Solana beach sun 03 23 17

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www.delmartimes.net

Volume 20, Issue 12

March 23, 2017 | Published Weekly

Del Mar council short-term rentals hearing set for April 17

Community

Upgrades of schools discussed at superintendents forum. A3

Lifestyle ANNA SCIPIONE

BIG WIN FOR TORREY PINES LACROSSE The undefeated Torrey Pines High School boys lacrosse team kept its winning streak alive with a big 9-7 win over Loyola of Los Angeles on March 18. Loyola came from behind and tied the game in the last few minutes, but thanks to two quick goals by Torrey Pines, the Falcons secured the win. In the game Mikhail Fraboni made 11 spectacular saves while Alderik Van der Heyde put in three goals and got three assists. Sophomore Michael Mines also had three assists. Torrey Pines is ranked 22nd in the country.

DMUSD dares to think different with revamped District Design ■ See inside for a variety of photos of community events.

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BY KAREN BILLING The Del Mar Union School District (DMUSD) is set to uncover how to make education look “radically different” with its District Design through 2022. The District Design, formerly known as the strategic plan, aims to create a vision for what’s next for today’s student. DMUSD Superintendent Holly McClurg said it’s an exciting process to develop a completely new design for the future that reflects not just what students need academically but what they need from the whole school experience to make it more meaningful.

A District Design team has been composed of leaders in education and the community that will meet in the coming months. The first meeting will be held on Thursday, March 30 at 5 p.m. at the district office, followed by meetings on April 24 and May 11. The team includes a mix of voices such as innovators in industry, CEOs of companies, entrepreneurs, educators from universities, politicians and parents. “The team will bring different perspectives and innovative ideas to get at SEE DMUSD, A24

BY JOE TASH The controversial question of whether short-term vacation rentals such as those offered on AirBnB and other websites are allowed in Del Mar’s residential neighborhoods is set to get a full airing before the City Council on April 17. At issue is whether Del Mar’s land-use rules, including its zoning ordinances and community plan, allow property owners to rent their homes for daily or weekly use to visitors. On one side are those who earn income from the rentals, and on the other side are residents who contend that vacationers cause problems such as noise, litter and parking shortages. The council decided at its meeting on Monday, March 21, to set the hearing in April in response to a pair of appeals from residents, resulting from a Planning Commission hearing on Feb. 14. At that earlier meeting, the commission decided, on a 3-2 vote, that it did not have enough information to interpret city laws regarding whether short-term rentals are allowed in residential zones. The council had requested the interpretation in January. At the Monday, March 21 council meeting, residents who filed the two appeals -

both requesting a council ruling on the short-term rental issue - spoke, along with eight members of the public. The speakers were reminded that the council would not be deciding on the legality of short-term rentals, but only whether to grant the appeals and set the public hearing. Under the city’s rules, council members were not allowed to discuss the issue, but only vote on whether to grant the appeals. Three council members - Dwight Worden, Sherryl Parks and Ellie Haviland - raised their hands to signal their approval, although only two votes were needed. The decision sets the stage for what is sure to be a contentious hearing on April 17. One factor that the council will have to wrangle with is that city codes don’t specifically permit or prohibit short-term rentals. This discrepancy has allowed proponents on both sides of the issue to contend that city rules support their cause. At Monday’s meeting, Ralph DeMarco, who signed an appeal along with more than 20 other people, argued that city regulations have for decades allowed transient or short-term vacation rentals. “There is no evidence that SEE RENTALS, A24

San Diego County bans marijuana dispensaries BY KAREN BILLING The San Diego County Board of Supervisors banned medical and non-medical marijuana facilities within the unincorporated areas of the county in a 3-2 vote on March 15. Supervisor Kristin Gaspar proposed the ban in January in the interest of public safety in an “uncertain

environment.” “We have ever-growing demands on law enforcement, we have ever-growing demands on our budget. In my personal view, San Diego really can’t afford the unintended consequences on the horizon related to recreational marijuana,” Gaspar said. “We can’t afford at this time to intensify the

situation, and we have an obligation to keep our communities safe and fiscally sound.” Supervisors Greg Cox and Ron Roberts voted against the ban. Recently adopted state laws permit jurisdictions to impose bans and the county’s amendments SEE DISPENSARIES, A24

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PAGE A2 - MARCH 23, 2017 - NORTH COAST

Local man pleads guilty in Solana Beach kidnapping case

EDUARDO CONTRERAS / U-T

Jack Henry Doshay (right) appeared in Vista Superior Court with his lawyer James Pokorny to enter a guilty plea on March 16.

BY DANA LITTLEFIELD A North County man accused of attacking a 7-year-old girl outside a Solana Beach elementary school pleaded guilty Thursday, March 16, to felony charges and agreed to be sentenced to more than a decade in prison. Nearly two years after he was first charged in the incident, Jack Henry Doshay, 24, admitted to one count of kidnapping and one count of assault with intent to commit child molestation, stemming from the March 23, 2015, incident. Doshay will be sentenced to 10 years and four months in state prison at a hearing set for May 31. Vista Superior Court Judge Timothy Casserly said the defendant will also be required to register as a sex offender for the rest of this life.

According to the District Attorney’s Office, Doshay attacked the young victim outside Skyline Elementary School in Solana Beach shortly after school had let out for the day. Investigators said a stranger dressed in baseball clothes approached the girl, put packing tape over her mouth and moved her toward a secluded area near the back of the school. When questioned by the judge on March 16, Doshay admitted he forcibly held the victim and moved her a substantial distance without her consent, facts that supported the kidnapping charge. He also admitted he intended to touch the girl sexually. The girl fought back and was able to get away. SEE KIDNAPPING, A26

Wet winter ends drought restrictions for SFID clients BY JOE TASH The drought is over, at least in the Santa Fe Irrigation District (SFID). At its meeting on Thursday, March 16, the district’s board voted unanimously to lift all restrictions on water use by its customers, essentially declaring that for the agency, which serves some 20,000 customers in Solana Beach, Rancho Santa Fe and Fairbanks Ranch, the drought that has plagued California for the past five years is a thing of the past. The decision comes during one of the wettest California winters in

years, as many parts of the state have switched from worrying about a lack of water to concern over flooding. “We’re pretty excited to bring this before you today,” SFID General Manager Michael Bardin told the board, as he explained his recommendation to rescind the “Level 1” drought response, which called on district customers to voluntarily cut back on water use to achieve a district-wide water savings of 10 percent. The decision removes the last of a series of both mandatory and

voluntary conservation measures imposed in 2015, in the wake of a declaration of emergency by Gov. Jerry Brown which required state residents to cut their water use by a collective 25 percent. SFID responded by imposing strict rules on its customers, backed by fines and penalties, such as allowing outdoor watering only at certain days and times. The district also imposed allocations, a form of water rationing, on its customers for the first time in its history of more than 90 years. Last summer, as local water

shortages eased, the district moved from mandatory to voluntary conservation goals, and Thursday’s action removes the last of the voluntary restrictions. The district has certified to the state that it has adequate water supplies to meet its customers’ needs for the next three years. In January, the San Diego County Water Authority, a wholesale water agency, declared an end to the drought in the region. Other neighboring water agencies have done the same or are considering SEE DROUGHT, A26

CRIME REPORT March 13 • Vehicle break-in, theft — 700 block of E. Solana Circle, Solana Beach, 10:30 a.m. • Petty theft — 3800 block of Valley Centre Drive, Carmel Valley, 11:48 a.m. • Vandalism, $400 or more — 5100 block of Rancho Verde Trail, Carmel Valley, 1:30 p.m. March 15 • Drunk in public — 100 block of S. Sierra Avenue, Solana Beach, 11:41 p.m. March 16 • Drunk in public — Lomas Santa Fe and Stevens Avenue, Solana Beach, 12:45 p.m. March 17 • Assault, battery with serious bodily injury — 6600 block of Carmel Valley Road, Carmel Valley, 2:30 p.m. • Vandalism, $400 or more — 100 block of Lomas Santa Fe Drive, Solana Beach, 5 p.m. • Commercial burglary — 2200 block of Jimmy Durante Boulevard, Del Mar, 5 p.m.

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NORTH COAST - MARCH 23, 2017 - PAGE A3

Del Mar working on plan to deal with rising ocean level BY JOE TASH A citizen’s advisory committee will soon release a report with recommendations on how the city of Del Mar and private property owners should deal with rising ocean levels, which scientists anticipate will be one result of global warming. Del Mar council members Dave Druker and Dwight Worden, who serve as liaisons to the committee, are launching a series of meetings with residents of areas that could be affected by sea level rise, to explain the city’s process of creating an “adaptation plan.” Once the report is completed, it will be brought before the city Planning Commission. The City Council heard an update on the ongoing effort at its meeting on Monday, March 21. The plan, when completed, will include “trigger” events, such as flooding or other adverse impacts of sea level rise, and options for dealing with those impacts. A staff report for Monday’s meeting said, “The City’s intent is to create a toolbox full of

options that will be available to the City and private property owners moving forward. The approach being contemplated involves monitoring the amount of sea level rise, flooding, storm frequency, and beach width over time to measure the extent of change and corresponding risk of hazard. The exact ‘triggers’ for future action are still to be determined by the City Council. Action will only be required by the City and private property owners if and when an established trigger is reached.” The California Coastal Commission has directed that all cities along the state’s coast begin planning for their response if and when ocean levels begin to rise, Druker said Monday. The city has received two state grants to help pay the planning costs for both a risk assessment and draft adaptation plan. The city will also have to seek an amendment to its local coast plan. The documents can be found on the city’s website at www.delmar.ca.us/sealevelrise

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Upgrades of schools discussed at superintendents forum BY BRITTANY WOOLSEY Superintendents from four local school districts discussed modernizations of learning institutions, among other topics, at a forum at Pacific Trails Middle School in Carmel Valley on March 15. The event, which was part of the North Coastal Council of PTAs’ bi-monthly meeting, invited Superintendents Holly McClurg of Del Mar Union School District, Timothy Baird of Encinitas Union School District, Eric Dill of San Dieguito Union High School District and Terry Decker of Solana Beach School District. Modernization and upgrades of school facilities was a common denominator

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Eric Dill, right, superintendent at San Dieguito Union High School District, discusses achievements at the district alongside Encinitas Union School District Superintendent Timothy Baird at a forum on March 15. in the superintendents’ speeches. At Del Mar Union School District, McClurg said the schools “look pretty traditional” and said the

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Water district raises manager’s pay BY JOE TASH The Santa Fe Irrigation District Board of Directors gave a 5.6 percent pay raise to the district’s general manager, Michael Bardin, at its meeting on Thursday, March 16. As a result, Bardin’s base pay increases to $225,000 per year, from its previous level of $213,140, which was set in May 2014. Bardin has held his position with the district since 2004. The board approved the pay raise on a 4-1 vote, with director Marlene King opposed. In a written statement, board president Michael Hogan said, “The board’s action to increase the general manager’s compensation was the first time his salary has been adjusted since 2014. The 5.6 percent increase is comparable to the total

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increases received by district employees over the same three-year period. His administration and financial management of the district is to be commended especially during the recent Michael Bardin emergency drought declaration that resulted in a decrease in revenues due to 25 percent reduction in water demands. As a result of his efforts, the district continued to meet its core services while maintaining one of the lowest water rates in the county.” King also released a written statement SEE WATER DISTRICT, A26

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PAGE A4 - MARCH 23, 2017 - NORTH COAST

U.S. Army engineers learn about sand replenishment County supervisor BY BRITTANY WOOLSEY Encinitas and Solana Beach city officials hosted colonels from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers March 15 at city beaches to show them the sand replenishment efforts the cities have taken on. During the tour, city officials showed the colonels Moonlight Beach in Encinitas and Fletcher Cove in Solana Beach, both of which have portions covered in cobblestones. The North County project, conducted by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, is an effort to bring more sand to the shores to help prevent the bluffs from being exposed to crashing waves, particularly during the winter season, and thus help maintain residential properties and public facilities on the upper bluff. The threat of bluff failures has “forced many private homeowners to build seawalls to protect the base of the bluff,” according to a project document. Another goal is to reduce erosion and shoreline narrowing to improve recreational opportunities, officials said, as well as increase public safety. In 2005, a woman fell to her death after she

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Encinitas Mayor Catherine Blakespear, right, meets with Colonel Gibbs from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers at Moonlight Beach on March 15 to discuss the city’s sand replenishment program. hopped over a safety barrier at the top of the bluffs in Encinitas. Encinitas Mayor Catherine Blakespear considered this an important local project. “Observing a beach filled with cobblestones instead of sand makes the case for funding the sand replenishment program,” she said. The project — which has been planned for nearly two decades and includes dredging sand from offshore sites to widen the beaches — is expected to cost nearly $174 million in construction costs over the next five decades, and the cities have agreed to share a portion of the costs with the

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federal and state governments. The 50-year project was unanimously approved by the two city councils in 2015 and signed off by the U.S. Congress last year as part of the federal Water Resources Development Act. For the Moonlight Beach project, officials want a 50-foot wider berm, 7,800 feet of sand alongshore, a renourishment cycle of five years nine times and 340,000 cubic yards of sand. At Fletcher Cove, a 150-foot wider berm, 7,200 feet of sand alongshore, a renourishment cycle of 10 years four times and an initial volume of sand of 700,000 cubic yards are all

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planned. The next step is getting funding from Congress, said David Van Dorpe, deputy district engineer. “Once we complete the design, we can get sand back on the beach,” he said, adding it could take a few years for the funds to be approved Heather Schlosser, chief of the Coastal Studies Group, said it will take about two years to design and conduct pre-construction monitoring of the beach, including for habitats and surfing conditions. “We have a little concern for the reefs,” she said. “We don’t expect any environmental impacts in Encinitas but we do expect some potential in Solana Beach. We’ll be monitoring both sites for potential impacts.” Construction could conceivably start after those two years, Schlosser said. Col. Peter Helmlinger, who was present on the tour, said the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers wants to continue to partner with the cities to “lead a successful project.” “At this point right now, it’s been raised to the next level for action to keep the project moving,” he said.

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NORTH COAST - MARCH 23, 2017 - PAGE A5

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PAGE A6 - MARCH 23, 2017 - NORTH COAST

Leading the way for women in STEM Carmel Valley’s Lauren Lek gives opportunities, support to OLP students BY KAREN BILLING As the head of school for Academy of Our Lady of Peace, Carmel Valley’s Lauren Lek is preparing 750 young women for the future, carrying on the 134-year-old school’s legacy of educating the next generation of women leaders and innovators; helping them find their voice and compete at all levels regardless of what their career and aspirations might be. Lek is a champion of science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) programs for young women, including the recent build-out of the first virtual reality space of its kind in an all-girls school or of any school in San Diego County with its new zSpace laboratory. Lek has brought much more to the school than just the state-of-the-art zSpace lab — she works hard to nurture girls in STEM and ensure that young women are provided with exposure to strong women mentors and champions in all fields. “OLP is my first exposure to the power of an all-girls environment,” said Lek. “Society loves to play up the myths of all-girls school but the reality is so different…Girls here are authentically themselves, they are able to enjoy learning and leadership. For these four

years there’s no pressure from boys, the opportunity to explore new things. They gain confidence and courage and really develop here.” Lek has been the head of school at OLP for the last four years. Before coming to OLA, she was the principal at the co-educational Moreau Catholic High School, her alma-mater in Hayward, Calif. Her educational background isn’t rooted in STEM but in English — she attended UC San Diego for her undergraduate degree in literatures of the world and received her master’s degree in educational leadership from St. Mary’s College. While serving as the assistant principal of instruction at Moreau, she oversaw the school’s first 1:1 laptop deployment and that was when she really started to explore the role of technology as a learning tool. She went back to school at Pepperdine University and got her doctorate in educational technology leadership. “It’s become a passion point for me to learn and understand how technology can be integrated with learning,” Lek said. “When I came to OLP, the school already had an amazing reputation as a center of excellence for young women but it was not

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COURTESY

Academy of Our Lady of Peace Head of School Lauren Lek with student Daniella Ochoa-Gomez, who will attend Harvard in the fall. integrated in the subjects like technology, science and computer science. They were fairly siloed,” Lek said. Over the last few years, the school went through a lot of professional development with teachers and worked on integration of subjects and adding classes, such as engineering and increased math options. She coordinated the STEM Certificate program, added AP computer science, bio-technology, entrepreneurship, orchestra, architecture and engineering design, and built the school’s Makers Engineering Space. OLP also launched the only all-girls competitive robotics team, the MicroChicks, which received a grant from the National

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Defense Education Program and is sponsored by Qualcomm. The new virtual reality zSpace lab has limitless applications, allowing students to learn visually and interact with a catalogue of course materials from anatomy, ecosystems, botany, physics, earth science, biochemistry, geography and history. Students wear special glasses and a stylus to manipulate 3-D graphics on a screen. They can also work in groups and witness the same imagery as long as they are wearing the glasses. “They can do a 3-D dissection of a heart or the entire living body. At the high school SEE STEM, A25

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NORTH COAST - MARCH 23, 2017 - PAGE A7

District Attorney fights ‘stereotypes’ of human trafficking Lawyer points out how to spot victims BY MARÍA JOSÉ DURÁN La Jolla Bar Association members were briefed on how to spot and combat human trafficking at their March 9 meeting, held at the Empress Hotel on Fay Avenue. Chief Deputy District Attorney Summer Stephan, who has been battling the illegal activity for over a decade told those gathered, “We have an image of human trafficking, and it usually involves some international affair, some border crossing, some lines between states, some foreign national or immigrant, when in fact, sex trafficking is 80 percent domestic in the United States.” She said the average age of a sex-trafficking victim is 16, adding that a study investigating 20 San Diego high schools found confirmed cases in 90 percent. “We find victims all the way across the county. We’ve had sex-trafficking cases in Carlsbad, La Jolla ... from every area,” she explained. Stephan said social media has revolutionized the recruiting techniques of sex traffickers. “When I first started with this issue, it used to take place in low socio-economic areas. That’s changed now because of the Internet. Through social media, traffickers and recruiters are reaching into our children’s bedrooms, and using their devices to lure them and recruit them,” she said. In recent cases, recruiters were using a fake modeling agency as an excuse to get close to the victims.

DORIAN IRIBE / SAN DIEGO DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S OFFICE

SAN DIEGO DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S OFFICE

San Diego Chief Deputy District Attorney Summer Stephan (at the podium) announces the results of a multi-agency operation across California to stop the sexual exploitation of young women and girls. ‘Operation Reclaim and Rebuild’ took place over a two-day period at the end of January.

Summer Stephan received the 2014 Bilateral Safety Corridor Coalition ‘Angel of Human Trafficking’ award for her 10 years of dedication in this area of law.

Up until 2012, sex-traffic victims under age 18 weren’t viewed as such if there was consent. “If you are a minor, it’s totally irrelevant if you consent to prostitution,” Stephan said. “It’s incredible to imagine that if a child under age 18 is molested by a stepfather, teacher or whatever it may be, society acknowledges that’s a crime. But if that child is subjected to 10 acts of sex abuse

2005. “My feeling is that the reason we didn’t have a law until 2000 is that we had a belief that this didn’t happen in our country. It happened somewhere else. It didn’t make sense until we realized we really needed it.”

every night at a hotel where he or she is being sold, somehow society feels like they’re just prostitutes, and no longer a victim of sexual abuse.” She further pointed out that legislation for human trafficking has been late-coming in the United States. Until 2000, there wasn’t a federal law tackling the issue, and the state version didn’t come into existence until

How to spot sex traffic victims

In January 2016, a state law went into SEE TRAFFICKING, A25

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AVINO is located at 5040 Camino San Fermin in the exclusive neighborhood of Pacific Highlands Ranch. With the new Village Center and award winning schools right next door, this brand new, exquisite eco-lux community offers 1, 2, and 3 bedroom luxury rentals ranging in size from 678 to 1338 sq.ft. Top of the line amenities include direct access garages with EV charging, solar-powered clubhouse and cyber café, resort style saltwater lap pool, spa and cabanas, 24-hour state of the art fitness center, steam room and sauna, three gourmet BBQ areas, playground, pet spa, and game room with pool table. Enjoy the convenience of Carmel Valley, and the charm of Pacific Highlands Ranch.

$2345 - $2620 1 bedroom $2875 - $3375 2 bedrooms $3425 - $3950 3 bedrooms

For more details, contact our office

(844) 821-7026

Professionally managed by R & V Management Corporation

Visit the property’s website

www.AvinoLiving.com


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PAGE A8 - MARCH 23, 2017 - NORTH COAST

‘Pammy’s Pony Parties and Petting Zoo’ enhances love of animals BY KAREN BILLING Pamela Kramer-Glickman is never happier or more at peace than when she is around her animals — and she is around her animals a lot. There’s her “handsome” quarter-horse Stanley, her Palomino pony Daisy, her Suffolk sheep Julian, Gittel the pygmy goat, her chickens she absolutely adores, and Marla, the pig, who sits under her desk while she’s working at home, warming her toes. These animals and more make up “Pammy’s Pony Parties and Petting Zoo,” which is partially housed at U.K. Equestrian at Rancho Cielo in Rancho Santa Fe. Her parties and petting zoo go on the road while riding lessons and an upcoming summer camp will be held at Rancho Cielo. “I encourage children especially to be around a horse ranch, they learn so much more than just riding,” Kramer-Glickman said. “They learn compassion for animals and it builds their self-esteem. They learn discipline, accountability and responsibilities. They learn to love and trust an animal as a friend. They have a sense of family and camaraderie with other riders. Age makes no difference.” The ranch was previously owned by Ginger Hill and was called Rancho East. Kramer-Glickman said she was lucky that Hill welcomed her in with her quarter-horse Stanley, her Palomino pony Daisy and her sheep and goat. “To find a ranch that would let you bring in a baa-ing sheep and goat was unheard of it, as it might scare the horses. Ginger's attitude was it’s just another farm animal. The horses will learn and adjust,” Kramer-Glickman said.

In September 2016, Graeme Dixon purchased the 11-acre ranch and renamed it Rancho Cielo — it is now home to about 85 horses in a newly spruced-up facility and barns. Kramer-Glickman was grateful that he allowed her sheep and goats to stay on, sharing the feeling that children could learn a lot from visiting with the animals. “He had a vision of wanting lots of children and grown-ups to learn to ride. He enjoys the sound of the children and the pure joy and happiness it brings to the ranch,” Kramer-Glickman said. Through the ranch’s business U.K. Equestrian, children can start beginning

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lessons with trainers Dixon and Shayna Gale and continue to ride either for pleasure or to go on to compete in local shows. Kramer-Glickman has taught horseback riding to children for over 40 years, beginning in her native Canada. She also worked as a veterinary assistant and is an insured horseback riding instructor, camp director and teacher. She has always loved animals and moved to California from Montreal nearly 30 years ago with her childhood horse and her filly. The horses passed away at the ages of 27 and 25 and a heartbroken Kramer-Glickman wasn’t sure she could ever own a horse again.

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Children hold animals at Pammy’s Pony Party and Petting Zoo.

Her whole life changed after a friend asked her to visit her horse in Del Mar at Far West Farms, owned by Sandy Arledge. At Far West Farms she saw horses and foals everywhere, chickens running around, some goats, a cow, peacocks, rescued rabbits and guinea pigs, and dogs. “I had only seen this many animals in a zoo. All the animals got along, the dogs did not chase the chickens or the horses. The peacocks walk along and did their own thing. Life seemed balanced and in harmony and chickens came when you called their name,” Kramer-Glickman said. She was hooked on the farm life and bought a quarter-horse from Arledge and then got some chickens of her own — she would’ve never thought that chickens could be such loving creatures. “They had personalities, they were affectionate and I felt like it was Christmas morning every day when I collected their eggs,” Kramer-Glickman said. She became more than just a horse rider but a small farmer, purchasing baby bunnies, a baby goat and helped nurse a baby sheep back to life, bottle feeding it while it lived in her home. As her little farm grew larger, she created Pammy’s Pony Parties and Petting Zoo to take the show on the road. “I couldn’t wait to bring them to preschools, senior homes and share my new experience. There is so much unconditional love all around us,” Kramer-Glickman said. One of the things she enjoys most about her traveling petting zoo is the joy it brings. She watches as children with learning disabilities SEE ZOO, A16

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NORTH COAST - MARCH 23, 2017 - PAGE A9

Local woman gets ‘Second Chance’ with new book

MICAELA MALMI

Local resident Claire Marti has published her first book.

BY BRITTANY WOOLSEY Claire Marti had always longed to write a book, but life got in the way. Various careers, including as a fitness instructor in the North County area, took precedence over the Leucadia woman’s passion for writing. But in January 2010, when Marti was diagnosed with breast cancer, books and stories overtook her life once again. “For me, my biggest escape, if it wasn’t yoga or working out, was reading and escaping into another world for a while,” she said. “I like romances because you know they have a happy ending.” She set her mind to begin her writing career, and began steadily focusing on it when she moved to Denver for two years for her husband’s job. “All of a sudden, it was cold outside and I didn’t have any friends,” she said. “So I found myself with time to just sit down and write.” Marti, who still teaches yoga and pilates classes, will release her first book, Second Chance in Laguna, on March 31. The 200-page story follows a woman who gets left behind at the altar by her fiance, who she learns has been cheating on her. She moves to Laguna Beach to write a novel and start over with no intention to date, but ends up meeting a man who could tempt her otherwise. Regarding her choice of location for the book, Marti said the city in coastal Orange County is unique, romantic and does not feel commercial. She also said it holds a special place in her heart since her husband proposed there. Marti described Second Chance in Laguna as the perfect book to read while at the beach, by the pool or on an airplane. “It’s kind of funny, it’s light, it’s not a big literary novel,” she said. “It’s more of, here’s your escape for a

few hours, especially if you’ve ever been really rejected or cheated on. You’re really cheering for her to get over it and find a happy ending.” She said the writing process — which took about six months — was cathartic because she could pull from personal experiences. She remembered how it felt to be cheated on by an ex-partner. “It was easy to pull up those emotions of when you look at the cell phone bill, and you see someone else’s number a bunch of times,” she said. Marti said she was encouraged by other authors at conventions a few years ago to submit her stories into writing contests. She ended up winning first and third place in two of them. She signed her book contract with The Wild Rose Press in March 2016. Second Chance in Laguna is the first in Marti’s Finding Forever in Laguna series, with the other two books featuring characters introduced in the debut. Marti said she has already finished writing the second book and has written a first draft of the third book. She also plans to write and release historical fiction books, as well as a larger hardback novel focusing on a romance set in 1920s Paris. “I purposely decided to do the contemporaries first because I wanted to master my craft, get my feet wet and learn as I go,” she said. “I wasn’t ready to sit down and write the epic novel yet.” A public launch party for Second Chance in Laguna is scheduled for April 6 from 5 to 7 p.m. at Stratford House Salon and Spa, 1408 Stratford Court in Del Mar. Champagne, wine, cupcakes and snacks will be served. Second Chance in Laguna is available for pre-order at Amazon.com, Barnes and Noble, Wild Rose Press, iBooks and Kobo in paperback and e-book editions. For more information, visit clairemarti.com.

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PAGE A10 - MARCH 23, 2017 - NORTH COAST

Solana Beach School District announces Employees of the Year The Solana Beach School District recently announced the 2017 Certificated and Classified Employees of the Year. ■ Certificated: Lisa Campbell, 5th-6th global education teacher, Skyline School. Skyline School Principal Lisa Denham said, “Lisa Campbell, a 26-year veteran with the Solana Beach School District, has dedicated her career to providing outstanding instruction that fully engages all students and allows each student to reach their full potential. She celebrates each milestone, no matter how big or small, with her students as she supports them through the learning process. Lisa has also served as a teacher leader, and has provided professional development in the area of writers’ workshop for the past two years to teachers across the district. Her knowledge and passion for teaching writing to fellow teachers has provided them with the opportunity to learn new approaches and strategies for teaching the different genres and components of writers’ workshop, resulting in renewed enthusiasm for writing, both with teachers and students alike across the district.” Upon receipt of this recognition, Campbell stated, “I am truly amazed and humbled by this honor. This recognition is absolutely due to working in an amazing and supportive district; the true excellence of the Solana Beach School

Lisa Campbell

Susanna Romero-Reiss

District is the result of the dedication and collaboration of an incredible team of teachers, administrators, staff, parents, and students. I am truly honored to be a member of the Solana Beach family!!” ■ Classified: Susanna Romero-Reiss, guidance technician, Solana Highlands School. “Susanna Romero Reiss, affectionately known as Mrs. R., comes to Solana Highlands every day ready to make a

difference in the lives of students. She is keenly aware of the individual needs of each child she supports as our guidance assistant. Mrs. R. teaches children to understand their feelings and how to manage their anxiety and frustration. Kids feel loved and cared for by Susanna, and they are able to overcome their challenges and enjoy their time at our school. She truly puts her heart and soul into her students and they are lucky to have her in their corner. We are so fortunate to have Susanna at our school and in our district,” stated Matt Frumovitz, principal, Solana Highlands School. Romero Reiss responded to the announcement by saying, “I feel deeply moved to receive this honor. Solana Beach School District employees are top notch and it is an honor to work alongside so many wonderful people. I absolutely love getting to work with the children at Solana Highlands School. It is such a blessing to help children learn strategies to work through their strong emotions and help them gain confidence and grow into leaders.” Solana Beach School District Superintendent Terry Decker said, “The success of our students is a direct reflection of the strength and commitment of our staff. Solana Beach School District is fortunate to have Lisa and Susanna on our team, and we are proud to have them represent the district as our employees of the year.”

