schatz, MD, and I came as a Fellow to work with them for a year. I found La Jolla a revelation after winters in New York and knew I’d stay here. See 10 Questions, B16

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Some of the films created by La Jolla Cinema League in the 1920s will screen 8 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 20 at the La Jolla Historical Society’s Wisteria Cottage. The movies, all shot in the Village and featuring a variety of plots, were lovingly donated to the Historical Society and San Diego History Center by the filmmakers’ daughters and carefully ‘restored’ by Scott Paulson and Miriam Polchino. Courtesy

The Perils of Paulson

Librarian strives to revive the past with old La Jolla movies By Will Bowen re you tired of the talkies? Got a hankering for a good oldfashioned silent movie in black and white with subtitles, live music, exaggerated facial gestures and slapstick movements? If, so, then the place to be is the south lawn of Wisteria Cottage on the night of Thursday, Aug. 20, when the La Jolla Historical Society will team up with UC San Diego librarian Scott Paulson to present a collection of short silent films made in La Jolla by La Jollans in the 1920s. “Talkies are just a fad, anyway!” jokes Paulson. “They won’t last!” The films will show La Jolla in the Roaring Twenties with posh cars, finely landscaped homes, big jewels, flapper gals and Gatsby guys. Set locations include Casa de Mañana, the Scripps family home, and the steep biological grade going up to the top of Soledad Mountain. The films were all made from 1926 to 1929 by the La Jolla Cinema League (LJCL), which was comprised of well-to-do La Jollans who had the means to buy the best equipment and fund a state-of-theart development lab. See La Jolla Movies, B8

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Scott Paulson of UC San Diego Library adds film curator to lengthy arts resume.

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LA JOLLA LIGHT - august 13, 2015 - Page B3

Let Inga Tell You

Letting it go

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La Jolla Cultural Partners

here was definitely a selection factor about the people who attended my 50th high school reunion in suburban New York a few weeks ago. We were the people who weren’t dead. I confess I was seriously ambivalent about attending this event. But in the end, I was glad I went, despite, as I’ve previously written, the nightmare air travel to get there. Fortunately, there was one shining light in the airline experience: flying from Martha’s Vineyard (where we were visiting friends ahead of time) to Armonk, New York (closest airport to my hometown) in an eight-seater Cape Air plane. When I tried to go through the TSA line at the Martha’s Vineyard airport, I was informed that I didn’t need to as mine was a “TSA-unsecured flight.” There’s really such a thing? But then, there’s probably only minimal terrorist activity going on between Martha’s Vineyard and Armonk. When they announced my flight, the Cape Air agent told me to go out the side door, walk past the playground, and hang out by the chainlink fence where someone would come get me and my two fellow passengers. After hours being tortured at O’Hare en route, this was truly refreshing. Olof, meanwhile, had decided that he

would rather excise his spleen with a rusty cheese knife than go to my reunion (his own, in Walnut Creek, is in September) and decided that it would be an upper instead to tour the battlefields in Gettysburg. Fortunately for me, the huge storm that was about to hit the Northeast held off long enough for my tiny toy plane to fly. While a deluge didn’t particularly impact my reunion, Olof observed that the Gettysburg battlefields probably show better when not under water. When I arrived at my Armonk motel (my Draconianally-zoned home town doesn’t have any hostelries), friends had already set up a bar as a precursor to our first evening plans, which was to eschew the reunion’s official Friday night event: walking in the graduation ceremonies followed by dinner at the school cafeteria. When I heard that my classmates had voted for this event, I could only wonder: were they all on food stamps? Further, I thought this was a rotten thing to do to the new graduates: like, if they work hard their whole lives and don’t die of cancer, WE’RE what they have to look forward to? Third, I avoided that cafeteria like the plague in high school so flying across the country to eat there wasn’t really high on

my list. As it was later disclosed, the vote for the graduation/cafeteria event was 1210, the other 150 classmates having failed to vote one way or the other. The big event was the Saturday night “dinner dance” at the local country club whose heyday was in the 1940s. We had a DJ who played “our” music, including the much beloved “YMCA,” which was technically released 13 years after we graduated but without which no oldies high school reunion would be complete. Despite being a small town, we actually have one really famous classmate, a Pulitzer prize-winning humor columnist and author of some 20 books who has written about our high school frequently. In fact, his latest book has an entire chapter about his yearbook photo in which he describes his hair as resembling a “malnourished weasel.” He and his wife came to the dinner dance with their 15-year-old daughter, who bore up bravely but could be seen clicking away on her phone. I would have killed to see the hashtags: #geezerfest #worstnightofmylife #sincewhenisthismusic #oyveyYMCA? All of us being age 67-68, there was not surprisingly, a lot of health and diet talk. One of my classmates appeared to have been dropped into a vat of new age elixir: everything was “meant to be,” all choices were OK. You just wanted to smack her. But what was truly lovely was how unfiltered conversations were. Maybe it’s because we’ve finally dropped all the pretenses. Or maybe we’re borderline senile. Regardless, the dialog was all refreshingly honest. Then again, maybe in high school you don’t want conversations

I arrive at my 50th high school reunion by toy plane. to be that honest. It being a reunion, there were prizes: most marriages (6); most grandchildren (8), longest marriage (46 years). As with the 40th, I got the award for coming the farthest although not before a challenge by somebody from Washington state was settled by MapQuest on our iPhones. Alas not present: the alphabetical creepo who sat next to me in homeroom. I was secretary of the Organ Club (music, not donors) so when club announcements were read, he loved to lean in and leer, “Hey, Inga, want to play MY organ?” I had so many rejoinders ready. Dang. Ultimately, I think the theme song for a 50th reunion ought to come from a much newer hit, Frozen’s “Let it go.” I’m happy to say, I think we did. u — Look for La Jolla resident Inga’s lighthearted looks at life in La Jolla Light. Reach her at inga47@san.rr.com

Green Flash C o n c e r t S e r i e s Where the sunset always rocks!

Wednesday, August 19: Back to the Garden Doors open at 5:30 p.m. | Concerts run from 6:30-9 p.m. | Ages 21+ Aquarium Members: $29.95 Public: $34.95 Walk-Up (all): $38.95 Green Flash concerts pair live music with panoramic ocean views on Birch Aquarium's stunning outdoor Tide-Pool Plaza. Brought to you in partnership with 102.1 KPRi FM. Proceeds benefit exhibits and educational programming at Birch Aquarium at Scripps.

CHECK OUT WHAT’S HAPPENING Shore Thing

La Jolla Music Society

A New Musical Comedy

Thursdays, through August 27 > 5-8 PM

SummerFest 2015

Join us every Thursday this summer for Shore Thing and enjoy free Museum admission, tours of the exhibition Dear Nemesis, Nicole Eisenman 1993-2013, music, food, and a cash bar. BYOP (bring your own picnic) and watch the sunset with old friends and new on the greens of the seaside Edwards Family Sculpture Garden.

Don’t miss this weekend’s SummerFest performances at MCASD Sherwood Auditorium. Friday night’s Three Great Quintets features Piano Quintets by Granados and Franck and Dvořák’s String Quintet in E-flat Major. Sunday’s matinee explores the music of Beethoven and Dohnányi in Beethoven’s Time Machine featuring the Borromeo String Quartet.

By the Oscar-Winning Composing Team Kristen Anderson-Lopez and Robert Lopez Directed by Two-Time Tony Nominee Alex Timbers

Visit our website for a complete listing of SummerFest performances and free events throughout the festival.

Now Playing!

(858) 459-3728 www.LJMS.org

858-228-1110 LaJollaPlayhouse.org

www.mcasd.org MCASD La Jolla 858 454 3541 700 Prospect Street

August 5 to August 28

UP HERE

Flicks on the Bricks Film & Wine Series Thursdays, August 13, 20, 27, at 7:30 p.m. Join us on the Athenaeum’s outdoor patio for balmy summer nights, delicious wine pairings by Barbara Baxter, and screenings of classic cinema along with winners of the Athenaeum’s short film competition “Shorts & Briefs in the Library. AUG. 13: Double Indemnity and play and repeat by Lana Z Caplan AUG. 20: JAWS and Move(meant) by Rizzhel Mae Javier AUG. 27: My Big Fat Greek Wedding and The New Look by Annette Cyr Tickets: $17 for members, $22 for nonmembers www.ljathenaeum.org (858) 454-5872


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Page B4 - august 13, 2015 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

Let’s Review Diana Saenger

Lots of crazy things distract in ‘Up Here’

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very day many of us talk to ourselves, listen to advice on the radio or TV, or to our own voices swirling around in our heads. That’s the premise of “Up Here” with book, music and lyrics by Emmy, Grammy, Oscar and Tony Award-winning Robert Lopez and his wife, Kristen Anderson-Lopez. Their experience on Broadway shines through this world-premiere musical comedy at the La Jolla Playhouse, which includes five main actors and an ensemble cast of 19, an extravagant stage design, bold musical numbers and costumes that would be revered at Comic-Con. Dan the Computer Man (Matt Bittner) has been called by Lindsay (Betsy Wolfe) to fix her computer. The minute he sits down she’s stuck on him like peanut butter to bread, popping in and out of her kitchen to ask him questions. Dan — who starts the play by singing his life history to date — gets more excited by the pretty blonde each time she comes out of the kitchen. Gathering around Dan (and supposedly invisible) are these good and bad, crazy, sub-consciousness creatures who want to advise Dan on his thoughts about Lindsay. Soon Dan and Lindsay are dating.

