La Jolla Village News, October 20th, 2011

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VILLAGE NEWS LA JOLLA

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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2011

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The thrill of the catch Debbie Peagler stands behind security glass at the Central California Women’s Facility prison in Chowchilla, Calif. Peagler is the subject of La Jolla filmmaker Yoav Potash’s new film, “Crime by Crime.” Photo courtesy Yoav Potash, LS Films, LLC

Local filmmaker comes home with a purpose Steve Schur shows off his catch last year during lobster season. Photo courtesy Mark Lozano

As lobster season swings into high gear, authorities remind divers to remember the risks BY MARIKO LAMB | VILLAGE NEWS Lobster diving season has hit the California coastline from Monterrey Bay to the Gulf of Mexico. Popular coastal sites in San Diego like the La Jolla Ecological Reserve, Point Loma’s giant kelp forest and Wreck Alley off Mission Beach’s shore draw in lobster divers from all over the nation for the thrill of catching the delicious crustaceans. San Diego safety officials and diving experts urge caution and proper knowledge of regulations when catching the elusive critters, which only come out at night and hide in rocks and reefs during the day. Ignorance about lobster diving regulations can lead to hefty fines — up to $1,000 for fishing without a license, said Andrew Hughan, representative for the California Department of Fish and Game’s South Coast Region.

According to California laws, lobsters must be measured underwater and those with carapaces less than 3 1/4 inches must be thrown back. Additionally, no more than seven lobsters can be taken per person per day, divers can only use their hands to take lobsters and all recreationally harvested lobsters must remain whole and intact while at sea. Hughan said opening day of lobster diving season on Oct. 1 went smoothly. “It was a great day — no safety violations, no one got hurt,” he said, although wardens did issue several citations throughout the day for undersize lobster catches and exceeding limits. The season has not gone all that smoothly since then, however. One death already occurred from the aquatic pursuit — that of 35-year-old Jimmy Somphiringa Tanovan on Oct. 9.

According to police, Tanovan went into the water alone around 7 p.m. He was found dead in waters south of Children’s Pool in La Jolla — in an area known as “Hospital Point” — around 8:30 p.m. Tanovan’s death marks the 11th diving fatality in San Diego since 2007. Marine safety lifeguard Lt. John Everhart emphasized the importance of diving safety during the height of the season. “Don’t dive alone,” he said. “You have to think that every diving death that we’ve had where a diver was diving alone could have been prevented. It’s critical to have a buddy.” He also urged divers be aware of their abilities and surroundings both on the surface of the water with currents and swells and below the surface in the kelp forests, reefs SEE LOBSTER, Page 6

BY MARIKO LAMB | VILLAGE NEWS La Jolla-grown filmmaker Yoav Potash, called “Joe” by classmates during his school days, will have a short-yetsweet homecoming by showcasing his highly acclaimed, award-winning film, “Crime After Crime,” at the Lawrence Family Jewish Community Center on Oct. 27. Proceeds from the film screening will benefit Project SARAH (Stop Abusive Relationships At Home) — a Jewish Family Service program that provides counseling, case management, therapeutic support groups and advocacy services for victims of domestic violence and other forms of abuse. “Crime After Crime” is a documentary film that takes an intimate look into the case of Debbie Peagler — a victim of domestic abuse and sex trafficking by her boyfriend — and the efforts of two rookie land-use lawyers who fought for Peagler’s freedom after she was sentenced to 25 years to life in prison for collaboration in her abuser’s murder. “I was blown away by the film,” said Cheryl Bruser, Project SARAH’s outreach coordinator. “Some of the things that stick out to me are the resilience of Debbie. She keeps getting knocked down and dealt terrible cards, starting with the abuse and continuing with the courts, but she keeps a positive attitude.” Potash learned of Peagler’s story from friend Joshua Safran who, despite having no experience in criminal law, reopened Peagler’s case pro bono with fellow land-use attorney Nadia Costa. “After I heard a little bit of Debbie’s story from him, I agreed SEE FILMMAKER, Page 5

