Solana beach sun 10 19 17

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Volume 20, Issue 42

October 19, 2017 | Published Weekly

SDUHSD gathering input for new trustee district maps

Community

Carmel Valley equestrian wins equitation title. A7

Lifestyle

TPHS CELEBRATES

ANNA_SCIPIONE

HOMECOMING WITH BIG WIN

A

“Color Splash” crowd showed up for Torrey Pines High School’s homecoming game on Oct. 13 to cheer on the Falcons as they dominated Oceanside with a 30-0 victory. At the game, the cheer and dance teams performed and the homecoming court was honored. See page A14 for more. (Above) TPHS junior Mac Bingham rushed for two touchdowns, including a 44-yard run.

DM moves ahead with short-term rentals ordinance ■ See inside for photos of a variety of community events.

SOLANA BEACH SUN

An Edition of

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BY SEBASTIAN MONTES Del Mar is ceding no ground in its ordinance to regulate and restrict short-term vacation rentals as the conflict heads toward two new fronts: review by the California Coastal Commission and adjudication in state court. At its first hearing on short-term rentals (STRs) since fielding pointed critiques from the city planning commission and Coastal Commission staff, Del Mar’s city council on Oct. 16 voted 4-1 to leave untouched its fiercely disputed ordinance that would require short-term rentals in nearly every residential area to last no fewer

than seven days at a time and total no more than 28 days per year. The ordinance cannot take effect until the Coastal Commission amends it into Del Mar’s Local Coastal Program, the planning document that carries out the terms of California’s Coastal Act of 1976. Under the council’s Oct. 16 decision, STRs that were operating before the city’s April 2016 moratorium will be allowed to continue until the Coastal Commission certifies the amendment. Del Mar has wrangled with short-term rentals SEE RENTALS, A20

Solana Beach OKs 2nd phase of community energy BY PHIL DIEHL Solana Beach took another step Wednesday, Oct. 11, toward becoming the first city in San Diego County to provide its residents with a renewable alternative to electricity provided by San Diego Gas & Electric Co. City Council members agreed to enter the second of three phases that would lead to the creation and operation of a community choice aggregation, or CCA, as early as next year through a partnership with two private companies that would oversee its maintenance

and operation. Other cities would be welcome to join the partnership, they said. “This is the right move for the utility consumers of Solana Beach,” said Councilman Dave Zito. “It provides some real benefits to ratepayers.” The vote was 4-1 with Councilwoman Ginger Marshall opposed, saying she had reservations about the possible costs. Most of about a dozen speakers urged approval of the partnership, which would purchase power from SEE CCA, A21

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BY KAREN BILLING On Oct. 12, the San Dieguito Union High School District (SDUHSD) held the first of a series of public hearings as it begins the process of transitioning from an “at large” election system to a “by-trustee area” election system. The city of Encinitas is undergoing a similar effort as the school district and many other elected bodies throughout the state in response to threats of costly litigation for violations of the California Voting Rights Act (CVRA). The CVRA prohibits the use of at-large elections of governing board members if it “impairs the ability of a protected class to elect candidates of its choice or its ability to influence the outcome of an election.” A violation of the CVRA is established if it is shown that racially polarized voting has occurred in a district’s governing board election. The only way SDUHSD can protect itself from a potential CVRA litigation is to divide into the “by-trustee area” system — one governing board member will be elected by the registered voters in that area rather than the community at-large. The new district map would be effective for the 2018 election. SDUHSD Superintendent Eric Dill said he sent an email message about the efforts to divide the district on Oct. 9 to all of the district parent contacts and has only received two responses, one for and one against. “I think right now the interest is not huge,” Dill said. “People are curious but we’re not getting a lot of input. I think once the maps go out we’re probably going to see that more people will come out and have an opinion one way or the other.” A second public hearing will be held Thursday, Oct. 19 at 6 p.m. at the district office. After the map options are created there will be public hearings throughout November. The board will vote on the area boundaries after the third public hearing, at the regular SDUHSD board meeting on Dec. 14. Jonathan Salt, an attorney with Fagen Friedman & Fulfrost, gave a presentation to the SDUHSD board about what the considerations could be in drawing the new SEE SDUHSD, A20

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PAGE A2 - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - NORTH COAST

Open House to discuss property at corner of Dahlia Drive and Hwy 101 in Solana Beach Events set for Oct. 28 and Nov. 18 Encinitas-based Zephyr will hold an open house for Solana Beach residents and business owners on Saturday, Oct. 28 and Saturday, Nov. 18, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. to discuss the community hub proposed for the property located at the corner of Dahlia Drive and Highway 101 in Solana Beach. Over the course of the last year, Zephyr has been working with community members and city leaders to “thoughtfully design an environmentally conscious project, which brings connection down Highway 101 and across the bridge to Cedros Avenue — home to a wide variety of shops, entertainment, eateries and more,” according to a press release. “Our goal is to create something that Solana Beach residents will think of as their own hang out spot — a place to grab fresh faire, shop and have fun,” says Brad Termini, Zephyr CEO and longtime Solana Beach resident. Residents and business owners are invited to visit with Termini, key team members and staff about the project’s community impacts and proposed public amenities, which include community gathering areas, restaurants, park-like access through the site and public parking. Both events will be held at the site, at the corner of Dahlia Drive and Highway 101, between CVS and Bank of America. Onsite parking will be provided. For more information about the project, visit solana101.com, and for Zephyr, visit builtbyzephyr.com.

Police investigating drug sales at high school BY BRITTANY WOOLSEY Authorities are conducting an ongoing criminal investigation into drug sales and use that involves adults who may be providing drugs and alcohol to teenagers at a San Diego high school, according to Officer Trevor Philips of the San Diego Police Department, Northwest Division. Little information has been

confirmed at this time — including the name of the high school, its city and how many people were involved — due to juveniles being involved, Philips said. One woman, Kimberly Quach, of San Diego, has been arrested, Philips said. The San Diego District Attorney’s Office has filed charges against Quach as a result of the investigation, according to Philips.

During the course of the investigation, the police department’s Northwest Division detectives came across a child’s name, who they believe is a victim or witness in the case and may be able to provide additional details, Philips said. Anyone with information related to this incident is asked to call Northwest Juvenile Services at 858-523-7027.

Del Mar, 7:15 p.m. • Vehicle break-in/theft-900 block of Lomas Santa Fe Drive, Solana Beach, 7:40 p.m. Oct. 9 Oct. 12 • Vandalism-11400 block of Honey Ridge, Carmel Valley, • Vandalism-500 block of Stratford Court, Del Mar, 10 12 a.m. a.m. • Vehicle break-in/theft-11400 block of Fairwind Court, • Simple battery-2200 block of Jimmy Durante Boulevard, Carmel Valley, 3:45 a.m. Del Mar, 10:36 p.m. Oct. 13 • Fraud-700 block of Academy Drive, Solana Beach, 11 a.m. Oct. 10 • Grand theft from building-2200 block of Jimmy • Fraud-11100 block of Vista Sorrento Parkway, Torrey Hills, Durante Boulevard, Del Mar, 11:25 a.m. • Vehicle break-in/theft-10600 Calle Mar de Mariposa, 12:01 a.m. • Residential burglary-13000 block of Via Esperia, Carmel Torrey Hills, 3:30 p.m. • Vehicle break-in/theft-2200 block of Jimmy Durante Valley, 9 a.m. Boulevard, Del Mar, 4 p.m. • Manufacture/sale/possession of leaded cane or • Drunk in public-4900 block of Ladera Sarina, Del Mar, billy-Cerro Largo Drive and Via Mil Cumbres, 1 a.m. Oct. 11 4:40 p.m. Oct. 15 • Petty theft from building-2200 block of Jimmy Durante Boulevard, Del Mar, 5 p.m. • Vandalism-14700 block of Caminito Punta Areans, Del • Vehicle break-in/theft-900 block of Lomas Santa Fe Mar, 2 a.m. Drive, Solana Beach, 5 p.m. • Grand theft-11700 block of Carmel Creek Road, Carmel • Vehicle break-in/theft-15700 block of San Andres Drive, Valley, 9 a.m. Del Mar, 6 p.m. • Petty theft-12000 block of Carmel Country Road, • Vehicle break-in/theft-900 block of Lomas Santa Fe Carmel Valley, 1 p.m. Drive, Solana Beach, 6:20 p.m. • Assault, simple battery-600 block of San Rodolfo Drive, • Vehicle break-in/theft-15700 block of San Andres Drive, Solana Beach, 2:15 p.m.

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NORTH COAST - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - PAGE A3

New park named after Del Mar Solana Beach School District passes Mesa’s Elizabeth Rabbitt resolution to continue DACA program Some Mesa board members ‘upset’ they were left out of naming process BY KAREN BILLING Del Mar Mesa’s long-awaited new park has officially been named Elizabeth S. Rabbitt Neighborhood Park, in honor of a longtime resident of the Mesa. The 3.7-acre park is located at the end of Del Mar Mesa Road, near the intersection of Duck Pond Lane and Del Vino Court. Expected to open in January 2018, the park will feature a multi-purpose turf field, basketball court, children’s play areas, walkways, landscaping, picnic facilities, shade structures, comfort station, horse corral and accommodations for equestrians using the Del Mar Mesa trail system. The park broke ground with a ceremony last August — Rabbitt was in attendance atop her horse Sherman. The effort to name the park was initiated by Dan O'Rourke, a neighbor and friend of Rabbitt’s since he moved to the Mesa in 2002. Rabbitt is the former CEO of Sharp Medical Group and is known as one of the early pioneers of the Del Mar Mesa

JON CLARK

Elizabeth Rabbitt at the site of the Del Mar Mesa park that has been named in her honor. community. When she first moved to Del Mar Mesa in 1995, there were just six homes with dirt roads. Prior to development, she hauled in her own water and hauled out her own trash every week. When development started in 2001, O’Rourke said Rabbitt embraced her new neighbors with open arms. Her farm "Hooterville" became the central point of the community. “We used her house as a park for our kids,” said O’Roarke of the farm

home to horses, goats and chickens — not to mention the occasional pink flamingo lawn ornament. “Elizabeth is one of the most caring and generous people I have ever met,” said Shelley Aberle, a 12-year resident of Del Mar Mesa. “Not a day goes by that she isn't trying to make Del Mar Mesa a more beautiful and special neighborhood.” Rabbitt is the one called upon to deal with rattlesnakes and SEE PARK, A22

BY KAREN BILLING On Oct. 12, the Solana Beach School District (SBSD) adopted a resolution calling on Congress to continue the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program and provide DACA recipients with a pathway to permanent residence and eventually U.S. citizenship. “Our board of education believes that each student deserves to be treated with respect and as a valuable human being — with hopes, dreams, aspirations, and goals,” read the resolution. “Each DACA recipient should be allowed to fulfill those dreams.” “I think it shows that our district embraces the diversity of our students and families and that our schools are a safe and supportive place for students to learn,” SBSD Superintendent Terry Decker said of the resolution which passed unanimously. At the meeting, there were five speakers in favor of the board taking action, including parents, board members from the La Colonia de Eden Gardens Foundation and a representative from the ACLU San Diego. “Every child in America has a right to an education. We all want children to be successful in school and in order to do so, they must feel confident in their abilities.When a child has to hide in the shadows of their community for fear of being deported, or not attend a school field trip because it may involve crossing a Border Patrol checkpoint, then their chances of being successful in school are much less in their favor,” said Lisa Montes, vice president of the La Colonia Eden Gardens Foundation. “The

Solana Beach School District needs to be commended for standing up for DACA children by putting this DACA resolution on the agenda and unanimously voting yes on it. I am now even prouder to have been educated in Solana Beach schools.” Former President Barack Obama implemented the DACA program in 2012. The program offered work authorization and a renewable two-year reprieve from deportation to unauthorized immigrants who were brought to the United States as children and met specific eligibility requirements. According to the Pew Research Center, there are 222,795 DACA recipients in California. DACA recipients must have been brought to the United States before they were 16 years old; have maintained continuous residence since 2007 and must be attending school; have earned a high school diploma or equivalent, or have been honorably discharged from military service; and have not been convicted of a felony or three or more misdemeanors. DACA applicants, or “DREAMers,” must pay nearly $500 to apply and receive a background check and fingerprinting. According to the Migration Policy Institute, one-third of all DACA recipients are enrolled in high school, one-fifth enrolled in college and one-fourth are enrolled in college and working at the same time. On Sept. 5, United States Attorney General Jeff Sessions, speaking on behalf of President Trump, announced that without action by Congress to approve legislation to formally SEE DACA, A22

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Marine shares insights on military life at Woman’s Club lecture BY ASHLEY MACKIN-SOLOMON When Indianapolis native Col. Jennifer Shaar first considered a military career more than 25 years ago, she said she never thought of the Marine Corps. “I had no clue women could even be in the Marines. I’d never seen it advertised. They were looking for a few good men,” she said. Now the Commanding Officer at the Headquarters Service Battalion, Marine Corps Recruit Depot, Shaar spoke to an intimate gathering at the La Jolla Woman’s Club for its Women in Leadership lecture series, Oct. 12. This year’s focus is women in the military. Fewer than 25 guests provided the appropriate platform for the personal nature of Shaar’s stories and allowed for more of a one-on-one interaction with opportunities to ask questions. So much so that half of the engagement was dedicated to such dialogue. Stories included why Shaar enlisted in the military, the division selection progress of the time, a 2004 deployment to Iraq and more. She also discussed how women’s presence in the Marine Corps has changed in the last quarter century. “The women we have coming into our Corps today are some of the fastest, strongest, most capable and most self-confident women I have ever seen,” she said. “They are far better than anything that came before and each one of them serves selflessly. They volunteer to come in uniform and put their lives on the line each and every day, just like their male counterparts. And they do so without fanfare, without hubris and without attention.”

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Shaar told the group she began her career at the U.S. Naval Academy (from which she graduated in 1992) because she was a strong swimmer. She said a military education was appealing because she could get a scholarship. When she was actually in the Marine Corps, she underwent training at TBS (The Basic School) and chose a specialty that could translate into the civilian world, so following five year commitment, she could leave if she wanted to. She chose financial management. “Five years came and went, and I loved every second of it. At the nine- or 10-year mark, the point at which most people have to look at where they are going in their career and evaluate whether it makes sense to keep going or start another career … I decided to stay,” she said. “Now I stand here with 25 years of service.” In that time, she said, the presence of women in the military has expanded into new arenas. “We had two women graduate the Army Artillery Officers Course, one was the honor graduate; we had an honor grad at the tank school; we now have a female astronaut that came from the Marines; in a few months, we are going to have the first aviation group commander. A lot of this has happened fairly recently, but has been growing and developing for a long time,” she explained.

ASHLEY MACKIN-SOLOMON

U.S. Marine Corps Col. Jennifer Shaar

The Female Point of View

With the gradual acceptance of female presence in the Marines, higher-ups have begun seeing the new skillsets women provide. “The 21st century battlefield is not just air and sea; it’s space, cyber and electromagnetic. It’s everywhere,” Shaar said. “We need to be recruiting, not just the best and the brightest, but a diverse group. Women bring more to the table than we ever realized. And the Marines agree. Traditionally, if women came in to enlist, that was great. But they were not being actively recruited. Today, they are.” She pointed out that women are team-builders and look at problem-solving differently than men. For example, the five-foot-two Shaar shared a story from a basic training exercise, a six-mile endurance course. “The last obstacle in the course is a log you must climb over. There is no support underneath and the log is probably six feet up. … Men can bound over that thing. I had to figure out another way. So, I took the sling of my rifle, hoisted it onto the log, and used it to climb up. I adapted and I overcame. I had to look at the problem differently, based on my challenges. I think women have to look at a lot of things differently,” she said.

Strength Across the Board

Of the challenges that still exist for woman in the military, Shaar concluded, “I think this situation is probably true for most women, but when we walk into a new command, especially when we are pretty junior, it’s on us to prove we deserve to be there and we can contribute to the mission. We try our best to hide the qualifier ‘woman’ in all that. If you can run as fast as everyone else and train as hard as they did … commanders recognize that. “Even if it wasn’t at first, it’s become so over time. That’s OK. It takes time to earn respect and trust, and I would rather do that than immediately have trust and then lose it. Is it a challenge? Absolutely. But the women are out there are strong and they’re proving it across the board.”


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NORTH COAST - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - PAGE A5

Sharp leader to receive prestigious award for philanthropic work BY JOE TASH Local resident Bill Littlejohn oversees philanthropy and fundraising for Sharp HealthCare, a nonprofit healthcare provider and one of the largest hospital and clinic networks in San Diego County. “I’m the fundraising guy,” said Littlejohn, who joined Sharp in 2002 as senior vice president and CEO of the Sharp HealthCare Foundation. In that capacity over the past 15 years, he has overseen efforts to raise some $275 million, which has been spent on a variety of projects, from new buildings to the latest medical equipment. Over the past 30 years, Littlejohn has seen his profession grow ever more complex, similar to the challenging environment faced by healthcare organizations. “It’s not the days of the bake sale and the carwash,” said Littlejohn. In recognition of his contributions to the fundraising profession, the Association for Healthcare Philanthropy, a national industry group, has selected Littlejohn as the recipient of its Harold J. (Si) Seymour Award, named after a man considered a trailblazer in the world of philanthropy and fundraising. The award will be presented Oct. 20 in New Orleans. Littlejohn said he was humbled by the award. “It was recognition by my colleagues more than anything else,” Littlejohn said. “The culmination of my focus for the last quarter century.” Philanthropy is critical for nonprofits such as Sharp, which count on fundraising to supplement revenue from operations and borrowing to pay for major capital improvements, Littlejohn said. “(Sharp) relies on charitable contributions and the support of the community to do the things it does,” he said. In a broader sense, he said, philanthropy acts as a bridge for those who have a vision to make their community better, such as healthcare providers, and those who have the means to make that vision a reality. “The power of philanthropy is where people of vision and generosity make possible the achievements of the dreams of people of skill and dedication,” Littlejohn said. And the job of people in his profession, he said, is to help forge connections between donors and healthcare providers.

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Bill Littlejohn, senior vice president and CEO of the Sharp HealthCare Foundation They do that by cultivating relationships with people from all walks of life, including physicians, hospital board members, staff, patients and their families, and members of the local community. Fundraising professional are storytellers, said Littlejohn, sharing the vision of their organization in all manner of locations, from the golf course to a fundraising gala to an informal coffee in someone’s home. The message they impart is, “We have a vision for the future and it requires a significant investment,” he said. Littlejohn joked that he could write a book about hospital cafeterias, since he has eaten in about 200 of them during his healthcare fundraising career. Since Littlejohn believes strongly in the work of fundraising professionals, and how it can help nonprofits achieve their goals, he has become a “champion and evangelist” for philanthropy, both within Sharp and in the San Diego community. To that end, he has volunteered to serve on a number of nonprofit boards, including that of Santa Fe Christian School in Solana Beach. He and his wife, Lisa, have two children, Will, 16, and Lauren, 14, who attend the school. When he’s not at work, Littlejohn said he and his family love to travel, enjoying vacations on the coast of Maine. Littlejohn serves as scorekeeper for Santa Fe Christian’s lacrosse games. He also loves to read books about history. That interest in history, he said, relates to the legacy of philanthropy. “These great stories of the past can influence the future.” Visit give.sharp.com/ways-to-give

Cancer Angels of San Diego to present ‘Walk to Restore Life’ in Rancho Santa Fe Cancer Angels of San Diego will celebrate its 10-year anniversary with a “Walk to Restore Life” at the exclusive Bridges Club of Rancho Santa Fe on Sunday, Nov.5, from 1 p.m.-6:30 p.m. To sign up as a walker, go to active.com and type in Cancer Angels of San Diego to set up your page and raise a minimum donation of $250. This fabulous event will include a walk through the beautiful Bridges country club, a scrumptious dinner, live music, a silent auction and more. Cancer Angels is an all-volunteer 501c3 that provides funds for basic necessities to

Stage IV cancer patients living in San Diego County. Sixty-eight percent of cancer patients face financial devastation since there is no safety net for this vulnerable population. Please help Cancer Angels continue its life-saving work and join them at the “Walk to Restore Life” on Nov. 5. Contact: pat@cancerangelsofsandiego.org , call Eve at 760-942-6346, or you can also send a check for $250 per registrant to: Cancer Angels of San Diego, 1915 Aston Ave., Carlsbad, CA 92008. www.cancerangels.org

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PAGE A6 - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - NORTH COAST

JOIN US

Saturday, October 28 & Saturday, November 18 10am - 2pm

/Bu h Residents Solana Beac

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Dear

Sincerely,

i, CEO Brad Termin Z ep h y r zephyr.com www.builtby 101.com www.solana


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NORTH COAST - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - PAGE A7

Carmel Valley equestrian wins equitation title at Greater San Diego Hunter Jumper Championship BY KAREN BILLING Carmel Valley 16-year old Lindsey Klein and her grey Dutch Warmblood Winston recently competed at the Greater San Diego Hunter Jumper Association (GSDHJA) Championship show held at the Del Mar Fairgrounds, winning the Jean McGinnis Open Equitation Challenge. Lindsey and Winston bested 54 horses and riders during the first round competition and then again against the top 15 riders to win the Open Equitation Challenge. In addition, they were also the champions in the Working Hunters (3’6”) Classic, Junior/Amateur Working Hunter(3’3”) Classic, Equitation Over Fences 14-17 year olds, and the Reserve Champion in the GSDHJA Hunter Derby(3’3”). Since achieving most of her goals on the county level, this past year Lindsey decided to see how well she could compete on the “A” circuit. She showed in several shows in San Juan Capistrano and Del Mar and her points qualified her for the CPHA Foundation Jr. Medal Finals in San Juan Capistrano and made her first appearance at the United States Equestrian Federation (USEF) Hunter Seat Medal Finals in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania on Oct. 15. She and her horse, Captain Darco of Wellington, Fla., had a beautiful round but were not among the top 10 finalists. “It was so much fun being among the top riders and the most stunning horses in the country,”

COURTESY PHOTOS

Lindsey Klein and Winston at the Greater San Diego Hunter Jumper Association Championship show held at the Del Mar Fairgrounds. Lindsey said. “I learned so much and I can’t wait to come back again next year.” Lindsey, a Torrey Pines High School junior, first started riding at the age of 6 and began showing locally when she was 10 years old. She has devoted the past six years to perfecting her horsemanship skills and rising in the levels of competition around

Lindsey Klein and Winston won the Jean McGinnis Open Equitation Challenge at the Greater San Diego Hunter Jumper Association Championship.