Surrounding the table of the coffee shop, the big rock in the park or wherever they might be, are these costumed “thoughts” in Dan’s mind that sing, dance and are very loud! For a while, things look good, but then Dan gets talked into doubting Lindsay and she takes up with her former boyfriend, Ed (Nick Verina.) Meanwhile, Lindsay’s challenged brother, Tim (Eric Petersen), shows up at her house and life becomes more complicated for her. Tim has lost his job and the love of his life, his former boss, Tina (Zonya Love). The idea of a romantic comedy about someone’s dueling consciousness is interesting, and the cast members playing the roles of Dan, Lindsay, Tim, Tina and Ed do a great job, but there are so many elements kidnapping the idea, it feels like “The Rocky Horror Picture Show,” or a rock concert. The music — many, many songs creatively written by the Lopez team — is very deafening and the words are often lost in the noise. Adding to that is a profusion of profanity, which some in attendance told me was overdone and offensive to them. There are also sexual terms, and props that are compared to sexual organs, which drew laughs from the younger crowd but

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Matt Bittner and Betsy Wolfe in La Jolla Playhouse’s world-premiere musical ‘Up Here.’ Matthew Murphy

not the more mature patrons. Such poortaste gags weren’t needed and stalled the flow of the story. One exceptionally entertaining cast member is 9-year-old Giovanni Cozic (another reason why, to me, the profanity and sexual elements don’t feel right). Cozic walks out on stage several times to talk about the rock in the park and its real function. He’s aware of the romance between Dan and Lindsay, and offers his

advice often. He’s quite the charmer. A production of this story that was shorter, less busy and with wittier words that don’t offend, might have been better suited to the diverse audience. u n If you go: “Up Here” runs through Sept. 6 in the Mandell Weiss Theatre at La Jolla Playhouse, 2910 La Jolla Village Drive. Tickets from $25 at (858) 550-1010. lajollaplayhouse.org

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Sunday August 16 - 2-4 pm Scripps Park - at La Jolla Cove La Jolla Concerts by the Sea -- 32nd Annual Summer Concert Series SponSored by:

City of San Diego Commission for Arts and Culture • Blanchard, Krasner & French, Attorneys at Law Kiwanis Club of La Jolla • Casa de Mañana • White Sands of La Jolla • Cymer, Inc. • Charles and Amy White All Single Ticket Full Prices Are Subject to Change Up Until Showtime Without Any Given Notice. All Artists, Programs, Dates and Times Are Subject To Change. All Sales Are Final. No Refunds or Exchanges.

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LA JOLLA LIGHT - august 13, 2015 - Page B5

UCSD Theater grad stars in award-winning musical at San Diego REP By Lonnie Burstein Hewitt “Violet,” which opens Aug. 20 at San Diego REPertory Theatre, is based on “The Ugliest Pilgrim” by Doris Betts, a gifted Southern writer who specializes in short stories about plucky outsider females. The original off-Broadway production won the New York Drama Critics’ Circle Award for Best Musical and a special Obie for composer Jeanine Tesori’s music in 1997. Revived on Broadway last year, with Sutton Foster in the lead, the show was nominated for several Tony Awards and hailed by the New York Times as one of the top 10 plays of 2014. “Violet” is the story of a young North Carolina woman disfigured by a freak childhood accident, who dreams of becoming beautiful. Believing that a Tulsa televangelist can help her with a miracle, she gets on a bus to Oklahoma, a 900-mile road trip that leads to her discovering what true beauty really is. “It’s a story about faith, healing, and the desire for transformation,” said director Sam Woodhouse, now entering his 40th season at the REP. “Violet is a pilgrim in search of salvation from the pain of being an outsider, and the play is almost a fairy tale of self-discovery,” he added. “It’s set in the south in 1964, a time of great changes — the year the Civil Rights Act was passed and Martin Luther King won the Nobel Peace Prize. And it’s a musical, with a mix of American roots music, gospel and honky-tonk rock. That search for higher ground plus the historical

‘Violet’ in rehearsal at the REP with Hannah Corrigan, flanked by Jacob Caltrider and Rhett George Daren Scott

audition for the show. “I was just graduating from the MFA program, and was about to leave for New York to showcase scenes for agents and managers there,” she said. “I was busy packing when I got a call from Korrie Paliotto, the music director of ‘Violet,’ who was music director of the last show I did at UCSD. When she asked me to audition, I told her I had no time to prepare, but she said to come anyway. So I went in and did a cold reading, and I guess it worked.” Corrigan said years of training in improvisational comedy trained her to get up, unprepared, in front of an audience and not be scared. “It makes your timing better, too,” she noted. Her varied background also includes training in Shakespeare, clowning, freestyle rapping, dialects and playing the ukulele. Performing in last year’s Page-To-Stage production of “Chasing the Song” at La Jolla Playhouse made her a member of

resonance and the music make the show deeply attractive.” Another attractive element in the show is Hannah Corrigan, who plays Violet. The recent recipient of an MFA in Theater from UC San Diego, Corrigan swept away all competition during the audition process. “She immediately distinguished herself as a top-shelf singer and actor with the tremendous amount of spunk the character needs,” Woodhouse said. “She sight-read the music, and the quality of her dramatic fire made us all say: ‘There’s our Violet!’ ” Corrigan said she never planned to

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Actors’ Equity; “Violet” was her first Equity audition, and her first audition after grad school. “It was great to try out for the title role and hook it,” she said. “It’s such an honor, and I’m really excited about playing Violet, a character who’s terribly scarred, but so brave.” • A Musical Note: In 2000, with lyricist Dick Scanlan, “Violet” composer Jeanine Tesori wrote songs for the stage adaptation of the 1967 movie “Thoroughly Modern Millie.” It premiered at the La Jolla Playhouse and went on to Broadway, bringing Tesori a Tony nomination for Best Original Score and a Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Music. This year, the oftennominated Tesori finally took home a Tony for the score of “Fun Home.” u

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Page B6 - august 13, 2015 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

Oh Brother! It’s a comedy of errors when long-lost twins reunite By Diana Saenger The Old Globe’s Summer Shakespeare Festival continues with the Aug. 16 opening of “The Comedy of Errors.” Scott Ellis directs the fabulous farce, which is Shakespeare’s shortest play, and written in 1594. Two sets of identical twins that were accidentally separated at birth are about to embark on a zany adventure. Antipholus of Syracuse (Glenn Howerton) and his servant, Dromio of Syracuse (Rory O’Malley) both have twin brothers they cannot find. As they travel to Ephesus, things become very strange because there dwell their twin brothers. When they’re seen in town, mistaken identities fuel disasters! Actor, writer and producer Howerton (Antipholus of Ephesus / Antipholus of Syracuse), currently stars as Dennis Reynolds in the FXX comedy “It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia,” which he cocreated, writes and produces. He starred in

FX’s Emmy and Golden Globe Awardwinning drama “Fargo,” appeared in Fox’s second season of “The Mindy Project,” many films, and the premiere of “The Credeaux Canvas” at Playwrights Horizons. “My background is theater, but I spent years in film and TV,” Howerton said. “I missed the stage and when I did a reading of ‘As You Like It,’ I was overwhelmed with being back on stage performing live — and more specifically — with Shakespeare. I auditioned for Scott Ellis right out of college. I wanted this role because Scott studied Shakespeare, but never directed it. He wasn’t bringing any preconceived notions about how Shakespeare should be played to the rehearsal process, so I knew it would be really fresh.” O’Malley (Dromio of Ephesus / Dromio of Syracuse) received both Tony and Drama Desk Award nominations for Broadway’s “The Book of Mormon.” He also starred in Broadway’s “The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee,” “Little Miss

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Glenn Howerton stars as Antipholus while Rory O’Malley plays Dromio in The Old Globe’s ‘The Comedy of Errors.’ Jim Cox Sunshine,” and several TV shows. “I love this play, this part, and the chance to work with Scott Ellis again,” O’Malley said. “He’s an awesome director. When I graduated from Carnegie Mellon University, I auditioned for several plays at The Old Globe but never got any roles. I’m excited to finally be here. I enjoy Balboa Park and its gardens.” The challenge for the actors is playing two different characters that look exactly alike. Howerton said, “What’s difficult is that I would love to create two distinctly different characters, but the entire play is predicated on everyone mistaking each brother for the other brother, so I have to make subtle choices that draw distinctions between them.” O’Malley added, “I’ve played multiple roles before, but usually you have

completely different costumes and looks to help create those characters. Here, it’s up to me to create a difference in these two men. Maybe they sound a little different, walk differently or have different relationships with their masters.” Howerton and O’Malley agree they have a great chemistry together, but each has a different favorite scene in the show. “Mine is the first scene where we meet Antipholus of Ephesus,” Howerton said. “He’s just been locked out of his house by his wife, who thinks he’s lying about who he is because his brother is inside having dinner with his family. It’s really funny.” O’Malley offered, “My favorite is where I’m telling my master that the kitchen wench at this house where we just showed up says I’m betrothed to her. She’s chasing me, and I have no idea who she is. It gets to be really crazy.” Both actors agree this production will appeal to a wide audience. Said Howerton, “As Shakespeare, it’s less complicated than a lot of his plays. It’s much more of a physical play. There’s not a lot of the flowery language. It’s great fun and silly.” Said O’Malley, “It’s 90 minutes of nonstop laughs and a wonderful way to end a summer day — outdoors in a great theater.” u n If you go: “The Comedy of Errors,” runs through Sept. 20 at the Lowell Davies Festival Theatre, 1363 Old Globe Way, Balboa Park. Tickets from $29. (619) 2345623. theoldglobe.org