Friends of Solana Beach Library scholarship deadline is April 30 The Board of Directors of the Friends of the Solana Beach Library has selected a Scholarship Committee who will carry out the directive to award two $1,000 educational scholarships to graduating high school seniors or continuing/returning students who live or attend school within the city limits of Solana Beach. Each

scholarship is a one-time award to be used for continuing education at a community college, a four-year college or university, a graduate/professional school, or a technical/vocational/career school in the United States. In addition to living or attending school within the city of Solana Beach, each

Your home financing deserves our attention We have over 25 years of mortgage lending experience. We are dedicated to providing top customer service and innovative financing options for all loan sizes and homeownership needs. Let us help you finance your home with confidence. Dan Sherlock, NMLSR ID 453574 Julie Sherlock, NMLSR ID 455249 Home Mortgage Consultants www.sherloans.com 858-997-9300 3579 Valley Centre Drive, #150 San Diego, CA 92130

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recipient must have a San Diego County Library card, have a minimum cumulative grade point average (GPA) of 2.5 for the three most recent years for which a GPA is available. Consideration will be given to financial need, community activities, extracurricular activities, awards and recognitions. The application for the 2017 Friends of the Solana Beach Library can be downloaded as a PDF from the Friends website (www.friendsofsolanabeachlibrary.org). Also printed applications are available at the Solana Beach Library and will be provided by any librarian.

Students must complete and submit the application form by April 30, 2017, along with an essay, a completed permission form, and two letters of recommendation; one letter should be from a teacher and the other from an adult who is not related to the student and can provide information about the student to the Scholarship Committee. There is no filing fee with this scholarship application and eligible students are encouraged to apply. The scholarship money can be used to pay for tuition, books, fees, room and board or other related educational expenses. More specific information is included with the scholarship packet.

Join Us for a FREE

SCAM PREVENTION & IDENTITY THEFT WORKSHOP Wednesday, March 29th 10:00 am – 12:30 pm

Solana Beach Community Senior Center Debin Hall • 120 Stevens Ave, Solana Beach

BE AWARE – DON’T BE A SCAM VICTIM This is an extremely important and timely event which takes the place of our regular scheduled activities. Please plan to join us for the entire event, beginning at 10:00 am in Debin Hall.

PAUL GREENWOOD, Deputy District Attorney and Head of the Elder Abuse Prosecution Unit will speak on how you can prevent becoming a victim of fraud and scams.

BRING YOUR QUESTIONS! • Learn How Identity Theft Can Occur • Learn How You Can Take Steps to Prevent It

Wells Fargo Home Mortgage is a division of Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. © 2011 Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. All rights reserved. NMLSR ID 399801. AS2224379 Expires 05/2017

• Learn What to Do If Your identity Is Stolen


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NORTH COAST - MARCH 23, 2017 - PAGE A11

PRELIMINARY RENDERING

WHERE STYLE, CONVENIENCE & CHARACTER BLEND TOGETHER New Homes Now Selling from the Mid $700s

Unparalleled living meets an unparalleled location at Sur 33. Set amongst the rolling hills of Del Sur, Sur 33 brings a little modern magic to North County with distinct tri-level homes offering three to five bedrooms ranging from 2,021 to 2,438 square feet. Just steps from the desirable shopping and dining destinations of Del Sur’s Town Center, this new neighborhood is truly located in the center of it all. We invite you to visit our Sales Center, tour our three fully furnished designer model residences and experience the beauty of Del Sur living.

CalAtlanticHomes.com

For more information, please contact Stephanie Norris at (949) 751-8951 or Stephanie.Norris@calatl.com

No view is promised. Views may also be altered by subsequent development, construction and landscaping growth. Seller does not represent/guarantee that the project will be serviced by any particular public school/school district or, once serviced by a particular school/school district, that the same school/school district will service the project for any particular period of time. Eligibility requirements (including geographical) may change over time. You should independently confirm which schools/districts serve the project and learn more information about the school district’s boundary change process prior to executing a purchase contract. Square footage/acreage shown is only an estimate and actual square footage/acreage will differ. Buyer should rely on his or her own evaluation of useable area. Prices, plans and terms are effective on the date of publication and subject to change without notice. Depictions of homes or other features are artist conceptions. Hardscape, landscape and other items shown may be decorator suggestions that are not included in the purchase price and availability may vary. This ad contains general information about a new home community in California and it is not an offer or the solicitation of an offer for the purchase of a new home. This information is not directed to residents of any other state that requires registration or permit issuance prior to the publication of such information. CalAtlantic Group, Inc. California Real Estate License No. 01138346.


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PAGE A12 - MARCH 23, 2017 - NORTH COAST

- Sponsored Content -

trends & events

A New Type of Psychotherapy Like many good things in life, clinical psychology and Dr. E.B. (Barry) Keehn did not meet up until he’d sampled many other forms of insight and learning. Born in the nation’s capital but partly raised in London, he left home at the age of 17 and hitch-hiked his way across Europe and then traveled overland to India and Thailand, where he stopped and studied to become a Buddhist monk.

However, traveling on to Japan, he met his wife, who soon presented him with twin girls. That focused his mind on earning a living, so he returned to the U.S. and obtained a Ph.D. in political science at Berkeley, specializing in the politics of Japan. Then, with a third daughter, he accepted an appointment at Cambridge University in England, where he taught for several years. When his oldest girls reached high school age, he decided to return to California so they could prepare to go to college here, while he became the President of the Japan Society of Southern California. Dissatisfied with a life mostly devoted to business affairs, Japanese interests, and raising money, he once again changed course and got a second doctorate in Clinical Psychology. But as his Los Angeles practice developed, he realized that traditional approaches to psychotherapy did not satisfy either his perceptions or the needs of many of his patients. Many of his patients came to him with immediate problems that, on closer inspection, derived from emotional reasoning, narratives, and behaviors that stemmed from much

COURTESY

earlier life experiences. But these historically embedded guides were often completely irrelevant to the choices, circumstances and challenges they faced now. Keehn therefore developed something he calls Present Moment Analysis because he believes that once we cultivate our “inner observer” we can better understand our thoughts and behaviors as they occur and move away from repetitive patterns of worry, depression, and anxiety. In Present Moment Analysis the client-therapist relationship includes three things: a) psychotherapy based on focused dialogue, b) broad-based readings and current research findings in areas of direct relevance to each client’s concerns, and c) the integration of meditation practices to enhance feelings of calm while augmenting insight, self-awareness, and social intelligence. This approach is not a quick fix and requires thought and effort on the part of the patient. One reason Keehn moved his practice from Los Angeles to the San Diego area is that he likes working with older people who have the necessary time and patience. He’s currently based in Solana Beach but is looking for a permanent office in La Jolla. He can be contacted via his website: www.presentmoment. healthcare.

Del Sol Lions in the photo include Caroline Matthews (back row, second from left, Joe Kellejian, back row, fourth from left, and Fran Fenical, far right). Also in the photo are staff and students of La Colonia Boys & Girls Club.

Del Sol Lions bring calculators to local students The Del Sol Lions delivered four TI-84 graphing calculators and 10 TI-30 scientific calculators to the high school students at the La Colonia Boys & Girls Club. The calculators are valued at more than $500. Both types of calculators will be used for completing homework and can be checked out for standardized SAT/AP/ACT testing.

COURTESY

Craig Missakian and Terry Minasian, president of Del Mar Seacoast Republican Women Federated at the March 16 event.

Former Assistant U.S. Attorney speaks at Del Mar Seacoast Republican Women Federated event Del Mar Seacoast Republican Women Federated hosted an evening of “Politics and Wine” March 16 at the Del Mar Country Club in Rancho Santa Fe. Craig Missakian, a well-known trial lawyer, and former Assistant U.S. Attorney, was the evening’s speaker. Missakian has earned national attention for prosecuting cases of terrorism, organized crime and public corruption. Highlights of his speech included an outline of his efforts

in prosecuting the 2007 case of Chi Mak, a Chinese National who headed up a spy ring that targeted the U.S. Navy’s most closely guarded technologies. Missakian described service in Washington D.C., as one of the lead lawyers who investigated the 2012 terrorist attack of Benghazi. He has also been involved in the investigation and conviction of numerous individuals in California that involved over $100 million in fraudulent Medicare claims.


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NORTH COAST - MARCH 23, 2017 - PAGE A13

Hand to Hand awards $32,000 in grants to help women

Rebels Wrestling Club for boys and girls, K-12 The Rebels Wrestling Club is underway. This off-season wrestling club is designed to offer wrestling to Girls and Boys in grades K-12. The summer league runs from March 13 – May 24. Practices take place at Canyon Crest Academy in the Auxiliary Gym every Monday through Wednesdays from 6:30-8 p.m. The fee is only $250 for over two months of wrestling with several competitions. Youths at all levels are encouraged to join to learn about wrestling and enhance their techniques for the next season. Sessions will cover: Warm Up/Stretching, Tumbling/Body Awareness, Skills & Technique, Drilling and Live Wrestling, Match Strategy, Nutrition, Special guest coaches and clinicians. The camp raises funds for the wrestling program at both Torrey Pines High School and Canyon Crest Academy. Don’t stop wrestling just because the season is over, sign up now! Register online: https://fs30.formsite.com/ccaf/ CVRebelsSpring17/index.html Parents are welcome to all activities. Please contact tphswrestling@gmail.com or Coach Nesseler at connor879@yahoo.com for more details.

COURTESY

Members of the Torrey Hills Rubik’s Cube teams.

Torrey Hills Rubik’s Cube team places second at competition

Four grants worth over $32,000 were awarded from Hand to Hand to San Diego County women’s nonprofit organizations. Hand to Hand, a giving circle at Coastal Community Foundation, directs resources to programs that empower change and self-sufficiency in women. This giving circle is composed of 60 women who contribute funds and then choose worthy recipients. Grantee Generate Hope, a residential treatment program for victims of sex trafficking, received $10,000 from Hand to Hand. The Karen Organization of San Diego received $5,700 to fund women’s mentoring circles for

Burmese refugees in San Diego. $10,000 was granted to Kitchens for Good which provides culinary job training and life skills programs for women in need. The residential treatment program for women being released from prison, New Entra Casa, was given $6,500. Hand to Hand is a part of Coastal Community Foundation which granted $300,00 last year to nonprofits, schools, and community programs. The grants help fulfill CCF’s mission to enhance the quality of life in the San Diego north coastal area. CCF can be contacted at info@coastalfoundation.org.

The Torrey Hills Elementary School Rubik’s Cube teams took part in the Rubik’s Cube competition held on March 11 at California State University, San Marcos. This was part of the San Diego Science Festival celebrations. One of Torrey Hills teams placed second, they were able to solve 25 cubes in 3 minutes, 27seconds.

COURTESY

Grant recipients with some Hand to Hand members.

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NORTH COAST - march 23, 2017 - Page A15 NORTH COAST - MARCH 23, 2017 - PAGE A15

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Spirit of Liberty Foundation helps celebrate 105th birthday of oldest Pearl Harbor survivor All community members invited to send a birthday message The Spirit of Liberty Foundation helped celebrate the 105th birthday of Ray Chavez, the oldest Pearl Harbor survivor, on the U.S.S. Midway in San Diego March 11. The Spirit of Liberty Foundation was able to secure letters giving birthday messages to Chavez from American Presidents Jimmy Carter, George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, Donald Trump and other great Americans, including World War II veteran Bob Dole and more than 100 Midshipmen at the Naval Academy. Ray's birthday cake was created by Gina Rose of "Dessert Divas." The Spirit of Liberty Foundation is inviting all Americans, including school children, to join the American Presidents by sending Chavez a birthday message, letter or card by July 4, 2017. Well wishers can e-mail (please print clearly) him the birthday wishes by e-mail to: raysbirthday.com. Or mail cards and letters to: Ray’s Birthday, Box 105, Cardiff by the Sea, CA 92007. If mailed, please print your e-mail address clearly so Ray can email you a thank you! Everyone who includes their e-mail with the cards or notes will also receive a personal thank you from Ray Chavez, with his photo. The Spirit of Liberty Foundation is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization that was originally formed to raise funds and to assist in the restoration and maintenance of the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island. After the restoration was completed, and as a result of 9/11, the Foundation’s mission was changed to honor and support American heroes in the Armed Forces past, present, and future with an emphasis on Wounded in Combat, Fallen Heroes, and their families. For more information, visit spiritoflibertyfoundation.com.

Marcy Llamas Senese, PhD

COURTESY

AAUW member Marcy Llamas Senese, PhD, a speaker at national convention COURTESY

Spirit of Liberty Foundation founder Richard Rovsek (far right), Sean Thompson (left) and Ray Chavez (center), the oldest Pearl Harbor survivor, at the 105th birthday celebration for Chavez held March 11 on the U.S.S. Midway in San Diego.

COURTESY

A birthday letter sent to Ray Chavez from President George H.W. Bush and his wife Barbara Bush.

COURTESY

The birthday cake created for Chavez at the March 11 event was a work of art created by Gina Rose, whose company name is “Dessert Divas.” FROM ZOO, A8

Pamela Kramer-Glickman with a young rider.

COURTESY

or people who are overcoming cancer find their strength again and feel powerful by riding a horse or leading as goat; she delights seeing children cradle a chicken or give her big fluffy sheep Julian a snuggly hug. “I’m getting a chance in my senior years to do something I love,” Kramer-Glickman said. Kramer-Glickman loves seeing children coming straight from school to the ranch for lessons or training, caring for their own horses or visiting her sheep and goats. She has led several children through training to get their “Animal Handler’s License.” Having the license allows them to come visit and care for ponies, goats and sheep on the Rancho Cielo property, giving them a sense of responsibility. “When they’re at the ranch, they’re not inside by a computer or playing video games, they’re out in the fresh air. It’s so wonderful,” said Kramer-Glickman, noting the therapeutic feeling she gets from being on the ranch after a busy day, taking a leisurely horse ride in

The Conference on College Composition and Communication (4C’s) recently announced that Encinitas resident Marcy Llamas Senese, PhD, was a speaker at the 4C’s Annual Convention held March 16 in Portland, Oregon. Senese, a consultant for writing programs in colleges and universities, was a chair of the session “Improving the Experience and Efficacy of Testing for Placement.” Senese’s consulting practice supports students, faculty and administrators in best practices of academic writing. She also coordinates college and university relations as a member of the Del Mar-Leucadia Branch of the American Association of University Women (AAUW). Each year the 4C’s Convention draws college faculty members from around the world to share research in the field of teaching writing at the post-secondary and graduate levels. For more information, visit www.ncte.org/cccc/conv. beautiful Rancho Santa Fe. “You go out and you just feel like you’re in a different world. It doesn’t seem to matter how stressful my day is, I can come here and just exhale.” Kramer-Glickman said beyond that sense of calm and unconditional love, there is so much to learn from being on the ranch. One of her favorite lessons to share with kids is that when they are walking or riding a horse or goat, you have to pick a focus point and go toward it and the animal will follow your lead. “It is my philosophy in life that if you have a plan and look ahead to where you want to go, you’ll get there,” Kramer-Glickman said. U.K. Equestrian is located at 18547 Aliso Canyon Road. Pammy’s Ponies upcoming Summer Equestrian Camp will allow campers to learn about all the basics of horse care through games and activities. In addition to feeding, grooming and equine education they will also get to interact with pigs, sheep, ducks, goats, rabbits, chickens and more. To learn more, visit Pammy’s Pony Parties & Petting Zoo on Facebook.


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COURTESY PHOTOS

Harlem Lacrosse middle school players from Compton and Southeast Los Angeles and members of the Torrey Pines Boys Lacrosse team at the beach in Del Mar.

Members of the teams playing lacrosse at the beach.

Torrey Pines Boys Lacrosse hosts Harlem Lacrosse After the 3th and 4th grade Rancho Santa Fe Eagles Lacrosse players left the Rancho Santa Fe School field on Saturday, 30 Harlem Lacrosse middle school players from Compton and Southeast Los Angeles suited up to participate in a clinic put on by senior members of the Torrey Pines Boys Lacrosse team. TPlax players led the boys in drills similar to what Coach Jono Zissi runs them through during their regular team practices. “The Harlem players responded well to what we

were asking them to do, their skills improved after just a few rounds,” shared Senior TPLax player, Caden Wolfson. After the clinic, the team headed to TPHS, to watch TPLax win 9-7 over Los Angeles’ Loyola High School. This keeps TPLax undefeated and still ranked #1 in the West, as well as their #22 nationally ranked position by Inside Lacrosse. Thirteen TPLax families hosted the boys for an overnight at their home, where many relationships started instantly. “No matter what their story looked like, or sounded like,

we all bonded in the short moment of time that we spent together,” said Deborah Hagen, mother of TPlax player Sean Hagen. The next morning, the players met at the beach in Del Mar and, for some, experienced the ocean for the first time. “It was a lot colder than I expected, but it sure was fun!” shivered Jermiah Ifanyi, a 5th grade Harlem player. After a lunch generously provided by Board and Brew in Del Mar, the Harlem team loaded the bus to head back to Los Angeles. Phone numbers were exchanged and promises to

meet up again were made as the boys said goodbye to one another. “I realized in that moment, here we were, all set and ready to help these boys, to give to these boys, and show them another side to things, but what I wasn’t expecting was what they gave and left us, a reminder of what life is truly all about – compassion, empathy and respect for one another, no matter what the story presents itself to be,” said Deborah Hagen. For more information about Harlem Lacrosse, please visit: www.harlemlacrosse.org

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45th Annual National Football Foundation Scholar-Leader-Athlete Awards Banquet is April 7

COURTESY

J.J. Bartelloni, Coach Jake Gilliam, Gage Helfrich, Coach Nick Diaz, Brady Burman, Pavle Ristic, Coach J.J. Brull, Aidan Collins, Josh Morgan. Not pictured: Cooper Whitton, Cam Wurl.

Falcons Elite’s 7th Grade Gold team wins another league championship Falcons Elite’s 7th Grade Gold team won another title this winter season, picking up a league championship (playing up a year) with 8th graders in the San Diego

Sol league. The team finished the season 15-3 across two leagues. For more information on the program, visit falconselitebasketball.com.

Torrey Hills Jogathon

T

orrey Hills Elementary School held its annual Jogathon fundraiser on March 8. Funds raised at the event this year go towards technology and the modernization of common spaces. Online: delmartimes.net PHOTOS BY JON CLARK

The National Football Foundation and College Hall of Fame — Walter J. Zable/San Diego Chapter will be holding its 45th Annual Scholar-Leader-Athlete Banquet Friday, April 7 at 6 p.m. at the Scottish Rite Center in Mission Valley. This prestigious banquet will be honoring 25 high school and two college football players from the San Diego County for their outstanding effort on the football field and in the classroom, including the Willie Jones Most Inspirational Player Award recipient, Oceanside High’s Mykel Bernal. Here is the entire list of players being honored at the banquet: Yu Jay Kurosu (Torrey Pines High), Mykel Bernal (Oceanside High), Chance Sears (Cathedral Catholic High), Jack Cavellier (Cathedral Catholic High), Graham Valentine (Cathedral Catholic High), Patrick Rutledge (Point Loma High), Noah DiNapoli (Saint Augustine High), Nicholas Demos (La Costa Canyon High), Sampson Niu (Madison High), Tyrese Reed (Mission Bay High), Vincent Alexander Cruz (Mira Mesa High), Dominic Gudino (Olympian High), Keenan McDonald (Imperial High), Quentin Frazier (Mater Dei Catholic High), Eli Shelton (Mater Dei Catholic High), Kayvon Brown (Lincoln High), Daniel McColl (La Jolla High), Cole Dimich (La Jolla High), Caleb Phillips (Santa Fe Christian), Domonic Esparza (Hilltop High), Casey Mariucci (La Jolla Country Day), Trent Forster (Santana High), Gabriel Preciado (Mar Vista High), Michael

Wilson (Mar Vista High), Rodrigo Del Real (Calipatria), Devyn Bryant (University of San Diego) and Daniel Brunskill (San Diego State University).. These athletes will join an impressive group of past NFF Scholar-Leader Athletes from San Diego, including the late Junior Seau and former Helix High stars and current NFL players Reggie Bush and Alex Smith. All of the Scholar-Leader-Athlete Award winners will receive a $1,500 scholarship. Coaches receiving awards are Tristan McCoy of Rancho Bernardo High School (Coach of the Year) and Mike Hastings of Point Loma High School (Meritorious Coach of the Year). University of San Diego head coach, Daley Lindsey, and San Diego State University head coach, Rocky Long, will both be receiving the Contribution to Amateur Football Award. Mike Downing will be receiving the Official of the Year Award. Scholar-Leader Athlete’s were nominated by their coaches based on a combination of their performance on the field, grades in the classroom and volunteer work in the community. The some 100 nominations were looked over by the NFF-Walter J. Zable/San Diego Chapter Board Members and of those 27 were selected. The NFF-Walter J. Zable/San Diego Chapter is sponsored by many in the community, including the Chargers Community Foundation, Higgs, Fletcher & Mack LLP and the Zable Foundation. Contact Jennifer Bower at jenbowernff@gmail.com or 619-341-0545 for ticket info.


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OPINION

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Del Mar Times Solana Beach Sun Carmel Valley News 380 Stevens Suite 316 Solana Beach, CA 92075 858-756-1451 1011 Camino del Mar Suite 120 Del Mar, CA 92014

delmartimes.net The Del Mar Times (USPS 1980) is published every Friday by UnionTribune Community Press. Adjudicated as a newspaper of general circulation by Superior Court No.GIC 748533, December 21,2000. Copyright © 2016 Union-Tribune Community Press. All rights reserved. No part of the contents of this publication may be reproduced in any medium,including print and electronic media,without the express written consent of UnionTribune Community Press. Subscriptions available for $125 per year by mail.

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LETTERS POLICY Topical letters to the editor are encouraged. Submissions should include a full name, address, e-mail address (if available) and a telephone number for verification purposes. We do not publish anonymous letters and there are length limits (about 450 words maximum). E-mailed submissions are preferred to editor@delmartimes.net. Letters may be edited. The letters/columns published are the author’s opinion only and do not reflect the opinion of this newspaper.

OUR READERS WRITE Climate change and science This letter was written on an iMac; emailed to the Del Mar Times. These everyday tools are the product of scientific research. Our TV’s, our cars, our homes have all been enhanced through scientific discovery. Science grows, delivers, and allows us to enjoy food of infinite variety. Through science we have learned the miracles of life, medicine, health. Science has shown us our place in the solar system and in the Universe. The theories of science, the discoveries of science, and the applications of science surround us. Now our science tells us that the one and only planet we have is experiencing more rapid and severe changes in its climate than in all of Earth’s history. It is certainly inconvenient, but science finds compelling evidence that our need for energy, particularly from fossil fuels, is a primary contributor to these changes to our planet. You can even deny the scientific evidence of cause; but to deny effect is to put your head in the ground. Our generation will not be able to arrest the climate changes ahead, but we need to make an effort now (though really we should have started 20 years ago). We have opportunities in solar energy, wind and others. We can conserve and recycle. These things are easy and save everybody money. I know we’re not going to stop driving, but we can get serious about electric cars. These efforts represent great opportunities for individuals, industry and business alike. It is a fools errand to debate climate change. We are no longer in a “what-if” scenario. We are all leaving this planet one day. Our children and

their children will inherit it. They will already be challenged to return the planet, the one we’re leaving them, to a long sustainable one. They will need the best efforts of science and scientists to find their solutions. In the meantime, we must allow our national policies on climate change to be guided by the same science that got us here. This in not a partisan issue; it affects all of us, Democrats, Republicans, Independents. There’s lots of room to debate the best path. I pray that our state and federal representatives look to the scientists for guidance. Scientific research with appropriate funding for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and even the Department of Defense will help us find solution. But we must get past debating reality. The one action we cannot afford is no action. Matthew Perl, MD Carmel Valley

Pall cast on free speech regarding climate change As most probably know, legal action has been taken by several state attorneys’ general to subpoena records regarding the issue of climate change and causes. Such actions cast a pall on free speech, and this newspaper is to be thanked for its willingness to participate in a public discussion. In a continuance of the discussion, I would offer Mr. Rabin that his citing of the often used “97% of active climate scientists agree…” is a discredited statistic (see: http://tinyurl.com/qjg5hf7). Once that idea is

Harvesting food awareness in Encinitas, Part Two

W

hen developers were granted permits to build new housing in Encinitas in the 1990s, they were required to reserve land for schools to serve the children of the new homes. A 10-acre parcel on Quail Gardens Drive was set aside for this purpose and was deeded to the Encinitas Union School District in the early 2000s. Because the projected number of students did not materialize, the land sat empty for years, said Tim Baird, EUSD superintendent. The state frowns on unused school land and was moving forward on an assessment of about $60,000 per year, Baird said, prompting the district to have serious discussions about the property. Although he said the district didn’t need a school then, he felt the district eventually might.

“This was the last big parcel of land available to us,” he said. “We therefore knew that whatever we did on the land, we had to be able to turn our work into a school at some point in the future.” The unique idea of Farm Lab met all requirements. The property was eventually transformed into an outdoor classroom that offers hands-on learning about bio-diversity, crop production and environmental science. Only one acre of the site is currently growing food for the district’s schools, but three more acres on the northern side of the property are being primed for future farming, with cover crops and soil amendments building soil fertility. We love our worms! Water usage and conservation are a major focus in Encinitas schools. “We have a whole series of lessons around water use,” said Baird.

absorbed, however, the real crux of the issue is the poisonous atmosphere (no pun intended) that prevents the traditional productive discourse between researchers. Unless researchers can postulate positions, solicit third party review, have strenuous and detailed analysis of each other’s raw data, challenge methodology, and engage in direct discourse of opposing ideas, then no confidence in any position can be seriously held. Unfortunately, I note that the current professional researcher role in resolving differences in understanding opposing positions is greatly inhibited. Professional growth, success in one’s chosen field, and perhaps simple employment in the profession, is apparently dependent to a large degree on holding a particular position that mankind is causing the climate to change in a harmful way. It seems that a few researchers, no longer concerned about “publish or perish” or a continued funding source, offer a moderating if not opposing view to the current drumbeat of man caused climate change and impending doom. See: http://tinyurl.com/zhof6od. A curious reader might also consider these video clips by a Nobel laureate in physics: http://tinyurl.com/gv8hwn8. Or: http://tinyurl.com/l5z3zc2. Several of the critical comments are based in mere data presentation (graphical axis scale distortion in one case), as an indication of the presenter’s goal of making a particular point, as opposed to letting the observer reach a data-driven conclusion. That is subterfuge at work in a technical discussion. Bill Stoops Solana Beach

SEE LETTERS, A23 Each of the nine K-6 campuses offers filtered water, and drip irrigation nourishes the crops at Farm Lab. Farm Lab Director Mim Michelove said the San Dieguito Water District measured water usage at Farm Lab last summer, when more water is used than at any other time of the year. “They calculated that … we used less than half of the water used in an average San Diego home,” she said. “That amount is consistent year-round, although we obviously use even less in cooler months.” Three Israeli-designed rain barrels, using an innovative yet simple concept to capture rain water, are in place at Farm Lab. Michelove said the rain barrels utilize a uniquely designed release valve at the bottom that eliminates bacteria and sediment. The health department has restrictions on how rain water can be used in schools. For now, the water can be used for landscaping purposes, and the district hopes to eventually use the water to flush toilets. Recycling is also part of the district’s environmental lessons. Children learn to sort their trash and food waste carefully, using special bins at every school site including Farm Lab. One of the six bins is labeled “worm SEE SUTTON, A23


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OUR READERS WRITE (CONTINUED) FROM LETTERS, A22

There’s no denying climate change Former Vice President Al Gore and his team just completed training almost 1,000 participants through his Climate Reality Project Leadership program in Denver early this month. He was joined by prominent scientists in giving very compelling presentations of the facts as they relate to climate change. I am one of the fortunate to have received this training. 8 billion tons of carbon emissions from fossil fuels have been released into the atmosphere since the mid- 1950s. Less than 2 billion tons per year were being released before that time. “Extreme” temperature events, which used to cover 0.1 percent of the earth now cover 14.5 percent. This corresponds with the dramatic increase in carbon emissions from fossil fuels. 2016 was the 40th consecutive year with global temperatures above 20th century averages. Jos Lelieveld, Director at the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry, says, “In the future the climate in large areas of the Middle East and North Africa could render some regions UNINHABITABLE…” Global ocean heat content has also risen dramatically along with the increase in carbon emissions. Extreme weather catastrophes in recent years have mirrored these increases as well. Global emissions have remained flat for three years in a row. Wind and solar power have been embraced as costs have come down dramatically. Many coal plants in the U.S. have been retired.