Southern California. Equestrians typically spend four to five days at the barn riding, schooling and working their horses and Lindsey is no different. Training at Flower Hill Farms, she is focused and goal-oriented and would like to compete at the NCAA level for one of the top equestrian colleges.

“Lindsey’s confidence and attention to detail makes her a pleasure to coach,” said Hailey Flowers, trainer and owner of Flower Hill Farms.“I am always impressed by her ability to beautifully execute our plan with the amount of pressure competition puts on the riders. I am so proud of the rider she is today.”

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PAGE A8 - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - NORTH COAST

Diplomacy Gala celebrates global connections Nov. 4 The 2017 Diplomacy Gala will bring together more than 200 citizen diplomats working together to connect San Diego leaders to those dedicated to solving the world’s most pressing issues at the Joan B. Kroc Institute for Peace and Justice at the University of San Diego on Saturday, Nov. 4. The San Diego Diplomacy Council connects San Diego to the rest of the world through professional, educational and cultural exchange programs. One of 90 nationwide organizations designated by the State Department to provide these services, the council builds relationships between community and business leaders in the San Diego region with their counterparts around the world; addressing challenges such as safety, economic opportunity, social justice and environmental sustainability. The year’s theme “Global Entrepreneurship + Public Diplomacy: A New Venture” highlights the connections made in the past year between local social and traditional entrepreneurs and their international counterparts. “The Diplomacy Gala is an opportunity for our entire network of citizen diplomats to come together and recognize the important role San Diego has to play in solving world issues,” said Carmel Valley resident Fabienne Perlov, president and CEO of the council. “We’re thrilled to highlight our professional exchange program this year which empowers our best entrepreneurial minds to use their innovative perspectives to help move the needle on important global issues like combating hate, homelessness, ocean

COURTESY

Carmel Valley resident Fabienne Perlov, president and CEO of the San Diego Diplomacy Council. conservation and women economic empowerment.” Perlov, a native of France, has been the executive director of the San Diego Diplomacy Council for almost two years. Perlov has over 13 years of experience in policy development, institutional fundraising, program management and capacity-building in the field of public diplomacy, international affairs, refugee

protection and humanitarian assistance. Beyond her role at the San Diego Diplomacy Council, Perlov has leadership experience at the United Nations, governmental and non-governmental organizations in the United States, Canada, the West Bank, Israel, France, Azerbaijan, Russian Federation and the Caribbean area. “I strongly believe in the power of public diplomacy as a cost-effective tool to create an

international network of countries who understand and work with the United States to address common global challenges,” said Perlov, who speaks English, French, Russian, Hebrew and Spanish. Solana Beach resident Johanna Afshani has taken on the role of managing this year’s gala. She brings her own unique experience as citizen diplomat from planning cultural diplomacy events, to hosting visiting leaders in her home and identifying the best opportunities for them to learn from the San Diego region. The event will feature remarks from keynote speaker Scot Chisholm, CEO of Classy, recognized by Fast Company as one of the “The World’s Most Innovative Companies in Social Good.” Amanda Lettmann, a global woman entrepreneur and CEO of Simple Disability and Kardia Ventures, will lead the ceremony. DJ Kutz, the resident DJ for GoPro’s Carlsbad office and Voices of Our City Choir, which serves and advocates for the homeless community through music, poetry and art, will provide entertainment. Qualcomm Inc. will receive the Citizen Diplomat Partner of the Year Award and Andy White, startup advocate for the Downtown San Diego Partnership, will be recognized with the Citizen of the Year Award. Live auction packages will also be available with proceeds going toward bringing additional world leaders to experience San Diego’s spirit of collaboration. Tickets and more information are available at sandiegodiplomacy.org.

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Del Mar Farmers Market awards scholarships

The Del Mar Farmers Market (DMFM) has awarded three scholarships for 2017. The recipients must be either vendors or family members that work half to full-time at the market and are enrolled in college classes. The nonprofit market began the scholarship program in memory of an early market manager, Mary Maciel, and has given over 100 educational grants over the years. This year, one of the scholarships went to Qing Wang, known as Clarissa at the market, who, with her husband, Ray, started a farming business in 2004. They have grown about 2,000 different fruit trees since then. They also raise turkeys and chickens for eggs, and offer a variety of greens at Ray’s Subtropical at the market. With so many exotic produce items, Clarissa and Ray can always report on the nutritional value of each item and suggest ways to prepare them. When Ray had a medical emergency recently, Clarissa was so

NORTH COAST - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - PAGE A9

DEL MAR HISTORY

Thinking of fishing off the beach this weekend? Did you know that... There used to be a pier in Del Mar as this 1917 photo shows. Constructed in 1913 at the foot of 15th Street, this 1,000-foot pier was called the “Pleasure Pier” and was intended for “fishing, boating, diving and strolling.” It was a huge hit in town, drawing many tourists and residents alike. At one point, The South Coast Land Company planned to replace it with a concrete pier but heavy storms with high waves never allowed the project to advance. Finally, in 1959, a Navy U.D.T. team blasted what remained of the pier into history. Thanks to Nancy Ewing and her book Del Mar Looking Back for all the good history. For more information about her book and the Del Mar Historical Society, go to www.delmarhistoricalsociety.org or drop the Del Mar Historical Society a note at 225 9th St.,

LESLIE ROBSON

Del Mar Farmers Market scholarship recipients Qing "Clarissa" Wang, Fabian Huertas, May Nou Nhiayi. inspired by the care the nurses and physicians provided, that she decided to apply to nursing school at Mt. San Jacinto College. “I have been pretty busy

working at our farm and taking care of our son, Dillon. In two years he will go to college. I will have extra time, so studying on the SEE SCHOLARSHIPS, A10

COURTESY OF DEL MAR HISTORICAL SOCIETY

A view from the “Pleasure Pier” in 1917. The pier was built at the foot of 15th Street in 1913. Del Mar, CA 92014 or email info@delmarhistoricalsociety.org. The Del Mar Historical Society would love to hear your stories about Del Mar.

Girl Scout Service Unit to hold ribbon-cutting ceremony and singalong An event will take place this Friday, Oct. 20, at 4 p.m., featuring a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the new and improved Girl Scout Hut, located outside the main gate of San Dieguito County Park. Local Junior Girl Scout Troop 3013 members worked to improve the hut for their Bronze Award and accomplished the goal of making it a

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PAGE A10 - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - NORTH COAST

Jake’s Del Mar Fun Run kicks off ‘Teen to Parent Panel Breeders’ Cup Festival Week Discussion’ to be held Oct. 21

Jake’s Del Mar will be hosting its 35th Annual Beach Fun Run on Saturday, Oct. 28, beginning at 9:30 a.m. In celebration of the first-ever Breeders’ Cup World Championships coming to Del Mar, Jake’s has teamed up with the Breeders’ Cup to kick off the Festival Week with this community event. The 5K (3.2 miles) Fun Run takes place on the beach, starting and finishing on the sand at Jake’s Del Mar. Breeders’ Cup Ambassador, Bo Derek, is the race’s official starter and she will be on horseback on the beach leading the field at the start of the race. The Fun Run is followed immediately by a beach party on the sand in front of the restaurant. Entry fees for the run are $35 for adults and children under 12 are $15. The entry fee includes a Fun Run T-shirt, brunch buffet, drinks on the beach — including Breeders’ Cup signature cocktails, live music,

Polynesian entertainment and awards. There will be raffle prize drawings including chances to win tickets to the Breeders’ Cup. Mail in deadline is Oct.23. Late registration fees (Oct. 24 through race day — or until the event sells out) are $50 for adults and $15 for children under 12. Race awards include First Place Man, First Place Woman, First Place Youth (12 and under), Oldest to Finish, Youngest to Finish, First Place Runner with Stroller and First Place Dog with Runner. Proceeds from the race will be donated through the Jake’s Del Mar Legacy of Aloha Program to the La Colonia Branch of the Boys & Girls Club of San Dieguito and Friends of the Powerhouse. To download a race entry form, visit jakesdelmar.com/fun-run or stop by Jake’s Del Mar at 1660 Coast Blvd. in Del Mar or call the restaurant at (858) 755-2002 for more details.

New and slightly used gowns, dresses needed for Wounded Warrior wives Rancho Buena Vista Chapter of the National Society Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) seeks new and slightly-used black-tie gowns and dresses to donate to Wounded Warrior wives at Camp Pendleton. All sizes welcome. Items need to be clean and in good condition. Everything is needed

by Oct. 24. There are about 800 Wounded Warriors and their wives who will be attending the Wounded Warrior Marine Corps Ball in November. This is a mandatory event for them. DAR will coordinate pickup. Contact Joanne Murphy at 760-481-4434 or Linda Gallagher at 858-342-8130.

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Finding Voices is hosting a Panel Discussion about the teen experience, including stress, anxiety and depression, on Saturday, Oct. 21, from 10 a.m.-1 p.m. at the Solana Beach Library. Finding Voices hopes this will be a very honest, candid and empowering discussion to help parents and teens through what can be difficult years – especially when teen stress, anxiety and depression come into the picture. When is everyday stress no longer everyday stress and something more serious? What resources are available? What resources are available outside of school? What are some positive techniques for negative situations? All are welcome to attend the event. Finding Voices is the civic engagement

arm of Youth Campaigns, a San Diego-based 501c3 nonprofit that empowers teens to give back to their community and support their peers by creating social awareness campaigns that discuss the issues that matter most to them. Student panelists include Carson Fassett, current Torrey Pines student, and Natalie Salgado, former Torrey Pines student. Adult panelists include parent Lisa Salgado and former Torrey Pines student Karena Fassett. If you are interested in being a part of the panel discussion, helping with the event or have questions, please contact Shawn at shawn@youthcampaigns.org. Learn more about Finding Voices at www.findingvoices.org.

FROM SCHOLARSHIPS, A9

manager. He is studying business marketing at Cal State San Marcos. A dean’s list student, graduating in spring 2018, Fabian’s goals for the market are to make an appealing destination for all, and “to create a beautiful atmosphere” at the current location at the Shores and soon at the new Del Mar City Hall. The second oldest market in the county, DMFM donates 100 percent of net profits to support not only the educational goals of the vendors, but also other Del Mar nonprofit groups. When people shop at the DMFM, they get not only fresh, local produce and beautiful flowers, but the satisfaction of helping the market give back to the community. Saturdays 1-4 p.m., at 225 9th Street, Del Mar. Visit delmarfarmersmarket.org

weekdays while working with my husband at the Del Mar Farmers Market on Saturday is a perfect match.” Nursing is the goal for another recipient, May Nou Nhiayi. May Nou helps her father, Neng, at the French Bakery Le Rendez-Vous, selling breads, pastries and desserts. Her interest in nursing is rooted in a sense of caring for her family. “It’ll be a new experience for me. I chose nursing because I could learn how to make people feel better and about which treatments they need.” May Nou is attending Mira costa College. A repeat recipient of a DMFM educational scholarship, Fabian Huertas, is the market


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NORTH COAST - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - PAGE A11

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PAGE A14 - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - NORTH COAST

‘We are TP’ Torrey Pines celebrates homecoming with 30-0 defeat of Oceanside

A

“Color Splash” crowd showed up for Torrey Pines High School’s homecoming game on Oct. 13 to cheer on the Falcons as they dominated Oceanside with a 30-0 victory. At the game, the cheer and dance teams performed and the homecoming court was honored. On Saturday night, students partied at a disco-themed homecoming dance on campus.

Quarterback Jason Heine with the heinous stiff arm.

Torrey Pines homecoming king and queen Zach Friedland and Izzy Aguiar

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NORTH COAST - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - PAGE A15

WEEK IN SPORTS BY GIDEON RUBIN Football: Torrey Pines defeated Oceanside 30-0 in an Avocado League game on Oct. 13. Mac Bingham rushed for 144 yards and two touchdowns to lead the Falcons. Torrey Pines improved to 2-1 in league and 5-2 overall for the season. ***** La Costa Canyon experienced its first defeat of the season as the Mavericks lost to Mission Hills 24-13 in an Avocado League game on Oct. 13. Mavericks quarterback Jake Neufeld threw for 160 yards and one touchdown in defeat for LCC. Neufeld completed a 55-yard scoring pass to Jaquan Carroll and Karson Lippert scored on a 39-yard run to help the Mavericks jump out to an early 13-3 lead. The Mavericks fell to 2-1 in league and 6-1 overall for the season. ***** Santa Fe Christian defeated Classical Academy 56-3 in a nonleague game on Oct. 13. Eagles quarterback Michael Linguadoca rushed for 92 yards and one touchdown on five carries threw and threw for 132 yards and two touchdowns with one interception. The Eagles rolled up 435 yards of total offense. They rushed for 323 yards and five touchdowns. Linguadoca completed a 58-yard touchdown pass to Luke Sanders and a 36-yard scoring pass to Joe Burich. Burich, Jack Miles, Austinn Rossetti and

Blake Weeks added rushing touchdowns. Isaiah Love led the Eagles defensively with 10 tackles and Sanders had nine tackles. The Eagles improved to 4-3 overall for the season. Volleyball: Cathedral Catholic defeated Our Lady of the Peace 3-1 (25-13, 25-10, 16-25, 25-12) in a Western League match on Oct. 12. The win was the Dons’ 10 in their last 11 matches. Peyton Wilhite led the Dons with 16 kills and Jaalyn Sotoa had 11 kills. Karenna Wurl had 24 digs and six service aces and Lindsey Miller had nine kills and four blocks. Kylie Adams had 37 assists. The victory followed a 3-1 (25-23, 23-25, 25-22, 25-16) league win against Point Loma three days earlier in which Wilhite led the Dons with 13 kills and Sotoa had 11 kills. Miller and McKenna Branson each had 10 kills and Adams had 41 assists. The Dons improved to 5-0 in league and 16-5 overall for the season. ***** Torrey Pines defeated Sage Creek 3-0 (25-8, 25-13, 25-18) in an Avocado League West match on Oct. 13 for the Falcons 14th straight win. Brie Severino had nine kills and Kiara McNulty had eight kills to lead the Falcons. Carly Diehl had 21 assists and McNulty had nine assists. The victory followed a 3-2 (25-20, 20-25, SEE SPORTS, A19

COURTESY California Bearcats 12U/6th Grade Red team: Back row: Ken (coach), Dylan, Marcos, Jake, Luke, Mike (coach); Front row: Max, Ryan, Cody, Greyson

California Bearcats 12U/6th Grade Red basketball team wins championship

T

he California Bearcats 12U/6th Grade Red team played in the Aloha Challenge basketball tournament in Anaheim on Oct. 14-15. The team won their pool and cruised through the playoffs beating teams from Fresno and Santa Barbara. In their fifth and final game they beat Bay City Basketball Red from Northern California by a score of 43-27 to win the championship! This was the first of six planned tournaments for the Bearcats 6th grade team this year.

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PAGE A16 - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - NORTH COAST

COURTESY

(L-R) Bill Seifen and Jeff Neufeld took top honors at the Del Mar-Solana Beach Rotary Club’s 21st Annual Bocce Tournament, shown here with club members Jon Fish and Kirk Collins.

DM-SB Rotary Club’s Turf Bocce Ball Tournament scores another fundraising win BY SEBASTIAN MONTES Nearly 250 people came out for some sun-soaked — and magnanimous — fun at the Del Mar-Solana Beach Rotary Club’s 21st Annual Turf Bocce Ball Tournament on Oct. 8. Having moved to the Surf Cup Sports Park after two decades at the Del Mar Horse Park, this year’s tournament raised more than $40,000, bringing the 21-year total to nearly $600,000 donated to a wide array of charities and community groups. This year’s event had two lead beneficiaries: Reality Changers and Just in Time for Foster Youth, both of which will receive 20 percent of the funds raised. In the 15 years since its founding, Reality Changers has helped 1,000 disadvantaged teens get into college. Just in Time helps foster youth transition out of the foster care system after they turn 18. The county-wide program serves about 700 people each year. The morning got off to its now-traditional start with a showdown between the elected leaders of Solana Beach and Del Mar. Thanks to some pinpoint play, Solana Beach Mayor Mike Nichols and Councilman David Zito retained the trophy with a 10-4 win over Del Mar Mayor Terry Sinnott and Councilwoman Sherryl Parks. More than mere bragging rights, the top three teams got to donate their “winnings” to the charity of their choice. Jeff Neufeld and Bill Seifen — with Del Mar Car Care as their sponsor — took home the tournament title, donating their $300 prize to Just in Time. The runners-up were Seth Teater and Matt Van Meeteren, sponsored by Merrill Lynch Wealth Management. They chose City of Hope Cancer Research to receive their $200 prize. Third place went to Mike Price and Jon Dyer, sponsored by SeaWorld. They gave their $100 prize to Reality Changers. While the annual funds are a much-appreciated boon, said Just in Time’s executive director Don Wells, six years of participation have also given rise to a larger community of support that helps the nonprofit combat the stigmas and obstacles surrounding foster care. Bocce players who discovered Just in Time at the tournament have gone on to join their board, Wells said, and one participant was so moved that they helped Just in Time land a $25,000 grant. “As time has gone by, bocce has become the official sport of Just in Time,” Wells said. “It’s

SEBASTIAN MONTES

Participants at the Del Mar-Solana Beach Rotary Club’s 21st Annual Turf Bocce Ball Tournament.

SEBASTIAN MONTES

Participants at the Del Mar-Solana Beach Rotary Club’s 21st Annual Turf Bocce Ball Tournament. been such a great partnership. This is a great opportunity to get more awareness out about the challenges that are faced by this population and to have people meet some of the young people who have been in foster care.” The rest of this year’s funds will be distributed among a slew of charities and community organizations that the Del Mar-Solana Beach chapter supports, many of which focus on youth poverty, veterans’ issues and homelessness. Locally, that list includes the Community Resource Center, Urban Street Angels, Voices for Children and Casa de Amistad. The club also benefits numerous international organizations. Learn more about the club at dmsbrotary.com.


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NORTH COAST - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - PAGE A17

Local resident’s fencing studio leads to champions, college success BY KAREN BILLING For the last 26 years, Carmel Valley’s Dmitriy Guy has worked to grow the sport of fencing in San Diego. With his newly opened La Jolla Fencing Academy, the former fencing champion’s studio offers “world class” instruction in beginning and advanced classes, private lesson for students as young as five to adults. The sport requires both athleticism and discipline, as fencers use replica swords to score points by hitting one another while moving back and forth on an area called a piste. “In our experience, fencing is a great sport for kids to become better people, better students, better citizens and to go to better colleges,” Guy said. Guy has coached World Cup medalists and members of the US National team of all ages and has sent kids to Harvard, Columbia, U-Penn and UC San Diego all with the help of fencing. The success story he and his wife Olga are perhaps the most proud of is their son Philippe, a Canyon Crest Academy graduate who is now a sophomore at Harvard. Philippe won the US Open as a Cadet level, under-17 and represented the U.S. in the World Cup. “We want to invite this community to come enjoy the great sport of fencing,” Guy said. Still relatively undiscovered in San Diego, the sport is huge in San Francisco and on the East Coast. Guy has modeled his studio after the Manhattan Fencing Center, run by friend Yury Gelman, the five-time coach for the US Olympic team — that Manhattan club is so popular that it has a lengthy waiting list. “I want to bring that same level of fencing to

LEO MALEVANCHIK

Students at work at La Jolla Fencing Academy.

COURTESY

La Jolla Fencing Academy founder and head coach Dmitriy Guy, left, with his coaching staff. San Diego,” Guy said. The school is Guy and his wife Olga’s second jobs — Olga works in marketing for a biotech company and Dmitriy is a real estate agent and mortgage broker by day. The couple moved to

Carmel Valley 13 years ago for the schools, their son attended Solana Pacific and Solana Highlands elementary schools and Carmel Valley Middle School. Guy was a national fencing champion in the

Soviet Union, a two-time US Open champion and a two-time gold and silver medalist at the World Maccabiah Games. He has coached the US National fencing team for several international competitions at the cadet, junior and senior level. He started fencing at age 9 in Moscow, learning the sport from a two-time Olympic champion. He moved to San Diego 27 years ago, meeting and marrying Olga, and continuing to fence representing the US National team. Guy founded Spartak Fencing Club in 1991 and expanded his efforts when he retired from competitive fencing. The club bounced around to various locations, from the old JCC on 54th Street in San Diego to Rancho Bernardo, Escondido and Sorrento Valley. Now Guy is thrilled to have a permanent home in La Jolla Village Square. The building features a main fencing floor, a lounge room and a pro equipment shop. The main floor features six SEE FENCING, A21

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OPINION

PAGE A18 - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - NORTH COAST

Del Mar Times Solana Beach Sun Carmel Valley News 380 Stevens Ave. 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 © 2017 Union-Tribune Community Press. All rights reserved. No part of the contents of this publication may be reproduced in any medium,including print and electronic media,without the express written consent of Union-Tribune Community Press. Subscriptions available for $125 per year by mail.