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LA JOLLA LIGHT - august 13, 2015 - Page B7

Shore Thing event with a twist Thursday

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here are only a few Shore Things events left this season! Stop by the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, 700 Prospect St., for free admission, 5-8 p.m. Thursday nights in August. Guests enjoy tours of the exhibition “Dear Nemesis, Nicole Eisenman 19932013,” soundscapes provided by DJs from The Roots Factory Art Collective, picnic bites and vino from Finch’s Bistro & Wine Bar, a cash bar, and a view of the sunset from Edwards Family Sculpture Garden. MCASD members receive a free drink (membership begins at $5 a month). On Thursday, Aug. 13, Shore Thing guests are invited to keep the evening going with a 7 p.m. screening of the classic surf film “Gidget” at ArcLight La Jolla. MCASD members receive popcorn/drink combo for $6.50 when they show their MCASD card. (858) 454-3541. mcasd.org u

Concert in the Park

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ncendio (pictured) will bring its brand of Latin Jazz to Scripps Park at La Jolla Cove, 2-4 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 16, as part of the free, summer concert series. Bring a lawn chair, blanket and picnic lunch or enjoy refreshments from the concessions stand. (858) 454-1600. ljconcertsbythesea.org u

At The Marine Room, Every Meal is a Special Occasion. HIGH TIDE DINNER August 13-14, 26-29

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Page B8 - august 13, 2015 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

From La Jolla Movies, B1

Before and After: “We’ve done some work improving the images; not actually ‘restoration,’ but some hard work doing improvements using new tools available to us,” Scott Paulson said. Paulson wears a number of different hats for his library job. He is an authority on cultural activities from the past (which he hopes to bring back into fashion) like toy pianos, magic lanterns, paper theatres, radio dramas and steampunk teas. Paulson said his work as a curator of such icons from days-gone-by evolved because “it needed to be done and no one else was doing it. These things need to make a comeback because they were — and still are — valid, important cultural art forms.” And while Paulson’s exhibits, events and film screenings to promote them may seem whimsical, madcap or a bit odd at first glance, they are all examples of historic

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Still from the 1920s La Jolla Cinema League film ‘Chess Game.’ In this trick film, the chess pieces move about on their own, magically, in a dramatic board battle. In this frame you just barely catch the trickster’s hand moving the pieces (the sorcery revealed!).

preservation work. “All the things I do are meant to be fun, but they are also educational events that are the product of a great deal of historical research,” he said. Paulson’s Aug. 20 silent film screening will mark the beginning of a bi-annual event (February/August), which he will curate for La Jolla Historical Society, featuring some of the melodramatic short films created by the LJCL. These include “Virtue’s Reward” (or “Blood for Bonds”) the story of a plot to defraud individuals of their stocks and bonds; “Avarice,” the tale of a greedy, old miser; “A Midsummer’s Day,” a love romp; and, two special effects pieces, “The Chess Game” and “Viral Kitty.”

Paulson said he loves old silent movies. “They’re not all comical and slapstick, like the Keystone Cops,” he points out. “Many are elegant, beautiful and even breathtaking — especially when they’ve been properly restored. You have to realize that when movies were silent and featured musical accompaniment, they were very close to live theater.” With the help of fellow musician, Christian Hertzog, Paulson will score the films at Wisteria Cottage with a bandwagon full of unusual musical instruments he’s collected over the years. The audience will also get to participate because Paulson will be distributing the instruments with

s

LJCL was a big, bright spotlight in the town’s history. The chief photographer was P.H. Adams, the scriptwriter was his wife, Elizabeth Adams, and the director was Ms. R.G.S. Berger. Tickets for the films were sold at The Little Shop and Putnam’s Pharmacy. Screenings were held at the La Jolla Woman’s Club and the American Legion Hall. The events were usually sold-out, with many people being turned away. One film showing in 1927 netted $200, which was sent down South to aid Mississippi flood victims. The LJCL, which produced some 10 featurelength movies and numerous shorts, was associated with a larger national association, called the Amateur Cinema League that put out the magazine, “Movie Makers.” Some examples of LJCL’s full-length movies include: “The Uninvited Guests,” a haunted house ghost story and “Consuelo di Capri,” an Italian-themed romance. Beverly Hjermstad and Alison Royle, the daughters of LJCL founders P.H. and Elizabeth Adams, gifted the entire collection of LJCL films to the La Jolla Historical Society and the San Diego History Center. Scott Paulson, the outreach coordinator for the Communications & Engagement Department at UC San Diego Library, became involved with the films because of his background as curator of the silent movie collection at the library. Paulson has done a great deal of research on the LJCL films and teamed with Miriam Polcino to do the lab work necessary to preserve and enhance each film.

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LA JOLLA LIGHT - august 13, 2015 - Page B9

n Joanne: I remember mother talking about the wonderful time spent creating these movies. Many were filmed at Capri, our grandmother’s beautiful home on the La Jolla coast. n Bev: I hold a warm spot of pride in my heart when I think of the ingenuity and creativity that went into the La Jolla Cinema League films. Although our father was the photographer, I’m sure our mother and grandmother were the inspiration for plots and casting. To see our parents, in their younger years, acting in their creations, is such a trip.

The Adams Sisters (from left) Alison, Bev and Joanne instructions on how (and when) they should be played during the films.

The Force that is Paulson Paulson has been working on the UCSD campus ever since he graduated with a joint degree in music and linguistics in 1984. Slowly, he has created his own job description at the library. For instance, Paulson started doing silent movie showings after he was given the assignment to clean out a storage room cluttered with old films. He took on the task of preserving, protecting and presenting these gems so the library acquisitions would become public knowledge. Paulson has also developed the annual

Courtesy

n Alison: We grew up enjoying these melodramas and giggling when we saw pictures of our handsome father charming a young woman “of vampish tendencies,” our grandfather acting as a Russian spy, and our uncle hanging by the neck. Dad was ahead of his time shooting moving pictures in the 1920s, using animation, creative lighting effects and handmade titles. How entranced he would be today with the audio/visual technology available on computer.

Toy Piano Festival, which took place earlier this month. The festival has become so important that the Library of Congress has created a special call number for the toy piano scores created for the festival each year by professional and academic musicians (M175T69). Paulson’s Paper Theater event is coming up Aug. 30-31. It will feature elaborate examples of scale model paper theaters with “performances” by little paper dolls. Paper theater was once the chief way people got to know about theater production companies. Director Franco Zefferilli (“Romeo and Juliet”) for instance, has said he first learned about theater by playing paper theater at

home with his mother. In touting a Magic Lantern performance, Paulson said it is an early version of a slide show, with gas-powered light projected through a series of painted glass slides to tell a story. Missionaries, showing slides of their travels in Africa, gave the first lantern performances in this country. In the mid1800s, the story from the novel, “Uncle Tom’s Cabin,” was also performed by way of a magic lantern. To catch Paulson at his best, tune into his old-time radio show on wsradio.com 8 p.m. second and fourth Thursdays. His first production was a detective drama about a lady gumshoe called “Del Mar Detective.” u

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■ What: Outdoor movie screening of silent films by La Jolla Cinema League ■ When: 8 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 20 ■ Where: La Jolla Historical Society’s Wisteria Cottage lawn, 780 Prospect St. ■ Tickets: Free ■ Contact: (858) 822-5758, spaulson@ucsd.edu

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Page B10 - august 13, 2015 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

From Diary to Memoir

La Jollan uses love of journaling to write book, help others By Ashley Mackin ear Diary…” are two words most people have written at some point in their lives. But La Jolla native Pamela Little has taken the joy of writing in a journal and made it a career. In October she selfpublished her memoir, “The Resting Place: A Graveside Diary” and, with friend and author Jinx Schwartz, will hold a lecture on navigating the world of self-publishing Saturday, Aug. 15 in La Jolla Shores. Little said her love of journaling began when she was in third grade, but was honed around fifth grade while attending The Evans School. She said her teachers encouraged writing, both creative and academic. As a teenager, she wanted to take her writing from journaling to journalist, and interned at La Jolla Light in the 1980s. “It was my first choice, naturally, she joked. “I walked in and asked if they would let me work there for free, and they did!” As an adult, the La Jolla High School graduate explored how to take her passion for writing in a diary – which she turned to in times of difficulty, including her battles with addiction and depression – and use it to help others. “As much as I love journal-writing myself, I love sharing the joys of journal-keeping with people,” Little said. “Your journal can be a laboratory for the writing you want to produce.” She became a journal-writing coach for an addiction treatment facility in Palm Springs that used journaling as a component of therapy. To this day, she is a journal-writing coach and life coach. In the 1990s, pulling from entries in a journal that focused on the joys of waking up early, Little decided to turn her observations and notes into a book. “My mother actually had the idea, she sat me down and told me I

“D

La Jolla native Pamela Little will sign ‘The Resting Place: A Graveside Diary’ on Aug. 15 in the Shores, and will discuss her journaling journey.

