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Volume 32 Number 16
2013 brings in a variety of new state laws BY JOE TASH Gov. Jerry Brown signed 876 regular session bills this year, and vetoed 120 regular session bills. Following are some of the higher profile new laws that took effect in California on Jan. 1. ONLINE PRIVACY California is making it illegal for employers to demand access to employees’ social media accounts. Gov. Brown said the legislation will protect residents from “unwarranted invasions.” GAY RIGHTS Gov. Brown outlawed gay conversion therapy practices on minors— efforts by therapists to convert minors’ sexual orientation. However, the law has been delayed pending a federal appeals trial. EDUCATION To ease the often overwhelming costs of higher education, select popular college textbooks are set to become available as free online downloads. More than 50 common textbooks for University of California, California State University and California Community College students should be posted in an online database by the start of the 2013-2014 school year. IMMIGRATION Young undocumented Californians will be eligible for driver’s licenses beginning next year if they qualify for a new federal work program. Gov. Brown’s signing of the law followed in the steps of President Obama’s decision to stop deporting young undocumented immigrants if they meet certain requirements, including if they are 30 years old or younger and came to the United States See STATE, page 20
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Under Armour Holiday Classic
Torrey Pines High School hosted its 23rd annual boys prep Under Armour Holiday Classic Basketball Tournament, presented by the Lucky Duck Foundation, Dec. 26-29. (Above and right) Torrey Pines HS Falcons opening day at the Holiday Classic. TPHS won 47-38 over Mater Dei HS Crusaders. (Above) Torrey Pines HS Falcon Brandon Cyrus brings the ball down; (Right) Torrey Pines HS Falcons Chris Kurylo shoots. Photos/Jon Clark
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Jan. 3, 2013
Preliminary injunction issued against Rancho Valencia Resort in noise-related lawsuit BY JOE TASH A judge has issued a preliminary injunction against the Rancho Valencia Resort in connection with a lawsuit filed by a Fairbanks Ranch couple who contend the resort generates too much noise from parties and other outdoor events. The couple, Angel and Linda Mendez, filed a lawsuit against the resort in May. They allege that noise generated by resort events disturbs their peace and quiet, and has lowered their property value. The back of the couple’s home on Avenida Las Perlas is about 300 feet from the resort’s property line. In his Dec. 18 order, Superior Court Judge Timothy M. Casserly wrote that the Mendezes have “established a reasonable probability of success on the merits of their claims,” and granted them a preliminary injunction. The lawsuit sought an injunction prohibiting the resort “from emitting any noise from their premises sufficiently loud to disturb plaintiffs’ comfortable enjoyment” of their property. “I am very thankful that the judge, after reviewing all of the evidence, ruled in our favor,” said Linda Mendez. Mendez said she and her neighbors, who have also been disturbed by noise from the resort, are “thrilled.” “We are just so relieved because nothing we ever did could get them to stop,” she said. Officials from the resort did not respond to several mesSee LAWSUIT, page 20
R. Roger Rowe robotics program off to a successful start BY KAREN BILLING Robots have invaded R. Roger Rowe School. The new robotics program at Rowe and participation in the First Lego League program has been a success thanks to teachers Dave Warner and John Galipault, a crew of invested young students, dedicated parent volunteers and support from the district administration. “It was a great year,” said Warner, who along with Galipault went to Carnegie Mellon’s Robotics Institute to learn about the programming and the NXT controller the robots use. “Like anything new it was difficult but rewarding.” The students worked incredibly hard for three months, meeting during lunch club at school as well as after school and even working on weekends trying to cram everything in for competitions. Parent coaches Anna Lillian, Theresa and Paul Gauvreau, and Mark Nelson helped out the four
This year’s R. Roger Rowe robotics teams. Photo/Karen Billing teams made up of fourth and fifth graders, a sixth grade team, a seventh grade team and an eighth grade team. “My goal was to compete at the qualifying tournament and I hoped at lease one would advance to Legoland…we had two advance,” Warner said. The two teams that advanced to the Legoland Championships on Dec. 2 were the sixth and seventh grade teams, who earned medals and a trophy. An assembly was held at Rowe on Friday, Dec. 21, to honor the robotics teams and to see a presentation from a high school team from Coleman Tech Charter School. Superintendent Lindy Delaney praised the students for being “frontrunners” and step-
ping up to make it a great inaugural year for the program. She spoke about how when she first came to the school 28 years ago, she helped get a volleyball team started and it is a program today that her then-students’ children are now a part of. Delaney said she thinks robotics will be the same way thanks to this group of trailblazing students. “Dave Warner and John Galipault are after that top spot and they’ve got a great young crew to do it,” Delaney said at the Dec. 13 board meeting when she sung the program’s praises to the school board. “It will be interesting to watch it evolve.” The robots may be made of legos but they’re more than just a toy. The robots are motorized with sensors and the students program them to accomplish different tasks such as grabSee ROBOTICS, page 6
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January 3, 2013
Rancho Santa Fe Review
RSF stories to watch in 2013 BY KAREN BILLING Here are several RSF stories on our radar for 2013. The Inn at Rancho Santa Fe Work to upgrade The Inn at Rancho Santa Fe, while still maintaining its historical integrity and charm, has been ongoing since September. New owner JMI Realty expects that the major guts of the construction work on the $12 million renovation project will begin at The Inn in January or February. “We are most looking forward to revitalizing the historic Inn at Rancho Santa Fe in a comfortable, sophisticated, fashion and developing an outstanding culinary program at the center of our community,� said Gordon MacMitchell, general manager. The big renovation work includes work on the lawn, The Inn’s lobby entrance and new 3,000 spa, as well as refreshed guest rooms and a re-imagined restaurant with Chef Todd Allison at the helm. The Inn’s layout of separate buildings means that it won’t have to close for multiple months for its renova-
tion and plans are to have it complete by summer 2013. “The Inn will remain open throughout the process, and we invite you to visit us and watch as the transformation comes to life,� MacMitchell said. The Village By spring, it’s expected that the new commercial center, Plaza de Acacias, will be complete. It will be the first new commercial/retail structure built in the village in several years, but it has been designed to look like it’s always been there, in the Lilian Rice style. The Rancho Santa Fe Association has been giving the village a lot of consideration at the committee-level, working on ways to improve business for the village merchants and to better market the community as a whole. One of the ideas to come out of the committees is a Farmers Market, which could come to El Tordo, between Avenida de Acacias and La Granada, on Saturday afternoons. It is the hope the market could bring some weekend activity to the village merchants in addition to being a fun gathering place with fresh produce and flowers for sale. The Association still has to approve of the market before it becomes a reality and some neighbors have expressed concerns about parking and the necessity. Look for it to be an item on an early 2013 RSF Association board agenda. Round and round we go: Roundabouts Plans for roundabouts on Paseo Delicias/ Del Dios Highway have been spinning around Rancho Santa Fe for more than 10 years. A draft environmental impact report was last circulated in 2008 and the county this month released a revised document on the three proposed roundabouts that includes minor design changes and a lighting study, as well as addressing the county’s new guidelines on greenhouse gases. The three roundabouts would be located at the intersections of Via de la Valle, El Montevideo and El Camino Del Norte. Of the three, Via de la Valle would have the most local impacts. It would result in a realignment of Las Colinas, a cul-de-sac would be created on La Fremontia (currently a loop street) and the Village Church would lose a significant
portion of its parking lot. El Montevideo would be the only four-way roundabout while the other two would be three-way. The DEIR (draft environmental impact report) will be open for review and public comment until Feb. 28. The DEIR is available in hard copy form at the Rancho Santa Fe Library and online at sdcounty.ca.gov. Comments can be submitted by email to Gail.Jurgella@sdcounty.ca.gov or by mail to Gail Jurgella, 5510 Overland Avenue, Suite 410, Mail Stop O-385, San Diego, 92123. San Dieguito Union High School District It took some time for the district’s Prop AA bond on November’s ballot to finally get the required 55 percent of the vote to pass but pass it did. According to Eric Dill, SDUHSD’s associate superintendent of business services, the district plans to draw $150 million of the bond monies in the spring of 2013 and kick off several local projects. “Because of the design and approval work that needs to happen first, the most significant projects will not get off the ground until 2014 or later but we do have some projects that will start earlier,� Dill said.
Some of the highlights for next year’s work include the installation of artificial turf and rubberized track at Canyon Crest Academy, and Torrey Pines High will get new stadium lighting, fire road improvements and a water main replacement after the main broke earlier in 2012. The district will also begin the design process and approvals for improvements and additions at CCA, TPHS, Carmel Valley Middle School and Earl Warren Middle School, as well as the new Pacific Highlands Ranch Middle School. In 2013, Dill said they plan to purchase the new middle school site in PHR, next to Canyon Crest. They aim to start construction on the middle school in 2015. Kelsey Kafka The Torrey Pines High School and North Coast Aquatics swimmer had an eventful 2011, when she became the Division 1 section champion in the 200-yard individual medley and the 100-yard breaststroke and helped the team win a section title. She skipped her junior year season in 2012 to focus on the Olympic Trials, which she took part in over the summer in Omaha. Already committed to swim for USC on a partial scholarship in the fall, Kelsey is now taking aim at
Kelsey Kafka helping TPHS to a fourth straight section title in the spring of 2013, defending her individual championships and chasing down a 100-yard breaststroke record that has been on the books for years. “My goals are to break the CIF record in the 100 breast (1:01.77), go a 2:12 in the 200 breast, and help the Torrey Pines girls win the CIF championship,� Kelsey said. “She’s been working really hard in the last six months, she’s a lot more focused about her goals,� said Jeff Pease, her coach at North Coast. Pease said Kelsey has built up “quite a repertoire� of races, such as the 400 individual medley. He said that her butterfly stroke has
See STORIES, page 8
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Rancho Santa Fe Review
January 3, 2013
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After 20 years of accomplishments on county board, supervisor Pam Slater-Price ready to tackle new goals BY JOE TASH At 11:59 a.m. on Jan. 7, the 20year tenure of County Supervisor Pam Slater-Price will come to an end. “And at 12 o’clock straight up, if anyone says help me with this, I’ll say go speak to Supervisor Dave Roberts,” said Slater-Price. Even though she’ll no longer be on the board, Slater-Price, 68, said she plans to continue to be involved in a number of local issues, including the County Supervisor Pam Slatergoings on at county government. Price Her advice to her successor, Roberts, a former Solana Beach City Councilman whom she endorsed over rival Steve Danon, is to listen to his constituents. “Listen to the people who put you in office,” she said. “If he starts going off the rails I’ll be down there at public comment to set him straight.” Roberts will be the first new supervisor on the board in 18 years. He’ll also be the first Democrat to serve on the board since the mid-1990s, and the first openly gay member of the panel. In the future, the board will see more turnover due to term limits passed by county voters in 2010. The five-member Board of Supervisors presides over an agency with a $4.8 billion annual budget and more than 15,000 employees. The county provides such services as law enforcement, health, parks and recreation, libraries and land use regulation in the county’s unincorporated areas. Slater-Price, a former teacher, worked on the drive for cityhood for Encinitas, then served on the Encinitas City Council and as mayor before her successful run for county
supervisor in 1992. Among the actions she is most proud of during her tenure on the county board was adoption of the MultiSpecies Conservation Plan, which is designed to preserve animal and plant species by setting aside areas to be preserved for natural habitat. Another issue “near and dear to my heart,” said Slater-Price, was improving the county’s animal shelters, and reforming many of its animal-related policies. “I thought the county shelter was terrible, it was a kill shelter, a concentration camp for animals,” she said. Slater-Price and other officials worked to obtain funding for a new central animal shelter in San Diego, and major renovations to the county animal shelter in Carlsbad, as well as upgrades to its shelter in Bonita. Policies were changed to encourage adoption of animals, which has led to a much lower percentage of animals being euthanized,
she said. The county also ended its practice of selling animals for medical research. “That’s kind of a mission accomplished,” she said. Not everything turned out as she had hoped. In this category, Slater-Price included the update of the county’s general plan, a blueprint for future development of the county’s unincorporated areas. The supervisors approved the updated plan in 2011, 13 years after the project was initiated. Slater-Price said she would have liked to see the plan remain more true to its original outline, rather than being changed to accommodate the concerns of individual land owners who didn’t like the way their property was designated. Many of those decisions came on 3-2 votes of the board, she said. “I was sorry to see it carved away and changed,” she said. Once she steps down from the board, she’ll have
plenty to keep her busy. Among them will be working with the San Dieguito River Park Joint Powers Authority to ensure that the Del Mar Fairgrounds follows through with promises it made to settle an environmental lawsuit, and working on a volunteer board to raise money for renovations to the downtown San Diego Civic Theater. Slater-Price, who lives in Del Mar with her husband, Hershell, also plans to keep fighting the proposed Gregory Canyon landfill in North County. “I’ve been fighting that now for 20 years and I won’t give up until I know it’s definitely not going to be built,” she said.
Officers still investigating home invasion RSF Patrol Chief Matt Wellhouser said authorities are still investigating the home invasion crime that occurred Dec. 20 when two men tied up a caregiver/housekeeper and robbed a Rancho Santa Fe home in the 5000 block of El Mirlo. No arrests have been made as of presstime. Wellhouser reminds residents to take safety precautions such as locking doors and windows, turning on alarms, and paying attention to those who drive in and out of gates. The suspects have been described as follows: Suspect #1: White male adult, 25-30 years of age, tall, with long blond hair Suspect #2: White male adult, 25-30 years of age, shorter, with a baseball cap If anyone has information on the case, call (760) 9663500 or 858-756-4372.
Music equipment stolen from Village Church Music equipment was stolen from the RSF Village Church Youth Center on Dec. 23 at approximately 3:43 a.m., according to RSF Patrol Chief Matt Wellhouser.
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January 3, 2013
Rancho Santa Fe Review
Local fitness instructor making waves in the blogosphere BY CLAIRE HARLIN Local women may have attended her reformer pilates classes at Solana Beach’s BodyROK Studios, or area residents might have met her at Delicias Restaurant in Rancho Santa Fe, where she bartends several nights a week. But her local following is nothing compared to the thousands worldwide who visit her health and fitness blog, “The Skinny Confidential,” each day. Local native Lauryn Evarts is 26 years old and in one year has amassed a readership that many seasoned authors and publishers would be envious of. She gets some 35,000 page views a day and is ranked at the top of the fitness category on the site www.bloglovin.com, which keeps a registry of all the world’s most popular blogs. A 2005 alumna of Torrey Pines High School, Evarts got the idea to blog about health and fitness while studying broadcasting at San Diego State University. “I would get lunch at school and couldn’t believe how horrendous the options were,” said Evarts, who has modeled for several brands and publications, including Rusty Swimwear and Maxim magazine. “With 40,000 students and tons of sorority girls at SDSU, I was thinking, ‘Wouldn’t it be nice if you could go online and modify each restaurant’s offerings to make them healthy?’” Evarts decided to start doing the research herself. She gathered carbohydrate and calorie counts on all the fast food offerings on campus and started making up her own meals. She removed the bread from a breakfast sandwich at Starbucks, for instance, and she used hummus as salad dressing at Daphne’s California Greek. When she graduated, she embarked on earning her nutrition license, and was poised to get her blog up and running. “At first I just wanted to start a blog on modifications and substitutions,” said Evarts. “But it turned into being about so many things — lifestyle, balancing health and relationships, working out, eating. There are only so many hours in the day and to do everything and manage health is hard, so I am just trying to make things easier.” What has really propelled Evarts’ popularity is her sense of humor, which is dry and sometimes even racy, she said. “I just talk to readers like they are my girlfriends and I’ll
Lauryn Evarts talk about anything,” she said. One of her most popular posts, for example, was about having a healthy hangover. In it, she urged people just to drink water and pull their [expletive] out of bed and get to the gym, even if it’s for 30 minutes. “I try to present topics in a funny, approachable way,” she said. The most interesting part of blogging, which has nearly become a full-time job for Evarts, is reaching out to people from all over the world. “I am talking to girls in Sweden and Australia. I am talking to girls in Hong Kong — one girl didn’t even have access there to cucumbers,” she said. “We all live in different places, but at the end of the day, people are concerned about the same things. At the end of the day, all everyone wants
is happiness.” Evarts spends much of her time on social media and reaching out to big brands that will help connect her with the world. “Companies have liked my blog and they help me promote it,” she said, adding that sponsorships and partnership, as well as advertising, has made the blog profitable. “I’m very close to making this my full-time job, and I hope it will eventually be my career.” Another thing that has made her successful is the surprisingly low number of fitness bloggers, she said. “There are so many fashion bloggers out there, and you’d think there would be a lot of health and fitness bloggers, but there aren’t,” she said. Next month, Evarts will be launching a YouTube Channel featuring tutorial and tips, and she said she would eventually like to publish both a recipe and fitness book. She also dreams of having her own TV show, and starting a delivery service for healthy foods, similar to Jenny Craig, but geared toward young women in their 20s and even teenage years. “I talk to girls through the blog who are 15 years old and struggling with weight,” said Evarts. “That’s tough for girls who aren’t on their own and buying their own food.” Evarts’ own fitness crusade began early in life, simply from growing up in a health-conscious family and healthconscious city. She was introduced to working out when her godmother invited her to a spin class, and she later fell in love with Pure Barre, a dance-inspired aerobic workout. Now, she says she’s “obsessed” with reformer pilates. But Evarts says that working out is not just about her body — it’s also about how she feels. And when it comes to blogging, Evarts gets the most satisfaction out of helping her readers. “I return every email I get, and I get 150 a day sometimes,” she said, adding that she recently received an email from a girl who said she lost 25 pounds by reading “The Skinny Confidential.” “A lot of people are just not educated about health and it’s not their fault, so I just want to help.” For more information, visit www.theskinnyconfidential.com.