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Cancer Consortium links work of five UC cancer centers

A

mong the many ways that cancer can confound successful treatment is its ability to draw upon some of the strengths and defenses of healthy cells and tissues, exploiting them to boost its resistance to therapy and its chances of survival. An unprecedented cancer consortium intends to use that same approach to more effectively address California’s most pressing cancer-related problems and opportunities. The new University of California Cancer Consortium is an alliance of UC’s five cancer centers at UC Davis, UC Irvine, UCLA, UCSF and, of course, Moores Cancer Center at UC San Diego Health. These centers all enjoy Comprehensive Cancer Center designation by the National Cancer Institute, which means they represent the leading minds and practices in cancer research, treatment and education. They are home, said UC President Janet Napolitano in a recent news conference announcing the consortium, “to physicians and scientists who are the very best at what they do: care for patients and conduct research that leads to new knowledge that benefits us all.” The need has never been greater. This year, more than 176,000 Californians will be diagnosed with cancer and nearly 60,000 will die from it. The estimated cost burden to the state and its residents is more than $14 billion annually. The consortium represents an effort to leverage the institutional strength of UC’s cancer centers, to produce results that are greater than the sum of its parts. Those parts are impressive. Each year, the five

academic medical centers of UC Health provide almost 900,000 days of inpatient care and 4.5 million outpatient visits. UC Health is the state’s fourth-largest healthcare delivery system, with 41,000 employees, including 12,000 nurses. The UC cancer centers treat nearly one in five cancer patients in California. Almost half of these patients are in the late stages of cancer; many with the rarest types that cannot be treated at other hospitals lacking expertise or access to clinical trials using the latest experimental drugs. Last year, UC medical centers conducted more than 1,600 clinical trials, a significant number focused on cancer, that involved more than 29,000 patients. They are moving the most promising treatments closer to federal approval and standard of care for all. The pace of innovation in cancer research and treatment these days is so fast that the best care may be in joining a trial using a drug headed to market. At Moores Cancer Center, we are currently running 300 clinical trials, including groundbreaking investigations involving immunotherapies and other forms of precision medicine. The power and possibility of the cancer consortium are obvious. Its potential is already being realized. Head and neck cancers are among the most difficult of malignancies to treat. They are a challenge compounded by the fact that many types are relatively rare. Individual doctors or centers don’t see many patients, making it difficult to deepen their understanding of the disease or develop new treatments.

www.delmartimes.net Recently, Ezra Cohen, M.D., associate director for translational science at Moore Cancer Center and a renowned head and neck cancer specialist, presented early results of a clinical trial at a medical conference in Spain. The trial combines two drugs in a novel way to treat head and neck cancer. The results were promising; the trial is ongoing. The key point is that the trial could not have happened at a single center. In this case, it involves multiple UC cancer centers providing patient-participants and agreeing to abide by the recommendations of MCC’s scientific review committee and institutional review board. This unified, streamlined approach helped convince the pharmaceutical company funding the trial to take the leap. The Cancer Consortium is also uniquely positioned to partner with health insurance plans and employers to provide a seamless statewide program for oncology services. This collaboration will provide patients with cutting-edge care throughout California, including cases where a patient has to relocate within the state during their course of treatment. There are other, similar examples of progress on the cusp of reality. They involve new collaborations among colleagues across the UC Health system, new combinations of cancer researchers and physicians coming together to devise and test ideas and treatments they could not — and cannot — do alone. In fact, an effort through this consortium was initiated three days after the Napolitano’s announcement to treat pancreatic cancer, the most deadly of all forms of cancer. Despite some dramatic improvements in the rates and treatments of some malignancies, cancer overall is expected to eclipse heart disease as the nation’s top killer in coming years. The over 200 diseases we call cancer work together to create an undeniable scourge. The UC Cancer Consortium is our combined and commensurate call to arms. — Scott M. Lippman, M.D., is director of UC San Diego Moores Cancer Center. His e-mail address is mcc-dir-lippman@ucsd.edu

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. The letters/columns published are the author’s opinion only and do not reflect the opinion of this newspaper.

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Watermark’s Specific Plan will change our community Watermark is proposing a high-density housing project footprint of more than 60,000 sq. ft. (this calculation does not include the additional square footage for hardscape and second stories) for 38–48 families, to live on the corner of Jimmy Durante Blvd. and San Dieguito Dr. Such a development cannot be legally built within existing Del Mar zoning laws. Therefore, Watermark’s Specific Plan Development necessitates changing our zoning laws thereby changing the Community Plan and character of Del Mar. Note: Already approved on this same location is a commercial office building, approximately 25,000 sq. ft. That project called “Riverview” has mitigated all the negative impacts which Watermark refuses to mitigate. Watermark’s Specific Plan is an intrusion

and a developer’s exploitation that will change our Community Plan/character, health, safety and welfare as we know it, forever. Watermark’s proposed buildings and hardscape will render this lot virtually 100 percent built upon from boundary line to boundary line to sidewalk with only unbuildable bluffs being excluded which will be severely limited as to views. Each and every resident needs to submit their written comments detailing all possible negative impacts concerning traffic, parking, views, Torrey Pine removal, wildlife, environment, watershed, neighborhood loss of privacy, light and noise pollution, etc., including lengthy detailed rationale /reasons substantiating each and every concerning potential negative impact - very important! Deadline to submit your written comments to the City of Del Mar is no later than Nov. 13. Send your email(s) as soon as possible To: mbator@delmar.ca.us (optional - your City Council members if you want). Please become part of our like-minded concerned email group - stay informed

concerning all relevant news for this development only. Send your name and email address to: delmarhillside@yahoo.com Arnie Wiesel Del Mar Del Mar Hillside Community Association

Why does DM have to give up so much to get so little? Del Mar’s failure of addressing the lack of affordable housing is now threatening to change the city’s character forever by allowing the monster Watermark project to be built on the north end of the city (providing a minimal number of affordable housing units). This will open the flood gate for more monster housing units to be built in the city under the state mandate for affordable housing and in the process trash Del Mar’s protective zoning laws, setback ordinances, mass, volume ordinances, view protection ordinances, DRB ordinances and rights. Why does the city have to give up so much to get so little? Can we protect our ordinances and SEE LETTERS, A19


OPINION

www.delmartimes.net

One View GORDON CLANTON

One hundred columns but who’s counting?

T

his is my 100th column for the Del Mar Times and its sister papers. Before that, I wrote more than 300 columns for other newspapers. At all these posts, I have tried to illuminate local and regional politics, finding drama and comedy where I can. Some pieces read like a gossip column, with the names of a dozen political celebrities in boldface. Some columns celebrate the natural environment and urge its preservation. I grew up in Louisiana and so first appreciated politics as an especially rowdy form of entertainment long before I understood what is at stake — namely, everything. Politics then was football for old guys in suits. When the adult daughter of a best friend learned that I write a column on politics and the environment, she said that she was very interested in the environment but totally uninterested in politics — as though the two have nothing to do with each other. There’s a lot of that going around. When you write in and for a community for more than 30 years, you eventually offend almost everyone you know. When someone tells me, “I agree with most of what you say,” or even, “I almost always agree with your columns,” I cannot

help but wonder what they are not telling me about columns that missed the mark for them. I always love it when someone tells me, “I read your column every week.” This is high praise indeed considering that I typically write only one column per month. Overheard at a Torrey Pines Community Planning Group meeting: “How can Gordon Clanton write about planning group issues if he does not attend our meetings?” Reply: ”Gordon has spies everywhere.” Well, not spies exactly, but I do have friends, activists of various sorts, who help me take the pulse of our community. They attend council meetings, community planning groups, school boards, the Del Mar Planning Commission and Design Review Board, among others. I am deeply in their debt, but I won’t thank them by name. You know who you are. I couldn’t do this without you. Overhead in Del Mar: “Have you seen Gordon Clanton’s last column?” Reply: “I certainly hope so.” — Gordon Clanton teaches sociology at San Diego State University. He welcomes comments at gclanton@mail.sdsu.edu

FROM LETTERS, A18 still allow some building for affordable housing and profit? The residents not living in the north end think Watermark is the solution that does not affect them. Wrong! Few affordable units will be included in this massive structure. Many more are needed. Watermark sets the standard for more massive buildings throughout the city. How unfair to north Del Mar residents when downtown residents feel protected by Prop B – what about the rest of the city – let them not be protected. Development on the north end of town will set the standard for future development in downtown Del Mar. Watermark provides only a small number of affordable units – more will be needed… Unbelievable how Del Mar residents fake their concern for affordable housing needs being so very important in Del Mar and did not attempt to put any units at City Hall development. What? Not in your backyards. Just wait more development will be coming to a lot near you. Will you let Watermark set the standard of the new development in Del Mar. Watermark: All usable lot covered with building and pavement, minimal Jimmy Durante setback, open space views from Heather Lane will be blocked by apartment walls, (notice how Watermark sales team does not show any views from the southeast), story poles are needed to inform the public now. I challenge Watermark to a show of good faith and put up story poles to inform the residents of the reality of this monstrosity. Annette Wiesel

City knocks public out City of Del Mar Planning Department Public Hearing for Watermark (Oct.10) was most disturbingly highlighted when commissioner Nathan McCay exclaimed that the public present offered no understandable specific negative impacts concerning Watermark’s “Specific Plan” developments and DEIR, nor any substantiation. He then recommended the Planning Department should only rely on Watermark’s DEIR which the Planning Department already endorses. The concerned residents present did in fact articulate serious specific negative impacts that were simple to understand and rationally supported. However, Planning Commission Mr.

NORTH COAST - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - PAGE A19

FROM SPORTS, A15 25-21, 22-25, 15-9) league win against La Costa Canyon two days earlier in which Emily Fitzner had 14 kills, Kendra Ham had 13 kills and Jaden Whitmarsh had 11 kills. Dani Fornaciari had 10 kills and led the Falcons with seven blocks. McNulty had 25 assists, 16 digs and five blocks, and Fitzner had 23 assists. Jessi Lumsden led LCC with 15 kills, Morgan Lewis had 14 kills and Sophia Tulino had 12 kills. Caitlin Kikta had 41 assists. The Falcons improved to 7-0 in league and 22-3 overall for the season and the Mavericks fell to 5-2 in league and 15-9 overall for the season. ***** Canyon Crest Academy defeated San Dieguito Academy 3-1 (25-9, 22-25, 25-16, 25-18) in an Avocado League West match on Oct. 11. Evie Gonzalez and Whitley Ballard each had 10 kills to lead the Ravens. Olivia Lovenberg had 29 assists and Gracie Wood had 10 assists. Sarah Colla led SDA with 19 kills and 11 digs, and setters Savannah Hyndman and Faith Kelly each had 12 assists. The Ravens improved to 5-1 in league and 16-7 overall for the season and the Mustangs fell to 0-6 in league

McCay made it clear that our voices/comments would never be seriously contemplated. As a Del Mar citizen and others present, we could never imagine being so obliterated, discarded and disenfranchised from our government’s public process as they did. Obviously all citizens need now be on notice that our voices, comments, concerns and opinions might be listened to as part of a government process but not considered. With only three weeks remaining to understand hundreds of pages of DEIR, including Watermark’s Specific Plans for development and rezoning laws, is virtually impossible. Additionally, our city’s strategic fast track processing for approving Watermark is not only moving rapidly, it has also scheduled meetings during the holidays when many residents will be very busy and out of town. All of this is beyond the pale. Especially when our city knows fully well how concerning and egregious this development is among its residents. I recommend we band together, all residents who truly care and are concerned about our village-like town, Del Mar. We should not allow our city to so easily sweep us under the rug as they did at the Oct. 10 Planning Department Public Hearing. I recommend we all be part of an email broadcast informational network concerning Watermark. We should do all we can individually and we also need to band together in order to gain the attention and respect from our city to be allowed to participate in our government process. There is a community group in Del Mar, I know them well and they are seriously concerned about this situation. Stay involved, stay in touch. Send your email address and name to: delmarhillside@yahoo.com (Del Mar Hillside Community Association) Bree Beauchamp Del Mar

A promise kept Some 20-plus years ago, Solana Beach took a big step to help improve our local freeway access and wisely chose to widen the overpass at the I-5 Lomas Santa Fe intersection which greatly facilitates our local access and exiting without crossing

and 15-12 overall for the season. Water polo: San Dieguito Academy had its three-game winning streak stopped as the Mustangs lost to Torrey Pines 10-9 in an Avocado League West game on Oct. 12. Matheus Gensler, Kekoa Wheeler, Jude Irons and Nate Conger each scored two goals in defeat for the Mustangs. SDA goalie Gavin Silberman had 14 saves. The loss followed a 10-2 league win against La Costa Canyon two days earlier in which Conger scored three goals and Wheeler had three goals and two assists. Gensler scored two goals and had one assist. Silberman had 14 saves and Dylan Herrera had three saves. The Mustangs improved to 2-1 in league and 17-6 overall for the season. Field hockey: Torrey Pines defeated San Dieguito Academy 5-0 in its Avocado League West opener on Oct. 11. Sophia LeRose led the Falcons with two goals and Kristin Bitter and Ryan Poe each scored one goal and had one assist. The Falcons improved to 1-0 in league and 10-6 overall for the season and the Mustangs fell to 0-2 in league and 7-7 overall for the season.

lanes of traffic to get on and off the freeway. This improvement was initiated after the City Council agreed to pay $50,000 for an engineering study to see if there was enough room to accommodate the additional lanes and the necessary ramps to access the proposed widening. The answer from Caltrans was yes, but the ramp was tight on the NW quadrant, but doable. With that, application was made. Today we can see the beginnings of the much larger I-5 improvements that involve all of the intersections and bridges north of Solana Beach all the way through Oceanside. The widening of the bridges over lagoons and then under or over all other roadways is to accommodate more lanes in each direction, will also need changes to the on and off ramps. What we see now at the San Eljio Lagoon is just the start of what will be happening as the freeway widens across every lagoon and roadway north of Solana Beach. One ray of hope for Solana Beach was the promise of “No taking of private property” along the freeway as our city leaders had demanded and was finally acknowledged by Caltrans and SANDAG back when all this freeway widening was first discussed and decisions were being made, would be kept. Solana Beach officials representing the city recited “the promise” to all the public agencies and key officials involved with transportation issues in North County many, many times over at all the meetings they attended. At first we were told that it was too environmentally sensitive to consider moving the Solana Beach freeway section north of Lomas Santa Fe farther to the west and also a dual widening that would also have condemned private homes along with the eastern side of I-5 in Santa Fe Hills. Fortunately, they finally conceded and kept their promise as we can see today. The massive grading on the western side of I-5 in Solana Beach and farther north on the eastern side of Manchester Avenue will all be part of a new much bigger, wider bridge spanning the San Elijo Lagoon that will provide for cars, buses, trucks, and an underpass for pedestrians and bicycles. Well, it will take years to get the entire I-5 corridor completed but at least it is in progress and Solana Beach is “home free” for now with our Lomas Santa Fe interchange already built with even more overpass expansion room for the future. Marion Dodson


OPINION

www.delmartimes.net

One View GORDON CLANTON

One hundred columns but who’s counting?

T

his is my 100th column for the Del Mar Times and its sister papers. Before that, I wrote more than 300 columns for other newspapers. At all these posts, I have tried to illuminate local and regional politics, finding drama and comedy where I can. Some pieces read like a gossip column, with the names of a dozen political celebrities in boldface. Some columns celebrate the natural environment and urge its preservation. I grew up in Louisiana and so first appreciated politics as an especially rowdy form of entertainment long before I understood what is at stake — namely, everything. Politics then was football for old guys in suits. When the adult daughter of a best friend learned that I write a column on politics and the environment, she said that she was very interested in the environment but totally uninterested in politics — as though the two have nothing to do with each other. There’s a lot of that going around. When you write in and for a community for more than 30 years, you eventually offend almost everyone you know. When someone tells me, “I agree with most of what you say,” or even, “I almost always agree with your columns,” I cannot

help but wonder what they are not telling me about columns that missed the mark for them. I always love it when someone tells me, “I read your column every week.” This is high praise indeed considering that I typically write only one column per month. Overheard at a Torrey Pines Community Planning Group meeting: “How can Gordon Clanton write about planning group issues if he does not attend our meetings?” Reply: ”Gordon has spies everywhere.” Well, not spies exactly, but I do have friends, activists of various sorts, who help me take the pulse of our community. They attend council meetings, community planning groups, school boards, the Del Mar Planning Commission and Design Review Board, among others. I am deeply in their debt, but I won’t thank them by name. You know who you are. I couldn’t do this without you. Overhead in Del Mar: “Have you seen Gordon Clanton’s last column?” Reply: “I certainly hope so.” — Gordon Clanton teaches sociology at San Diego State University. He welcomes comments at gclanton@mail.sdsu.edu

FROM LETTERS, A18 still allow some building for affordable housing and profit? The residents not living in the north end think Watermark is the solution that does not affect them. Wrong! Few affordable units will be included in this massive structure. Many more are needed. Watermark sets the standard for more massive buildings throughout the city. How unfair to north Del Mar residents when downtown residents feel protected by Prop B – what about the rest of the city – let them not be protected. Development on the north end of town will set the standard for future development in downtown Del Mar. Watermark provides only a small number of affordable units – more will be needed… Unbelievable how Del Mar residents fake their concern for affordable housing needs being so very important in Del Mar and did not attempt to put any units at City Hall development. What? Not in your backyards. Just wait more development will be coming to a lot near you. Will you let Watermark set the standard of the new development in Del Mar. Watermark: All usable lot covered with building and pavement, minimal Jimmy Durante setback, open space views from Heather Lane will be blocked by apartment walls, (notice how Watermark sales team does not show any views from the southeast), story poles are needed to inform the public now. I challenge Watermark to a show of good faith and put up story poles to inform the residents of the reality of this monstrosity. Annette Wiesel

City knocks public out City of Del Mar Planning Department Public Hearing for Watermark (Oct.10) was most disturbingly highlighted when commissioner Nathan McCay exclaimed that the public present offered no understandable specific negative impacts concerning Watermark’s “Specific Plan” developments and DEIR, nor any substantiation. He then recommended the Planning Department should only rely on Watermark’s DEIR which the Planning Department already endorses. The concerned residents present did in fact articulate serious specific negative impacts that were simple to understand and rationally supported. However, Planning Commission Mr.

NORTH COAST - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - PAGE A19

FROM SPORTS, A15 25-21, 22-25, 15-9) league win against La Costa Canyon two days earlier in which Emily Fitzner had 14 kills, Kendra Ham had 13 kills and Jaden Whitmarsh had 11 kills. Dani Fornaciari had 10 kills and led the Falcons with seven blocks. McNulty had 25 assists, 16 digs and five blocks, and Fitzner had 23 assists. Jessi Lumsden led LCC with 15 kills, Morgan Lewis had 14 kills and Sophia Tulino had 12 kills. Caitlin Kikta had 41 assists. The Falcons improved to 7-0 in league and 22-3 overall for the season and the Mavericks fell to 5-2 in league and 15-9 overall for the season. ***** Canyon Crest Academy defeated San Dieguito Academy 3-1 (25-9, 22-25, 25-16, 25-18) in an Avocado League West match on Oct. 11. Evie Gonzalez and Whitley Ballard each had 10 kills to lead the Ravens. Olivia Lovenberg had 29 assists and Gracie Wood had 10 assists. Sarah Colla led SDA with 19 kills and 11 digs, and setters Savannah Hyndman and Faith Kelly each had 12 assists. The Ravens improved to 5-1 in league and 16-7 overall for the season and the Mustangs fell to 0-6 in league

McCay made it clear that our voices/comments would never be seriously contemplated. As a Del Mar citizen and others present, we could never imagine being so obliterated, discarded and disenfranchised from our government’s public process as they did. Obviously all citizens need now be on notice that our voices, comments, concerns and opinions might be listened to as part of a government process but not considered. With only three weeks remaining to understand hundreds of pages of DEIR, including Watermark’s Specific Plans for development and rezoning laws, is virtually impossible. Additionally, our city’s strategic fast track processing for approving Watermark is not only moving rapidly, it has also scheduled meetings during the holidays when many residents will be very busy and out of town. All of this is beyond the pale. Especially when our city knows fully well how concerning and egregious this development is among its residents. I recommend we band together, all residents who truly care and are concerned about our village-like town, Del Mar. We should not allow our city to so easily sweep us under the rug as they did at the Oct. 10 Planning Department Public Hearing. I recommend we all be part of an email broadcast informational network concerning Watermark. We should do all we can individually and we also need to band together in order to gain the attention and respect from our city to be allowed to participate in our government process. There is a community group in Del Mar, I know them well and they are seriously concerned about this situation. Stay involved, stay in touch. Send your email address and name to: delmarhillside@yahoo.com (Del Mar Hillside Community Association) Bree Beauchamp Del Mar Del Mar

A promise kept Some 20-plus years ago, Solana Beach took a big step to help improve our local freeway access and wisely chose to widen the overpass at the I-5 Lomas Santa Fe intersection which greatly facilitates our local access and exiting without crossing

and 15-12 overall for the season. Water polo: San Dieguito Academy had its three-game winning streak stopped as the Mustangs lost to Torrey Pines 10-9 in an Avocado League West game on Oct. 12. Matheus Gensler, Kekoa Wheeler, Jude Irons and Nate Conger each scored two goals in defeat for the Mustangs. SDA goalie Gavin Silberman had 14 saves. The loss followed a 10-2 league win against La Costa Canyon two days earlier in which Conger scored three goals and Wheeler had three goals and two assists. Gensler scored two goals and had one assist. Silberman had 14 saves and Dylan Herrera had three saves. The Mustangs improved to 2-1 in league and 17-6 overall for the season. Field hockey: Torrey Pines defeated San Dieguito Academy 5-0 in its Avocado League West opener on Oct. 11. Sophia LeRose led the Falcons with two goals and Kristin Bitter and Ryan Poe each scored one goal and had one assist. The Falcons improved to 1-0 in league and 10-6 overall for the season and the Mustangs fell to 0-2 in league and 7-7 overall for the season.

lanes of traffic to get on and off the freeway. This improvement was initiated after the City Council agreed to pay $50,000 for an engineering study to see if there was enough room to accommodate the additional lanes and the necessary ramps to access the proposed widening. The answer from Caltrans was yes, but the ramp was tight on the NW quadrant, but doable. With that, application was made. Today we can see the beginnings of the much larger I-5 improvements that involve all of the intersections and bridges north of Solana Beach all the way through Oceanside. The widening of the bridges over lagoons and then under or over all other roadways is to accommodate more lanes in each direction, will also need changes to the on and off ramps. What we see now at the San Eljio Lagoon is just the start of what will be happening as the freeway widens across every lagoon and roadway north of Solana Beach. One ray of hope for Solana Beach was the promise of “No taking of private property” along the freeway as our city leaders had demanded and was finally acknowledged by Caltrans and SANDAG back when all this freeway widening was first discussed and decisions were being made, would be kept. Solana Beach officials representing the city recited “the promise” to all the public agencies and key officials involved with transportation issues in North County many, many times over at all the meetings they attended. At first we were told that it was too environmentally sensitive to consider moving the Solana Beach freeway section north of Lomas Santa Fe farther to the west and also a dual widening that would also have condemned private homes along with the eastern side of I-5 in Santa Fe Hills. Fortunately, they finally conceded and kept their promise as we can see today. The massive grading on the western side of I-5 in Solana Beach and farther north on the eastern side of Manchester Avenue will all be part of a new much bigger, wider bridge spanning the San Elijo Lagoon that will provide for cars, buses, trucks, and an underpass for pedestrians and bicycles. Well, it will take years to get the entire I-5 corridor completed but at least it is in progress and Solana Beach is “home free” for now with our Lomas Santa Fe interchange already built with even more overpass expansion room for the future. Marion Dodson


www.delmartimes.net

PAGE A20 - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - NORTH COAST

FROM RENTALS, A1 over the past three years, the issue growing into perhaps the most divisive in the city’s recent history, entrenched as a seemingly irreconcilable conflict between property rights and the sharing economy on one side and the sanctity of Del Mar’s residential character on the other. The council’s landmark decision in April — that Del Mar’s 40-year-old planning documents do not allow the kind of high-turnover rentals made possible by AirBnB, VRBO and other online platforms in any residential zone except for a two-block stretch of Stratford Court — did little to quiet the fracas. When the regulations started to take shape this summer, a group of disgruntled homeowners immediately filed suit in state court. And when the ordinance reached the city planning commission last month, its five members refused to sign off, saying the 7/28 timeframe is too restrictive and that the overall approach lacks a basis in data. Coastal Commission staff raised similar concerns in a letter sent the day before the planning commission’s Sept. 12 hearing, recommending that rentals be allowed for less than seven days at a time and that the 28-day cap be raised to 60 or 90 days. Those critiques added fuel to the debate heading into the council’s Oct. 16 hearing. Nearly 120 letters poured into city hall and more than 40 people testified. STR proponents

framed their arguments around Del Mar’s long history of rentals as a linchpin of tourism, and the Coastal Act’s mandate to guarantee diverse access to the beach. Supporters of the ordinance railed against the hundreds of de facto hotels that have proliferated throughout the city, with most preferring to see STRs be banished altogether but content with the 7/28 framework as a tolerable compromise. After nearly two hours of exhaustive testimony, the council remained unmoved. “There are not a lot of issues that are worth dying on the fence for, but there are some,” said Councilman Dwight Worden, who has set the course on the council’s direction on STRs. “In Del Mar, protecting the integrity of our Community Plan’s primary directive — to protect our residential neighborhoods — that is one that’s worth dying on the fence for.” As he has since April, Mayor Terry Sinnott cast the dissenting vote. “This proposal to me is not a compromise,” he said. “I’ve just got a tremendous amount of input from a lot of folks that this is not the right way to go. We can’t be doing something that’s going to split the community and I’m afraid this is.” Central to the planning commission’s rebuke last month: a unanimous recommendation to postpone the ordinance for a year in order to investigate the economic and neighborhood impacts of short-term

rentals. While councilmembers weren’t entirely hostile to gathering more data, they had little interest in further delay and second-guessing. “It’s time for us to put a stake in the ground, get the approvals started, go to the Coastal Commission,” said Councilman Dave Druker. “If we don’t start now, we’re never going to get there.” Review by the Coastal Commission isn’t expected before the end of this year. With the usual back-and-forth revisions, it could be early summer before Del Mar’s ordinance takes effect. The Coastal Commission has ruled on dozens of STR policies across the state over the past decade —typically, in favor of looser restrictions than what Del Mar is proposing. The agency does not, however, have an explicit position on vacation rentals, and the latest round of commissioner appointments appears to have shifted the balance in the other direction. While that bureaucratic tussle plays out, Del Mar will be girding for a protracted and pricy battle in San Diego Superior Court. Despite legal expenses on pace to far exceed the city’s budget, several residents at this week’s hearing urged the council not to back down from litigation — a call that the council heeded. “I’m a woman who was elected to preserve the values of the residential community,” Councilwoman Sherryl Parks. “I will be brave and stand up to these threatening, ominous lawsuits.”