FROM SUTTON, A22 composting food.” I asked Michelove if this awareness has taken the yuck out of worms. “We love our worms!” she replied, smiling. Farm Lab also loves the idea of providing food for the community by way of a Food Forest along the edge of the property. A tree garden has been planted along Quail Gardens Drive which will bear many varieties of fruit in about three years, free for the community. Michelove said about 25 drought-tolerant trees have been planted, including pink and yellow pomegranate, nectarine, papaya, fig, plum, apple, persimmon, loquat, pineapple guava, and black and green coastal olives. The trees were planted through a joint effort of volunteer community members and the California Conservation Corps. The trees and supplies were purchased with funds provided through donations. Signs along the walking path will provide information about water conservation and urban agriculture. Not without controversy Despite all this, Farm Lab is not without controversy. Some parents have said Farm Lab is as controversial in the community as the yoga program has been. Said parent Danica Edelbrock, “As a health expert and a mom concerned with the environment for future generations, I applaud the idea of the EUSD Farm Lab. The importance of teaching children about these concepts is crucial to them growing up healthy and respecting our planet. “I would however like to be assured that the curriculum has been written by, and that farming practices are being managed by, educated leaders in these fields. I would also

Naysayers, rest assured that the facts are what matter. Finally, I believe that there is hope that with the adoption of clean energy solutions we can make a difference. Please ask your local, state and federal representatives to fight for clean energy and support climate action plans. Dr. Udo Wahn Climate Reality Project Leader

Where was Issa? On Sunday evening March 5, I attended the Anti-Defamation League’s (ADL) community briefing on anti-Semitism and security at the Jewish Community Center (JCC) in La Jolla - the site of four bomb threats this past month. Over 500 people braved the heavy rain and showed up including Congresswoman Susan Davis and staffers from the district offices of Congressman Scott Peters and Senator Dianne Feinstein. I deeply appreciate the participation of these elected officials and the support they demonstrated for the local Jewish community. Congressman Darrell Issa failed to attend - nor did he send anyone to represent him. ADL staff informed me that Issa’s office received an invitation but never responded. This is inexcusable. The JCC borders Issa’s district. His constituents send their children to preschool there. Many of us use the JCC’s athletic facilities and participate in its varied cultural programming. Issa should’ve sent someone to this apolitical forum dealing with an urgent community need. How will he learn about our concerns if he fails to monitor these crucial events? Sharon Rosen Leib Solana Beach

like to be assured that the [bond] proposition monies are being used wisely, that all children in the district have benefited from this program, and that the agriculture yields are in fact accurate.” Most seem to agree that the idea is good, but they question the cost. Baird said he plans to prepare a complete budget showing income and expenses for Farm Lab in the next month or so. Baird offered assurances about the crop yields at Farm Lab, saying, “The produce amounts that Mim gave are accurate. We are still purchasing some produce outside of the district farm and gardens, but our goal is to get as much as possible from our own fields.” Complaints have focused on the Farm Lab director herself, some questioning her qualifications and abilities. But Baird backs her, saying, “She is the best person in the world to be in this position doing this important work.” “Mim has acquired more money in donations and grants than her entire salary last year,” which Michelove said was about $80,000 not including benefits. Michelove was a co-founder of the non-profit Healthy Day Partners, which the website says was established “to provide schools with sustainable programs that help students make informed healthy lifestyle choices … [and to] support programs that engage students through school gardens, wellness and environmental education.” Michelove, through Healthy Day Partners, contributed to the success, Baird said, of the one-acre garden and farm at Ocean Knoll School, regarded by many as a showcase of nutrition and agricultural education. He said she also helped implement school gardens and garden instruction at other district schools.

Kyoto University, a UCSD partner, will open office in San Diego Kyoto University of Japan, one of the University of California San Diego’s international partners, will open an office in San Diego in early April, both campuses have announced. The Kyoto University Office will be located in the Sunroad Corporate Center, Suite 200, at the Eastgate Mall near UC San Diego. When UC San Diego opened an office in the heart of Tokyo in 2016, Chancellor Pradeep K. Khosla said: “By opening this new office, UC San Diego is demonstrating our commitment to strengthen our global partnerships and advance the frontiers of knowledge in order to benefit our planet and humankind.” Those very words could be repeated today as Kyoto University opens its office here, adjacent to the university and the innovative research institutions on the Torrey Pines Mesa. San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer welcomed the announcement. “We are proud to welcome Kyoto University to San Diego as its premier location to promote international partnerships in North America,” he said. “This decision bolsters San Diego’s standing as one of the smartest and most innovative cities in the world. It’s yet another example of how San Diego’s research ecosystem and collaborative culture continues to drive

One common criticism of the program is that the students are learning how to garden, harvest and prepare farm-grown food not at Farm Lab but at the schools’ gardens. Michelove said the Ocean Knoll farm is where the district piloted most of the programming and philosophies now implemented at Farm Lab. “OK Farm serves as proof of concept, prior to the natural extension of this work at Farm Lab,” she said. The future of learning Geographically, Farm Lab is ideally positioned in what’s known as the Encinitas Environmental Educational Cluster, or E3 Cluster. The E3 Cluster is a rare convergence of nonprofit organizations within close proximity to one another: EUSD’s Farm Lab, Leichtag Foundation, Coastal Roots Farm, San Diego Botanic Garden, San Dieguito Heritage Museum, Seacrest Village Retirement Community, the YMCA, and others. It’s a location that gives students access to learning opportunities rarely realized in other school communities. This has contributed to Farm Lab’s growing reputation, which has resulted in official visits from schools in central and northern California, from Los Angeles, and some San Diego County schools. “Out of state visitors have come from Colorado, Wisconsin, and even from Ontario, Canada,” Michelove said. Jim Farley, president and chief executive officer of the Leichtag Foundation, is proud of Leichtag’s association with Farm Lab, through Leichtag’s offshoot – the nonprofit Coastal Roots Farm. The idea is to get kids into farming, Farley said. He’d like to see the next generation “heavily engaged in growing their own food” and believes programs like Farm Lab are an

our economy and attract the world’s most talented individuals.” Sandra A. Brown, vice chancellor of Research at UC San Diego, said the new office “is a milestone we have achieved as a result of several years of hard work by faculty and staff at both institutions. UC San Diego and Kyoto University are premier research partners, and we expect our collaborations to expand by having the Kyoto University office next door.” Most recently, the university hosted the second UC San Diego-Kyoto University Joint Symposium, which featured two Nobel Laureates, the late Roger Tsien and Shinya Yamanaka, and attracted more than 300 participants from both universities as well as regional businesses and research institutions. “We are proud of the fact that we have maintained a healthy relationship between our two universities since UC San Diego’s early years, our cooperation beginning soon after its establishment,” said Kyoto University President Dr. Juichi Yamagiwa. “The new Kyoto University San Diego Office will further enhance and develop research collaborations with not only UC San Diego but also with the many prestigious institutions and hospitals in the greater San Diego region and in California, as well as with its active industry communities and governmental network.”

important step in that direction. Farley called Farm Lab a “transformational experience” that he acknowledged was in the early stages. “We’re just beginning to understand the possibilities here,” he said. “This is the best farm-school program in the country,” said Michelove. “This is where the future of learning is going.” Involving San Dieguito The long-term goal is to turn Farm Lab into a pre-K through adult learning center. What’s missing is a way to continue the learning after EUSD students leave sixth grade. Farley said the San Dieguito Union High School District can help fill the gap by extending EUSD’s program into middle and high schools, to allow students to stay connected to the land. Mike Grove, SDUHSD’s associate superintendent of educational services, agreed and called Farley’s ideas visionary. Grove said he sees numerous ways the program could enhance learning, in classes such as AP environmental science, chemistry and culinary arts. He said San Dieguito Academy and La Costa Canyon high schools both have thriving culinary arts programs, and SDA has its own garden. Grove said discussions need to happen with teachers “to make them aware of the possibilities.” According to the United States Botanic Garden, 200 years ago a vast majority of Americans worked in agriculture, but today fewer than 2 percent do. EUSD is trying to do its part to connect future generations more closely with the land. As Farley likes to say, “Farm on!” Part one of this topic appeared in the March 2, 2017 issue. Senior Education Writer Marsha Sutton can be reached at suttonmarsha@gmail.com.


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FROM DISPENSARIES, A1

a new rubric, that’s a new way of measuring how we do business in education,” DMUSD Assistant Superintendent Shelley Petersen said. “What we will be focusing on over the next three meetings is District Design. It’s not just in classroom and how it looks different supporting that really innovative, radically different instructional model and school experience. It’s more than just how we teach math. It’s the entire way we operate from the moment children walk in our doors at 7:45 a.m. to the time they leave at 2:45 p.m. How is that different?” Petersen said talking about “different” is what’s trending now in education, with buzzwords like innovators, project-based learning, inquiry-based learning and maker spaces. “Our mission is to set out to define what those mean and create a system that embraces the important parts and makes it more than just a lot of buzzwords in an old system,” Petersen said.

don’t preclude the private use of medical and non-medical marijuana, as allowed by California law. The proposed zoning changes will cause three existing medical marijuana collective facilities and two other vested facilities to become nonconforming and would need to cease operations within five years. The board also voted 4-1 to extend the moratorium on the establishment of medical marijuana collective facilities with Roberts voting no. “I feel very strongly that we ought to be establishing medical marijuana facilities in keeping with the state initiative,” Roberts said. “The ban is an attempt to have an excuse not to have anything, I’m not going to vote for that.” Roberts and Cox favored the “reasonable” compromise proposed by the planning commission. The planning commission did not recommend the ban and instead recommended limiting dispensaries to five existing operating facilities, banning new additional dispensaries and to consider future ordinances in 2018 when state regulations are in place regarding cannabis farming in agricultural zones. In January, the city of San Diego legalized recreational pot dispensaries and opened up the possibility to allow farms, manufacturing facilities and testing labs. There are 15 dispensaries throughout the city; the closest location in North County is on Roselle Street in Sorrento Valley. The city of Del Mar has an existing prohibition in place for both medical- and non-medical marijuana- related businesses, and the city of Solana Beach also has a ban in place for medical marijuana cultivation delivery and dispensaries. At the over three-hour hearing March 15, the supervisors heard from 49 speakers, the majority opposed to the ban, including medical marijuana patients, business owners and farmers. Those in favor asked the board to seek a compromise that preserved access. Borrego Springs resident Jake Fredericks said as the country is in the middle of a prescription drug overdose epidemic, medical marijuana is an alternative that helps people fighting debilitating disease, pain and chronic disorders. “Regulation is the appropriate response to deal with the safety concerns of the community, the will of the voters and the patients’ needs,” Borrego Springs resident Jake Fredericks said. Some in favor of the ban, including several parents and Judi Strang, the executive director of the San Dieguito Alliance for Drug Free Youth, spoke about their current fight against the “normalization of pot use” among kids.

The speakers were not against using marijuana medicinally but against the “commercialization” of marijuana. Chris Brown, who represented the Ramona Community Planning Group and small businesses affected by the ban, said while youth marijuana use and abuse is “troubling and concerning to us all, it is not the result of medical marijuana dispensaries.” In voting against the ban, Supervisor Cox said that his biggest fear is that the county could see an initiative placed on the ballot to deal with medicinal and non-medicinal marijuana facilities that could take away county control and possibly result in even more proliferation of facilities. He said such an initiative would be posed to see strong support as 57 percent of county residents supported Prop 64. “We will have basically abdicated our ability as a board to regulate the use of medical marijuana,” Cox warned. “It will be the logical consequence of this board taking action imposing this ban.” Chair Dianne Jacob said people only need to look to Colorado to realize that the legalization of marijuana has been a “disaster” and hasn’t produced the amount of revenue that it was believed to have generated. She said Colorado has seen an increase in marijuana-related traffic accidents, an increase in marijuana-related emergency room admissions, an increase in youth use and the black market has also surged as the number of drug cartels has increased. “If voters in California truly knew what law enforcement knows and the Colorado experience, they would not have voted for Prop 64,” Jacob said. “I firmly believe that marijuana use is detrimental to the health of kids and further actions to legalize marijuana would subject them to the many detrimental health effects that marijuana is associated with,” Jacob said. “A ban is in the best interest of public safety and the best interest of the people and the kids in our communities.” Since Gaspar’s proposal for the ban in January, she said she has been subject to a level of “non-civil discourse” including communication that she should be shot, that she is an unfit mother and that she wants to send cancer patients to jail. Gaspar said she is sympathetic to the impactful patient stories she has heard and has plenty of exposure to the issue from patients at her physical therapy practice who have benefited from medical marijuana use. Gaspar said it isn’t the board’s job to debate whether medical marijuana is helping patients — she believes that it is — but it is more about looking at the fiscal impact and the negative impacts on youth. She said with the hundreds of medical marijuana patients she has interacted with, no one has brought up a lack of access.

On the other side of the issue were two residents, Robin Crabtree and Ed Yuskiewicz, representing a group called Save Our Neighborhood Del Mar, which also appealed the Planning Commission’s decision. “Our intention in this appeal is preserving and restoring the special character of our residential neighborhoods, as the Community Plan and Municipal Code were intentionally written to protect, from the commercial uses that are adversely affecting our neighborhoods due to short-term rental businesses,” Crabtree told the council. “We urge you to acknowledge the

Planning Commission failed to properly render an interpretation as requested and to grant the appeal and set this matter for de novo (new) hearing,” she said. Nine members of the public also addressed the council and although they differed on the issue of short-term rentals, they all urged the council to grant the appeals and hold a new hearing. Carol Ozaki said the issue will affect the finances of many Del Mar residents such as herself, and asked the council to set a public hearing. “It really is a huge financial impact for all of us,” she said, and the hearing offers,

“a chance to have our voices heard.” David Doyle said many cities around the world, from Barcelona to New York, are grappling with similar issues regarding short-term rentals. “Every one of them is facing this exact same problem. It has to be dealt with if we’re going to have residential areas in our community,” he said. Among cities dealing with the issue is San Diego. Earlier this week, San Diego City Attorney Mara Elliott issued an opinion that short-term rentals are prohibited within city limits, and next week, a City Council committee is scheduled to discuss the topic.

COURTESY

Students work in DMUSD's modern learning studios. The district is looking to redefine what the school day looks like with its District Design planning. FROM DMUSD, A1 a much more well-rounded vision to help define and articulate the actions the district needs to take,” McClurg said. “By the end of the spring, we will have a clearly articulated vision that defines our path for the next several years.” McClurg said that if one really looks at the school experience 100 years ago compared to today, it wasn’t all that different. Children come to school and sit in a classroom, usually with desks, they go the library, they eat lunch and they go home with homework. When DMUSD says “radically different,” they mean they are looking at all of those pieces, including their own jobs in the old traditional leadership structure. “When we talk about change, this is change that is better,” McClurg said. She said the district will always focus on academic instruction, on creating great writers and readers and “fearless mathematicians,” but they also know from

everything they have researched over the last four years that children need a school experience that is different from the traditional model. “We really know from everything we’ve done, school must look different for our kids,” McClurg said. “We believe that school will be obsolete if we don’t do things differently and better.” DMUSD Assistant Superintendent Jason Romero said, it’s about ensuring that students are “excited, inspired and energized” from the first minute of the first day of school to the last minute of school that day to the last day of that year. He said the district has to determine whether it is providing an experience that keeps that level of creativity and inquiry throughout the whole school day and year. “We have a very successful system in Del Mar according to a traditional rubric and measures. The industry is asking for a different type of student to emerge from our educational system, so that’s

FROM RENTALS, A1 zoning codes have ever prohibited STRs (short-term rentals) in the city’s residential zones. There are no restrictions in the (Municipal) Code on length of time of a rental nor on the definition of a dwelling unit and there has never been any action taken by the city to enforce, stop or prevent STRs,” said the written appeal filed by DeMarco and his group. “It is clear by the plain language of the Code that STRs are permitted,” said the appeal.


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NORTH COAST - MARCH 23, 2017 - PAGE A25

FROM RAISE, A4

FROM STEM, A6

the money, it’s kind of an empty claim.” The higher salaries for members of the Board of Supervisors kick in as the county faces a deficit of at least $100 million from its $5.4 billion budget. Last month, board Chairwoman Dianne Jacob warned that looming changes in federal spending under the Trump administration could double or even triple that gap. For decades, the salary paid to county supervisors was set at 80 percent of the compensation paid to Superior Court judges, allowing the elected officials to get periodic pay increases without the spectacle of a public vote on a touchy subject. The action that Gaspar opposed in January adjusted the pay scale to 85 percent, effective March 17. The compensation rate will climb to 90 percent of a judge’s salary on Dec. 7, driving supervisors’ annual pay to $172,450 (or more if judges get a raise in the meantime). The increased salary also will boost the elected officials’ county pensions, lifetime benefits that are calculated by the amount of annual earnings. Simon Mayeski, a San Diego small business owner and longtime volunteer with California Common Cause, said if Gaspar was truly opposed to the pay hike, she would have lobbied her board colleagues against taking the money. “They were getting raises already that were more or less in line with other employees lately, less than 1 percent,” Mayeski said. “Not good enough for them, they voted to increase the percentage. That’s the story.” In supporting the proposed raises, supervisors noted that the salary formula had not been amended in almost 20 years. “San Diego County has the second largest population in the state and in terms of square miles is one of the nation’s largest counties, larger in size than two states,” Supervisor Ron Roberts said at the time. “I am very comfortable this adjustment is fair and justified.” Pay hikes for elected officials are often controversial. One such dustup is playing out in Boston this month over GOP lawmakers who voted against pay increases for lawmakers, then accepted the money. They are being ridiculed as the “vote no, take the dough” caucus. Some California lawmakers have declined to accept pay raises in a show of fiscal discipline. In 2013, after an independent panel approved pay hikes for state legislators, Sen. Mark Wyland, R-Solana Beach, and Assemblyman Rocky Chavez, R-Oceanside, declined the boost for themselves. “Last time I checked the state still has a structural deficit which we have not addressed as a Legislature,” Chavez said at the time. Chavez said on Friday, March 17, that he subsequently accepted the salary increase because voters were aware of the compensation package when they re-elected him. “I go back to the theory that as long as people know what they are paying me for the job I’m doing, I will take the money,” he said. Gaspar, a Republican, ran as a fiscal conservative, an approach she also took on the Encinitas City Council. After she was elected supervisor, the Encinitas council in January voted itself a 45 percent raise on a 3-1 vote. Gaspar’s conservative ally, Mark Muir, voted against the increase. Muir did not immediately responded to an inquiry about whether he plans to accept the raise when it takes effect in late 2018.

level, no student has access to those types of experiences,” said Lek, noting the technology can also whisk students away to the Louvre or the Taj Mahal. “Today, students are challenged to compete on a global scale and be adept at leveraging rapidly changing technologies. At OLP, we are thrilled to place these new tools in the hands of our remarkable students,” Lek said. As an advocate for women in leadership, Lek also created the OLP Women’s Symposium, providing the students with exposure and access to leaders in the field. The third annual Women’s Symposium will be held this year on Friday, March 31 and features leaders not just in STEM but in healthcare, arts, business and entrepreneurship. “Through dialogue and modeling, these female leaders empower young women to stand up for themselves and fearlessly chase their dreams,” Lek said. In the hub she has created, women have an opportunity to network and be together — Lek said it’s amazing to

Jeff McDonald is a reporter for The San Diego Union-Tribune. UT staff writer Ricky Young contributed to this report.

see a community leader sitting next to high school and middle school students and all of them learning about the same opportunities together. The best compliment Lek received was from one of the women professionals who said the $50 symposium (which includes breakfast, lunch and the speakers) was better than a $500 conference. Lek’s approach to stimulate STEM minds at OLP is working — the number of school graduates heading into STEM fields has skyrocketed. The national average for co-ed graduates pursuing STEM careers is 16 percent. At OLP last year, 40 percent of graduates chose to pursue STEM. “Our girls are really thriving in those areas,” Lek said. In San Diego, Lek has been recognized for her work by Athena, founded by District 1 City Councilmember Barbara Bry to support the advancement of women in the STEM-related industries. In 2016, Lek won Athena’s Pinnacle Award for best in the education field. “It was a very humbling experience and one of the

FROM TRAFFICKING, A7 effect requiring mandatory reporting of minor-age victims of commercial sexual exploitation. “Before this law passed, if a teacher overheard that a child in school was engaging in prostitution, the teachers did not have a duty to report that because it was not considered child abuse,” Stephan said. She has been training teachers, school nurses and hospital personnel about how to spot victims of sex traffic. Some of the behaviors include a steady need of abortions, possession of material objects (jewelry) that haven’t been accounted for and frequent disappearances from the home. Minors

most special awards I’d ever received because of what Athena stands for,” Lek said. “The Pinnacle means the top of your career. I’m humbled to receive this at 37 years old and I just feel like I have so much more; the award is acknowledging what I’ve done and honoring what is yet to come. As the leader, I want to ensure that at OLP all of us are ever restless in not settling for what was done, but searching for what our girls will need for today and tomorrow. In our rapidly changing world, that need for evolution in pursuit of excellence is always shifting." In March, Lek served as the keynote speaker at the San Diego Diplomacy Council’s Celebration of the International Day of Women and Girls, which featured 33 dignitaries from 16 different countries discussing the role that law plays in protecting women’s rights, domestically and abroad. Lek was proud to bring OLP senior Daniella Gomez-Ochoa to the celebration, as she represents everything Lek is trying to achieve at the school. Daniella, a dual citizen of the U.S. and Mexico who

who’ve experienced homelessness or are in the foster care system are at a higher risk of becoming victims. “When I train school nurses, I’ve had some of them in tears because I’ve described scenarios they’ve seen,” Stephan continued. “(For example) on Friday, a young girl comes in and says she has cramps, she needs to go home. With her in the room there’s another girl, posing as her friend, but that girl is only there to make sure she says the right thing so she can go. “Now you wonder, ‘Why is this girl not telling the nurse what’s happening to her? How she’s now going to be used for prostitution all weekend while claiming to be at her girlfriend’s house?’ The reason is the gangs know

lives in the Mira Mesa area with her grandmother, will attend Harvard University in the fall. A first-generation college student in her family, she plans to study neurobiology. At the San Diego Diplomacy Council event, Daniella shared how grateful she was that her family sacrificed so much for her education and said she is carrying on for others who are just as smart as she is but didn’t have the same opportunities. She gave the example of her grandmother, who aspired to be a nurse but was pulled from secondary school to work at a store so she could start saving money for her dowry. When Daniella was feeling anxious about writing her admissions essay, her grandmother gave her the push she needed, saying: “I want you to have the same opportunities as a man, and you should have them.” “She is a woman who will transform this world,” Lek said of Daniella. “She is an example of what can happen when a young girl is told ‘You can achieve this.’ Look out. Because she will.”

exactly what to do; they’ve given her drugs and alcohol and put her in a compromising position at a party with lots of pictures taken. What do teenagers fear the most? Being humiliated by their classmates. No force is needed. No chains are needed. The psychological chain of feeling ashamed and that you’re going to be embarrassed is enough for teenagers to do everything they’re asked to do.” Another problem in the fight against sex trafficking is that victims don’t consider themselves such. “We need to be the eyes and ears to see them. And report it,” Stephan concluded. ■ To report a victim of sex trafficking: Call 1 (888) 3737-888 or text BeFree (233733).

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FROM WATER DISTRICT, A3 regarding her vote against Bardin’s pay raise: “Regarding reasons for my ‘no’ vote on the salary increase for General Manager Bardin, which occurred three months into this current Board’s term, the Brown Act forbids revealing comments made in Closed Session. The 2016 Board carefully deliberated Mr. Bardin’s yearly performance evaluation and directed “no action taken” on 11/17/16 agenda item #16, ‘Consider Amending Employment Agreement between Santa Fe Irrigation District and

FROM SCHOOLS, A3 know schools to be,” she said. Decker said flexible learning environments — which can be easily converted with items like moveable furniture — can be part of the answer. In November 2016, Solana Beach voters approved Measure JJ, which replaced or upgraded aging, outdated classrooms, science labs, libraries and school buildings. Decker said the 60-year-old Skyline Elementary School will break ground on modernization in June. The construction will take place over the next year, when students will be displaced and many of them will go to Earl Warren Middle School across the street. Solana Highlands Elementary School and Solana Pacific Elementary School will also undergo modernization, Decker said. Improvements include a nutrition initiative and solar panels over parking areas. Dill said flexible learning environments have proved beneficial in the high schools. “We’ve created a bunch of boxes when we created our new classrooms, knowing that years from now there could be something

General Manager Michael J. Bardin, as Amended, Regarding Compensation.’ I stand by the integrity of the three-month performance evaluation process carried out by the 2016 Board which directed no action be taken to increase the G.M.’s salary.” Bardin oversees an agency that provides water to 20,000 customers in Solana Beach, Rancho Santa Fe and Fairbanks Ranch. The district’s operations and capital improvement budget for the current fiscal year, which runs through June 30, totals $35.7 million, and the district has 46 permanent employees. completely different that we want to utilize those rooms for,” he said. “We don’t want to be constrained by our furniture and the cabinetry.” He also formally announced there would be no lottery selection for the high schools, at least for the next year, partially due to various bell schedules to accommodate student and parent needs. In Encinitas, Baird said the district is currently “finishing out” the $44 million bond extension approved in Proposition P, which voters approved in 2010 to upgrade Encinitas elementary schools. The district would continue to develop and design its Farm Lab, which is essentially the district’s version of Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM) education, he said. A teacher-collaboration program was also recently approved, Baird said. “We’re in a bubble in our North Coastal area of the kinds of amazing work that’s going on,” he said. “This idea of empowering our teachers to do more and expand what they’re doing is really something you’ll find in all of our districts.”

Pay Tribute to a Loved One

OBITUARIES Your loved one spent a lifetime making an impact in the community. Let us help you honor their memory and share their accomplishments by creating a lasting tribute.

Life Tributes James Peter Gravendyk August 16, 1951 – July 1, 2015

James Peter Gravendyk passed away peacefully at home in La Jolla, California, surrounded by loved ones on June 23, 2015. Jim was born to John and Dorothea Gravendyk on May 10, 1922. Upon the death of his father in 1935, Jim at age 14 was forced to pack up his mother, brother and sisters and with a special drivers license in hand, drove the family from Grand Rapids to Los Angeles in an aging Model A Ford. During WWII Jim, with his younger brother by his side, crisscrossed the Pacific in the service of the U.S. Merchant Marines. After the war Jim joined the Southern California Aircraft Industry. He and Joyce married and had two children, their son John, and later, daughter Jan. Jim and Joyce led an active social life from their home in Manhattan Beach, California. He was known for his wonderful sense of humor and love of family. They spent many happy times snow skiing, boating, bicycle riding, scuba diving and various equestrian pursuits involving the family horses. Upon retirement as a Chief Engineer from Northrop Aerospace Company, Jim

(aka “Gravy”) relocated to Cambria, California, where he and his second wife, Marjanna, launched many travel adventures in their motorhome. After Marjanna’s passing, Jim continued to live in his beautiful Cambria “home in the pines” and rode his bicyd Jan Crr Stevens and Scarlett Wilke. He was preceded in death by his wives, Joyce Arcelia Gravendyk and Marjanna Freeman; sisters, Florence and Dorothy; brother, John; and granddaughter, Hillary. and Scarlett Wilke. He was preceded in death by his wives, Joyce Arcelia Please sign the guest book online at www.legacy.com/ obituaries/lajollalight.