We would like to introduce two new members of the Union family - Kaylen & Kyrah! We adopted them on 11/22 from the Inyo County Animal Shelter located between Lone Pine and Big Pine on the way to Mammoth Lakes. These two sisters have reminded us that the Holiday Season is one of giving thanks and appreciating blessings. With our daughter off to College (very happily at Cal Poly SLO) and our last dog passing away last January we had a void in our family. By rescuing Kaylen & Kyrah our lives have been so enriched that our favorite line is now "who rescued who"! So, if and when you need a pet, don't forget to visit your local shelter and not only save a life but enrich your own life!
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Rancho Santa Fe Review
RSF Attack announces tryouts for U7-U9 players Rancho Santa Fe Attack, will hold tryouts for its Boys and Girls U7 – U9 competitive teams the week of Jan. 7. The “Tryout Flyer” along with the “Tryout Registration Form” can be downloaded from the league website at www.rsfsoccer.com. The boys tryouts will be Tuesday and Thursday, Jan. 8 and Jan. 10, and the girls tryouts will be Monday and Wednesday, Jan. 7 and Jan. 9, with call backs as necessary. The tryouts will start at 3:45 p.m. for all age groups. All of the tryout sessions will be held at the Rancho Santa Fe Sports Field (16826 Rambla de las Flores, Rancho Santa Fe, CA 92067). The Attack competitive soccer program offers teams in every age group from U7 to U19 for those who are interested in a higher level of play. These teams are coached by a highly qualified international coaching staff that train and develop players who aspire to play in college and beyond. Competitive coaching focuses on skill development in the younger age groups and tactical abilities for the older players. Skill development for the players is always RSF Attack’s focus with winning as the main objective. Malcolm Tovey, the director of coaching, has been with the league for 15 years. Tovey is one of the most well-known and respected coaches in Southern California, having been involved with youth soccer here for almost 30 years. Tovey’s philosophy is that soccer is “more than just a game.” The league’s mission is to develop the passion for the game throughout the community and through soccer have fun, build character and develop an appreciation for the rich spectrum of the world’s cultures. “Our goal at Attack is to provide the local soccer community with the resources and support needed to learn about the game, and for all youth who want to play, we pledge to provide the highest level of coaching and to organize quality competitions for all levels of play.” Tovey said. “We want to give each player the best opportunity we can to develop by providing only the best in all areas of the game.” Questions about the tryouts can be directed to the league office at 760-479-1500 or by emailing Marilee Pacelli, director of league operations, at Marilee@rsfsoccer.com.
RSF Women’s Fund to host UCSD economics professor at February General Meeting Dr. Gordon H. Hanson, economics professor at UCSD, will speak at the Rancho Santa Fe Women’s Fund General Meeting on Feb. 4, 2012 at 9:30 a.m. at The Inn at Rancho Santa Fe. Guests are always welcome. The front page of the New York Times this Sunday highlights one of the biggest economic issues our nation faces, higher education for all socioeconomic classes. At the moment, only 65 percent of our nation’s children are graduating from high school. Only 40 percent finish college. In our current economic climate, the women of the RSF Women’s Fund share a desire to understand and gain insight on the pivotal con- Dr. Gordon Hanson cerns that are affecting our nation. Dr. Gordon Hansen is prepared to discuss six of the economic issues that San Diego County, and the United States, now face. Immigration will be discussed. People immigrating to San Diego come to fill two types of jobs, the highly skilled engineer, physician or biologist filling the open positions at many of the high tech and biotech firms in the area and the low-skilled laborer who performs a majority of the backbreaking labor in the local construction, field work and fast food industries. Dr. Hanson will share with us the impact these new residents have on our economy. Dr. Hanson will also discuss the current government debt and how it affects our economy as well as the potential tax treatment changes for contributions to non-profits. He will wrap up the discussion with suggestions on the areas where philanthropists should increase their funding. Dr. Hanson is bright and personable. He is a professor of economics in the Graduate School of International Relations and Pacific Studies and the Department of Economics at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD). Dr. Hanson is also a research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research and coeditor of the Journal of Development Economics. Before joining UCSD, Dr. Hanson served on the faculties of the University of Michigan and the University of Texas. He is the author of over 50 academic research publications on the economic consequences of immigration, international trade and investment, and other aspects of globalization. He is also the author of Why Does Immigration Divide America? Public Finance and Political Opposition to Open Borders (2005) and Immigration Policy and the Welfare System (Oxford University Press, 2002). Dr. Hanson will touch on each of the topics listed above, leaving plenty of time for questions and further discussion. Please bring a guest to share in this timely, informative and highly educational morning. The presentation will begin at 9:30 a.m. sharp at The Inn at Rancho Santa Fe on Feb. 4. The mission of the Rancho Santa Fe Women’s Fund is to educate, inspire and increase the number of women committed to philanthropy in order to strengthen the community and impact lives through informed, focused, collective giving. For more information, visit www.rsfwomensfund.org.
January 3, 2013
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January 3, 2013
Rancho Santa Fe Review
Renown World War II vet and ‘Unbroken’ author Louis Zamperini to speak at next Viewpoints event in RSF; Tickets go on sale Jan. 15
Mr. Riviére and Natalie Kim Tessa Catledge, Peyton Davis, Olivia Sidwell (Left) Katherine Arnold and her mother Rebecca.
Real Estate Directory Andrea Dougherty Group Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty
A7
Barry Estates, Inc. Rancho Santa Fe
A12 & A13
Bob & Kathy Angello Willis Allen Real Estate
A3
Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage Rancho Santa Fe
A23
Equestrian Real Estate Del Mar
A2
Eric Iantorno Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty
B23
Heather & Holly Manion, RSF Realty Willis Allen Real Estate
A24
Kilroy Realty Corporation Carmel Valley Office
A5
Open House Listings
B23
Richard Stone Keller Williams, Carmel Valley
A21
R. Roger Rowe School Nonfiction Picture Books Fifth grade students at R. Roger Rowe School recently celebrated their published writing pieces with parents, teachers and friends. The Performing Arts Center was filled with chattering students reading their nonfiction picture books that they had been perfecting for publication over the past few weeks. Thanks to the district’s Five Star Education foundation, students are taught key writing and language skills from teachers who have trained with the Columbia University Reading and Writing program. One-hundred percent of K-8 classroom teachers have been trained in the model, either through institutes at Columbia University, homegrown institutes or on-site professional development conducted by Columbia staff.
On Sunday, Feb. 24, Viewpoints will present Louis Zamperini. Zamperini’s amazing life story was documented in the acclaimed book “Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resiliency and Redemption.” Tickets for this event will go on sale Jan. 15 on the Viewpoints website www.willageviewpoints.org. In order to accommodate the large crowd expected, this event will be held in the sanctuary of The Village Church. Tickets prices will be as follows: Louis Zamperini •$50 per person - Sanctuary seating -tickets purchased in advance •$60 per person - Sanctuary seating -ticket purchased at the door (if seats remain available) •$25 per person - Overflow seating - Chapel and Parlor with video feed Seating for the evening’s event will begin at 5 p.m.. The program will begin at 6 p.m., followed by wine and hors d’oeuvres in the Fellowship Center. If you have any questions or need additional assistance in purchasing tickets, please call 858-381-8070. Viewpoints is co-presented by The Village Church and the Rancho Santa Fe Foundation. The goal of the lecture series is to inform, inspire and impact by providing a forum in which individuals, renown in their field, share their knowledge, wisdom and experience with members of our community. Zamperini’s life was literally one in the record books by the time he became a bombardier during World War II. In high school, he set the world high school record for the mile. During the 1936 Olympics and also at the University of Southern California he continued to set records. But what really made his life remarkable is what he endured in World War II. On a routine mission, his aircraft crashed into the Pacific Ocean. Zamperini and other crew members survived in a life raft for 47 days, unknowingly drifting into Japanese-controlled waters. They were rescued by the Japanese but then placed into Japanese prison camps. It was here that Zamperini encountered a guard who tried for two years to break his spirit with verbal and physical cruelty, but the strong spirit that had been his trademark throughout his life enabled him to outlast the guard. Following the war, he returned to live in Southern California but eventually went back to Japan to forgive the very guards who had tormented him. In 1998, the Olympic Winter Games were held in Nagano, Japan, just outside the town where Louis Zamperini had been held captive. The people of Nagano asked him to carry the Olympic flame as part of the torch relay, and a 45-minute feature about his life was aired during the telecast of the Closing Ceremony. Today, at 95 years of age, Louis Zamperini is still spry and full of life, lecturing throughout the country on his experience.
ROBOTICS continued from page 1
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bing items, using a lever, climb stairs and even send a bowling ball into pins. “It was a challenge to figure out what worked and what didn’t work,” said eighth grader Greg Fernandez. “My robot could lift a lot of stuff and went really fast.” In a video of the competition, the students look excited and engaged—they jumped up and down as they watched their robots successfully compete a task and winced if something didn’t go as planned. The FLL’s approach is more than just building a functioning robot. Students must take on a research project—this year’s theme was seniors. The teams visited the Rancho Santa Fe Senior Center to learn about issues that seniors face and
then set to work creating a project that would provide a solution. One team created a pair of glasses for seniors who suffer from macular degeneration (vision issues)— the glasses had a sensor that would go off when the seniors got too close to a particular object. The glasses even came programmed with an emergency button. There is also a significant focus on core values and teamwork. The students must reflect and give a presentation on how they worked together. The students expressed their views on a project board: “After joining FLL, I’ve learned to work better with people,” wrote Aaron Lustig. “It was more about bonding with friends and learning about seniors’ problems than it was about winning and getting first place,” wrote Alex Lillian.
Rancho Santa Fe Review
January 3, 2013
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Members of one of two 6th grade Handbell Choirs: (L-R) Lea Palmer, Abby Gammel, Horizon Prep Middle School Christmas Musical Cast: 1st row (L-R) Kylie Preske, Madison Nathan Coons, Carson Wright, Samantha Preske and Tucker Hobbs. Hansmeyer, Natalie Paxton, Katelyn Butler; 2nd row (L-R) Alexis Dale, Isabella Landis, Hayden Center, Haley Kerwin and Kyra Hendrickson.
Horizon Prep 3rd grader Colton Misel surprises the modern-day middle school cast, while the other 3rd grade shepherds look on.
1st grade rapping angels: (L-R) Carissa Vanzant-Thomas, Julia Jablonski, Rebecca Bartolotta, Savanna Hobgood, and Macy Lake.
Horizon Prep Christmas Musical
Angels with attitude, rapping to “Behold the First Noel” (L-R) Tommy Carlander and Hunter Hajjar.
STORIES continued from page 2 really improved in the last year and her only weakness is backstroke, which she continues to work on. “I’m very pleased with her focus because a lot of seniors get ‘seniorities’ once they’ve signed with a school but I don’t see that with Kelsey,” Pease said. He said he feels Kelsey is capable of another strong showing in the 2013 section, her final year racing as a Falcon. The new and improved at Flower Hill Promenade and Del Mar Highlands Carmel Valley-area retail centers have undergone
The message of Christmas rings through loud and clear at Horizon Prep in its annual 1st - 8th grade Christmas musical “What Child is This?” Students donned the traditional characters of Christmas found around the manger scene — “Angels, Shepherds, and Wisemen” — with a modern twist of a group of middle schoolers whisked back in time. From handbell choirs to glockenspiels to a live band, the songs of Christmas delighted the standing-room-only audience. “There is no question about the true meaning of Christmas at Horizon Prep,” says Horizon Prep Middle School Vice Principal Dr. Jeffery Pratt, “the birth of Jesus brings salvation to the world!” Visit www.horizonprep.org
(L-R) Hannah Elliott, Jasmine Kennedy, Alyssa Pedersen, and Camille Johnson.
major facelifts and the new amenities keep on coming. Already people can enjoy the smell of cupcakes wafting out of the new Towne Bakery at Del Mar Highlands Town Center or grab a massive burrito lunch at Flower Hill Promenade’s new Chipotle or get the little one’s hair snipped at Pigtails & Crewcuts, but more changes lie ahead. Some were sad to see longtime spots like Chevy’s and Red Robin depart, but the center owners hope that their replacements will be well received. In Red Robin’s place at Del Mar Highlands, a new Mexican eatery called Casa Sol y Mar is coming in spring of 2013. The restaurant will come courtesy of
the Bazaar Del Mundo Restaurant Group, which owns Casa Guadalajara in Old Town and Casa de Bandini in Carlsbad. The new Whole Foods at Flower Hill is expected to open in January. And after Chevy’s closed, plans were announced to replace the restaurant with Cucina Enoteca, a concept from San Diego’s Cucina Urbana, featuring the same modern kitchen meets historic farmhouse concept with a wine shop. Burger Lounge is also coming to Flower Hill. The restaurant, with other locations in Hillcrest, La Jolla and the Gaslamp, features premium grass fed burgers and a quality menu that appeals to “health conscious diners, vegetarians and salad lovers.”
On the Web photo winner; January’s contest is ‘Best Wildlife Photo’
Congratulations to Steve Satkowski for winning this newspaper’s’s December photo contest. Steve will win a
prize for submitting the photo at left titled “Christmas Eve day in Zermatt, Switzerland.” Placing second was (above) “Santa in Marriott Marina” by Milena. A big thanks to everyone who participated in the contest. Our January photo contest is “Best Wildlife Photo.” Submit yours at DelMarTimes.net/contests and you will be automatically entered to receive a prize.
Rancho Santa Fe Review
January 3, 2013
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RSF Senior Scene: Individual balance screenings and recommendations Volunteers needed for regional Academic Decathlon
BY TERRIE LITWIN, RSF SENIOR CENTER, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR Preventing falls is one of the most challenging issues we face as we age. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) National Center for Injury Prevention and Control: •More than one-third of adults, age 65 years and older, fall each year. •Among older adults, falls are the leading cause of injury deaths and the most common cause of injuries and hospital admissions for trauma. •Older adults are hospitalized for fall-related injuries five times Terrie Litwin more often than they are for injuries from other causes. •Of those who fall, 20 to 30 percent suffer moderate to severe injuries that reduce mobility and independence, and increase the risk of premature death. On Friday, Jan. 11, from 2 p.m. – 4 p.m., the Senior Center is offering free individual balance screenings by licensed physical therapist, Jim Prussack. Following the personal balance screening test, participants will be given specific recommendations to improve balance and reduce the risk of falling. Please call the Senior Center at (858) 756-3041 to schedule your appointment. Senior Center Resource and Referral Program The array of service providers offering assistance to seniors can be overwhelming and confusing. The Rancho Santa Fe Senior Center is pleased to offer free senior resource information and referrals on an ongoing basis to seniors and their family members. Senior Center staff is
available Monday through Friday, from 9 a.m. until 5 p.m., to provide information regarding a wide variety of services available to seniors. Information provided includes categories such as homecare providers, retirement communities, skilled nursing facilities, medical alert devices, transportation resources, meal delivery services, home repair services, etc. Please call or visit the Senior Center if you, or someone you know, is in need of assistance. Best wishes from the RSF Senior Center for a happy, healthy New Year!
The San Diego County Office of Education is seeking adult volunteers to help with the San Diego County Academic Decathlon on Saturday, Feb. 2, at Olympian High School in Chula Vista. The Academic Decathlon enables academically-oriented students to enjoy the same sense of competition as athletes. Volunteers are needed for proctoring written tests and judging the students speeches. No previous experience necessary. Volunteers need only be objective. A thorough explanation of volunteer duties and written guidelines will be provided at the orientation session prior to the start of the competition. If interested in volunteering, call Nicole Shina at 858292-3850 or sign up online at www.sdcoe.net/ad.
Village Church Community Theater to hold auditions The Village Church Community Theater in Rancho Santa Fe will be holding auditions for the musical adaptation of “Helen Keller” on Jan. 7, from 6-8 p.m.. For more information and an appointment, visit www.villagechurchcommunitytheater.org ormargiew@villagechurch. org.
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Rancho Santa Fe Review
RSF residents join forces to help provide veterans scholarships for Archi’s Acres program BY KATHY DAY Sometimes a little networking goes a long way. Take a lunch meeting between Janet Lawless Christ of Coldwell Banker Previews International and Joe Allis, owner of Porshe of San Diego. Just a day after their get-toknow-you meal at The Inn at Rancho Santa Fe she reached out to him to help three active duty service members. Last spring she was watching NBC Evening News with Brian Williams’ Friday “Making A Difference” segment. It featured a program called Archi’s Acres, which helps vets transition into civilian life by teaching them about organic farming through their Veterans Sustainable Agriculture Program (VSAT). Colin and Karen Archipley founded the program in 2007 on their farm in the hills above Escondido while he was still an active duty Marine Corps rifleman. Where a rundown avocado grove sat when they bought the farm, they now grow basil, kale, avocados and other produce for local markets while teaching others a skill for their future. It was their vision to assist vets that caught Christ’s ear. “When I heard it was in Escondido, I nearly fell off my chair,” she said. “I called them on Monday morning and was stunned that someone — Karen — answered the phone.” After talking to Karen Archipley, she drove up to the farm. “My site visit was overwhelming,” the longtime Rancho Santa Fe resident said. While Christ was there she learned that service members cannot use the GI Bill to cover VSAT’s $4,500 tuition. Many require assistance for the program’s 270 hours of training, which includes job readiness instruction. After her visit, Christ pledged to help in whatever way she could. In October, she learned about three of the students whose scholarships had fallen through due to
some red tape. “They were nearly through the program but would not have been able to graduate or get their certification,” she said. “In a different place and time I would have written the check myself.” But since she couldn’t afford the $13,500, she began calling her philanthropic friends but didn’t have much luck. And then she had a thought. She had “a nice lunch” with Allis on Oct. 25 and figured it was worth a try to reach out to him. The next day, she thought about calling him, but texted him instead with a message if he wasn’t on a plane to call her. Allis, a Rancho Santa Fe resident who is the proprietor of the Miramar Road Porsche dealership, is a recently transplanted New Yorker whose family has yet to join him here. So trips back are a regular part of his routine. (In fact, he was heading East for Christmas and then back to San Diego, only to return to New York for New Year’s celebrations.) Although he wasn’t on the plane when Christ texted, he was at the airport – heading home the same weekend as Super Storm Sandy approached. He texted back to call him. “I gave him the fastest description and asked if he could match my funds,” she said. Talking on Dec. 21 about that day, he said told her “I wanted to be part of it. I didn’t care how much it cost. I just told her to tell me the scope and I’ll get right on it.” The following Monday as she was meeting with her managing broker “and throwing myself on him” in hopes that he would contribute, she noticed Allis was calling. “He said, ‘OK , we’re in. We’re all in,’” Christ said, recalling that she figured he would give $1,000. Instead, Allis had talked to his partners, George Athan of Audi San Diego and Jason
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Puga of Land Rover San Diego, and they came up with the full $13,500. But it wasn’t until a reception honoring the grads and the donors on Dec. 11 where Allis had a chance to meet Catherine Llanas, Matt Figurski and Steve Brown – the VSAT grads they had helped – that he really learned about Archi’s Acres. “It’s just amazing,” Allis said, talking enthusiastically about the effort to engage the vets in the sustainable agriculture program. “I so much want to get involved. There’s almost not enough circuitry in my brain not to.”