FROM SDUHSD, A1 district maps — such as geographical boundaries, attendance boundaries and the district’s demographics. Salt went over the district’s existing demographics: with about 165,915 residents, 75 percent are white, 10 percent Latino, 12 percent Asian American and 1 percent African American. The district’s CVAP, the citizen voting age population, includes 119,226 who are citizens and over the age of 18. Of that group, 80 percent are white, 8 percent Latino, 10 percent Asian or Pacific Islander and 1 percent African American. Salt said one of the goals of the map considerations would be to have one of those populations’ CVAP be able to grow in at least one district. Salt said when looking at the map of the district as a whole, the Latino population’s distribution across the district is not concentrated in any one area but the Asian community is congregated more in the southern part of the district. “If there was a map created that grouped that area together, you’d like to see an increase in Asian CVAP percentage over the 10 to 12 percent that the current rate is,” Salt said. The district’s demographer will take all of that data and input into consideration when putting together the maps. Salt recommended the district come up with three to four potential maps and encouraged the public to be involved in the open process: “We want to hear your comments,” he said. Salt stressed that the process does not change school attendance boundaries or how the district is governed, it remains one district with common goals and challenges. “The concerns I’ve heard from other parents are that the board would start operating as individual entities representing their own district. I know that would be a concern for the whole district if that started happening,” SDUHSD Board President Amy Herman said. “As we make these decisions, we need to be reinsuring the public that that’s not how our board governs and remembering as board members are elected hopefully the tradition and practice will be that we make decisions for the whole district no matter what area we actually live in.”

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NORTH COAST - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - PAGE A21

FROM FENCING, A17 electric fencing strips for bouting plus six wooden strips with a gym mirror for fencing classes and footwork. With an open window to the academy’s fencing floor, people passing by from the AMC La Jolla Movie Theater and other nearby businesses are able to check out what the academy is all about. Guy has carefully built a roster of several internationally-acclaimed coaches with championship backgrounds and the school also has a great relationship with UC San Diego. “UC San Diego Fencing is pretty strong on the international level. It’s definitely one of the best in the United States and the second best in the state of California after Stanford,” Guy said. In addition to students being recruited to excellent universities, Guy said fencing has great physical and mental benefits. Guy said another name for fencing is “physical chess”— athletes must use strategies and think about how to outsmart your opponent in a condensed amount of time. That critical thinking time crunch can be useful in other endeavors, such as in starndardized testing like SATs and ACTs.

FROM CCA, A1 renewable sources and deliver it on SDG&E lines. “Delay is the currency of the oil and gas industries,” said Nicole Capretz of the Climate Action Campaign. “It’s why we’re in the mess we are in today. We are witnessing climate change now.” Several other North County cities, including Carlsbad, Encinitas and Del Mar, agreed earlier this year to share the expense of a year-long regional study expected to cost about $100,000 that will look at the feasibility of forming a joint powers authority to operate a CCA. So far there are 13 CCAs in California, most in Northern California and nearly all formed since 2010. In May, Solana Beach signed contracts with two private companies — The Energy Authority (TEA) and Calpine Energy Solutions — to set up and

“They can train their brains to work faster. A good student is a good fencer and a good fencer is a good student,” Guy said, noting it helps kids to be focused, concentrated and to succeed. “My philosophy as a coach is what my old coach used to say to me. I don’t want to create a good fencer, I want to create good people good citizens, good human beings. If they become a good fencer on top of all of that, it’s just icing on the cake for me.” Kids from La Jolla Fencing have progressed quickly — performing well in regional tournaments and bringing home hardware. One student started only a few months ago and got second in regionals under-12. Local fencers will compete in the US Open in Kansas City this month, the Junior Olympics in February and National Championships in July in St. Louis. “My goal is for our young students to shine in the next Olympics,” Guy said. “I would love to see some of our local kids represent our country in 2028 when the Olympics are held in Los Angeles. It’s possible. Our students are already shining.” La Jolla Fencing Academy provides equipment for free for the first three months. For more information, visit lajollafencingacademy.com

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PAGE A22 - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - NORTH COAST

Pacific Ridge students aid in Puerto Rico recovery Nearly eight tons of supplies were delivered to Puerto Rico recently, thanks to a supply drive held by Pacific Ridge School and Gilead Sciences. In just a week, the school and the biopharmaceutical company collected more than 10,000 items to ship to the hurricane ravaged island. Pacific Ridge junior Spencer Jones spent a year and a half living on the Caribbean island with his family and said he considers the people there like a second family. Jones’ father, Geoff Jones, is the Associate Director of Quality Control at Gilead Sciences. When Spencer heard about the supply drive being held at Gilead, he immediately asked for help from the

Pacific Ridge community. The response was astounding. “Every day was like Christmas,” Jones said. Each afternoon around lunch time, he would visit the areas designated as drop-off points and would be overwhelmed by the response from students and their families. More than 16,000 pounds of donations are en route to Puerto Rico right now. Many employees at Gilead Sciences have relatives in Puerto Rico and spent hours collecting and taking inventory of the items. “We are very proud to support the efforts by Spencer and everyone at the Pacific Ridge School who volunteered their time and resources to help with this initiative to

FROM PARK, A3 gophers in yards and Aberle said she is always clearing trash from the trails and is often seen riding her tractor making sure the trails are draining properly after a rain storm. “Elizabeth epitomizes the meaning of living on the Mesa,” O’Rourke said. “Her love of family, animals and preservation of this beautiful area many now call home is central to her way of life.” While no one has a bad word to say about Rabbitt, Del Mar Mesa Community Planning Board members were caught off-guard last month when they found out that the park had been officially named without their involvement. At the planning group’s Oct. 12 meeting, Chair Gary Levitt said that it was “inappropriate” to single out any one person for the park to be named after when so many have contributed to a “gigantic planning effort” for Del Mar Mesa community and the park; thousands of volunteer hours stretching back over 28 years. He said the planning board pushed for the park design in 2004 and when the funding was available in 2008, the board continued pushing the city until it finally broke ground last year. Levitt said he was frustrated that the board was then ignored in the naming process. “This has split the community over an issue that should’ve brought the community together,” Levitt said. In a 6-2 vote with two abstentions, including Rabbitt who sits on the board, the board approved sending a letter to the city asking for an investigation into the naming process, including whether there was proper noticing of the city Park and Recreation board meeting. The letter questioned why the group associated with the design, planning and financing was not involved

FROM DACA, A3 create or replace the DACA program, the current program would cease to exist within six months or by March 2018. As stated in the board’s resolution, the announcement reportedly caused “panic and distress” in the DACA-eligible community and for many undocumented students and families throughout California. Some undocumented students were even discouraged from attending school. SBSD board member Vicki King was responsible for bringing the resolution before the board. She said she hadn’t heard of the fear and distress occurring within the Solana Beach district but she wanted to get in front of it. “When I heard that this had happened, it was a call to action for me,” King said. “Every

assist families in Puerto Rico,” said Carmilia Jimenez, senior research scientist of Biologics Analytical Operations at Gilead Sciences. “We hope these supplies provide much needed resources to those in need.” More than 85 percent of the devastated island is still lacking power, which is why Spencer used monetary gifts to buy two generators. Pacific Ridge families also donated construction supplies, including a chainsaw, to speed up the rebuilding efforts. “You can’t chop up a fallen tree without tools or on an empty stomach,” he said. Other donated items include food, water, baby supplies, toiletries and pet

supplies. The emergency relief provisions are being shipped to a church in Bayamon, which is in the north, and to another church in Manatí, where they will be distributed to citizens. Head of School Dr. Bob Ogle said Jones’ efforts exemplify the Pacific Ridge mission. “Part of our school’s mission is to encourage global perspective and action. Spencer and the entire community have taken the initiative to help the Puerto Rican people who are facing a major crisis,” Dr. Ogle said. On Oct. 11, San Juan Mayor Carmen Yulín Cruz asked the international community to send potable water to

counter the spread of disease. Leptospirosis is the suspected cause of four deaths in Puerto Rico, which is contracted through contaminated drinking water. There are 10 more suspected cases. The shipment from Pacific Ridge and Gilead includes 15 pallets of supplies, with four pallets full of potable drinking water and water filters. Jones said he hopes the shipment will help the recovery efforts and aid the people who showed him such warmth as a child. “I hope it can give them one less thing to worry about and help them take care of their kids,” he said.

in the process and why the parks department failed to advise that petitioners obtain planning board support. “I think our neighbors went about it in good faith and I think it’s the city that dropped the ball and did not advise them to get community-wide support,” board member Lisa Ross said. At a “contentious” Ocean Air Recreation Council meeting in September, Levitt and others objected to the process and naming the park after Rabbitt, however, the council did not take action to place the item on a future agenda. The Oct. 12 planning board meeting was also stressful and tense, as Rabbitt sat listening to the debate between community members and the board. One of the first people O’Rourke contacted about his proposal to name the park after Rabbitt was Levitt — in an October 2016 email. At the time, Levitt replied back that his impression was that Rabbitt would appreciate the thought but not like the idea and stated that others who played a larger part may have earned the consideration. He suggested that O’Rourke bring his idea before the board. O’Rourke interpreted that email as the board not being interested in his proposal and so he pursued his efforts through the city Parks and Recreation Department. That process included support from the local rec council (Ocean Air), Community Parks I Area Committee and then to the city Park and Recreation board. The name was approved in May. O’Rourke said throughout the process he asked multiple times if he had to go to the planning board and the answer was always no. “I did not exclude the group in any way. I was simply told it was not part of the process,” O’Rourke said, noting that the planning board

had the time to go through the same process to propose a name for the park but never took action. To gather community support for his proposal, O’Rourke posted a petition on a big piece of plywood in front of the park and posted on Nextdoor.com. Rabbitt said she was not involved in the effort. “I was speechless and didn’t know what to think,” Rabbitt said of when she got a call from O’Rourke telling her about his plans. “I was honored and respected by the care of my neighbors, it meant so much to me.” In January, Rabbitt said board member Lisa Ross asked her to refuse the naming and stop the process but Rabbitt said she felt uncomfortable asking her friends to stop what they had initiated. Rabbitt said she told Ross that she would not object or have her feelings hurt if another name was proposed and selected by the board. O’Rourke moved on through the process — in November 2016, the Ocean Air Recreation Council voted to recommend approval of the name and the name moved onto the Community Parks I Area Committee in March and then finally to the city Park and Recreation Board for approval. “I made the incorrect assumption that at some point it would come back to our planning board,” Levitt said. Levitt said he received no notice of the continuing process or meetings and didn’t find out that the park had been officially named until last month. Those who have been members of the planning board for 20 years, such as Paul Metcalf and James Besemer, also said they never heard anything about the naming effort. “This is not against Elizabeth,” Levitt said. “Elizabeth is my friend and my neighbor. It’s

about the process and the process that has excluded people that have been so involved in this community. It’s not about them wanting their name, it’s about them being asked their opinion and given a chance to give an option and I am upset about it. I am so frustrated about this experience that I think this is my last meeting as a chair. I’ve sat in this chair for 12 years and eight before that trying to work at creating a community and this is what I get?” Levitt said he wanted there to be some acknowledgment of community volunteers who helped build Del Mar Mesa, who fought “tooth and nail” to stop developers from filling canyons and for a special community with no streetlights and decomposed granite trails instead of sidewalks, fences with gates in front of every home. “It was so insulting when one of our neighbors called us an ineffective planning group,” Levitt said. O’Rourke said no one is discounting the work that the planning board has done for the community and he has also offered to spearhead an effort to honor the committee and other volunteers with plaques at the park. He said he thinks the Mesa is about more than the fact that they don’t have sidewalks or streetlights —his neighbor Elizabeth, her farm, personality, passion and acceptance of new neighbors is why they chose to honor her and, as far as he knows, he was successful in his efforts. He said the signs for Elizabeth S. Rabbit Community Park are already being made up. “She’s a fantastic lady, a genuine and loving person. Who is more deserving than her? I haven’t heard a single name,” O’Rourke said. “If there’s an effort to rename the park I’m going to be there to make sure that doesn’t happen.”

student should come to school without fear and with faith in our schools. It was a great opportunity for our district to say how much we embrace diversity. I believe as a school board member that diversity makes a richer learning environment.” In the Solana Beach School District, students come from 46 different countries and speak more than 36 different languages, Decker said. Thirty-percent of students come from a home where a language other than English is spoken. Per the resolution, there are no fewer than four separate bills pending in Congress to address the DACA program, including the bipartisan “DREAM Act,” sponsored by Senators Lindsey Graham (R-SC) and Richard Durbin (D-IL) to expand eligibility for conditional residency to 1.8 million immigrants, including all DACA recipients, who entered the United

States before the age of 18 and who have been in the country longer than four years. The Republican-sponsored “Recognizing America’s Children Act,” would provide conditional residency for immigrants who arrived in this country before the age of 16 and who have been in the country for five years. “It is crucial that the Solana Beach School District make a strong statement and push for legislation without concessions for a border wall or other unnecessary border enhancements,” said Edward Sifuentes, senior communications strategist for the ACLU of San Diego and Imperial Counties. “DACA recipients were brought into the U.S. as children and the United States is the only country they know. California is their home. Solana Beach is their home. We cannot sit back and allow this administration to rip them away from their

home, from the life they've already built here. On behalf of the ACLU, we want to thank the Solana Beach School District board for its support of this resolution and for standing with our DACA recipients.” In King’s mind, the resolution was a way that their “small little coastal Southern California school district” could take action and send an important message to Congress and the President. King said she was happy that her follow board members unanimously supported her efforts. “We just confirmed what I always thought to be true about the Solana Beach School District, that we embrace every student and all cultures that come to our schools,” said King, encouraging others to take action and contact their representatives to make their opinions known on this issue.


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NORTH COAST - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - PAGE A23


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PAGE A24 - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - NORTH COAST

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Birds of a Feather: Rooted in Flight Gala celebrated San Elijo Lagoon Conservancy’s 30th Anniversary. B11

‘Mystifique’: a unique take on Poe works to haunt CCA campus. B3 Section B

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October 19, 2017

Breeders’ Cup Festival offers a variety of unique events BY KELLEY CARLSON The Breeders’ Cup World Thoroughbred Championships isn’t just a two-day showcase of the top thoroughbred racehorses in training. It has evolved to include a weeklong series of events that highlight the best of the host site’s offerings, and this year’s Breeders’ Cup Festival at Del Mar is the biggest one yet. “We want to show people what makes San Diego unique and entertain them,” said Craig Dado, executive vice president and chief marketing officer of the Del Mar Thoroughbred Club. About 25 events are planned in Del Mar and nearby locations, kicking off with Jake’s 35th Annual Beach Fun Run and Breeders’ Cup Breeze Presented by San Diego Surf Cup on Oct. 28. The 3.2-mile race in the sand will end with a party at Jake’s Del Mar, where there will be live music, Polynesian entertainment, food and beverages, and a raffle that benefits local charities. “We’re hoping to get a nice mix of locals and Breeders’ Cup folks,” Dado said. Many of the Breeders’ Cup Festival activities will be based at Barn at the Beach, a 7,000-square-foot luxury tent set up on the grass in Powerhouse Park that will accommodate 500 people. Among the events scheduled are Best at the Barn on Nov. 2, a tasting event hosted by the Del Mar Village Association that will feature some of the top chefs in San Diego County; Bash at the Beach on Nov. 3, a party after the races that benefits Thoroughbred Charities of America; and

the Breeders’ Cup Viewing Party on Nov. 4, with post-race entertainment. On Nov. 1, retired sportscaster Dick Enberg, a La Jolla resident who hosted the first seven Breeders’ Cups on NBC, will be honored with the Racing Excellence Award at the Fairmont Grand Del Mar. Jockeys Gary Stevens and Chris McCarron will be among the speakers, along with former basketball star Bill Walton and former San Diego State University basketball coach Steve Fisher. The gala will benefit the Boys & Girls Clubs of San Dieguito. It’s a “lifetime achievement award with a Breeders’ Cup flair,” Dado noted. Additional highlights during the festival include: •Ponies & Poker (Oct. 31-Nov. 2): Amateur and professional poker players, along with racing fans, athletes and celebrities, will gather at Ocean’s Eleven Casino in Oceanside for a Texas Hold ‘Em-style tournament and a chance to win $100,000. •Breeders’ Cup Belly-Up Concert Series (Nov. 1-4): Performances by Bret Michaels of Poison, the B-52s and ’80s cover band Tainted Love with DJ Scotto are slated. •La Jolla Art Walk (Nov. 3): Guests can meander through galleries on a self-guided walking tour through the Village. •Art of the Horse (Through Nov. 4): Twenty life-size, fiberglass horse statues created by local artists are displayed throughout San Diego. For more information about these and other events, go to breederscupfestival.com.

KELLEY CARLSON

Arrogate (left) defeated California Chrome in the 2016 Breeders' Cup Classic at Santa Anita Park in Arcadia. He is expected to return to defend his title this year at Del Mar.

PROPERTIES

Del Mar racetrack is ready to host the 2017 Breeders' Cup World Thoroughbred Championships.

Something for everyone:

2017 Breeders’ Cup and Bing Crosby fall racing season set to begin BY KELLEY CARLSON After many months of planning and prepping, the stage has been set for the 34th annual Breeders’ Cup World Thoroughbred Championships to come to Del Mar. It’s finally showtime. One of thoroughbred racing’s biggest events, the Breeders’ Cup consists of 13 Grade I races with purses and awards totaling more than $28 million. This year’s edition will be hosted by the seaside oval for the first time, slated for Nov. 3 and 4 as part of the fall meet’s opening weekend. It will be likely be a new experience for many people, predicted Craig Dado, executive vice president and chief marketing officer of the Del Mar Thoroughbred Club. He said that based on reports as of early October, 76 percent of ticket buyers are from outside Southern California, and many of them are likely East Coast fans who go to Saratoga in New York rather than Del Mar in the summer. “We’re going to blow everyone away with what we have to offer,” Dado said. “Between the weather, the beaches, the restaurants … there’s never been a (Breeders’ Cup) host site quite like Del Mar.” With the event expected to bring in an estimated $100 million to the area, the organizers are pulling out all the stops. They’re presenting a

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week’s worth of activities in Del Mar and the surrounding areas during the Breeders’ Cup Festival, which starts Oct. 28 and runs through Nov. 4. The track itself will open Nov. 1 and feature the return of the Hollywood Fashion Contest. Racegoers can vie for more than $3,500 in prizes by dressing up in the categories of Most Glamorous, Best Dressed Couple or Debonair Man, and Best Celebrity Look-alike or Famous Character. The grand prize is a one-night stay in the Fairmont Grand Del Mar Hotel and dinner for two at Addison Restaurant, a package valued at more than $1,000. Sign-ups will be between 11 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. in the Plaza de Mexico. On Nov. 2, the racetrack will host a Breeders’ Cup Sneak Peek Day, with event merchandise for sale, special food and cocktails, an autograph session with jockeys and trainers, and an opportunity to win tickets for Friday and Saturday. For the championships on Nov. 3 and 4, ticket sales have been capped at 38,000 each day. As of early October, the majority of tickets were sold out, Dado said, although there may be still be some available for the infield or the two-story, luxury chalets in the Seaside Concert Area. He added that all tickets must be bought ahead of time, and walkups will not be permitted. Parking on site will only be

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permitted for those who have already bought passes, which are now sold out. Dado said parking services will be offered by select host hotels, the British Bus Co. at the Solana Beach train station, Uber and Lyft, and there are three off-site parking locations that will offer complimentary shuttles for ticket holders - Del Mar Horse Park (14550 El Camino Real, Del Mar), MiraCosta College’s San Elijo campus (3333 Manchester Ave., Cardiff) and the Kilroy Realty Park & Ride (3633 Kilroy Driveway, San Diego). Those who attend the Breeders’ Cup will watch the best horses in training compete for year-end honors, including Horse of the Year in the $6 million Breeders’ Cup Classic. The 2017 edition of the Classic is expected to feature last year’s winner, Arrogate, who will take on top-ranked older horse Gun Runner and TVG Pacific Classic winner Collected. There will also be a handful of horses with local connections competing during the two days, including Finest City, last year’s Breeders’ Cup Filly & Mare Sprint winner who is owned by Tyler and Wayne Seltzer of Rancho Santa Fe; and West Coast, a Classic contender and emerging 3-year-old star who is owned by Rancho Santa Fe’s Gary and Mary West. Post-Breeders’ Cup SEE RACING, B9

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PAGE B2 - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - NORTH COAST

African Americans in Thoroughbred racing history lecture Nov. 1 at DM Library The Friends of the Del Mar Library will host a presentation by local educator, singer-songwriter and storyteller Ross Moore on “African Americans in Thoroughbred Racing: Stories of America’s First Star Athletes” on Wednesday, Nov. 1st at 1:30 p.m. at Del Mar Branch Library. This program focuses on the largely unknown stories of America’s first star athletes, African American jockeys, in what was the most popular sport in the United States, 200 years before Jackie Robinson broke the “color barrier.” Tracing origins to West Africa, learn about the rise of slave grooms and trainers, and then slave jockeys in the time of George Washington. Hear about America’s first true national sporting event, a match race that drew over 50,000 people, and the two slaves who competed that day. Meet Simon, a slave who defeated Andrew Jackson’s horses in nine different races. Then discover the jockeys who dominated the early Kentucky Derbies,

including Isaac Murphy, who many still believe was the greatest jockey of all, and Jimmy Winkfield, the “Forrest Gump” of horse racing, who was a star in America and Europe but then had to escape the Russian Revolution, the Nazi Occupation of France, and finally the bigotry of Jim Crow. Presenter Ross Moore was the Museum Educator at the Kentucky Derby Museum for 12 years. The museum did extensive research into the then unknown stories of early African American jockeys in the Kentucky Derby, and also worked closely with Ed Hotaling, author of the groundbreaking book, The Great Black Jockeys. The Del Mar Branch Library is located at 1309 Camino Del Mar. For more information, call the library at (858) 755-1666. For information about San Diego County Library and other events, visit www.sdcl.org.