Elizabeth Schwartz (pen name Jinx Schwartz) will also share her experiences with self-publishing at the Aug. 15 celebration. Courtesy Photos

needed to write a book about all the ways to embrace and appreciate being awake in the early morning,” she said. She prepared a pitch for publishers, but the concept didn’t gain traction. “I couldn’t get people interested in the idea,” Little said. “For all the drafts and outlines I put together I never actually wrote the book.” Hooked on the idea, she spent the next 20 years trying to get something published, but found herself facing roadblocks and disinterest. After poring through journals looking for ideas, Little said she realized the book she wanted to publish wasn’t within her diary, but the diary itself. “However, only famous people get to have their diaries

published as they are,” she said, citing as an example, the Kurt Cobain Journals, containing notes, sketches and ideas by the late Nirvana singer. Nevertheless, Little was committed to the idea, and sat down in the cemetery plot she bought to look back on her life “from the perspective of death.” She chronicled her life and its struggles — including mental illness, suicidal thoughts, dependency on food and alcohol, and divorce — as well as her hope for the future. “The book is like one big suicide note without the suicide, and I felt so good after I wrote it,” she said. “I was confident that if it was published, it would help reveal things to people (they) might have a hard time admitting to themselves. It gave me so much strength. It freed me.” Little’s mother, Mary Moore Little, the former owner of Mary Moore Gallery in La Jolla Shores, said while the content was hard to read, “I think it was extremely courageous and honest of her to be so personal about her life in an open way like that. It might help people who have those same struggles to know they are not alone. People have told me they’ve found humor in it. I didn’t, but others have.” Little might have inherited her love of journaling from her mother, who had the same hobby in the 1940s. “I journaled from the time I was about 10 years old,” Moore Little explained. “I wrote a page a day and I also made a war diary of World War II. I took newspapers and summarized the war.” Hoping to get her book into the hands of people it might help, Little opted for self-publishing. While some might consider it “less legitimate,” she said, “I found the experience super satisfying. I found my own editor, graphic designer and more. There is a freedom there.” To promote “The Resting Place: A Graveside Diary,” Little will host a book signing and lecture on self-publishing with help from author friend Elizabeth Schwartz (pen name Jinx Schwartz). “Most people are very curious about the whole self-publishing situation and e-publishing,” Schwartz said. “A lot of people have good ideas for books or have already written a book, but they go through this process, get discouraged and quit. My message is for them not to quit but to go about it in a professional way.” Schwartz is author of the Hetta Coffey series, stories about the adventures of a sassy Texan in her 40s who decides to change her life and live on a boat. The first four installments came through a publishing company (her publisher retired before the series could be complete). The later installments were self-published. u

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n Book Signing/Self-Publishing Lecture: 1-4 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 15 at 8285 El Paseo Grande in La Jolla Shores; “How I Quit Trying to Write a Book,” 2 p.m. by Little, followed by Schwartz’s talk “How I Fired My Publisher and Started Selling Books.” Free. authorpamelalittle.com, jinxschwartz.com


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LA JOLLA LIGHT - august 13, 2015 - Page B11

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Page B12 - august 13, 2015 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

SOCIAL LIFE

www.lajollalight.com

69th Las Patronas Jewel Ball c’est magnifique!

T

he most glamorous annual fundraiser in San Diego since 1946 sported a French theme for 2015, celebrating the bon vivant and the joie de vivre in high style on Aug. 8 at the La Jolla Beach & Tennis Club. Bien sur there was Champagne, cocktails, hors d’oeuvres and auctions, toutefois, dinner and dancing to the music of Wayne Foster Entertainment provided the pièce de résistance. The major beneficiaries of the Las Patronas Jewel Ball, 2015 are: Alpha Project for the Homeless; Arc of San Diego; Boys & Girls Clubs of San Diego; Living Coast Discovery Center; Mountain Health & Community Services, Inc.; Old Globe Theatre; The Preuss School UCSD; University of San Diego Hahn School of Nursing & Health Science; and San Diego Zoo Global. u Photos by Vincent Andrunas

Beau and Kathryn Gayner (co-chair), Bassam and Cari Massaad (chair), Sherrie and Brad Black (co-chair)

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SOCIAL LIFE

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LA JOLLA LIGHT - august 13, 2015 - Page B13

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Page B14 - august 13, 2015 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

La Jolla’s

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More events listed at lajollalight.com

Luau Dance Time Get your aloha spirit going at the La Jolla Rec Center’s annual Senior Luau, 5:30 p.m. Friday, Aug. 14 at 615 Prospect St. There will be live music, food, fun and dancing for La Jollans age 55 and older. Tickets: $15. (858) 552-1658.

SummerFest Continues

Pass the Popcorn n Movie night continues at La Jolla Community Center, 7 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 20 with dram-edy “Sunset Boulevard” (1950), considered the most scathing satire of Hollywood and nominated for 11 Academy Awards. The

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Here are La Jolla Music Society’s chamber music festival concerts for this week at Sherwood Auditorium in the Museum of Contemporary Art, 700 Prospect St. (858) 459-3728. ljms.org n Three Great Quintets: Works by Granados, Dvorak and Franck performed by festival favorites, 8 p.m. Friday, Aug. 14. Tickets: $50-$75. n Beethoven’s Time Machine: Borromeo String Quartet will provide insight into Beethoven’s genius, 3 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 16. Tickets: $45-$65. n Russian Masters: Works by Rachmaninoff,

Tchaikovsky and Taneyev, 8 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 18. Tickets: $50-$75. n Evening with Time for Three: Performance by trio known for uncommon mix of music from Bach to Brahms to bluegrass to the Beatles, 8 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 19. Tickets: $45-$65. Note: During SummerFest 2015, audiences are invited to follow the artistic growth of this year’s Fellowship Artists working with master teachers: The Huntington Quartet and the Sycamore Trio. 10-10:50 a.m. and 11-11:50 a.m. (one act each showing, order varies daily) Aug. 14, 17, 18, 19 and 20. La Jolla Library, 7555 Draper Ave. Limited seating. Free. (858) 459-3728. ljms.org

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‘Sinatra at 100: A Salute to The Chairman of the Board’ film stars William Holden and Gloria Swanson. 6811 La Jolla Blvd. $5-$8. (858) 459-0831. ljcommunitycenter.org n Movies @Mingei Film Series, featuring award-winning documentaries focusing on self-taught artists, closes Friday, Aug. 14 with a double feature “A Day with Thornton Dial Sr.” and “Ralph Fasanella’s America.” Activities begin at 5 p.m., screening 6 p.m. Free with museum admission $10. 1449 El Prado, Balboa Park. (619) 239-0003. mingei.org n Just when you thought it was safe to go back in the water … Athenaeum Music & Arts Library’s Flicks On The Bricks presents “Jaws,” paired with deep down under wines presented by La Jolla wine expert Barbara Baxter, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 20, patio 1008 Wall St. New this year, a short film precedes the main film. This week “Move(mant)” by Rizzhel Mae Javier, reveals what happens when card catalogs come to life. Tickets: $17-22. (858) 454-5872. ljathenaeum.org/flicks-on-the-bricks

Summer Pops Concerts

San Diego Symphony celebrates the work of ol’ blue eyes, Frank Sinatra, 7:30 p.m. Friday, Aug. 14 and Saturday, Aug. 15 with vocals by Cary Hoffman, considered the FS vocalist of record. Tickets from $27. The music of Burt Bacharach will be performed with Bacharach conducting, 7:30 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 16, Embarcadero South, 206 Marina Park Way. Tickets from $22. sandiegosymphony.org

Art Walk Weekend Works by more than 200 artists from La Jolla, Southern California and Mexico will be for show and sale at Art Walk at NTC

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2015 VW Jetta S Liberty Station from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., Aug. 15-16. There will also be a wine and beer pavilion, street food, kids activities and music in the Ingram Plaza, Decatur and Roosevelt Roads, Point Loma. Free admission. artwalksandiego.org

Special Events in Balboa Park n Balboa Park is the subject of the work featured at the 2015 “Art of the Park” show and sale, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 16 at the Marston House, 3525 Seventh Ave., Balboa Park. All the artists chosen for event have an affinity for painting Balboa Park and its historic buildings and gardens. Tickets: $15. (619) 297-9327. sohosandiego.org n “Remember Our Fallen from California,” a travelling photo exhibit featuring more than 700 men and women, will arrive at The Veterans Museum at Balboa Park for a grand opening celebration 6 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 19, at 2115 Park Blvd. The dramatic exhibit will be on display through Aug. 29. Free. (619) 239-2300. veteranmuseum.org