But beyond giving scholarships, he added, he and his partners are exploring ways to bring their entrepreneurial background to the table. Logisitics, distribution and supply chains along with profit-and-loss statements and marketing are all part of the car business, he said. “That’s background they don’t have and it’s all that the three of us do.” Just how they’ll be involved has yet to be determined. They may form a board but Allis said they want to be hands on, too. “If I can curtail their losses, especially for these guys and gals who have given so much for their country, I want to do what I can,” he added. Christ, who has supported a number of local causes and is heavily involved in the Rancho Santa Fe community, said she’s never directly supported a veterans’ cause in the past, although when she was part of the RSF Women’s Fund they backed efforts for the military. “I can’t believe we’ve been at war for 10 years,” she said. “I can’t believe these are all volunteers who have been fighting for me.” Now, she added, she’s found a way to give back and plans to do more for Archi’s Acres. Learn more about Archi’s Acres at www.archisacres.com
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Grauer School hosts film screening of Sundance Film Festival documentary ‘Miss Representation’
Families invited to Admissions Open House event at Pacific Ridge School Jan. 12
The Grauer School will host the film screening and post-film discussion of “Miss Representation” on Thursday, Jan. 17, at 6 p.m. in the Great Hall on the school campus located at 1500 S. El Camino Real in Encinitas. Writtten and directed by Jennifer Siebel Newsom, the 90-minute inspiring documentary priemered at the 2011 Sundance Film Festival and reveals how all forms of media (television, feature films and the internet) contribute to the under-representation of women in American leadership positions and an over-emphasis on youth and beauty. Stories from teenage girls and compelling interviews with Condolezza Rice, Nancy Pelosi, and Katic Couric, among many others, disclose startling statistics that challenges the media’s misleading portrayals of women and girls. The film (which aired on the Oprah Winfrey network in October 2011) imparts the message that in an ever-increasing media-driven world, teenage girls are being tempted to adopt a biased perspective, one which undermines their intellegence and substantive accomplishments. This phenomena may lead to barriers for women who aspire to achieve leadership positions and instead, trivializes the role of women in general. The Grauer Film Series event is free and open to the public; the film is appropriate for children age 13 and older. For details, visit http://www.missrepresentation.org/the-film/, or email Sally Grauer regarding questions, sallygrauer@grauerschool.com, or call 760-9446777.
Pacific Ridge School, a nonprofit, independent middle and high school (grades seven through 12) located in North County, San Diego, invites Rancho Santa Fe families to attend its winter Admissions Open House event for the 2013-2014 academic year. The Open House will take families through a program of faculty presentations that describe Pacific Ridge’s best practices of traditional and innovative education. In addition, the Open House event will allow families to take campus tours, including visits to seminar-style classrooms designed for 15 students, arts studios, science labs and the school’s new, energy-efficient 35,236 sq. foot Athletic Center. The Open House will be offered on Saturday, Jan. 12, from 1 to 4 p.m. for both Middle and Upper School family applicants. Leading up to the Admissions Open House, Rancho Santa Fe families may begin the application process by completing an inquiry form on the Pacific Ridge School website, or by contacting the Admissions Office at admissions@pacificridge.org or (760) 579-4901. Upon receiving the request, the school will provide a view book and other informational materials. Applications for the 2013-2014 academic year are available and may be downloaded or completed online. Pacific Ridge School welcomes inquiries from Rancho Santa Fe families interested in learning more about student life at Pacific Ridge. Families may RSVP to attend the Open House event by phone at (760) 579-4901 or by email atadmissions@pacificridge.org. For more information about Pacific Ridge School, visit http://www.pacificridge.org.
The PettyBreakers to play benefit concert Jan. 6 at Belly Up for Superstorm Sandy victims A benefit for the victims of Superstorm Sandy, featuring The PettyBreakers and very special guests, will take place Sunday, Jan. 6, at the Belly Up Tavern in Solana Beach. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. with the show beginning at 7 p.m. The event will include both a silent and live auction along with a three-hour concert by “The PettyBreakers,” a well-known tribute band to Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers. “We wanted to do something to help those who have lost their homes and livelihood due to Sandy. This is something we’ve wanted to do since Sandy hit the East Coast, so now we’re gearing up and ready to rock!” says Ozzie Mancinelli, who fronts the band. We have called on some of our musician friends to come out and join us to raise money for the Red Cross’ efforts and it’s shaping up to be a great evening.” Slated to appear are Jesse Valenzuela of the Gin Blossoms, Eve Selis, Keith Scott (guitarist for Bryan Adams) and bassist Ron Blair from the Heartbreakers will be joining the band
North Coast Rep to present ‘Educating Rita’ University lecturer Frank needs to earn some extra money, so he agrees to tutor Rita, a brash, earthy hairdresser with a recently discovered passion for higher education. The result is a Pygmalion-style comedy filled with self-discoveries, temptation, and heartfelt humanity that tackles personal and social issues with insight and grace. “Educating Rita” previews at 8 p.m., Jan. 9-11, opens Jan. 12-Feb. 3. North Coast Repertory Theatre, 987 Lomas Santa Fe Drive, Solana Beach. Tickets: From $34. (858) 481-1055. northcoastrep.org onstage for several songs. “We are really thrilled to have a member of the original Heartbreakers playing with us on this gig and it’s a tribute to all these guys that are willing to help us raise money for this cause,” notes PettyBreakers guitarist and Solana Beach resident John McAllister. Also performing will be noted guitarist Joe Bonamassa. General admission tickets are on sale now for $25. Tickets purchased at the door will be $27 with a few preferred seats available for $40. One hundred percent of the proceeds will donated to the Red Cross. For more information: 858-481-8140: www.bellyuptavern.com. The Belly Up is located at 143 S. Cedros Avenue, Solana Beach, 92075.
Under Armour Holiday Classic Torrey Pines High School hosted its 23rd annual boys prep Under Armour Holiday Classic Basketball Tournament presented by the Lucky Duck Foundation Dec. 26-29. Tournaments were held in five divisions, with games played at various locations. Teams from the United States and British Columbia, Canada were in attendance. Visit www.theholidayclassic.org. Photos/Jon Clark
On this page: Torrey Pines HS Falcons opening day at the Holiday Classic. TPHS won 47-38 over Mater Dei HS Crusaders.
(Top center and right photos) Torrey Pines HS Falcon Brandon Cyrus up for the ball; 0 Torrey Pines HS Falcon Dominic Hovasse doubled team passes the ball; (Bottom photos, l-r) Torrey Pines HS Falcon Sam Worman on the move; Torrey Pines HS Falcon Brandon Cyrus; Torrey Pines HS Falcon
Rancho Santa Fe Review
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Rancho Santa Fe Review
2012 Year in Review: RSF Society Benefit for Navy families
John Plewes, left, mingles with T. Boone Pickens and Madeleine Pickens, who hosted a fundraiser for the Naval Special Warfare Family Foundation at the Del Mar Country Club on March 24. PHOTO: JON CLARK
‘Toast Your Imagination’
“Toast Your Imagination — A Celebration of Tabletops” was the title of the RSF Community Center’s Spring Luncheon held recently at The Inn at Rancho Santa Fe. The annual event promotes a day of creativity and fun as groups of friends decorate their tables with exquisite designs, original arrangements and fanciful themes. (Above, l-r) Shaunna Kahn, Leslie DeGoler, Genta Luddy, Koki Reasons, “Adam,” Roni McGuire, Lila Jarvis. PHOTO: JON CLARK
R. Roger Rowe School Latin Festival
Bow Tie & Pearls (Above) Broadway veteran and Emmy Award-winning actress Lucie Arnaz sang at the “Bow Tie & Pearls” gala celebrating North Coast Repertory Theatre’s 30th anniversary. The event was held April 22 at the Rancho Santa Fe Garden Club. (Above) Honorary Event Chairs Bertrand and Denise Hug with Lucie Arnaz (center). Photo/Jon Clark
R. Roger Rowe School held its second annual Latin Festival on March 29 in the school’s Performing Arts Center. The event was hosted by the RSF Education Foundation. The purpose of the event is to recognize and celebrate Latin culture as an integral part of the school community. (Right) RiAnna, Sarah, Maria, Natalie and Alanna at the festival. Photo/Jon Clark
‘Rambling thru the Ranch’
Tee It Up For Foster Teens (Right) Debby Syverson, Honorary Event Chair Quentin Jammer and James Monroe at the “Tee It Up For Foster Teens” 8th annual golf tournament, dinner and auction held April 23 at The Santaluz Club. The tournament provides much-needed funds for the foster teens of San Pasqual Academy. Photo/Jon Clark
Carol Kumlin of C. Kumlin Designs and Kimberly Schnell with Chate, Jackie and Sarah try on some hats during the Rancho Santa Fe Garden Club’s ‘Rambling thru the Ranch’ event May 5. PHOTO: ROB MCKENZIE
Rancho Santa Fe Review
January 3, 2013
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His father and nature inspire former lifeguard’s first book A deep connection to nature and the desire to give a loving tribute to his father led local resident Sebastian Slovin to write and publish a picture book, “The Adventures of Enu: The Tale of the Giant Whale.” Created in collaboration with Blaze Syka, who designed the vibrant pen-and-ink illustrations, the work is a modernday fable. Combining poetic language with a simple story line, the book tells of a young boy’s adventure as he meets Enu, a shape changer, who appears in several forms from a hummingbird to a whale, and how he teaches the boy that everything in nature is connected. The book has an appeal to readers of all ages and teaches others to “live in the moment,” said Slovin, whose yoga business spreads that same message. This is Slovin’s first endeavor in publishing. The idea for the book’s message percolated in his imagination for many years. It is
Sebastian Slovin based on a story that was told to him by his father who passed away, under tragic circumstances, when Slovin was 6 years old. His father was also the inspiration for the main character in the book. “A lot of my really good memories of my dad are being out on the ocean or in nature with him,” Slovin explained.
A South African native, who lived in La Jolla, his father was an athletic swimmer and after he died the family spread his ashes in the ocean at La Jolla Cove. “From that time on I looked at nature as part of my family,” said Slovin, who grew up part-time in Australia and South Africa, but mostly in La Jolla. Slovin and his younger sister were raised solely by his mother. “She was a single parent following a really bad situation but she raised us very well. She is my hero,” he said. As a teen Slovin discovered yoga to aid his flexibility for improved competitive surfing. He also discovered the philosophical and mental aspects of yoga which today he weaves into the activities he offers through his business, Nature Unplugged. These are guided adventures that allow his clients to experience the richness of the natural world. “I’m interested in encouraging people to find a spiritual connection in
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whatever they are doing, whether it’s walking or surfing, biking or yoga. You don’t have to go somewhere far away to have a big adventure,” said Slovin. Slovin has traveled extensively and surfed com-
petitively around the world, but three years ago he sustained a debilitating hip injury that prevented him from doing any rigorous sports. “I found myself hanging out in San Dieguito Park in Solana Beach and that’s where the idea for the book all came together. I was forced to just sit, so the park became my inspiration.” Both Syka and Slovin are former Del Mar lifeguards. “That’s where we met and connected. He’s a wonderfully talented artist. It was a natural collaboration. I’d sketch out my ideas and he perfected them,” said Slovin. Syka is a recent graduate of Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo, and now resides in Morro Bay. A book launch party was held in Del Mar on Dec. 21 attended by Del Mar lifeguards. Slovin plans to speak at local schools and to local organizations to spread his message of respecting and embracing nature. “The Adventures of Enu: The Tale of the Giant Whale” [Nature Unplugged, 2012] is available for sale both on amazon.com or from http://natureunplugged.com
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January 3, 2013
Rancho Santa Fe Review
2012 Year in Review: RSF Society
Opening Day for RSF Little League
RSF Education Foundation thanks donors
Pamela Dirkes, Helle Brandrup, Leslie DeGoler and Jennifer Davis, above, and Tony Shahri and Charles Mauro, right, don festive gear Feb. 25 for the Rancho Santa Fe Education Foundation’s Mardi Grasthemed bash recognizing Scholars’ Circle-level donors. The event was held at Laura Barry’s RSF home.
Above, Players strut their stuff in the RSF Village during the March 11 Parade of Teams, Opening Day event for Rancho Santa Fe Little League. Right, former MLB pitcher Jack McDowell was the guest speaker. PHOTOS: JON CLARK
PHOTOS: JON CLARK
Celebrity Golf Classic
‘A Night with Dennis Miller’
Guests enjoyed an evening of comedy and fundraising at the Rancho Santa Fe Unit of Rady Children’s Hospital Auxiliary’s 2012 gala benefit held March 3 at The Grand Del Mar. The event featured fabulous cuisine, a silent/live auction, the comedy of Dennis Miller, and dancing until midnight — all in support of Rady Children’s Hospital, Peckham Center for Cancer and Blood Disorders. (Above) The Gala Committee of The Rancho Santa Fe Unit of Rady Children’s Hospital Auxiliary: (L-R) Tiffany Catledge, Gabrielle Oratz, Kimberly King, Cindy Leonard, Gina Jordan, Michele Stephens, Shaunna Kahn (Gala Chair), Ally Wise Harney, Sandra den Uijl, Roni McGuire, Karen Ventura, Leslie DeGoler, Lesa Thode. Photos/Jon Clark
Former San Diego Charger Leslie O’Neal takes a swing at Fresh Start Surgical Gifts’ 20th annual Celebrity Golf Classic on March 19 at Morgan Run Club & Resort. PHOTO: JON CLARK
Rancho Santa Fe Review
January 3, 2013
‘Club 92067’ gala in RSF
2012 Year in Review: RSF Society ‘A Night at the Royal Ascot’
The RSF Community Center’s annual Gala rocked the house at The Inn at Rancho Santa Fe on May 12. Guests arrived dressed for the occasion and there were sightings of “Elton John,” “Nicki Minaj,” “Kurt Cobain,” and many other look-alikes at the rock-glam event titled “Club 92067.” Funds raised from the gala will support the center’s ongoing programs for children, adults and families. (Above) Cheryl and Tom Giustiniano, Kim Smart. Photos/Rob McKenzie
Dazzling Lip Sync Show
Supporters of Kids Korps USA enjoyed a dazzling evening at the organization’s annual Superstar Gala, “A Night at the Royal Ascot,” on April 28 at the Del Mar Country Club. Above: Andrea Carrier, Connie McNally, Dana Falk and Jensine Bard. Left: Greeters Julia, Olivia, Jack and Alex. PHOTOS: JON CLARK
RSF School Field Day Fun
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he Rancho Santa Fe Community Center held its annual Family Lip Sync Show on May 18, showcasing local talent and No. 1 hits of the last 30 years. (Above) Darby, Isabella, Gabriella, Brooke and Mia are ready to perform. PHOTOS: JON CLARK
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. Roger Rowe School students enjoyed another fun-filled Field Day on May 25. Students took part in hurdles, obstacle courses, jumping and throwing events, along with gunnysack races and three-legged partner races. Field Day recognizes students in the area of athletics and gives the opportunity for team play, healthy competition and good outdoor recreation as part of the complete physical education program. (Top) Natalie, Avery, Nina, Cameron. PHOTOS: JON CLARK
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Fabulous Fashions
he 2012 Wine, Women & Shoes fundraiser for Voicas Damas de Fairbanks hosted a Fashion Show es for Children was held on May 18 at the Fairbanks Ranch Country May 12 at the RSF estate of PaClub. The event included the yearly philantricia Brutten. (Above) Kiki thropic summary and introduction of May Charity Coates and Lamar Rutherford. Angels Depot, a raffle, boutiques and more. Photo/ Photo/Rob McKenzie Jon Clark
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LAWSUIT continued from page 1 sages requesting comment as of press-time. An attorney who is representing the resort in the lawsuit, Dennis Crovella, declined to comment. Mendez said that in the past, she has called the Sheriff’s Department and complained about the noise, but was told deputies could not take action unless she had a court order. Now that a preliminary injunction has been granted, she believes deputies will have the legal authority to shut down a noisy event. In their lawsuit and in interviews, the Mendezes contend that the resort is violating both county noise ordinances and the resort’s major use permit. The couple has also submitted a declaration by an acoustics expert, who said he had conducted several sound tests on their property and determined that noise generated by the resort exceeded legal limits. In her own declaration for the court, Mendez detailed a number of events held at the resort in September and October that she claims generated excessive noise. At one event, a fund-
Rancho Santa Fe Review raiser held on Oct. 13, the band Boys II Men performed. “This musical group was extremely loud and I could clearly hear them from my property,” said Mendez’ declaration. The couple also submitted declarations from two neighbors, Bruce Bartlett and Rick Heymann, who said that noise from the resort has also disturbed them. “The noise generated from the resort is so loud that it is like my wife and I live next to a party house, frat house, rock and roll concert venue, auction house, or outdoor reception hall,” said Heymann in his declaration. In an interview for a previous article, Doug Carlson, managing partner for the resort, acknowledged receiving noise complaints from neighbors, and said the resort was taking steps to reduce noise coming from its property. Those measures included hiring an engineering firm to design a sound system that wouldn’t disturb neighbors. But Mendez said those efforts apparently haven’t worked, based on the noise she and her family have heard in recent months. The resort opened in
1989 and was purchased in 2010 by a group led by Jeff and Hal Jacobs, former hightech executives, and general partners Doug Carlson and Jeffrey Essakow. The resort recently re-opened after undergoing a $30 million renovation. A trial on the lawsuit, when the Mendezes will seek a permanent injunction along with monetary damages, is set for next summer.
