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Man pleads guilty to assault in University City
THIS WEEK
BY NEAL PUTNAM | LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS
Newly discovered Dr. Seuss’ book to be released SEE PAGE 2
The Sunny Jim cave silhouette.
Luau and Legends of Surfing raises $720K for cancer research SEE PAGE 5
La Jolla Cove’s famous caves still an attraction, especially Sunny Jim BY JILL DIAMOND
Social Concept opens on Prospect Street SEE PAGE 10
THOMAS MELVILLE / VILLAGE NEWS
| LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS
In addition to its breathtaking scenery, La Jolla has something a lot of beachside communities don’t – sea caves. The seven La Jolla sea caves – The White Lady, Shopping Cart, Little Sister, Sea Surprize, Arch Cave, Sunny Jim and Clam Cave – can be identified from east to west. It is said the caves were formed from a 75-million-yearold sandstone cliff, and according to an LA Times article, they were originally used as a hideout for drug smugglers and some pirates. In addition, all but the Sunny
Jim and The White Lady were named in the 1900s and 1800s by lifeguards to help identify landmarks during search and rescue missions, according to the same article. Speaking of Sunny Jim, it is the only La Jolla cave accessible by land; visitors can walk down 145 steps into a hand-dug tunnel after buying a ticket at the Cave Store. As the story goes, and according to La Jolla Historical Society archives, the Sunny Jim cave has a long history dating back to 1902. “The Sunny Jim Cave was one of seven La Jolla caves originally
exploited as a tourist attraction in the early 1900s by Gustav Schulz, a German immigrant, artist, and engineer. Schulz, a self-proclaimed professor, artist, photographer and civil engineer, who dug a tunnel into it and provided public access from land, first by rope and then stairs, collected a modest sum from anyone wishing to enter,” said La Jolla Historical Society historian Carol Olten. “The same idea has continued into the present day with people paying a fee to make the descent SEE SEA CAVES PG. 2
A man who stabbed a passenger on a Greyhound bus in the University City area has pleaded guilty to assault with a deadly weapon aboard a mass transit vehicle. Gilbert Louis Dominguez, 36, also pleaded guilty to a felony assault of another inmate in jail in a separate incident on Oct. 22. Dominguez faces a sentencing range from 13 to 21 years in prison, according to court records. San Diego Superior Court Judge Polly Shamoon set sentencing for Nov. 12. The incident aboard the Greyhound occurred July 11, 2018 at 12:30 p.m. as the bus was traveling on Interstate 5 in University City near the Genesee exit. The bus victim, Martin Hernandez, 27, was cut behind the ear with the knife slicing his throat. He was also stabbed in both arms and in the back. The prosecutor said Dominguez did not know Hernandez. An attempted murder charge was dropped after the guilty pleas. The bus driver kicked both men off the bus and called 911. Hernandez was taken to a hospital. Dominguez was convicted of carjacking in Los Angeles Superior Court in 2001 and served a prison sentence for that, records say. His prior record does play a factor in the 21-year maximum sentence. Dominguez remains in jail without bail.
News 2 Dr. Seuss’ first nonfiction children’s book ‘Horse Museum’ to be released Sept. 3 FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 2019
LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS
BY VICTORIA DAVIS It’s been 28 years since world-acclaimed children’s book author Theodor Seuss Geisel, or “Dr. Seuss,” passed away, leaving behind more than 50 beloved published works, from “The Cat in the Hat” to “Green Eggs and Ham.” Since 1995, six additional Seuss books have been completed and released posthumously by Random House and a seventh is now on its way. “Horse Museum” is Dr. Seuss’ first nonfiction, non-rhyming children’s book and it’s set to hit bookstores across the U.S. on Sept. 3. There will be 250,000 copies released of the first printing. “’Horse Museum’ is not a traditional story book,” said Susan Brandt, president of Dr. Seuss Enterprises, in an email interview. “It contemplates what art is all about and teaches children how to think about art. While it’s unique from Ted’s other books, Dr. Seuss’s ‘Horse Museum’ screams Dr. Seuss because Ted does not talk down to children in this book. He uses his unique and genius way of writing for children that respects and ignites children’s imaginations.” In the fall of 2013, Brandt received a call from Dr. Seuss’ wife Audrey Geisel — who passed away just last year — and his assistant Claudia Prescott. The two had discovered, in a hidden closet behind a bookshelf at Seuss’ home in La
Jolla, a box of the author’s old manuscripts. Inside the box was a folder marked “Noble Failures,” filled with uncategorized drawings and illustrations, a more complete project titled “The Pet Shop” — which was published in 2015 as “What Pet Should I Get?” — and lastly, a collection of sketches titled “Horse Museum.” “I was so excited,” said Brandt. “It was indeed like discovering treasure!”
In Dr. Seuss’ latest picture book, a horse in a formal suit and bowtie takes a group of school children on a tour of a horse museum, filled with various depictions (sculptures, photos and paintings) of horses from famous artists such as Deborah Butterfield, Jacob Lawrence, Pablo Picasso, Jackson Pollock, and others. The book explores the history of art and distinctions between techniques; cubism versus realism and expressionism versus
impressionism. “I was surprised how much I learned about art just by doing the book,” said Andrew Joyner, an acclaimed children’s book illustrator based in Australia who was hired by Seuss Enterprises and Random House to illustrate Seuss’ new book. “I love the concept…Dr. Seuss’ idea that you can understand art by looking at how different artists have looked at horses, or painted horses. It just shows how endlessly
SEA CAVES >>
“When people go down the steps it takes about 10-15 minutes through a long tunnel and they end up on a platform inside the cave where they can take in the scene,” she said. There’s no swimming or jumping into the water and because it’s a sea cave the water comes in and out of the cave. “The water is underneath you, so you don’t get wet. People love it,” she said. However, some recent construction in the area has caused a bit of a wrinkle for the shop. “It has slowed down slightly but people are still allowed to drive down here but they can’t drive all the way down Coast Boulevard,” she said. “We still have a lot of visitors, but parking is limited. “The city is doing some repair work on Cove Cave, which is not accessible to locals or tourists.” According to Anthony Santacroce, senior spokesperson for City of San Diego, the city has taken safety precautions for the repairs. Crews began the emergency construction project to stabilize one cliff area on Aug. 8, and the roadway in La Jolla following an analysis by geology experts. He said experts discovered a zone of weakness where “Koch’s Cave,” (pronounced as “cook” and named after lifeguard Jeff Koch who made a daring rescue there in 1977) is located underneath Coast Boulevard and recommended action be taken.
CONT. FROM PG. 1
from inside the Cave Store into Sunny Jim, eponymously named after a historic cartoon character whose profile is vaguely suggested by the silhouette seen from looking oceanward through it,” Olten said. She added that for many years the store operated mainly as a shell shop for exotic and not-so-exoticfinds, but the merchandise today is more generalized with “beachy things, postcards, a few antiques and memorabilia.”
EARLY DAYS In the beginning, visitors had to enter through the original Schulz’s Cave Store and lowered themselves down into the tunnel by a rope. Years later the steps were added and continue today, according to current Cave Store shop owner Shannon Smith. Smith said she has owned the shop for a few years now located at 1325 Coast Blvd. and it has become more of a souvenir store for those looking to take a bit of the nostalgia back home. “The store and cave continue to be popular attractions all these decades later we have thousands who visit yearly and probably hundreds daily,” she said. “We are the oldest continuously running business – we’ve been open more than 100 years.
creative he was.” Though Joyner’s art illustrations differ from that of the well-known “Seuss style,” Joyner’s artwork still captures the childhood charm and lighthearted spirit of Seuss’ storytelling. But still, little Easter eggs have been scattered throughout the book, certain pages featuring beloved Seuss characters like the Grinch, Horton the Elephant, and the Cat in the Hat, all original illustrations by Dr. Seuss. “I wanted the book to also feel like a bit of a tribute to him,” said Joyner. “I didn’t want to copy Dr. Seuss’ style because I don’t think I’m capable of that. But I wanted the spirit of his drawings in there. I think he’s an amazing artist and he’s had a huge impact on my childhood. So, the publishers and I thought this was a nice way to have this 60-or-so-page book be a homage to him.” “We get to ensure every generation has the opportunity to experience these amazing characters and stories,” added Brandt. “I hope that children, and adults as well, will understand and embrace the core message of this book, that art is what an artist sees in something… This is a very sophisticated yet simple message that I hope children will embrace both when they see art and when they are inspired to create their own art.” “Dr. Seuss’ Horse Museum” will be available for sale on Amazon. “We immediately shut down the street and initiated an emergency contract to reinforce the cave,” Santacroce said. As part of the stabilization project, sections of Cave Street and Coast Boulevard will be closed temporarily to all traffic for about six weeks or longer depending on what is found by the crews, he said. “People can still get around and this cave will essentially be closed off permanently, we’re just not sure how it will appear when the project is completed,” he said. “People however can still get around and see the beautiful La Jolla caves.”
SUNNY JIM FOLKLORE According to more folklore, some stories suggest the cave was initially called “Sunny Jim” by Frank Baum, the author of “The Wizard of Oz.” Why? Because looking outward from the inside of the cave, the opening profile resembles the cartoon mascot for British Force Wheat Cereal (named Sunny Jim) created by W.W. Denslow in the 1920s. There are other rumors and tales suggesting the cavern was named after former California Gov. “Sunny Jim” Rolph. A third tales says it is named so because its opening resembles a smiling (sunny) man (named Jim for an unknown reason) facing leftward.Like Sunny Jim the other six caves have their own story and history, which will be explored in upcoming articles.
LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS · FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 2019 · PAGE 3
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News 4 Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego partners with city to study kelp forests’ health FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 2019
LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS
BY DAVE SCHWAB | LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS In partnership with the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego, the city of San Diego will spend $3.6 million in a five-year study of the region’s kelp forests to determine their overall health and future outlook with global warming. Thus far, it’s going well, said SIO researcher Ed Parnell. “It’s basically a continuation of the work we’ve been doing over the years by different agencies,” he said of the new study. “It’s to determine the status of the kelp forest in North County, La Jolla and Point Loma, along with a census of the different animal and plant species that share the ecosystem from the water bottom to the surface, measuring current oxygen and nutrient levels.” Kelp is a simple, nonflowering, and typically aquatic plant of a large group of marine algae (Laminariales) that includes seaweeds.
Algae contain chlorophyll for photosynthesis (using sunlight to create plant foods from carbon dioxide and water) but lacks true stems, roots, leaves and vascular tissue. A wide range of sea life uses kelp forests for protection or food, including fish. Kelp forests occur worldwide throughout temperate and polar coastal oceans covering about 25% of the world’s coastlines. Parnell said early indications are San Diego’s kelp beds are making a comeback from past decimation from El Nino weather patterns. Such events are characterized by the appearance of unusually warm, nutrient-poor water off northern Peru and Ecuador, typically in late December, which impact San Diego. Where the ocean ecosystem is concerned, cooler is better, said Parnell. “Cooler water is more nutritious,” he said. “Warmer water is less nutritious, and stresses plant
A giant sea bass captured swimming through one of San Diego’s kelp forests.
and animal species making them more prone to disease.” Parnell said long-term studies of San Diego’s kelp forests over the years show a cyclical process of kelp “die-offs and comebacks.” “With the El Nino of 1977, there was a big change in terms of a larger, more regional and warmer weather pattern,” he said. “Since then, the water’s been warmer and the kelp has been more frequently disturbed.” Last August, the highest water temperature ever measured in more than 100 years, 78.6 degrees, was recorded in San Diego at Scripps Pier. “Last summer, we had Hawaii
temperatures here up near the surface,” noted Parnell. But recently, the San Diego kelp has been rebounding along with the return of cooler water temperatures. “It’s coming back, but it’s not coming back everywhere where it was before,” said Parnell adding, “we have a very shallow thermocline [temperature change in water depth] and very cold water below, so the kelp is doing better this year.” Parnell characterized varying water temperatures year to year as a “sawtooth” pattern. “We see trends, cycles, in longer frequencies,” he said. “Right now, what we’re seeing is a trend of the California current getting warmer. But
OCTAVIO ABURTO / iCLP
now that we’ve returned to colder [water] conditions this year, the kelp is doing better.” But if ocean water temperatures climb again, the kelp will again becoming increasingly stressed. “If we get conditions again like the late ’70s, the kelp may have a harder time making it back, and it could go the way of becoming a relic in some areas,” said Parnell. A total of 450 dives per year will be conducted at 21 areas in kelp forests along the San Diego coast in the five-year study. The project is funded by the city’s 280,000 sewer customers whose utility bills include a calculation for the kelp project.
News
FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 2019 LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS
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La Jolla’s annual Luau and Legends of Surfing Invitational raises $720K BY EMILY BLACKWOOD | LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS When doctors diagnosed Teresa McKeown with stage 4 breast cancer in 2016, she prepared for the worst. While she had already beaten it once in 2003, this time her tumors came back with a vengeance, causing a small bowel obstruction that made it difficult for her to eat.
Teresa McKeown was one of the cancer survivors who attended the annual Luau and Legends of Surfing Invitational. EMILY BLACKWOOD/VILLAGE NEWS
Her health rapidly declined in the seven months following her diagnosis, and her weight dropped to under 100 pounds. “At that point, I was really heading towards hospice,” she said. “I was wrapping up life.” After continuously failing numerous chemotherapy treatments, McKeown found herself in a very dire place and began to write goodbye journals to her three children. On those pages, she said tried to “foresee and condense a lifetime of a mother’s love.” But thanks to a clinical trial done at the hands of surgical oncologist Jason Sicklick, MD, at the Moores Cancer Center at UC San Diego Health, her children won’t have to live without their mother’s love. “I remember when I was very, very sick just wanting to know if there was anyone out there with stage 4 who was alive,” she said. Eventually, she did come across someone with stage 4 who was participating in a clinical trial and seeing great results. Finally, McKeown found something she had been searching for a long time: hope. So, she asked Sicklick if there were any clinical trials she would be a candidate for, and he said yes. McKeown enrolled in a trial, and after two infusions, her tumor markers had dropped by 75%. After eight weeks of treatment, she had a
Surf legends came together to raise money for the Moores Cancer Center at UC San Diego Health. EMILY BLACKWOOD/VILLAGE NEWS
complete response. She was declared cancer-free in the summer of 2017. “It absolutely turned my health around, 180,” she said. “And it’s been nothing but healing ever since.” Stories like McKeown were on display at the 26th annual Luau and Legends of Surfing Invitational, a major fundraiser for the Moores Cancer Center. Held on Aug. 18 at Scripps Pier, the event brings together more than 500 surfers, doctors, and cancer survivors to raise over $720,000 for the Moores
Yes, Please!
McKeown shares the same sentiment. “I never could have imagined that that was going to be my journey,” she said. “Right now, it feels like there are not a whole lot of stories identical to mine, but I really believe with all my heart that I’m at the front end of a long line of people. “One day, what happened to me will be an expected response — not an outlier.” For more information about the Moores Cancer Center at UC San Diego Health, visit health.ucsd.edu.
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PAGE 6 · FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 2019 · LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS
Update your home décor quickly dramatically with window treatments Most homeowners are looking for ways to upgrade their home décor quickly and dramatically. One of the most overlooked pieces of home décor are the window treatments, which can alter your interior design more than you may realize. Take a look at these tips to see how you can update your home without compromising your style.
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Drapery is an easy way for any homeowner to layer onto existing window treatments bringing new life to an old look. It
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Homeowners are always on the lookout for ways to save money, and the monthly gas/electric bill can be a sore spot. Start saving with window treatments that keep your home well insulated. Drapery is great at controlling the amount of light that enters a room. During the summer, light entering a home will heat
the interior and cause the energy costs to rise. Closing drapes during the day can reduce those costs because drapery acts as an additional layer of insulation. Drapery also acts as a barrier from the outside temperature during the cold winter months. No matter the season, drapery is the perfect way to help keep you comfortable inside, regardless of what the weather is doing outside.
and see someone else looking back in at you. Having control of who is seeing into your home is something that you need to account for. Before you say your windows are private enough, think about them at night. Once the sun goes down, and it starts to get dark, any light on in your home makes it easier to see in. With light filtering options you can determine the level of light entering or leaving your windows, allowing you to Privacy be able to see out without Sometimes, privacy can unwanted eyes peering in. be an afterthought until Because of the variety of you look out your window fabrics available, drapery
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Business 8 Med’s new chef debuts menus A Better Deal closes in Bird Rock after 22 years FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 2019
LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS
The Med at La Valencia's new executive chef Timothy Ralphs recently debuted his first breakfast and lunch menus. The classically trained chef known for fresh, flavorful dishes with a touch of whimsy immediately took to the kitchen to begin working on a new breakfast menu. Ralphs added five dishes inspired by the flavors found 34 miles south of La Valencia. These include favorites with a twist, like a breakfast quesadilla with eggs, spinach, bacon, cheese, and guacamole, as well as Ralphs' chorizo Benedict with pico de gallo, avocado and chipotle hollandaise. For lunch, bright, clean dishes shine with additions such as a pineapple poke bowl with tofu, edamame, radish, mushrooms and avocado; Jidori chicken with whipped cauliflower, roasted brussels sprouts, and chicken glace; and his seafood fritti with squid, shrimp, scallops and assorted peppers. These new menu additions are available now with a dinner menu to follow in the upcoming weeks. The Med is located at La Valencia at 1132 Prospect St. Visit lavalencia.com for more information.
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BY EMILY BLACKWOOD | LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS After more than two decades of selling tuxedos, suits and other formal wear to the Bird Rock community, A Better Deal is closing its doors for good. Janet Klein — who owns and runs the store with her husband, Jerry — said closing shop wasn't a decision they made on their own. According to her, they were forced to close after the building sold. The mixed-use office and retail space, often referred to as the "Piano Building,” sold for $2.9 million in December 2018 according to The Franco Realty Group, who represented the buyer and the seller. "The building was purchased, and they have other plans," she said. "And we can't move forward at another location. It would be impossible to at this point in Jerry and my's life." For 22 years, Jerry Klein served as the face of A Better Deal, often standing in the store's showroom talking to customers while Janet handled things behind the scenes. Three years ago, doctors diagnosed Jerry with Alzheimer's disease, and Janet has had to take over most of the responsibility. "Jerry drew a lot of people in," Janet recalled. "He was a social butterfly. Everybody loved Jerry. They called him the mayor of Bird Rock." These days, Jerry is still at the
Janet and Jerry Klein owned A Better Deal for over two decades. EMILY BLACKWOOD / VILLAGE NEWS
store with Janet, greeting customers, telling them the news of their closing and adding that "he's ready for a day off." "It's a bittersweet situation," Janet said. Janet and Jerry have until Aug. 31 to move out of the building. They're currently trying to sell as much inventory as possible, offering 20-75% off all merchandise. Whatever they can't sell, they'll donate, and after that, Janet said she'll be looking for work in addition to caretaking for her husband. "It's not retirement, unfortunate-
ly," she said, adding that she's not sure if she'll look for similar work. Jerry started in the suit and tuxedo industry in the 1970s in Chicago, and Janet later joined him. They opened A Better Deal on 369 Bird Rock Ave., in 1997 and have been a staple in the community ever since. "I've had customers coming in here crying," she said. "We've been very successful. Our Yelp reviews are off the charts, and the majority of our customers are referrals and repeats. We've had a lot of good years here."