Abigail Haskell Redfern August 16, 1951 – July 1, 2015

LA JOLLA – Abigail “Gail” Redfern died peacefully at home surrounded by family after a lengthy illness. She was an intelligent, generous and good humored La Jollan who will be deeply missed. With a ready smile, Gail always brought a positive outlook and made all feel welcome in her home. She believed in the power of education to counteract ignorance and bigotry and quietly supported causes to this effect. Gail was born in Tucson, Arizona, to Bess and Fletcher Haskell. She graduated from Tucson High School in 1950. Gail obtained both BA and MA degrees in education at Stanford University. She met her husband-to-be, John Redfern, on a summer vacation in La Jolla and they married in 1954. She taught at the Bishop’s School, but later dedicated herself to raising her three

children. She maintained an interest in the arts, particularly the opera and Spanish literature Gail is survived by her children, Donald, Tamlin and Charles; and grandchildren, Grace, Gabrielle, Chloe, Avery, Alma and Karl. An account has been established in her memory at La Jolla Public Library: Please sign the guest book online at www. legacy.com/obituaries/ lajollalight.

Everlasting memories of loved ones

Alan David Sapwith August 16, 1951 – July 1, 2015

Alan David Sapowith was born on February 20, 1925, and passed away on May 20, 2015. He was born in Delaware, the son of Reba and Harry Sapowith. But for short stints in the Air Force and a family business, Alan’s career spanned over 30 years in the aerospace industry. A graduate of West Point with a master’s degree in aeronautical engineering from Purdue University, he managed multi-disciplined R & D programs in a number of fields ranging from nuclear weapons effects to stealth, contributing papers and creative designs in many of them. He had a passion for tennis, skiing, bridge and politics and in his younger years white water canoeing. He will be missed and remembered for his satire and wit, his

great sense of humor, his strong moral values and his dazzling smile. Alan is survived by his loving wife, Carolyn Blumenthal; one son, Mark; three daughters, Andrea, Amy and Lisa; two stepchildren, Robin and Bill; four grandsons, Heath, Taylor, Brett and Mathew; two granddaughters, Emma and Annelies; one great-grandson, Rainen; and two greatgranddaughters, Layla and Lauren. A memorial to celebrate his life was held on May 29, 2015, at 11:30 AM at Congregation Beth Israel, 9001 Towne Center Drive, San Diego, CA. Please sign the guest book online at www. legacy.com/obituaries/ lajollalight.

Moylan Feild “Tony” Garth August 16, 1951 – July 1, 2015

LA JOLLA – Lifelong La Jolla resident, Moylan Feild Garth (known as “Tony”), passed away unexpectedly from illness May 23, 2015, at Scripps Memorial Hospital in La Jolla, CA. Growing up in La Jolla Shores he spent his youth attending The Gillespie School, Scripps Elementary (now The Children’s School), San Miguel’s (now Bishop’s), and graduating from La Jolla High School class of ’66. He went on and graduated from the University of California Santa Barbara and became a successful stock broker for Dean Witter before deciding to fulfill a passion for the Law. He went to the Thomas Jefferson School of Law where he was Editor in Chief of the Law Review and graduated Magna Cum Laude and became a member of the bar in 1990. After working in the public defender’s office and for several top firms he started his own practice becoming a top criminal defense attorney. He believed in the law and everything it stood for. He represented clients from all walks of life and all circumstances and stood tall believing that everyone deserved a proper defense. Jerry Streichler, retired Dean of the College of Technology

at Bowling Green State University (BGSU), Bowling Green, Ohio, passed away peacefully on July 2, 2015, in his home in La Jolla. Born on December 8,1929, on the Lower East Side of New York, he grew up during the Depression, then moved to New Jersey during his teen years, moving later to Ohio and then retiring in California. From these humble beginnings, he became one of the leading university educators of his generation. His early career as a mechanical designer in Montclair, New Jersey, was interrupted when his Air National Guard unit was called up for duty during the Korean War. He served at Turner Air Force Base in Georgia, Godman Air Force Base at Fort Knox in Kentucky, and the Air-

Judith Miller George August 16, 1951 – July 1, 2015

Skip was born in Aberdeen, South Dakota, on January 4, 1929. He passed away on June 12, 2015, from pulmonary fibrosis. His parents were Vivian Foncanon Ward and Alonzo L. Ward Jr. Skip served two years in the U.S. Army from 1951 to 1953 and was a graduate of the School of Hotel Admin. at Cornell University in 1955. He went on to have a career in the hotel industry including 15 years with Hilton hotels, as well as held management positions with Radisson hotels and the Hospitality

Management Company. In retirement, Skip was an active golfing member of the La Jolla Country Club and past president of the Super Seniors Golf Group, at LJCC. He volunteered at Mercy Hospital, Scripps Clinic and delivered Meals on Wheels for 10 years. Skip was preceded in death by his parents and sister Sarah. He donated his body to UCSD Medical Research. Please sign the guest book online at www. legacy.com/obituaries/ lajollalight.

Judith Miller George August 16, 1951 – July 1, 2015

Judith Miller George, 80, died peacefully on May 25, 2015, at home in La Jolla, CA, surrounded by her family and supported by her many friends. Judith was born on February 1, 1935, in Cincinnati, Ohio, to Arthur A. and Eleanor (Fletcher) Miller. She grew up primarily in Chicago, Illinois, and was graduated from the Convent of the Sacred Heart in Chicago in 1952. After high school, Judith attended the University of Colorado at Boulder, where she earned a Bachelor’s degree in Political Science in 1956. She was interested in art history and architecture and was a member of the Tri Delta Sorority. After graduation from college, Judith worked for the Skidmore, Owens & Merrill architectural firm in Chicago and eventually WBBM television. In 1962, she married Clark Brower George in Las Vegas and after several years in Greenwich, CT, and Antigua, West Indies, the family settled in La Jolla, CA. Over the ensuing decades, Judith reared her children, became an accomplished tennis player, explored yoga, completed a half-marathon, nurtured her friendships and travelled to six of the seven continents. She also worked in the financial services industry as an associate at Loeb Rhodes, Inc., which, after many mergers and name changes

over the course of her career, eventually became Wells Fargo Advisors. Judith remained keenly interested in the Arts throughout her life and she was active in the Asian Arts Council of San Diego and the Garden Club of La Jolla. Judith was an intelligent, curious, and optimistic person who lived with grace and dignity. Judith is survived by her three children, Lisa Hukari of Mill Valley, CA, Jeffrey George of Safety Harbor, FL, and Susan George of Phoenix, AZ. She is also survived by her four grandchildren, Kallie and Jackson Hukari of Mill Valley, CA, and Devon and Hayden George of Safety Harbor, FL; and her daughter-in-law, Heather Peshak George of Safety Harbor, FL. She was preceded in death by her parents and her husband, Clark Brower George. Please sign the guest book online at www. legacy.com/obituaries/ lajollalight.

Your Yo ur loved lov oved ed ones one ness obituary obitititua ob uary ua ry will wililll be published pub ublililish shed sh ed in in the the Del Del Ma Marr Ti Sol Be h Sun, Su and nd Times, Solana Beach Carmel Valley News and will also appear on the National Obituary website, Legacy.com. Your loved ones family and friends can sign a guestbook online, include pictures, videos, order flowers or make donations to their favorite charity.

To place a Life Tribute call Monica Williams at 858-218-7237 or email inmemory@mainstreetmedia.com

Call Monica Williams at 858-218-7228 or email, Monica at inmemory@mainstreetmedia.com

FROM KIDNAPPING, A2 After Doshay was charged in the Solana Beach attack, he was indicted on charges related to a second incident in 2010 outside an elementary school in Rancho Santa Fe. Prosecutors contended that a 10-year-old girl told investigators in 2015 that she was 5 when a man lured her to a shed at Solana Santa Fe Elementary School to look at a “white bunny.” When the girl was behind the shed, the man grabbed her by the hips, turned her around and tried to remove her pants, prosecutors said. She screamed and kicked her attacker in the groin. He ran off. After a lengthy hearing, Judge K. Michael Kirkman dismissed two felony charges, both involving a lewd act committed on a child, along with allegations that Doshay committed crimes against more than one victim. Defense lawyers Paul Pfingst and James Pokorny had argued that the description the 10-year-old gave of her attacker did not match Doshay, and that prosecutors failed to present all available evidence related to that issue to the grand jury. They also said a sheriff’s deputy who went to the scene of the incident when it was reported in 2010 and questioned the girl, determined later that the incident was “unfounded,” meaning no crime had been committed. On March 16, the victim in the 2015 incident in Solana Beach had a front row seat in the packed courtroom with her parents and other supporters when

FROM DROUGHT, A2 such action, said a district staff report. Members of SFID’s board expressed satisfaction with the development, noting that the district still encourages conservation. “People realize they can reduce their water cost by being more efficient,” said director David Petree. But he said the district must be careful not to “cry wolf” by calling for unwarranted water-use cutbacks. “(Customers) respond better if we back off,” he said. But director Marlene King said she found it “troubling” that the district is lifting all voluntary conservation measures without putting out a strong statement in favor of ongoing water conservation. “What is this saying to our customers about the district’s values? Part of it is saying we’re not selling enough water,” King said. Directors agreed that the district does want to continue to urge its customers to use water wisely, and such language was included in a news release about the board’s decision to move out of the Level 1 drought response. The district also thanked its customers for cutting back on water use by 26 percent over the past two years, when compared with the baseline year of 2013. In spite of voluminous precipitation this winter, state water regulators extended emergency water use rules in February for 270 days, over the objections of local water officials from around California.

Doshay pleaded guilty. And when it was over, she leaped into her mother’s arms for a big hug. Outside the courtroom, the girl — now 9 — described her attacker as a “big bully” who had frightened her and hurt her feelings when he told her she would never see her mother or father again. “I wish I had the chance to tell the judge to put Jack in jail for a long time,” she said, reading from a white piece of paper covered in plastic. “I was 7 years old when this incident happened, and now I am older. I am confident that the judge did make the right decision on how long to put him in prison and what will happen next. “I am glad police caught him and he’s going to prison now so I don’t ever have to see him again,” she continued. “Like Dr. Seuss always says, ‘Sometimes you will never know the value of a moment until it becomes a memory.’ I’ll always have that memory that I got away and he messed with the wrong girl.” At the end of her statement, she thanked Deputy District Attorney Ryan Saunders and the investigators who worked on the case, as well as family and friends who had supported her throughout the ordeal. And she gave a special thanks to her brother, who had taught her how to fight back. Doshay, the son of a former investment banker who is a minority owner of the San Diego Padres, remains free on bond until sentencing. — Dana Littlefield is a writer for The San Diego Union-Tribune

Those state rules include making sure that outdoor sprinklers don’t cause runoff, that people washing cars must use a hose with a shutoff nozzle, and that restaurants will only serve water on request. In a presentation to the SFID board on Thursday, County Water Authority Deputy General Manager Sandy Kerl noted the irony that, at the same time emergency drought restrictions remain in place for all 58 California counties, 50 counties are under flood emergencies. As of March 9, Northern California’s mountain snowpack was at 179 percent of average. Locally, the region has already received more than 10 inches of rain, the average for the entire season, but with two months of the rainy season remaining. Wet conditions brought the Lake Hodges reservoir on the verge of spilling over in early March for the first time in years. Bardin told the board that local water officials reacted by moving water from Lake Hodges to other reservoirs, thus creating room for more water to fill the lake in case of additional rains. Bardin said the maneuver was a first for the region since pipelines were attached to Lake Hodges as part of an emergency water storage project. “Pulling that off is operational gymnastics,” said Bardin, but the lake now has room to collect more water. SFID owns a share of the water in the lake along with other local water districts, including the city of San Diego. Local water is cheaper than imported water and saves the district money, savings that it can pass on to its customers.


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NORTH COAST - MARCH 23, 2017 - PAGE A27


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PAGE A28 - MARCH 23, 2017 - NORTH COAST

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Community Resource Center English Tea Party to help victims of domestic violence, homelessness. B7

Students enjoyed a busy “Pi Day” at Earl Warren Middle School. B4 Section B

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March 23, 2017

Symposium offers latest on breast cancer treatments, research “ J ” BY JOE TASH oan Lunden was busy with her career as a journalist, author and motivational speaker, and didn’t always get her yearly mammograms on time. In 2014, things changed. “I heard those words no one ever wants to hear: ‘You have cancer,’” said Lunden, a former long-time host of “Good Morning America,” and one of the featured speakers at a dinner symposium held Thursday, March 16, at the San Diego Marriott Del Mar, before a sold-out crowd of 370. “I didn’t think it would happen to me.” These days, Lunden travels the country, trying to raise awareness about breast cancer, current treatments, and the importance of early detection and diagnosis. Thursday’s event, sponsored by Susan G. Komen San Diego, provided her with another opportunity to spread her message. After her diagnosis, Lunden underwent aggressive chemotherapy, surgery and radiation. Her signature blonde hair has now grown back, and she appeared energetic and in full health as she addressed the gathering. “I am now NED – no evidence of disease,” she said to applause. “I’m still here and I’m rocking the boat.” The symposium, called “Screens, Genes and the Choices We Make,” was the third annual edition of the event put on by the Komen organization, a nonprofit that funds cancer research, provides diagnostic mammograms and other services. Along with being a forum for breast cancer education, the event raised $210,000, and the money will be used for such purposes as paying for mammograms for women who can’t afford them, said Laura Farmer Sherman, president and CEO of Komen San Diego. On display in front of the hotel was a mobile mammography coach, an RV painted pink and

As a survivor, you want to reach out your hand and help the next woman on her journey. Joan Lunden

equipped with 3D mammography equipment. “Regardless of the money in your pocket, you can get a mammogram,” Farmer said. “We did this (launched the mobile unit) so there would be no more excuses for not getting a mammogram. It goes everywhere women are and helps them out.” The mobile unit is a joint effort of Komen San Diego and Community Health Imaging Centers. Sherman said both reservations and walk-up screenings are available. For information about the mobile unit’s schedule, visit www.komensandiego.org. As attendees dined on kale-beet salad and coconut curry (edible centerpieces made of beets and leeks adorned the tables), Lunden moderated a roster of speakers that included cancer specialist and researcher Dr. Deborah Rhodes of the Mayo Clinic and Dr. Dennis Holmes, a surgeon and medical director of the Los Angeles Center for Women’s Health. San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer also expressed his support of the Komen organization and its work. Rhodes explained that some women have “dense breast tissue,” which can mask a tumor on a mammogram image, and dangerously delay a cancer diagnosis. She and her colleagues, using duct tape to rig up a prototype model, developed a technique called “molecular breast imaging,” which she said can more effectively spot tumors when women have dense breast tissue. “Mammography does save lives,” Rhodes said. “But I don’t think it’s enough for women with dense breast tissue.” Those women, she said, need an additional diagnostic test, such as

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Laura Farmer Sherman (left), president and CEO of Komen San Diego, and journalist/author Joan Lunden stand in front of the mobile mammography coach.

Marsha Friend-Berkson gave tours at the event of the mobile mammography coach. an MBI, an MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) or an ultrasound. In Lunden’s case, she said her mammogram in 2014 did not detect her cancer, but an ultrasound test showed her tumors. Lunden and Rhodes stressed that women need to know if they have dense breast tissue, so they can discuss it with their doctors. Early

diagnosis is linked to higher survival rates, they said. One source of more information is the web site www.areyoudense.org. Lunden said one of her motivations for speaking to groups about breast cancer awareness is to carry on the legacy of her father, a cancer surgeon who died in a plane crash when she was 13. Another motivation, she said, is to

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repay the kindness she received when she was going through treatment. “It’s not a sorority you necessarily want to join. The initiation stinks,” she said of being a cancer patient. “But the community is so supportive. As a survivor, you want to reach out your hand and help the next woman on her journey. Now is my turn to pay it forward.”

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PAGE B2 - MARCH 23, 2017 - NORTH COAST

Outdoor dining enhanced by locals’ grill, dining table BY KAREN BILLING armel Valley residents Karim and Shahin Pirani’s new business IBBQ hopes to get people to slow down from today’s fast-paced lifestyle and embrace the traditional concept of having the entire family sit down for a meal. The Piranis are bringing people together with IBBQ’s new modern outdoor grill and dining table, the Angara Maximus. The company launched the product in Del Mar on March 9 serving party guests steaks, shrimp and vegetables grilled right in front of them as they sat around the table. The Angara Maximus table is handcrafted in the United States from imported African teak and high-grade stainless steel. Tables come in four, six and eight-seaters, and there is also a less expensive option, the Angara Regula, which is made of domestic cedar. Shahin Pirani, who serves as the CEO of IBBQ (which stands for Interactive BBQ), also owns the Raayna Threading and Henna Studio in Del Mar with her daughter Selina. A longtime entrepreneur, Karim ran a successful hedge fund that invested in internet companies and was able to retire early — he has come out of retirement to

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COURTESY PHOTOS

A barbecue becomes interactive on the Angara Maximus table.

IBBQ’s Angara Maximus grill and dining table.

create a few online ventures of his own. The Piranis found the table while they were living in their London apartment. They had hired a landscape architect to design their outdoor patio and the designer suggested the couple attend the Royal Hampton Court Palace Flower Show, held on the expansive grounds of King Henry VIII’s former castle, in order to get some ideas for the yard. “As soon as we walked into the show, we saw the table. Shahin immediately made a beeline for it and said, ‘We have to buy this

to leave. We started to call it the interactive barbecue table because everyone would sit around it having an amazing time.” Once in San Diego with the table, the pair called the table’s inventor, Anthony Grove, and encouraged him to sell his tables in the United States, as the climate was much more conducive to outdoor entertaining than London. Grove asked the couple if they would be interested in buying the company —Karim couldn’t resist and instead bought the global rights after finding out the website IBBQ.com and phone

table,’” Karim said. Karim balked at the price and also the fact that they still had 150 acres to explore and they had barely stepped foot into the expo. He insisted they keep looking, but by the end of the day, the table remained at the exit and they bought it. For the next two and a half months in London, they hosted several friends from back home in San Diego. “Everyone said, ‘This table should be in California’,” Karim said. “We would spend 7 p.m. to 11 p.m. at the table, nobody wanted

number 1-800-Yes-IBBQ were both available. With IBBQ, the Piranis plan to improve and expand on Grove’s original design. The original model was built by hand in England with the grill unit from China, but Karim insisted that the table be built in the U.S. They found a company in Michigan that has been building burners for the last 54 years — the family-owned business’ in-laws happened to be in the furniture industry, so the entire table is able to be American-made from the SEE TABLE, B27

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NORTH COAST - MARCH 23, 2017 - PAGE B3

Baby Boomers’ Musical Premieres

‘The Geeze and Me’ brings humor, honesty to aging

La Jolla Cultural Partners

BY ASHLEY MACKIN When La Jolla residents Hedges Capers and Nancy Locke Capers were researching their play, “The Geeze and Me” (matinee and evenings March 31-April 29 at the Tenth Avenue Arts Center, 930 Tenth Ave., downtown San Diego) the husband, of the husband-and-wife duo, compiled an in-depth definition of the word “old.” The condition Hedges Capers came up with was “showing the effects of time or use; worn or aged; diminished in value or usefulness; wearied; enfeebled; tiresome; boring; showing the effects of wear; ancient; spent; senile; wasted; over the hill; past one’s prime; broken down; obsolete; useless or wanted; no longer used by anyone; done.” Hoping to disprove the negative aspects of this notion, while providing an honest look at aging in a humorous and musically oriented way, “The Geeze and Me” looks at what people can expect about getting older, and what they don’t have to accept. With three replaced knees and a replaced hip between them — in addition to extensive research, personal experience, and a few days in the entertainment industry — the two bring varying levels of expertise to the production. “We think we’ve taken as many of the issues those in the Baby Boomer generation are facing that we can consider, and approach them both as seriously and humorously as we can,” Hedges Capers said. “We look at money, homelessness (reportedly one of the No. 1 fears facing women over age 50), mobility, finance, retirement, the sense women get about being invisible, sex and more, and we do it with songs.” Both Capers have a background in the music and theater industries. He was a singer/songwriter in the 1960s and half of the “socially conscious folk rock” duo Hedge & Donna; she is an actress of film, commercials (including one for Jane Fonda workout wear) and theater, and a screenwriter. Although retired from the music-making businesses, Hedges Capers said he would still write songs when inspiration struck or as gifts for loved ones. One day, when

ASHLEY MACKIN

‘The Geeze and Me’ playwrights and La Jollans Hedges Capers and Nancy Locke Capers he was at the piano writing songs for the show, he physically couldn’t sing and originally chocked it up to, well, getting older. “I had no breath control, no range, I couldn’t maintain a note,” he explained. “I went to UCSD and they checked me out and said, ‘We know why you can’t sing, and we’re surprised you can even speak.’ I had a growth on one of my vocal cords, so when I tried to sing, my vocal cords couldn’t come together and air would slip through. They said it had to come off now, so I had it removed and after 30 days of silence, I could sing again.” He added, “Singing was all I had done ... it was all I wanted to do. And I was that close to accepting that these things happen and that a part of my life that I loved was gone. The crazy part for me, was that there was a part of me totally willing to accept that. But when all was said and done, I took

a step back and looked at what is it we’re willing to accept about the aging process.” The pair got in touch with the UCSD Center for Healthy Aging (script consultants for the play) and with UCSD’s research and blessing, together co-wrote “The Geeze and Me.” After several years of writing, re-writing and hosting staged readings of the play to various audiences, the two were ready to produce the show in San Diego. In addition to writing roles, Locke Capers directs and produces, and Hedges Capers wrote the music and stars in the production as John, a “soap-boxer” and beat poet. The show features projections as a way to set the stage, and crucial scenes take place at Bird Rock Coffee Roasters. One of which, Hedges Capers said, makes fellow actors cry in rehearsal. “After a Silver Sneakers senior exercise class, two people meet for coffee. He needs a knee replacement and she used to be a dancer. She arrives in a walker and explains that she fell going down the stairs … she doesn’t need the walker, but feels unstable without it. She lost her confidence,” he said. “As they leave Bird Rock Coffee Roasters, she’s on a walker and he is wobbling because of his knees, and some kids on skateboards make fun of them and sing a song (that goes) ‘Old folks, they can’t do nothing … they ain’t good for much at all …’ ” The old man returns, in song, suggesting their time will come. “In the course of things, the old woman’s feelings are hurt, but she wants to prove them wrong and gets her confidence up, folds her walker and starts to dance. Toward the end, she stumbles slightly, and goes back to get her walker,” Hedges Capers continued. “When we rehearsed that scene, even though they knew what was going to happen, nine of the other cast members started to cry.” “It’s very moving,” adds Locke Capers. SEE MUSICAL, B19

ATHENAEUM ART HISTORY LECTURES

HUGH DAVIES presents

FRANCIS BACON

APRIL 13 MAY 25

7:30 PM

Join us on April 13 for An Introduction to Francis Bacon: Paintings from 19451973 and on May 25 for Francis Bacon: The Late Work in a dynamic series given by Hugh Davies, director emeritus of the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego. TICKETS: $14/ 19; SERIES: $24/ 34; 858.454.5872; ljathenaeum.org/art-history-lectures

CHECK OUT WHAT’S HAPPENING Springfest: IMMERSION WE’RE EXPANDING #SuperShinySara DANISH NATIONAL The Museum of Contemporary Art’s La Jolla April 9: 6-8 SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Birch Aquarium teams up with UC San Diego’s location is undergoing an extensive expansion POP Tour 2017 Fabio Luisi, principal conductor Deborah Voigt, soprano

Thursday, March 30 at 8 p.m. Jacobs Music Center - Copley Symphony Hall Tickets: $99, $75, $50, $30 Under the leadership of Italian maestro and new principal conductor Fabio Luisi, the Orchestra will perform Nielsen’s Helios Overture, Mahler’s 1st Symphony and American operatic soprano Deborah Voigt joins the Orchestra to perform Wagner’s Wesendonck Leider.

(858) 459-3728 www.LJMS.org

Department of Music to present an evening of live music and experimental sounds spread throughout the aquarium. Join us for a unique offering of works conceived and performed by graduate students and inspired by the sea. Voices of Our City Choir will also perform.

Members & UCSD Students/Staff: $9 Public: $12 aquarium.ucsd.edu

and renovation project that will quadruple current gallery space, making room to show MCASD’s 4,700-piece collection of world-class contemporary art. During the closure, MCASD will continue to deliver high-quality exhibitions and programming at its Jacobs and Copley Buildings at MCASD Downtown, located at 1100 Kettner Blvd. Visit www.mcasd.org for more information about downtown exhibitions.

MCASD DOWNTOWN 1100 Kettner Blvd. 858 454 3541 www.mcasd.org

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Only 4 performances. Buy today! Sat. March 25 at 1pm & 3pm Sun. March 26 at 1pm & 3pm

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PAGE B4 - MARCH 23, 2017 - NORTH COAST

Del Mar Art Center hosts check presentation

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el Mar Art Center Gallery recently announced a donation of $2,000 to the Monarch School in downtown San Diego, and $2,000 to ArtsBusXpress. A presentation of checks was held at a hosted reception at the gallery March 18. The Del Mar Art Center Gallery, a nonprofit artist cooperative, presents annual donations to arts programs in the region. “We give back to a community that has supported our

artists for the past 16 years,” says Maidy Morhous, president of the gallery. “We look for organizations who provide value in the arts. ArtsBusXpress and the Monarch Schools were at the top of the list for their contributions to youth. We are very happy to be able to support these two worthy organizations in 2017.” For more information, visit www.dmacgallery.com or call the gallery at 858- 481- 1678. Online: www.delmartimes.net

Local artists and supporters of the Del Mar Art Center present checks to representatives of ArtsBusXpress and The Monarch School

Karen Aschenbrenner, Pam Linton, Dannette Brennan

Maidy Morhous (President, Del Mar Art Center), Patty Smith (ArtsBusXpress)

Reginald Brown, Deandra Green

Jeff Barnouw, Randy Doering

"Blue Shutters" by Cradic on display at the Del Mar Art Center

Tom O' Mary, Bruce Swart, Mark Sherman

Julianne Ricksecker, Kay Beeson

Michele Engel (President, ArtsBusXpress), Don Garske

PHOTOS BY JON CLARK

Natalia Correa, Kelly Garske


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NORTH COAST - MARCH 23, 2017 - PAGE B5

New Jimbo’s part of Del Mar Highlands expansion 120,000-square-foot expansion named ‘The Collection’ to open in 2018 Del Mar Highlands Town Center recently announced plans for the next phase of expansion for the retail center on Del Mar Heights Road and El Camino Real, set to open in 2018. The expansion project, named The Collection at Del Mar Highlands, will encompass over 120,000 square feet of new retail space, including a new, larger Jimbo’s...Naturally! The expansion will bring the center’s total to 380,522 square feet. The Collection at Del Mar Highlands Town Center will consist of inviting spaces for customers to relax, dine, shop, workout, run errands, and meet with friends. Jimbos’, the locally-based natural foods grocer, will open a state-of-the-art new store in The Collection allowing them to grow from 14,000 square feet to 25,000 square feet. The expansion is designed to complement the highly successful Del Mar Highlands Town Center that has the highest average sales per square foot in the trade area.

COURTESY

“Travels with My Aunt” cast members David McBean, Richard Baird, Benjamin Cole and James Saba. KAREN BILLING

Expansion plans are in the works for Jimbo’s at the Del Mar Highlands Town Center. “Today’s busy consumers demand offerings and amenities that allow them to get everything done in one convenient location,” said Patrick Donahue, chairman and chief executive officer of Donahue Schriber Realty Group. “It’s much more than a shopping center expansion, this is about continuing to be the meeting place or as the name so adequately describes, the town center of the Carmel Valley community.” In October 2016, Del Mar Highlands opened a portion of its multi-level parking structure. The luxury cinemas Cinepolis expanded from an eight theaters to 11 and leases have been signed with several new businesses,

including upscale cosemetics boutique spa Bluemercury, Mendocino Farms, Grater Grilled Cheese and the build-your-own poke bowl spot Pokewan. Grater and Pokewan are expected to open this spring while Mendocino Farms gourmet sandwich shop will open this summer, taking the place of the departed Carnitas Snack Shack. “The development of The Collection at Del Mar Highlands Town Center will help meet the demand of the lifestyle and top-tier regional and local tenants that have been looking to expand into Carmel Valley,” said Chris Elliott, Donahue Schriber’s vice president of leasing and acquisitions/development.

North Coast Rep to present 'Travels with My Aunt' North Coast Repertory Theatre continues Season 35 with “Travels with My Aunt,” a 2015 New York Times Critic’s Pick that was hailed as “a triumph of theatrical style.” Giles Havergal adapted the Graham Greene novel about eccentric Aunt Augusta who swoops in and shakes up the life of her staid bourgeois nephew. The result is a life-changing, offbeat odyssey created by four astonishingly versatile actors who tackle more than 20 roles. David Ellenstein directs James Saba, David McBean, Richard Baird and Benjamin Cole. “Travels with My Aunt” previews begin

Wednesday, April 12. Opening Night on Saturday, April 15, at 8 p.m., includes a post-show reception. There will be a special talkback on Friday, April 21, with the cast and artistic director. It will play Wednesdays at 7 p.m., Thursdays through Saturdays at 8 p.m., Saturday and Sunday matinees at 2 p.m. with Sundays at 7 p.m., through May 7. North Coast Repertory Theatre is located at 987 Lomas Santa Fe Drive, Solana Beach, CA 92075. Call 858-481-1055 or visit www.northcoastrep.org to purchase tickets.