STATE continued from page 1 by the age of 16. HEALTH For parents who decide not to have their children vaccinated, they’ll need a signed waiver from a doctor verifying that they were warned of risks and benefits associated with opting out of vaccinations before registering their children for school. HOUSING Homeowners on the brink of losing their homes gained stronger protections, with state legislators banning banks from practicing “dual tracking”—renegotiating mortgage payments with struggling homeowners while simultaneously pursu-
ing foreclosure against the homeowner. PARTY BUSES California will hold party bus operators to the same standards as limousine drivers, making them legally responsible for drinking by underage passengers. The law is named for Brett Studebaker, a 19-year-old from San Mateo who died in 2010 after drinking on a party bus and crashing his own vehicle while driving home later. PRISONS Juveniles sentenced to lifetime prison stints in California have a chance of release after serving 25 years if they show remorse and spend time in rehabilitation programs. Supporters of the bill argued that the U.S. is the only country in the world that sentences teenagers to life in prison without the possibility of parole. GUN RIGHTS A new bill outlaws openly carrying shotguns and rifles on the streets and in the malls of California cities. A similar law last year banned the open carrying of handguns. The new bill does not apply to hunters, law enforcement personnel and others with specified licenses.
CHILD ABUSE REPORTING California coaches and administrators in K-12 schools, as well as higher education employees who have regular contact with children, will be required to report suspected child sexual abuse. BROKEN PARKING METERS SB 1388 allows motorists to park at broken meters (up to the posted time limit) without fear of getting a ticket unless the local jurisdiction provides visible and adequate notice of any prohibitions at parking locations. ELECTRONIC DEVICES AB 1536 clarifies existing law by allowing drivers to dictate, send, or listen to text-based communications while driving as long as they do so using technology specifically designed and configured to allow fully voiceoperated, hands-free operation. Drivers under age 18 are still prohibited from using any electronic device while driving. LICENSE PLATES AB 2489 prohibits a person from operating a vehicle with a product or device
that obscures -- or is intended to obscure -- the reading or recognition of a license plate by sight or use of an electronic device (like a toll or red-light camera). The new law also prohibits a person from erasing, painting over, or altering a license plate to avoid visual or electronic capture of the license plate or its characters. EXPRESS LANES AB 2405 exempts vehicles with special state-issued green and white stickers (all electric, natural gas, and “plug-in” hybrid cars) from toll charges that single-occupant vehicles pay to access express or HOT (high occupancy toll) lanes. This article was compiled from wire services and online sources.
Robin Henkel to perform at Zel’s Del Mar Jan. 12, 26 Robin Henkel, awardwinning guitarist/singer, will perform solo blues and jazz at Zel’s Del Mar on Jan. 12 and 26, from 8-10 p.m. Zel’s Del Mar is located at 1247 Camino Del Mar, Del Mar; (858) 755-0076.
Rancho Santa Fe Review
January 3, 2013
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Rancho Santa Fe Review
Rancho Education Matters/Opinion Santa Fe A correction and a call for compromise Review 3702 Via de la Valle Suite 202W Del Mar, CA 92014 858-756-1403
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LETTERS POLICY Topical letters to the editor are encouraged and we make an effort to print them all. Letters are limited to 200 words or less and submissions are limited to one every twoweeks per author. Submissions must include a full name, address, e-mail address (if available) and a telephone number for verification purposes. We do not publish anonymous letters. Contact the editor for more information about submitting a guest editorial piece, called Community View, at 400 words maximum. We reserve the right to edit for taste, clarity, length and to avoid libel. E-mailed submissions are preferred to editor@rsfreview.com. Letters may also be mailed or delivered to565 Pearl St., Ste. 300, La Jolla, or faxed to (858) 459-5250. LETTERSPOLICY
BY MARSHA SUTTON M y Dec. 20, 2012 column titled “Twenty Marsha Sutton d e a d children have to matter” – about the Newtown tragedy and the renewed debate over gun control – elicited reactions across the spectrum that reminded me how far apart we are in our views on the proliferation of guns. Yet I also found reasons to be hopeful. Everyone without exception wants kids to be safe at school. And almost everyone who wrote in agreed that sensible gun laws consistent from state to state (depending upon one’s definition of “sensible”) need to be combined with better and faster treatment of the mentally ill. Violent movies and video games are also contributing factors, and most said ways to protect schoolchildren should be considered. Clearly, several approaches are required. Gun control alone won’t do it. Actually, nothing will do it completely, and that’s a fact. But steps can be taken to reduce these horrific shootings, and we can make progress if we stop thinking they can be eliminated altogether. Thanks to knowledgeable readers who clearly know a great deal more about guns than I do, I learned that gun laws in California have been tightened since I last visited the local gun show (which admittedly was a while ago and I’m still traumatized by the memory). In my column, I wrote that it was easy to buy guns of all sorts at gun shows, “immediately, with little if any waiting period.” Actually, there is a 10day waiting period, even for gun show purchases, which must be made through a licensed dealer, according to the Calif. Dept. of Justice Office of the Attorney General. However, gun shows are still frightening exhibitions of killing machines, no matter how long buyers have to wait to receive their weapons. And rules are not so stringent in other states. According to the Campaign to Close the Gun Show Loophole, about 40 percent of the 5,000 gun shows across the country each year allow unlicensed sellers to sell guns without conducting a background check: “Although 17 states have taken action to partially or completely close this loophole, 33 states have not.” So the overarching point of my previous column, that guns are far too easy to access, stands.
Some would repeal the Second Amendment. Others say all guns and all kinds of ammunition should be legal. Two extremes. Is there no place to come together in the middle and reach compromise? Most certainly. Despite what some have charged, gun control supporters are not trying to “punish” citizens by taking away their constitutionally guaranteed rights. In fact, even many gun advocates support more responsible ownership and believe there are reasonable limits that should be placed on the right to own firearms, given how this right has been abused by criminals. Gun owners are generally law-abiding citizens who also want, obviously, these murderous rampages to stop. After all, shootings give gun owners a bad name. So we are in agreement on that for certain. This, at least, is a place to start. In the world of public education and union/management negotiations, this sounds very much like interest-based bargaining, when both sides identify areas of common interest instead of first putting forth each side’s polarizing positions. We agree for the need to treat violent, mentally unstable youth, uncover the causes of this condition, and prevent them from taking out their internal rage on innocent citizens. And many on both sides believe that protecting schoolchildren from future tragedies may mean locked gates, bullet-proof windows, electronic lockdown mechanisms, metal detectors and backpack checks. But none of this will help until we acknowledge that our country’s obsession with guns and firepower, easy access, and lack of proper training for novices, have contributed mightily to the rise in random mass killings of innocent citizens. Guns are clearly a part of the problem. How big a part of the problem is the primary point of disagreement. And that’s positive because it means there’s room for dialogue. In several exchanges with gun owners, who were initially angry with me for advocating tighter gun control, it was encouraging to find some agreement. One writer said California’s gun laws are sensible and have had an impact on gun safety and gun violence. “There are states with no waiting period and no magazine size regulations,” he wrote. “All states need to be brought up to a uniform standard, and that standard should be something similar to California law.” Another gun owner, after
listing many reasons why gun control proposals are unworkable and when applied haven’t really had an impact, wrote, “I am in favor of mandatory firearm training for citizens who wish to purchase a gun, along with background checks at every pipeline a gun can be acquired.” He also objected to “the piecemeal, individual state requirements which are confusing, cumbersome, and promote illegal activity to circumvent certain states’ laws.” Polarizing positions One lawyer weighed in on the issue from a constitutional perspective, referring the first line of the Second Amendment: “A well-regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free state...” “The founders were not concerned so much about an individual’s right to a private arsenal, as an individual’s responsibility to participate in collective national defense, should the government fail in that defense,” he said, offering an interesting interpretation on intent. “It is notable but littleknown that the founders considered putting into the Constitution, right next to the Second Amendment, a related amendment which would have given individuals the right not to bear arms – that is, to be conscientious objectors, pacifists. This, obviously, is not in the Constitution, but its consideration does shed light on how the framers were thinking.” A national conversation about the intent of the Second Amendment is important but will be unproductive if we all settle comfortably into our polarized positions and refuse to listen to one another. With mass media, everyone can find someone out there who agrees with their views, and it feels good to have our positions validated in this way. But the more we are told we are right, the less inclined we are to open our minds to the ideas of others. It’s of little value to become locked into intransigence, surrounded by those who think alike. This has contributed to the decline in civil dialogue, a tremendous barrier to progress. This applies not just to gun control but to stubborn inflexibility on everything from private property rights up to the national fiscal cliff debate. We have to give up getting our way 100 percent of the time. And respectful disagreement that challenges us to think outside the familiar is integral to accomplishing anything constructive. I still don’t understand why citizens should have the right to own military-style assault weapons or armor-pierc-
ing bullets, or why some consider it fun to hunt and shoot animals. But I do respect the right of lawful citizens to buy guns, as long as they respect the need to be responsible gun owners. And nearly all of them do. In the wake of Newtown, we must work together on several fronts at once: sensible gun control laws at the federal level, better mental health treatment, ending the glorification of violence in the media, creating safer schools to protect against senseless attacks, and greater awareness of the compassion and love we all share for America’s children. And keeping compromise and respect a fundamental part of any discussion. Marsha Sutton can be reached at SuttComm@san.rr.com.
To Your Health: Keep Your New Year’s Fitness Resolutions BY ANDREA KRAKOWER, SCRIPPS HEALTH Lose weight. Quit smoking. Spend an hour at the gym every day. Find a new job. Resolutions like these are just a few of the thousands being made across the country as 2013 rolls in. While they’re made with the best of intentions, many of them fall by the wayside within months or even weeks of New Year’s Day. There are a number of reasons why many people find it so difficult to stick to New Year’s Resolutions. Here are some of the most common obstacles, and tips to overcome them. Setting unrealistic expectations. You may truly want to spend an hour a day at the gym, but if you barely have time to take the kids to school, go to work, make dinner and tuck everyone in, finding that extra hour every day may be nearly impossible. Instead, set more realistic goals that are easier to achieve. Maybe you can purchase workout equipment to use at home while the kids do homework or after they go to bed. Perhaps you could fit in several shorter workouts during the day between your other responsibilities. Make a list of all possible options, and you may find one that is actually do-able. Making too many resolutions. This, too, can lead to failure. Instead of getting more exercise, learning to cook, saving money and spending more time with your family, pick one or two goals to focus on. Otherwise, you may just be overwhelming yourself, and you won’t achieve any of them. Making resolutions that are too broad. Similarly, some resolutions become overwhelming simply because they are so broad. Finding a new job, for example, is a much more complicated task than something like skipping dessert or taking a 30-minute walk every evening. Moreover, this type of goal is also daunting because it isn’t completely in your control – even if you make every effort to find a new job, factors such as the economy, the job market and the qualifications of other applicants can all influence the outcome. Instead, break broad goals down into measurable steps. If your goal is a new job, vow to update your resume, join a networking group and learn to use social media to market yourself. These are all measurable, achievable goals that will give you a sense of accomplishment rather than frustration. Not having a plan. If you’re resolving to spend less money eating out, decide how you can achieve that before New Year’s Day. Will you set a weekly or monthly limit on how often you dine out? Will you buy a cookbook, so that you can cook meals at home more often? Will you prepare meals advance, so you don’t realize at the last minute that you are out of food? Can your family members help with planning, shopping and cooking? When you know how your will achieve your goal, you are one step closer to doing it. Going it alone. If your resolutions may affect other people, let them know what you plan to do in advance and ask for their support. For example, if you want to lose weight, ask others not to tempt you with desserts and junk foods. Recruit a friend to watch the kids while you go for a run. Spend more time with people who support your efforts and celebrate your achievements, and avoid those who don’t. It also helps to associate with people whose lifestyles already reflect the changes that you are trying to make. Expecting perfection. Remember that change is a process, and it can be challenging. Give yourself permission to be imperfect. If you miss a workout or blow the job interview, don’t mentally beat yourself up or give up on your goal. Earn from your mistakes, think about how you can do better next time, and move on. And when you do succeed, reward yourself. Andrea Krakower is the manager of wellness at Scripps Health. “To Your Health” is brought to you by the physicians and staff of Scripps. For more information or to make an appointment, please call 1-800-SCRIPPS.
Rancho Santa Fe Review
January 3, 2013
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Encinitas | $1,749,000
Del Mar Beach Bach. Amazing one of a kind 1,911 appx sf property with breathtaking views of Powerhouse Park and whitewater surf. 120029536 858.756.6900
Stylish & urban lifestyle, Pacific Station. Close to beach. Former model 2 br, 2.5 ba. Refined spacious int. Glamorous architectural details. 120049529 858.756.6900
Exquisite masterpiece 4 br, 4.5 ba on Encinitas Ranch Golf Course. Gated Quail Ridge community. Breathtaking ocean & golf course views. 5,000 appx sf. 120044069 858.756.6900
Encinitas | $3,995,000
Olivenhain | $4,995,000-5,495,000
Poway | $8,995,000
Living on the oceanfront. 3 br, 3 ba. Priv stairs to beach, 1,000 appx sf oceanfront deck. Completely renovated/redesigned by architect Steve Adams. 120058235 858.756.6900
Majestic trophy estate on appx 2.04 private acres with panoramic back country views. 9,000 est appx sf main residence. Liv and din rms, 5 br suites. 120053006 760.436.0143
Mediterranean 5 br, 7.5 ba, 11,191 appx sf European manor w/modern technology. Hills of Poway in Heritage Golf Estates. Wood beams, red stone home. 120039029 858.756.6900
Rancho Santa Fe | $1,300,000
Rancho Santa Fe | $1,595,000
Rancho Santa Fe | $2,195,000
3 br, 3.5 ba, private balconies & views of Del Mar Country Club. Den, living room with floor-to-ceiling windows, formal dining room, breakfast room. 120034447 858.756.4481
Buildable lot near horse trails, stables. Current house is habitable while plans are approved. 2 stall barn and corral usable with a little TLC. 120051214 858.756.4481
Appx 2+ acres of landscaped grounds. 4 br, loft, play/exercise rm and fam rm. open-beam ceilings, large skylights and wood floors. Det guest house. 120043020 858.756.4481
Santaluz | $3,195,000
Mission Beach | $5,950,000
Solana Beach | $1,625,000
Custom Hacienda-inspired 5 br, 6.5 ba, 7,000 appx sf estate. Two distinct casitas w/ seperate entrances. Plank hdwd floor, travertine, wine cellar. 120045106 858.756.4481
Oceanfront 4 br, 4.5 ba Cape Cod beach house. Custom home featuring an elegant great room/dining room opening to fabulous kitchen with French tile. 120034392 858.756.6900
Ideal pastoral locale. Super private setting but close to Flower Hill, Lomas Santa Fe GC & more. 5 br, 3 ba. Master plus br or optional ofc down. 120042785 858.756.4481
To view more Coldwell Banker listings go to www.CaliforniaMoves.com/RanchoSantaFe Like us on Facebook www.facebook.com/cbrsf
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©2012 Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Coldwell Banker® and Coldwell Banker Previews International® are registered trademarks licensed to Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. An Equal Opportunity Company. Equal Housing Opportunity. Owned And Operated By NRT LLC. Broker does not guarantee the accuracy of square footage, lot size or other information concerning the condition or features of property provided by seller or obtained from public records or other sources, and the buyer is advised to independently verify the accuracy of that information through personal inspection and with appropriate professionals. If your property is currently listed for sale, this is not intended as a solicitation. We are happy to work and cooperate with other brokers fully.