University City
FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 2019 LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS
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UCHS graduate featured on ‘Blown Away’ and other University City news She spent the last six years of her career at Corning as the team leader of the Hot Glass program on Celebrity Cruises, during which she traveled to over 60 countries. Congrats, Annette!
BY JEMMA SAMALA | LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS University City High School graduate Annette Sheppard is one of 10 contestants on the newly released Netflix reality series, “Blown Away.” The series features professional glass artists producing original works of art, one to be selected as “Best of Blow” in each episode, with one artist being eliminated from the competition in each episode. Filming took place in Toronto in October-November of last year in a warehouse converted into a “hot shop” featuring 10 furnaces. This made for less than ideal conditions at times as temperatures climbed to as high as 130 degrees. Judging was performed by well-known artist and professor at CSU, San Bernardino, Katherine Gray, and a variety of guest judges. Grand prize package included an “Artist in Residency” stint at the famous Corning Museum of Glass in Corning, New York. Annette graduated from UCHS in 1998. She was a three-sport varsity athlete and continued her educa-
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University City High School graduate Annette Sheppard is a contestant on the newly released Netflix reality series, “Blown Away.” COURTESY PHOTO
tional and athletic career at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, where she was the four-year starting catcher on the varsity softball team, making two appearances in the NCAA softball regionals as Ivy League champs in 1999 and 2001. Annette graduated with a bachelor’s degree in design and environmental analysis in 2003. During her final year, on an architecture class field trip to the Corning Museum of Glass, she became fasci-
nated with the medium and began taking classes and acquiring internships and scholarships at Corning, the Penland School of Crafts in North Carolina, and the Pilchuck glass school in Washington. In 2008, she began working full-time at Corning in the traveling Hot Glass show, spending time at the Indianapolis Children’s Museum, the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago, and the Norton Museum of Art in Palm Beach.
A little less than two years ago, after the Parkland, Florida school shooting, University City High School Principal Jeff Olivero sent out a request to the UC community to help create an on-campus Neighborhood Watch program. With this call out, four amazing retired seniors in the area agreed to join the high school and become senior “ambassadors” to the school. Not only did the UC seniors provide an extra pair of eyes on campus, they also immersed themselves into the fabric of the school. They visited classes, talked to students and staff, and helped around campus when needed. UCHS wants to again extend this opportunity to the UC community by asking seniors to consider joining the UCHS team.
If you are a senior with two-three hours of free time a week to join UCHS as a senior Centurion, please email Principal Jeff Olivero at jolivero@sandi.net or drop by UCHS, 6949 Genesee Ave. Senior Centurions will enjoy this relationship with their local high school as there is nothing better than to be around an energetic and vibrant school community.
STANDLEY PARK EVENTS Summer Movies in the Park continues with “Ralph Wrecks the Internet” on Saturday, Sept. 7, starting at dusk. The free movie is a chance for the whole family to relax and enjoy a safe and special night under the stars. For a schedule of all remaining Summer Movies in the Park scheduled throughout San Diego, visit summermoviesinthepark.com. The final Summer Concert at Standley Park is scheduled for Sunday, Aug. 25 from 5-7 p.m. The band Forecast will play a wide variety of jazz styles, from funk to swing to bossa. Don’t forget to bring your dancing shoes. This will also be the special occasion where the University City Community Association will honor the many volunteers that help make University City more than just a neighborhood! For both free events, bring a blanket, chairs, and a picnic snack and drinks. Come early to enjoy the park and get a good seat. Standley Park is located at 3585 Governor Drive.
NIGHT WALKS In the still of the night, there’s a whole world of critters that comes alive. Take a walk during one of the upcoming Friends of Rose Canyon’s free nighttime events and you can experience the animal night life. Evening Nature Exploration Walk — Saturday, Aug. 24, 6:308 p.m. Meet at Regents/Lahitte Court (two blocks north of Governor Drive). Kids will especially enjoy finding birds, rabbits coming out to eat, animal tracks and beautiful night-blooming flowers as they open. During the easy walk, you can enjoy the sunset, feel the cool evening air, and experience the canyon as it transitions from day to night. It’s a peaceful and magical time of day. Discover Insects at Night — Saturday, Aug. 31, 8-9:30 p.m. at UC Village Park (corner of Florey Street and Cather Avenue) Jim Berrian, field entomologist at the San Diego Natural History Museum, will set up blacklights to attract insects such as moths and beetles. Participants will catch them, identify them, and then let them go. UC Village Park is on the rim of Rose Canyon adjacent to native habitat where many nocturnal insects live. For both events, you may leave at any time and there are no bathrooms at either site. For more info, contact Debby Knight, Friends of Rose Canyon, 858-597-0220, rosecanyon@san.rr.com.
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FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 2019 LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS
Community
Living back in the United States and two summers working in Israel Doing it Better By Natasha Josefowitz, Ph.D. Back from our business trip/honeymoon in South America, my husband Sam’s apartment was in a basement on the west side of the city. The small windows were right under the ceiling. We had a view of people’s feet passing by. One day Sam invited business associates to come over for drinks. I was to serve hors d’oeuvres. Remembering my mother’s caviar canapés, but not having the money for such luxury, I bought fake caviar; it was black and looked the part. I dutifully made little sandwiches and arranged them prettily on a platter. They were sitting in the fridge waiting for the guests to arrive, but when I opened the refrigerator door to serve my lovely appetizers, all I saw was black liquid from the fake caviar running down the sides of my dish; it was a mess. I was too embarrassed to admit what had happened. Next time, I thought, I will have a can of peanuts for such emergencies. That time, however, we had drinks with nary a bite of food. Returning home from our honeymoon, I dis-
covered I was pregnant. Sam and I were delighted to welcome a daughter; twenty-one months later a son followed. With our expanded family we needed a larger apartment. We found one facing Central Park where I spent many happy hours sitting at the playground while my children played in the sandboxes and on the slides. To escape the heat in New York, we rented a small summer cottage in Bound Brook, New Jersey, close to a factory where Sam was experimenting with a new fire-retardant paint (he was a chemical engineer). It turned out to be a failure, as the paint, although fire-retardant, remained sticky to the touch. I had two children in diapers—this was before disposables—so every couple of days I would drive to the local laundromat with the kids in tow. One day Sam came home with half a dozen baby chicks, which turned out to be ducks who took over the children’s inflatable pool. The children loved running after. We gave them to our neighbors when we returned to New York. I enjoyed those summers living out in the countryside. Sam continued to travel on business. He would fly home for a few days and then take off again, leaving me to raise the children alone. As they got older, I wanted to pursue a career. The Child Study Association was looking for
people to read and write reviews of child development books for parents and psychologists. This was a perfect job for me as I could stay home to work and meet weekly in their offices to discuss my findings and hand in my reviews. I worked there for many years. In 1961, the U.S. government funded a study on children in daycare. They were looking for a parttime researcher. Based on my experience, they offered me the job. As my children were in school, I accepted the position. The project involved doing a literature review of psychologists’ and psychiatrists’ writings about child development. I identified 25 professionals from Europe, Israel and the U.S. willing to spend part of a summer living in a kibbutz in Israel studying different patterns of childcare and how they affect child development. This involved my spending two summers in a kibbutz in Israel, the first to prepare and the second to coordinate a symposium. Kibbutz Dahlia was a typical, 500-member, agricultural, self-sustaining community. Children lived in a children’s house from infancy until university. They were divided into age groups with four to six children and an adult called a metapelet in each bedroom. Children spent their days at their house, eating, studying, playing, and sleeping. Parents came after work to pick them up for
dinner and returned them to the children’s house to put them to bed. The European and American participants were interested in studying farming communities to compare the children to kibbutz children. They held many discussions with the Israeli participants. The kibbutz children were seen as more secure, self-confident, and less aggressive than their counterparts with good ego development and no evidence of success strivings. Competition was between groups, but not within the group. Leadership was shared at various times. Since everything including toys were shared equally by all the children, there was no need for individual ownership, nor acquisition drive. The collective was successful in producing sociable, responsible, and contended members of the kibbutz society, with the large majority returning to the kibbutz after completing university. It was a privilege to have organized and been involved with this group from its inception to its conclusion. The insights gained by the participants contributed to the literature on the management of daycare centers. Natasha Josefowitz is the author of more than 20 books. She currently resides at White Sands Retirement Community in La Jolla. Copyright © 2019. Natasha Josefowitz. All rights reserved.
Del Mar Fairgrounds to host inaugural Taste of New Orleans Sept. 1 BY BART MENDOZA | LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS A brand new event, Taste of New Orleans, kicks off on Sept. 1 at the Del Mar Fairgrounds. Celebrating the sounds and foods of the Big Easy, more than 2,000 people are expected to take part in the inaugural event, with music provided by Louisiana favorites, Cowboy Mouth, as well as local combos Theo & the Zydeco Patrol, Billy Lee & the Swamp Critters and The Bayou Brothers. Organized by Kevin Hellman of SDS Events USA, a Taste of New Orleans ticket includes the festival as well as track admission, program and tip sheet and five New Orleans-themed drink or beer tasters. Though known as a promoter of such local events as The San Diego Music Awards, Hellman was actually born in New Orleans and returns regularly, making this festival a natural extension of his other projects.