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PAGE B6 - MARCH 23, 2017 - NORTH COAST

Earl Warren ‘Pi Day’

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arl Warren Middle School held a fun-filled, innovative and tasty “Pi Day” March 14. Students could choose to participate in seven stations in the quad with a carnival-like feel: •Eat pie: Each student received a slice of Cost Co apple pie. •Guess the circumference and area: A big chalked circle and there was a winner who guessed the closest circumference and a winner who guessed the closest area. •Pi digit reciting: Students chose to compete to memorize digits of pi. The winner this year (an Earl Warren record) 231 digits and second place prize winner for 116 digits. •Temporary pi tattoo

•Rubik’s Cube race: Who can solve the Rubik’s Cube fastest? First place winner for 52 seconds and second place winner for 59 seconds. •Pi digit scramble: Kids compete head to head in seeing who is the fastest at ordering the digits of pi (to 10 decimal places). Winners get a pi pencil. •Pie throwing at teachers: Two raffled off tickets per math class (44 total) for students to choose which teacher/staff member they get to throw “pie in the face.” Earl Warren staff participated in being the judges at the “Student Pie Bake Off,” which had prizes for four categories: Best tasting fruit, best tasting cream, best appearance fruit, and best appearance cream.

Earl Warren students are shown participating in a variety of ‘Pi Day” activities.

COURTESY PHOTOS

Del Mar Heights School Garden Community Service Day

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embers of the Solana Beach Presbyterian Church took part in a joint effort Feb. 26 to continue improving the beauty and educational value of the Del Mar Heights Gardens as part of the Del Mar Heights School Garden Community Service Day. This year, volunteers disassembled a raised bed, assembled raised bed covers, installed rain catchment and rain barrels, affixed a sun shade, secured benches with cement, removed vines, removed wood poles, sanded and painted a tall arbor, spread compost, weatherproofed wood benches, reset stepping stones, dug a trench to locate an irrigation line and pulled weeds. Online: www.delmartimes.net

Amy Chelesnik (PTA president)

The Cunningham family

PHOTOS BY JON CLARK

Rory Schermerhorn

Anna and Steve Frost

The Grimes family

Jackson and Joe Kaminsky


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NORTH COAST - MARCH 23, 2017 - PAGE B7

Community Resource Center English Tea Party to help victims of domestic violence, homelessness BY BRITTANY WOOLSEY Local residents have the opportunity to sip tea and munch on scones and other foods for a good cause April 1. The Community Resource Center (CRC), which has offices in Encinitas and has been serving North County since 1979, will host its 22nd annual English Tea event from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. that day at the Encinitas Community Center, 1140 Oakcrest Park Drive. The event benefits the CRC’s mission to promote self-sufficiency, stability and safety. Event Chair Patricia Moore considers it a fundraising and educational event. It is used as a way to bring information about domestic violence to the community. The day, emceed by Emmy Award-winning broadcast journalist Peggy Pico, will include an address from the keynote speaker, Chief Deputy District Attorney Summer Stephan, who has served appointments as Chief of the DA’s North County Branch and Chief of the Sex Crimes and Human Trafficking Division. As a trial prosecutor, Stephan tried more than 100 jury trials, including special circumstance homicides, sexually violent predators, child molestation, sexual assault, child abuse, school shooting, assault on peace officers, and human trafficking-related cases. The English Tea event annually raises about $50,000 for the CRC’s programs.

Much of the funding will go toward the center’s domestic violence program, officials said. “If you knew someone who was experiencing domestic violence, where would you turn for help?” said CRC’s CEO Isabel St.Germain Singh, in a statement. “CRC provides safety and stability for households in crisis from domestic violence, as well as education programs and counseling that aid in the prevention of such violence. The annual English Tea provides necessary funding so that CRC can continue to meet the needs of those coming to us for help.” In 2016, CRC’s domestic violence program served 143 households, including 124 children, through their Carol’s House domestic violence shelter, transitional housing, counseling and therapeutic programs, officials said. Additionally, 98 percent of CRC’s domestic violence program households did not return to their abusers in Fiscal Year 2015-2016. The CRC’s domestic violence hotline in 2015 and 2016 also received almost 2,000 calls, said Heather Johnson, the CRC’s domestic violence program coordinator. The women are then referred to different agencies or CRC’s services, including Carol’s House and transitional housing. Moore said many of the women become known to the CRC before they reach out for

COURTESY

The Community Resource Center’s annual English Tea event will take place April 1. help because of the center’s educational and outreach programs. “At some point, a woman makes a decision to leave her abuser,” Moore said. “We don’t always get the same women because sometimes we will help them be placed out-of-area because it’s safer for them.” Accepted women can spend between 45 and 60 days at Carol’s House — and in a case-by-case situation, can be extended to 90 days — where they work with counselors to help the women get back on their feet, Johnson said. Offerings for the women at the CRC

include financial counseling, nutrition and food support, help to get food stamps and help to see if they qualify for any kind of aid. “When the women are in the shelter, we offer them the whole range of the classes that we offer to the community,” Moore said. “Often, these women have been so overshadowed by their abuser that they don’t have a checkbook, credit card or job skills.” Johnson also noted the center’s nationally-recognized therapeutic children’s center. SEE TEA, B27

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PAGE B8 - MARCH 23, 2017 - NORTH COAST

Salute to Local Women In Business In honor of Local Women in Business, we proudly celebrate the achievements of working women. Throughout history and today, female professionals have contributed greatly to our country’s economic, civic and cultural development. Today, women number 66 million in our nation’s workforce and women-owned businesses account for 28 percent of all U.S. businesses. These women are leading CEOs, presidents, vice presidents, accountants and managers in many of our nation’s leading corporations. Join us as we congratulate these business women for all their efforts and continue to promote equality for women in the workplace.

Kristina R. Hess, Esq KR Hess Law

6540 Lusk Blvd., Suite C176, San Diego 858.461.6844 www.KRHess.com

Kristina’s mission is to change the course of history in your family by guiding you to establish legal and inspirational legacies in order to pass them on to your future generations. Her objective, as your family attorney is to listen, to understand, and to protect you regarding legal, financial, plus business decisions throughout your life with her most compelling goal – to empower your loved ones when you cannot. Her vision is to be your guiding angel and is the bedrock foundation for KR Hess Law. Prior to establishing her own firm in 2009, Kristina has a proven track record with over 16 years of legal experience, highlighted with San Francisco’s prestigious law firms, Shearman & Sterling and Pillsbury Winthrop. Her extensive “best practice” experience has been focused in a wide variety of complementary practice areas to include Estate Planning, Living Trusts, Family Owned Business, Litigation, Mediation and Conflict Resolution. She is a graduate from Berkeley Law School, was trained at Pepperdine’s Straus Institute and at Harvard University in conflict resolution, and has worked as a court appointed mediator to resolve litigation, family business, real estate, and trust/estate disputes.

Anne Chao,

Massage Concepts Del Mar

858-847-2777 Del Mar Highlands Town Center 12925 El Camino Real, Ste J25, SD 92130 info@massageconceptsdelmar.com

Massage Concepts – Del Mar is making it easy for local residents to get a high quality massage. Located in the Del Mar Highlands Town Center, Massage Concepts has a contemporary spa feel with private singles and couples massage rooms and provides personalized service at a reasonable price. Because there are always massage therapists on site, walk-ins are welcome. “Customers can book appointments with little or no advance notice” explains owner Anne Chao. “They simply call us or book their appointment online with our easy to use website.” Massage Concepts does not believe in selling memberships to customers as a way of locking in return business. They rely on stellar customer service and competitive pricing to make people want to come back. Reading their Yelp and Google reviews, the customers are enjoying their experiences and returning by themselves. Anne Chao has lived with her family in Del Mar for over 10 years. She received her MBA from San Diego State University.

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NORTH COAST - MARCH 23, 2017 - PAGE B9

Natalie L. Stillman, CFP , CLTC ®

Hall Private Wealth Advisors

858-263-1675 Natalie@HallPWA.com www.HallPWA.com

When I was eight, my father died unexpectedly and the lives of his wife and three daughters changed that day forever. My parents were good, loving parents who would do anything for us. Having always lived a bit beyond their means, our young mother was unprepared for her new reality and she struggled with a mortgage, credit card debt, auto loans and only a secretary’s salary. There was no life insurance and no emergency fund. We moved to a less expensive area and we all changed schools. Our lives went from stable and secure, to latch-key kids. You see, my parents loved and adored us, but they didn’t plan for such an unthinkable outcome. In looking back, I now understand why I do what I do. I now understand the passion behind the planning that I do for individuals and families. Technically, it’s called “financial planning” but truly it is “LIFE planning.” In working with women’s groups, I have come to understand how differently women process and live their lives. We do not separate our personal, professional and financial lives in the same manner as men. If this resonates with you, join me for a complimentary, private conversation and education about your financial life and how you can empower yourself to feel confident and in control.

LIFEMATTERS

Learn how to

EMPOWER YOURSELF!

• • • • • •

Investing Personal Finances Spending Plans Educational Workshops Financial Planning Complimentary Private Consultation

TRANSPARENCY. ALIGNMENT. COMMITMENT.

Rebecca Hayes, Owner e3 Consulting

858.755.7877 ethreeconsulting.com 2 Convenient Locations

Rebecca Hayes is the Owner and Academic Director of e3 Consulting. The core component of her practice is to provide consistent, first-rate academic tutoring, consultation, and therapy for students and their families. They provide an individualized, holistic approach to educational, therapeutic, and additional supportive services for children and their families within our local community in an effort to create healthy, happy young citizens. e3 employs a highly qualified staff of Academic Specialists, who provide unique approaches to teaching and learning which are customized for each student’s needs, goals, and interests. The e3 educators work to create a close-knit, collaborative team with their clients’ parents, school teachers, school administrators, therapists, and pediatricians, as the e3 mission is to build up the child consistently on all fronts. Hayes embraces the perspective that if a child is struggling with confidence or life dilemmas, he/she will not be able to participate and maximize to his/her greatest ability. e3’s holistic approach focuses on building individual growth, self-awareness, values, and success in all realms. Unlike other learning centers which stop at the curriculum, e3 offers an exceptional variety of interactive programs to promote overall wellness and empower its clientele. Deeply intertwined within the efforts toward academic success, e3 is committed to staff and student outreach in community service. Rebecca Hayes successfully created, developed, and co-owned Mindful Mentoring for seven years. In August 2011, Hayes’ passionate goals to truly construct and implement a community hub that will wholly support a family’s mind, body, and soul finally came to fruition with the development and launch of e3 Consulting. e3 Consulting provides specialized Educational Tutoring, Consultation, and Therapy for kindergarten through college students, while earnestly embodying the principles of EDUCATE, ENRICH, and EMPOWER. For information on e3, call 858-755-7877 or visit their web site: www.ethreeconsulting.com

Serving Our San Diego Community For Over 15 Years • Educational Therapy • Educational Consultation • Academic Enrichment (All Subjects) • Executive Functioning Skills • Study Skills, Organization, & Time Management • Social Skills & Self Advocacy

2015

Readers’ Choice

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• Home Schooling • SAT/ACT Test Preparation • College Counseling • Adult Services • Child & Family Counseling • Social Skills & Self Advocacy • School & Grade Level Placement

Voted Best Tutoring Service on the North Coast Two Years in a Row!

2016

Readers’ Choice

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Natalie L. Stillman, CFP, CLTC

www.ethreeconsulting.com | (858) 755-7877

858.263.1675 | Natalie@HallPWA.com

Two Convenient Locations: 2190 Carmel Valley Road, Suite A | Del Mar, CA 92014 681 Encinitas Blvd, Suite 304 | Encinitas, CA 92024

Advisory Services provided by Hall Private Wealth Advisors LLC, an advisor registered with the California Department of Business Oversight. Securities, products and services are offered through M.S. Howells & Co., Member FINRA, SIPC


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PAGE B10 - MARCH 23, 2017 - NORTH COAST

Betsy Gleijeses and Brandi Miller, Co-Founders Reins of Change

858-367-3762 Rancho Santa Fe, CA contact@thereinsofchange.com www.thereinsofchange.com

Reins of Change Co-Founders, Betsy Gleijeses and Brandi Miller, are sisters who share a passion for horses and helping others. They grew up with horses and both realized later in life how much horses have a natural ability/gift to help oneself heal. Miller used her own personal horse as her therapist after her mom passed away. This transpired organically and planted the seed in Miller’s head. Gleijeses is a CASA (Court Appointed Special Advocate) for the foster care system. She sponsored several children to participate in equine therapy work, and witnessed amazing results that inspired her. Miller and Gleijeses came together and collaborated to create Reins Of Change after Gleijeses moved to the North San Diego region, near where her sister, Miller resides. Reins of Change is an equine assisted learning and development center that offers non-traditional, experiential therapy and coaching using horses in a beautiful, private setting in Rancho Santa Fe. Reins of Change works with all populations and ages. Any mental health issue and personal development goal can be applied to equine assisted work, ranging from, but not limited to, depression, anxiety, substance abuse recovery, eating disorders, PTSD, and interpersonal relations with family and others. Reins of Change is growing rapidly and collaborating with several therapists whom specialize in varying areas. Clients and therapists are matched accordingly. In addition to private individual and group sessions, Reins of Change offers a variety of group, oneday workshops on topics including emotional intelligence, parenting, and empowering women, with more to come. To learn more about Reins of Change, please visit our website at thereinsofchange. com or contact us at contact@thereinsofchange.com, 858-367-3762.

Maria Bagby

Therapeutic Literacy Center

(858) 481-2200 990 Highland Drive, Suite 106-D Solana Beach, CA 92075

I’m the second oldest of nine children and because of life circumstances, I was also the one in the family that was the protector of my younger siblings; so, in some respects, I’ve always been a teacher. School came easy for all of us and was our “safe place.” It seemed natural for me to become a teacher, which I did. I won multiple awards for teacher excellence and continued to pursue more study and obtained three Master’s Degrees but still couldn’t find all the answers. I have always felt that it is our job to create choices for children. They have more choices in their future when they have had success in school. Yet, it seemed that no matter what I did as a teacher, I couldn’t reach EVERY child. So many kids are “smart but struggling” and I became determined to find out why. Unfortunately, traditional schools aren’t resourced to provide solutions for children; so, I decided that I had to leave the school system. TLC was born. The center serves the “underdogs.” “We listen to the child and we go underneath those underlying layers to see why and what specifically is causing the problem; then we make a plan to fix it.” Five years later, TLC has become renowned as a deficit-specific treatment center helping students with and without identified learning disabilities find school easier. Learning problems don’t have to be permanent problems…

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990 Highland Drive, Suite 106-D Solana Beach, CA 92075 www.Therapeu"cLiteracyCenter.com A!end a parent informa"on mee"ng on Mondays at 6 p.m. to save $100 on TLC programs. Therapeu"c Literacy Center provides deficit specific therapies in the underlying causes of learning challenges for all children - with and without iden"fied learning disabili"es. Contact us today for more informa"on!


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NORTH COAST - MARCH 23, 2017 - PAGE B11

Salute to Local W Women In Business

Jill Wheeler, REALTOR®, GREEN

Willis Allen Real Estate C

858.353.2639 jill@willisallen.com 1424 Camino Del Mar, Del Mar

A L BRE#018540 0 0

As a Realtor along the San Diego coast since 2008 Jill uses her business background and savvy to navigate buyers and sellers through one of the most important financial decisions of their lives. After graduating from Fordham University’s College of Business Administration and working in corporate PR in NYC, Jill later returned to school at Long Island’s Hofstra University, receiving her Masters in Marriage and Family Therapy before relocating to her home away from home in 2006. She loves what she does and looks forward to connecting with her next buyer and seller. Contact Jill to discuss all things real estate.

YOUR LOCAL LUXURY REAL ESTATE SPECIALIST

Diane Huckabee, CFP , CRPC ®

Financial Advisor - Edward Jones

®

®

858-794-7399 12760 High Bluff Dr, Ste 320 Del Mar, CA 92130

As an Edward Jones financial advisor, I believe it’s important to invest my time to understand what you’re working toward before you invest your money. Working closely with you and your CPA, attorney and other professionals, I can determine the most appropriate financial strategy for you and your family. I can also help with your retirement savings strategy so you have more options when you retire, regardless of what you decide to do. I earned a bachelor’s degree in Finance from San Diego State University. In addition, I received the CFP professional designation in 2008. I have been active in business and community civic affairs in San Diego for many years. I am a member of the Del Mar/Solana Beach Sunrise Rotary and the San Diego State University Alumni Association (Business Chapter).

Investing is about more than money. At Edward Jones, we stop to ask you the question: “What’s important to you?” Without that insight and a real understanding of your goals, investing holds little meaning. Contact your Edward Jones financial advisor for a one-on-one appointment to discuss what’s really important: your goals.

www.edwardjones.com Member SIPC

Local resident returns to perform in Village Church Community Theater's Alice@Wonderland The Musical The Village Church Community Theater (VCCT) in Rancho Santa Fe has relationships with many Southern California actors throughout this locale. These actors overlap working their talented magic at more than one regional theater throughout our sunny homeland. One of these talented individuals saw an ad for VCCT auditions in the Carmel Valley News. Judy Sperling, of Carmel Valley, came to auditions for The Carol Burnett Comedy Buffet a couple years ago. She played Molly in the Spring “Old Folks” Sketch and sang and danced in the finale with “The Village Harmonettes” singing, There’s No Business Like Show Business. Judy Sperling embraced the Sperling VCCT team of actors initially through that first play and has taken on, once again, a role in its upcoming show, Alice@Wonderland The Musical; book by Jonathan Yukich, music by Bill Francoeur and lyrics by Scott DeTurk. She will play the Caterpillar, a familiar character to us all, as this story line follows very closely to Lewis Carroll’s original story, Alice in Wonderland. Not only has Sperling acted with VCCT, she has tackled some varied tasks for them, too. During the last year’s Christmas performances, for Double Your Christmas Joy, Two Musicals, One Show, Sperling served as Assistant Stage Manager. In this role she was very involved with helping the back stage crew with their many scene changes. Sperling is employed by the Congregation Beth Am Synagogue in Carmel Valley, where she provides one-on-one training as a Bar/Bat Mitzvah tutor, which occurs for about six

months prior to the date planned for the event. A member of her synagogue choir, she periodically sings as a lay cantorial soloist for their service. As a wife and mother, she successfully, balances thespian work with her family life, since she has not only worked with the VCCT, but also multiple shows at the Star Theater in Oceanside and the Carlsbad Community Theater. Please join Sperling and her fellow actors, Nika Fikhman, Abby Cason, Sanika Shahapurkar, Dave Wilkey, Brookelynn Nelson, James Wilkey, Gavin McLoughlin, Chris Marshman, Karri Kirschenmann, Brooke Wells, Mae McClave, Makena Vorkoper, Lily Burke, Cody Hug, Dee Silver, Delilah Graham, Cherry Gatpo, Michelle Gatpo, Nick Noetzel, Mirabella Smith, Michelle Elson, Giana Reenan, Rick Farley, John Chalmers and Faye Foroutanpour, for their performances in Alice@Wonderland The Musical on May 5, 6, and 7. For more information and to purchase tickets visit the Village Church Community Theater’s website at www.villagechurchcommunity theater.com. The Village Church is located at 6225 Paseo Delicias, Rancho Santa Fe, 92067, Telephone: (858) 756-2441, X128

Palma de la Reina signs restaurateur Bob Djahanguiri Palma de la Reina has signed a lease with accomplished restaurateur Bob Djahanguiri, a Rancho Santa Fe resident and co-owner of the popular eatery The Rancho Santa Fe Bistro. Djahanguiri’s concept for his new space at Palma de la Reina includes an Italian coffee house, convenience market and classic European steak house. Tenant improvements have begun with a projected opening in early summer. “Bob is a world-class restaurateur whose distinguished career includes a number of nationally- acclaimed establishments in Chicago, Dallas and Minneapolis,” said Richard Cavanaugh, president and CEO of Newport Pacific, Inc., owner and developer of the Palma de la Reina mixed-use complex located at 5525 Cancha de Golf off Via de la Valle. Djahanguiri is currently immersed in all details of the new venture, from interior design and décor to creation of the menu. Plans call for early morning specialty coffees, freshly made pastries and a juice bar, with handmade gourmet to-go items available all day from the village market. The operation will transition in the late afternoon to fine

dining. Located at the entrance to the Whispering Palms community in Rancho Santa Fe, Palma de la Reina includes two buildings of retail merchants, a third building of professional services providers and 54 two-bedroom, two-bath luxury apartment homes. The 81,336-square-foot complex is the final element in the Whispering Palms master plan, which was created by Newport Pacific in 1962. Other retail commitments include Gyrotonic Rancho Santa Fe, Salon Draven, Whispering Palms Cleaners, Bella Botox and My Brighter Side, a boutique specializing in mastectomy products and services for women affected by breast cancer. In the commercial building, tenants include a real estate company, property management firm, and Rancho Santa Fe Cosmetic and Family Dentistry, which is now completing interior improvements. Palma de la Reina is expected to be open for business and leasing at the end of April. For leasing information, contact Scott Danshaw or Steve Willmore of Lee & Associates at 858-713-0309. – Submitted press release


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PAGE B12 - MARCH 23, 2017 - NORTH COAST

EVENT BRIEFS TPHS Music Department to present chamber concert The Torrey Pines High School Music Department will present a Chamber Concert Tuesday, April 4, at 6:30 p.m. at the Canyon Crest Academy Proscenium Theatre. The event will feature solo instrumentalists and vocalists, chamber ensembles and jazz combos. $10 suggested donation per family at the door.

Master Rosarian to speak at Del Mar Rose Society meeting Del Mar Rose Society will host Edyie Osaki, master Rosarian with the Orange County Rose Society, March 30. Osaki will be sharing her experience at the 100th Chelsea Flower show held in London, England in 2013. Her presentation will be a virtual tour through the flower show and gardens of London. Del Mar Rose Society will meet March 30 at 6:30 p.m. for a wine and cheese social.The lecture begins at 7 p.m. at the Powerhouse Community Center, 1658 Coast Blvd. The group meets the last Thursday of each month. Call 760-809-6860 or visit DelMarRoseSociety.org.

Goodguys Meguiar Del Mar Nationals Goodguys Meguiar Del Mar Nationals will be held March 31-April 2 at the Del Mar Fairgrounds. A giant automotive festival delivering a full weekend of Cali-style hot roddin’. Over 2,500 of the finest hot rods, customs, muscle cars, tricked out trucks and classics in the country as they compete to win the coveted Goodguys 2017 Street Rod D’ Elegance Award. Hundreds of vendor exhibits, the “Nitro Thunderfest” vintage dragster exhibition, the Goodguys Autocross timed racing competition, a Swap Meet & Auto Trader Classics cars 4 Sale Corral, live music and free Kids Zone and more. Visit good-guys.com.

Radici Hair Studio to hold Grand Opening Radici Hair Studio will hold a Grand Opening and ribbon-cutting event Thursday, March 30, from 5 p.m.-7: 30 p.m. Enjoy an evening of networking, tours, food, giveaways and drinks. Radici Hair Studio is located at 512 Via de la Valle, Suite 100, Solana Beach, 92075. Visit radicihairstudio.com

Memory Cafe welcomes speaker from Alzheimer’s San Diego March 24 This Friday, March 24, at the Memory Cafe guest speaker Amy Abrams from Alzheimer’s San Diego will discuss Memory Loss 101 and

take questions. The free Memory Cafe is a social gathering place for friends wondering about, worried about, or even starting to experience memory loss. Memory Cafe participants socialize, enjoy refreshments, play games, and have discussion about aging and health issues. All family members are welcome. Monthly on second and sourth Fridays 10-11:30 a.m. at Grace Point Church, 13340 Hayford Way, Room 1B, Carmel Valley.

Maritime Museum of San Diego tall ship to participate in Regatta The Maritime Museum of San Diego’s tall ship Californian, the official tall ship of California, will be participating in the 29th Annual America’s Schooner Cup Charity Regatta on San Diego Bay Saturday, April 1. Tickets are limited and available to sail in the race on the Californian or as a spectator aboard the1542 Spanish galleon San Salvador, a replica of the first European vessel to visit the Pacific West Coast. Tickets on the Californian or San Salvador for this special event are $65 for adults and $48 for children and include general admission. Tickets can be purchased online at www.sdmaritime.org or by calling 619. 234-9153 ext. 106.

Osher Lifelong Learning classes to begin at UC San Diego Registration for the spring quarter is now open at The Osher Lifelong Learning Institute at the University of California, San Diego. The Institute conducts twice daily lectures and seminars for members over 50 years of age with the first lecture for the quarter beginning on Monday, April 3 at 10 a.m. All lectures are held on the Extension campus located at 9600 North Torrey Pines Road in La Jolla. Class offerings will include presentations from scholars and experts in the fields of international relations, science, medicine, art and humanities, among many other subjects. Spring quarter lecture subjects range from Hollywood’s Golden Age to stem cell research. For further information visit the UCSD Osher web site at www.olli.ucsd.edu or by calling 858-534-3409.

Friendship Gardeners of Del Mar meeting to be held March 25 Friendship Gardeners of Del Mar will hold its monthly meeting Saturday, March 25, from 1-3 p.m. Mary Freistadt, a seasoned docent at San Diego Botanic Garden, will give a presentation on herbs. The group meets in members’ homes and newcomers are always welcome. Call 858-755-6570 for the Del Mar meeting locaiton.

Pi Beta Phi luncheon A Pi Beta Phi luncheon with a community speaker will be held at Bernardo Heights Country Club in Rancho Bernardo Friday, March 31, 10:15 a.m. For reservations and details contact Dotty

Washburn at 858-487-7648.

Master Composting Course Solana Center presents a five-week in-depth training about the art and science of composting on Saturdays in April. Course includes lectures, demonstrations and a field trip to a commercial composting facility. The trainings will take place at the Encinitas Boys & Girls Club, 1221 Encinitas Blvd., on Saturdays from April 1 to April 29 between 9:30 a.m. and noon. Encinitas residents get preferential registration, and the course fee is $50 per person. Scholarships are also available upon request. For more information and to register, visit www.solanacenter.org/events.

Taste of Leucadia The fifth annual Taste of Leucadia will take place April 6 from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. For the event, 23 of Leucadia’s restaurants will serve samples to ticket holders, and seven “Sip Stop” locations will be open after hours for attendees to drink libations from local breweries and wineries. at City Hall, 505 S. Vulcan, to Leucadia. It will run throughout the night to bring guests back to City Hall. The last pick-up will be from HapiFish at 8:55 p.m. For more information about the event, visit www.leucadia101.com.

Theatre School at North Coast Rep presents Wizard of Oz From the widely adored silver-screen film to the intimate theatre at North Coast Rep, comes the theatre school production of The Wizard of Oz, directed by Benjamin Cole. You won’t want to miss this exciting theatrical journey, as it brings you closer than ever to the magic of the ruby slippers. Two casts of 30-plus kids will take you through the tornado from dusty Kansas and right into the Wonderful Land of Oz. The Wizard of Oz opens March 29. Performance schedule: March 29 at 6 p.m., March 30 and 31 at 10 a.m., 12 p.m., and 6 p.m., April 1 at 2 p.m. and 6 p.m., and April 2 at 2 p.m. North Coast Repertory Theatre is located at 987 Lomas Santa Fe Drive, Solana Beach, 92075. Tickets are $16 for adults and $12 for children 17 and under. To purchase tickets, call 858-481-1055 or visit www.northcoastrep.org/TheatreSchool.

Conservancy Wax & Wine event March 26 San Dieguito River Valley Conservancy will hold its annual Wax & Wine event Sunday, March 26, from 1 p.m.-4 p.m. at Knorr Candle Factory (14906 Via de La Valle, Del Mar, 92014). Members $50, non-members $75.Savor gourmet fare. Sip delicious wine selected by the chefs. Enjoy live music. Learn how to make your own beeswax candle and take it home. Stroll the lovely grounds of the Knorr Candle Factory. Receive discounts on all Knorr Candle Factory products. Gourmet fare provided by Urban Kitchen

Catering. The event sold out last year so make your reservations early. Visit www.sdrvc.ejoinme.org/waxandwine or call 858-755-6956.