24
January 3, 2013
Rancho Santa Fe Review
A Great Time to Buy in Rancho Santa Fe
Secluded Country Living
ČšČšČ˛ÉƒČžČşČżČ¸ Č?ɀɆɃ Č™ČśČľÉƒÉ€É€Čž ÉˆČşÉ…Čš Č?ɆȽȽ ȞɆȜɄɅ Č&#x;ɀɆɄȜ Çľ ȞɀȽȡ ČšÉ€É†ÉƒÉ„Čś ČČşČśÉˆÉ„ ČœČżČľ ČžÉƒČ˛ČşČż ȤȜɄɂɆȺɅȜ ȲȿȾ ȌȲȟ Č?Č˝É€É€ÉƒČşČżČ¸ ČœÉ‰É É€É„ČśČľ ȎɀɀȾ ȲȿȾ șɀɉȜȾ șȜȲȞ ȚȜȺȽȺȿȸɄ Çľ ȚɀɇȜȿȲȿɅ Č˜Č´ÉƒČśÉ„
$ ,665,000
Stunning Westside Estate
ČœÉ‰É‚É†ČşÉ„ČşÉ…Čś Č?ȺɇȜ Č™ČśČľÉƒÉ€É€Čž ȪȺȿȸȽȜ ȽȜɇȜȽ ȊȜɄȺȾȜȿȴȜ Çľ Č?ɆȽȽ ȞɆȜɄɅ Č&#x;ɀɆɄȜ ȌȡȡȺȴȜ ČœÉ‰ČśÉƒČ´ČşÉ„Čś ȊɀɀȞ Č?ɆȽȽ ČŤČšČśČ˛É…ÉƒČś Č™ČşČ˝Č˝ČşČ˛ÉƒČľ ȞȲȞȜ ȊɀɀȞ ČœÉ ČşČ´É†ÉƒČśČ˛Čż ȢȺɅȴȚȜȿ Çľ ȌɆɅɄȺȾȜ ȣȺɇȺȿȸ ȊɀɀȞ Çľ ČŠČśÉ„É€ÉƒÉ… ȪɅɊȽȜ ȧɀɀȽ
$6,750,000
ȚɀɇȜȿȲȿɅ șȊ 5Č™Č˜, Č˜ÉˆČśÉ„É€ČžČś ČȺȽȽȲȸȜ ȣɀȴȲɅȺɀȿ, Č&#x;ȺȸȚ ȚȜȺȽȺȿȸɄ, ČĽČśÉˆ ȧȲȺȿɅ ȲȿȾ ČšČ˛ÉƒÉ ČśÉ… $5, 00 ȞɀȿɅȚ ȚɀɇȜȿȲȿɅ șȊ Č™Č˜, ȨɆȺȜɅ ȚɆȽ ȾȜ ȪȲȴ ȣɀȴȲɅȺɀȿ, ȎɀɀȾ Č?Č˝É€É€ÉƒČşČżČ¸, ȪɅɆȾɊ, ČžÉ€ÉƒČ¸ČśÉ€É†É„ ČČşČśÉˆÉ„ $6, 00 ȞɀȿɅȚ
Rancho Santa Fe Realty
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License #00798626, #01024451 Photo Ticro Title Collection
Heather & Holly Manion 858-756-3007 www.rsfrealty.com
~Society~
Section B
January 3, 2013
Jammer Family Foundation-San Pasqual Academy Holiday Dinner
(Left) Melissa and Sandehpal Sira
Jennifer and Clint Telfer Rob Powell (Jammer Family Foundation Executive Director); John Stine, Diane Uke
Lucy Kelts, Jolane Crawford, Sharon Corp
The Jammer Family Foundation (JFF), under the direction of San Diego Charger Quentin Jammer, held a holiday celebration for the students of San Pasqual Academy (SPA) at the Del Mar Fairgrounds on Dec. 17. The festivities included dinner, gifts for all students and a tour of the “Parade of Lights.� In addition to supporting SPA, the JFF engages in a wide variety of worthy causes in the San Diego community, including Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD), United Way, and the Boys and Girls Clubs. Visit www.jammerfoundation.org. Photos/Eva Stimson
Rich Enright, Curtis Cerenzie, Kevin Crawford, Sean Barry, Bob Gilbert
Ian Kelly, Kimberly Crouse, Quentin Jammer Kevin Crawford, Jennifer and Rich Enright Ryan Westphal, Kelsey Minnery, Jolane Crawford (Schubach Aviation), Josh Westphal
Whitney and Lee Hejmanowski
SD Charger Quentin Jammer with Kasen, Kaleb and Kaden Jammer
Sean and Maria Barry, Cindy and Curtis Cerenzie
B2
January 3, 2013
Rancho Santa Fe Review
Details at The Ranch THE TRAILER IS GONE BUT WE’RE STILL HERE. WE HAVE JUST OPENED OUR STATE OF THE ART 3M, MEGUIAR’S DETAIL CENTER. WE HAVE INTEGRATED THE SAME ENVIRONMENTALLY RESPONSIBLE GREEN TECHNOLOGY TO RECYCLE 100% OF THE WATER USED IN ALL OF OUR WASH AND DETAIL SERVICES.
We are proud to offer these vehicle enhancement services Hand wash- 100% hand wash with a special attention to details Authorized Meguiars Certified Detail Services- We know what it takes to remove the swirl marks and restore your paint to its deep luster. Come by and let us show you what we can do for your car. We will perform our 2 or 3 step system on a small spot of your car so you can see what your car should look like. We know you will be amazed.
Headlight Restoration- We use only 3m headlight restoration systems to remove the haze that prevents your lights from shining through on to the road.
“PPF” Paint Protection Film- This virtually invisible extremely tough
film is strategically placed on your vehicle to protect your paint from
nicks and scratches. It takes the beating so your paint stays smooth and shiny.
Vehicle Wraps- We can custom wrap your vehicle to promote your business or its a great alternative to a custom paint job. Window Tint- We use 3M crystalline window film it is indorsed by the American Cancer Society to protect you from the suns damaging rays. We offer tints from virtually clear to a dark limo tint. all the products block 99.9% of the harmful rays and will reduce heat transfer up to 60%. This will help maintain a comfortable temperature in your vehicle no matter what it is outside.
Check out our new facility at 16095 San Dieguito Rd (Mobil Gas Station). We will be happy to answer any questions or give us a call at 858.759.0327. We will match any competitors offer and accept their coupons.
Serving the Community for Over 85 Years – Always Free Local Pick Up and Delivery Two Convenient Locations To Serve You
Rancho S anta F e VP F uels 6089 L a F lecha 858.756.2929
Serving the community since 1923.
Fairbanks Ranch Mobil 16095 San Dieguito Road 858.759.9184 | 858.759.0327
Rancho Santa Fe Review
January 3, 2013
B3
Art exhibit captures the ‘Wonder of Women’
La Jolla Cultural Partners
BY LONNIE BURSTEIN HEWITT The opening of “Capturing the Wonder of Women,” a multi-media exhibit reflecting the diversity of women’s experiences, drew hundreds of visitors to the Women’s Museum of California Dec. 7. The WMC is one of only five women’s museums in the country. The museum recently moved from its old Golden Hill location to Liberty Station, and their first juried art show is a way of showing off their new space and reaching out to a wider audience. “We’re recharging the whole spirit of the museum and reintroducing ourselves with this major exhibition,” said curator Li Huai, a visual arts lecturer at UC San Diego and an artist whose work has been shown locally and around the world. Born in China, with art degrees from Beijing and California, Li is a longtime La Jolla resident whose husband also teaches at UCSD. For the exhibit, she gathered more than 150 submissions from regional artists, asking them to capture the “wonder of women” in the medium of their choice. She selected 47 pieces
If you go What: ‘Capturing the Wonder of Women’ When: Noon to 4 p.m., Wednesdays-Sundays through Feb. 24 Where: Women’s Museum of California, 2730 Historic Decatur Road, Suite 103 at Liberty Station, San Diego Phone: (619) 233-7963 Website: WomensMuseumCa.org to show and arranged them attractively in the new gallery. Li and guest juror Robert Pincus, senior art writer for the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego (MCASD), selected three prize winners, who were announced at the opening. “I like art that poses a question to the viewers, that makes people think, so the audience becomes part of the art work,” Li said. Women’s Museum director Ashley Gardner said the exhibition is the result of a huge, huge team effort. “(Li Huai) had a vision and when she put all the pieces together; it was magic,” Gardner said. Li called it “a dynamic
Top: Museum Director Ashley Gardner with Claudia Cano, who was awarded second prize for a photographic portrayal of herself as ‘La Chacha.’ Bottom: Mesa College Gallery Director Alessandra Moctezuma with the other second-prize winner, ‘Miss La Mesa,’ by Lee Puffer. tableau that testifies to the vitality, resilience and potential of women in California and beyond.” The enthusiastic crowd at the opening seemed to agree.
Clockwise from above left: At the opening of the ‘Wonder of Women’ exhibition, guest juror Robert Pincus poses with curator Li Huai and the grandprize-winning self portrait by Angela Dominguez Burns; Board Member Bob Alden showed off his Tshirt from the museum gift shop; Museum Board Member Anne Hoiberg and Director Ashley Gardner with several pieces from the show; Jean Landis, 94, who flew P-51s during WWII, with Bonnie Domingos, Women’s Museum collections manager.
CHECK OUT WHAT’S HAPPENING Orpheus Speaks presented by Write Out Loud Orpheus Speaks—a unique series of short stories read aloud by talented actors— returns to the Athenaeum on Monday, January 14, at 7:30 p.m. Artistic Director Veronica Murphy explains, “All of us were read to as children and we loved it. Why did it stop? We adults enjoy a good story as much as children do, but the story has to be worth our while, beautifully written and expertly presented. When those elements combine, magic ensues.”
Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra
Summer C.A.M.P.
Whale Watching Adventures
Nicholas McGegan, music director Elizabeth Blumenstock, violin
July 22-26 for 7-9-year-old campers; July 29-Aug 2 for 10-12-year-old campers
Dec. 26 through April 14 9:45 a.m.–1:15 p.m. & 1:30–5 p.m.
Saturday, January 12, 2013 at 8 p.m. MCASD Sherwood Auditorium Tickets: $75, $55, $25
Depart from the summer camp norm and give your little one a crash course in contemporary art. Learn about exhibitions on view, create artwork in a variety of mediums, and learn about contemporary artists’ practices. Space is limited. Reserve your spot today! E-mail education@mcasd.org.
Download a coupon at aquarium.ucsd.edu – Save up to $30!
Don’t miss this San Francisco-based ensemble, dedicated to historically informed performances of baroque, classical and early-romantic music on original instruments, perform Vivaldi’s Four Seasons alongside works by Pergolesi, Locatelli, Durante and Corelli.
Tickets: $12 members/$17 nonmembers ljathenaeum.org/lectures Call (858) 454-5872
(858) 459-3728 www.LJMS.org
www.mcasd.org Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego 700 Prospect Street La Jolla, CA 92037
Embark on an unforgettable journey with the ocean experts at Birch Aquarium at Scripps! Join aquarium naturalists for twice-daily cruises to locate gray whales on their roundtrip migration from their Alaska feeding grounds to Baja California. Don’t forget your camera! Cost: $37 weekdays, $42 weekends Youth: $18.50 weekdays, $21 weekends More info: 858-534-4109 or aquarium.ucsd.edu
B4
January 3, 2013
Rancho Santa Fe Review
On The
Menu
See more restaurant profiles at www.delmartimes.net
Hearty fare at Adobe includes the Filet.
On The Menu Recipe Each week you’ll find a recipe from the featured restaurant online at delmartimes.net Just click ‘Get The Recipe’ at the bottom of the story.
■ This week’s recipe: Adobe El Restaurante’s Grilled Chicken Salad
Chocolate Mousse Cake and Raspberry Cheesecake are among the desserts served in a buffet, which is only offered on weekends and holidays.
Adobe El Restaurante ■ 9700 N. Torrey Pines Road, La Jolla ■ (858) 550-1000 ■ estancialajolla.com ■ The Vibe: Resort casual, elegant
■ Reservations: Yes
■ Patio Seating: Yes ■ Signature Dish: Huevos Rancheros, Steak & Egg, Mary’s Organic Chicken, ■ Take Out: No Smoked-Salmon Nicoise Salad ■ Happy Hour: No ■ Open Since: 2004
Steak Benedict is served with a variety of Spanish-American ingredients.
■ Hours: 6 a.m. to 2 p.m. daily
Mary’s Organic Chicken with apples and walnuts.
Breakfast, lunch are served Spanish-style at Estancia Hotel’s Adobe El Restaurante BY KELLEY CARLSON ust a stone’s throw from busy Torrey Pines Road, Adobe El Restaurante is ensconced in the peaceful oasis of Estancia La Jolla Hotel & Spa. Breakfast and lunch are served in this Spanish-themed dining establishment that overlooks the resort’s courtyard. The open-air balcony is often in high demand, especially during the morning hours, as guests sip java to clear the fog in their heads and become further invigorated by the ocean breeze. “Most guests on decent days love to sit on the patio,” said Danny Fancher, director of food and beverage at Estancia. “San Diego has great weather, which is always helpful. It’s beautiful (the patio). You don’t see any roads. Here, it opens up, there’s a fountain and it’s lush and green everywhere.” While the patio offers natural beauty, the spacious indoor dining room has its own allure. It features a dark-wood ceiling, brick and paintings of flowers along creamcolored walls. Multi-paned doors permit a glow of light to bathe the tables. There is a horse stall-style door near the entrance — a nod to the property’s history as a former equine estate. Once seated, patrons are presented with rustic, copper-hued menus listing an assortment of foods, from classics to specialties. According to Fancher, guests gravitate most toward the sizable Blackhorse Breakfast with two eggs any style, roasted poblano hash, blue corn pancakes and a
J
Dining areas include an open-air balcony and elegant dining room. choice of meat. Another popular selection is the Egg White Frittata, which looks like a big breakfast pizza with shiitake mushrooms, arugula, tomatoes, chickenapple sausage, avocado and queso fresco. The morning specialties have more of a Spanish influence and are presented with house-made salsa. These include the Huevos Rancheros with cheese quesadilla, parmesan, tomato sauce and black-bean puree; and the Chilaquiles, created with scrambled eggs, roasted-tomato chile negro sauce, crispy tortillas, cilantro, sour cream and queso fresco. Lunch takes more of a farm-to-table approach, mainly consisting of sandwiches, salads and soups. The healthy fare is especially favored by neighboring Salk Institute and UC San Diego employees, and
PHOTOS BY KELLEY CARLSON
the majority of people dining at that time of day are not in-house guests. Among the light favorites are the Smoked Salmon Nicoise Salad with Belgian endive, frisee, fingerling potato, haricot vert, Bermuda onion and crispy capers with the thinly sliced fish; and the Grilled Free-Range Chicken Salad garnished with Julian apples, Medjool dates, candied walnuts, Manchego cheese and whole-grain mustard vinaigrette. Other lunch entrees include the Portobello Burger with butter lettuce, feta cheese, balsamic aioli and olive tapenade that is sandwiched in a buttermilk bun. The desserts can appeal to patrons of all ages, as there are temptations such as the Vanilla Bean Creme Brulee and Molten Chocolate Lava Cake.
Rancho Santa Fe Review
10 tips for living happier each day of the new year Todd Patkin grew up in Needham, Mass. After graduating from Tufts University, he joined the family business and spent the next 18 years helping grow it to new heights. After Advance Auto Parts purchased it in 2005, he was free to focus on philanthropy, spending time with family and friends, and helping more people learn how to be happy. The following article is based Glenn Vanstrum on his new book, “Finding Happi- Photo/Diane Vanstrum ness: One Man’s Quest to Beat Depression and Anxiety and — Finally — Let the Sunshine In,” which was co-written with clinical psychologist Dr. Howard Rankin. Patkin lives with his wife, Yadira, their son, Josh, and two dogs, Tucker and Hunter. “I’ve given it a lot of thought and I’ve come up with 10 simple things people can do to become happier in 2013. You don’t have to do all of them at once — just focus on the three or four that resonate most with you and do those.” 1) If you don’t exercise, start. You already know exercise keeps you healthy and helps you control your weight. But did you know it’s also a natural antidepressant? Even a 20-minute walk every other day is great for both your body and mind if you do it consistently. And the good news is you can do it with your spouse or kids —and spending more time with them is another shortcut to happiness.” 2) Be easier on yourself. A lot of New Year’s resolutions are little more than thinly disguised vehicles for beating yourself up. There’s nothing wrong with self-improvement but it needs to come from a place of love. Many of us have a we’re-never-good-enough-or-doingenough mindset that’s antithetical to happiness. It’s not easy to change these ingrained thought patterns, but it can be done. And becoming aware of this tendency is the first step. 3) Find some way this year to put your gifts and talents to work. Talent wants to express itself. If your job doesn’t allow it to do so, find something that does. Playing to your strengths brings real happiness, and when you combine those strengths with a desire to do something good, it’s a double whammy. 4) Strengthen family relationships. Is your marriage running on autopilot? What about your relationship with your kids? Do you come home from work and sit in front of the computer while they play in another room (or worse, watch TV)? Too many Americans fail to engage their families in a meaningful way. 5) Celebrate your spouse. And speaking of your marriage, how is it? If it’s mired in negativity or characterized by bickering or tension, you’ll never be happy. The good news is that it may not take a lot of effort to dramatically change the tenor of your marriage. Random acts of kindness are always powerful, and that’s even truer inside a marriage. 6) Let the people you appreciate know it. Yes, of course you need to let your close friends and family members know how you feel about them. That’s a given. But what about your coworkers? Your barber? Your child’s teacher? The neighbor who keeps an eye on your house when you’re away? Most of us are too self-conscious to make a big fuss over the people who are sort of on the periphery of our lives but who nonetheless make a big impact, Changing that stance is a key component of happiness. Be generous with hugs. If you’re just not the hugging type, that’s fine, try thank-you notes instead. Letting people know how grateful you are for what they do makes two people happy: them and you.
7) Forgive someone who has wronged you. This is the other side of the “forgive yourself” coin. Just as you deserve a break, so do other people. And forgiveness is, at its heart, an act of self-love. If you can’t let go of pain and anger, you can’t be happy. 8) Become a giver. Happiness is not about how much you make; it’s about how much you share. If you have good health, a sound mind, and as little as an hour a week to spare, you are truly fortunate. Whether you’re tutoring kids who need a helping hand or delivering hot meals to the elderly, there’s great joy to be found in giving. Many people know this intellectually; they’ve just never put it into practice. Make this the year you do it. Just give up some of the time you waste in front of the TV or mindlessly surfing the Internet. You’ll find that it’s no sacrifice at all. 9) Take a “baby step” toward finding some faith. This year, make a conscious effort to think a little bit more about your faith, perhaps check out a few different places of worship, or maybe read a couple of spiritual books. Happy people have a connection to a Higher Power. If you aren’t sure there even is one, make this the year you do some honest exploration. 10) Make 2013 a year of gratitude. If you make only one change in 2013, make it this one: Work to be more appreciative in general. Gratitude covers a lot of territory. When you’re grateful for your family, you’ll treat them better. When you’re grateful for talents, you’ll use them. When you’re grateful for your health, you’ll work to maintain it. All of these add up to happiness. It’s ironic: Most of us have everything we need to be happy. The tragedy is we’re sleepwalking through life without really noticing that truth. If we could learn to live with an attitude of gratitude — for our kids, our homes, our friends, our health, the food on our tables — we wouldn’t need to worry about finding happiness. We’d be living it every day.