“I have a deep connection to that city,” he explained. It was that connection that led to the creation of this festival. “I’m part of the San Diego LSU Alumni group, and we do an annual event in the spring. I was contacted by the Del Mar Thoroughbred Club about doing something similar to that in the fall to coincide with racing season, and we came up with the concept for the ‘Taste.’” What is it about New Orleans’ art and culture that resonates with folks around the world? “It's the people of New Orleans that make the scene,” Hellman said. “They’re very resilient, very much wanting to always have a good time. NOLA has a great music and artist community. Once you visit NOLA, it gets inside of you. It makes for a ton of fun when you see NOLA artists perform.” While Hellman loves the music of New Orleans when it comes to a favorite part of this event, for
him its no contest. “Everything is a highlight, really, but food is a standout,” he said. “I love the food. Where else can you get gumbo, jambalaya, etouffee, shrimp platters, beignets and more, all in one place outside of Louisiana? I can't wait to take a bite out of a fried shrimp po’boy. “And then of course the music is going to be fantastic. It all works together. Not to mention, you can enjoy the horse races all afternoon, and it's a beautiful outdoor setting in Del Mar. It’s going to be fun.” For Hellman, the choice of headliner was easy. “Cowboy Mouth is one of my favorite NOLA bands,” he said. “I first saw them at the Pacific Beach Block Party back in 1995, but more importantly, they recently performed at the LSU Alumni of San Diego Crawfish Boil event at the SDCCU Stadium, and they just killed it.” The crowd response provided the impetus for a
quick return. “I thought it would be great to have them back in town again to follow up on that show. People just raved about seeing them. Of course, they are just the tip of the iceberg. All of the bands we have are a lot of fun and great at what they do.” Though the first edition of Taste of New Orleans has yet to happen at the time of writing, Hellman is already thinking ahead. “Hopefully, if all goes well, this becomes an annual event that I will be asked to curate for years to come,” he said. “The Del Mar team is great to work with, and I'm really looking forward to a long history working with them, making this event bigger and bigger each year.” Taste of New Orleans: 12-6 p.m., Sunday, Sept. 1 at The Del Mar Fairgrounds, 2260 Jimmy Durante Blvd. All Ages. $25. 14 and under free. For more information, visit dmtc.com/calendar/detail/ NewOrleans.
New socially conscious store opens on Prospect BY ADAM BEHAR | LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS This summer, we’re seeing more retail stores opening in La Jolla that are aligned with specific causes. Last month, Two Stories, a clothing store helping to forge collaboration and peace between Israelis and Palestinians, opened on Pearl Street, and just last weekend, Social Concept, an eyewear, jewelry, and apparel store devoted to helping the people of Latin America, hosted a grand opening at its Prospect Street location. The idea behind Social Concept, owner Chris Ortiz said, is to “provide customers with attractive, high-quality merchandise produced by talented artists and designers in impoverished regions like El Salvador.” The product lines that Ortiz and his co-owner wife Stephanie lovingly curate come with an inspiring backstory. Their line of women's apparel, for example, is weaved by artisans in Cojutepeque, a small town in El Salvador.
Each product is connected with a specific social program that supports the health and education needs of the local population. Social Concept also has a partnership with Buenavista Optometry in El Salvador. An optometrist recently performed eye exams in a poor community for more than 80 students and parents; of that cohort, Chris explains, 37 individuals required glasses, which were provided without charge by Social Concept. The inspiration for Social Concept came when Chris and Stephanie, after years of toiling in fast-paced ad agencies and then completing their graduate degrees, decided to move to El Salvador, where Stephanie has family. What they saw on the ground changed their perspectives. “The need down there is extraordinary,” said Chris. “We spent a lot of time getting to know the people and identifying their most fundamental needs. We wanted to help the
people, and Social Concept became our vehicle.” The human suffering in that part of the world is driving migrants away from Central America in search of a better life elsewhere. The best way to address the problem, say the experts, is by tackling the underlying causes, including poverty and gangs. “Our customers know that they are receiving high-quality products that are not only unique,” said Chris, “but which allow young men in El Salvador to learn a craft that can translate into a lifelong career and keep them away from gangs.” But Chris and Stephanie Ortiz are not just pie-in-the-sky idealists; they are marketing pros who understand that doing good is also good for business. The Nielsen Global Survey on corporate social responsibility, which surveyed nearly 30,000 people across 58 countries, found that 50% of global consumers are willing to pay a premium for socially re-
Social Concept opened on Prospect Street last weekend. COURTESY PHOTO
sponsible products. “The idea with Social Concept is for the customers to feel they are engaging not simply in a transactional exchange of money but a deeper and more meaningful purchase experience,” said Chris. While Chris and Stephanie are currently creating partnerships that
benefit the people of El Salvador, their plan is to eventually expand the Social Concept model to other Latin American countries such as Panama and Mexico. For more information about Social Concept, visit their store at 1295 Prospect St., Ste 109 or go online at socialconceptsd.com.
LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS · FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 2019 · PAGE 11
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St. Madeleine Sophie’s Center presents 42nd Haute with Heart Fashion Show Fashion Files Diana Cavagnaro St. Madeleine Sophie’s Center presented the 42nd Haute with Heart Fashion Show & Luncheon at the Hilton San Diego Bayfront on Aug. 10. The invitation for the event this year was by featured artist and SMSC student John Agostini. His artwork was of the legendary actress Rita Hayworth. Each guest was given a note card with this artwork on it. The event kicked off with a social hour and fabulous silent auction. There was shopping with fun boutiques for everyone’s enjoyment. Each person was able to have their picture taken as they came in and were greeted by students of SMSC. As the guests sat down for lunch, Cirque Quirk treated them to an amazing circus performance. Master of ceremonies was Clint Bell and Marianne Kushi, anchor at NBC 7 News Today, was the celebrity emcee. The Honorary Chair Dee
Ammon and Host Chair De Anna Dougherty welcomed the crowd. Sr. Virginia Rodee, RSCJ, gave the invocation and SMSC student Charlie Lizarraga sang the national anthem. Clint Bell was the auctioneer for the live auction, which had so many incredible items. One priceless item was to be the first car in valet after the event, paid parking including gratuity, have a personal concierge carry your auction items to your car and have two of your favorite Starbucks beverages waiting for you. The theme for the fashion show this year was” Dreaming of Style.” Leonard Simpson, creator of Fashion Forward, produced this theatrical production. He gave the audience a “dreamy” fashion experience. SMSC Students came down the runway with special guests wearing fashion from Macy’s. Satori Boutique showed eclectic fashions on the runway with bold designs. Vicente Guzman Cruz had a collection on the catwalk with vibrant colors. Jennifer Grace from Chateau Bel Age showed sophisticated clothes with a touch of gold. John Parks
from Ziglio Suits presented well-tailored suits for men. The finale showed cased couture designer Juliet Sailo with headpieces topped off by Gloria Parker. Other designers in the show included Aimee Fuller Hats and Debbie Solan. St. Madeleine Sophie’s Center provides programs for adults who have developmental disabilities. This may include autism, Down syndrome, or cerebral palsy. Some of the programs include art, music, drama and dance along with an organic garden program and an aquatics and fitness program. All these courses are used to educate and empower these individuals. The motto for St. Madeleine Sophie’s Center is “Empowerment for Life…. through Innovation and Education.” If you would like more information about this terrific organization, visit: stmsc.org.
UPCOMING EVENTS Saturday, Sept 21 — 15th annual Strut for Sobriety. This will be a boutique, luncheon, awards ceremony and fashion show to be
Bold designs from Satori Boutique.
DIANA CAVAGNARO/VILLAGE NEWS
held by A New PATH at the Sheraton Harbor Island Marina Tower. The event celebrates recovery from drug addiction. Fashion show produced by Gretchen Productions. For info: 619-670-1184 Saturday, Oct. 5 — 33rd annual Fur Ball. Held from 6-11 p.m. at the San Diego Humane Society. Honoring Senate President Pro Tempore Toni G. Atkins. The evening includes a cocktail reception, live and silent auctions, and exquisite vegetarian meal prepared by chef Jeffrey Strauss of Pamplemousse Grille and after-party with music by Haute Chile. Well-man-
nered leashed dogs are invited. For tickets, call: 619-243-3469. Monday, Oct. 14 — Zandra Rhodes: 50 Fabulous Years in Fashion. Book signing with Zandra Rhodes, who is one of Britain’s most recognized designers, and a discussion about her 50 years in fashion. The designs are from 1969 to present. Location is Warwick’s on 7812 Girard Ave., at 7:30 p.m. Diana Cavagnaro is an internationally renowned couture milliner based in the historic Gaslamp Quarter. Learn more about our hat designer, teacher and blogger at DianaCavagnaro.com.
Fourth Friday Jazz: Rob Thorsen BY BART MENDOZA | LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS
Finale with couture designs from Juliet Sailo and headpieces by Gloria Parker.
DIANA CAVAGNARO/VILLAGE NEWS
The monthly Fourth Friday Jazz Series at the La Jolla Community Center continues with a performance from the Rob Thorsen Trio on Aug. 23. Thorsen is an acclaimed bassist and one of the lynchpins of San Diego’s music community, teaching, mentoring, performing with and inspiring generations of musicians during his career. Most often seen performing alongside the likes of Gilbert Castellanos, Steph Johnson and the Mike Wofford/Holly Hofmann Quartet, this show spotlights Thorsen’s own group, featuring pianist Hugo Suarez and drummer Richard Sellers. Anyone who appreciates adventurous music and the bass in particular, will enjoy every second of Thorsen’s performance. The Rob Thorsen Trio, Friday, Aug. 23, at the La Jolla Community Center, 6811 La Jolla Blvd. 8 p.m. $25. All ages. For more information, visit ljcommunitycenter.org.