A holiday roundup of the ghoulish kind BY MARIKO LAMB | VILLAGE NEWS La Jolla has some frighteningly fun events in store for Halloween this year, including a haunted fishy adventure at the Birch Aquarium, free kid-friendly fun at the La Jolla Recreation Center and a La Jolla Shores restaurant that goes above and beyond with Halloween decorations for its favorite holiday. Barbarella’s ‘Howl-O-Ween’ It would be impossible for passersby on Avenida de la Playa not to notice a funky little Italian joint called Barbarella’s. The front patio and façade are spilling over with ghouls, goblins, ghosts and ghastly characters of all sorts, Mummies stand watch as guests enjoy adding a few extra guests to the table. their meals at Barbarella’s. The lavish HalPirate skulls and a giant red demon loween decorations took the restaurant’s leer over guests as they eat, creatures of crew at least an entire day to set up. DON BALCH | Village News all sorts creep out of bushes and a group

of skeletal mummies jealously oversee guests enjoying scrumptious meals while they remain bound by chains on the restaurant’s outdoor patio. Barbarella’s invites creatures of all sorts, including pets, for their “Howl-OWeen” pet costume contest on Oct. 20 at 11 a.m. Pets can also enjoy items from their very own “doggie menu” including “Rover Easy,” “Barbarella Bits” and “Puppy Delight.” Barbarella’s is located at 2171 Avenida de la Playa. For more information or Guests eat among the ghostly decorations at Barbarella’s, located at 2171 Avenida to make reservations, call (858) 454- de la Playa. DON BALCH | Village News 7373 or visit www.barbarellarestauThe experience will include live music the City of San Diego Water Conservarant.com. and dancing with Billy Lee and the tion, San Diego Audubon Society, Baskin Swamp Critters, a “deep sea” slime lab Robbins, Cliff Bar and Birch Aquarium “Shipwrecked” at Birch Aquarium Kids can discover the lurking myster- and the chance to collect tricky treats volunteers. Spooky story times will take place ies of the deep in a haunted “Ship- throughout the three-hour evening wrecked” adventure at the Birch Aquar- exploring eerie creatures lurking in the throughout the evening and a costume depths. Games will also be provided by ium on Oct. 21 and 22. SEE HALLOWEEN, Page 2


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NEWS

THURSDAY · OCTOBER 20, 2011 LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

HALLOWEEN CONTINUED FROM Page 1

raffle ensures anyone who comes dressed to impress will have a shot at winning prizes. “Shipwrecked” will take place from 6 to 9 p.m. at the Birch Aquarium, located at 2300 Expedition Way. Tickets are $12 for members in advance, $15 for nonmembers in advance and $17 at the door for all. To purchase tickets, visit www.aquarium.ucsd.edu or call (858) 534-7336.

NEWSbriefs A La Jolla kitchen designed by John Mills Davies of Marrokal Design & Remodeling is one of 14 kitchens featured on the American Society of Interior Designers’ Kitchen Tour. Courtesy photo

La Jolla kitchen gets winning facelift

A young starfish makes an appearance at Birch Aquarium’s Halloween celebration. Courtesy Birch Aquarium

LJ Rec Center’s Halloween Festival The La Jolla Recreation Center has planned three hours of free kid-friendly fun for its annual Halloween Festival on Oct. 29 from 1 to 4 p.m. The festival will include pony rides, an inflatable jump and slide, carnival games, a balloon artist, cakewalk, face painting, music and free arts and crafts for kids. Halloween prizes will be awarded for carnival game winners and a traditional costume contest will award a total of 25 children — five children from each of five 10 and under age groups — with prizes including a trophy and Target gift card. Tickets are four for $1. Carnival games are only one or two tickets apiece. La Jolla Recreation Center is located at 615 Prospect St. For more information, call (858) 552-1658.

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in a free outdoor concert on Oct. 27. Guests at the event can enjoy a complimentary happy hour at 7 p.m. featuring craft brews from Stone Brewing Company and food truck fare including Deborah Scott’s Chop Soo-ey and Corner Cupcakes in the Playhouse Forum Courtyard. Following the happy hour, up-andcoming artists will entertain guests of all musical preferences with styles ranging from alternative rock to jazz to pop. “La Jolla Playhouse is thrilled to partner with SoundDiego to present their Oct. 27 concert,” said Playhouse managing director Michael Rosenberg. “This exciting event will help introduce new people to the Playhouse, while offering a terrific evening of free music by top local bands, all in the Playhouse’s unique outdoor environment.” SoundDiego provides a one-stop virtual music community forum with daily blogs, multimedia content and exclusive videos and galleries. Bloggers, artists, venues, recording stores and prominent voices from around San Diego contribute to the forum to provide up-to-date information and behind the scenes looks at the San Diego music scene. SoundDiego also regularly presents SoundDiego LIVE, a free concert series that takes place at various venues throughout the San Diego community. For more information about SoundDiego or to keep up with upcoming concerts, visit www.sounddiego.com.