January 3, 2013
B5
B6
January 3, 2013
Rancho Santa Fe Review
SPOTLIGHT on LOCAL BUSINESS Bring the gym to you: Pilates 2 U provides private in-home lessons BY KAREN BILLING When Renee Casanova arrives at your door with her Pilates 2 U reformer and mats in hand, out go the excuses. “When I knock on the door, it’s time to work out,” said Casanova, the owner and trainer of Pilates 2 U. A traveling trainer, Casanova guides private in-home lessons, awakening deep muscles and elongating bodies in 50-minute sessions. “Seeing people improve by being able to do more with their lives because of what I’m teaching them, seeing them become stronger from the inside out makes me feel so good,” Casanova. “When I see any kind of improvement, it’s so gratifying. People tell me ‘I’m standing up straighter,’ or ‘I think I’ve gotten taller’ or ‘I have more energy because I’m doing this’, that’s what I love most.” Casanova has lived in Leucadia and run Pilates 2 U for two years, coming from the Los Angeles area where she had a studio in Marina del Rey. While she travels to clients now, she would love to eventually have a studio locally. In addition to being a certified Pilates instructor for the last 10 years, Casanova is also is a certified core power yoga instructor and Zumba instructor, leading classes at LA Fitness. Casanova comes from a background in dance and performed in musical theater in Los Angeles. She became a personal trainer but she didn’t like the type of workouts that involved. “My body didn’t feel elongated like it did with dance, I felt tighter,” Casanova said. “When I went to Pilates I felt like it was dancing without all the pain of dancing.” She loved the amazing feeling she got from Pilates and decided to become certified with Long Beach Dance Conditioning.
Renee Casanova provides private Pilates training with Pilates 2 U. Courtesy photo Casanova travels with her own Pilates reformer for clients to use or some clients may have their own at home. If preferred by the client, she also can do matonly Pilates workouts. Pilates can help bodies
in all kinds of ways, according to Casanova — it improves core strength, promotes better posture and sharpens that mind-body connection. Casanova said every movement done during Pi-
lates requires you to concentrate on the muscles to make the movement happen. With New Year’s resolutions around the corner, Casanova said Pilates would be an excellent way to “make
yourself strong and invincible.” For Casanova, Pilates was a huge help after giving birth to her daughter Madison eight years ago. After her pregnancy she said she felt like a truck had hit her, but she knew she could return to the exercise that forced her to find her deep abdominal muscles and get her strong again. “Even if you have never taken a Pilates class before you had a baby, it’s a great way to get back into life gently but effectively,” Casanova said. “Pilates teaches you about your body and what it needs to stay injury free.” For more information on Pilates 2 U, visit www.pilates2u.com, or e-mail pilates2u.dance@gmail.com or call 760-230-2040. Note: Business spotlights are developed through this newspaper’s advertising department in support of our advertisers.
Rancho Santa Fe Review
January 3, 2013
Christmas at the Village Church Preschool During the month of December at the Village Church Preschool, individual classroom activities along with family festivities took place. Decorating Christmas trees, baking, making family gifts, and Christmas caroling in the Village of Rancho Santa Fe were just some of the ways the children celebrated the Christmas season during class. The school will be closed for the holidays and will resume on Jan. 8.
Connor
Christmas Caroling Florence Kai
Finn
Sasha
Caleigh
Kat
2013 ATTACK
Competitive Tryouts Girls U7 / U8 / U9 January 7 & 9 (Monday/Wednesday) 3:45 to 5:15 p.m. Boys U7 / U8 / U9 January 8 & 10 (Tuesday/Thursday) 3:45 to 5:15 p.m.
We Ask That ALL Players: z Bring a Friend! z AƩend all tryout sessions z Arrive at the Įeld 30 minutes prior to start Ɵme z Bring Tryout Form signed by a parent or guardian (download form at www.rsfsoccer.com) z Wear shin guards, cleats and bring plenty of water
All tryouts will be held at Rancho Santa Fe Sports Field 16826 Rambla de las Flores, Rancho Santa Fe Callbacks will be held as needed For more informaƟon or direcƟons to the Įeld, visit our website at
www.rsfsoccer.com AƩ A Ʃack ack Soccer Soccer | 616 616 Stevens Stevens A Avenue, venue, SSuite uite M | SSolana olana B Beach, each, C CA A9 92075| 2075| 7760.479.1500 60.479.1500
B7
B8
January 3, 2013
Rancho Santa Fe Review
Local Kids Korps families send 1,000 ‘Peace & Love’ messages to Sandy Hook Elementary FROM KIDS KORPS USA The horrendous news from Newtown, Conn., pierced our hearts. We are so deeply saddened, confused and distraught when we think of the killing of innocent children and teachers — no doubt emotions that have been shared by every family in this country and beyond! As a youth leadership and volunteer agency, our first thoughts following the tragedy were centered around the need to pull our local community together in a form of positive action, and help answer the question for many: “What can we do to help?” Kids Korps put out a simple plea for our community last week — we asked for students and families to decorate a “Peace & Love” card template, downloadable from our website, to be sent to Newtown, Conn., and spread among the hallways of local schools where the 500 Sandy Hooks Elementary students will be relocated after the holiday break. Our hopes were that the project would be a small gesture of our heartfelt condolences and not only help bring some peace to those suffering in Connecticut, but also allow for other children and families who were struggling to process the tragic events have a positive outlet for their emotions, empowering them to turn that sadness into something beautiful. Kids Korps was absolutely blown away by the response from our local community! Within three short days, we collected more than 1,000 Peace & Love Cards for New-
town, Conn.! Children from 2 years of age to high school participated, in addition to many parents and local teachers sending their heartfelt messages of hope and comfort. We are so appreciative of the unbelievable outpouring of support, and the wonderful ways our volunteers stepped into action to help spread the word, and engage hundreds of families and classrooms throughout San Diego County! Thank you Kids Korps volunteers! Along with our continuous community volunteer projects offered year-round for youth ages 5-25 (visit our project calendar at www.kidskorps.org), we strive to help mobilize the community during unexpected times of tragedy or natural disasters. Please feel free to share any ideas you may have for family-friendly projects in response to local, national, or international events. Feel free to contact us at (858) 500-8136, or info@kidskorps.org. Our thoughts, prayers, and deepest sympathy go out to everyone impacted by the horrific events that took place at Sandy Hook Elementary School. And to those amazing volunteers who created a Peace & Love card to send to Newtown, thank you for helping share the powerful message that our world is still full of good people doing really wonderful things for each other!
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Rancho Santa Fe Review
2012 Year in Review: RSF Society
January 3, 2013
B9
Toast of the Town
Woodward Spring Fling
A
howling good time was had by all June 2 at the 24th annual BlackTie Kit Kat Club Gala at the Helen Woodward Animal Center. The “Great Catsby”/roaring-’20sthemed gala featured 5-star dining, dancing all night with a step-back-intime soundtrack by the Sensations Showband, live and silent auctions and a casino area. The event benefits the center’s programs for animals and people in need. (Above) Nancy Walters with Creative, Jan Grandprey with Cathy, Marian Higdon with Duncan, Myrna Dignan with June Bug. (Right) Cathy and Doug Moore PHOTOS: ROB MCKENZIE
Celebrity poker in RSF
Above, Tim Fox, Beth Nelson and Catherine Fox attend the annual Toast of the Town celebration on June 7 at The Inn at Rancho Santa Fe. A highlight of the celebration was the School Student Art Auction, which included the work of Victoria Williams, right. The event was sponsored by the RSF Education Foundation. PHOTOS: JON CLARK
Sounds like summer in RSF
Steve and Kathleen Flynn, Jolane and Kevin Crawford, and Mike Dawson take part in a celebrity No Limit Texas Hold ’em tournament Nov. 10 at The Inn at Rancho Santa Fe. The event benefits the RSF Senior Center. PHOTO/JON CLARK
Sharon Lamb, Susan Appleby and Jennifer See attend a concert by the Peter Pupping Band and Village Church Contemporary Band at the Rancho Santa Fe Village Green on June 24. PHOTO: JON CLARK
RSF Community Center benefit The Rancho Santa Fe Community Center held its inaugural No-Limit Texas Hold ‘em Celebrity Poker Tournament Jan. 21 at the RSF Garden Club. The event included a cocktail reception and live music by Jazz Club; a four-hour tournament with poker celebrities and local sports, television and film luminaries; and a silent auction. (Above) Monica Sylvester, Tim Histreet, Don and Nicole Fryer.
GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY — The Village Church Preschool, formerly known as the Village Nursery School, celebrated its golden anniversary with a birthday bash Jan. 29 in the courtyard of the Village Community Presbyterian Church. (Above) Appreciation bouquets were given to those who helped to put on the event. Photo/Jon Clark
B10
January 3, 2013
Rancho Santa Fe Review
There must be 50 ways to lose your love handles The Kitchen Shrink
BY CATHARINE KAUFMAN As we ring in 2013, most of us carry some baggage from last year. I’m talking cottage cheese thighs, muffin tops, beer bellies. According to a recent article in the journal Circulation, “reducing intake by 100 calories a day would prevent weight gain in 90 percent of adults by small increases in physical activity along with small changes in food intake.” Here’s the skinny on trimming those calories that tend to creep up on us. Brainy Breakfast Bites For a morning jumpstart and long-lasting fuel power have a complex carb like a whole-wheat bagel, toast or muffin. Instead of slathering on fatty butter or
cream cheese, swap it out with goat cheese or organic fruit preserves. Chuck the sugary, highcal cereals for low-fat, highfiber, protein-packed oatmeal. Add a splash of almond milk, a drizzle of agave syrup and sprinkling of toasted walnuts, rather than cream and brown sugar. Choose eggs soft boiled or poached rather than a cheesy omelet. Swap out oink bacon for lower fat turkey bacon, and jazz up savory breakfasts with salsa instead of sugary ketchup. Finally, whole fruit is better than sugar-packed juice that wallops the pancreas first thing in the a.m. Lunch Lightweights Salad and sandwich dressings like Ranch, blue cheese and creamy Caesar made with mayo and creambased artery-clogging monsters are best served on the side and used sparingly. Better choices are vinaigrettes with virgin olive oil or a sprinkling of Meyer lemon juice. Lay off croutons, cheese and fatty nuts like cashews, substitute slivered almonds, toasted pumpkin and sunflower seeds. Choose chicken, turkey, vegetarian or even lamb
SoCal Resolution Vinaigrette This calorie-conscious French vinaigrette is from the kitchen of Chef Bernard Guillas at La Jolla’s Marine Room. Use it to jazz up salads or as a dipping sauce or marinade for chicken, fish or veggies. Happy New Year’s Resolutions! Ingredients 1/4 cup avocado oil 1 tablespoon sherry vinegar 2 tablespoons Meyer lemon juice 1 teaspoon agave 1 teaspoon minced shallots 1 teaspoon freshly chopped tarragon leaves 2 tablespoons chopped smoked alburgers over beef, and lose the bun! Sandwich the meat between crisp romaine leaves. Skinny Suppers When dining out, order a couple of appetizers instead of a heavy entrée. For sides, opt for steamed veggies or protein-dense grains like quinoa or farro, and don’t give in to the temptation of a fully-loaded baked potato stuffed with globs of
monds Sea salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste Method: Add ingredients in a mixing bowl, whisk to emulsify. Season with salt and pepper. butter, sour cream and crumbled bacon — probably more fattening than a heap of French fries. Pick tomato-based Manhattan Clam Chowder over creamy New England-style, order grilled fish instead of deep-fried, choose goat cheese pizza rather than mozzarella, tomato or wine sauces over creamy ones. Chicken breasts trump
bone-in chicken, lavash crackers beat bread, and olive oil is better than butter. Unhappy Hour Are you trying to justify the health benefits of a Pina Colada? The cocktail is liquid fat – a whopping 644 calories, despite its mother load of the essential fatty acid omega-6, protein and calcium from the coconut milk, the pineapple component giving an anti-inflammatory boost of bromelain and Vitamin C. White Russians and Chocotinis aren’t much better, while Margaritas and Long Island Iced Teas are worse. For skinny swigs try a Mojito, a champagne sparkler or a pale ale (light beer). Wine, whether white or red, is the most calorie-friendly libation. Fat-, sodium- and cholesterol-free, this hearthealthy drink is a mere 20 calories per ounce, a 5-ounce glass only 100 calories. Another tip–sip from a champagne flute rather than a bulbous wine goblet to savor more and drink less. Cheers! Just Desserts It’s nice to end a meal on a sweet note, but most blissful bites are filled with sugar and spice and deca-
dent vice. Easy on the whipped cream, butter cream and ice cream. Meringue trumps all of the above, same with sorbets and ices. A bowl of fresh berries with a balsamic drizzle beats them all. Miscellaneous Fat Trimming •Eat a salad (with light dressing) before your main course to put the skids on calorie consumption. •Get your zzz’s. Lost sleep hinders the burning of carbs and increases cortisol production that tinkers with appetite. •Eat a daily handful of heart-healthy nuts to keep pounds at bay. •Beef up protein. A lean high-protein low-carb diet will prevent muscle loss while dialing-up fat loss. •Cut coffee calories. Swap out frothy frappuccinos, lavish lattes and Irish coffees for fat-free herbal teas that warm the cockles of your heart, while energizing your soul. For trendy or not-sotrendy recipes e-mail kitchenshrink@san.rr.com or check out www.FreeRangeClub.com.
Rancho Santa Fe Review
January 3, 2013
B11
Two films about autism to screen at Museum of Contemporary Art BY ASHLEY MACKIN Two short films about the lives of autistic children will be shown at 7 p.m. on Saturday, Jan. 19, in Sherwood Auditorium at the Museum of Contemporary Art, 700 Prospect St. in La Jolla. The films, “El Abuelo” and “With Me,” were produced by the La Jolla-based production company, Drama House. “With Me” stars a La Jolla boy with Asperger’s Syndrome. After the films, there will be a panel discussion addressing Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD) with filmmakers and educators. Autism now affects 1 in 88 children. Though the screenings were planned long ago, Drama House Productions founder Patrick Scott said increased awareness of the condition is important since autism is in the spotlight after the school shooting in Connecticut. Adam Lanza, the gunman who took the lives of 20 children, eight adults and himself, is believed to have had an autism disorder. “The obvious concern is … there is going to be a witch hunt on children or people with autism after this tragedy in Connecticut, so it’s a real concern for everyone,” he said of those with loved ones who have an ASD. Scott produced the film “El Abuelo” in 2011, which is the story of a boy with autism who does not
Panel Participants • Claudia Metcalfe, actress in ‘With Me’ and mother of a child with autism spectrum disorder • Cheryl Zak, executive director of The Arch Academy • Dave Florek, actor in “With Me’ • Dr. Joshua Feder M.D., Research director and professor at UCSD School of Medicine • Karen Shultz, President of Tender Loving Canines Assistance Dogs, Inc. • Patrick Scott, founder of Drama House Productions • Stephen Metcalfe, writer/director ‘El Abuelo’ speak and befriends an elderly migrant worker who helps him “find his voice.” “I got halfway through shooting ‘El Abuelo’ and I realized I didn’t know enough about autism. So I started studying it … and it’s a disease that has many symptoms,” Scott said. Stephen Metcalfe, whose son has Asperger’s Syndrome (a form of autism), wrote the script for “El Abuelo,” and helped Scott in his newfound need to study autism.
After educating himself and after the success of “El Abuelo” – which won best local film at San Diego Latino Film Festival and honorary mention at the Los Angeles Movie Awards – Scott began work on “With Me,” which is based on the Metcalfe family’s experiences. Claudia Metcalfe, Stephen’s wife, wrote the script for “With Me,” and when Scott read it, he said, “There’s no way I’m not producing this.” The story of “With Me” is that of a boy who develops a connection with a service dog. “The idea to have a boy with autism who meets his first best friend in a service dog was a story too compelling not to tell,” Scott said. The Metcalfe’s son, Wesley, starred in “With Me” and, despite the social anxiety that comes with (Above) Wesley and dog: Wesley Metcalfe and Mully, the cohaving autism, Scott said Wesley stars of “With Me.” Courtesy blossomed on the set. This was in part due to filming at the Museum of Contemporary Art and the La Jolla Beach and Tennis Club, Wesley’s favorite hangouts. “It’s heartwarming to see what their talents are once you get to The 5K9 Walk Run national 10-race series kicks off at the Del Mar know them,” Scott said of his experiences. He added that part of what Fairgrounds on Sunday, Jan. 13, promoting healthy and fit living for people and pets and supporting local animal welfare organizations producers hope to show through through the Petco Foundation. The event will feature a 5K and 1-mile these films is both the symptoms walk run and a free healthy living expo for humans and pets. and talents that come with autism. Registration is at 6 a.m., the 5K start is at 8 a.m. and the 1-mile Admission at the door is by a start is at 9 a.m. For more information or to register for a race near you, suggested donation of $12. visit www.5k9walkrun.com.
Race for active pets and humans to be held Jan. 13 in Del Mar
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B12
January 3, 2013
Rancho Santa Fe Review
Week in Sports BY GIDEON RUBIN Torrey Pines won the historic Kiwanis Tournament in commanding fashion as the Falcons outscored their opponents by 22 points in the decisive third quarter of a 5952 championship game victory over Francis Parker on Dec. 22. The Falcons led 23-20 going into the intermission before breaking the game open in a third quarter in which they outscored their opponent 25-3. Brandon Cyrus scored 13 points to lead the Falcons. Zack Wagner and Sam Worman each added nine points. The Falcons defeated R.C. Palmer (Richmond, B.C.) 77-45 in a tournament semifinal the previous day. Chris Kurylo scored 13 points to lead the Falcons and Cyrus added 12 points. The Falcons extended their winning streak to six games as they improved their overall record for the season to 8-3. ***** San Diego Jewish Academy lost to Calvin Christian 53-50 in a Pacific League game on Dec. 20. The defeat followed a 55-49 loss to Pacific Ridge in the Lions’ Dec. 17 league opener. Ilan Graubart scored 23 points and had eight rebounds to lead the Lions in the Calvin Christian game. Judah Rosenzweig contributed 14 points and eight rebounds. Graubart scored 11 points to lead the Lions in the Pacific Ridge game. King Chen added 10 points and Rosenzweig added eight points, five assists and 12 rebounds.