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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 20199018230. Fictitious Business Name(s) a. INGRID’S HEALING HANDS and b. INGRID’S WELLNESS MASSAGE. Located at: 5210 BALBOA AVE. #F, SAN DIEGO, CA 92117. Is registered by the following: INGRID C. WILSON. This business is conducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL. The first day of business was: 7/24/19. Registrant Name: INGRID C. WILSON. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: JULY 24, 2019. ISSUE DATES: AUGUST 02, 09, 16, & 23, 2019. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 20199018571. Fictitious Business Name(s) NATALIE NEECE VIRTUAL ASSISTANT AND COPYWRITER. Located at: 1133 REED AVE. #D, SAN DIEGO, CA 92109. Is registered by the following: NATALIE MICHELLE NEECE. This business is conducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL. The first day of business was: 7/29/19. Registrant Name: NATALIE MICHELLE NEECE. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on: JULY 29, 2019. ISSUE DATES: AUGUST 02, 09, 16, & 23, 2019. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 20199018444. Fictitious Business Name(s) ANDRES TRUCKING, TOWING AND RELOCATIONS. Located at: 720 FOURTH AVE. #270, SAN DIEGO, CA 92101. Is registered by the following: KEVIN LAMARR ANDRES. This business is conducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL. The first day of business was: 7/16/19. Registrant Name: KEVIN LAMARR ANDRES. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: JULY 26, 2019. ISSUE DATES: AUGUST 02, 09, 16, & 23, 2019. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 20199018035. Fictitious Business Name(s) LOS RANCHEROS TACO SHOP. Located at: 1847 MAIN ST., RAMONA, CA 92065. Is registered by the following: LOS RANCHEROS TACO SHOP LLC. This business is conducted by: A LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY. The first day of business was: 7/22/19. Registrant Name: LOS RANCHEROS TACO SHOP LLC. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor OWNER/CEO. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: JULY 22, 2019. ISSUE DATES: AUGUST 09, 16, 23, & 30, 2019. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 20199018511. Fictitious Business Name(s) AXIOS SKATE COMPANY. Located at: 3238 COWLEY WAY, APT. 2, SAN DIEGO, CA 92117. Is registered by the following: MICAH ALEXANDER DEVLAMINCK. This business is conducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL. The first day of business was: 7/29/19. Registrant Name: MICAH ALEXANDER DEVLAMINCK. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: JULY 29, 2019. ISSUE DATES: AUGUST 09, 16, 23, & 30, 2019. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 20199018935. Fictitious Business Name(s) LICORICE PIZZA. Located at: 209 S. VENTURA RD. #36, PORT HUENEME, VENTURA, CA 93041. Is registered by the following: GARY TROUSDALE. This business is conducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL. The first day of business was: 6/01/19. Registrant Name:
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SUITE 205, SAN DIEGO, CA 92109. Is registered by the following: THERA FRENTZ STORM. This business is conducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL. The first day of business was: 11/01/18. Registrant Name: THERA FRENTZ STORM. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: AUGUST 05, 2019. ISSUE DATES: AUGUST 09, 16, 23, & 30, 2019. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 20199019171. Fictitious Business Name(s) ROCKSTAR RIDES INC. Located at: 1036 S. SANTA FE AVE., VISTA, CA 92084. Is registered by the following: ROCKSTAR RIDES INC. This business is conducted by: A CORPORATION. The first day of business was: 3/01/13. Registrant Name: ROCKSTAR RIDES INC. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor PRESIDENT. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: AUGUST 05, 2019. ISSUE DATES: AUGUST 16, 23, 30, & SEPTEMBER 06, 2019. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 20199019341. Fictitious Business Name(s) CORI PASTIFICIO. Located at: 2305 HISTORIC DECATUR ROAD, SUITE 100, SAN DIEGO, CA 92106. Is registered by the following: LOTARIA INC. This business is conducted by: A CORPORATION. The first day of business was: N/A. Registrant Name: LOTARIA INC. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor SECRETARY. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: AUGUST 07, 2019. ISSUE DATES: AUGUST 16, 23, 30, & SEPTEMBER 06, 2019. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 20199018023. Fictitious Business Name(s) CALIFORNIA PAIN AND SPINE CARE. Located at: 5565 GROSSMONT CENTER DRIVE STE 540, LA MESA, CA 91942. Is registered by the following: WILLIAM LEROY WILSON, M.D., INC. This business is conducted by: A CORPORATION. The first day of business was: N/A. Registrant Name: WILLIAM LEROY WILSON, M.D., INC. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor PRESIDENT. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: JULY 22, 2019. ISSUE DATES: AUGUST 16, 23, 30, & SEPTEMBER 06, 2019. SUMMONS (CITACION JUDICIAL) CASE #: 37-2019-00013551-CU-PA-CTL NOTICE TO DEFENDANT: (AVISO AL DEMANDADO): ISABELLE MARIE LIM, DOES 1 TO 100 YOU ARE BEING SUED BY PLAINTIFF: (LO ESTA DEMANDANDO EL DEMANDANTE): MARDY LYNN FISHER NOTICE! You have been sued. The court may decide against you without your being heard unless you respond within 30 days. Read the information below. You have 30 CALENDAR DAYS after this summons and legal papers are served on you to file a written response at this court and have a copy served on the plaintiff. A letter or phone call will not protect you. Your written response must be in proper legal form if you want the court to hear your case. There may be a court form that you can use for your response. You can find these court forms and more information at the California Courts Online Self-Help Center (www.courtinfo.ca.gov/selfhelp), your county law library, or the courthouse nearest you. If you cannot pay the filing fee, ask the court clerk for a fee waiver form. If you do not file your response on time, you may lose the case by default, and your wages, money, and property may be taken without further warning from the court. There are other legal requirements. You may want to call an attorney right away. If you do not know an attorney, you may want to call an attorney referral service. If you cannot afford an attorney, you may be eligible for free legal services from a nonprofit legal services program. You can locate these nonprofit groups at the California Legal Services Web site (www.lawhelpcalifornia.org), the California Courts Online Self-Help Center (www.courtinfo.ca.gov/selfhelp), or by contacting your local court or county bar association. NOTE: The court has a statutory lien for waived fees and costs on any settlement or arbitration award of $10,000 or more in a civil. case. The court’s lien must be paid before the court will dismiss the case. AVISO! Lo han demandado. Si no responde dentro de 30 dias, la corte puede decidir en su contra sin escuchar su version. Lea la informacion a continuacion. Tiene 30 DIAS DE CALENDARIO despues de que le entreguen esta citacion y papeles legales para presentar una respuesta por escrito en esta corte y hacer que se entregue una copia al demandante. Una carta o una llamada telefonica no lo protegen. Su respuesta por escrito tiene que estar en formato legal correcto si desea que procesen su caso en la corte. Es posible que haya un formulario que usted pueda usar para su respuesta.Puede encontrar estos formularios de la corte y mas informacion en el Centro de Ayuda de las Cortes de California (www.sucorte.ca.gov), en la biblioteca de leyes de
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su condado o en la corte que le quede mas cerca. Si no puede pagar la cuota de presentacion, pida al secretario de la corte que le de un formulario de exencion de pago de cuotas. Si no presenta su respuesta a tiempo, puede perder el caso por incumplimiento y la corte le podra quitar su sueldo, dinero y bienes sin mas advertencia. Hay otros requisitos legales. Es recomendable que llame a un abogado inmediatamente. Si no conoce a un abogado, puede llamar a un servicio de remision a abogados. Si no puede pagar a un abogado, es posible que cumpla con los requisitos para obtener servicios legales gratuitos de un programa de servicios legales sin fines de lucro. Puede encontrar estos grupos sin fines de lucro en el sitio web de California Legal Services, (www.lawhelpcalifornia.org), en el Centro de Ayuda de las Cortes de California, (www.sucorte.ca.gov) o poniendose en contacto con la corte o el colegio de abogados locales. AVISO: Por ley, la corte tiene derecho a reclamar las cuotas y los costos exentos por imponer un gravamen sobre cualquier recuperacion de $10,000 o mas de valor recibida mediante un acuerdo o una concesion de arbitraje en un caso de derecho civil. Tiene que pagar el gravamen de la corte antes de que la corte pueda desechar el caso. The name and address of the court is: (El nombre y direccion de la corte es): SAN DIEGO SUPERIOR COURT, 330 WEST BROADWAY, SAN DIEGO, CA 92101. The name, address, and telephone number of plaintiff’s attorney, or plaintiff without an attorney, is: (El nombre, la direccion y el numero de telefono del abogado del demandante, o del demandante que no tiene abogado, es): JOSEPH C. ROSENBLIT, 1370 N. BREA BLVD., SUITE 235, FULLERTON, CA 92835, Telephone: 877475-7065 Date: 03/13/2019 Clerk (Secretario), by L. SHEFFA, Deputy (Adjunto). COMPLAINT-Personal Injury, Property Damage, Wrongful Death Type (check all that apply): MOTOR VEHICLE, Property Damage, Personal Injury, Jurisdiction (check all that apply): ACTION IS AN UNLIMITED CIVIL CASE (exceeds $25,000) CASE NUMBER: 37-2019-00013551-CUPA-CTL 1. Plaintiff (name or names): MARDI LYNN FISHER alleges causes of action against defendant (name or names): ISABELLE MARIE LIM; 2. This pleading, including attachments and exhibits, consists of the following number of pages: 4;6. The true names of defendants sued as Does are unknown to plaintiff.; a. Doe