Book sale benefit to be held in Solana Beach Oct. 21 Title Wave Bookstore will hold a huge sidewalk book sale on Saturday, Oct. 21, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in front of Earl Warren Middle School and Solana Beach Library. The sale will include hundreds of “like new” children books. These books will make perfect gifts for the holidays. Additionally, some of them have Halloween, Thanksgiving, Hanukkah and Christmas themes.

The sale will also feature many quality books for teens and adults. Look for the sale rack of paperback books at 5 for $1. Friends of Solana Beach Library is a nonprofit organization and all proceeds from the sale will pay for programs for all ages at the Solana Beach Library. Please visit www.FriendsOfSolanaBeachLibrary.org

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CCA films screened at All-American High School Film Fest Canyon Crest Academy’s Envision Cinema and CCA-TV had a great showing at the All-American High School Film Festival in New York City on Oct. 4-6. Considered the world's largest high school film festival, six films and videos from Canyon Crest Academy were featured as official selections. Additionally, three CCA filmmakers were finalists in the Refinery 29 “2020” female filmmakers competition. The Refinery “2020” contest asked female filmmakers to imagine the world in 2020, focusing on a hot button topic. Katie Laliotis (class of 2017), Melanie An and Campbell Moore's documentary film from spring 2017 focused on Planned Parenthood. Three CCA juniors made the trip to New York with CCA Envision

GLORIA GOLDSTEIN

Three CCA juniors, Reed Martin, Timothy Zhang and Melanie An, at the All-American High School Film Festival in New York with CCA Envision Cinema Coordinator Mark Raines. Cinema Coordinator Mark Raines. At the festival, Reed Martin, Melanie An and Timothy Zhang participated in an invitational short film competition as part of the festival, produced over three days in New York City. CCA’s invitational competition film titled "The Last Dance," as well as the Refinery “2020” film will be online soon at envisioncinema.com

At the festival, Reed Martin, Melanie An and Timothy Zhang participated in an invitational short film competition, produced over three days in New York City.


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NORTH COAST - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - PAGE B3

Director Blake McCarty works with the cast of “Mystifique.”

COURTESY

‘Mystifique’: A unique take on Poe works to haunt CCA campus BY KAREN BILLING Canyon Crest Academy’s Envision Theatre Arts performers will interpret the fantastic terrors of the works of Edgar Allan Poe through a “macabre masquerade” of acting, movement, music, rhythmic gymnastics, tap dancing and even puppets. “Mystifique,” a devised performance created in partnership with Blindspot Collective and Diversionary Theatre, will be staged on Oct. 27-28 at 7 p.m. and Nov 2-4 and Nov. 7-9 at 7 p.m. While the performers rehearse on stage, the piece will be performed in a “mysterious location on the Canyon Crest campus.” Jeannine Marquie, the theatre coordinator at CCA, said that Poe was a perfect fit for both the time of year with his Halloween-y, gothic romantic aesthetic not to mention the call-out to CCA’s mascot: The Raven. Marquie keeps an eye on what is happening in the arts and all forms of theater opportunities for her students and she was excited about the idea of students doing devised theatre, a form of theatre in which the script and show is created through a collaboration of the performers and director. “The last several years I’ve been building the program with traditional theater. This gives kids an opportunity to do something different than most high schools would ever do,” Marquie said. “The idea to devise a piece was not something I’d ever done.” For “Mystifique,” she brought in directors Blake McCarty and Skyler Sullivan. Sullivan, the education associate for Diversionary Theatre in San Diego, is a veteran teaching artist. At CCA he has worked with students as a guest artist in clown and physical comedy and in voice training —“Mystifique” is his first time as a director of an after-school piece. McCarty, a performance and multimedia artist and educator, is the executive artistic director of Blindspot Collective, a performing arts nonprofit that looks to develop new work and encourage new perspectives — Sullivan and Marquie are members of the Blindspot Board of Directors. McCarty has been working with CCA since 2014 and has introduced students to many different theater styles such as ethnodrama or verbatim theatre work around social issues such as mental health and immigration. In 2015, he developed “Hall Pass” for CCA which represented a style of theater in which the show was staged at different areas of the school campus and audience members choose their own experience. For the auditions for “Mystifique,” students were challenged to come up with two minutes of content for the show and a cast of 22 was

selected, each bringing something totally unique to the production. “The cast has so many distinct, special and wonderful skills,” McCarty said. The first two weeks of rehearsals for the show were idea generation. The directors gave the students 15 different Poe stories and poems and asked them to let their creativity run wild. They were asked to stay true to Poe’s texts but interpret it in their own way, such as by composing their own songs, both instrumental and voice, or choreographing movements and dance. “It’s the most unique of all of the shows that I’ve worked on,” said senior cast member Ally Martin. In rehearsals the cast worked in small groups and then came together to share their ideas –with constructive feedback some ideas were kept, some scraped and the directors recorded all ideas because the person who came up with the concept wasn’t always the one selected to perform it. “I felt like the directors really incorporated all of the things we like to do. I’m into stage combat, so they let me bring that into the ‘Tell-Tale Heart,’” Ally said. From all of those ideas, Sullivan and McCarty created the bones for the script, distilling, editing and sequencing the best 10. “It’s a really eclectic show, the performance modes and styles are all so diverse,” said senior cast member Nicole From. “All disciplines are represented.” The show is structured around Poe’s “The Masque of Red Death” — in the narrative there is a masquerade ball and guests travel through seven rooms. Within the piece, viewers will travel through different scenes or modes based on Poe tales and poems. The poem “The Bells” is interpreted by a vocal symphony and “The Tell-Tale Heart” is told with shadow puppets. For “The Cask of Amontillado,” the ensemble brings to life a carnival scene where a man gets buried alive. At rehearsal on Oct. 11, a couple weeks out from opening night, McCarty was still devising the movements of the players on stage during the mode of the poem “Annabel Lee,” figuring out how the performers would evoke the wind or waves of “a tomb by the side of the sea” as death comes for the doomed Annabel. “Who wants to be death?” McCarty asked and eight willing hands plunged into the air. The sequence and set of the show may still be shrouded in mystery, but the content is definitely for mature audiences, McCarty said, as much of Poe’s work is grizzly and gruesome and the dark writer found “a sense of joy in the macabre.” For tickets or more information, visit cca-envision.org.

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PAGE B4 - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - NORTH COAST

Aurora Capital provides a different way to think about life insurance costs

La Jolla Cultural Partners

Aurora Capital Alliance wants people to know there are more options out there for them when it comes to life insurance. The decade-old, Rancho Santa Fe-based premium finance company works with advisers and their clients across the country in the design, implementation and administration of the financing of large life insurance premiums. Alex Bellini, founder of Aurora Capital, said he wants to raise awareness to let people know they don’t have to pay for their life insurance premiums in cash. “A lot of people don’t even know it’s an option,” he said. “It’s important to understand there are multiple ways to purchase, really, anything in the world. Life insurance is just another one of those assets.” To qualify for Aurora Capital’s services, individuals must have a net worth of more than $5 million, be insurable and be 85 years of age or younger. Bellini said it is similar to taking out an interest-only loan for a mortgage. The loans also do not show up on credit reports. Aurora Capital serves hundreds of people and thousands of advisers across the country. Because of its business-to-business model, the company typically works with advisers, who then work with their clients. The company’s services benefit clients, advisers and banks, Bellini said. He said advisers and lending institutions benefit from the selling of large life insurance policies, and banks benefit from the loan interest revenue. People who choose to finance with Aurora Capital can

COURTESY

The Aurora Capital team acquire large amounts of life insurance without having to pay cash. They leverage a bank’s money and only pay the interest, Bellini said. “We want to advocate for people to look at their options and understand there are more options available,” he said. “If they can benefit from this, fantastic. If not, at least they

know they made a well-informed decision.” For more information about Aurora Capital, located at 16081 San Dieguito Road, Suite E7, Rancho Santa Fe, 92091, 619-595-4832. Visit AuroraCapitalAlliance.com. — Business spotlights are developed through this newspaper’s advertising department in support of our advertisers.

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NORTH COAST - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - PAGE B5

North County ballet dancers place in international competition Ballet Arte dancers will compete next in the World Ballet Art Competition finals BY BRITTANY WOOLSEY Young North County ballet dancers are gaining recognition as being some of the top in their class after they competed and placed in the World Ballet Art Competition Grand Prix in Escondido in late September. The one male and seven female students, ranging from ages 10 through 16, from Ballet Arte in Solana Beach danced their way to positions ranging from fourth to first place at the competition Sept. 23 at the California Center for the Arts. The dancers typically begin their season in the fall, so Sara Viale, co-director of Ballet Arte and former professional dancer, said she was extremely proud of them for working hard so early on. "This competition was really hard for the kids because we worked them as much as we could,” she said. “We got to the competition, and they all did a great job.” This was the first time the dancers competed in the World Ballet because it is usually held too far away, Viale said. Ballet Arte usually competes in events such as the Youth America Grand Prix, she added. Dancers Marcus Taylor, Christine Marabella, Remy Loren, Alexis Marxer, Karaina Matic, Sophie Savas-Carsterns and Caitlyn Feddock each placed in

Sophie Savas Carstens, a Ballet Arte dancer. contemporary and modern categories in their age groups. In addition, the 14-year-old Ballet Arte studio as a whole was recognized as the best ensemble and best school in the competition. Viale's co-director, Erlends Zierminch, a former professional dancer who performed in the Latvian National Opera and Ballet Theatre and New York City Ballet, was also recognized as best teacher. Students, ranging in age from 3 to adults,

COURTESY

are taught discipline from the very start, which is a "quality that will help them throughout their life," Viale said. She said Ballet Arte stands out among other dance studios because she and Zierminch teach their students respect and love for the arts and mindfullness of others; prepare them for a professional career; and help them develop the neurological organization of the body to achieve the best possible coordination.

For adults, ballet can be a wonderful form of exercise and an outlet for stress and anxiety, Viale said. "[We have] the desire to share our knowledge and most of all our passion with a younger generation," she said. "In my opinion there is nothing like being on stage. To get there is hard, strenuous work, but the feeling of freedom and exhilarating joy that you get is hard to describe." The Ballet Arte dancers will compete in the World Ballet Art Competition finals in Niagara Falls, Canada on Nov. 11. Viale said she is excited for what this could mean for her students' careers. "These are like our kids," she said. "Most of them we've known since they were 5. We're so happy for them because their dreams are coming true." Viale, who studied ballet at the Academia di Danza Teatro Nuovo Torino and Academie de la dance Princess Grace in Monte Carlo, said it is not easy to make it as a professional dancer. She said watching her students fall in love with dance and dedicating themselves to the fullest is her favorite part of the job. "As a teacher, when the kids fall in love with dance and dedicate themselves to the fullest because it’s what they love to do, it’s a great accomplishment," Viale said. "To have some of our students join professional ballet schools like The School of American Ballet, San Francisco Ballet School, Joffrey Ballet, Miami City Ballet and more, it’s definitely a big plus." For more information about Ballet Arte, visit balletarte.com.

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PAGE B6 - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - NORTH COAST

Caregiver’s book has family insights on coping with Alzheimer’s BY JEANNE RAWDIN It’s called the Memory Disease, and it’s the new epidemic. Alzheimer’s and dementia are overtaking millions of seniors at alarming rates. Elizabeth Lonseth has written a book on the subject, “A Gradual Disappearance,” and she spoke about her family’s struggles with Memory Disease on Oct. 11 at the Oakmont Assisted Living Center in Pacific Beach. The audience included caregivers, seniors, family members and health professionals. Lonseth’s book recounts how she and her husband took the journey of caregiver four times over — first with her father, then with both of her husband’s parents, and finally with her mother — all who were diagnosed with dementia and Alzheimer’s. Throughout the story, Lonseth offers tips on the struggles that come with caregiving. She started her presentation with some staggering statistics: One in five people will die with Alzheimer’s disease or dementia. One in 10 people over age 65 have Alzheimer’s. Two out of three of those are women. Alzheimer’s is the fifth leading cause of death in the United States.

Her personal introduction to the disease occurred when her father was diagnosed with vascular dementia during the last two years of his life, occurring after 14 years of heart attacks and strokes. Lonseth was in her mid-30s, married, raising three children, and busy with a career in interior design. She recalls her regret and denial in accepting the sad situation. “It was heartbreaking to watch my father, a forest geneticist, function on the level of a child,” she recalled. “I was not as supportive of my mother as I should have been. Occasionally, I would give my mother a break, but I wish now I had done more.” Seven years later, the same reality hit full force again with her husband’s parents. “At first, my husband and I made the mistake of trying to correct his parents’ behavior and attempted to help them learn again what they had lost. That didn’t work. They only became frustrated and more agitated,” she said. So instead, the couple began coming alongside them and joining them in their reality.

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“We began to try to figure out where they were in their head at the moment — maybe 16 again, or in another part of the world,” she explained. “My cousin told me to ask them, ‘How old are you today?’ Their answers Author often gave us clues as to how Elizabeth to interact with them.” Lonseth And finally, it was her mother who got Alzheimer’s. She lost her motor skills as part of her disease, and Lonseth hired an in-home caregiver 20 hours a week. She learned to recruit family members and friends to help out, too. “A neighbor girl was hired to put mom’s dinner in the microwave and chat with her while she ate,” Lonseth related. “As we needed more help, a friend of my daughter’s become the afternoon and evening caregiver. Occasionally, she would take mom to church. Two of my daughters took turns living with their grandma so the night shift and weekends were covered. I came in every Thursday to give everyone a break.” (She had to take a plane flight weekly to do so.) Throughout all the years of caregiving — however grueling — Lonseth said she also learned a lot about how to handle what seemed like a hopeless situation. “It’s financial, it’s emotional, it’s dealing with the medical system, and it’s planning for the future,” she noted. “You can’t stop it, but you can prepare for it. “Knowing how to communicate is crucial. You need a lot of patience because your loved ones need time to process what you’re saying.

Stay on one subject when talking. Pick your battles carefully. And avoid saying no. Instead, say things like ‘I wish we could.’ ‘Wouldn’t that be nice?’ ‘That’s a great idea.’ ‘That sounds fun for next time.’ ”

Lonseth’s other tips for handling the journey

■ Create special moments with your loved one, like going on picnics or sharing music together. ■ Keep a journal of events or things they say, like funny one-liners. ■ Use humor on a daily basis. ■ Do constant research on the disease as the patient’s needs change. ■ Get professional help to free you up from physical care. ■ Take a break. If you don’t take care of yourself, you can’t take care of others. Lonseth notes that a huge part of the problem in treating Alzheimer’s patients is denial. “Too many people are falling through the cracks and not being diagnosed until they are well into the mid-stage of Alzheimer’s or another type of dementia. Lack of education on the part of family-practice doctors and family members creates problems.”

Resources

■ Lonseth admits there is no single formula or answer to deal with memory disease, but there are many common threads. The Alzheimer’s Association offers a wealth of information, as well as free classes to patients and caregivers. For details, visit alzsd.org ■ To purchase “A Gradual Disappearance,” go to elizabethlonsethnovels.com

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NORTH COAST - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - PAGE B7

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trends & events

Pacific Ridge School Educates Students for a Rapidly Changing World

COURTESY

Anne Swan Moore in front of her paintings at the Art San Diego 2017 Contemporary Art Show at the end of September.

Local artist paints a good career for herself in a changing world BY BRITTANY WOOLSEY Some years ago, Anne Swan Moore was told by a friend that the “art world was changing.” Mid-sized galleries were disappearing, and what seemed to be replacing them was large art shows. While the Rancho Santa Fe painter said she missed the mid-sized galleries, she was grateful for large art shows, such as the Art San Diego 2017 Contemporary Art Show at the end of September in Del Mar, which she recently participated in. "I met a lot of wonderful people at the art show here, and I think that's a huge advantage," she said. "If they're going to replace the middle galleries — where most of the people come if you have a show they know — the big art fairs are great opportunities to see a lot of good art from around the world and meet the interesting artists that accompany it." Now, the 33-year resident of San Diego has been invited to appear in upcoming shows in Miami, New York and Las Vegas. Moore, who was formerly a musician and has appeared in dozens of museums around the world throughout her career, first picked up a paintbrush in her 20s, when she began raising two children after her first husband died. Her children's kindergarten teacher invited her to a painting class, and then a gallery, and “that was it” for Moore. She first started with abstract paintings while living in California. Then, when she moved temporarily to New York, she realized most of her abstract paintings were landscapes, something she couldn't paint in the Big Apple.

She then went to the grocery store, purchased a variety of fruits and vegetables and began painting them in a contemporary way. "That got me into my next 15-year period of creating, in a contemporary manner, very old compositions," she said. "Everything, every apple, every flower, has a bit of difference to it." She said the difference between abstract and contemporary art, for her, is more details going into the contemporary art, like glazing. Each painting she does can take about four months, and she says she completes about a dozen works a year. Writing in Artweek magazine covering one of Moore’s earlier shows, art critic Robert McDonald declared that her “color sense is sophisticated and pleasing, and her control of the brush is energetic and sure. Moore’s paintings create a feeling of compatibility with nature. They require examination both from a distance and up close, both straight on and from oblique angles.” In the Los Angeles Times, Leah Goldman praised Moore’s work as “evocative.” And while she moved from music to painting, music still plays a role in Moore's life as she creates her art to music. She said the songs and their energy motivate her paintings. "Anything from Janis Joplin to Bach," she said. "I was told by someone that there are very few people who can synthesize music into visual art and, apparently, that's what I do." For more information about Moore and to see some of her work, visit her website at anneswanmoore.com.

With the pace of change increasing and technology as its primary driver, the adult lives of today’s children will look very different than their parents’. Educating young people to be ready for this fluid, unknown future needs to combine proven, traditional methods with new, innovative approaches. The best environments are those in which students learn how to ask the right questions, discuss and design solutions to complex problems, make commitments, take thoughtful risks, stretch themselves and grow from both their successes and their failures. Attaining these skills can be challenging in schools with traditional programs, large class sizes and shrinking resources. Motivated and curious students are pressed to fit growth opportunities into programs that take place outside of school. Often, they need to choose a single interest to pursue out of many they may have.

skills. Academic content is frequently integrated across disciplines to add depth and context to learning.

In a co-curricular service learning program, students develop empathy, leadership and project management expertise in year-long projects. The middle school program and over 40 student-led upper school groups address needs as diverse as ocean pollution, elder care and girls’ education in rural India. Global issues are carefully woven into the curriculum and over 95% of students participate in a year-end global travel program, journeying across the United States and around the world for cultural immersion, service and study. To date, Pacific Ridge students have visited 52 countries on six continents.

At Pacific Ridge School, students in grades 7-12 engage actively with academic subjects while gaining relevant, hands-on practice in essential skills. The school’s mission focuses on academic excellence, ethical responsibility and global engagement – all necessary for leading purposeful lives in the future.

Students at Pacific Ridge have many opportunities to develop skills and follow interests outside of the classroom. The school’s unique weekly schedule and annual calendar include built-in time for service learning, clubs and global education so students can participate on the Model United Nations team while playing soccer, or perform in the annual musical while competing on the robotics team. This approach, known as the Student360 Experience, gives students the opportunity to develop essential skills and explore multiple interests while maintaining balance in their already busy lives.

The “Harkness Table,” an oval table at which 15 students sit alongside their teacher, is the center of academic life at Pacific Ridge. Students share ideas and perspectives, strengthening their speaking, listening and critical thinking

Families interested in learning more about a Pacific Ridge education and the Student360 Experience are invited to attend an Open House on Saturday, November 4, at 1:00pm. To register, visit pacificridge.org.

For parents, investing early in an enriched, forward-looking education can pay tremendous dividends for their children’s success and satisfaction in life.