A La Jolla kitchen designed by John Mills Davies, director of design for Marrokal Design and Remodeling, will be showcased on the self-guided Kitchen Tour, a tour of beautifully remodeled kitchens across San Diego County hosted by the American Society of Interior Designers (ASID), on Oct. 22. Davies’ modern, neutral-toned kitchen will be one of fourteen on display during the tour. Guests have the opportunity to spend the entire day from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. exploring every facet of all fourteen kitchens or pick their favorite designs to visit for a couple hours. The designers will also be on hand in each kitchen to discuss the latest in sustainability, space planning, appliances, surfaces and storage solutions. “This is an unprecedented opportunity to tour 14 astonishingly different kitchens and meet the ASID designers who created these magical transformations,” said Tatiana Machado-Rosas, allied member ASID event chairwoman. “These kitchens represent the entire gamut of up-tothe-minute design — European minSTELLA MARIS ACADEMY imalism, nostalgic arts and crafts, authentic Tuscan, sleek mid-century and opulent country, plus plenty of Stella Maris Academy transitional and contemporary open its doors styles.” Stella Maris Academy, located at Tickets are $25 per person. Group 7654 Herschel Ave., is inviting discounts are available. To purchase prospective parents to visit the school tickets, visit www.asidsandiego.org or at its open house on Oct. 26 from 9 to call (858) 646-9896. 11 a.m. Parents are invited to tour the school, meet the teachers and see Hearing San Diego’s the classrooms in action. sound in La Jolla Stella Maris Academy is a Catholic The La Jolla Playhouse will host K-8 school focused on the academic, NBC’s SoundDiego LIVE perfor- spiritual and social development of mance, featuring 2011 San Diego its students since 1947. Music Award nominees Endoxi, For more information, visit www.Maren Parusel and Miss Erika Davies stellamarisacademy.org, or call (858) and host DJ Tim Pyles from FM 94.9, 454-2461.

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BUSINESS

THURSDAY · OCTOBER 20, 2011 LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

Eddie V’s changes ownership, maintains quality dining Guy Villavaso and Larry Foles, cofounders of Eddie V’s restaurants, announced an agreement to sell their eight Eddie V’s and three Wildfish restaurants to Darden Restaurants Inc., the world’s largest full-service restaurant company that includes well-known chains like Red Lobster, Olive Garden and Bahama Breeze. “This is an opportunity we could not pass up,” said Foles. “In a highly competitive industry, we found that one of the most successful restaurant companies in the world wanted to grow Eddie V’s and Wildfish restaurants to their fullest potential.”

Villavaso and Foles have agreed to close the sale by the end of the year, and both will serve as consultants for the restaurants over the next two years. In the meantime, Villavaso and Foles will shift their focus solely on the development of four Roaring Fork restaurants in Texas and Arizona, a rugged Old West-style restaurant featuring wood-fired cooking and bold American cuisine, which was not included as part of the sale. “It is really a culmination of a dream since opening our first Eddie V’s in 2000,” said Villavaso. “We have

always believed that through a commitment to excellence in our staff and the guest experience, we could create the finest seafood restaurant. Darden agreed and this partnership will take it to the next level.” Villavaso said the quality of the brand, excellence of the employees and dining experience will not change from the transition. Eddie V’s Prime Seafood is located at 1270 Prospect St. For more information or to make a reservation, call (858) 459-5500 or visit www.eddieEddie V’s is shown while under construction earlier this year. The restaurant has been v.com. a successful dining experience in many locations in the Southwest and Southern Cal— Mariko Lamb ifornia, but president and CEO Jim VanDercook said it was his dream to open a restaurant in La Jolla.