defendants (specify Doe numbers): 1 - 51 were the agents or employees of other named defendants and acted within the scope of that agency or employment.; b. Doe defendants (specify Doe numbers): 51 - 100 are persons whose capacities are unknown to plaintiff.; 8. This court is the proper court because: a. at least one defendant now resides in its jurisdictional area.; c. injury to person or damage to personal property occurred in its jurisdictional area.; 10. The following causes of action are attached and the statements above apply to each (each complaint must have one or more causes of action attached): a. Motor Vehicle; 11. Plaintiff has suffered: a. wage loss; b. loss of use of property; c. hospital and medical expenses; d. general damage; e. property damage; 14. Plaintiff prays for judgment for costs of suit; for such relief as is fair, just, and equitable; and for: a. (1) compensatory damages The amount of damages is (in cases for personal injury or wrongful death, you must check (1)): (1) according to proof Date: March 12, 2019 (TYPE OR PRINT NAME) JOSEPH C. ROSENBLIT (SIGNATURE OF PLAINTIFF OR ATTORNEY) JOSEPH C. ROSENBLIT (number) FIRST CAUSE OF ACTION – Motor Vehicle ATTACHMENT TO Complaint (Use a separate cause of action form for each cause of action.) Plaintiff (name): MARDI LYNN FISHER MV-1. Plaintiff alleges the acts of defendants were negligent; the acts were the legal (proximate) cause of injuries and damages to plaintiff; the acts occurred on (date): 3/31/2017 at (place): I-805 S/B 250 feet north of Home Ave., City of San Diego, County of San Diego, CA MV-2. DEFENDANTS a. The defendants who operated a motor vehicle are (names): ISABELLE MARIE LIM Does 1 to 20 b. The defendants who employed the persons who operated a motor vehicle in the course of their employment are (names): ISABELLE MARIE LIM Does 21 to 40 c. The defendants who owned the motor vehicle which was operated with their permission are (names): ISABELLE MARIE LIM Does 41 to 60 d. The defendants who entrusted the motor vehicle are (names): ISABELLE MARIE LIM Does 61 to 80 e. The defendants who were the agents and employees of the other defendants and acted within the scope of the agency were (names): ISABELLE MARIE LIM Does 81 to 90 Page 4 ISSUE DATES: 8/16, 8/23, 8/30, & 9/06/19. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 20199018933. Fictitious Business Name(s) CHRIST IS THE HEAD OF THE CHURCH MINISTRIES. Located at: 4040 HANCOCK ST. APT. 908, SAN DIEGO, CA 92110. Is registered by the following: REV. GENEVA URQUHART. This business is conducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL. The first day of business was: N/A. Registrant Name: REV. GENEVA URQUHART. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: AUGUST 01, 2019. ISSUE DATES: AUGUST 16, 23, 30, & SEPTEMBER 06, 2019. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 20199017968. Fictitious Business Name(s) DIVINE HEALING ESSENTIALS. Located at: 1024 47TH ST., SAN DIEGO, CA 92102. Is registered by the following: MONIQUE SHERI COX. This business is conducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL. The first day of business was: N/A. Registrant Name: MONIQUE SHERI COX. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: JULY 22, 2019. ISSUE DATES: AUGUST 16, 23, 30, & SEPTEMBER 06, 2019. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 20199019320. Fictitious Business Name(s) a. METRO FIRE b. METRO FIRE & SAFETY c. METRO FIRE EQUIPMENT and d. METRO FIRE PROTECTION SERVICES. Located at: 8254 RONSON RD., SAN DIEGO, CA 92111. Is registered by the following: CINTAS CORPORATION NO. 2. This business is conducted by: A CORPORATION. The first day of business was: 7/12/19. Registrant Name: CINTAS CORPORATION NO. 2. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor VICE PRESIDENT – CORPORATE DEVELOPMENT. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: AUGUST 07, 2019. ISSUE DATES: AUGUST 16, 23, 30, & SEPTEMBER 06, 2019. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 20199019783. Fictitious Business Name(s) BASEBALL BARD. Located at: 6660 CAMINITO HERMITAGE, LA JOLLA, CA 92037. Is registered by the following: RICHARD MARK SICKMAN. This business is conducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL. The first day of business was: 7/16/12. Registrant Name: RICHARD MARK SICKMAN. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: AUGUST 12, 2019. ISSUE DATES: AUGUST 16, 23, 30, & SEPTEMBER 06, 2019. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 20199019880. Fictitious Business Name(s) MAXIMUS BOOKKEEPING SERVICES. Located at: 7780 MARGERUM AVE., UNIT 132, SAN DIEGO, CA 92120. Is registered by the following: RAMUNE LIUCVAITYTE. This business is conducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL. The first day of business was: N/A. Registrant Name: RAMUNE LIUCVAITYTE. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: AUGUST 13, 2019. ISSUE DATES: AUGUST 23, 30, SEPTEMBER 06, & 13, 2019.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 20199019727. Fictitious Business Name(s) KARATS AND CARATS JEWELRY. Located at: 2727 WORDEN ST., SAN DIEGO, CA 92110. Is registered by the following: MARY CHARLAINE WETTERSTROM. This business is conducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL. The first day of business was: 3/01/19. Registrant Name: MARY WETTERSTROM. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: AUGUST 12, 2019. ISSUE DATES: AUGUST 23, 30, SEPTEMBER 06, & 13, 2019. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 20199019436. Fictitious Business Name(s) ROAST MASTER USA. Located at: 4643 MISSION GORGE PL. SUITE B, SAN DIEGO, CA 92120. Is registered by the following: AIR ROASTING, INC. This business is conducted by: A CORPORATION. The first day of business was: 8/01/19. Registrant Name: AIR ROASTING, INC. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor PRESIDENT. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: AUGUST 07, 2019. ISSUE DATES: AUGUST 23, 30, SEPTEMBER 06, & 13, 2019. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 20199019964. Fictitious Business Name(s) a. DEXET TECHNOLOGIES and b. DEXET. Located at: 600 B ST., SUITE 300, SAN DIEGO, CA 92101. Is registered by the following: DEXET TECHNOLOGIES LLC. This business is conducted by: A LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY. The first day of business was: N/A. Registrant Name: DEXET TECHNOLOGIES LLC. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor CEO. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: AUGUST 13, 2019. ISSUE DATES: AUGUST 23, 30, SEPTEMBER 06, & 13, 2019. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 20199020035. Fictitious Business Name(s) ELEVATE SPEECH THERAPY. Located at: 5084 GEORGETOWN AVE., SAN DIEGO, CA 92110. Is registered by the following: CHANEL, CRISTA, JORGESON. This business is conducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL. The first day of business was: N/A. Registrant Name: CHANEL JORGESON. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: AUGUST 14, 2019. ISSUE DATES: AUGUST 23, 30, SEPTEMBER 06, & 13, 2019. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 20199019769. Fictitious Business Name(s) COLLEGE TOWNE NEWS. Located at: 1621 GRAND AVE. STE. C, SAN DIEGO, CA 92109. Is registered by the following: MANNIS COMMUNICATIONS, INC. This business is conducted by: A CORPORATION. The first day of business was: 8/06/19. Registrant Name: JULIE MAIN FOR MANNIS COMMUNICATIONS, INC. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor PRESIDENT. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: AUGUST 12, 2019. ISSUE DATES: AUGUST 23, 30, SEPTEMBER 06, & 13, 2019. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 20199020086. Fictitious Business Name(s) TRADESMAN PLUMBING. Located at: 1059 SAPPHIRE ST., #C, SAN DIEGO, CA 92109. Is registered by the following: THOMAS LAURENT CARON. This business is conducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL. The first day of business was: 8/01/19. Registrant Name: THOMAS LAURENT CARON. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: AUGUST 14, 2019. ISSUE DATES: AUGUST 23, 30, SEPTEMBER 06, & 13, 2019. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 20199020185. Fictitious Business Name(s) MYROOMERS. Located at: 2930 BAYSIDE WALK, SAN DIEGO, CA 92109. Is registered by the following: JASON ERIC GRIFFIN. This business is conducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL. The first day of business was: 8/15/19. Registrant Name: JASON ERIC GRIFFIN. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: AUGUST 15, 2019. ISSUE DATES: AUGUST 23, 30, SEPTEMBER 06, & 13, 2019. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 20199019721. Fictitious Business Name(s) MG BUILDER. Located at: 5014 AMNEST ST., SAN DIEGO, CA 92117. Is registered by the following: MICHAEL WAYNE GOODMAN. This business is conducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL. The first day of business was: N/A. Registrant Name: MICHAEL WAYNE GOODMAN. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/ Corporation, Title of Signor. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: AUGUST 12, 2019. ISSUE DATES: AUGUST 23, 30, SEPTEMBER 06, & 13, 2019. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 20199020112. Fictitious Business Name(s) a. ALLSEATER and b. ALL-SEATER. Located at: 2448 HISTORIC DECATUR RD. #105, SAN DIEGO, CA 92106. Is registered by the following: WONKA BAR, INC. This business is conducted by: A CORPORATION. The first day of business was: N/A. Registrant Name: WONKA BAR, INC. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor CFO. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: AUGUST 15, 2019. ISSUE DATES: AUGUST 23, 30, SEPTEMBER 06, & 13, 2019. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 20199018428. Fictitious Business Name(s) NATASHA PETERSBURGSKAYA. Located at: 2500 TORREY PINES RD. #205, LA JOLLA, CA 92037. Is registered by the following: a. NATALIA KRAKOVSKY and b. ALEXANDER KRAKOVSKY. This business is conducted by: A MARRIED COUPLE. The first day of business was: 7/23/19. Registrant Name: NATALIA KRAKOVSKY. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/ Corporation, Title of Signor. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: JULY 26, 2019. ISSUE DATES: AUGUST 23, 30, SEPTEMBER 06, & 13, 2019. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 20199019647. Fictitious Business Name(s) CCS GAMES SD. Located at: 4366 ½ BOSTON AVE., SAN DIEGO, CA 92113. Is registered by the following: KAREN LYNN ST. SAUVEUR. This business is conducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL. The first day of business was: 8/01/19. Registrant Name: KAREN LYNN ST. SAUVEUR. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/ Corporation, Title of Signor. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: AUGUST 09, 2019. ISSUE DATES: AUGUST 23, 30, SEPTEMBER 06, & 13, 2019. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 20199020324. Fictitious Business Name(s) THINGS TO DO. Located at: 10271 CAMINITO RIO BRANCO, SAN DIEGO, CA 92131. Is registered by the following: JENNIFER CHING MOFF. This business is conducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL. The first day of business was: N/A. Registrant Name: JENNIFER CHING