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PAGE B8 - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - NORTH COAST

Del Mar Unit of Rady Children’s Hospital Helen Woodward Animal Auxiliary to host Harvest Boutique Center to hold ‘Howl-O-Ween Harvest Family Day’ Oct. 29 The spookiest day of the year is right around the corner and, once again, Helen Woodward Animal Center’s Humane Education Department is offering a Halloween treat that will leave kids with something other than cavities. For the third year, the center is opening up its “Spine-Tingling Harvest Tour” to individual families for one special day. Parents and kids of all ages are invited to explore an Eerie Estate, meet creepy creatures and cuddly critters in costume, and partake in a host of other great autumn-inspired activities. Kick off Halloween at Helen Woodward Animal Center’s “Howl-O-Ween Harvest Family Day,” Sunday, Oct. 29 between 9 a.m. and 1 p.m. at the Center’s Education Building – 6461 El Apajo Road in Rancho Santa Fe. Family Day attendees will create boo-tiful crafts, enter the “Eerie Estate,” journey through the mini pumpkin patch, and enjoy trick-or-treat stations, face painting, and a

Shop for a cause – the Harvest Boutique is the jamming place to be on Wednesday, Oct. 25,from 4:30 p.m.-7:30 p.m. at Fairbanks Ranch Country Club. The event is hosted by the Del Mar Unit of Rady Children’s Hospital Auxiliary. Get a leg up on the holiday shopping madness with your friends while benefiting a great cause. Join in the fun and boutique shopping with the ladies of the Del Mar Unit of Rady Children’s Hospital Auxiliary who have been busy “Jammin’ in their Jammies,” and brewing up delicious jam to sell at the boutique, all made with organic fruit. A wide variety of vendors will be offering

COURTESY

The Autumn Harvest Tour at the Helen Woodward Animal Center offers kids the chance to meet “a hair-raising array of slimy and slinky critters.” magical maze. The event also includes costume contests, pumpkin decorating contests, and pie eating contests. New this year: Attendees can partake in a scavenger hunt, a cake walk, and warm up with some hot cider. Of course, a Critter Camp Autumn Harvest Tour wouldn’t be complete without a hair-raising array of slimy and slinky critters and the tour will feature plenty of those too.

The cost is $14.25 per child (which includes animal interactions, all activities, and a mini pumpkin to take home.). Accompanying adults cost $5. Visitors can plan their arrival time around meeting and greeting their choice of favorite critters. For more information on Helen Woodward Animal Center’s Howl-oween Harvest Family Day, call 858-756-4117 x 319 or visit animalcenter.org.

their wares of chic apparel and accessories, handbags, jewelry, treats, and more. Sip while you shop with a no-host bar available to sweeten your shopping experience. Net proceeds to benefit the projects of the Del Mar Unit of Rady Children’s Hospital Auxiliary, an all-volunteer organization whose mission is to support children through advocacy, community awareness and fundraising. For questions or inquiries contact rchadmsocial@gmail.com or at facebook.com/RadyChildrensHospital AuxiliaryDelMar/

Solana Beach celebrates ‘Día de los Muertos’ Oct. 29 at La Colonia Park The Solana Beach 3rd Annual “Día de los Muertos” — Day of the Dead — community event will be held Sunday, Oct. 29, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at La Colonia Park, 715 Valley Ave. This alcohol-free community event will offer cultural opportunities for the whole family. Highlighting the entertainment stage schedule will be the festive sounds of Mariachi Juvenil de Montgomery High School, followed by Ballet Folklorico dance groups, SantanaWays and the Calphonics. Fun activities for the whole family will include a Catrin/Catrina costume contest; commemorative T-shirts for sale; oldies car show; free face painting provided by MiraCosta College and kids’ games. Free mammograms will be provided by Community Health Imaging Centers Mobile Mammogram Coach based on income guidelines. Authentic Mexican and American food and

beverages will be available. Come join the City of Solana Beach and the La Colonia de Eden Gardens Foundation in celebrating Día de los Muertos while enjoying authentic Mexican food and family entertainment. Parking and shuttle service will be available from the Solana Beach Corporate Center on Stevens Avenue between Academy Drive and San Rodolfo Drive. You may request your own Día de los Muertos alter space by emailing ddlmuertos@yahoo.com. Sponsorship and vendor booth opportunities are also available by emailing mannya@sbcglobal.net. To volunteer at the event, email brittneyrojo@yahoo.com. Seating is limited. Please bring your own picnic chairs and blankets. Canopies are prohibited. This event is free. For more details, visit cityofsolanabeach.org. 2017

Menu changes seasonally. View changes hourly.

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Thanksgiving

Thursday, November 23 | 12 to 7 p.m. Enjoy our exquisite à la carte menu for an amazing feast. Choose from main courses including Woodchuck Pear Cider Brined Turkey Breast and Moroccan Tagine Lamb Osso Buco. Our Five Spice Pumpkin Torte is the perfect way to end your meal. Tax, beverage and gratuity are not included in prices listed. Menu items subject to change.

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NORTH COAST - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - PAGE B9

Solana Vista and Skyline schools to hold Halloween Carnival Oct. 22 The 60th Annual Solana Vista/Skyline Elementary schools Halloween Carnival will take place Sunday, Oct. 22 from 11 a.m.- 4 p.m. at Solana Vista Elementary School, located at 780 Santa Victoria Avenue in Solana Beach. The carnival will take place rain or shine. This beloved community event will again feature a variety of games, activities and

performances for children of all ages, as well as food from local restaurants. All families are welcome to attend. Costumes are encouraged but not required. Proceeds from the carnival benefit the Solana Beach Schools Foundation and provide essential funding for science, technology, art and physical education classes at both Solana Vista and Skyline schools.

Bicentenary celebration of the birth of Baha'u'llah to be held at CV Library Baha’is of Carmel Valley will celebrate the 200th anniversary of the birth of Baha’u’llah at an event to be held Saturday, Oct. 21 from 3-5 p.m. at the Carmel Valley Library. The event is free and open to the public. The event will feature speakers, refreshments and music. Millions of members of the Baha’i religion around the world will also celebrate the 200th anniversary of the birth of Baha’u’llah, a Persian nobleman and the founder of the faith, who is considered a prophet by the Baha’is.

Considered one of the youngest of the world’s major religions, the Baha’i faith teaches the unity of the human race, with such tenets as the equality of the sexes, that science and religion go hand in hand, and that all religions share a single deity, said Nava Ghalili, a Rancho Santa Fe resident and one of the organizers of another anniversay event being held on Oct. 22 in Fairbanks Ranch. The Carmel Valley Library is located at 3939 Townsgate Drive, San Diego, CA 92130

Carmel Valley Fall Festival is Oct. 28 The Carmel Valley Recreation Council presents the Carmel Valley Fall Festival on Saturday, Oct. 28 at the Carmel Valley Community Park from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. The event will include pony rides, crafts, games, jumpers and a name painter. A pumpkin carving contest will be held at 10 a.m. and a costume contest at 11 a.m. Sign-ups are required for the pumpkin carving contest—there is one table per family and must bring your own carving supplies. Sign up online at sdrecconnect.com with the code 45012.

FROM RACING, B1 While the Breeders’ Cup celebrations end Nov. 4, there will still be plenty of action at Del Mar during the following three weeks. “It’s our fourth season of the Bing Crosby (fall) meet,” said Chris Bahr, director of events and promotions. “We’re still trying to create more awareness throughout the community. We’re looking to keep the momentum, especially after the Breeders’ Cup.” One way Del Mar plans to accomplish that is with the return of concerts. The popular Reggae Fest featuring Iration will be presented on Nov. 18, and rock band The Offspring will perform on Nov. 25. Go to delmarracing.com to check for updates. Two events previously on the Bing Crosby meet calendar will merge into one on Nov. 25 - the Craft Beer, Cider, Cocktail & Wine Fest, to be held in the Seaside Concert Area. There will be dozens of seasonal ales and ciders; local, international and hard-to-find brews; and other libations. For $20, patrons will receive five samples. To supplement the drinks, there will be a Wing Feast, where six vendors will serve three flavors of $1 wings. Also during the fall meet, Del Mar will participate in several charitable events. Visitors who bring a new, unwrapped toy to the Stretch Run admission gates in support of Toys for Tots on Nov. 19 will receive free admission that day. Those who donate nonperishable food for the San Diego Food Bank on Closing Day (Nov. 26) will also be able to enter

COURTESY OF DEL MAR THOROUGHBRED CLUB

The fourth season of the Bing Crosby (fall) meet will be held Nov. 1-26 at the Del Mar Racetrack. at no charge. And those who participate in Del Mar’s Family Mile Fun Run at 8 a.m. Thanksgiving Day (Nov. 23) will be supporting the Helen Woodward Animal Center and its equestrian therapy program for people with special needs. Racegoers can also look forward to the return of the Handicapping Challenge (Nov. 11-12), College Day (Nov. 18), Thanksgiving Brunch (Nov. 23), Daybreak at Del Mar (Saturdays, except Nov. 4), Taste of the Turf Club (Sundays), Seniors Day (Thursdays), Weekend Handicapping Seminars, Free & Fun Sundays, Newcomers Seminars (daily) and Sing With Bing (daily). As of press time, a Fall Food Truck Festival is tentatively scheduled for Nov. 11; go to delmarracing.com for updates. “With two concerts, several events and a great stakes schedule, we’re looking forward to a fantastic meet,” Bahr said.

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PAGE B10 - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - NORTH COAST

SOCIAL LIFE

www.delmartimes.net

Lucky Duck Foundation’s Ninth Annual Swing & Soiree

T

he Ninth Annual Swing & Soiree, hosted by the Lucky Duck Foundation, took place at The Santaluz Club Oct. 9 to raise funds for local beneficiaries: Helen Woodward Animal Center, Father Joe’s Villages and Challenged Athletes Foundation. Del Mar couple Pat and Stephanie Kilkenny started the Lucky Duck Foundation in 2005 to raise funds

and awareness for worthy causes that are important to them. In addition to great golf, the event included music, entertainment, boutique shopping, silent and live auctions, awards and more. Guest speakers included Bill Walton, Neil Everett, Joe Carroll and Mike Arms. Visit luckyduckfoundation.org. Online: delmartimes.net

Joe and Linda Hook, Vicki and Bob Schraner

PHOTOS BY MCKENZIE IMAGES

Advisory board members Katie Kilkenny, Ann Hoye, Jennifer Land

Lori Siron, Advisory board member Kathy Sweeney, Advisory board member Kristen O’Connor, Jen Wilbur

Lucky Duck Foundation co-founders CEO Stephanie and Chairman of the Board Patrick Kilkenny with Father Joe Carroll, President Emeritus of LDF beneficiary Father Joe's Villages

Retired MLB player Mark Kotsay, Bob Kimmel

Lucky Duck Foundation co-founders Chairman of the Board Patrick and CEO Stephanie Kilkenny

Tom Cody, PJ McNall

Former San Diego Charger Shawne Merriman, Jon Frontino, board member Brian Panish

Richard and Naomi Peters, retired SDSU basketball coach Steve Fisher

Vanessa Tarlton, Jen Miller, Allison Sterett

PHOTOS BY MCKENZIE IMAGES

Oregon student Patrick with dad Walt Coyle


PAGE B10 - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - NORTH COAST

SOCIAL LIFE

www.delmartimes.net

Lucky Duck Foundation’s Ninth Annual Swing & Soiree

T

he Ninth Annual Swing & Soiree, hosted by the Lucky Duck Foundation, took place at The Santaluz Club Oct. 9 to raise funds for local beneficiaries: Helen Woodward Animal Center, Father Joe’s Villages and Challenged Athletes Foundation. Del Mar couple Pat and Stephanie Kilkenny started the Lucky Duck Foundation in 2005 to raise funds

and awareness for worthy causes that are important to them. In addition to great golf, the event included music, entertainment, boutique shopping, silent and live auctions, awards and more. Guest speakers included Bill Walton, Neil Everett, Joe Carroll and Mike Arms. Visit luckyduckfoundation.org. Online: delmartimes.net

Joe and Linda Hook, Vicki and Bob Schraner

PHOTOS BY MCKENZIE IMAGES

Advisory board members Katie Kilkenny, Ann Hoye, Jennifer Land

Lori Siron, Advisory board member Kathy Sweeney, Advisory board member Kristen O’Connor, Jen Wilbur

Lucky Duck Foundation co-founders CEO Stephanie and Chairman of the Board Patrick Kilkenny with Father Joe Carroll, President Emeritus of LDF beneficiary Father Joe's Villages

Retired MLB player Mark Kotsay, Bob Kimmel

Lucky Duck Foundation co-founders Chairman of the Board Patrick and CEO Stephanie Kilkenny

Tom Cody, PJ McNall

Former San Diego Charger Shawne Merriman, Jon Frontino, board member Brian Panish

Richard and Naomi Peters, retired SDSU basketball coach Steve Fisher

Vanessa Tarlton, Jen Miller, Allison Sterett

PHOTOS BY MCKENZIE IMAGES

Oregon student Patrick with dad Walt Coyle


www.delmartimes.net

NORTH COAST - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - PAGE B11

Birds of a Feather: Rooted in Flight Gala

M

ore than $300,000 was raised at the celebration and fundraiser for San Elijo Lagoon Conservancy’s 30th Anniversary benefit Oct. 7 at the Lomas Santa Fe Country Club. More than 250 guests had the opportunity to enjoy an evening about nature and community conservation education. The event also included entertainment, a silent and live auction, great food and more. Guest speakers Sandra Aguilar, Elizabeth Cavillo, Patti Koger and Dawn Mayeda shared their personal connections to nature through the Conservancy’s programs. Visit sanelijo.org

Mark Boiskin, Nikki Boiskin, Rita Meyer

Gala Co-Chairs Sally Foster, Paul Worthington

Carol Childs, Peter House

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Michael and Teresa Lea

John Helmer, Jane Helmer, Doug Gibson (SELC executive director), Scott Mayeda, Dawn Mayeda

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Jim Pietz, David Kramer

Stephanie Wilde and Barb Bolton


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PAGE B12 - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - NORTH COAST

www.delmartimes.net

NORTH COAST - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - PAGE B13

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PAGE B12 - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - NORTH COAST

www.delmartimes.net

NORTH COAST - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - PAGE B13

CUSTOM LANDSCAPE PACKAGES Each Package includes FREE DESIGN at our nurseries, all trees and plants listed, hand select your exact trees, professional installation with custom blended Moon Valley mulch and our proprietary Moon Juice! Plus everything we plant is GUARANTEED to grow! SAMPLE PACKAGE

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ENGINEERED

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BIGGEST TREES LOWEST PRICES

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HOLLYWOOD STYLE HEDGES OUR #1 BEST SELLER - HERE'S WHY: • Creates Instant Privacy • Keeps Your Home Shaded From Nosy Neighbors! And Cool All Year! • Easy To Care For! • Great Sound Barrier!

FICUS RUBIGINOSA GUARANT EED !

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4-5 STAR RATING!

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

NATURAL SOUND BARRIER INSTANT PRIVACY

EVERY CALIFORNIA NURSERY LOCATION!

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TREES & PALMS

QUALITY BENEFITS: • LARGER TREES IN SMALLER CONTAINERS CREATES INTRINSIC VALUE • LIGHT SOIL MIXTURES DESIGNED TO IMPROVE PLANT HEALTH • WE USE PROPRIETARY SOIL MEDIUM ON ALL OF OUR PRODUCTS COST BENEFITS: • MORE TREES PER TRUCK - LOW SHIPPING COST • LARGER TREES THROUGH CONFINED SPACES

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BRING IN YOUR PLANS OR DRAWINGS AND LET OUR EXPERTS CREATE THE PERFECT ASSORTMENT OF TREES, PALMS & MORE FOR YOUR LANDSCAPE!

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from

SPECIMEN SIZED VALUE

CANARY DATE PALMS

BRING IN YOUR PICTURES OR WE'LL COME TO YOU!

ROSES $1499

78 San Marcos

La Costa Encinitas La Jolla

Rancho Santa Fe

Escondido

Rancho Bernardo

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

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

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.

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

SAN DIEGO •ESCONDIDO

760.316.4000

Oceanside

Vista

Carlsbad

78

San Marcos

La Costa Encinitas La Jolla

Rancho Santa Fe

CSLB 941369 C-27

Escondido

Rancho Bernardo

26334 Mesa Rock Rd. Escondido, CA 92026

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


www.delmartimes.net

PAGE B14 - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - NORTH COAST

JOIN US for MEPHISTO DAY! 10am until 6pm Saturday, Oct. 21st SPECIAL GIFT WITH PURCHASE (while supplies last)

Mephisto Fit Specialist Matt Lerner will be in-store to assist with questions and personal fittings.

Teeing off for the animals: FACE to hold annual golf tournament On Monday, Nov. 13, the Foundation for Animal Care and Education (FACE) will host its 6th annual golf tournament to benefit local pets in need of emergency care and assistance. This pet-friendly event will be held at the Loma Santa Fe Country Club in Solana Beach and will allow players to bring their well-behaved pups onto the course for a great day of fun. Golfers will be joined by special VIP guests MLB legend Fred Lynn and PGA Major Tournament Champions Corey Pavin COURTESY and Jeff Sluman. The tournament will be followed by a brand Players can bring their well-behaved pups new Yappy Hour, including drinks, appetizers, onto the course at the Nov. 13 golf tournament for a great day of fun. and desserts, an awards ceremony, and a live auction. Auction packages include VIP courtside Lakers tickets, luxury travel packages, and exclusive access to some of the most sought-after events in San Diego. Guests also have the chance to win the coveted “Dream Ticket” opportunity drawing, which comprises of golf outings at over 10 of the best golf clubs in Southern California, such as The Bridges at Rancho Santa Fe and Del Mar Country Club. In addition, guests will also have the chance to meet FACE success stories and spend time with some of these beloved animals. All are welcome at Yappy Hour; tickets are available to golfers and non-golfers alike. Professional golfer and VIP guest Jeff Sluman says, “I look forward to helping raise much needed funds to help so many animals live long healthy lives. Knowing that FACE can help animals and pet owners in a time of crisis is so important, and anything I can do to raise money for this cause is my pleasure.” FACE’s 2016 Golf Tournament raised over $110,000 for pets in need. Registration for the 2017 event is now open. Those interested in attending are encouraged to sign up quickly as the event sells out annually. Guests can register at bit.ly/facefoundationgolftournament or www.face4pets.org. Those looking for sponsorships or making a tax-deductible donation can contact FACE by emailing events@face4pets.org.

Solana Beach Civic & Historical Society Holiday Boutique set for Nov. 18

The annual holiday boutique hosted by the Solana Beach Civic & Historical Society will be held Saturday, Nov. 18 at La Colonia Community Center located at 715 Valley Avenue in Solana Beach. As in the past, many beautiful items will be on sale from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. The event will include a silent auction, hourly raffles and free coffee and tea on the patio where you can relax and enjoy time with family and friends.

The residents of Solana Beach are the beneficiary of proceeds from this event as they have been through the years. The money will go to support a special project within the city. The boutique is free to the public with free parking. Members of the community are encouraged to come and support this event. You can get your holiday shopping done early and at the same time support your local organization.

Free presentation on knee and hip pain treatment Nov. 2 at Scripps Encinitas

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North County residents can learn about the latest treatment options for chronic knee and hip pain at a free presentation on Thursday, Nov. 2, from 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the conference center at Scripps Memorial Hospital Encinitas. About 15 million U.S. adults live with severe joint pain related to arthritis, which is particularly common in the knee and hip. There is no cure for arthritis, but many treatment options are available to manage

pain and restore function and quality of life. The Nov. 2 presentation will be led by Scripps Encinitas orthopedic surgeon Christopher Hajnik, M.D. Hajnik will review a spectrum of pain relief options, ranging from lifestyle modifications to knee and hip replacement surgery. Scripps Memorial Hospital Encinitas is located at 354 Santa Fe Drive, Encinitas 92024. To register, call 1-800-SCRIPPS (1-800-727-4777).

Volunteers needed for Hospice of the North Coast Resale Shop Hospice of the North Coast is looking for volunteers to work in its Resale Shop at 278-B N. El Camino Real, Encinitas (Homegoods Shopping Center). One four-hour shift per week is required. Volunteers assist with customer purchases, pricing, sorting and processing donated merchandise. All proceeds go directly to Hospice, a non profit organization. If you are interested, please contact Mary Joe Barry, manager, at 760-943-9921.


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NORTH COAST - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - PAGE B15

ENCINITAS

The Carmel Valley Auxiliary of Rady Children's Hospital held an outreach event at Ashley Falls Park

Neighborhood Outreach event for Rady Children’s Hospital

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he Carmel Valley Unit of Rady Children’s Hospital Auxiliary hosted a Neighborhood Outreach event Oct. 14 at Ashley Falls Park in Carmel Valley. Attendees had the opportunity to learn more about Rady Children’s Hospital Auxiliary. The event also included entertainment by

Hullabaloo, raffle prizes, and Philly Pretzel Truck and Rush Coffee gave out food and drink in exchange for a small donation of a new DVD, game or book geared towards children under 18. All donations will benefit Rady Children’s Hospital.Visit rchsd.org Online: delmartimes.net

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PAGE B16 - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - NORTH COAST

‘Muriel Anderson’s Solana Beach Guitar Night’ benefit

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uitars in the Classroom, a local nonprofit dedicated to bringing musical training, integration with academics, and instruments to public schools, hosted Muriel Anderson’s Solana Beach Guitar Night featuring the fingerstyle

and jazz mastery of international star Muriel Anderson and San Diego favorites Peter Sprague and Feed Benedetti. This benefit concert was held Oct. 13 at the Solana Beach home of GITC board member Scott Fischel and his family. The evening

Siena Fischel, Alison Appelgate, William Lutz

Peter Sprague, Steve Grant

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also included a silent auction, hors d’oeuvres, desserts, special wines and non-alcoholic beverages and door prizes. Visit guitarsintheclassroom.org More online: delmartimes.net

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NORTH COAST - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - PAGE B17


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PAGE B18 - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - NORTH COAST

EVENT BRIEFS Joyapalooza: Rhythm and Roots Enjoy an evening under the stars with local nonprofit Resounding Joy at Joyapalooza: Rhythm and Roots, an event to benefit its important work to bring music therapy to the community. Celebrate the incredible power of music by rolling up your sleeves for interactive musical experiences as well as performances by Resounding Joy’s own music therapists and local musicians Trio Gadjo. The event will be held Saturday, Oct. 21, from 5 p.m. -9 p.m. at Calvary Lutheran Church, 424 Via de la Valle, Solana Beach, 92075. Learn more about this unique form of therapy while enjoying food provided by Wild Thyme catering and beer provided by Ballast Point (as well as wine and other beverages). For more information, check out resoundingjoyinc.org. Tickets: resoundingjoyinc.org/event/joyapalooza/

Moonlight movie, Halloween events at Flower Hill Promenade On Saturday, Oct. 21, from 10 a.m. - noon, Flower Hill is hosting a Pumpkin Palooza. Families can purchase their pumpkins at Whole Foods and then bring them over to the east courtyard where there will be kid-safe carving stations set-up for them to carve their Jack O’ Lanterns.On Saturday, Oct. 28, after the sun goes down, the center will air moonlight movie “Hotel Transylvania” for the whole family to enjoy. On Tuesday, Oct. 31, all are invited to trick-or-treat on the promenade on Halloween day from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Flower Hill Promenade is located at 2720 Via de la Valle, Del Mar, 92014. Visit flowerhill.com

Surfing Madonna Beach Run Surfing Madonna presents its fifth annual Beach Run on Nov. 5 at Moonlight Beach in Encinitas. The event, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., includes 5K, 10K and 15K runs at 2 p.m. starting and finishing at Moonlight Beach.Following the run, Surfing Madonna will host an after-party for participants at Seaside Bazaar complete with DJs and a beer garden. Visit surfingmadonna.org

Radical reptiles at the Birdwing Slither into the world of reptiles with Living Coast Discovery Center’s animal ambassadors. Learn about what all reptiles have in common. Look at a snake skin up close and compare the size of tortoises and sea turtles. After the presentation, join the San Dieguito River Valley Conservancy on an optional, easy, 4-mile

round-trip hike around the San Dieguito Lagoon. Saturday, Oct. 28 at 10 a.m. at the Birdwing Open Air Classroom, 2775 Via de la Valle, Del Mar. This event is free; space is limited to 50 people. Directions will be provided upon registration. https://form.jotform.us/70881020911145

Casa De Amparo benefit at Mille Fleurs A Holiday Fashion Show & Luncheon will be held Oct. 31 at Mille Fleurs in Rancho Santa Fe from 10:30 a.m.-1 p.m. The Holiday Fashion show and luncheon features exclusive fashion selected by Maggie Bobileff. All proceeds raised at the Holiday Fashion Show & Luncheon will benefit Casa de Amparo, which has a mission “to support those affected by and at risk of child abuse and neglect, through a range of programs and services that promote healing, growth, and healthy relationships,” according to its website. Visit casadeamparo.org/holidayfashionshow

‘Of Mice and Men’ at NC Rep For its second play of Season 36, North Coast Rep in Solana Beach is reviving John Steinbeck’s classic drama novella-turned play. Opening Night is Saturday, Oct. 21, at 8 p.m. The show runs through Nov. 12. There will be a special talkback on Friday, Oct. 27, with the cast and artistic director. Visit northcoastrep.org to purchase tickets.