For the Kids n The seventh annual Fairy Tales in the Park is an interactive event from San Diego Civic Youth Ballet that engages young audiences, introducing them to the art of ballet through stories they know and love. Performances 1 and 4 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 15 and Sunday, Aug. 16 at Casa del Prado Theater, 1800 Village Place, Balboa Park. Tickets: $12. Proceeds benefit SDCYB scholarships. (619) 233-3060. sdcyb.org n Toddler storytimes: 10:30 a.m. Thursday Aug. 13 and Aug. 20 at La Jolla’s Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 522-1657, lajollalibrary.org and 11 a.m. Thursday, Aug. 18 at Warwick’s bookstore, 7812 Girard Ave. (858) 454-0347. warwicks. com All gatherings are free. u

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Page B16 - august 13, 2015 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

Soroptimist La Jolla welcomes new officers, new projects By Ashley Mackin Eradication of human trafficking. Scholarships. Veterans services. These programs, and more, have all received support from Soroptimist International of La Jolla. The service organization held an Installation of Officers dinner Aug. 6 at the Crab Catcher restaurant. “We are focused on improving the lives of women and girls through charitable work,” said Bonnie Mendenhall, Soroptimist president for 2015-2016. “We fundraise and then spend that money on projects … but we do not only give money, we give ourselves in (volunteer) service.” Founded in 1920 as a sister organization to service clubs such as Kiwanis and Rotary (which at the time only allowed men as members), Soroptimist International has expanded to 130 countries. Soroptimist International of La Jolla was established in 1947.

Terms of service

From 10 Questions, B1 If you could snap your fingers and have it done, what might you add, subtract or improve in the area? An instant change would be wonderful. I

Parliamentarian Carol Tuggey, secretary Sharilyn Gallison, incoming president Bonnie Mendenhall, director of fundraising Diana Hill, treasurer Rebecca Ritchey, vice-president Gaylyn Boone and outgoing president Kate Woods While human trafficking is no longer the club’s threeyear focus, Lindgren said, a joint committee of members from Soroptimist clubs across San Diego formed, called Soroptimists Together Against Trafficking (STAT). Members of STAT meet to screen documentaries about trafficking and assemble discussion panels for special events.

Ongoing commitments In addition to the three-year themes, Soroptimist International of La Jolla funds scholarships. The Live Your Dream Award is for women at the head of a household who are trying to better their circumstances through education. The cash gift can be used for course expenses or childcare. The Violet Richardson Award recognizes women, ages 14-17, who volunteer to make their communities a better place. The winner receives a cash award, and Soroptimists

recognized the need for a more comprehensive, holistic approach to cardiovascular disease and opened the Scripps Center for Integrative Medicine 16 years ago. My wish would be to fully transform the way medicine is practiced to be more proactive,

Private Garden Concert A Benefit for the Eastern Sierra Land Trust

Sunday, August 30 5 - 8 pm, La Jolla Join hosts Elaine and Doug Muchmore as we welcome world-renowned chamber orchestra musicians to their garden for an evening of fine music and celebration! For tickets and directions, visit www.eslt.org.

Your $100 tax-deductible donation protects California’s “Wild Side,” the remote Eastern Sierra.

make a donation to her charity of choice. Next year the Dream It, Be It project will be open to students in grades 10-11 from La Jolla’s high schools, so they may attend a one-day conference on college preparedness. Woods explained the selected students (by application) will learn how to complete a college application, put together a college resume, turn service projects over when they move on to college, and determine their major.

Becoming a member Longtime Soroptimist Carol Tuggey explained there are varying levels of membership, starting with a supporting group known as The Jewels, and continuing up to lifetime members. Prospective members are encouraged to attend a meeting to get an understanding of what the club is all about, she said. Annual dues are $140, plus monthly dues. La Jolla’s Soroptimist club meets three times a month

focusing on body, mind and spirit with prevention as the foundation. La Jolla would be a national model for optimal health and community wellness. Who or what inspires you? Visionaries inspire me, of which La Jolla has had many, such as Martha LongneckerRoth and Ellen Browning Scripps … people who identify a challenge and seek effective solutions to make our world a better place. What are your favorite kinds of books and movies? I am reading “Reading Lolita in Tehran” by Azar Nafisi. I was an English major and am an avid reader. My favorites are true, inspirational stories that bring out the best in human nature and speak to the power of the human spirit. Recent favorite movies are “McFarland, USA” and “The Hundred-Foot Journey.”

If you hosted a dinner party for eight, whom would you invite? My dinner party theme would be Spirituality and Health, and guests would

s

Every three years, the La Jolla-based club decides on a service focus, and engages in community partnerships and projects. Past topics have been ending human trafficking and supporting foster children. This year’s focus, Women in the Military, was determined during Soroptimist’s outgoing president Kate Woods’ 20142015 term, and will be the group’s mission through 2017. For this effort, Soroptimist will partner with Reboot and the Center for Community Solutions. Through Reboot, an organization offering resources to help female veterans transition into civilian life, Soroptimist members will serve as mentors and sponsor workshops. With the Center for Community Solutions, they will assist with programs for females in the military, specifically those in need of therapeutic assistance or counseling after leaving the armed forces. “They need all hands on deck, so we are donating the money and providing the hands,” Woods said. Mendenhall added that members also volunteer at Veterans Hospital women’s health events, to hand out literature and answer questions. In partnership with Just in Time for Foster Youth, the Soroptimists raised funds for teens in foster care about to “age out” of the system. Mendenhall said their help bought apartment furnishings for those approaching their 18th birthdays to ease their transition into adult life. The last service focus helped victims of human trafficking. Soroptimist member Lisa Lindgren said they partnered with the Bilateral Safety Corridor Coalition out of National City to renovate the shelter it operates. “We landscaped the facility and added a safe playground for the children, to make it feel more secure and more like a home for these women,” she said.

include His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama; Mahatma Gandhi; Jesus; Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.; Sri Narayani Amma; Dr. Deepak Chopra; Dr. Wayne Dyer and Paramahansa Yogananda. What is it that you most dislike? I am deeply saddened by intolerance. What is your most-prized possession? My most-prized possessions are my relationships, my health and my spiritual life. What do you do for fun? For me, fun is travelling, hiking and spending time at WindanSea Beach. What is your motto or philosophy of life? Do unto others as your would have them do unto you. What would be your dream vacation? My dream vacation would be travelling the world and studying spiritual sites and traditions. u


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LA JOLLA LIGHT - august 13, 2015 - Page B17

for breakfast at 939 Coast Blvd. and once a month for dinner at The Shores Restaurant. Depending on how frequently a member attends, monthly dues fluctuate. If a member attends two breakfast meetings and the dinner meeting, monthly dues are $47; if she can attend three breakfast meetings, monthly dues are $60. Jewel members, Tuggey explained, are a supporting group for someone who cannot regularly attend meetings, but would like to attend events and assist with volunteer efforts. Jewel membership is $35-$100 a year. A lifetime membership is $500. For more details about membership, e-mail soroptimistlj@ gmail.com or visit soroptimistlj.org/membership.html u

Previous president Jackie Young (right) thanks outgoing president Kate Woods for her service to Soroptimist.

Members, dubbed ‘life members,’ include Shelly Gellman, Marcia Lowery and Ronda Landrum

Approximately 30 people attend the Soroptimist installation dinner at the Crab Catcher.

Live Here. Give Here! The La Jolla Community Foundation connects people who want to make a difference with the projects and organizations that can help make La Jolla an even better place to live.

Make your giving matter here: Join the La Jolla Community Foundation. Membership Levels • Community Leader $1,000 • Patron $2,500 • Pacesetter $5,000 • Visionary $10,000 • Corporate $5,000 Send checks payable to: La Jolla Community Foundation Julie Bronstein, Executive Director 2508 Historic Decatur Road, Suite 200, San Diego, CA 92108

www.lajollacommunityfoundation.org

Incoming president Bonnie Mendenhall receives her President’s Pin at the installation dinner.

Photos by Ashley Mackin


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Page B18 - august 13, 2015 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

The Haerr Family: Art ‘dynasty’ exhibits in Bird Rock By Jane Wheeler The work of four generations of the Haerr family is on view through August at the Bird Rock Coffee Roasters Art & Music Collective, 5627 La Jolla Blvd. Their talent started with greatgrandmother Lydia Cooling, who emigrated from England and arrived on Ellis Island the day the stock market crashed in 1929. As the young mother of Molly Haerr, she made her way to the Midwest and raised her family in Peoria, Illinois. After a chance visit to Carmel, California, she and her husband bought a house and she began to paint at the age of 54. “This is when my life blossomed,” she declared, inspired by the nature of Asilomar Beach, Pacific Grove, Point Lobos, Carmel Valley and Monterey Bay. She opened an art gallery in Carmel. In 1969, the couple moved to Bird Rock, where she became a member of the La Jolla Art Association. Her rough seascapes and still-life paintings instilled a love of art and inspired her grandchildren to paint — including Roger Haerr, Greta Kennedy and Paul Haerr. Many great-grandchildren also followed suit — including Julia, Margaret and Eric Haerr, who grew up in Bird Rock. “When I think back to childhood, some of my earliest memories were of her art,” Roger said. “The colors she revealed to me excite me to this very day — Alizarin Crimson, Cadmium Orange, French Ultramarine Blue, Viridian Green, Lemon Yellow, Burnt Sienna, Raw Umber, Ivory

Roger and Stacey Haerr

Black, Titanium White. These names conjure up colors that lift my spirits.” Roger’s wife, Stacey, said she always had the desire to paint, but never the opportunity nor courage, when she was younger. She took her first painting class at a Bird Rock art studio in 2007, with lots of encouragement from Roger. She said she enjoys oil painting and the plein-air technique, and finds painting a calming, centering experience.