Community LEGALS ADS 900 MOFF. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: AUGUST 16, 2019. ISSUE DATES: AUGUST 23, 30, SEPTEMBER 06, & 13, 2019. STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF USE OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME FILE NO. 2019-9020024 Fictitious Business Name to be Abandoned: MEDICALHISTORY I.D. Located at: 7335 BULLOCK DR., SAN DIEGO, CA, 92114. The Fictitious Business name referred to above was filed in San Diego County on: 4/18/2018 and assigned File No. 2018-9010488. Fictitious Business name is being abandoned by: a. UTE BURRELL 7335 BULLOCK DR., SAN DIEGO, CA, 92114 and b. GARY M. BURRELL 7335 BULLOCK DR., SAN DIEGO, CA, 92114. This business is conducted by: A MARRIED COUPLE. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to section 17913 of the Business and Professions code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000).) Registrant name: UTE BURRELL. Title of officer, if limited liability company/corporation. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on: AUGUST 14, 2019. ISSUE DATES: AUGUST 23, 30, SEPTEMBER 06, & 13, 2019. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-9019474. Fictitious Business Name(s) OKDO. Located at: 15373 INNOVATION DRIVE, SUITE 380, SAN DIEGO, CA 92128. Is registered by the following: ALLIED ELECTRONICS, INC. This business is conducted by: A CORPORATION. The first day of business was: N/A. Registrant Name: ALLIED ELECTRONICS, INC. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor CONTROLLER / SECRETARY. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: AUGUST 08, 2019. ISSUE DATES: AUGUST 23, 30, SEPTEMBER 06, & 13, 2019. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-9020284. Fictitious Business Name(s) LUV2SHOP4STUFF. Located at: 8069 CAMINITO DE PIZZA UNIT G, SAN DIEGO, CA 92108. Is registered by the following: LISA ANN PEARCE. This business is conducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL. The first day of business was: N/A. Registrant Name: LISA ANN PEARCE. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr. Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: AUGUST 16, 2019. ISSUE DATES: AUGUST 23, 30, SEPTEMBER 06, & 13, 2019. AMENDED ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO CASE NO: 37-2019-00042462-CU-PT-CTL. TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: 1. Petitioner (name): CATHRYN BELL filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: Present name: a. CATHRYN BELL to Proposed name: KATHRYN BELL 2. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that indicates the reasons for the objection at least two court 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 a. Date: 10/31/2019 TIME: 9:00 AM DEP: 903; b. The address of the court is other (specify): 1100 UNION STREET, SAN DIEGO, CA 92101; 3 a. A copy of this Order to show cause shall be published at least once each week for four consecutive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county (specify newspaper): The Peninsula Beacon and La Jolla Village News. Date: AUGUST 15, 2019. JUDGE OF THE SUPERIOR COURT PETER C. DEDDEH. ISSUE DATES: AUGUST 23, 30, SEPTEMBER 06, & 13, 2019.
FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 2019 LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS
Local legends inducted into San Diego’s Surfing Hall of Fame
LA JOLLA
VILLAGE NEWS
BY DAVE SCHWAB | LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS Several local surfers and shapers were among legends of the sport who were inducted Aug. 13 into the San Diego Surfing Hall of Fame at a ceremony at Belly Up Tavern in Solana Beach. The event was hailed by its organizers as “the greatest gathering of surf legends San Diego has ever seen.” Among the inaugural list of surfing hall of famers: • Skip Frye (from Pacific Beach known for his pro surf career and iconic boards.) • Mike Hynson (from Pacific Beach who costarred in the 1966 hit "The Endless Summer" and surfboard design guru.) • Butch Van Artsdalen (from La Jolla, a pioneering surfer who took on 25-foot waves in Hawaii to garner the title "Mr. Pipeline.") • Tom Ortner (La Jolla resident and an icon in the Windansea beach community.) • Carl Ekstrom (from La Jolla, developed the first asymmetrical boards in the late 1960s.) • Larry Gordon (a fixture in the board making community from the 1960s until his death in 2016.) • John Holly (veteran Ocean Beach surfer and board shaper.) • Chuck Hasley (founder of the Windansea Surf Club of La Jolla.)
LJCC ANNOUNCES AUGUST CONCERT
This month, the La Jolla Community Center will host concerts on Aug. 17, 23, 24, and 31, at 6811 La Jolla Blvd. At 7 p.m., Aug. 17, David Roberts and the Sounds of Sinatra will perform swing and big band music. The Rob Thorsen Trio will perform songs by Duke Ellington and Wayne Shorter with a reception at 7 p.m. and a concert at 8 p.m., Aug. 23. From 5-6:30 p.m., Aug. 24, world-class virtuoso violinist Yonatan Leviim will perform the work of Bach, Telemann, and Paganini. At 7 p.m., Aug. 31, the KatieCat & Cain Jazz Trio will perform jazz, bossa nova, and the blues. To reserve tickets or to learn more, visit ljcommunitycenter.org.
BIG BROTHERS BIG SISTERS ANNUAL DINNER
Big Brothers Big Sisters of San Diego County will host its 57th annual gourmet dinner from 5:30-7 p.m., Oct. 10, at the Hyatt Regency La Jolla, 3777 La Jolla Village Drive. This event will feature a seafood cocktail party, gourmet dinner, hosted bar, silent auction, and live music. For the past 57 years, this event has brought together 700 local businesses and community leaders to fund over 500 children for a full year. To learn more about Big Brothers Big Sisters or purchase tickets, visit sdbigs.org.
1621 Grand Ave. Suite C San Diego, CA 92109 (858) 270-3103 sdnews.com lajollavillagenews.com Twitter: @ljvillagenews
EDITOR: Emily Blackwood x133 emily@sdnews.com CONTRIBUTING EDITORS: Thomas Melville x131 Kendra Sitton x136 Dave Schwab x132 Jeff Clemetson x130 COPY EDITOR: Dustin Lothspeich
Carl Ekstrom of La Jolla speaking during the event.
• Windansea Surf Club (legendary surf club known for boasting some of the best-known surfing names.) Surfboard craftsman Hank Warner, a legend in his own right, was the event’s master of ceremonies. “It was a big event, Belly Up was packed,” said Warner adding, “Ninety-nine percent of surfers grew up idolizing these inductees in the San Diego Surfing Hall of Fame.” Attendees enjoyed live music from Jimmy Lewis, live art from Wade Koniakowsky, and a special collaboration between Warner and surf filmmaker Ira Opper. “These innovators and pioneers have emerged everywhere that waves break. In this regard, San Diego has been particularly blessed,” organizers wrote. “Our 70 miles of coastline have produced some of the most innovative shapers and wave stylists in the sport. And as everyone paddling out to the lineup knows, you have to hon-
COURTESY PHOTO
or those who have come before us.” Warner discussed his long-term goals for the San Diego Hall of Fame. “We’re going to be doing this yearly,” he said. “We have a list of about 100 people we’ll be choosing from.” Warner pointed out the inaugural list of legends are “influential surfers so it was pretty much bulletproof (selecting) for the first year.” Warner said the objective is for the San Diego Hall of Fame to be nonprofit and truly representative of the surfing community. “It’s an amazing group,” he noted. “It’s not just surfers. It’s shapers. It’s artists. It’s photographers, the whole gamut. It’s really honoring all the elite surfers who have come before us.” Discussing the policy of a future brick-and-mortar San Diego Hall of Fame site, Warner envisions inductees “donating boards, photos, wetsuits, etc., priceless heirlooms to the museum/hall of fame.”
CONTRIBUTORS: Bart Mendoza Diana Cavagnaro Neal Putnam Natasha Josefowitz, Nicole Sours Larson Scott Hopkins Linda Marrone Dave Thomas Paige Fulfer Judi Curry Lucia Viti Ed Piper Jemma Samala Kathy Miller Gray Victoria Davis Adam Behar PRODUCTION: Chris Baker x107 Barbara Rogel x107 MARKETING MANAGER: Francisco Tamayo x116 ADVERTISING SALES: Mike Fahey x117 Michael Long x112 Heather Long x115 Paul Welsh x106 Rick Santos LEGAL/CLASSFIEDS: Calin Cionca x140 ACCOUNTING: Heather Humble x120 PHOTOGRAPHERS: Don Balch Jim Grant Sharon Hinckley John Cocozza Mike McCarthy
SUBMISSIONS/NEWS TIPS: Send press releases, tips, photos or story ideas to tom@sdnews.com For breaking news and investigative story ideas contact the editor by phone or email. We encourage letters to the editor and guest editorials. Please email submissions to tom@sdnews.com and include your phone number and address for verification. Deadline for publication is Friday 12:00pm. We reserve the right to edit letters for brevity and accuracy. Letters and guest editorials do not necessarily reflect the views of the plublisher or staff DISTRIBUTION: La Jolla Village News is distributed every other Friday. Copyright 2019. All rights reserved.