Del Mar International Horse Show The Del Mar International Horse Show runs through Oct. 29 at the Del Mar Horsepark, located at 14550 El Camino Real, Del Mar, 92014. Known for its incredible atmosphere and exciting competition, the Del Mar International Horse Show encompasses multiple weeks of world-class show jumping, which attracts an elite field of internationally recognized horses and riders. Visit jumpdelmar.com

Bach Collegium SD North County series Bach Collegium San Diego recently announced that for the first time, all its concerts will be performed both in central San Diego and at a North County venue, Sts. Constantine and Helen Greek Orthodox Church in Cardiff-by-the-Sea. The new North County Series begins with Acis AND Galatea, by G.F. Handel, on Oct. 21 from 6:45 p.m.-8:45 p.m.Visit bachcollegiumsd.org. Address: 3459 Manchester Avenue, Cardiff-By-The-Sea.

A Celtic Choral Celebration The Center Chorale presents A Celtic Choral Celebration, the first concert of the 2017/18 season for the North County choral ensemble. Local Ashworth Academy of Highland Dance joins the Center Chorale in this concert. The Chorale will sing arrangements of Scottish and Irish tunes accompanied by pianist, Joseph Valent. A Celtic Choral Celebration will be in the California Center for Arts, Escondido, Center Theater on Oct. 27, at 7 p.m. Tickets: artcenter.org or call 800-988-4253.

Bow Wow Brunch Cruise This month, Hornblower’s 9th Annual Bow Wow Brunch Cruise will live up to the “Wow” with a delicious brunch, Halloween-themed canine costume contest and a stunning ride around the boo-tiful San Diego Bay. Each adult ticket purchase includes a free invitation to bring one furry canine family member to this howlingly good time, setting sail at noon on Sunday, Oct. 22. A portion of each ticket sale will go to the pets and programs at Helen Woodward Animal Center. Each adult passenger is invited to board with one dog. Canines must be kept on a leash throughout the cruise. To book tickets, visit hornblower.com/bowwow. Boarding begins at 11:30 a.m. at Hornblower’s Grape Street Pier (1800 N. Harbor Drive, San Diego, CA, 92101) and the cruise will sail from noon to 2 p.m.

Aruna Run 5K The inaugural San Diego Aruna Run 5K on Oct. 21 in Encinitas will benefit the Aruna Project, a U.S. nonprofit whose mission is to bring and sustain freedom through employment marked by holistic care to sexually enslaved women in India. The run will be one of 13 runs the Aruna Project hosts this year to raise awareness about the harsh reality of commercial sexual exploitation in India and to generate money to aid in the freedom process. Race registration begins at 10 a.m., race starts at 11 a.m. Location: Encinitas Community Park, 425 Santa Fe Dr., Encinitas, CA 92024. Visit arunaproject.com

Free Manure Management & Composting Workshop Solana Center presents a Manure Management and Composting Workshop Saturday, Nov. 4, 10 a.m.-noon, that will show you how to both protect your local watershed and produce a fantastic soil product from large animal manure. Composting is easy and inexpensive. Improper disposal of SEE EVENTS, B20

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100 - LEGAL NOTICES FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-9024856 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. GLOBAL PAIN INSTITUTE b. INSTITUTES OF HEALTH Located at: 3525A DEL MAR HEIGHTS DR. #406, San Diego, CA 92130, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. INSTITUTES OF HEALTH BEHAVIORAL MEDICINE AND MEDICAL PSYCHOLOGY INC., 3525A DEL MAR HEIGHTS DR. #406, SAN DIEGO, CA 92130, CA. This business is conducted by: a Corporation. The first day of business was 10/05/2017. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 10/05/2017. TOMER ANBAR, PRESIDENT. DM5239297 10/12, 10/19, 10/26 & 11/2/2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-9024406 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Lazy Tuna Sushi Located at: 145 S. Highway 101, Solana Beach, CA 92075, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 3740 Boyd Ave #148, San Diego, CA 92111 Registered Owners Name(s): a. BANG GROUP INC, 3740 Boyd Ave #148, San Diego, CA 92111, 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 09/29/2017. Byung Jin An, President. DM5229154 10/12, 10/19, 10/26, 11/2/2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-9024521 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. SD Home Cleaners Located at: 9645 Genesee Ave. Apt B1, San Diego, CA 92121 , San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Indira Christina Maese, 9645 Genesee Ave. Apt B1 San Diego, CA 92121. b.Adam Lee Maese, 9645 Genesee Ave. Apt B1 San Diego, CA 92121. This business is conducted by: a Married Couple. The first day of business was 5/1/17. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 10/02/2017. Indira Christina Maese. SB5230342 10/12, 10/19, 10/26, 11/2/17 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-9024434 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. ABUNDANCE BRAND Located at: 4836 SAGINA COURT, OCEANSIDE, CA 92057, San Diego County. Mailing Address: SAME AS Registered Owners Name(s): a. PATRICIA ANN BUTTERFIELD, 4836 SAGINA COURT,

BUTTERFIELD, 4836 SAGINA COURT, OCEANSIDE, CA 92057. 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 10/29/2017. PATRICIA ANN BUTTERFIELD. CV5235275 10/12, 10/19, 10/26 & 11/2/2017

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-9022800 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Insight College Advising b. Insight 2 College c. Insight2Career Located at: 13997 Durango Dr., Del Mar, CA 92014, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Julia Wooddell Laymon, 13997 Durango Dr., Del Mar, CA 92014. This business is conducted by: an Individual. 09/01/2017. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 09/12/2017. Julia Wooddell Laymon. DM5189037 9/28, 10/5, 10/12, 10/19/2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-9024136 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. ChampCohen Design Associates Located at: 1049 Camino del Mar, Suite C, Del Mar, CA 92014, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. CohenGovekKass Creative, Inc., 1049 Camino del Mar, Suite C, Del Mar, CA 92014, 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 09/27/2017. CohenGovekKass Creative, Inc., CEO. DM5217907 10/5, 10/12, 10/19, 10/26/2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-9024501 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. DENTAL ANESTHESIA ASSOCIATES Located at: 3715 RUETTE DE VILLE, SAN DIEGO, CA 92130, SAN DIEGO County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. MARCO SAVITTIERI, DDS, INC., 3715 RUETTE DE VILLE, SAN DIEGO, CA 92130, CA. This business is conducted by: a Corporation. The first day of business was 09/18/2017. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 10/02/2017. MARCO SAVITTIERI, PRESIDENT. DM5227221 10/5, 10/12, 10/19 & 10/26/2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-9024479 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Gymboe b. Yoga4Brain Located at: 4849 Almondwood Way, San Diego, CA 92130, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Sara Noorafkan, 4849 Almondwood Way, 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 10/02/2017. Sara Noorafkan. DM5230109 10/12, 10/19, 10/26, 11/2/2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-9023646 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. TQ Consulting Located at: 1084 Solana Drive, Del Mar, CA 92014, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Terrence Jon Quinn, 1084 Solana Drive, Del Mar, CA 92014. This business is conducted by: an Individual. 6/1/2016. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 09/20/2017. Terrence Jon Quinn. DM5247542 10/19, 10/26, 11/2, 11/9/2017

CLASSIFIEDS FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-9023891 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Real Education Enrichment Academy & Family Day Care Located at: 13763 Sparren Avenue, San Diego, CA 92129, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Real Education Inc., 13763 Sparren Avenue San Diego, CA 92129, California. This business is conducted by: a Corporation. The first day of business was 9/4/12. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 09/22/2017. Eleanor Lopato, President. DM5230431 10/12, 10/19, 10/26, 11/2/17 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-9024160 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Mind Body Soul Psychology Located at: 561 Saxony Place, Suite 101, Encinitas, CA 92024, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Gricelda Fragoso, Psy D, A Professional Psychology Corporation, 561 Saxony Place, Suite 101 Encinitas, CA 92024, California. This business is conducted by: a Corporation. The first day of business was 7/1/2017. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 09/27/2017. Gricelda Fragoso, President. DM5231974 10/12, 10/19, 10/26, 11/2/17 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-9023438 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Chronic Intuition Located at: 8759 Gilman Drive Unit A, La Jolla, CA 92037, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Whitney Rachelle De Maria, 8759 Gilman Drive Unit A, La Jolla, CA 92037. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business was 09/16/2017. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 09/18/2017. Whitney De Maria. SB5203152 9/28, 10/5, 10/12, 10/19/2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-9022292 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Solutions Real Estate Located at: 2055 Corte Del Nogal, Carlsbad, CA 92011, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. SDRE Partners, Inc., 2055 Corte Del Nogal, Carlsbad, CA 92011, CA. This business is conducted by: a Corporation. The first day of business was 12/15/2009. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 09/06/2017. SDRE Partners, Inc., Vice Present. DM5223146 10/5, 10/12, 10/19, 10/26/2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-9022729 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. wet detail Located at: 4764 Beachwood ct., Carlsbad, CA 92008, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Chaz jj Nichols, 4764 Beachwood ct. 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 09/12/2017. Chaz jj Nichols. SB5224361 10/12, 10/19, 10/26, 11/2/2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-9025275 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. RACK-LUCK Located at: 3755 Torrey View Ct. , San Diego, CA 92130, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Takeo Kitamura, 3755 Torrey View Ct., San Diego, CA 92130. This business is

Diego, CA 92130. This bus conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business was 10/01/2017. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 10/12/2017. Takeo Kitamura. DM5247433 10/19, 10/26, 11/2 & 11/9/2017

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-9025303 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Viking Hauling Demo Removal Located at: 5025 Caminito Exquisito, San Diego, CA 92130, Carmel Valley County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. GORMAN CHARLES ERICKSON, 5025 Caminito Exquisito, San Diego, CA 92130. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business was 10/12/2017. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 10/12/2017. GORMAN CHARLES ERICKSON. CV5247846 10/19, 10/26, 11/2, 11/9/2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2017-9024865 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Loving Lactation Located at: 12453 Heatherton Ct. #300, San Diego, CA 92128, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Virginia J. Krula, 12453 Heatherton Ct. #300 San Diego, CA 92128. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business was 10/01/2017. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 10/06/2017. Virginia Krula. SB5249792 10/19, 10/26, 11/2, 11/9/17 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE Trustee Sale No. 16-00101-2 Loan No: 3440 APN 265-452-49-00 NOTE: THERE IS A SUMMARY OF THE INFORMATION IN THIS DOCUMENT ATTACHED. (The above statement is made pursuant to CA Civil Code Section 2923.3(d)(1). The Summary will not be recorded pursuant to CA Civil Code Section 2923.3(a). It will be mailed to the Trustor(s) and/ or vested owner(s) only, pursuant to CA Civil Code Section 2923.3(d) (2).) YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST DATED SEPTEMBER 8, 2008. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE OF THE PROCEEDINGS AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. On October 25, 2017, at 10:00 AM, at the entrance to the East County Regional Center by statue, 250 E. Main Street, El Cajon, CA 92020, FIDELITY NATIONAL TITLE COMPANY, as the duly appointed Trustee (the “Trustee”), under and pursuant to the power of sale contained in that certain Deed of Trust recorded on September 9, 2008, as Instrument No. 2008-0480779 of official records in the office of the Recorder of San Diego County, CA, executed by: KEITH COE, A MARRIED MAN AS HIS SOLE AND SEPARATE PROPERTY, as Trustor (the “Trustor”), in favor of SILVERGATE BANK, as Beneficiary, and any modifications thereto are collectively referred to herein from time to time as the “Deed of Trust”, WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER, in lawful money of the United States, all payable at the time of sale, that certain property situated in said County, California describing the land therein as: PARCEL 1:LOT 55 OF AMENDED MAP OF COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO TRACT NO. 4227-1, IN THE COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO, STATE OF CALIFORNIA, ACCORDING TO MAP THEREOF NO. 14104, FILED IN THE OFFICE OF THE COUNTY RECORDER OF SAN DIEGO COUNTY, DECEMBER 13, 2001.EXCEPT THEREFROM ALL OIL, OIL RIGHTS, MINERALS, MINERAL RIGHTS, NATURAL GAS, NATURAL GAS RIGHTS, AND OTHER HYDROCARBONS BY WHATSOEVER NAME KNOWN THAT

NORTH COAST - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - PAGE B19

WHATSOEVER NAME KNOWN THAT MAY BE WITHIN OR UNDER SAID LAND, TOGETHER WITH THE PERPETUAL RIGHT OF DRILLING, MINING, EXPLORING AND OPERATING THEREFORE AND REMOVING THE SAME FROM SAID LAND OR ANY OTHER LAND, INCLUDING THE RIGHT TO WHIPSTOCK OR DIRECTIONALLY DRILL AND MINE FROM LANDS OTHER THAN SAID LAND, OIL OR GAS WELLS, TUNNELS AND SHAFTS INTO, THROUGH OR ACROSS THE SUBSURFACE OF SAID LAND, AND TO BOTTOM SUCH WHIPSTOCKED OR DIRECTIONALLY DRILLED WELLS, TUNNELS AND SHAFTS UNDER AND BENEATH OR BEYOND THE EXTERIOR LIMITS THEREOF, AND TO REDRILL, RETUNNEL, EQUIP, MAINTAIN, REPAIR, DEEPEN AND OPERATE ANY SUCH WELLS OR MINES, WITHOUT HOWEVER, THE RIGHT TO DRILL, MINE, EXPLORE AND OPERATE THROUGH THE SURFACE OR THE UPPER 500 FEET OF THE SUBSURFACE OF SAID LAND OR OTHERWISE IN SUCH MANNER AS TO ENDANGER THE SAFETY OF ANY HIGHWAY THAT MAY BE CONSTRUCTED ON SAID LANDS, AS RESERVED IN THAT CERTAIN GRANT DEED RECORDED MAY 31, 1999 AS INSTRUMENT NO. 1999-0214711, OFFICIAL RECORDS OF SAN DIEGO COUNTY. PARCEL 2: AN EASEMENT AND RIGHT-OF-WAY FOR INGRESS AND EGRESS, ROAD AND UTILITY PURPOSES INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ELECTRIC POWER, TELEPHONE, GAS, WATER, SEWER AND CABLE TELEVISION LINES AND APPURTENANCES THERETO OVER, UNDER, ALONG AND ACROSS ALL OF LOTS 62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, 68 AND 69 COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO TRACT NO. 4227-1, IN THE COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO, STATE OF CALIFORNIA, ACCORDING TO MAP THEREOF NO. 11979, FILED IN THE OFFICE OF THE COUNTY RECORDER OF SAN DIEGO COUNTY, DECEMBER 16, 1987. PARCEL 3: AN EASEMENT AND RIGHT-OF-WAY FOR ACCESS, INGRESS AND EGRESS, ROAD AND UTILITY PURPOSES INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ELECTRIC POWER, TELEPHONE, GAS, WATER, SEWER AND CABLE TELEVISION LINES AND APPURTENANCES THERETO OVER, UNDER, ALONG AND ACROSS THAT PORTION OF CALLE AMBIENTE, AS DEDICATED AND SHOWN ON COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO TRACT NO. 4227-1, ACCORDING TO MAP THEREOF NO. 11979, IN THE COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO, STATE OF CALIFORNIA, ACCORDING TO MAP THEREOF NO. 11979, DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS:ALL THAT PORTION OF CALLE AMBIENTE AS SO DEDICATED, PORTIONS OF WHICH WERE SUBSEQUENTLY VACATED BY RESOLUTION OF THE BOARD OF SUPERVISORS OF SAN DIEGO COUNTY, RECORDED FEBRUARY 17, 1999 AS INSTRUMENT NO. 1999-095131, OF OFFICIAL RECORDS, LYING WITHIN THE AREA DESCRIBED AS PARCEL 1 OF ACCESS AND DRAINAGE EASEMENT DOCUMENT RECORDED FEBRUARY 1, 1999 AS INSTRUMENT NO. 19990056430, OF OFFICIAL RECORDS OF SAN DIEGO COUNTY. PARCEL 4: ALL USE RIGHTS AND EASEMENTS SPECIFIED AS EXISTING IN OR GRANTED TO AN “OWNER” IN THAT CERTAIN MASTER DECLARATION OF COVENANTS, CONDITIONS AND RESTRICTIONS AND RESERVATION OF EASEMENTS (CIELO RANCHO SANTA FE) RECORDED ON JUNE 23, 2000 AS INSTRUMENT NO. 2000-0332969, OF OFFICIAL RECORDS OF SAN DIEGO COUNTY, CALIFORNIA (THE “DECLARATION”). NOTICE TO POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If you are considering bidding on this property lien, you should understand that there are risks involved in bidding at a trustee auction. You will be bidding on a lien, not on the Property itself. Placing the highest bid at a trustee auction does not automatically entitle you to free and clear ownership of the Property. You should also be aware that the lien being auctioned off may be a junior lien. If you are the highest bidder at the auction, you are or may be responsible for paying off all liens senior to the lien being auctioned off, before you can receive clear title to the Prop-

you can receive clear title to the Property. You are encouraged to investigate the existence, priority, and size of outstanding liens that may exist on this Property by contacting the county recorder’s office or a title insurance company, either of which may charge you a fee for this information. If you consult either of these resources, you should be aware that the same lender may hold more than one mortgage or deed of trust on the Property. NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNER: The sale date shown on this notice of sale may be postponed one or more times by the mortgagee, beneficiary, trustee, or a court, pursuant to Section 2924g of the California Civil Code. The law requires that information about trustee sale postponements be made available to you and to the public, as a courtesy to those not present at the sale. If you wish to learn whether your sale date has been postponed, and, if applicable, the rescheduled time and date for the sale of this Property, you may call 714.730.2727 or visit this Internet Website www.servicelinkasap. com, using the file number assigned to this case 16-00101-2. Information about postponements that are very short in duration or that occur close in time to the scheduled sale may not immediately be reflected in the telephone information or on the Internet Website. The best way to verify postponement information is to attend the scheduled sale. The real Property heretofore described is being sold “as is”. The street address and other common designation, if any, of the real Property described above is purported to be: 7730 CALLE AMANACER, RANCHO SANTA FE, CA. The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the street address and other common designation, if any, shown herein. Said sale will be made without covenant or warranty, express or implied, regarding title, possession, or encumbrances, to pay the remaining unpaid balance of the obligations secured by and pursuant to the power of sale contained in that certain Deed of Trust (together with any modifications thereto).The total amount of the unpaid balance of the obligations secured by the Property to be sold and reasonable estimated costs, expenses and advances at the time of the initial publication of this Notice of Trustee’s Sale is estimated to be $398,997.53 (Estimated), provided, however, prepayment premiums, accrued interest and advances will increase this figure prior to sale. Beneficiary’s bid at said sale may include all or part of said amount. In addition to cash, the Trustee will accept a cashier’s check drawn on a state or national bank, a check drawn by a state or federal credit union or a check drawn by a state or federal savings and loan association, savings association or savings bank specified in Section 5102 of the California Financial Code and authorized to do business in California, or other such funds as may be acceptable to the trustee. In the event tender other than cash is accepted, the Trustee may withhold the issuance of the Trustee’s Deed Upon Sale until funds become available to the payee or endorsee as a matter of right. The Property offered for sale excludes all funds held on account by the Property receiver, if applicable. DATE: September 26, 2017 FIDELITY NATIONAL TITLE COMPANY, TRUSTEE 1600101-2 1101 Investment Blvd., Suite 170 El Dorado Hills, CA 95762 916-636-0114 Sara Berens, Authorized Signor. SALE INFORMATION CAN BE OBTAINED ON LINE AT www.servicelinkasap.com AUTOMATED SALES INFORMATION PLEASE CALL 714.730.2727. A-4634408 DM5221965 10/05/2017, 10/12/2017, 10/19/2017 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO 330 W. Broadway San Diego, CA 92101 PETITION OF: Thomas Busacco


PAGE B20 - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - NORTH COAST

100 - LEGAL NOTICES Thomas Busacco for change of name. ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR A CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER: 37-2017-00033067-CU-PT-CTL TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS Petitioner(S): Thomas Busacco filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: a. Present Name : Thomas Busacco to Proposed Name: Thomas Malone 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: November 3, 2017 Time: 8:30 am Dept: 46 The address of the court is: 220 W. 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: Del Mar Times Date: 09/19/2017 Jeffrey Barton Judge of the Superior Court DM5199673 9/28, 10/5, 10/12, 10/19/17

ANSWERS 10/12/2017

SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO 330 WEST BROADWAY SAN DIEGO, CA 92101 PETITION OF: DONNA GHOSH for change of name. ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR A CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER: 37-2017-000 36184-CU-PT-CTL TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS Petitioner(S): DONNA GHOSH filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: a. Present Name : DONNA GHOSH to Proposed Name: DONNA ROY 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: DEC 01, 2017 Time: 8:30 AM Dept: 46 The address of the court is: 220 WEST BROADWAY SAN DIEGO, CA 92101. A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: CARMEL VALLEY NEWS Date: SEP 28, 2017 JEFFREY B. BARTON Judge of the Superior Court CV5224199 10/5, 10/12, 10/19 & 10/26/2017

SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO 330 W Broadway San Diego, CA 92101 PETITION OF: Rochelle Faye Maio for change of name. ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR A CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER: 37-2017-00037789-CU-PT-CTL TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS Petitioner(S): Rochelle Faye Maio filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: a. Present Name : Rochelle Faye Maio to Proposed Name: Rochelle Faye Neugarten 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

CLASSIFIEDS

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: December 14, 2017 Time: 8:30 Dept: The address of the court is: , . 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: Del Mar Times Date: October 11, 2017 Jeffrey B. Barton Judge of the Superior Court DM5246666 10/19, 10/26, 11/2, 11/9/2017

DID YOU KNOW...? There are more than 9 million millionaires and about 800 billionaires in the world – depending on how the stock market did today.

crossword

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FROM EVENTS, B18

available at celebratethecraft.com.

manure is unsightly, breeds flies, may create health hazards, and can contaminate local streams and water sources. Using composted manure on your garden and landscaping will help your plants thrive and conserves water too! Workshop will also cover basics of traditional composting, as well as the particulars associated with composting manure on-site. This workshop is funded by the County of San Diego. Pre-registration required. Location: Pathfinder Farm, 2101 Marilyn Ln, San Marcos, 92069. Register at: bit.ly/2yqPJnj

Disney’s ‘The Lion King’

Friends of Jung San Diego lecture The Friends of Jung San Diego will hold a Friday lecture, Nov. 3, 7:30 p.m., at The Winston School, 215 9th Street, Del Mar, 92014. Jerome Bernstein, MA, NCPsyA will speak on “Global Climate Change: The Dominion Psyche and the Psyche Left Behind.” Bernstein is a Jungian analyst in private practice in Santa Fe, New Mexico and is a Diplomate of the American Psychotherapy Association. He provides lectures and seminars nationally and internationally on Borderland Consciousness and the psychic and clinical bridges between American Indian (and other indigenous groups) and western healing modalities.