Julia Haerr, Lydia’s great-granddaughter, has been creating since she was a child. She is an accomplished pen-and-ink artist, watercolorist and printmaker, and also enjoys making jewelry. She is completing her degree in philosophy at Bard College, New York, and manages to keep her creative spirit alive through writing, sketching and exploring the Catskill Mountains and Hudson River.

Eric Haerr, Lydia’s great-grandson, is a senior at La Jolla High School. He said he’s been working with different mediums since elementary school when his father, Roger, provided him with journals and sketchbooks. Today, he favors pen-and-ink and is taking a figure-drawing class at UCSD. He has exhibited at San Diego Museum of Art in Balboa Park and at Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego. u

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interrupt your summer to begin injections or laser treatment, there are some things you can do for temporary relief. Keep hydrated. This should be part of everyone’s daily routine, but it is even more important for those with varicose or spider veins, as drinking plenty of fluids helps with circulation. Avoid or limit salt consumption. We know a little bit of sodium helps us stay hydrated, but most of us load up on salty foods and snacks, especially when on vacation or when looking for a quick beach snack. Opt for a low-sodium snack if you can’t fight that craving, or ask for that margarita minus the salted rim. Head for the pool or air conditioning. When the weather is hot, especially during

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trendy while keeping your legs comfortable during errands or walking around town. Lose any excess weight. Maintaining a healthy weight is always important to consider with any varicose vein prevention or reduction. For many people, fortunately, this is already part of a summer bathing suit readiness plan. Stay active. Summer is perfect for swimming, which provides a low-pressure workout without adding stress to the legs. Light walking is also preferred. Column continued at http://www.lajollalight.com/ news/2015/jul/21/Relieve-VaricoseVeins-During-Summer/

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Located at: 4666 Cass St., Ste. 100, San Diego, CA, 92130, San Diego County. Registrant Information: Simone Ressner, 14250 Mira Zanja Corte, San Diego, CA 92130. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The first day of business was 7/31/2015. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 07/31/2015. Simone Ressner. LJ2001. Aug. 6, 13, 20, 27, 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-019880 Fictitious Business Name(s): Spider Window Cleaning Located at: 6520 Bead Nell Way, #2X, San Diego, CA, 92117, San Diego County. Registrant Information: Eduardo Rodriguez Rodriguez, 6520 Bead Nell Way, #2X, San Diego, CA 92117. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The first day of business was 7/15/15. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 07/30/2015. Eduardo Rodriguez Rodriguez. LJ2000. Aug. 6, 13, 20, 27, 2015.


Page B20 - augusT 13, 2015 - La JOLLa LIgHT FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-019971 Fictitious Business Name(s): T.E.A.A.M.S. Located at: 3310 Par Dr., La Mesa, CA, 91941, San Diego County. Registrant Information: Martin D. Teachworth, 3310 Par Dr., La Mesa, CA 91941. 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 07/31/2015. Martin D. Teachworth. LJ1999. Aug. 6, 13, 20, 27, 2015.

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Rousseau, 11031 Via Brescia, #310, San Diego, CA 92129. 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 07/20/2015. Celeste Rousseau. LJ1998. Aug. 6, 13, 20, 27, 2015.

Information: Mario Salvador Quintanilla, 8840 Hammond Dr., San Diego, CA 92123. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The first day of business was 6/1/15. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 07/27/2015. Mario Quintanilla. LJ1996. Aug. 6, 13, 20, 27, 2015.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-019054 Fictitious Business Name(s): LJ Crafted Wines Located at: 5621 La Jolla Blvd., La Jolla, CA, 92037, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 5735 Dolphin Place, La Jolla, CA 92037. Registrant Information: Jooste Wine, LLC, 5735 Dolphin Pl., La Jolla, CA 92037, California. This business is conducted by: A Limited Liability Company. 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 07/23/2015. Lowell Jooste, Manager. LJ1997. Aug. 6, 13, 20, 27, 2015.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-019476 Fictitious Business Name(s): BHB Web Located at: 101 Coast Blvd., #3E, La Jolla, CA, 92037, San Diego County. Registrant Information: a. Steven D. Peck, 101 Coast Blvd., #3E, La Jolla, CA, 92037 b. Pollie Deza-Peck, 101 Coast Blvd., #3E, La Jolla, CA, 92037 This business is conducted by: A Married Couple. The first day of business was 7/27/15. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 07/27/2015. Steven Peck. LJ1995. July 30, Aug. 6, 13, 20, 2015.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-019442 Fictitious Business Name(s): Mario’s Quick Bumper Repair Located at: 8840 Hammond Dr., San Diego, CA, 92123, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 8840 Hammond Dr., San Diego, CA 92123. Registrant

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-019036 Fictitious Business Name(s): Malcolm Accounting Located at: 4411 Morena Blvd., #230, San Diego, CA, 92117, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 4411 Morena Blvd., #230, San Diego, CA 92117. Registrant Information: Chrisopoulos CPA Inc., 4411 Morena Blvd., #230, San Diego, CA 92117, California. This business is conducted by: A Corporation. The first day of business was 7/22/15. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 07/22/2015. Carol Chrisopoulos, President. LJ1993. July 30, Aug. 6, 13, 20, 2015.

crossword

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-018395

DO NEED DO YOU YOU NEED TO TO PUBLISH PUBLISH AA LEGAL AD? LEGAL AD? Let Help! Let Us Help! Fictitious Business ••Fictitious Business Names Names

Name Changes Changes ••Name Lien Sales Sales ••Lien Alcoholic ••Alcoholic

Beverages Beverages License License Petitions for ••Petitions for Probate Probate • Trustee Sales Sales • Trustee Summons -- Divorce ••Summons Divorce • Annual Report Report • Annual Non-Responsibility ••Non-Responsibility • Dissolutions of • Dissolutions of Partnership Partnership

Call Today! Call Today! 858.748.2311

858.218.7237 858.218.7237

Fictitious Business Name(s): Ellahi & Consultants Located at: 4370 La Jolla Village Dr., San Diego, CA, 92122, San Diego County. Registrant Information: Fahad Ellahi Rajpoot, 4370 La Jolla Village Dr., San Diego, CA 92122. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The first day of business was 7/15/15. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 07/15/2015. Fahad Ellahi Rajpoot. LJ1994. July 30, Aug. 6, 13, 20, 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-019078 Fictitious Business Name(s): Bard’s Decorator’s Custom Shop Located at: 5643 La Jolla Blvd., La Jolla, CA, 92037, San Diego County. Registrant Information: Karl Rudat, 5643 La Jolla Blvd., La Jolla, CA 92037. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The first day of business was 7/23/15. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 07/23/2015. Karl Rudat. LJ1992. July 30, Aug. 6, 13, 20, 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-018842 Fictitious Business Name(s): LR Audio Video Solutions Located at: 142 Blando Ct., San Ysidro, CA, 92173, San Diego County. Registrant Information: Francisco Lopez, 8301 Rio San Diego Dr., Unit 11, San Diego, CA 92108. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The first day of business was 7/21/15. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 07/21/2015. Francisco Lopez. LJ1991. July 30, Aug. 6, 13, 20, 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-018494 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. DocBron b. Integrative Health Solutions c. Natural Non-Toxic Medicine d. Integrative Medical Solutions e. Naturopathic Medical Center f. Naturopathic Primary

Medical Center Located at: 8950 Villa La Jolla Drive, #A107, La Jolla, CA, 92037, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 8950 Villa La Jolla Drive, #A107, La Jolla, CA 92037. Registrant Information: Bronner Handwerger, 14362 Twisted Branch Road, Poway, CA 92064. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The first day of business was 09/01/2005. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 07/16/2015. Bronner Handwerger. LJ1990. July 30, Aug. 6, 13, 20, 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-017520 Fictitious Business Name(s): So Cal Industries Deep Recovery and Salvage Located at: 6980 Mission Gorge Rd., Unit F, San Diego, CA, 92120, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 820 Wilbur Ave., San Diego, CA 92109. Registrant Information: Griffin McCarty, 820 Wilbur Ave., San Diego, CA 92109. 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 07/06/2015. Griffin McCarty. LJ1989. July 30, Aug. 6, 13, 20, 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-018346 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Some Recycling b. So Others May Eat Recycling Corporarion Located at: 3015 Clairemont Drive, San Diego, CA. 92117, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 1223 Muirlands Vista Way, La Jolla, CA. 92037. Registrant Information: a. So Others May Eat Recycling Corporation, 9222 Chesapeake Drive, San Diego, CA. 92123, California This business is conducted by: A Corporation. The first day of business was 06/27/2015. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 07/15/2015. Tresha Souza, President. LJ1988. July 23, 30, Aug. 6, 13, 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT

File No.: 2015-018347 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Some Recycling b. So Others May Eat Recycling Corporarion Located at: 6925-6947 Linda Vista Rd., San Diego, CA. 92111. Mailing Address: 1223 Muirlands Vista Way, La Jolla, CA. 92037. Registrant Information: a. So Others May Eat Recycling Corporation, 9222 Chesapeake Drive, San Diego, CA. 92123, California This business is conducted by: A Corporation. The first day of business has not begun. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 07/15/2015. Tresha Souza, President. LJ1988. July 23, 30, Aug. 6, 13, 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-018477 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. USA JStar Home Help Agency b. JStar USA Care Agency c. JStar Caregivers Agency Located at: 663 S. Rancho Santa Fe Rd., #135, San Marcos, CA, 92078, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 9420 #C Activity Rd., San Diego, CA 92126. Registrant Information: Maria M. Kruse, 9420 #C Activity Rd., San Diego, CA 92126. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The first day of business was 07/09/2015. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 07/16/2015. Maria M. Kruse. LJ1986. July 23, 30, Aug. 6, 13, 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-018097 Fictitious Business Name(s): Old World Vines Located at: 8545 Arjons Drive, Suite N, San Diego, CA, 92126, San Diego County. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: Old World Vines, 8545 Arjons Drive, Suite N, San Diego, CA 92126, CA. This business is conducted by: A Corporation. The first day of business was 2/15/2010. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 07/13/2015. Kathleen Bendel, President. LJ1985. July 23, 30, Aug. 6, 13, 2015.

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LA JOLLA LIGHT - august 13, 2015 - Page B21

The NCL Seaside chapter is accepting applications for mothers with daughters entering grades 8-10 in the fall. For more details, e-mail seasidencl@gmail.com

New NCL Seaside chapter seeking members

N

ational Charity League, Inc. (NCL), which

Seaside Chapter is the ninth NCL chapter in the San

members will support include Father Joe’s Villages, I

fosters mother-daughter relationships through

Diego region, with the earliest chapter forming in 1971.

Love a Clean San Diego, Bannister Family House and

community service, leadership development

The chapter is accepting applications for mothers

Feeding America.

and cultural experiences, announced the formation of

with daughters entering grades 8-10 in the fall.

its 203rd chapter, Seaside. The Seaside Chapter is based

Membership will be open until each class fills. For more

said Seaside chapter president April Winograd. “Joining

in La Jolla but open to those who reside in or attend

details, e-mail seasidencl@gmail.com

a chapter at its beginning will give members an

A few of the philanthropies the Seaside chapter’s

opportunity to shape its culture.” u

ito

in

76 74

Ca m

Op

en S

at

55 Op 19 en M oo Sa nl t & ig ht Su La n ne 1 , L -4 aJ ol la

Co & ro Su m n an 1de 4 l, L aJ ol

la

school in central San Diego and surrounding areas. The

“We are thrilled to become a part of the NCL family,”

$2,495,000 • 4 bed/4.5 bath, 3,191 sq ft

$1,248,000–$1,348,000 • 4 bed/3 bath, 3,052 sq ft

2015 custom single level, ocean & bay view home

Remodeled and redesigned turn-key ocean view home

ing

m Co

So

! on

6612 Caminito Hermitage, La Jolla - Call for more details.

CalBRE #01334502

858.480.9945 | Team@JimMcInerney.com | www.JimMcInerney.com ©MMVIII Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates LLC. A Realogy Company. All Rights Reserved. Sotheby’s International Realty® is a registered trademark licensed to Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates LLC. An Equal Opportunity Company. Equal Housing Opportunity. Each Office is Independently Owned And Operated. CalBRE #01767484


LA JOLLA HOMES & REAL ESTATE

Page B22 - august 13, 2015 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

www.lajollalight.com

HOMES SOLD Top La Jolla Homes Sold: Aug. 1-11

ADDRESS

BED

BATH

SALE PRICE

n 7007 Country Club Drive 8 12.5 $17,000,000 See the story about this property sale on Page A1 n 7742 Ivanhoe Ave.

4

4

$2,425,000

n 5625 Beaumont Ave.

4

3

$2,400,000

n 5458 Caminito Bayo

3

2.5

$1,600,000

n 5791 Rutgers Road

4

4

$1,500,000

n 1040 Coast Blvd., Unit S304 2

2

$1,195,000

n 2011 Nautilus St.

3

2

$1,171,000

n 7757 Eads Ave., Unit B2 2

2

$650,000

n 5490 La Jolla Blvd., Unit K205 —

1

$500,000

n 445 Rosemont St.

2

$495,000

2

SOURCE: RealQuest

HOME OF HOME OFTHE THEWEEK WEEK

OPEN SAT 1-3 & SUN 1-4 7790 Senn Way, La Jolla

• 5BR/5+BA, 3819 sq ft • Gracious and spacious single level home on quiet cul de sac • Includes an attached granny flat or second master on the second level • All living and entertaining rooms feature unobstructable ocean and mountain views • Large patio area off the living rooms offers spacious outdoor living • Grassy area for play equipment in the entry area • Interior entry courtyard is secluded, sunny and offers a private quiet spot to relax • All rooms are large with high ceilings • Updated kitchen and bathrooms

Offered at $2,495,000

Arlene Sacks 858.922.3900 arlsacks@willisallen.com CAL BRE #603821

This ‘Amazing Kitchen’ captures kudos for representing Realtor Monica Sylvester of Willis Allen. Courtesy

Willis Allen Real Estate named winner in HGTV contest

A

home represented by Monica Sylvester of Willis Allen Real Estate won HGTV’s Ultimate House Hunt in the “Amazing Kitchen” category. The month-long online contest on HGTV.com attracted over 82 million views, with nearly 900,000 votes cast. The award-winning home is a new estate built by Richard Doan Construction at The Strand in Dana Point. The 5,880-square-foot home features a chef’s kitchen, inviting open living and entertaining areas, four

bedrooms, five bathrooms, a walk-in wine cellar, three dramatic fireplaces, a fire pit, pool/spa and an outdoor loggia to capture the home’s panoramic ocean views. “Warmth and sophistication meets functionality in this stunning ocean view home,” said Sylvester. “The added exposure this distinction will bring to this phenomenal property is something that wouldn’t be possible without Willis Allen’s exclusive affiliations.” u — Press Release


www.lajollalight.com

LA JOLLA LIGHT - august 13, 2015 - Page B23

OPEN HOUSES

More open house listings at lajollalight.com/homes RANDI DARCY DELANO SMITH HEGELER

DARCY RANDI DELANO HEGELER SMITH

858.361.2097 858.945.3452

858.945.3452 858.361.2097

CAL BRE #01076572 #00885940

CAL BRE #01076572 #00885940

In Escrow before it hit the MLS! GREAT FAMILY HOME IN MuIRLANDS WEST 4BR/2.5 BA on a large flat useable lot (20,000 sqft+) with pool, great front and backyard. Seller will entertain offers between $1,775,000 - $2,250,000

Call Darcy or Randi to see this property before it goes in the MLS. List with us and experience Concierge-Style Real Estate service.

LA JOLLA FARMS OCEAN VIEW ESTATE

Spanish Revival home offers unobstructed views of the Pacific from most rooms. Lush landscaping, garden spaces and view decks provide privacy & endless entertaining possibilities. Architectural details abound in this 8 bedroom/7.5 bath estate, which includes a music conservatory, gourmet kitchen with premier stainless appliances, game room, pool, 2-story guest suite, and endless opportunities to enjoy the SoCal resort life style. Co-listed with Jorge Terriquez CA BRE: #01714678 $10,900,000 - $11,900,000

The Brett Dickinson Team

SOPHISTICATED MASTERPIECE RANCHO SANTA FE

• Dramatic Contemporary • Soaring ceilings • Expansive grass areas • 8800 SF home on 3 acres • Resort style salt water pool • 5 bedroom, 6+baths, elevator • Close to Rancho Valencia Spa and Tennis Resort

Price Upon Request Peter & Judy Corrente 858.354.8455 Correntes92037@gmail.com www.lajollacahomes.com

Peter CA BRE # 00389337 Judy CA BRE # 00848593

La Jolla Office : 858-926-3060 7855 Ivanhoe, Suite 110 | La Jolla, California | 92037

PacificSothebysRealty.com ©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

$315,000 1 BR/1 Ba

8368 Via Sonoma #a, La JoLLa iRene ChandLeR/CoLdweLL BankeR ReSidentiaL

Sat 1pm - 4pm 858-775-6782

$595,900 2 BR/2 Ba

7509 dRapeR # 303, La JoLLa Candi demoURa/CoLdweLL BankeR

$875,000 3 BR/2 Ba

7560 eadS aVe., Unit 9, La JoLLa tom CaRRoLL/CaRRoLL and Co.