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FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 2019 LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS
Sports
LJ women rowers: strength in the boat Kate and Liv Bolitho have quite a heritage on the water as rowers for the San Diego Rowing Club (SDRC). They not only enjoy their mother Colette’s sticky toffee pudding, a traditional South African dessert, but also also receive the drafting their father Glynn’s career as a rower in college in their ancestral land provides. Granddad was in a boat, too. Plus, of course, mom and grandma were swimmers. “The bond you have in the boat is ultimately the thing that is going to make the boat go faster,” says Kate, headed to University of California, Berkeley this fall to pull an oar for the Golden Bears, during a discussion of intangibles and what provides an advantage of mere milliseconds. She knows the racer’s edge, having crewed for the SDRC juniors to a silver medal in the monster Head of the Charles Regat-
ta in Boston — second in a field of 84 boats. Kate, a 2019 graduate of Bishop’s, her sister, Liv, a junior Knight, and their friend and teammate, Chantal Lanatta, who graduated from La Jolla High in June, emphasize the extreme conditioning that rowing demands, as well as the need for cohesion among teammates in the boat. They row in four- and eight-person boats, the former with the coxswain calling the rhythm in the back of the boat, the latter in the bow. “You see people try to juggle rowing and other sports,” says Lanatta, who will row at Newcastle University in the U.K. this fall, “and they don’t keep up. It’s physically exhausting.” She played soccer and volleyball until rowing captured her with its magic and singular focus. Liv played field hockey for Coastal Clash and Bishop’s as a freshman. Though thankful for a variety of
coaches in their years competing for SDRC, the trio really appreciate the step up in conditioning that Patrick Kington has brought. “We think it’s a good change,” says Lanatta, headed into an international business management major speaking the Spanish of her parents, Gus from Buenos Aires and Tande from Mexico City, as well as French from attending the San Diego French American School K-8. “(Kington) upped our strength conditioning.” The rowers explain that they use the ergonomic (ERG) machine for land training to complement their time on the water. Says Liv, “It’s important that your teammates respect you. You go through grueling tests, including time trials. It’s very competitive. The thing I like is at the end of the day, you’re still teammates.” Her older sister, enjoying the waning days of summer before heading to the Bay Area, asserts, “I like the aspect where the work
Coach reflects on surviving potential massacre BY ED PIPER | LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS Image number one: Gatluak Lam, 7 years old, in a refugee camp in Kenya. Soldiers from some side — he still doesn’t know which — attack. “My life flashed in front of my eyes,” says “Golly,” as he is nicknamed. “There was smoke. No one knew what was going on.” Suddenly his uncle Gat- Gatluak Lam — the assistant basketball coach at Uniluak, for whom he was versity City High School — survived a potential refunamed after, scoops him gee massacre in Kenya when he was a child. ED PIPER/VILLAGE NEWS up and together they leap into the water and swim to a tiny island. For two days, I had only seen a person gle, Golly has a dream. He with their backs to a cliff on as black as me,” he says, wants to help construct the other side of the island, pointing to the color on his a basketball league of nowhere to escape, the sol- arm as we chatted in the 18-to-24-year-old South diers face them, not attack- shade at a congenial coffee- Sudanese young men that ing but hoping to starve house in La Jolla. “I didn’t includes travel and comand thirst them out in the speak much English. I had petitive games for the playburning African heat. an accent. I was with an- ers in Arizona, Nebraska, “It’s always hot in Afri- other uncle.” and Texas, as well as San ca,” the now-31-year-old His parents had preceded Diego. The significance of University City High assis- him to America. his team, made up of Nuer tant basketball coach says. “I grabbed my uncle.” (his tribe) and Dinka, is Other soldiers, friendly, fiRecalling this “shell- that back home, in South nally drop down ropes that shocked” moment, Gatluak Sudan, the two groups of they climb up the cliff to says, “It broke my brain. All people are at each other’s safety. “No food, no water, I knew was what I had seen throats. boiling hot,” the 6-foot-4- in my eight or nine years “I’m going to work on it inch Lam remembers. growing up [including be- coming up,” says Lam, who Image number two: Com- ing born in Ethiopia, out- says his harsh experiences ing off a plane at JFK Air- side of his ancestral South as a refugee in Africa don’t port in New York. At that Sudan, due to the turmoil haunt him. “I think, why time, he was 8 or 9 years there, later living in refu- let that stay with you and old. gee camps]. That’s before make you bitter?” “It was the first time I technology [which he now He’s one of the talkers in was shell-shocked,” says makes his living on as a the family, and he talks easithe good-natured , easy-go- computer tech] blew up ly about his experiences. His ing assistant to long-time in Africa — before people Christian faith (his father is UCHS head coach Terry commonly had TVs, cell- choir director at the SudaStonebraker. “I got off the phones… I was scared.” nese Presbyterian Church plane...I had never seen an Now, two decades later, in City Heights) underlies Asian before. I had never living near his intact fam- his outgoing warmth that seen a white person before. ily in San Diego, still sin- engages people.
San Diego Rowing Club rowing sisters Kate (left) and Liv Bolitho. ED PIPER / VILLAGE NEWS
you put in is what you get out of it.” She explains that, in addition to training, come diet and rest. Lanatta quickly adds, “You also have to manage your time so that after school you can handle workouts and do homework so that you can get to bed at a reasonable hour.”
At no point would these three, or their families, want the recognition of being featured in an article to take away from the focus on “team” and the camaraderie they share in the boat with the other student athletes. They make that very clear.
Big league baseball dreams deferred BY HARRY CUMMINS
| LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS
They were both supposed to be halfway to the Hall of Fame by now, twin comets launched skyward from the seaside Shangri-La of La Jolla. La Jolla was my own private paradise as well, having grown up mere blocks from La Jolla High School, the early proving ground of athletic prowess for the brothers Kyle and Bradley Zimmer. Playing every sport imaginable, including lacrosse and water polo, the Zimmer boys eventually settled on baseball. Piggy-backing their prep exploits, the pair would go on to spend a year together playing college baseball for the University of San Francisco. Kyle, a pitcher, left USF after his junior year by virtue of his selection as the fifth overall pick in the 2012 Major League Baseball draft by the Kansas City Royals. He received a $3 million signing bonus. Bradley Zimmer, an outfielder, followed his brother into professional baseball two years later when he was ranked as the top bat in the 2014 MLB
La Jolla brothers Kyle and Bradley Zimmer. COURTESY PHOTO
draft. He was selected in the first round by the Cleveland Indians who, like the Royals, reside in the Central Division of the American League. Like everyone else, I anticipated the soon-to-come day when Bradley would step into a Major League batter’s box and stare out at his brother — 60feet, 6-inches away — ready to release a mid-90s lightning bolt in his direction. However, an absurdly improbable series of crippling injuries to both Kyle and Bradley have left us all still waiting for this brotherly breakout — the predicted stratospheric ascension of the next great brother act to rival that of the DiMaggios, Alous and Alomars.
Misfortune visited Kyle Zimmer first. He had bone chips removed in 2012 and missed key time in 2013 with elbow tendinitis. He spent most of the next two seasons recovering from surgery to repair his right labrum and rotator cuff. When it looked like he was finally healthy, he was diagnosed with thoracic outlet syndrome. He underwent surgery in July of 2016 for this potentially career-ending injury. He suffered shoulder soreness all of the 2017 season, and shoulder fatigue in 2018, ending his season after retiring just one batter in spring training. read more online at sdnews.com
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FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 2019 LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS
15
OPEN HOUSES
POINT LOMA Sat 1-4PM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3050 Rue D’Orleans #304 . . . . . .1BR/1BA . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$299,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Linda Celano 858-361-2048 Sat 1-4PM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2664 Narcissus Dr. . . . . . . . . . . .3BR/2BA . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$995,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Karen Duvall Meyer 619-206-7638 Sun 12-3PM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2664 Narcissus Dr. . . . . . . . . . . .3BR/2BA . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$995,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Jim Sours 619-306-0477 PACIFIC BEACH Sat & Sun 2-6PM . . . . . . . . . . .3434 Crown Point Dr. . . . . . . . . .3BR/2BA Sun 1-4PM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .729 Archer Street . . . . . . . . . . . .4BR/3BA Sun 1-4PM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1150 Emerald Street . . . . . . . . . .4BR/5BA Sun 1-4PM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4922 Mission Blvd . . . . . . . . . . .3BR/2BA Sun 1-4PM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3253 Ocean Front Walk . . . . . . .2BR/1BA
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Where in the world were La Jolla Village News Cynthia and Tom Goodman of the Rotary Club ly visited the Galápagos Islands, where they the locals — one being this large tortoise.
readers this week? of La Jolla recentmet with some of COURTESY PHOTO
* New Listings * Beautifully home in Vista features 3BR/2 BA, downstairs and upstairs the home features 2BR/1BA ! There are 1927 SQ Ft of living area in this home! Priced to sell at the reduced price of $623,500. Single family 1527 Sq Ft home in Hemet with 3BR, 2 BA for sale at the reduced price of $299,000! Located in a quiet area in Riverside County this home is priced to sell now. SOLEDAD MOUNTAIN RENTAL OPPORTUNITY! 4BR/3BA single family home will be available 7/1/19. Owner is offering this unfurnished La Jolla Home for a 1 year lease at $4,200 per month. Shown by appointment only COMMERCIAL LEASE PROPERTY! 1128 Wall Street in La Jolla is now available for 3 year lease. The lease is offered at $3,100 for the first year, $3,200 for the second year and $3,300 for the third year! This is an excellent location for a tax attorney or a C.P.A.! Call Klatt Realty for details an any or all of these listings
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PAGE 16 · FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 2019 · LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS
David Knows La Jolla
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