Herbert B. Turner Gallery holding reception for exhibit The Herbert B. Turner Gallery in Del Mar will host a solo art exhibit of images by photo illustrator Bob Coletti. Over 33 Images will be on display featuring work produced in his Foto Oscura style. A Grand Reception for the exhibit is scheduled for March 25, 2-5 p.m. The event is open to the public. Refreshments served. Free parking. Free admittance. The Herbert B. Turner Gallery is located at 2010 Jimmy Durante Blvd, Del Mar, 92014. Visit www.hbtgallery.com

Youth Theater Featuring 13 La Jolla teens, J*Company presents “Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory,” inspired by the 1971 Gene Wilder film. Matinees and evening shows through March 26 at the Jewish Community Center, 4126 Executive Drive. Nathan Conlan is in the title role, Ben Jimenez is Mike Teavee and Marina Hall is Violet Beauregarde. Tickets: $17 JCC members, $19 general. (858) 362-1348. jcompanysd.org

T.E.A.M. to present program on Israel’s political system April 2 Curious about Israel’s political system and how a coalition government works? T.E.A.M. (Training and Education about the Middle East) will present a program on Israel’s political system and how it works on Sunday, April 2 at 10:30 a.m. at the Lawrence Family Jewish Community Center, 4126 Executive Drive, San Diego. Israeli Political Science Professor Oded Brosh, visiting professor, Jewish Studies Program at San Diego State University, will share “inside info” on the Israeli political scene, followed by a Q&A session. A leading expert on nuclear politics and security studies, Brosh will return to teaching at the IDC, Herzliya, Israel, next month. RSVP by March 31, latest, to teamisraelsd@gmail.com or 858-232-2445 Bagels and cream cheese for those who RSVP early. Free and open to the public.

Water/money-saving plant fair The San Diego County Water Authority and select locations of The Home Depot are again partnering to offer discounts on water-efficient plants ideal for springtime planting through a series of San Diego County Garden Friendly Plant Fairs. Consumers are invited to take advantage of these deals at seven events across the county. The next one will be held March 25, from 9 a.m.-1 p.m. at The Home Depot in Encinitas (1001 N. El Camino Real, Encinitas). Visit WaterSmartSD.org.


www.delmartimes.net

NORTH COAST - MARCH 23, 2017 - PAGE B13

2017 North Coast Repertory Theatre holding summer camps for kids and teens Are you on the hunt this summer for a zoo of theatrical fun? Discover the Theatre School @ North Coast Rep! We’re offering three different one-week half-day camps for your future Broadway Babies ages 4-8, three different two-week full-day fun production

camps for ages 6-12, and three different two-week full-day teen performance camps for ages 12-19. To register, call 858-481-1055 or www.northcoastrep.org/TheatreSchool or email Ben@northcoastrep.org with questions.

Summer Discoveries Day Camp at Del Mar Pines Join Del Mar Pines School this summer for Summer Discoveries Day Camp 2017. There will be over 20 fun-filled classes to choose from and two separate sessions. The first session will begin on June 19th and run through July 6th, and the second from July 10th to July 27th. Classes are offered for Kindergarten through sixth grade on a variety of topics

BRING THIS AD IN FOR 10% OFF

rf Camp Sol Su St Del 22nd

June thru August

Mar

including Theatre, Crafts, Chess, Golf, Circus 101, Math, Literature, Computer Science, Keyboarding, Martial Arts, Mad Science, Comedy and many more. Space is limited, and classes are filling up fast. Visit delmarpines.com for complete course descriptions & registration forms or call 858-481-5615 for more information.

BRING THIS AD IN FOR 10% OFF

lay P m a r mer! n Prog

$300 per Week

Early Registration & Sibling Discounts

Hurry! Space Is Filling Fast!

(619) 889-0404 email: solsurf@outlook.com solsurf@eartlink.net www.solsurfcamp.com

NIKE TENNIS CAMPS SERIOUS. FUN. UNIVERSITY OF SAN DIEGO JUNIOR OVERNIGHT & DAY CAMPS

Boys & Girls | Ages 9-18 | All Skills | High School June 11-16 | June 18-23 | June 25-June 30 July 9-14 | July 16-21 | July 23-28 | July 30-Aug 4 Directed by: Veteran Nike Tennis Camp Director and San Diego Hall of Champions Coaching Legends inductee, Bill Scott, and University of San Diego Head Women’s Tennis Coach, Sherri Stephens, and USD Head Men’s Tennis Coach, Ryan Keckley

USSportsCamps.com

All Rights reserved. Nike and the Swoosh design are registered trademarks of Nike, Inc. and its affiliates, and are used under license. Nike is the title sponsor of the camps and has no control over the operation of the camps or the acts or omissions of US Sports Camps.

1-800-NIKE CAMP

(1-800-645-3226)

20%

Early Bird Discount

if you register by March 31st!

ig t h i s S u m s e D d l Bui Robots With

CampsCamps begin on begin June 8thin , and newand sessions start weekly start through August 28th. June, new sessions weekly Duration:5Days(Monday-Friday) Half:9am-12pm,or12:30pm-3:30pm Duration: 5 Days (Monday - Friday) Half: 9am - 12pm, or 12:30pm - 3:30pm Full:9am-3:30pm Full: 9am - 3:30pm EarlyDrop-off(8AM)andLatePick-up(5PM)willbeavailableuponrequest&availability Early Drop-off (8AM) and Late Pick-up (5PM) Kits will used be purchased for additional $110 becan available upon request & availability

1 Week Robotics Camp

Early Special Early Bird Bird Special Half Half Days Days $$235 235 $$188 188 $ $ Full FullDays Days $445 465 $356 372

www.robolink.comor or call call 858.876.5123 forfor details VisitVisit www.robolink.com 858.876.5123 details 56775677 Oberlin Dr. Suite 100,San SanDiego Diego, 92121 Oberlin Dr. #212, CA CA 92121


www.delmartimes.net

PAGE B14 - MARCH 23, 2017 - NORTH COAST

This summer is a blockbuster for Learning Tree's camp program New! Fun Fridays - Balboa Park with Museum adventures; New! Drama Club; Challenge Island - hours of non-stop fun and brain-busting challenge activities; Icky Me Minion; Mindcraft Creeper Crazy; Space Wars; Super Hero; American Girls and Dolls; Emoji; New! Kiln Fired Ceramics; Fencing;

New! SAT Tutoring for the August test. Learning Tree continues its "Best of the Best" tutoring (they've won Bronze and Silver for "Best Tutoring" from U-T Community Newspapers for three years in a row), writing classes, math programs, on-site full service music

The perfect balance of Summer Play & Learning!

THE THEATRE SCHOOL @ NORTH COAST REPERTORY THEATRE

SUMMER THEATRE CAMP Ages 4 – 8

One-Week, Half-Day (morning) The Very Hungry Caterpillar Where The Wild Things Are One Fish Two Fish

Ages 6 – 12

department, and table tennis with worldwide winning coaches. Other classes offered include Mad Science, Cooking, Chess, Robotic Link, Health Science, Manners, Chinese Credit Courses and basic computer skills.Visit www.afterschoollearningtree.com or call 619-988-8039.

June 19 – June 23 July 10 – July 14 July 24 – July 28

Two-Week, Full-Day Disney’s The Lion King Kids Disney’s The Jungle Book Kids Disney’s Winnie The Pooh Kids

June 19 – June 30 July 10 – July 21 July 24 – August 4

Ages 12 – 19 Two-Week, Full-Day Hamlet Revenge of The Space Pandas Disney’s The Little Mermaid Jr

June 19 – June 30 July 10 – July 21 July 24 – August 4

NorthCoastRep.org/TheatreSchool

More details on the website. Questons? Contact Benjamin Cole, (858) 481-2155, ext. 216. Register for camps on the website or by calling the Box Office, (858) 481-1055.

SUMMER CAMP

• Math • Chinese • Spanish • Cooking • English Writing • Typing • Health Science • Manners • Computer: Photoshop • CoDrone Programming Camps • Robotic Camps • NASA Space Academy • Crazy Chem-Works • Mad Science All-Stars • Anatomy Academy • Little Green Thumbs • Drama • Flute • Singing • Melodica • Ukulele • Mindcraft Creeper Crazy • Space Wars • Super Heroes • Icky me Minion • Fencing • Table Tennis • Ice-Skating • Tennis • Swimming • Ceramic • Collage • Origami • Painting & Drawing • Paper Mache

It’s fun to be

SMARTER IN THE SUMMER!

SAT/PSAT & college essay tutoring available. 2015

2016

Readers’ Choice

New classes this year... FUN FIRST & LEARNING TOO. Full-day summer camp. Top Notch, Enthusiastic Teachers!

Readers’ Choice

“Best of”

“Best of”

2014

Readers’ Choice

“Best of”

Voted “Best of the Best”

for Best Tutoring Services by the readers of the UT Community Press

AFTER SCHOOL LEARNING TREE www.AfterSchoolLearningTree.com

11525 Sorrento Valley Road, San Diego 92121 • 858.603.2211 or 858.259.0066


www.delmartimes.net

NORTH COAST - MARCH 23, 2017 - PAGE B15

Summer Discoveries Day Camp 2017

(Kindergarten - Sixth Grade)

COURTESY

Teen Volunteers in Action (TVIA) SD-1 members volunteering at the Coastal Roots Farm in Encinitas March 12.

Teen Volunteers in Action SD-1 members volunteer at Coastal Roots Farm Teen Volunteers in Action (TVIA) SD-1 volunteered at the Coastal Roots Farm in Encinitas March 12. The teens worked on the Coastal Roots Farm at the Leichtag Foundation property in Encinitas. The TVIA Teens worked to spread mulch to the newly planted trees and plants on the property and planted seeds for future crops to include corn, beans, zucchini and watermelon. Coastal Roots Farm integrates Jewish tradition and sustainable agriculture to grow and share healthy food especially with those most in need, learn about and

care for the land, and help strengthen connections between neighbors. Each year, it provides tens of thousands of pounds of fresh vegetables to local hunger relief efforts. Coastal Roots Farm is an independent organization created by the Leichtag Foundation to help foster a vibrant, healthy community. TVIA is an organization of young men committed to developing community leaders through a structured program of volunteerism, philanthropy and personnel growth. More information is at www.tvia.org.

TEDxEncinitas is 'changing voices' at April 1 event TEDxEncinitas, an independently organized TED event, will explore the theme of “changing voices” featuring 12 speakers and two performances, all under the age of 24. “In our ever-changing world, all too often we look to the wisdom of the past to create and shape our future,” said Bobbi Cecio, event organizer. “While there is absolutely great value in the wisdom of those who have walked this journey before us, so is there innate and valuable wisdom to be found in the voices of tomorrow.” TEDxEncinitas invites adults to experience this for themselves by hearing these youth voices.

The event will take place on April 1, from 1 p.m. to 6 p.m, at San Dieguito High School Academy’s Clayton E. Liggett Theater (800 Santa Fe Drive, Encinitas). Tickets are currently available to the public for $85 at www.tedxencinitas.com. Consistent with the “changing voices” theme, the audience of this primarily student-run event will be limited to adults. The speakers for TEDxEncinitas range from a fifth grader passionate about equal pay for equal work, to a legally blind eighth grader who competes in both musical and athletic competitions. Other topics include immigration,

activism, American culture, farm animal sanctuaries and more -- all from a youth perspective. TED is a nonprofit organization devoted to "Ideas Worth Spreading," usually in the form of short, powerful talks (18 minutes or fewer) delivered by today's leading thinkers and doers. Many of these talks are given at TED's annual conference in Vancouver, British Columbia, and made available, free, on TED.com. TED speakers have included Bill Gates, Jane Goodall, Elizabeth Gilbert, Sir Richard Branson, Nandan Nilekani, Philippe Starck, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Sal Khan and Daniel Kahneman.

Academic enhancement programs for the inquisitive mind.

Over 20 fun-filled classes to choose from! SESSION I: JUNE 19 – JULY 6 SESSION II: JULY 10 – JULY 27 • Jumpstart Readers

• Exploring Science Through Art

• Reading & Writing Explorations

• Mad Science

• Reading & Writing Workshop

- Robot Recruit

• Response to Literature

- Wild Adventure

• Ukulele

- Brixology

• Theater/ Broadway

- Crazy Chem Works

• Stories, Games & More

• Math Fun

• Comedy/ Improv

• Engaging Math & Games

• Circus: 101

• Math Problem Solving

• Monart Mixed Media

• Chess

• Crafts

• Golf

• Keyboarding

• Super Soccer Stars

• Google: Computer Science

• Martial Arts

39

YEARS


www.delmartimes.net

PAGE B16 - MARCH 23, 2017 - NORTH COAST

www.delmartimes.net

NORTH COAST - MARCH 23, 2017 - PAGE B17

Palm Paradise! BEFORE

AFTER

STYLE

Hollywood INSTANT PRIVACY!

BLOCK OUT THOSE NOSY NEIGHBORS!

MOONVALLEYNURSERIES.COM

TRUCKLOADS OF NEW TREES ARE ARRIVING DAILY FROM OUR FARMS!

TREE & PLANT SALE PROFESSIONAL ON ALL BOX

FREEPLANTING

SIZE TREES AND PALMS!

ORIGINAL RETAIL PRICE PER TREE APPLIES. CRANE, IF REQUIRED, IS EXTRA. NOT VALID WITH OTHER OFFERS. SOME RESTRICTIONS APPLY. EXCLUDES PACKAGES & WHOLESALE PRICES.

At Moon Valley Nursery, we are committed to providing our customers with the highest quality and largest selection of trees and plants available. As the largest box tree grower in America, we always guarantee the absolute best VALUE!

TREE FOR TREE AND PLANT FOR PLANT...NOBODY CAN BEAT THE VALUE THAT WE DESIGN INTO EVERY PROJECT!

BEST SELECTION!

PLANTED & GUARANTEED

ONLY $799

HUGE HEDGES 3 HUGE TREES

PLANTED & GUARANTEED PKGS $ FROM

1399

NEW PACKAGE DEALS! YES...CUSTOM PACKAGES AVAILABLE

BLOCKBUSTER BACK YARD $3400

PACKAGE PRICE

$

RECLINATA PALMS!

KING PALMS!

WE PLANT IT ALL!

MOON VALLEY NURSERIES PRIVATE COLLECTION OF PALMS GATHERED ALL AROUND THE WORLD IS NOW LOCATED IN ONE PLACE HERE IN SAN DIEGO! COUNTY WIDE DELIVERY JUST $99!... Call our palm design expert, Naia Armstrong at 760-444-4630

FREE

1999

PLANTING!

$19000

SHADE TREES!

FLOWERING TREES!

LARGE HEDGES!

THE LARGEST BOX TREE GROWER IN AMERICA!

BEST TIME TO PLANT EVERYTHING! Free Design

$

9999 SAVE 9000! $

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

Amazing Selection!

CONSULTATIONS Call Our Pros Today!

TRUCKLOADS OF

FRESH TREES

Allow our experts to work with you to create the perfect assortment of trees, palms, plants and more for your landscape. From waterwise to contemporary, put their experience to work for you!

ARRIVING DAILY FROM OUR FARMS! WATER WISE!

1000’S OF SHRUBS

John Allen at 760-301-5960

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

COLORFUL TREES!

OLIVE TREES DESERT TREES!

ORIGINAL RETAIL PRICE PER TREE APPLIES. CRANE, IF REQUIRED, IS EXTRA. NOT VALID WITH OTHER OFFERS. SOME RESTRICTIONS APPLY. EXCLUDES PACKAGES & WHOLESALE PRICES. ON ALL BOX SIZE TREES & PALMS.

Timothy Burger at 760-990-1079

Murrieta, Temecula, Hemet, Wine Country & all nearby areas

Dave Schneider at 951-331-7279 Paradise Palms Expert

Naia Armstrong at 760-444-4630

DESIGN ALWAYS FREE AT NURSERY WITH MIN. PURCHASE AT JOBSITE. RETAIL ORDERS ONLY.

PALM PARADISE

760-291-8223 78

Carlsbad

San Marcos

Rancho Santa Fe

CITRUS & FRUITS

Landscapers, Designers, Architects, Project Managers & Developers WHOLESALE MANAGER

SANDIEGO•RANCHOSANTAFE ESCONDIDO•FALLBROOK &MORE

760-316-4000

Oceanside

Vista

Carlsbad

Escondido

CALL KRAIG HARRISON 760-742-6025

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

78 San Marcos

Escondido

La Costa Encinitas Rancho Bernardo

26437 N. City Centre Pkwy. - Escondido, CA 92026

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA

$99 delivers any order within 20 miles of nursery - other areas higher

Vista

I-15 Exit Deer Springs Rd. Easet to City Centre then South 1.5 mi.

POTTERY - NOW 50% OFF

GET APPROVED IN 90 SECONDS ORDERS $499 AND UP. ON APPROVED CREDIT. SEE STORE FOR DETAILS.

OPEN DAILY • Mon - Sat 7:30 - 6:00 • Sundays 9-5

La Jolla

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

LOCALLY GROWN, DISEASE FREE OLIVE TREES. ONE YEAR GUARANTEE ON ALL OLIVE TREES!

NO INTEREST FINANCING!

La Costa

Kraig Harrison at 619-320-6012

Zack Heiland at 619-312-4691

12 MONTH

ORIGINAL RETAIL PRICE PER TREE APPLIES. CRANE, IF REQUIRED, IS EXTRA. NOT VALID WITH OTHER OFFERS. SOME RESTRICTIONS APPLY. EXCLUDES PACKAGES & WHOLESALE PRICES.

NOW! 2 GIANT NURSERIES SERVING ALL AREAS OF SAN DIEGO COUNTY!

Encinitas

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

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

Plant Now! Pay Later!

Oceanside

WATERWISE

ON ALL BOX SIZE PALMS

PONYTAIL PALMS!

UNIQUE SPECIMENS!

PACKAGE PRICE

FREE BONUS ($160 VALUE) 2 JUGS MOON JUICE 2 BAGS MOON SOIL CONDITIONER

WINDMILL PALMS!

COME SEE WHAT ALL THE EXCITEMENT’S ABOUT!

ULTIMATE YARD

PICK YOUR TREES!

SHADE TREES!

DATE PALMS!

SAVE $1400!

2 GIANT TREES 3 BLOCKBUSTER TREES 6 HUGE INSTANT TREES 7 SUPER TREES 12 BIG SHRUBS OF CHOICE FREE DESIGN AT YOUR HOME!

FREE PRO DESIGN!

ENJOY YOUR YARD!

SUPER STARTER HEDGES

5 HEDGE TREES

DESIGN VALUE IN YOUR PROPERTY WITH INSTANT PRIVACY. WE CREATE AMAZING HEDGES FOR ALL SITUATIONS. EVEN MANY CELEBRITY HOMES FEATURE OUR FAMOUS HOLLYWOOD HEDGES!

1 BLOCKBUSTER TREE 1 HUGE INSTANT TREE 2 SUPER TREES 8 BIG SHRUBS OF CHOICE FREE DESIGN AT NURSERY FREE BONUS ($80 VALUE) 1 JUG MOON JUICE 1 BAG MOON SOIL CONDITIONER

THE BEST SERVICE & SELECTION!

HEDGES!

The largest collection of amazing palms, tropicals & MORE... ever seen at one location - OVER 40 ACRES!!! •Full Grown Palms •Dwarf Palms •Rare, Ancient Palms •Bamboo & Hawaiian •Giant Aloe & Agave •Indoor Palms & More

La Jolla

Rancho Santa Fe

Rancho Bernardo

26334 Mesa Rock Rd. Escondido, CA 92026

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

PROFESSIONAL

TREE SERVICES REMOVALS & MORE

760-291-8949

Just $99 delivers any order within 20 miles of nursery. Other areas higher.


www.delmartimes.net

PAGE B16 - MARCH 23, 2017 - NORTH COAST

www.delmartimes.net

NORTH COAST - MARCH 23, 2017 - PAGE B17

Palm Paradise! BEFORE

AFTER

STYLE

Hollywood INSTANT PRIVACY!

BLOCK OUT THOSE NOSY NEIGHBORS!

MOONVALLEYNURSERIES.COM

TRUCKLOADS OF NEW TREES ARE ARRIVING DAILY FROM OUR FARMS!

TREE & PLANT SALE PROFESSIONAL ON ALL BOX

FREEPLANTING

SIZE TREES AND PALMS!

ORIGINAL RETAIL PRICE PER TREE APPLIES. CRANE, IF REQUIRED, IS EXTRA. NOT VALID WITH OTHER OFFERS. SOME RESTRICTIONS APPLY. EXCLUDES PACKAGES & WHOLESALE PRICES.

At Moon Valley Nursery, we are committed to providing our customers with the highest quality and largest selection of trees and plants available. As the largest box tree grower in America, we always guarantee the absolute best VALUE!

TREE FOR TREE AND PLANT FOR PLANT...NOBODY CAN BEAT THE VALUE THAT WE DESIGN INTO EVERY PROJECT!

BEST SELECTION!

PLANTED & GUARANTEED

ONLY $799

HUGE HEDGES 3 HUGE TREES

PLANTED & GUARANTEED PKGS $ FROM

1399

NEW PACKAGE DEALS! YES...CUSTOM PACKAGES AVAILABLE

BLOCKBUSTER BACK YARD $3400

PACKAGE PRICE

$

RECLINATA PALMS!

KING PALMS!

WE PLANT IT ALL!

MOON VALLEY NURSERIES PRIVATE COLLECTION OF PALMS GATHERED ALL AROUND THE WORLD IS NOW LOCATED IN ONE PLACE HERE IN SAN DIEGO! COUNTY WIDE DELIVERY JUST $99!... Call our palm design expert, Naia Armstrong at 760-444-4630

FREE

1999

PLANTING!

$19000

SHADE TREES!

FLOWERING TREES!

LARGE HEDGES!

THE LARGEST BOX TREE GROWER IN AMERICA!

BEST TIME TO PLANT EVERYTHING! Free Design

$

9999 SAVE 9000! $

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

Amazing Selection!

CONSULTATIONS Call Our Pros Today!

TRUCKLOADS OF

FRESH TREES

Allow our experts to work with you to create the perfect assortment of trees, palms, plants and more for your landscape. From waterwise to contemporary, put their experience to work for you!

ARRIVING DAILY FROM OUR FARMS! WATER WISE!

1000’S OF SHRUBS

John Allen at 760-301-5960

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

COLORFUL TREES!

OLIVE TREES DESERT TREES!

ORIGINAL RETAIL PRICE PER TREE APPLIES. CRANE, IF REQUIRED, IS EXTRA. NOT VALID WITH OTHER OFFERS. SOME RESTRICTIONS APPLY. EXCLUDES PACKAGES & WHOLESALE PRICES. ON ALL BOX SIZE TREES & PALMS.

Timothy Burger at 760-990-1079

Murrieta, Temecula, Hemet, Wine Country & all nearby areas

Dave Schneider at 951-331-7279 Paradise Palms Expert

Naia Armstrong at 760-444-4630

DESIGN ALWAYS FREE AT NURSERY WITH MIN. PURCHASE AT JOBSITE. RETAIL ORDERS ONLY.

PALM PARADISE

760-291-8223 78

Carlsbad

San Marcos

Rancho Santa Fe

CITRUS & FRUITS

Landscapers, Designers, Architects, Project Managers & Developers WHOLESALE MANAGER

SANDIEGO•RANCHOSANTAFE ESCONDIDO•FALLBROOK &MORE

760-316-4000

Oceanside

Vista

Carlsbad

Escondido

CALL KRAIG HARRISON 760-742-6025

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

78 San Marcos

Escondido

La Costa Encinitas Rancho Bernardo

26437 N. City Centre Pkwy. - Escondido, CA 92026

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA

$99 delivers any order within 20 miles of nursery - other areas higher

Vista

I-15 Exit Deer Springs Rd. Easet to City Centre then South 1.5 mi.

POTTERY - NOW 50% OFF

GET APPROVED IN 90 SECONDS ORDERS $499 AND UP. ON APPROVED CREDIT. SEE STORE FOR DETAILS.

OPEN DAILY • Mon - Sat 7:30 - 6:00 • Sundays 9-5

La Jolla

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

LOCALLY GROWN, DISEASE FREE OLIVE TREES. ONE YEAR GUARANTEE ON ALL OLIVE TREES!

NO INTEREST FINANCING!

La Costa

Kraig Harrison at 619-320-6012

Zack Heiland at 619-312-4691

12 MONTH

ORIGINAL RETAIL PRICE PER TREE APPLIES. CRANE, IF REQUIRED, IS EXTRA. NOT VALID WITH OTHER OFFERS. SOME RESTRICTIONS APPLY. EXCLUDES PACKAGES & WHOLESALE PRICES.

NOW! 2 GIANT NURSERIES SERVING ALL AREAS OF SAN DIEGO COUNTY!

Encinitas

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

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

Plant Now! Pay Later!

Oceanside

WATERWISE

ON ALL BOX SIZE PALMS

PONYTAIL PALMS!

UNIQUE SPECIMENS!

PACKAGE PRICE

FREE BONUS ($160 VALUE) 2 JUGS MOON JUICE 2 BAGS MOON SOIL CONDITIONER

WINDMILL PALMS!

COME SEE WHAT ALL THE EXCITEMENT’S ABOUT!

ULTIMATE YARD

PICK YOUR TREES!

SHADE TREES!

DATE PALMS!

SAVE $1400!

2 GIANT TREES 3 BLOCKBUSTER TREES 6 HUGE INSTANT TREES 7 SUPER TREES 12 BIG SHRUBS OF CHOICE FREE DESIGN AT YOUR HOME!

FREE PRO DESIGN!

ENJOY YOUR YARD!

SUPER STARTER HEDGES

5 HEDGE TREES

DESIGN VALUE IN YOUR PROPERTY WITH INSTANT PRIVACY. WE CREATE AMAZING HEDGES FOR ALL SITUATIONS. EVEN MANY CELEBRITY HOMES FEATURE OUR FAMOUS HOLLYWOOD HEDGES!

1 BLOCKBUSTER TREE 1 HUGE INSTANT TREE 2 SUPER TREES 8 BIG SHRUBS OF CHOICE FREE DESIGN AT NURSERY FREE BONUS ($80 VALUE) 1 JUG MOON JUICE 1 BAG MOON SOIL CONDITIONER

THE BEST SERVICE & SELECTION!

HEDGES!

The largest collection of amazing palms, tropicals & MORE... ever seen at one location - OVER 40 ACRES!!! •Full Grown Palms •Dwarf Palms •Rare, Ancient Palms •Bamboo & Hawaiian •Giant Aloe & Agave •Indoor Palms & More

La Jolla

Rancho Santa Fe

Rancho Bernardo

26334 Mesa Rock Rd. Escondido, CA 92026

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

PROFESSIONAL

TREE SERVICES REMOVALS & MORE

760-291-8949

Just $99 delivers any order within 20 miles of nursery. Other areas higher.


www.delmartimes.net

PAGE B18 - MARCH 23, 2017 - NORTH COAST

6th Annual Canyon Crest Academy Writers’ Conference

T

he 6th Annual Canyon Crest Academy Writers’ Conference was held March 11 at CCA’s Proscenium Theater and Media Center. New York Times bestselling author Mary E. Pearson gave the keynote address at the event, which featured more than 20 authors who led workshops on a variety of subjects from screenwriting to poetry to comics and graphic novels. The CCA Writers’ Conference – the only free writers’ conference for high school students in the country – has continued to grow and encourage aspiring young writers, drawing in hundreds of teens from more than 20 area high schools and attracting top names in publishing. For a story on the event, see last issue or visit www.delmartimes.net. Online: www.delmartimes.net

PHOTOS BY SIMONE CAMILLERI

Conference Advisor Kathy Krevat with Authors Harley Jane Kozak and Cecil Castellucci

Author Laura Preble's packed workshop on major plot structures.

Viet Mai, Spoken Word Poet and recipient of the Jonathan Maberry Inspiring Teens Award.