$880,000 3 BR/3 Ba

2892 toRRey pineS Road, La JoLLa SCott appLeBy/wiLLiS aLLen ReaL eState

Sat 12pm - 2pm 858-775-2014

$1,000,000 - $1,200,000 2 BR/2 Ba

316 paLomaR StReet, La JoLLa LeSLie RoSenqUiSt/paCifiC SotheBy'S inteRnationaL ReaLty

SUn 1pm - 4pm 858-692-3880

$1,049,000 3 BR/2.5 Ba

9605 CLaiBoRne SqUaRe, La JoLLa team ChodoRow hoSted: nataSha aLexandeR & ChaRLeS SCheVkeR/BeRkShiRe hathaway homeSeRViCeS

$1,195,000 3 BR/2 Ba

5818 SoLedad moUntain Road, La JoLLa maRyL weightman/BeRkShiRe hathaway homeSeRViCeS

$1,198,000 3 BR/3 Ba

1385 Caminito aRRiata, La JoLLa geof BeLden hoSted: kaRa CaUthon//BeRkShiRe hathaway homeSeRViCeS

$1,198,000 2 BR/2 Ba

529 feRn gLen, La JoLLa theReSa paniSh/Re/max

$1,248,000 - $1,348,000 4 BR/3 Ba

7674 Caminito CoRomandeL, La JoLLa Jim mCineRney/paCifiC SotheBy'S inteRnationaL ReaLty

Sat & SUn 1pm - 4pm 858-480-9945

$1,425,000 3 BR/2.5 Ba

7357 fay aVenUe, La JoLLa deBoRah gReenSpan/paCifiC SotheBy'S inteRnationaL ReaLty

Sat & SUn 1pm - 4pm 619-972-5060

$1,475,000 - $1,675,000 5 BR/3 Ba

2730 Caminito pRado, La JoLLa BRett diCkinSon team hoSted: JoRge teRRiqUez/paCifiC SotheBy'S inteRnationaL ReaLty

Sat & SUn 1pm - 4pm 858-926-3060

$1,660,000 3 BR/2 Ba

5547 LadyBiRd Ln, La JoLLa Jeannie thompSon/CoLdweLL BankeR ReSidentiaL

Sat & SUn 1pm - 4pm 858-395-7727

$1,775,000 - $1,999,876 4 BR/3 Ba

5937 La JoLLa CoRona dR., La JoLLa CRaig gagLiaRdi/BeRkShiRe hathaway homeSeRViCeS

SUn 1pm - 4pm 619-813-9557

$1,849,000 3 BR/2 Ba

1533 Copa de oRo, La JoLLa, CheR ConneR CaRLy SUniga/BeRkShiRe hathaway homeSeRViCeS

SUn 1pm - 4pm 858-551-7292

*$1,925,000- $2,200,000 3 BR/3Ba

5388 Caminito Bayo, La JoLLa ShaRon BeLden /ShaRon BeLden ReaLty

SUn 1pm - 4pm 858-822-9156

$1,995,000 3 BR/2.5 Ba

7330 eadS aVenUe, La JoLLa doRiS "day" diRkS/BeRkShiRe hathaway homeSeRViCeS

$2,150,000 4 BR/4 Ba

6209 BeaUmont aVenUe, La JoLLa team ChodoRow nataSha aLexandeR & ChaRLeS SCheVkeR/BeRkShiRe hathaway homeSeRViCeS

$2,299,000 4 BR/3 Ba

6561 aVenida wiLfRedo, La JoLLa Jeannie thompSon/CoLdweLL BankeR ReSidentiaL

2,395,000 4 BR/3.5 Ba

964 La JoLLa RanCho, La JoLLa CheR ConneR kaRa CaUthon/BeRkShiRe hathaway homeSeRViCeS

$2,395,000 4 BR/4.5Ba

425 Sea Lane, La JoLLa team ChodoRow moniCa LeSChiCk BaxteR/BeRkShiRe hathaway homeSeRViCeS

wedS 2pm - 5pm 858-456-6850

$2,475,000 6 BR/5 Ba

6810 Via VaLVeRde, La JoLLa andRew moSS/BeRkShiRe hathaway homeSeRViCeS

SUn 12pm - 3pm 858-525-1277

$2,475,000 4 BR/3 Ba

383 weStBoURne StReet (2 homeS), La JoLLa Linda maRRone/CoLdweLL BankeR ReSidentiaL

$2,495,000 5 BR/5.5 Ba

7790 Senn way, La JoLLa deBRa SChRakamp/wiLLiS aLLen ReaL eState

$2,495,000 4 BR/4.5 Ba

5519 moonLight Lane, La JoLLa Jim mCineRney/paCifiC SotheBy'S inteRnationaL ReaLty

$2,595,000 4 BR/3 Ba

6875 paSeo LaRedo, La JoLLa iRene ChandLeR/CoLdweLL BankeR ReSidentiaL

$2,600,000 3 BR/3 Ba

6652 aVenida La Reina, La JoLLa tim neLSon/wiLLiS aLLen ReaL eState

$2,699,000 4 BR/4.5 Ba

1738 CaSteLLana, La JoLLa CaRoL doty/BeRkShiRe hathaway homeSeRViCeS

$2,700,000 4 BR/3 Ba

7981 La JoLLa ShoReS dRiVe, La JoLLa ViCki padULa/naU ReaL eState

$3,195,000 4 BR/4.5 Ba

7003 fay aVenUe, La JoLLa eLizaBeth CoURtieR/wiLLiS aLLen ReaL eState

Sat 11am - 2pm 619-813-6686

$3,999,999 - $4,250,000 3 BR/3.5 Ba

6679 ViSta deL maR, La JoLLa Randy & Jo-an UpJohn/paCifiC SotheBy'S inteRnationaL ReaLty

SUn 2pm - 5pm 858-354-1736

$4,600,000 5 BR/3.5 Ba

1575 toRRey pineS Road, La JoLLa the BRett diCkinSon team hoSted: annette ViLLaLoBoS/paCifiC SotheBy'S inteRnationaL ReaLty

$8,500,000 - $9,800,876 6 BR/10 Ba

6019 aVenida CReSSta, La JoLLa maxine & maRtin geLLenS/BeRkShiRe hathaway homeSeRViCeS

$15,650,000 3 BR/3.5 Ba

6106 Camino de La CoSta, La JoLLa VinCe CRUdo/wiLLiS aLLen ReaL eState

SUn 12pm - 3pm 858-900-1333 Sat & SUn 1pm - 4pm 619-279-0299

Sat & SUn 12pm - 4pm 858-456-6850 SUn 1pm - 4pm 858-354-2913 Sat & SUn 1pm - 4pm 858-752-1000

Sat 10am - 5pm & SUn 12pm - 5pm 858-395-8454

SUn 12pm - 4pm 619-813-9503 Sat & SUn 12pm - 4pm 858-336-9051 Sat 1pm - 4pm & SUn 11am - 2pm 858-395-7727 SUn 1pm - 4pm 858-551-7292

SUn 1pm - 4pm 858-735-4173 Sat 1pm - 3pm & SUn 1pm - 4pm 925-963-5151 Sat & SUn 1pm - 4pm 858-480-9945 Sat 12pm - 4pm & SUn 1pm - 4pm 858-775-6782 SUn 1pm - 4pm 858-527-9949 Sat & SUn 1pm - 4pm 858-997-8151 Sat 11am - 2pm & SUn 12am - 3pm 619-985-1055

Sat & SUn 1pm - 4pm 858-926-3060 SUn 1pm - 4pm 858-551-6630 Sat 1pm - 5pm & SUn 10am - 1pm 858-518-1236

selling your house?

most extensive open hom e listings anywhere more than 50000 visitors a month visitors from 50 states and 132 countries...

lajollalight.com/homes

For the most up-to-date list of open houses, mapped locations, and *premium listings with photos, visit lajollalight.com/open-houses-list/ Contact Sarah Minihane • sarahm@lajollalight.com • 858.875.5945


www.lajollalight.com

Page B24 - august 13, 2015 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

Contemporary Work of Art

Perched atop Soledad Mountain, this copper roofed showplace with walls of glass and an exposed glass elevator is just as striking as the north shore coastline and mountains framed so beautifully like wall paintings in every room. $9,443,000

ED UC D RE

Very Special Property

Thanks for all your help “Finally it’s over. You all did a great job. If you need references, just let us know; we are great fans.” M&C

LIS NEW TIN G

Sweeping panoramic ocean views abound from this property on two contiguous lots with a guest house and a detached view deck. As is, the compound is beautifully updated and a lot of fun with a tree house and half pipe but there is development potential too. $3,975,000

RE DU CE D

Traditional Charm on a Half-Acre

Panoramic Ocean Views

Inviting single story 4BR home with study on more than a half-acre site in Muirlands West with pool, garden, 3-car garage, concrete roof, a/c, solar for pool, 10 skylights, room off the MBR, , and many built-ins throughout. $1,995,000

This sensational one bedroom corner condo with views on the 11th floor of one of La Jolla’s premiere concierge buildings, The Seville, is flooded with light and has wraparound views of the golf course as well as the ocean from all rooms. $949,000

7780 Girard Avenue, La Jolla, CA BRE #00992609 | BRE #00409245 ©2015 BHH Affiliates, LLC. An independently operated subsidiary of HomeServices of America, Inc., a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate, and a franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of HomeServices of America, Inc.® Equal Housing Opportunity. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices does not guarantee the accuracy of square footage, lot size or other information concerning the condition or features of property provided by the 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. CalBRE# 01317331


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