Salsa finds a permanent home in the Village Susie Nguyen, aka “Salsa Susie,” opened the doors to her Ooh La La Dance Academy at a grand opening ceremony on Oct. 9. The dance academy, which previously held classes in the La Jolla YMCA, finally got its permanent home, a process Nguyen said was years in the making. “I put everything I have — heart, mind, body, soul, savings, credit and years — into building this 1,500square-foot, two-studio academy to have a place for preschoolers and adults to experience the joy and passion of dance,” she said. “It changed my life, so I’ve dedicated my life to dance. Needless to say, the studio is the most gorgeous, vintage academy filled with character, oil paintings galore, local craftsmanship by contractors, from the store frontage signs

to the counters and, of course, more chandeliers, fringe, feathers and fabulousness that one can only secretly ask for.” Nguyen is offering two weeks of free kids classes to children ages 514 until the end of October. Ooh La La Dance Academy offers Susie Nguyen, owner of Ooh La La Dance Academy, is surroundclasses for chil- ed by friends and students at the grand opening of the dance Photo by Joel Navarro, Imulsion Imagery dren and adults academy’s permanent space. in a variety of dance disciplines, For more information, call (858) including salsa, hip hop, ballet, jazz, 456-4500 or visit www.oohlahula, cha cha, flamenco, show and ladanceacademy.com. character. — Staff and contribution

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NEWS

Trio suspected in Craigslist murder of La Jolla High grad bound over for trial BY NEAL PUTNAM | VILLAGE NEWS Two teenagers and an adult were ordered Oct. 12 to stand trial for the murder of Garrett Berki, 18, a Mission Beach resident and a 2010 graduate of La Jolla High School. Berki, who answered a Craiglist ad on May 11 to buy a computer, was instead robbed and shot – allegedly by the defendants. The trio was also ordered to stand trial for robbing Berki and his girlfriend of $640, along with their cellphones, and are additionally charged with shooting at an occupied vehicle during the incident in Paradise Hills. They were also accused of committing the homicide as members or associates of a criminal street gang. After a two-day preliminary hearing before a packed courtroom, San Diego Superior Court Judge Joan Weber ruled there was enough evidence against Rashon Jay Abernathy, 17, Shaquille Jordan, 17, and Seandell Lee Jones, 18, to justify a trial. They face trial as adults. All three defendants have pleaded not guilty and will return to court Oct. 27 to have a trial date set. Abernathy and Jordon remain in Juvenile Hall on $5 million bail, but Jones was transferred to adult facilities after he turned 18. Deputy District Attorney Kristian Trocha did not call Berki’s girlfriend, family or others as witnesses, but

seven police officers testified about statements given to them. When the trio was arrested about 45 minutes after the holdup, the girlfriend identified all three defendants in a curbside lineup. Officers told the judge the girlfriend identified Abernathy, the alleged gunman, as wearing a pony tail and sitting in the back seat. Officers testified Jones was identified as the driver and that one robber was described as wearing an SDSU sweatshirt. After Berki was robbed in the deal-gone-wrong, he followed the robbers in his car to get their license-plate number as they turned into a cul-desac. Trocha said Abernathy fired a shot through the windshield, striking Berki in the chest. Berki died later that Garret Berki was gunned down in a Craigslist transaction gone wrong on May 11. Two night in the hospital. teenagers and an adult were charged with his San Diego police Det. John murder and for robbery of Berki and his girlfriend. Brown was called as an expert The trio was ordered to stand trial for the crimes, witness involving gang mem- which included shooting at an occupied vehicle, bers and said the trio was asso- all of which occured during the incident in ParCourtesy photo ciated with — or were mem- adise Hills. bers of — two gangs. Defense The trio is also accused of stealing a attorneys disputed his testimony, saying he was giving his own opinions. black Honda Accord that was used to Abernathy’s lawyer, Kate Coyne, drive to the murder scene. If convicted of first-degree murder, argued there was no testimony that the trio could be sentenced to 50 years gang signs were flashed or challenges to life. made during the incident.

CIVICreport La Jolla Town Council, Oct. 13 BY MARIKO LAMB | VILLAGE NEWS

Historical Society makes one last stand for Windemere Cottage La Jolla Historical Society executive director John Bolthouse provided a status report on the Windemere Cottage, located at 1328 Virginia Way, which was not designated as a historical property during the city’s Historical Resources Board (HRB) meeting on Sept. 22. The vote was 5-2 in favor of designation, however the HRB rules mandate that six favorable votes be required to grant historic designation of a property. “It’s a very interesting way the bureaucracy works at the HRB,” said Bolthouse. “When they vote, they need a majority of the entire board, not just a quorum of those in attendance, so therefore, because they have 11 members, you have to have six people vote for any initiative. There were five that voted for it, so essentially they did not vote to take an action.” If the HRB had voted to designate the property as historic, the owners would only be able to renovate the property based on a different set of criteria, which excludes demolition or making significant character changes to the property. “We’d like to think there are benefits and incentives out there to having a historic property, but frankly, not everybody agrees with that,” Bolthouse said. “They have different visions for their private properties, and we respect that, but the consequences are that we enable our com-