The Lions fell to 0-2 in league and 3-4 overall for the season. Girls basketball: Torrey Pines defeated Sweetwater 66-31 in a nonleague game on Dec. 26 for its third straight win. The victory followed a 69-54 victory over Rancho Buena Vista in a Kiwanis tournament game on Dec. 22, and a 63-51 win against Olympian the previous day in the same tournament. The Falcons improved their overall record for the season to 6-4. Madison Lombard scored 18 points and had 10 rebounds to lead the Falcons in the Sweetwater game. Jasmine Gutierrez added 10 points and 10 rebounds and Tierra Eshom contributed eight points and 10 boards. Christina Ellis also contributed eight points. Freshman standout Sierra Campisano scored 22 points and had 13 rebounds and eight blocks to lead the Falcons in the Rancho Buena Vista game. Lombard contributed 21 points and Kaitlin Schreiber added 13 points. Ellis scored 18 points and Campisano contributed 17 points and 13 rebounds to lead the Falcons in the Olympian game. Lombard added 15 points, six rebounds, five assists and five steals. Campisano has had a double-double (double figures in points and rebounds) in all nine varsity games she’s played in. She’s averaging 20.1 points, 15..9 rebounds, 7.8 blocks and three steals. The Falcons improved their overall record for the season to 6-4. Boys soccer:
The Under Armour Holiday Classic Basketball Tournament was recently held at TPHS (see page 14).(Right) One of the big National Division games — Bishop O’Dowd vs St. John’s from Texas. O’Dowd won 64-57. Photos/Anna Scipione Torrey Pines has turned things around after a slow start. The Falcons defeated Cathedral of Los Angeles 1-0 in a nonleague game on Dec. 27 for their third in four games. They’re 3-0-1 over that stretch that started with a 1-0 victory over University City in a Grossmont tournament game on Dec. 19 and continued with a 2-2 tie with Patrick Henry three days later and a 4-3 win against Desert Vista on Dec. 26 in the same tournament. Jeremy Dinkin scored the game’s only goal for the Falcons in the Cathedral game. Elliot Patrick scored off an assist from Uri Bialostozky in the University City game. Dinkin, Tyler Valdes, Eren Esener and Eric McKee each scored on goal for the Falcons in the Desert Vista game. The Falcons improved
their overall record for the season to 3-3-1. Girls soccer: After going three straight games without a victory a Mater Dei Premier Invitational tournament, Cathedral Catholic came back with a vengeance in a 6-0 thrashing of Beckman of Irvine in its Dec. 27 tourney finale. The Dons were 0-1-2 over their previous three games, with a 1-0 loss to San Clemente on Dec. 17, a 2-2 tie with Harvard-Westlake of North Hollywood on Dec. 20, and a 0-0 tie with Canyon of Anaheim on Dec. 21. Brittany Doan scored
two goals and had one assist to lead the Dons in the Beckman game. Sunny Dunphy scored one goal and had one assist, and Mikela Kraus and Dana Dalton each contributed one goal. Dons goalie Hanna Macaulay was credited with the shutout. Dunphy and Kraus each scored one goal for the Dons in the Harvard-Westlake game, and Macaulay had seven saves. The Dons improved their overall record for the season to 7-1-3.
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Rancho Santa Fe Review
2012 Year in Review: RSF Society
January 3, 2013
B13
Rancho Days 2012
Above: The Rancho Santa Fe Rotary Club kicked off Rancho Days with a Fall Festival BBQ on Sept. 28 at the south park in front of The Inn at Rancho Santa Fe. Stagecoach rides are always a popular part of the event. PHOTOS/JON CLARK
RSF Tennis Club turns 50
Art of Fashion 2012
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B14
January 3, 2013
Rancho Santa Fe Review
The Winston School provides iPads for every faculty member and student BY KARIN OLSEN Providing access to technology in the classroom is rapidly becoming the standard in American education. Nowhere is this trend more impactful than in schools teaching students who learn differently. Two years ago the Winston School, which specializes in teaching students with such learning differences as autism, Asperger’s, ADHD and dysgraphia, embarked on a three-year plan to incorporate technology into the classroom. For nearly 25 years the school (www.thewinstonschool. com) has steadily built a reputation for teaching students in ways each individual can learn and not the other way around. A technology committee made up of staff members with diverse specialties and classroom needs sought to expand capabilities for students who often turn to the school when traditional educational avenues have failed them. The technology team consisting of headmaster Mike Peterson, dean of students and director of counseling Dr. Norm Severe, assistant head of school Mary Sterling-Torretti, and science teacher Ernie Hartt devised the plan that launched last year with 20 iPads for classroom use. When fellow teachers and students connected the devices to TVs and tapped into a vast number of applications, the technology committee realized the small sampling of iPads made a significant impact. The success prompted the decision this year by the Board of Directors to provide iPads in the classrooms for all teachers and students one year ahead of schedule. According to Severe, the program is transforming every class at the school with each class customizing how the iPads are used. “Classes use applications for writing, reading, and science as well as word processing programs and presentation software. Google has been a favorite in many classes, especially in history where teachers are doing timeline work.” he said. He said the assistive devices are particularly helpful for those who struggle to pay attention in class or write and have difficulty with note taking and problem solving. “Students with dysgraphia find the dictation software helps them become more at ease and struggle less. It really breaks down the barriers.” First-year Winston student Grant Anthony previously attended a large public school and said he experienced the
Winston School 9th graders Daniel Crawford and Katie McKitrick benefits of Winston and the technology tools immediately. The 17-year-old University City junior with attention deficit disorder said the combination of smaller class sizes and access to his own iPad transformed his high school experience. “At Winston I feel like I can crack down and work more. The school is a lot smaller so it’s harder to get distracted and into conversations with other students. I have ADD it’s been a bit of a problem, but at Winston I’ve been able to get past it. The iPads are awesome, too and since Winston updated the Internet we can do all the research we want with the high-speed access. “For math I can write in a formula with a graph and it will show what it looks like. In biology I’ll have questions, but if I don’t want to interrupt the class I can Google and find the answer in about a minute. At my other school we used laptops, but the servers couldn’t handle all of them. Each laptop was assigned to two kids. It didn’t work out very well.” Anthony, who also participates in the school’s highly
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acclaimed arts program as a base player for the school’s blues band as well as his long-time group The Weekend Warriors, also said he regularly uses his iPad to access ultimateguitar.com for learning music. Fellow Winston junior and blues band member Nicolai Spiegelberg said he also finds the iPad a big help in class. “I do all my research and write on the iPad now. I don’t even use a computer anymore. Last year I used the iPad mostly in biology and English to research and write my papers. And I’ve become more interested in math – I like to use the 10 Ultimate tab in there.” Spiegelberg said the device is also good for organizing. “I actually haven’t even used a computer since I started using the iPad. It’s so convenient. It’s like a piece of paper. I pull it out of my backpack and research something. I have my whole life on this thing and it’s helped me be more organized. I can even get text books on the iPad so now my backpack is much lighter.” Winston School headmaster Mike Peterson shares Dr. Severe’s and the students’ positive assessment and enthusiasm. “The iPads have helped stimulate interest and sense of adventure for all subjects and it’s exciting to walk around to the classes and see how the devices are adding to our students’ learning experiences.” Peterson said the groundwork has been laid to expand the program. “Prior to this school year, we increased and improved our infrastructure network to support the large number of iPads with high-speed internet and strengthened our wireless backbone system to handle the high traffic. “Along the way,” he said, “We have been sorting through thousands of education apps, many of which are free or low-cost and the staff regularly shares their findings in staff meetings. Our next step is to facilitate Winston teachers visiting other schools to learn about other methods of tech integration and share what has worked for Winston.” The Winston School is a college preparatory program which offers hope and success for children with learning differences in grades 4 through 12. The school is located at 215 Ninth St., Del Mar, Calif., 92014. Visit www.thewinstonschool.com or email mindy@thewinstonschool.com or call the school at 858-259-8155.
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Rancho Santa Fe Review
2012 Year in Review: RSF Society
January 3, 2013
B15
Halloween in Rancho Santa Fe
Swing for Kids golf tournament
Connie Sundstrom, Mary Murray, Kristina Smith, Kids Korps program director Robin Chappelow, Marian Benassi and Matt Wellhouser at the Kids Korps’ Swing for Kids golf tournament held at La Costa Resort & Spa on Oct. 26. PHOTO/MCKENZIE IMAGES
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Students and parents dazzled in their costumes at the Rancho Santa Fe Education Foundation’s annual Halloween Parade and Carnival on Oct. 31. Photos/Jon Clark
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B16
January 3, 2013
Rancho Santa Fe Review
Gold Diggers’ Christmas at Mille Fleur BY LESLIE CARTER The ladies of the San Diego GOLD (Gifts Of Loving Donors) Diggers and their gentlemen were greeted by a beautiful tall flute of Villa Sandi Prosecco, an Italian sparkling wine, as they moved from the courtyard into Mille Fleurs on Paseo Delicias, just before sunset on Sunday, Dec. 16. It was the traditional Holiday Celebration enjoyed by the Gold Diggers and their friends. They reside in all areas of San Diego County, but this was the first time in recent memory that this charitable group has come to Rancho Santa Fe for the Christmas event. There is usually a Golden Kettle in an honored and prominent spot at a Gold Diggers party. This evening, however, the Golden Kettle had gone missing, but it was replaced by a red envelope on each table. Throughout the year, the Gold Diggers fundraise for many of the smaller charitable organizations in the county, mainly those that are too small to maintain their own fundraising staffs. The Gold Diggers focus on the special needs of children and their caregivers, the elderly, crime victims and other groups that do good works. Recently Pegasus Rising was added to the Gold Diggers’ philanthropy list, a program based in Rancho Santa Fe that uses a herd of formerly feral Polish-Arabian horses to mitigate the ravages of traumatic brain injury and PTSD in Wounded Warriors. Over the course of the dinner $600 was placed into the envelopes to benefit Project Homeless Connect. The sixth annual Project Homeless Connect will be held at Golden Hall on the San Diego Concourse on Jan. 30. It is an annual one-day resource fair that provides health screenings, flu shots, dental exams, haircuts, drug counseling, legal aid, housing counseling and other services for San Diego’s homeless families, veterans, seniors and disabled. It is organized by the San Diego Housing Commission, and Gold Diggers Isabelle Piccini and Barbara Miller are on the board of directors. The Gold Diggers are collecting clothing to be given to the homeless at the event. At least 1,200 homeless people are expected to seek help this year. Last year 650 pairs of socks were purchased with the donations made at the 2011 Holiday Party. The excellent three-course dinner was prepared by Mille Fleurs Chef de Cuisine of 28 years, Martin Woesle. There were four entrĂŠe choices but most of the guests enjoyed the Prime Beef Hanger Steak with Potato Gratin, Steamed Broccoli and Black Peppercorn Sauce, or Grilled Sea Bass with Mussels, Braised Fennel, Saffron Sauce and Wild Rice. There was also a beautiful Pumpkin Soup with light cream and Cinnamon Croutons. Gold Diggers President Holly Smith Jones hosted the canapĂŠs (spinach soup, salmon, roast beef and goat cheese) and the Prosecco. The event co-chairs were Diana Vuich and Pricilla Web. The Gold Diggers woke up to sad news on Monday morning. Larry Mabee, one of only two men on the membership roster, died at his home in Rancho Santa Fe on the day of the Holiday Party. He was a treasured member because it was his mother, Betty Mabee, who spearheaded the founding of the Gold Diggers in 1993. Larry Mabee has been generous to Gold Diggers projects over the years and his family has requested that “in lieu of flowersâ€? gifts go to the Gold Diggers. You may follow the Gold Diggers activities on www.golddiggerssandiego.org.
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Rancho Santa Fe Review
Nutrition and you: What’s making America fat? Part Three BY PEGGY KORODY, RD, CLT In part-one of this three-part series we looked at people’s eating patterns which can lead to overeating and weight gain. In part-two we looked at physical activity and the important role it plays in one’s health. In this third and final article I would like to explore one’s coping skills and how it can affect one’s health. We all have heard of the emotional eater, maybe you know one, or are one. Emotional eaters often use food to comfort themselves in times of stress, anxiety, or sadness. Also, the food they tend to use for comfort is often not a healthy choice (a big bowl of ice cream, macand-cheese, a bag of cookies, etc.). In fact, I have never met someone who told me they would grab a salad when they are stressed! If you are an emotional eater I would like to offer some ideas on different ways to handle the cravings for comfort food. First, keep a “food & mood” diary for a few days, filling in your ABCs: •Antecedents – the trigger situations or emotions that come before eating. •Behavior of eating – what you ate and how much. •Consequences – the feelings and attitudes that occur after eating. Here’s an example: Antecedents: Got yelled at by the boss; felt stressed. Behavior: Grabbed candy and soda from the vending machine. Consequences: Felt better at first, but left work still feeling stressed. The goal is to learn your triggers that you typically soothe with food, such as anxiety, loneliness, stress, sadness, etc. Then ask yourself, “How much of my eating is emotionally related?” Then you can develop an emotional eating plan, in fact it might be a good idea to write your plan down on index cards that you can carry with you so you can refer to your plan when needed. Here’s an example: When feeling lonely: Call a friend; Log onto an internet chat group; E-mail or write a friend; Visit the health club. When feeling stress at work: Take slow, deep breaths; Talk it out with someone you trust; Take a
Peggy Korody, RD, CLT walk; Put thoughts in a journal. Your goal is to change the mood that is causing you to be an emotional eater. Sometimes if you just write your feelings down, or take a walk to take your mind off of a stressful situation you won’t turn to food for comfort. What if you are the type of person who knows they need to lose weight, wants to lose weight, but keeps putting it off – are you a persistent procrastinator? Here are some of the top reasons people procrastinate: to avoid an unpleasant task, low self-confidence, lack of an immediate reward, or maybe you are easily distracted. If this describes you here’s a few tips. Instead of setting general goals, such as to eat healthier or to exercise, set mini-goals. For example: instead of a goal to eat healthier, set a mini-goal to eat breakfast on a daily basis.
Or if your goal is to start exercising, set your mini-goal to walk 20 minutes daily. Immediate benefits from eating breakfast and walking daily will be your energy boost in addition to helping you manage your weight better, which leads to a long-term benefit. Keep some sample reminders to prompt you to pursue your mini-goals. •Keep a fresh fruit basket on the counter. •Leave a water bottle on your desk at work. •Use the internet to find healthy options at your favorite restaurants. (www. healthydiningfinder.com is a great site) •Keep healthy recipes in plain sight (visit my website www.RD4Health.com for some ideas) •Lay out gym clothes the night before. •Schedule exercise times in your calendar. Also, it’s a good idea to keep a success journal so that you can easily see how far you have come. You may even want to give yourself an award as you meet certain goals, such as pamper yourself with a spa day, have a romantic night out, attend a special sporting event, or enjoy a concert. Now that we have come to the end of this series on “What is making America fat?” I hope you can see that it is not a simple answer. There are a plethora of
things that get in the way of living a healthy lifestyle. So, if you are looking to make changes in your eating and/ or exercise habits my suggestion is to start slow. Make you goals specific and achievable, and your longterm benefit will be a healthy person. Are you wondering what a healthy diet looks like? I’ve got an app for that! MealLogger – is an easy and personal nutrition coaching service that allows you to connect virtually with me, your RD coach. No fad diets, no calorie counting. You gain the advantage of nutrition advice that is tailored for your eating habits, your health concerns and your lifestyle. Peggy Korody is a registered dietitian and owner of RD4Health Nutrition Counseling, LLC in Rancho Santa Fe. She is also a Certified LEAP Therapist — Helping people who suffer with food sensitivities which can lead to IBS, Migraines, Fibromyalgia, and other inflammatory conditions. Her first cookbook, “Little Hands in the Kitchen” is available on her website. For more information on services offered, visit RD4Health.com or email pkorody@RD4Health. com, 858-401-9936.
EXPERT E XP ERT RT ADVICE ADV A DV VICE ICE San Diego beach homes for sale: learn to capitalize on low real estate inventory for better values along the coast Patricia Kramer & Patricia Martin, Kramer & Martin Real Estate
Local heroes rally to support servicemembers, bolster Rancho Santa Fe community this holiday season Janet Lawless-Christ, Real Estate
San Diego student athletes: fostering superior leadership and academic excellence Kevin Yaley, Progressive Education
Look to these local authorities for professional guidance on daily living at ranchosantafereview.com/columns
Curb obesity, improve health and enhance appearance with liposuction plastic surgery Dario Moscoso, Pacific Cielo Surgery Center
Buying a home in San Diego: decode the latest market news with help from a real estate expert Vicki Johnson, Real Estate
January 3, 2013
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International Bipolar Foundation’s next free lecture is Jan. 10 The International Bipolar Foundation will hold its free mental health lecture series on Jan. 10, 2013 with guest Dr. Rienzi Haytasingh on “Bipolar Disorder in Schools: What every parent needs to know.” Haytasingh is a practicing licensed educational psychologist who has devoted his entire professional career towards promoting the education of students with disabilities and differences. The event will be held at the Sanford Children’s Research Center (Building 12), 10905 Road to the Cure San Diego, 92121, from 5:30-6 p.m. (Social) and 6-7 p.m., lecture and Q&A. Please R.S.V.P. to areitzin@internationalbipolarfoundation.org. Event and parking are free.