Author recipients of the Super Star Award: Matt Wolf, Greg van Eekhout and James Matlack Raney with three-time conference organizer and CCA high school senior Julia Camilleri

Conference Keynote Speaker Mary E. Pearson with Author Cecil Castellucci

SPONSORED COLUMNS DR. VAN CHENG San Diego Vein Institute 760.944.9263

Can My Varicose Veins Affect My Blood Pressure? Some truths about venous hypertension. Statement: I already know my varicose veins can be caused by my elevated blood pressure. The real picture: Sure, elevated blood pressure can be accompanied with varicose veins as a symptom. But elevated blood pressure might not be the cause of everyone getting varicose veins. Very often, varicose

veins are hereditary. They are caused by a weakening of the venous walls. Statement: But only older people or pregnant women can get varicose veins. The reality: While many women do find themselves with varicose veins during pregnancy, and while venous walls do weaken with age, the truth is that anyone can get varicose veins, including men and young people. Varicose veins can occur from standing too often, or from sitting too often, either at work or during traveling. When the venous walls weaken, too much strain from a heavy workout elevates the blood pressure, and the veins and valves have to work very hard to pump the blood from the feet and legs back up to the heart. Conversely, when the body sits for too long, blood can pool in the weakened veins because the body isn’t working hard enough

to pump the blood back up to the heart. But again, sitting, standing, and working out too much in and of themselves don’t automatically cause varicose veins. However, varicose veins are common enough in people that a moderate workout routine and an active lifestyle are good practices for just about everyone. Statement: So, if varicose veins may be caused by elevated blood pressure, that means the reverse can’t be true, that varicose veins don’t affect my blood pressure. Right? The reality: Not so fast. Doctors are still working on learning the full effects that varicose veins have on blood pressure. However, what they do know is that varicose veins can contribute to venous hypertension. When blood pools in the veins in your lower extremities, that puts additional pressure on your heart, which

has to then work harder to pump all of that pooled blood back up the body. This is especially dangerous to people who already have an underlying heart condition. That is why varicose veins are themselves, in fact, considered a medical condition. Statement: I don’t have to worry, then, if I don’t have varicose veins. The reality: Incorrect! Many people suffering venous hypertension have no visible symptoms. This is why regular medical checkups are a must, especially if you have a family history of high blood pressure, hypertension, or heart disease.But since varicose veins are known to have a negative medical effect on the body, apart from being unsightly, it can be worthwhile to get them removed with a simple in-office sclerotherapy treatment.

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NORTH COAST - MARCH 23, 2017 - PAGE B19

ENCINITAS

Springtime sips to wet your whistle

A

s spring breezes in, swap out the steamy winter drinks that warmed the cockles of your heart, for icy spring thirst-quenchers that cool your heels and invigorate your soul. Infuse these sips with the season’s bounty of organic and local strawberries, cherries, zesty limes, sassy rhubarb, apricots and juicy mangos. For savory palates, blend beverages with young, tender vegetables bursting with fresh flavors from arugula, baby spinach leaves and spring onions to pea shoots, Persian cucumbers, fennel bulbs and cactus pads. And to amp up the body’s systems to alleviate winter’s maladies, including stiff, achy joints, congestion and indigestion, add choice herbs, spices and flower buds to create healing tonics for a good spring cleaning. Whether concocting a sweet or savory drink, sprinkle some potent spices into the mix like golden turmeric — an anti-inflammatory, detoxifying, allergy-calming immune booster, musky cumin and mustard seeds, powerful digestive aids, coriander, also a warrior against inflammation, and zippy fresh-grated ginger, a natural remedy for all that ails you from nausea and digestive discomfort to stuffy noses and scratchy throats. Fragrant springtime herbs will dial up mocktails and cocktails with a vibrant tang. Mint, the season’s quintessential herb, one of the most popular since classical times for its culinary and medicinal attributes is a high fiber, vitamin-rich, antioxidant powerhouse

that has been linked to tempering bad cholesterol (and breath), heart rate and blood pressure, easing indigestion and sunburns, while awakening the senses and perking up memory. Toss some fresh leaves into a tall, chilled glass of limeade or iced tea, whip up a mint julep with or without the booze, a strawberry and mint spritzer or an ancient Persian sweet and sour treat called sekanjabin that blends lemon peel, ginger, mint, vinegar, honey and pureed fruits or shredded cucumber for a syrupy energizer. Originating from Mediterranean climes, thyme was revered by the ancient Greeks as a cure-all for everything except mending a torn tunic. Add these delicate sprigs to infuse a minty lemony essence to teas, sparkling waters, strawberry or honeydew agua frescas or vodka cocktails. Beautiful green-leafed basil, as fragrant as it is brilliantly-hued, while the most commonly grown herb in the world, is anything but common. A native of India and Asia, and member of the mint family, there are dozens of varieties, the best known being Sweet Basil, followed by Lemon and Thai. Basil enlivens rhubarb bellinis or margaritas, strawberry or cucumber slushes, orange blossom honey limeades, mango, perfume-pulped cherimoya or leafy green smoothies, or a simple pitcher of ice water adding an anti-inflammatory and antioxidant oomph to every sip.

2017 VW Jetta S

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■ Ingredients: 5 cups spring water, 2 cups sugar, 1/2 cup lavender flowers, 2 cups fresh squeezed lemon juice (pink, Meyer or Eureka), 2 bottles sparkling water (750ml) , 1 sliced lemon, 6 lavender sprigs, 6 mint sprigs ■ Method: Bring water and sugar to a boil over medium heat, stirring to dissolve sugar. Add lavender blooms. Cover. Remove from heat. Steep 1 hour. Strain through a fine sieve into large a pitcher. Stir in lemon juice. Add sparkling water. Fill pitcher with ice. Garnish with lemon slices and sprigs of lavender and mint. Yields 10-12 servings. Recipe courtesy of Bernard Guillas, executive chef at The Marine Room, La Jolla — kitchenshrink@san.rr.com

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The cast is comprised of 13 people of various ages, but the production staff is on the silver end of the spectrum. There are four producers in the show, their average age is 73; there are six members of the band, their average age is 69; there are three screen hangers, with an average age of 71; the four-member promotion team has an average age of 67; the set and design builders are “too old to mention.” “It’s a really talented cast and crew,” Locke Capers said, adding they help bring the couple’s vision to life. “We hope the poignancy of the play moves audiences and I hope they laugh a lot and walk away humming at least one of the songs they

enjoyed,” she said. Added Hedges Capers, “I hope people will leave asking, ‘Have I lived the life I want to live?’ If so, terrific, keep doing what you’re doing. But if there is something left that you want to do — you’re still here, do it!” ■ IF YOU GO: “The Geeze and Me” is on stage 7:30 p.m. Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays; 2 p.m. Sundays March 31-April 29 (previews March 29-30) at Tenth Avenue Arts Center, 930 10th Ave., downtown San Diego. Opening weekend is sold out. Some 50 percent of ticket sales will be donated to Path, A New Path; UCSD Center for Healthy Aging; The Unbattle Project; and The Center LGBT Senior Services. Tickets $30. (858) 232-9696. thegeezeandme@yahoo.com or sdartstix.com/the-geeze-and-me

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PAGE B20 - MARCH 23, 2017 - NORTH COAST

Solana Ranch Dads’ Club Spaghetti Dinner

S

olana Ranch Elementary School students and families gathered March 16 for a delicious Dads’ Club Spaghetti Dinner. Online: www.delmartimes.net

The Henderek family

Solana Ranch Dads’ Club Spaghetti Dinner

Elias Haddad with the Solana Ranch hawk

Claire Lin, Alanis Huang, Alain Huang

Naisha and Shiela Patel

The Quach family

Diana Wu is served by Arjay Virdi, Ken Song, and David Cai

PHOTOS BY JON CLARK

Nicole Shalaev, Ella Mannarino

Rodrigo Hanna is served spaghetti by Miles Fleming and Clay Whiting


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NORTH COAST - MARCH 23, 2017 - PAGE B21

Come See the All-New 5-Series Redesigned for 2017!

2017 BMW 320i

2017 BMW X3 sDrive28i

2016 BMW 528i

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Test Drive a BMW and Receive a COMPLIMENTARY 2014 BMW 320i – Bluetooth, ENN90835 ................................. $19,995 2014 BMW 320i – Alarm, EP680922........................................$20,276 2014 BMW 328i – Leather, EK109114.......................................$21,956 2014 BMW X1 sDrive28i – Privacy Glass, EVW52375 .............$21,995 2014 BMW X1 sDrive28i – Fog Lights, EVW55840..................$22,995 2015 BMW 328i – Backup Camera, FK119835........................$24,991 2014 BMW 328i – Nav, EK112085.............................................$24,995 2014 BMW i3 – Leather, EV273520 ..........................................$25,345 2014 BMW 328i – M Sport Line, EK109214..............................$25,995 2014 BMW 328i – EK108914.....................................................$26,995 2014 BMW 328i – Leather, EK108914 ......................................$26,995 2014 BMW X3 xDrive28i – Premium Sound, E0D13543..........$29,992 2014 BMW 528i – Premium Pkg, ED507790............................$29,995 2015 BMW 428i Coupe – Leather, FK223163..........................$30,991 2014 BMW 528i – Backup Camera, ED504515 .......................$30,995 2014 BMW X3 xDrive28i – Premium Pkg, E0D40030..............$31,842 2014 BMW 335i – M Sport Line, ENS64620 ............................$31,956 2014 BMW 535i – Moon Roof, ED478267................................$31,956 2016 BMW 320i – Moon Roof, GNT35307 ...............................$31,995 2016 BMW 320i – Bluetooth, GK618460..................................$31,995 2014 BMW 535i – M Sport Line, ED475179.............................$32,991 2016 BMW 320i – Sport Pkg, GNT36274 .................................$32,995 2016 BMW 320i – Sport Pkg, GNT36274 .................................$32,995 2016 BMW 320i – Premium Sound, GNT36257.......................$32,995 2015 BMW 428i – Parking Sensors, FK233611.......................$33,348 2016 BMW 320i – Sport Pkg, GNT35680.................................$33,995 2016 BMW 328i Gran Turismo xDrive – GGS38070.................$36,596 2014 BMW 428i Convertible – EJ96334...................................$36,956 2016 BMW 528i – Driver Assistance Pkg, GG349571 .............$36,956 2016 BMW 328i – M Sport Pkg, GNT45303.............................$36,995 2015 BMW 335i – Premium Wheels, FNT09260 ..................... $37,950

2016 BMW 328i – M Sport Pkg, GNT81862 ............................. $37,995 2014 BMW 535i – M Sport Line, ED478989............................. $37,997 2016 BMW 328i – M Sport Pkg, GK647271 2014 BMW 428i Convertible – EJ969023.................................$38,995 2014 BMW Z4 sDrive35is – Nav, EE634123.............................$39,589 2014 BMW Z4 sDrive35is – EE634123 .....................................$39,589 2016 BMW 328i – Premium Pkg, GNT46384...........................$39,995 2016 BMW 328i – M Sport Pkg, GK647404..............................$39,995 2017 BMW X1 xDrive28i – Premium Pkg, H5F67696..............$39,995 2015 BMW 435i – M Sport Line, FK193861.............................$40,867 2017 BMW X1 xDrive28i – Premium Pkg, H5F69558..............$40,995 2017 BMW X3 sDrive28i – Panorama Roof, H0U44916...........$40,995 2017 BMW X3 sDrive28i – Premium Pkg, H0U45243.............. $41,995 2014 BMW X5 sDrive35i – Premium Pkg, E0C00262..............$40,991 2017 BMW X3 xDrive28i – Backup Camera, H0T06186.......... $41,995 2016 BMW 528i – Moon Roof, GG350009 ............................... $41,995 2016 BMW 328i Gran Turismo xDrive – Luxury Pkg, GGS38335... $41,995 2016 BMW 528i – Premium Pkg, GD529378 ...........................$42,986 2014 BMW X5 xDrive35d – Premium Sound, E0C06883........$42,995 2013 BNW 750Li – M Sport Pkg, DD132846............................$42,995 2016 BMW 328i Gran Turismo xDrive – M Sport Pkg, GG500742...$42,995 2016 BMW 428i Gran Coupe – Tech Pkg, GG50588................$43,995 2017 BMW X3 xDrive28i – H0T03225 ......................................$44,995 2016 BMW 428i Gran Coupe – Premium Pkg, GG5054175.....$44,995 2016 BMW 528i – Premium Pkg, GG347879 ...........................$45,995 2014 BMW X5 xDrive50i – M Sport Line, jE0373141...............$46,655 2014 BMW 750Li – Executive Pkg, ED134495.........................$46,956 2015 BMW 740i – Executive Pkg, FG273270...........................$46,987 2014 BMW 750Li – Executive Pkg, ED136252.........................$46,995 2016 BMW 328d xDrive Sport Wagon – GK458437 ................$49,995 2014 BMW 550i xDrive – Executive Pkg, ED692856...............$50,995 2016 BMW X5 sDrive35i – Premium Pkg, G0R71004..............$50,995 2016 BMW 535d – Luxury Line, GG042241.............................$51,456 2014 BMW 750Li xDrive – Executive Pkg, ED653116..............$54,995

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Manager’s Specials

2006 Infiniti M35 Sport – 6M109817........................................$6,681 2012 Mitsubishi i-MiEV Hatchback – CU025943 .....................$6,823 2005 Mercedes-Benz CLK320 – 5T049280 ............................$8,405 2012 Nissan Sentra SR – CL753498.........................................$9,993 2011 Chevrolet Cruze LT – B7248784.......................................$9,995 2006 BMW 530i – 6B996368 ...................................................$9,995 2007 Mercedes-Benz GL450 – 7A180536.............................$10,997 2013 Toyota Camry LE – DR308509.......................................$10,997 2012 Mini Clubman Cooper S – CTY39104.............................$11,995 2012 Hyundai Santa Fe SE – CG102983.................................$12,881 2011 BMW 328i – BNM75881.................................................$12,995 2013 Ford Flex SE – DBD33880..............................................$15,856 2012 Volkswagen Touareg VR6Lux – CD008593...................$16,463 2014 BMW 320i – EP680992..................................................$18,995 2008 BMW 650i Coupe – 8CV91267......................................$19,498 2013 Acura RDX Sport – DL009435........................................$19,576 2014 Honda CR-V EX-L – EH559896..................................... $20,995 2014 BMW 328i – EK110025.................................................. $22,420 2013 Ford Explorer XLT – DGA99190.....................................$22,989 2013 Infiniti JX35 – DC308629 ..............................................$22,995 2003 Porsche 911 Carrera – 3S650673................................ $23,381 2014 Mercedes-Benz C350 – ER304546.............................. $24,222 2014 BMW 328d – EK155121................................................. $25,956 2011 BMW M3 – BE203732 ................................................... $25,956 2012 BMW 550i – CDV58422................................................. $26,998 2016 Acura TLX 2.4 – GA001885........................................... $28,597 2015 BMW X1 xDrive28i – FVY37441.................................... $28,995 2012 BMW M3 Convertible – CE784615................................ $34,995

2017 BMW X1 xDrive28i – H5F72799.....................................$35,736 2016 BMW 328i Gran Turismo – GG501024...........................$35,951 2017 BMW X1 xDrive28i – H5F72903 ................................... $35,991 2017 BMW X1 sDrive28i – HP925173.................................... $35,995 2017 BMW X1 sDrive28i – HP925250 ....................................$37,879 2017 BMW X1 sDrive28i – HP925223 ....................................$37,958 2017 BMW X3 sDrive28i – H0U45540....................................$37,956 2006 Porsche 911 Carrera S – 6S769181..............................$37,986 2010 Porsche Panamera Turbo – AL090765..........................$39,879 2017 BMW X1 xDrive28i – H5F71342.................................... $40,995 2016 BMW i3 Range Extender Hatchback – GV506792........$41,335 2014 Mercedes-Benz GL350 BlueTEC – EA293293..............$41,995 2016 BMW X3 xDrive35i – G0S17135.....................................$45,412 2016 BMW X3 xDrive35i – G0S15261 ................................... $46,338 2017 BMW X3 xDrive35i – H0S18504 ................................... $49,960 2017 BMW X4 M40i – H0U25697.......................................... $49,995 2017 BMW X4 M40i – H0U25011........................................... $49,995 2014 BMW X5 xDrive50i – E0J72789.................................... $50,995 2016 BMW X5 xDrive40e – G0S78595.................................. $50,995 2017 BMW X4 M40i – H0U25240 ..........................................$52,985 2016 BMW X5 xDrive40e – G0S76772...................................$59,314 2017 BMW X4 M40i – H0U25759 .......................................... $59,897 2016 BMW X5 xDrive50i – G0J76963 ................................... $63,995 2016 BMW X5 xDrive50i – G0J83494................................... $66,956 2014 BMW M6 Coupe – ED467043.......................................$68,246 2016 BMW X6 xDrive50i – G0S82481................................... $69,995 2015 BMW M6 Convertible – FD651452.................................$71,948 2016 BMW M4 Coupe – GK336336........................................$73,991 2014 Land Rover Range Rover Supercharged – EA138043..............$75,956 2017 BMW 650i Convertible – HD996834 .............................$78,985 2016 BMW X6 M – G0R43534 ...............................................$85,994 2016 BMW X6 M – G0R43594 ............................................... $89,995 2016 750i xDrive – GG415321...............................................$101,391 2016 BMW M5 – GG343467..................................................$107,245


www.delmartimes.net

PAGE B22 - MARCH 23, 2017 - NORTH COAST

25th Annual Celebrity Golf Classic

F

resh Start Surgical Gifts, a San Diego nonprofit, held its 25th Annual Celebrity Golf Classic March 5-6 at the Hilton San Diego/Del Mar and Lomas Santa Fe Country Club. The event was hosted by Alfonso Ribeiro, best known for his role in “Fresh Prince of Bel Air” and “America’s Funniest Home Videos.” This event will benefit the nonprofit’s mission to transform the lives of disadvantaged infants, children and teens with physical deformities caused by birth defects, accidents, abuse or disease through the gift of reconstructive surgery and related healthcare services. Visit freshstart.org. Online: www.delmartimes.net

PJ Putich and Ashley Fomon

Ed and Christal Aikey, Denise and Solon Goodson

Sara and Rob Lake Tricia Dye, Shari Brasher (Fresh Start CEO), Jermaine Dye, Jeff Knox, Joy Roelike

Pete and Amy Lassalette

Chad Galloway, Nick Vanags

Lauren and Nick Schmidt

Peri and Tim Lachman

PHOTOS BY JON CLARK

Elvia Tinney, Jermaine and Tricia Dye, Shari Brasher (Fresh Start CEO), Beloved Jefeti (guest speaker), Christina Curtin

Larry and Tina Campbell, Mike and Jennifer Brown

Michelle and Eric Zybura


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NORTH COAST - MARCH 23, 2017 - PAGE B23

North County DanceArts' dancers take top awards at regional competition Dancers from North County DanceArts’ Competition Team took top awards at the Rainbow Dance Competition recently held at the California Center for the Performing Arts, Escondido. Categories included Contemporary, Lyrical, Jazz, Acro Dance and Tap. Studio owners Louis and Tanya McKay congratulated the winners, along with NCDA Competition Coach Emily Pepper, and choreographers Korey Vanhoy and Christian DePaul. Among the winners were NCDA’s Ensemble Competition dancers Dalia, Geena and Toni Benson with their acro dance trio “The Bensons” taking Platinum, 3rd Overall and awarded a trip to visit New York City; Bianca Zorrilla and her open/jazz solo “Prison of Decision” taking Platinum, 9th Overall; Savahanna Walsh with her jazz solo “Kill It” winning a Platinum; Kati McGuire with her lyrical solo “Birthday Song” took Platinum; Audrey Shao and her lyrical solo “Finding the Light” taking Double Platinum, 1st in category and 3rd Overall; and Radhika Patel’ tap solo “Drez” taking Double Platinum, 1st in category and 1st Overall. NCDA’s Exhibition Competition Dancers were equally rewarded for their hard work and preparation. Among these dancers Gianna Kelly took Platinum for her jazz solo “Resolve”; Ashley Hanson took Platinum for her jazz solo “Sinking Feeling” and a Platinum, 2nd in category, 16th Overall for her contemporary solo “The End of Everything”; Sydney Rodrigue and her

contemporary solo “Rise Up” took High Gold; Carly Fiskness took High Gold with her jazz solo “Woman Up” and Platinum for her contemporary solo “Battlefield”; and Sarah Golts’ contemporary solo “Spector” took High Gold. North County DanceArts’ Ensemble Jazz, Lyrical and Musical Theater Lines with dancers Isabella Dekoker, Rebecca Golts, Emma Griffith, Katherine McGuire, Brieanna Walsh, Bianca Zorrilla, McKenna Belford, Francsca Pinney, Radhika Patel and Kelly Rodriguez were awarded Platinum and 8th Overall for the lyrical piece “Without You” choreographed by Korey Vanhoy. The jazz Ensemble line number “Chow Down” choreographed by Emily Pepper took Platinum with the Ensemble Musical Theater piece titled “Revolting Children” choreographed by Emily Pepper took Double Platinum, 4th Overall and an invitation to visit New York City. NCDA Instructor and Competition Coach, Emily Pepper was recognized as Top Choreographer for her pieces” Chow Down,” “Enter Sandman” and “Revolting Children”. Not to be outdone, the North County DanceArts’ Exhibition Jazz and Contemporary lines with dancers Carly Fiskness, Sarah Golts, Gianna Kelly, Audrey Shao, Savahanna Walsh, Bianca Zorrilla, and Davia Petkevich were awarded Platinum, 8th Overall for the contemporary piece “Intensity” choreographed by Korey Vanhoy. The Exhibition jazz line “Enter Sandman” choreographed by Emily Pepper

Ensemble Exhibition Line Team

COURTESY PHOTOS

Exhibition soloists was awarded a Double Platinum, 3rd Overall. There is an opportunity to see these and other award-winning dancers in North County DanceArts’ 2017 Annual Dance

Showcase on Saturday, July 29 at UCSD’s Mandeville Auditorium. For more information on North County DanceArts and training and performing opportunities, please visit www.northcountydancearts.com.

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100 - LEGAL NOTICES

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-004338 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. SD Grooming Co b. SD Grooming Academy c. San Diego Grooming Co d. San Diego Grooming Academy e. San Diego Dog Grooming Co f. SD Dog Grooming Co g. SDG Co h. SD Dog Grooming Academy i. San Diego Dog Grooming Academy Located at: 3805 Utah Street, San Diego, CA 92104, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 10855 Sorrento Valley Rd., suite 204, San Diego, CA 92121 Registered Owners Name(s): a. Absolute Pawfection, Inc., 10828 Greenford Drive, San Diego, CA 92126, California. This business is conducted by: a Corporation. The first day of business was 01/23/2017. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 02/14/2017. Myke Ross, President. DM4823006 3/9, 3/16, 3/23 & 3/30/2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-005538 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Jabotinsky and Associates Located at: 8233 Station Village Ln #2120, San Diego, CA 92108, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 8233 Station Village Ln #2120, San Diego, CA 92108 Registered Owners Name(s): a. Konstantin K. Emma, 8233 Station Village Ln #2120, San Diego, CA 92108. b.Yevgenia Jane Jabotinsky, 8233 Station Village Ln #2120, San Diego, CA 92108. This business is conducted by: a General Partnership. The first day of business was 01/05/2016. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 02/28/2017. Konstantin K. Emma. SB 3/9, 3/16, 3/23 & 3/30/2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-006155 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Handy Paws b. Handy Pak Located at: 2381 Manchester Avenue, Cardiff, CA 92007, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 2381 Manchester Avenue, Cardiff, CA 92007 Registered Owners Name(s): a. Kari Handy, 2381 Manchester Avenue, Cardiff, CA 92007. b.Russell Handy, 2381 Manchester

b.Russell Handy, 2381 Man Avenue, Cardiff, CA 92007. This business is conducted by: a Married Couple. The first day of business was 03/01/2017. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 03/07/2017. Kari Handy. SB 4830096 3/16, 3/23, 3/30, 4/6/2017

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-005185 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Jon’s Tailor & Alterations Located at: 3840 Valley Centre Dr, #600, San Diego, California 92130, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 3840 Valley Centre Dr, #600, San Diego, California, 92130 Registered Owners Name(s): a. Serena Chung, 11339 Bootes St, San Diego, CA 92126. b.Thanh Ngoc Nguyen, 10169 Presley St., San Diego, CA 92126. This business is conducted by: Copartners. 02/01/2017. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 02/24/2017. Thanh Ngoc Nguyen. CV4831333 3/16, 3/23, 3/30/17 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-003718 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. ABBA PM Locatedat: 800TheMarkLane#506,San Diego, CA 92101, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 800 The Mark Lane #506, San Diego, CA 92101. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Trident CM, Inc., 800 The Mark Lane #506, San Diego, CA 92101, California. This business is conducted by: a Corporation. The first day of business has not yet started . This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 02/08/2017. Alexander Stewart Buggy, Agent CEO. DM 3/2, 3/9, 3/16, 3/23/17 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-004936 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Realty Place b. Realty Place Realty by the Sea Located at: 887 Buttercup Rd, Carlsbad, CA 92011, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 887 Buttercup Rd Carlsbad, CA 92011 Registered Owners Name(s): a. Realty Place Inc., 887 Buttercup Rd Carlsbad, CA 92024, California. This business is conducted by: a Corporation. The first day of business was 3/5/02. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 02/22/2017. Jay Krovetz, President. SB. 3/2, 3/9, 3/16, 3/23/17 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-005636 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. MA-KO Management Located at: 4021 Canario St. #136, Carlsbad, CA 92008, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Marta Kostecki, 4021 Canario St. #136 Carlsbad, CA 92008. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business has not yet started . This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 03/01/2017. Marta Kostecki. SB. 3/9, 3/16, 3/23, 3/30/17 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-004205 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Ocean View Home Improvment Located at: 3421 Cowley Way #2, San Diego, CA 92117, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Carlos Evans, 3421 Cowley Way #2, San Diego, CA 92117. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business was 02/01/2017. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 02/13/2017. Carlos Evans. DM 3/9, 3/16, 3/23, 3/30/2017

CLASSIFIEDS FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-005134 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Heritage House Located at: 919 Melaleuca Ave # K, Carlsbad, CA 92011, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 919 Melaleuca Ave # K, Carlsbad, CA 92011 Registered Owners Name(s): a. Kirsten Emma Yule-Zaagman, 919 Melaleuca Ave # K, Carlsbad, CA 92011. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business has not yet started . This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 02/23/2017. Kirsten Emma Yule-Zaagman. DM 3/2, 3/9, 3/16, 3/23/2017

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-006011 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Lorenna’s Crystals Located at: 2274 Carol View Drive, #D318, Cardiff, CA 92007, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 2274 Carol View Drive, #D318, Cardiff, 92007 Registered Owners Name(s): a. Lorenna Pinto, 2274 Carol View Drive, #D318, Cardiff, 92007. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business has not yet started . This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 03/06/2017. Lorenna Pinto. DM 4846168 3/23, 3/30, 4/6, 4/13/17

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-005863 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. LoveyLu Located at: 153 S. Sierra Ave. #175, Solana Beach, CA 92075, San Diego County. Mailing Address: same Registered Owners Name(s): a. Pure Body Spa, Inc., 153 S. Sierra Ave. #175, Solana Beach, CA 92075, California. This business is conducted by: a Corporation. The first day of business was 03/01/2017. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 03/02/2017. Lindsey McDonald , President. CV4819818 3/9, 3/16, 3/23, 3/30/2017

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-004945 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Songs and Creations b. Creations Located at: 5753 Kensington Pl, Bonsall, CA 92003, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 993 S Santa Fe Ave C-192, Vista, CA 92083 Registered Owners Name(s): a. Yohann G Anderson, 5753 Kensington Pl, Bonsall, CA 92003. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business was 02/02/2017. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 02/22/2017. Yohann G. Anderson. DM 4851548 3/23, 3/30, 4/6, 4/13/17

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-006246 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Pacific Philanthropy Located at: 13335 Roxton Circle, San Diego, CA 92130, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 13335 Roxton Circle, San Diego, CA 92130 Registered Owners Name(s): a. Kathleen Daugherty, 13335 Roxton Circle, San Diego, CA 92130. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business has not yet started . This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 03/07/2017. Kathleen Daugherty. CV4826472 3/16, 3/23, 3/30 & 4/6/2017

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-005052 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. F.O.B. Street Food Located at: 445 Cara St., Escondido, CA 92025, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Joseph A. Rodriguez, 13069 Evening Creek Dr., South # 60, San Diego, CA, 92128. b. Junmark C. Nucup, 445 Cara St., Escondido, CA, 92025. This business is conducted by: Copartners. The first day of business has not yet started . This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 02/23/2017. Junmark C. Nucup. SB 3/9, 3/16, 3/23, 3/30/2017