Lecture: Hate Crimes: A Legal Perspective? Friday, Oct. 20, 1 p.m-3 p.m. San Elijo Campus of MiraCosta College, 3333 Manchester Ave, Cardiff, CA 92007, room 204. Free. Lecture: Hate Crimes: A Legal Perspective? Oscar Garcia, from the San Diego County District Attorney’s Office, will discuss the difference between hate crimes, hate speech, civil rights violations and how the 1st amendment pertains to these issues. Info: lifesanelijo@gmail.com

Celebrate the Craft In conjunction with the milestone anniversary of The Lodge at Torrey Pines, on Oct. 29 the property will host the 15th annual Celebrate the Craft, a premier food festival highlighting Southern California’s finest chefs, food artisans, produce, wine and craft beer. In honor of the momentous occasion, the lineup of featured chefs will mirror that of the inaugural 2002 festival. The festival will take place from 11:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. on the luxury hotel’s Arroyo Terrace overlooking the world renowned Torrey Pines Golf Course and Pacific Ocean. Tickets are

The African savannah is coming to life as JCompany Youth Theatre kicks off its Jubilee Season with Disney’s “The Lion King” at The Lawrence Family Jewish Community Center, Jacobs Family Campus Garfield Theatre, 4126 Executive Drive, La Jolla running Oct. 20-Nov. 5. Based on the Disney’s 1994 Academy Award winning animated film, the stage adaptation with music by Elton John and lyrics by Tim Rice, took Broadway by storm in 1998 winning six Tony Awards, including Best Musical. JCC Box Office: 858-362-1348 or sdcjc.org/jc

Parioli Solana Beach anniversary event Parioli Italian Restaurant’s 20-year anniversary and ribbon-cutting event will be held Thursday, Oct. 26, from 5-7:30 p.m. Enjoy an evening of networking, tours, food, drinks, wine pairings and live music. Free. Parioli Italian Restaurant is located at 647 S Highway 101, Solana Beach, 92075. Visit parioliitalianbistro.com

SB Library Refresh Project ribbon-cutting event A ribbon-cutting celebration for the Solana Beach Library Refresh Project will be held Friday, Oct. 20 at 9:30 a.m. at 157 Stevens Avenue, Solana Beach, 92075. Phone: 858-755-1404.

North Coast Symphony Orchestra: ‘Chills and Thrills’ The North Coast Symphony Orchestra, directed by Daniel Swem, will perform “Chills and Thrills” on Sunday, Oct. 22, at 2:30 p.m. at Seacoast Community Church, 1050 Regal Road, Encinitas, 92024. For more details, visit northcoastsymphony.com.

‘How the Grinch Stole Christmas!’ returns to Old Globe The Old Globe’s 20th annual production of Dr. Seuss’s “How the Grinch Stole Christmas!” will run Nov. 4-Dec. 24 on the Donald and Darlene Shiley Stage in The Old Globe Theatre, part of the Globe’s Conrad Prebys Theatre Center. Tickets: TheOldGlobe.org, (619) 23-GLOBE or visit the Box Office.

Laughing Pony Rescue to hold carnival Laughing Pony Rescue (LPR) will host its 2nd annual October Carnival Oct. 22, from 11 a.m.-4 p.m. LPR will be celebrating with free carnival entry, pony rides, arts and crafts, ranch tours, prizes, free carnival games, caricatures, photos with the minis and other ranch horses, pony painting and more. Feeling competitive? Wear your Halloween costume to the carnival and post your photo on LPR’s Facebook page to win a prize. Feeling

hungry? Compete in Laughing Pony’s Pie Eating Contest and steal the title from its official pie eating champ. Most importantly, come meet LPR’s magnificent survivors; their current resident rescue horses. LPR is located at 7143 Via Del Charro, Rancho Santa Fe. Street parking available. For more information, please contact Kathy Szyeller at kathyszeyller@sbcglobal.net or call 760-521-7566.


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NORTH COAST - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - PAGE B21

Coastal Community Foundation celebrates 30th Anniversary

T

he Coastal Community Foundation’s 30th Anniversary Celebration took place Oct. 12 at the local home of John Tehranian and Kristen McBride Tehranian. The mission of the Foundation is to enhance the quality of life in the North Coastal San Diego County by directing philanthropic efforts toward community needs. Visit coastalfoundation.org. Online: delmartimes.net

Casa de Amistad Executive Director Nicole Mione-Green with Casa de Amistad students Mariana, Maria, Gisselle, Keyli

Founding board members Jeanne Orphan, Toni Seay, Anne Omsted, Carolyn Cope. Seated: Helmut Kiffman, Bill Dean, Pastor Bill Harman

Nancy Telford, David Moore

Advisory board member Joe and Mary Kellejian

PHOTOS BY MCKENZIE IMAGES

Kathy Sage, board member Edward Blodgett, Peter Shapiro

Board member Marion Dodson, Suellen and Advisory board member Eric Lodge, Ruby Edman

Hosts John Tehranian and Kristen McBride Tehranian with Zach and Erik

David Meyer and Lizbeth Ecke, Barb Grice, Cathryn B.

John and Debra Dewald, Julian Duvall, Norm Nyberg


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PAGE B22 - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - NORTH COAST

Don’t be a sap this fall, Let maple syrup pour!

G

rowing up in northeastern Canada, maple syrup — the authentic, really good stuff — practically coursed through my veins. We would not only drench pancakes, waffles and French toast in the liquid gold, but drizzle it on savory dishes as well. But even more fun than eating the blissful treat was helping farmers in Quebec drill and tap big ol’ red, black and sugar maple trees to extract the sap throughout the late winter and early spring months during school field trips. A group of kids would hold a wooden bucket under a spigot, steadying the receptacle until brimming with the amber-tinted fluid. The watery sap would then be boiled to a thick, dense consistency, and funneled into shapely glass bottles, which were given to each of us as a souvenir to take home. We treasured the gift, not even knowing the rich store of nutrients it contained. Mighty maple syrup is an antioxidant powerhouse (comparable to the class of superfoods, including berries, green tea and red wine) loaded with blood, bone, heart, prostate and immune-boosting minerals (iron, calcium, magnesium, zinc,

manganese) fluid balancing potassium, and a slew of vitamins, such as, riboflavin to tame migraines and niacin for heart health. This low-cal natural sweetener (17 calories per teaspoon), comprising the complex sugar sucrose is a healthier alternative to simple, refined sugars heralding the fall season with an oomph of full-bodied flavor, color and texture to dial up assorted dishes and drinks. • Whip up some autumn cheer with a splash of pure Canadian, Vermont or Maine maple syrup in an Old Fashioned, Maple Fizz, Bourbon Twist or Mapletini. • Warm the cockles of your heart with a maple pecan latte, maple chai tea or hot maple cider. Or kick off the day with a refreshing maple vanilla bean smoothie.

Now for the food part

• Breakfast is a no-brainer — drizzle on granola, oatmeal, Greek yogurt, egg scramble and biscuits, quick breads, scones or over a pan of sizzling bacon or sausages. • For lunches and dinners, concoct a candied maple walnut vinaigrette for assorted salads or a robust marinade for grilled salmon, chicken, shrimp or scallops, pulled pork, baked beans, roasted roots or a

sweet potato pecan bake (recipe at right). • And for your just desserts, ice cream sundaes, crème brulees and cakes of all manners beckon to be kissed by the lively syrup. To avoid confusion for consumers, the International Maple Syrup Institute has revamped the grading system, which has been accepted internationally throughout the industry. Grade B has been eliminated, leaving Grade A as the sole survivor with varying sub categories. All maple syrup has the same density and maple sugar content (66.9 percent), but only differs in terms of flavor and color ranging from a pale golden hue to a rich, robust brown. • Grade A: Golden Color and Delicate Taste is the first syrup of the sugaring season, with a mild appearance and personality that complements traditional dishes, especially pancakes and waffles without overpowering them. • Grade A: Amber Color and Rich Flavor, a mid-season syrup is the chef’s grade of choice. Like Goldilocks’ porridge it’s the perfect hue and taste for baking and enlivening cocktails. • Grade A: Dark Color and Robust Flavor has a full-bodied taste and appearance, making it a great brown sugar substitute for sauces, hearty cuts of meat and coffee drinks. • Grade A: Very Dark Color and Strong Flavor reminiscent of molasses is tapped at the end of the season, and used commercially for the manufacture of confections. Note: Unopened containers of maple syrup should be stored in cool spots, and once opened need refrigeration.

Sweet Potato Casserole with Maple Pecan Topping ■ For the casserole: 4 pounds sweet potatoes; 1/3 cup pure maple syrup; 1 1/2 tablespoons butter, melted (optional for cholesterol-conscious); 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon; 1/4 teaspoon each ground nutmeg and ginger. ■ For the topping: 1/4 cup melted butter (optional for cholesterol-conscious); 1/3 cup brown sugar; 1 cup pecan pieces or halves. ■ Method: Preheat oven to 400 degrees F. Place sweet potatoes in their jackets on parchment-lined cookie sheet. Pierce with a fork and bake for about 45 minutes or until tender. In a large mixing bowl, scoop out flesh and blend with syrup, butter and spices until smooth. Transfer to an oven-safe casserole dish. Sprinkle nuts and brown sugar on top and pour melted butter evenly. Refrigerate until ready to bake in a moderate oven for 25 minutes or until bubbly and brown. — kitchenshrink@san.rr.com

SPONSORED COLUMNS DR. VAN CHENG San Diego Vein Institute 760.944.9263

Beware Phony Treatments for Spider and Varicose Veins It is inevitable that for any medical condition, theories will pop up for how to treat these conditions with home remedies, with cheap and practical solutions that “really work.” Most are schemes hatched by snakeoil peddlers, with no medical background, who are seeking to make some easy money by either pitching a product that can be put together in their home kitchen or can gain them followers (and advertising revenue) on social media. While some phony treatments will just make users look a little foolish, some can even be hazardous to your health.

1. Tomato Slices. Apparently, there is a myth that tomatoes will remedy varicose

veins if you slice them and put the slices on the capillaries, then wrap the area with a bandage. This is not true. Putting food on your legs will not cure spider veins. But you may smell like a salad.

2. Garlic and other herbal remedies. This time, the myth goes that the garlic should be consumed daily to remedy poor circulation and reduce inflammation (although one “remedy” does suggest making a paste out of minced garlic and alcohol and spreading it on your legs). Now, perhaps if you have varicose veins and are worried about attracting the attention of vampires, then by all means, paste away. But otherwise, this is nonsense. Garlic may have some useful benefits as part of any wellbalanced diet, but it is not a medicine any more than a tomato, and it will not “cure” spider or varicose veins. The same is true for herbals such as witch hazel and horse chestnut, which are purported to effectively treat venous insufficiency and prevent leg cramps and swelling of the ankles and varicose veins

but actually do nothing. Horse chestnut can even be toxic if prepared at home.

3. Cold showers. While cold water or ice packs can help reduce swelling in the legs, thereby reducing pressure on your legs, the coolness won’t cure your spider veins. But it may help swollen legs feel better after a long day.

4. Supplements. The supplements industry is huge. And of course, it is enticing to imagine that taking natural herbs and vitamins can keep you in the peak of health or even, dare to dream, cure what ails you. However, taking supplements, even the popular Vitamin K and butcher’s broom, will not “cure” spider or varicose veins. In fact, supplements aren’t regulated by the FDA, so there is no oversight on what gets put into them and how much, and studies are often not conducted on their effects or their general safety. Always be careful when taking supplements, and consult your doctor to see what would be of any benefit.

Look to these local authorities for professional guidance on daily living at lajollalight.com/our-columns/

5. Apple cider vinegar and natural oils. This is a popular one, that apple cider vinegar is a miracle potion that can keep you from ever visiting a doctor again. While it may have good dietary benefits when taken in small doses, it won’t fix your spider or varicose veins. Similarly, proponents rave about the miraculous restorative effects of oils such as emu oil and castor oil, but sadly, these claims are untrue. Notice the pattern here. Food or herbs or spices may be beneficial dietary components, but they won’t fix you, weather you consume it or rub it onto your skin.

6. Food can’t cure veins, but yoga can. No, yoga can’t “cure” veins. Low impact yoga may help with overall health, has been known to reduce blood pressure, and can help maintain a healthy body weight.

Column continued at http://www.lajollalight.com/our-columns/ sponsored-columnists/sd-ljl-sponsoredcolumns-sd-vein-institute-phonytreatments-spide-varicose-veins20170926-htmlstory.html


www.delmartimes.net

NORTH COAST - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - PAGE B23

Stayko and Isabelle Tcholakov join Coldwell Banker’s Carmel Valley office Stayko and Isabelle Tcholakov have associated with the Carmel Valley office of Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage as affiliate agents. Stayko Tcholakov comes to the office with more than two years of real estate experience. “I am very passionate about real estate and am committed to helping my clients achieve their real estate goals,” said Stayko Tcholakov. “My wife and I chose to affiliate with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage because of its longstanding legacy and high quality of service.” Prior to affiliating with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage, Stayko Tcholakov was an independent salesperson with Keller Williams. He has a background in mechanical engineering and has customer service, media management, data mining and database experience. “Every transaction is important from small to large and whether our clients are looking for a small home or a grand estate, in various zip codes, we are here to serve you,” said Isabelle Tcholakov. “I had a wonderful experience when I worked with Coldwell Banker to purchase my home in San Diego and an investment property in Torrance, which is why I chose to affiliate with Coldwell Banker.” Isabelle Tcholakov was previously the senior research associate II at Takeda Pharmaceutical, Inc. She holds a bachelor’s degree in cellular, molecular and microbial biology from the University of Calgary,

Stayko and Isabelle Tcholakov

COURTESY

Canada and a certificate in human resource management from University of California, San Diego Extension. She sponsors a child in Brazil and a child in Kenya through Compassion International and is a volunteer judge with the Greater San Diego Science and Engineering Fair. “Back in 2003, I moved from Canada to San Diego County to work in the pharmaceutical industry. After more than 15 years in research and development, I decided to pursue my dream job, helping people on their real estate journey,” said Isabelle Tcholakov. “I joined my husband as a licensed and accredited REALTOR to work side by side in real estate. We are a strong team, and our clients will benefit greatly from this union in a number of ways.” Visit coldwellbankerhomes.com

OPEN HOUSES CARMEL VALLEY

$869,000 4BD / 2.5BA $1,225,000 3BD / 3BA $1,429,000 4BD / 3.5BA $1,465,000 4BD / 4.5BA $1,472,475 4BD / 4.5BA $1,730,400 5BD / 5.5BA $1,949,725 5BD / 5.5BA $1,998,000 5BD / 5.5BA $2,199,000 4BD / 4.5BA $3,100,888 5BD / 5.5BA $4,895,000 1BD / 1BA $6,995,000 5BD / 6.5BA

12650-111 Carmel Country Road Mary Chaparro, Berkshire Hathaway 12855 Corbett Court Holly Hermanson, Willis Allen Real Estate 5034 McGill Way Charles & Farryl Moore, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 6132 Artisan Way Dan Conway, Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty 6124 Seafaring Way Dan Conway, Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty 6211 Sunrose Crest Way Dan Conway, Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty 6472 Meadowbrush Circle Dan Conway, Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty 6442 Lilac Mist Bend Dan Conway, Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty 13132 Winstanley Way Charles & Farryl Moore, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 5543 Meadows Del Mar Maggi Kawasaki, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices CA Properties 3857 Pell Place, Unit 112 Cheryl Chen, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices CA Properties 4920 Rancho Del Mar Trail Becky Campbell, Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty

$1,083,000 2BD / 2.5BA $1,100,000 2BD / 2.5BA $2,199,000 3BD / 2.5BA $2,350,000 3BD / 2.5BA $2,380,000 4BD / 4.5BA $3,950,000 3BD / 4BA $5,550,000 4BD / 2.5BA $11,725,000 5BD / 3.5BA

2113 Caminito Del Barco Sat 12 p.m.-3 p.m. Ellen Bryson, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 858-945-2522 2162 Caminito Del Barco Sat 2 p.m.-5:30 p.m., Sun 2 p.m.- 6 p.m. Monica Meredith, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices CA Properties 858-761-1891 12729 Via Felino Sun 1 p.m.-3 p.m. Jennifer Anderson, Willis Allen Real Estate 858-524-3077 2131 El Amigo Road Sat & Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Maxine & Marti Gellens, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices 858-551-6630 4910 Ladera Sarina Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Danielle Short, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 619-708-1500 555 Zuni Drive Sat 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Maxine & Marti Gellens, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices 858-551-6630 1832 Seaview Avenue Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Jennifer J. Janzen-Botts, Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty 760-845-3303 2508 Ocean Front Sat & Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Csilla Crouch, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices 858-245-6793

$865,000 3BD / 2BA $1,495,000-$1,650,000 4BD / 4BA

260 Turner Ave. Sat & Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Gracinda Maier, Berkshire Hathaway Home Services 858-395-2949 3686 Sage Canyon Drive Sat 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Kacey Smith, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices California Properties 760-672-5706

$1,185,000 3BD / 3BA $1,195,000 4BD / 2.5BA $1,195,000 3BD / 3BA $1,228,000 3BD / 2.5BA $1,298,000 4BD / 4BA $1,399,000 4BD / 3BA $1,825,000 5BD / 4BA $1,895,000-$1,995,000 4BD / 3BA $2,875,000 4BD / 5BA $3,395,000 5BD / 6.5BA $3,890,000 4BD / 5BA $4,735,000 4BD / 4.5BA $7,900,000 6BD / 6.5BA

16118 Via Madera Circa Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Mary Heon, Coldwell Banker 619-888-7653 5255 Via Talavera Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Nena Jo Haskins, Nena Jo Haskins & Assoc. 858-395-5026 4031 Avenida Brisa Fri, Sat & Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Shannon Biszantz, Pacific Sothebys International Realty 619-417-4655 16118 Via Madera Circa Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Mary Heon, Coldwell Banker 619-888-7653 7504 Garden Court – Santaluz Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Eileen Anderson, Willis Allen Real Estate/Host: Anderson Team 858-245-9851 3934 Via Valle Verde Sat & Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Dan Conway, Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty 858-243-5278 7951 Nathaniel Court – The Crosby Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Colleen Roth, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 858-357-6567 4611 El Mirlo Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Danielle Short, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 619-708-1500 5489 Calle Chaparro Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Cathy Gilchrist-Colmar, Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty 858-775-6511 6867 Poco Lago Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Lisa Golden, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices CA Properties 858-776-6995 5076 El Mirlo Sat & Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Linda Sansone, Willis Allen/Hosts: Tom Chamberlain(Sat), Karla Gatto(Sun) 858-775-6356 4512 Los Pinos Sat 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Danielle Short, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 619-708-1500 6546 La Valle Plateada Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Scott Union, Union West 858-518-9663

$1,440,000-$1,460,000 4BD / 2.5BA $1,795,000-$1,850,000 4BD / 4BA

1535 Santa Elena Court Jo Ambrogio, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 1739 Sienna Canyon Dr Bob Angello, Willis Allen Real Estate

DEL MAR

Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 619-884-4477 Sat & Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 619-417-8974 Sat & Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 858-395-7525 Sat & Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 858-243-5278 Sat & Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 858-243-5278 Sat & Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 858-243-5278 Sat & Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 858-243-5278 Sat & Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 858-243-5278 Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 858-395-7525 Sat & Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 858-692-0310 Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 858-366-2767 Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 858-449-2027

ENCINITAS

RANCHO SANTA FE

SOLANA BEACH

Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 619-261-4808 Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 858-755-9100

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

Contact April Gingras

|

april@rsfreview.com

|

858-876-8863


www.delmartimes.net

PAGE B24 - OCTOBER 19, 2017 - NORTH COAST

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