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January 3, 2013
Rancho Santa Fe Review
2012 Year in Review: RSF Society
British general talks history
Marvin Hamlisch at The Bridges
The Bridges at Rancho Santa Fe and the San Diego Symphony featured acclaimed composer Marvin Hamlisch at its Legends at The Bridges event June 27. Pictured are Barbara Gladden, Herb Chasman, Rosalind Chasman, Marvin Hamlisch, Jo Gladden and Dick Gladden. PHOTO: JON CLARK
Rancho Santa Fe July 4 Parade & Picnic
Above, Rev. Jack Baca greets guest speaker Gen. Graham Hollands at the Viewpoints event held Feb. 19 at the Village Church in Rancho Santa Fe. Hollands discussed D Day and the Normandy invasion. Viewpoints is copresented by The Village Church and the Rancho Santa Fe Foundation. PHOTO: JON CLARK
RSF HISTORICAL SOCIETY SUMMER HOME TOUR — (Above) Peppy Bahr, Midgie Vandenberg, Mary Van Anda and Jan Crouch were among those who enjoyed the 2012 Rancho Santa Fe Historical Society Summer Home Tour, held July 14.
‘Jammin Under the Stars’
Above: The RSF Community Center float makes its way through Rancho Santa Village during the 31st annual Rancho Santa Fe July 4 Parade & Picnic. Right: Master of Ceremonies Chaco Clotfelter Far right: Princesses Ava and Julia Domann PHOTOS: JON CLARK
HWAC’s 40th
(Right) Rylan Kargman gets a kiss from CindyLou, held by Jessica Gercke, during the Helen Woodward Animal Center’s 40 anniversary celebration Aug. 8 at the Center Pavilion. PHOTO/JON CLARK
The third annual fundraising event “Jammin Under the Stars” was held at the RSF estate of Rich and Jennifer Enright July 21 to benefit the programs supported by the Jammer Family Foundation (JFF). (Above) Jammer Foundation Executive Director Rob Powell, hosts Rich and Jennifer Enright, Quentin Jammer, Foundation Director of Business Development Jolane Crawford, Billy Ray Smith, Kimberly Hunt. Photo/Rob McKenzie
Rancho Santa Fe Review
After 40 years, local men still steering YMCA service club
From left: Edgar Engert, Renate Engert and Fred Pahl, longtime leaders of the North Coast Y Service Club. Engert and Renate travel internationally every year to meet with service groups from Y’s all over the world, from Japan to China to Europe. “It’s interesting to sit around a table of people with all different languages and make wonderful friendships around the world,” Engert said. Pahl said he sees Engert as a “Y success story,” and a true leader. “He helps people at our club know they are part of something larger,” Pahl said. The service club, which is welcoming new members, meets twice a month, on the second and fourth Wednesdays, at 7 p.m. at the Ecke YMCA, located at 200 Saxony Road in Encinitas. For more information, find the North Coast Y Service Club on Facebook or visit https://ysmennorthcoast.samariteam.com/. For event ticket information, email the club’s spokeswoman, Michele Wegman, at wegali@cox.net.
On Thursday night, Jan. 10, at 6:30 p.m. at the Solana Beach Library, the Friends of the Library are hosting a presentation by Francine Jensen on “Stained Glass Windows of France: Sublime Light and Colors.” In this lecture Francine will recount, through slides, the history of the stained glass windows in the various regions of France and describe the technical evolution and trends of this special art form over the course of centuries. Although Francine is a biological scientist by training, her leisure-time passion has been the study of French art and history. The Solana Beach Library is located at 157 Stevens Avenue, Solana Beach, 92075 (telephone 858-755-1404). This program is free to the public.
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BY CLAIRE HARLIN When Fred Pahl first met Edgar Engert in 1972, he said the local man, who worked for 44 years as a landscaper at the Paul Ecke Ranch, was shy and never spoke in groups. But if you knew Engert now, at age 76 — a high-spirited, outgoing leader who starts conversation with nearly everyone he passes — that description would be hard to believe. Engert has come to be known in North County as “Mr. Encinitas.” He’s headed the Encinitas Chamber of Commerce, spearheaded Encinitas events like their holiday parade and Octoberfest, and he’s the longest-standing member on the board of the Magdalena Ecke Family YMCA, which has for decades served communities from Encinitas to Del Mar to Rancho Santa Fe. But highest on Engert’s list of achievements is the fact that he helped start the YMCA’s service club 40 years ago. Once known as the “Y’s Men’s Club,” the group has, to date, raised more than $750,000 for the Magdalena Ecke Y. Pahl, the Y’s former executive director, saw a need for the service organization in 1972, and approached 30 local men who he asked to help charter the club. Well-known horticulturist Paul Ecke Junior introduced Paul to Engert, his landscaper, who Ecke said would be a great person to head the club. Engert is still a leader in the club today, having progressed to head of the club on regional and international levels as well. “[Ecke] said, ‘I have just the guy for you.’ He introduced me to Edgar because he’s a gogetter, a dynamo.” said Pahl, adding that the group became the first co-ed Y service club in the world when Engert’s wife, Renate, became president in 1975. It was at that time when the group changed its name to the North Coast Y Service Club. For those who have attended the Y, they may have noticed the remodeled preschool, youth camp programs and structural improvements to the aquatic park, but they may not have known that those assets are the results of people like Pahl and Engert, as well as other members of the North Coast Y Service Club. That’s why, on the club’s 40th anniversary, members are holding a commemorative event to recognize the club’s efforts. The event is open to the public and will be held at 6 p.m. on Jan. 26, 2013 at The Grauer School, located at 1500 S. El Camino Real. The North Coast Y Service Club is comprised of members from a variety of backgrounds, from retirees to working people to stay-at-home moms. The club’s annual flower sales, which include the poinsettia sale that recently wrapped up, bring in some $8,000 to $12,000 in sales each year, and the group’s holiday giving campaign brings in about $250,000 — about $8,000 of which is usually raised annually by Engert himself. The service club also holds an annual casino night that brings in about $18,000. “Being part of this club has changed my life because I feel good about doing something for the community,” said Engert, who is still very active in the club with his wife. He also said he’s happy to see the Y, which was once small, grow into a 20-acre, ocean-view facility with an extensive number of programs and activities for all ages.
January 3, 2013
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January 3, 2013
Rancho Santa Fe Review
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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2012-033470 Fictitious Business Name(s): Home Inspection One Located at: 12580 Oak Knoll Road #20, Poway, CA, 92064, San Diego County. Mailing Address: P.O. Box 262144, San Diego, CA 92196. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The ďŹ rst day of business was 10/30/2006. This business is hereby registered by the following: Dirk R. Funk, 12580 Oak Knoll Road #20, Poway, CA 92064 . This statement was ďŹ led with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 12/27/2012. Dirk R. Funk. RSF286. Jan. 3, 10, 17, 24, 2013
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Trustee Sale No. 23737CA Title Order No. 95502923 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST DATED 12-04-2006. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE OF THE PROCEEDINGS AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. On 01-16-2013 at 10:00 A.M., MERIDIAN FORECLOSURE SERVICE f/k/a MTDS, INC., A CALIFORNIA CORPORATION DBA MERIDIAN TRUST DEED SERVICE as the duly appointed Trustee under and pursuant to Deed of Trust Recorded 12-12-2006, Book , Page , Instrument 2006-0878333 of ofďŹ cial records in the OfďŹ ce of the Recorder of SAN DIEGO County, California, executed by: MICHAEL A DEMICH AND JONI S DEMICH HUSBAND AND WIFE AS COMMUNITY PROPERTY as Trustor, MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., AS NOMINEE FOR INDYMAC BANK, F.S.B., A FEDERALLY CHARTERED SAVINGS BANK, as BeneďŹ ciary, will sell at public auction sale to the highest bidder for cash, cashier’s check drawn by a state or national bank, a cashier’s check drawn by a state or federal credit union, or a cashier’s check drawn by a state or federal savings and loan association, savings association, or savings bank speciďŹ ed in section 5102 of the Financial Code and authorized to do business in this state. Sale will be held by the duly appointed trustee as shown below, of all right, title, and interest conveyed to and now held by the trustee in the hereinafter described property under and pursuant to the Deed of Trust. The sale will be made, but without convenant or warranty, expressed or implied, regarding title, possesssion, or encumbrances, to pay the remaining principal sum of the notes (s) secured by the Deed of Trust, interest thereon, estimated fees, charges and expenses of the Trustee for the total amount (at the time of the initial publication of the Notice of Sale) reasonably estimated to be set forth below. The amount may be greater on the day of sale. Place of Sale: AT THE ENTRANCE TO THE EAST COUNTY REGIONAL CENTER BY STATUE, 250 E. MAIN STREET, EL CAJON, CA Legal Description: AS MORE FULLY DESCRIBED IN SAID DEED OF TRUST Amount of unpaid balance and other charges: $1,687,996.60 The street address and other common designation of the real property purported as: 7592 VISTA RANCHO COURT , RANCHO SANTA FE, CA 92067 APN Number: 265-480-11-00 NOTICE TO
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Rancho Santa Fe Review to the property. You are encouraged to investigate the existence, priority, and size of outstanding liens that may exist on this property by contacting the county recorder’s office or a title insurance company, either of which may charge you a fee for this information. If you consult either of these resources, you should be aware
that the same lender may hold more than one mortgage or deed of trust on the property. NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNER: The sale date shown on this notice may be postponed one or more times by the mortgagee, beneficiary, trustee, or a court, pursuant to Section 2924g of the California Civil Code. The law requires that information about
CROSSWORD
trustee sale postponements be made available to you and to the public, as a courtesy to those not present at the sale. If you wish to learn whether your sale date has been postponed, and, if applicable, the rescheduled time and date for the sale of this property, you may call (714) 573-1965 or visit this Internet Web site www. Priorityposting.com , using the file number assigned to this case 23737CA. Information about postponements that are very short in duration or that occur close in time to the scheduled sale may not immediately be reflected in the telephone information or on the Internet Web site. The best way to verify postponement information is to attend the scheduled sale. The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the street address and other common designation, if any, shown herein. The property heretofore described is being sold “as is”. DATE: 12-17-2012 MERIDIAN FORECLOSURE SERVICE f/k/a MTDS, INC., A CALIFORNIA CORPORATION DBA MERIDIAN TRUST DEED SERVICE 3 SAN JOAQUIN PLAZA, SUITE 215, NEWPORT BEACH, CA 92660 Sales Line: (714) 573-1965 OR (702) 586-4500 STEPHANIE GARCIA, FORECLOSURE OFFICER MERIDIAN FORECLOSURE SERVICE IS ASSISTING THE BENEFICIARY TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. P1010158 12/27, 1/3, 01/10/2013. RSF285
January 3, 2013
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2012 Year in Review: RSF Society
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2012-030868 Fictitious Business Name(s): Pharmachine Vending Company Located at: 16060 Rambla de las Flores, Rancho Santa Fe, CA, 92067, San Diego County. Mailing Address: P.O. Box 2441, Rancho Santa Fe, CA 92067. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The first day of business has not yet started. This business is hereby registered by the following: Nicole Andonian, 16060 Rambla de las Flores, Rancho Santa Fe, CA 92067. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 11/27/2012. Nicole Andonian. RSF284. Dec. 13, 20, 27, 2012, Jan. 3, 2013
LEGAL NOTICES
ANSWERS 12/27/12
Call 858.218.7237
Dia Del Sol 2012
The The Beach and Country Guild’s 43rd Annual Día Del Sol, “Strike a Pose,” was held Oct. 17 at the Fairbanks Ranch Country Club. The event, which benefits United Cerebral Palsy, San Diego, included a luncheon and auction. The highlight of the event was the UCP Children’s Fashion Show sponsored by the Gap and a designer runway fashion show with Mistress of Ceremonies Kimberly Hunt. (Top) Missy Murray, Christina Capozzi, Marina Parnell, Marie Daniels, Denise Hug; (Bottom left) Fashions dazzle on the runway; (Bottom right) Emma Wells modeling fashions from The Gap. Visit www.beachandcountry.org. Photos/Jon Clark
Toys for Tots at RSF Golf Club
Place your ad online anytime! We now have a complete classified advertising self-service and payment system on our website! From items for sale, to rental and transportation needs, to garage sales, announcements and services, to obituaries and fictitious business name notices, and more.
Above: Joan Scott, Jennifer Dunn, Shelby Strong and Rose Weeks gather at a Toys for Tots event at the Rancho Santa Fe Golf Club on Dec. 4. PHOTOS/JON CLARK
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January 3, 2013
Rancho Santa Fe Review
Fundraiser benefits TPHS football
2012 Year in Review: RSF Society Symphony at Salk gala
Scott Ashby, Paul and Sarah Publico and Amanda and Roger Simsiman support Torrey Pines High School’s football program at the 17th annual Summer Dinner/ Auction and Golf Tournament Aug. 20 at Fairbanks Ranch Country Club. PHOTO/JON CLARK
‘Murder by the Book’
Above: Shara Fisler, Marc Montminy, former Vice President Al Gore, RSF’s Liz Keadle and Travis Berggren attend the 17th annual Symphony at Salk gala Aug. 25. Left: RSF’s Dr. Kent and Candace Humber, Robin and Gerry Parsky. PHOTOS/JON CLARK
Teens, Jeans and Dreams Cheryl Giustiniano, Kim Smart, Jill Stiker, Sophia Alsadek and Neda Noorani attend ‘Murder by the Book,’ the Rancho Santa Fe Library Guild fundraiser Sept. 15 at the Morgan Run Club & Resort. PHOTO: JON CLARK
‘White Nights’ La Jolla Music Society SummerFest’s ‘White Nights’ Gala was held Aug. 11 at the home of Jean and Gary Shekhter in Rancho Santa Fe (below). (Left, l-r) Gigi Fenley; Christopher Beach, Music Society president and artistic director; and Linda Howard enjoyed the event. PHOTO/JON CLARK
Solana Santa Fe turns 20!
(Above) Mary Miller, Ashlyn Mossy, Melisse Mossy and Lauren Grizzle are happy to be a part of Friends of San Pasqual Academy’s Team Penning event, “Teens Jeans and Dreams,” held Sept. 8 at the Del Mar Fairgrounds.The event benefits the 150 foster teens of San Pasqual Academy. (Left) Sarah Ortel, Jordan Salter and Grace Creelman at Solana Santa Fe Elementary School’s “Back to School BBQ and 20th Birthday Party” Sept. 7. PHOTOS/MCKENZIE IMAGES
Rancho Santa Fe Review
HOME OF THE WEEK
Magnificent Views Rancho Santa Fe, CA Outrageous Covenant property with incredible views. Wake up to spectacular sunrises every morning on this estate site with southerly views that will truly take your breath away. The property consists of a four-bedroom, 5,445-square-foot home with a terrific floor plan. With towering eucalyptus, tennis court and a pool to the south, the possibilities are endless. Offered at $3,295,000
Orva Harwood 858-775-4481 orva@harwoodre.com CA DRE Lic #00761267
www.TheHarwoodGrp.com
THIS WEEK’S
OPEN HOUSES
Can be viewed at rsfreview.com/homes and delmartimes.net/homes
January 3, 2013
B23
B24
January 3, 2013
Rancho Santa Fe Review
Rancho Santa Fe | The Covenant-$6,475,000
Rancho Santa Fe | Rancho La Cima Estates-$5,495,000
Private & gated, this magnificent Italian Farmhouse was built by a prominent architectural & interior design team with custom finishes throughout. Features include 1BD guesthouse & pool house.
This custom estate radiates Country Italian ambiance on a spacious & lush 2.27 acre lot and showcases majestic sunsets, mountain vistas & peak ocean views in the gated enclave of Rancho La Cima Estates.
Rancho Santa Fe | The Covenant-$4,100,000
Rancho Santa Fe | The Covenant-$3,995,000
Single story, historic Lilian Rice gem! Stunning architecture, beautifully appointed interior spaces, 2BD/2BA guesthouse, 3 entertainment patios, sparkling pool, regulation tennis court and a huge, tree lined park.
Stunning Mediterranean Villa perched on a hilltop with breathtaking panoramic views on one of the Covenant’s most desirable West side locations. This 4BD main + 2BD guest house is situated on 3 lush acres.
Rancho Santa Fe | The Covenant-$3,795,000
Escondido | Elfin Forest-$1,995,000-$2,295,000
San Marcos | Twin Oaks Valley -$1,975,000-$2,295,000
Reminiscent of all the grace which is Rancho Santa Fe, this adobe exudes charm & ambiance with modern comforts.
Luxury abounds in this incredibly private hilltop location- a welcoming retreat with a brilliantly designed floorplan.
Equestrian dream with extensive horse amenities on 8.74 flat acres, featuring 2BD remodeled guest house & studio apartment.
Rancho Santa Fe | The Covenant-$2,250,000
Rancho Santa Fe | Covenant-$1,975,000-$2,195,000
Rancho Santa Fe | Cielo -$1,788,000
Incredible opportunity! Spectacular, panoramic views overlooking the idyllic countryside of RSF extend to La Jolla & beyond.
Recently remodeled and situated on 2.8 flat & useable acres, this Westside Covenant gem is the perfect family home!
This extraordinary home in Cielo is the perfect blend of relaxation and elegance- resort-style living at its finest!
La Jolla | The Village-$848,000
San Marcos | Old Creek Ranch-$749,900-$779,900
Carlsbad | Bristol Cove-$649,000-$670,000
La Jolla’s premier full service building in the heart of the Village! It’s all about quality of life with ocean views & more!
Designer staged home with all the bells & whistles! Canyon views surround this gorgeous, tropical landscape!
Waterfront living on the lagoon! Bristol Cove is San Diego’s prime spot where you can enjoy waterskiing & private boat dock!
858.756.2444
WWW.WILLISALLEN.COM • 6012 - 6024 PASEO DELICIAS, RANCHO SANTA FE Coronado • Del Mar • Downtown • La Jolla • Point Loma • Rancho Santa Fe