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-006345 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. True Bookings Located at: 630 Grand Ave. Suite F, Carlsbad, CA 92008, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 630 Grand Ave. Suite F, Carlsbad, CA 92008 Registered Owners Name(s): a. Jettn, Inc., 630 Grand Ave. Suite F, Carlsbad, CA 92008, California. This business is conducted by: a Corporation. The first day of business has not yet started . This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 03/08/2017. Matt Walker, Secretary. DM 4829234 3/16, 3/23, 3/30, 4/6/2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-006421 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Creato Performance Solutions Located at: 14071 Mira Montana Drive, Del Mar, CA 92014, San Diego County. Mailing Address: P.O. Box 2295, Del Mar, CA 92014 Registered Owners Name(s): a. The Lazarus Group, Inc., 14071 Mira Montana Drive, Del Mar, CA 92014, A California Corporation. This business is conducted by: a Corporation. 03/01/2017. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 03/08/2017. Ian R. Lazarus, President & Ceo. DM 4230795 3/16, 3/23, 3/30, 4/6/2017

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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-005493 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. A.D. Design b. A.D. Design & Printing Located at: 12696 Brubaker Ct, San Diego, CA 92130, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 12696 Brubaker Ct, San Diego, CA, 92130 Registered Owners Name(s): a. Allen Wynar, 12696 Brubaker Ct, San Diego, CA, 92130. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business was 05/01/1996. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 02/28/2017. Allen Wynar. CV 4822606 3/9, 3/16, 3/23, 3/30/2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-006335 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Gina Corrie Photography Located at: 5856 Cape Jewels Trail, San Diego, CA 92130, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 5856 Cape Jewels Trail San Diego, CA 92130 Registered Owners Name(s): a. Gina Metcalf ,

ANSWERS 3/16/2017

PAGE B24 - MARCH 23, 2017 - NORTH COAST

Owners Name(s): a. Gina Metcalf , 5856 Cape Jewels Trail San Diego, CA 92130. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business has not yet started . This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 03/08/2017. Gina Metcalf . CV4827983. 3/16, 3/23, 3/30, 4/6/17 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-006663 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Senior Rights Center Located at: 4981 Pearlman Way, San Diego, CA 92130, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 3525 Del Mar Heights, Rd #320, San Diego, CA, 92130 Registered Owners Name(s): a. Flora Calem, 4981 Pearlman Way, San Diego, CA 92130. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The

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is conducted by: an Indiv first day of business was 10/14/2014. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 03/10/2017. Flora Calem. DM4837315 3/23, 3/30, 4/6, 4/13/17

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-006706 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Ulterior Homes Located at: 1711 Bruce Road, Carlsbad, CA 92008, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 1711 Bruce Road, Carlsbad, CA 92008 Registered Owners Name(s): a. Dylan Doherty , 1711 Bruce Road, Carlsbad, CA 92008. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business has not yet started . This statement

crossword


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100not - LEGAL NOTICES has yet started . Thi was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 03/10/2017. Dylan Doherty . DM4842789 3/23, 3/30, 4/6, 4/13/17 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-006939 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Southwestern Mortgage Company Located at: 11622 El Camino Real, #100, San Diego, CA 92130, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Scott Tucker, 5236 Caminito Vista Lujo, San Diego, CA 92130. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business was 04/27/07. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 03/14/2017. Scott Tucker. CV Mar. 23, 30, Apr. 6, 13, 2017

CITY OF DEL MAR NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on Monday, the 3rd day of April, 2017, at 6:00 p.m., (or as soon thereafter as practicable) in the City Hall, Temporary Council Chambers, 2010 Jimmy Durante Blvd., Suite 100, Del Mar, California, the City Council will conduct public hearing(s) on the following: TTM14-001 Extension of Time. A request for a three-year extension of time to the previous approval of a Tentative Tract Map to subdivide approximately 6.2 acres of land into five (5) new single-family residential lots west of Camino del Mar, with access off Border Avenue, and one (1) non-buildable lot located east of Camino del Mar. Applicant/Owner: Carol Ann Lazier, Stensrud Lazier Holding Trust Dated 10/17/2011 Address: 929 Border Avenue APN(S): 298-241-06, 298-241-07, 299030-14 Those desiring to be heard in favor of or in opposition to this item, will be given an opportunity to do so during such hearing or by writing to the City Council at 1050 Camino del Mar, Del Mar, CA, 92014. Attention: Administrative Services Director. On any correspondence, please reference the hearing title and date. Materials related to this public hearing are available at the temporary City Hall, 2010 Jimmy Durante Blvd, Suite 120, Del Mar, CA 92014, during normal business hours. Under California Government Code 65009, if you challenge the nature of the proposed action in Court, you may be limited to raising only those issues you or someone else raised at the public hearing, described in this notice, or written correspondence delivered to the City at, or prior to, the public hearing. Date: March 17, 2017 Ashley Jones, Administrative Services Director DM1747. Mar. 23, 2017 CITY OF DEL MAR NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on Monday, the 3rd day of April, 2017, at 6:00 p.m., (or as soon thereafter as practicable) in the City Hall, Temporary Council Chambers, 2010 Jimmy Durante Blvd., Suite 100, Del Mar, California, the City Council will conduct public hearing(s) on the following: TPM16-003/CDP16-022 -Request for

Request for approval of a Tentative Parcel Map and a Coastal Development Permit to create a condominium form of ownership for new two residential units in the RM-South Zone. Applicant: Zephyr Partners Owner: 516 Stratford Court LP Address: 516-522 Stratford Court APN: 300-321-01 Those desiring to be heard in favor of or in opposition to this item, will be given an opportunity to do so during such hearing or by writing to the City Council at 1050 Camino del Mar, Del Mar, CA, 92014. Attention: Administrative Services Director. On any correspondence, please reference the hearing title and date. Materials related to this public hearing are available at the temporary City Hall, 2010 Jimmy Durante Blvd, Suite 120, Del Mar, CA 92014, during normal business hours. Under California Government Code 65009, if you challenge the nature of the proposed action in Court, you may be limited to raising only those issues you or someone else raised at the public hearing, described in this notice, or written correspondence delivered to the City at, or prior to, the public hearing. Date: March 17, 2017 Ashley Jones, Administrative Services Director DM1746. Mar. 23, 2017

SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO 330 W. Broadway San Diego, CA 92101 PETITIONER(S): ANDY PO-HSUN WU and LISA HSIAO-MEI WU on behalf of a minor for a change of name ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR A CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER: 37-2017-00008478-CU-PT-CTL TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS PETITION OF: ANDY PO-HSUN WU and LISA HSIAO-MEI WU on behalf of minor child filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: a. Present Name : ETHAN WU to Proposed Name: ETHAN YU-HONG WU. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING Date: April 28, 2017 Time: 8:30am Dept: 46 The address of the court is: 220 West Broadway San Diego, CA 92101 A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: Carmel Valley News Date: March 10, 2017 Jeffrey B. Barton Judge of the Superior Court CV969. Mar. 16, 23, 30, Apr. 6, 2017

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NORTH COAST - MARCH 23, 2017 - PAGE B25

Ride for a sustainable Jewish community April 2 San Diego Jewish Academy is partnering with the Hazon Jewish Community Bike Ride and Day at the Farm. Hazon is a Jewish environmental nonprofit organization that is launching a community bike ride in San Diego to raise awareness about environmental sustainability. The event will be held on Sunday, April 2,

in Encinitas. The Hazon Ride is for all cycling levels and ages. Come for a long-distance ride (20, 36, or 60 miles) or just come for a fun time at the local organic farm -- there will be a delicious kosher lunch and activities for all ages. The event is at Coastal Roots Farm in Encinitas. Start times for the ride vary

beginning at 8 a.m., and farm activities and lunch are open to everyone from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.. For more information and to sign up, see www.hazon.org/sdride. Students who would like to volunteer at the event can receive community service hours. For more information, contact amy.scher@hazon.org

Junebug’s April 1 Open House will showcase upcoming classes for kids and parents Recently opened children’s resale shop, junebug, will soon offer classes for kids, parents and parents-to-be. “It has always been part of the vision of junebug to offer classes that promote creativity and connection – within the child, within the family and within the community”, says Jennifer Smith, owner of junebug. “I am so excited for this part of junebug to come to life as it represents so many of my own personal interests. The hope is that the classes will spark interest in others as well.” The inaugural classes will include family yoga for different age groups, family art, bilingual storytime (Spanish/English)

and musical sing and sign for babies. Classes will be offered in six-week series and officially begin the week of April 24. To introduce the classes to the community and break in their studio space, junebug will be hosting an Open House on April 1, with free classes, mural painting, healthy food and discounts on class packages. For more information or to register for a class, visit junebug’s website at www.junebugoncedros.com/open-house or call 858-755-2152. Junebug is located at 142 North Cedros Avenue in Solana Beach, right across the street from the train station.

Rady Children’s Auxiliary to host benefit

Indian Fine Arts Academy of San Diego presents 10th annual Music and Dance Festival

The sixth annual “Date Night for a Cause” at the Belly Up Tavern will be hosted by The North Coast Unit of Rady Children’s Hospital Auxiliary on March 31 from 5-8 p.m. One-hundred percent of the proceeds raised at this event will contribute to the Rady Children’s Hospital Auxiliary $2.5 million Endowment for Neuroscience at the Institute for Genomic Medicine. The goal is to make it possible to sequence the genome of every child who is treated and cared for at Rady Children’s, dramatically increasing their ability to diagnose disease and develop treatments that improve and save children’s lives. For extremely ill babies with unexplained symptoms, rapid genetic testing has been shown to yield life-changing results. The Rady’s Genomics Team recently purchased machines from the San Diego-based company Illumina, which allows the hospital to sequence the DNA of a child and both parents in as little as 26 hours — instead of the current standard of weeks or even months. Since

September, over 25 families have had their DNA sequenced, and a majority of those cases have produced answers for the symptoms causing the newborns to be hospitalized. And in some cases, sequencing has provided information that directly changed a patient’s plan of care. In addition, the Genomics Institute is conducting groundbreaking research in neurogenetics that seeks to understand the genetic basis of diseases such as epilepsy, autism and mental disability, and develop new treatments. The Belly Up is located at 143 South Cedros Avenue, Solana Beach, 92075. Tickets can be purchased at http://radysncu.com/datenight-for-a-cause. Early bird tickets are available until March 17 for $65 per person. Tickets purchased after March 17 are $75 per person. Tickets purchased at the door are $85 per person. Ticket price includes live music from “Atomic Groove and the Fly Girlz,” heavy appetizers provided by Wild Note Café, a live auction and additional drawings.

The Indian Fine Arts Academy of San Diego is celebrating its 10th annual Music and Dance Festival from April 2-9 at the Jewish Community Center in La Jolla. This organization is dedicated to the propagation and celebration of classical Indian music and dance in Southern California. This year, the festival has a fantastic line-up of world-renowned vocal and instrumental artists of both the Hindustani and the Carnatic genres of Indian music from India. Among the many highlights of the program are fascinating vocal concerts by three of the leading artists of Carnatic music, concerts that will showcase the virtuosity of artists performing on instruments such as Sitar, Chitravina and Violin, a vocal CarnaticHindustani Jugalbandhi duet, and melodious vocal concerts by several popular artists. The festival will also present some of India’s most talented and engaging percussionists who will be playing on such diverse instruments as the mridangam the kanjira, the tabla, and the ghatam. Audiences are also certain to be enthralled by the captivating music of such wind instruments as the flute and shehnoy and string instruments like violin, sitar, and chitravina. The IFAASD is also presenting Indian Classical Dance productions during the festival that promise to be marvelous aural and visual treats. The festival will also feature two music and dance concerts performed by over a 100 children from all over Southern California. Throughout the festival, the patrons will have the opportunity to taste a wide range of Indian vegetarian cuisine from the South to the North and everywhere in between. Visit www.indianfinearts.org for more information and to purchase tickets.


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PAGE B26 - MARCH 23, 2017 - NORTH COAST

Drives for Rides golf tourney to benefit Emilio Nares Foundation The fifth annual Drives for Rides golf tournament benefiting the Emilio Nares Foundation (ENF), a nonprofit that helps families navigate their child’s journey through cancer, will be held on Friday, May 5, at the Encinitas Ranch Golf Course. The event will include a golf tournament with raffles and a silent auction, followed by a dinner banquet, during which guests will hear from an Emilio Nares Foundation patient family. The event will be hosted by “gap intelligence,” a values-led market research firm. All money raised from Drives for Rides will support the Emilio Nares Foundation’s Ride With Emilio program, which ensures that no child misses life-saving cancer treatment due to lack of transportation, a proven need among low-income patient families. Ride With Emilio travels more than 100,000 miles each year to provide 4,250 free, hygienic rides to and from cancer treatments for patients and their accompanying family members.

COURTESY

All money raised from Drives for Rides will support the Emilio Nares Foundation’s Ride With Emilio program, which ensures that no child misses life-saving cancer treatment due to lack of transportation, a proven need among low-income patient families. “We feel so fortunate to have the support of golfers, volunteers and the team at gap intelligence who make this event a success every year,” said Richard Nares, co-founder and executive director of the Emilio Nares Foundation. “This fundraiser is critical in enabling us to support families through one of the most difficult times of their lives.” Golfers are pampered throughout

the event, beginning with lunch and opening remarks upon arrival, followed by a popular putting contest with prizes. Throughout the scenic golf course, golfers are treated to a beverage service and ongoing games and raffles. Strategically placed signs along the course remind golfers of how their participation raises funds to benefit young patients fighting for the lives.

“It has been a cherished tradition of ours to host this fundraiser every year,” said Gary Peterson, CEO of gap intelligence. “Our support of the Emilio Nares Foundation reaffirms our commitment to the community, and we are excited for an even more successful year of giving back to such an important cause.” The evening program includes a sumptuous dinner buffet and presentation of raffle prizes and silent auction gifts. During dinner, golfers and their families will also hear from 15-year-old patient Yuntasha and her mother La Toya about the critical role that Ride With Emilio plays in their journey through cancer. Yuntasha has battled cancer for most of her life. She first overcame leukemia when she was 4 years old, and is now battling a brain tumor. Without Ride With Emilio, one 20-minute trip to her treatment at Rady Children’s Hospital would turn into a 2.5-hour ordeal switching buses and hiking up steep hills, which is unsafe and nearly

impossible for Yuntasha, who is already weak from her brain tumor, and immunocompromised from chemotherapy. “I don’t know where we would be without the support and care of the Emilio Nares Foundation team, said La Toya, mother of Yuntasha. “Yuntasha and I are so thankful for the blessing of being honored at this event, which is so important for helping families like ours make it to their treatment appointments.” Drives for Rides registration cost is $200 per golfer. This includes golf, cart, lunch, beverage service, dinner reception and prizes. Sponsorship packages range from $15,000 to $300, with a suite of benefits. Registration opens at 11 a.m. Dinner banquet begins at 6:30 p.m. To register for the event or to make a donation, visit www.classy.org/encinitas/events/ drives-for-rides-2017/e106593. Encinitas Ranch Golf Course is located at 1275 Quail Gardens Drive, Encinitas, 92024. For more information, visit www.enfhope.org.

Doctors raising money for uninsured San Diegans at `Aces for Health’ golf and tennis tournaments March 27

Help young students enjoy a growth experience at the fair

Champions for Health, a local nonprofit foundation affiliated with the San Diego County Medical Society, will host its fifth annual “Aces for Health,” golf and tennis fundraising tournaments, on Monday, March 27, at the Lomas Santa Fe Country Club, 1505 Lomas Santa Fe Dr., Solana Beach. Registration begins at 11:30 a.m. for golf and 1:30 p.m. for tennis. Cost to play golf is $300 per player. Cost to play tennis $75 per player. Cost to attend a reception and awards dinner, which begins at 5:30 p.m., is $75 per person. For more information, visit www.AcesForHealth.org. The Aces for Health fundraiser will feature more than 250 physicians and leaders in the local healthcare profession raising raise money for expenses associated with from life-changing, specialty surgeries provided pro bono by surgeons to low-income, uninsured San Diegans. Proceeds from Aces for Health will benefit Project Access San Diego (PASD), the flagship program of Champions for Health. PASD links volunteer specialist doctors with low-income uninsured people who need healthcare services and cannot afford specialty surgeries. PASD relies on a network of volunteer physicians, hospitals, surgery centers and other ancillary health services. Since PASD began in 2008, donated care provided by PASD volunteers and healthcare providers has exceeded $13 million in value, according to Mandel, CEO. Visit www.ChampionsForHealth.org.

What is bigger – a fat, red radish lovingly tended from a tiny seedling that is now as large as a tomato – or the bright eyes of the young gardener accepting a ribbon for growing this delicious masterpiece of nature? The San Diego County Fair’s Plant*Grow*Eat program teaches elementary school students about the connection between agriculture and nutrition. After planting their seeds, watering and weeding their plants, plucking out pesky bugs and watching their garden grow, even kindergarteners now understand where their food comes from. On designated mornings during the fair, classrooms of students descend from buses, accompanied by teachers and parents. Laden with lettuces, radishes, beets, nasturtiums and other edibles, they enter the Fairgrounds through a special gate and march merrily to the infield where enthusiastic judges await. Not every entry will capture first place, but each child happily receives a participation ribbon, tastes the fruits and veggies of their labor, then sets off to explore the agriculture areas and to see and touch farm animals as they enjoy a glimpse of the ocean; for some, their first. Last year, the Don Diego Scholarship Foundation, thanks to the generosity of donors, sponsored 73 buses (typically, $300 per bus) that enabled students from low-income schools to participate in Plant*Grow*Eat. Bus sponsors receive publicity, bus signage, an opportunity to meet and accompany the sponsored students to the judging area, and, if they wish, they can even serve as a judge. Teachers, parents and judges love the program. In 2016, Nye Elementary participated for the first time. The school plans to make it an annual tradition, if it can obtain a sponsored bus. Taraysa and Tre Morrow related, “Our son Tremier became so excited doing Plant*Grow*Eat that he and his grandmother started a home garden with onions, tomatoes and other crops.” Hortensia Trejo, who has been a judge since the program’s inception several years ago, noted, “I say something encouraging to every youngster. Being

COURTESY

The fifth annual “Aces for Health,” golf and tennis fundraising tournaments, will be held on Monday, March 27, at the Lomas Santa Fe Country Club. “Aces for Health is a crucial revenue source for our Project Access program, which supports more than 800 uninsured patients each year,” says Barbara Mandel, CEO, Champions for Health. “We are grateful and encouraged by how the community continues to participate in this event and support our mission.” The golf tournament will follow a scramble format, while tennis will be a round-robin tournament for all skill levels. Last year’s Aces for Health golf tournament sold out, netting $63,000 for PASD. For more information, visit www.ChampionsForHealth.org.

COURTESY

The San Diego County Fair’s Plant*Grow*Eat program teaches elementary school students about the connection between agriculture and nutrition. (Above) Arturo and Emily with their first place ribbons. around their smiling faces makes my day.” But no one enjoys the growth experience more than the young gardeners. Asked to reveal the secret of their first-place lettuce medley, 2016 winners Arturo and Emily confided, “Extra water. When our plants looked dry, we gave them a little more.” If you’d like to “give a little more” to a program that celebrates the rich agricultural history of our region and keeps it flourishing for future generations, please visit www.dondiegoscholarship.org. The Don Diego Scholarship Foundation was named for Don Diego, AKA Tom Hernandez, who served as the Fair’s welcoming goodwill ambassador from 1947-1984. To date since its inception in 1986, the Foundation has awarded nearly $800,000 in college scholarships to 177 students and in agriculture education grants. In 2017, the Foundation is offering 27 scholarships totaling $65,000. More information is at www.dondiegoscholarship.org and facebook.com/DonDiegoScholarship.


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NORTH COAST - MARCH 23, 2017 - PAGE B27

Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty and World Housing partner to build homes in Tijuana, Mexico Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty has partnered with World Housing, a 501c3 non-profit organization, to fund the building of 28 homes in one of the poorest communities in Tijuana, Mexico. Through Pacific Sotheby’s Realty’s “Agents of Change” initiative, the company’s real estate agents will donate a portion of the commission from each closing with the goal of raising $300,000 in the next 12 months. Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty chose to align with the World Housing organization because of their commitment to providing homes to families living in slums in the developing world, fostering communities where families can thrive with safety, security, and access to the resources that change lives. “The real estate industry is built on the belief that home ownership is the foundation that gives people the chance for a better life – it’s always been part of the American Dream,” according to Steve Games, Chairman, Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty. “We are very fortunate to have the opportunities that we do in our society and it is our responsibility to ensure that everyone, no matter where they are from, has access to the very basic need of shelter and security.” Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty’s “Agents of Change” was officially announced at the company’s annual meeting and was met with an overwhelming response from the agents who proudly opened their hearts agreeing to donate a portion of their commission on each home sale, matched by the company, directly to the campaign. “We

asked our agents for a commitment of $10 per closing, hands went up and then we heard, “I’ll donate $25,” “I’m in for $50,” “Put me down for $100,” and it went on and on,” says Games. “By the end of the meeting our agents committed to raising enough money to completely fund the entire project.” World Housing’s business model operates with completely separate overhead so there are no administrative costs, allowing 100 percent of the money raised to go directly to construction and materials costs. The organization is dedicated to working with local partners to train workers and buy locally sourced construction materials, to help stimulate local economies and teach skills in the process. “We see a greater impact for our donation where it really matters,” says Brian Arrington, CEO, Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty. “Each home costs under $6,000 and is given to families previously living on the streets. Once someone has a home, their life and the lives of those around them change exponentially… a roof provides stability and security. It’s a place to store things without fear of them being stolen and a place to sleep without fear of being mugged, raped, or killed. These homes are the first step in building the sense of self-worth and pride, and we are honored to be a part of this outreach.” To learn more about Pacific Sotheby’s Realty’s Agents of Change’ program and see how you can get involved visit http://worldhousing.org/agentsofchange/ or visit www.pacificsothebysrealty.com

FROM TABLE, B2

won’t even let us cook, they take over,” Shahin said. “They sit around for hours and don’t get bored, enjoying the outdoors. It really brings families and friends together.” The table has features such as customizable LED lighting and security locks, but Karim said the best feature is the social aspect and how it truly brings everyone together around a meal. “Usually the host is always stuck behind the grill. With this table, you can be the host and can enjoy and be part of the party, that’s what’s magic about this table,” Karim said. To learn more about the Angara tables, visit ibbq.com or call 1-800-Yes-IBBQ.

imported African teak Iroko. African teak is a low-maintenance wood: Shahin said it’s easy to clean with a damp cloth. Even better, the top grill easily comes off and instead of needing to be cleaned with a wire brush, it is small enough to be picked up and thrown in the dishwasher. Shahin said the biggest thing she noticed when they got the table was that their children stuck around. She said usually when guests are over, the children don’t like to stay around the table and socialize. “What we discovered is that our children

FROM TEA, B7 “It’s a place where a kid can be a kid, where they don’t have to worry about what mom is doing and if she’s OK,” Johnson said. “They can kind of be in their own world and play.” Domestic Violence Program participants are also provided transitional housing at a lower rental cost and are able to continue receiving concurrent services. The CRC also helps homeless people and offers counseling on a sliding scale, tax preparation services and mailing addresses. “Our mission is more to prevent homelessness,” Moore said. “If a family is having to choose between living in their car and having nutritious food, they can enroll in our food program ... We offer all of those

services people need to remain a real person. Once you slide into homelessness, it’s really hard to get back ... We’re large enough to make an impact, but flexible enough to meet the needs of the community.” English Tea event officials are still seeking auction items and sponsorships. Anyone who wants to get involved should call Moore at 858-775-3955. Tickets for the event are available through March 20 at www.crcncc.org/event/englishtea. Tickets are $75 for general admission — including tea sandwiches, scones, sweets and tea — and $800 for an eight-seat VIP champagne table that includes lunch and desserts, as well as preferred seating, tableside champagne service and recognition in the event program.

OPEN HOUSES CARLSBAD

$1,049,000 4BD / 3BA

6974 Shoreline Drive Fri 12 p.m. - 3 p.m., Sat 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. Mindy Pometto, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices California Properties 858-736-7880

$1,000,750 4BD / 3BA $1,099,000 4BD / 3BA $1,300,000 5BD / 3BA $1,495,000 4BD / 3.5BA $3,000,000-$3,250,000 5BD / 5.5BA

13586 Bolero Way Dan Conway, Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty 5250 Caminito Exquisito Rhonda Hebert, Windermere Homes & Estates 12951 Flintwood Way Dan Conway, Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty 13773 Rosecroft Way Charles & Farryl Moore, Coldwell Banker 5747 Meadows Del Mar Julie Split-Keyes, Berkshire Hathaway/Host: Maggi Kawasaki

$2,195,000 2BD / 2BA $2,549,000-$2,649,000 3BD / 2.5BA $2,795,000 4BD / 3BA $3,499,888-$3,699,888 5BD / 5.5BA $3,749,000 4BD / 3.5BA

345 14th Street Sat 2 p.m. - 5 p.m., Sun 12 p.m. - 2 p.m. Jennifer Anderson, Willis Allen Real Estate 858-524-3077 12729 Via Felino Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. Dan Conway, Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty 858-243-5278 860 Crest Road Fri 3 p.m. - 6 p.m., Sun 12 p.m. - 2 p.m. Jennifer Anderson, Willis Allen Real Estate/Host: Nancy Anderson (Fri) 858-524-3077 5640 Meadows Tues 2:30 p.m. - 6:30 p.m Adam Loew, Keller Williams Realty 858-342-8232 209 Torrey Pines Terrace Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. Jean Logan, Berkshire Hathaway 858-442-0499

$1,985,000 4BD / 4.5BA

748 Rancho Santa Fe Road Christie Horn, Berkshire Hathaway California Properties

$585,000 2BD / 2BA $1,190,000 3BD / 2BA $1,249,000 3BD / 3BA $1,285,000 4BD / 3BA $1,450,000 3BD / 2.5BA $1,629,000 4BD / 3BA $2,485,000 6BD / 6.5BA $2,595,000 3BD / 3.5BA $2,849,000 5BD / 5.5BA $2,880,000 4BD / 4.5BA $2,900,000 3BD / 3.5BA $3,100,000 4BD / 5BA $3,199,000 4BD / 4.5BA $3,599,000 4BD / 4.5BA $3,650,000 8BD / 7.5BA $4,349,000 5BD / 6BA $5,690,000 4BD / 6BA

5620 Camino Esmerado Sun 12 p.m. - 4 p.m. Shannon Biszantz, Pacific Sothebys International Realty 619-417-4655 16936 Via de Santa Fe Sat 1 p.m. - 3:30 p.m., Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. Gloria Doinoff, Coldwell Banker//Host: Eveline Bustilos (Sat) 858-204-4667 8154 Santaluz Village Green North Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. Eileen Anderson, Willis Allen Real Estate 858-245-9851 5140 Via Avante – Senterra Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. John Lefferdink, Berkshire Hathaway/Host: Kelly Lefferdink 619-813-8222 14530 Caminito Saragossa Sat & Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. Shannon Biszantz, Pacific Sothebys International Realty 619-417-4655 3934 Via Valle Verde Sat & Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. Dan Conway, Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty 858-243-5278 16738 Zumaque Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. Heidi White, Berkshire Hathaway California Properties 858-353-1171 15312 Las Planideras Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. Amy Bramy, Coldwell Banker 858-705-0950 8136 Entrada de Luz East – Santaluz Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. Gloria Shepard & Kathy Lysaught, Coldwell Banker 619-417-5564 7560 Montien Rd – Santaluz Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. Danielle Short, Coldwell Banker 619-708-1500 17174 El Vuelo Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. Heidi White, Berkshire Hathaway California Properties 858-353-1171 6992 St. Andrews Road Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. Sue Carr, Berkshire Hathaway California Properties 858-353-3242 7751 Sendero Angelica – Santaluz Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. Cecilia G Zavala, Berkshire Hathaway California Properties 858-699-6646 5380 La Glorieta Fri 1 p.m. - 4 p.m., Sat & Sun 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. Doug Harwood, Coldwell Banker/Host: Tom DiNoto 858-888-3579 17615 Via de Fortuna Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. Cecilia G Zavala, Berkshire Hathaway California Properties 858-699-6646 7832 Santaluz Inlet Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. Eileen Anderson, Willis Allen Real Estate 858-245-9851 14630 Calle Diegueno Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. Becky Campbell, Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty 858-449-2027

$1,999,000 3BD / 2.5BA $6,000,000 3BD / 3BA

164 Solana Point Circle Jennifer Anderson, Willis Allen Real Estate 520 Pacific Ave Doug Harwood, Coldwell Banker/Host: Tom DiNoto

CARMEL VALLEY

DEL MAR

ENCINITAS

RANCHO SANTA FE

SOLANA BEACH

Sat & Sun 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. 858-243-5278 Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 858-945-0644 Sat 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 858-243-5278 Sat & Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 858-395-7525 Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 858-735-6754

Sat & Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 858-775-9817

Sat 2:30 p.m. - 5 p.m. 858-524-3077 Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 858-888-3579

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

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


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PAGE B28 - MARCH 23, 2017 - NORTH COAST

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