and at the La Jolla Library, announced Phyllis Minick, chairwoman of the La Jolla Parks and Beaches Beautification Committee. Participants’ ideas included improvements for parking, pedestrian flow, trees, seating, vendor tables and art. To add suggestions or comments, contact minickphyllis@gmail- .com. • Trustee Peter Wulff announced the Bylaws Committee is halfway through the process of making LJTC bylaws more transparent. He said the goal of the committee is to have a proposal to the Executive Committee by Thanksgiving and to get LJTC approval by Christmas. • Erin Demorest, representative for District 1 City Councilwoman Sherri Lightner, announced the city won a round of competitive bidding against private firms for fleet maintenance services that will save the city $4.4 million per year over the next five years. The savings will go into the general fund for police, fire and street repairs. • Resurfacing street repair projects on Nobel Drive and La Jolla Village Drive will take place until the end of October and construction on a sewer main replacement project on La Jolla Boulevard in Bird Rock will take place until May 2012, Demorest announced. • The La Jolla Shores Association invites members of the public to attend its next meeting on Nov. 9 to Other news • A summary of results from the discuss problems with UCSD students Beautification of Coast Boulevard parking in residential neighborhoods. • Chinese will be added to San Walkway at Children’s Pool Park, Casa Beach public workshop is postSEE CIVIC REPORT, Page 6 ed at the La Jolla Recreation Center munity’s architectural character to change over time. Bolthouse said if the owners were determined to demolish the property, the “next best option” would be to enlist the aid of a third party to relocate the cottage entirely. “Where we stand on the property right now is that we don’t have much stand in it. It’s privately owned and because La Jolla is not incorporated separately from the city, we fall under the auspices of the city,” Bolthouse said. “There is no clear appellate process in place at the city when an agency, specifically the HRB, chooses not to take an action but we are looking behind the scenes, and [Save Our Heritage Organisation] has the legal power and assets to take more proactive actions.” Following Bolthouse’s plea to the town council, the trustees voted to have the president write a letter to the HRB on behalf of the town council to urge them to reconsider the Sept. 22 discussion and vote on the historical designation of the Windemere Cottage property. Trustee Ann Kerr Bache, who made the motion, urged Bolthouse and other supporters of designation to work with the owners of the property in case reconsideration of its historical designation is denied by the HRB.

THURSDAY · OCTOBER 20, 2011 LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

FILMMAKER CONTINUED FROM Page 1

to meet her,” Potash said. “Once I met her, I was hooked.” As his first full-length film, Potash never anticipated the film, which he expected to be completed in one year, would stretch out to a fascinating ride involving five and a half years of filming. “Sometimes that’s the nature of filmmaking — following the story as it unfolds,” he said. “There was no way to predict certain twists and turns in her story.” During the filmmaking process, Peagler had the unusual privilege of gaining an unprecedented level of access in two unlikely filming locations — a maximum-security prison and a law firm — to reveal the inner workings of the criminal justice system’s failures. “I hope that the film wakes people up and shakes people up a bit about the prevalence of domestic violence and sex trafficking,” he said. “More specifically, how especially women who have been abused and have ended up in prison for fighting back against an abuser have never had a chance to have their stories fully heard and properly looked at in court or anywhere else.” Potash said at the time of filming California was the only state that legally allowed incarcerated survivors of domestic violence to petition for relief. Now, due in part to the efforts of nonprofit campaigns such as Potash and Safran’s “Debbie’s Campaign,” there is an effort under way in five other states to pass a similar law.

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“The court never looked at the fact that she was abused, that she had been prostituted by force. They only looked at this narrow slice of a story,” he said. “This is an effort to use this film to create change on the ground and across the country so Debbie’s story doesn’t repeat itself.” He iterated it only takes a handful of people — very dedicated people like those involved in Project SARAH — to generate a few great strides that can turn a dire situation around. This year, there have already been 16 domestic abuse-related homicides in San Diego County, said Bruser. Last fiscal year, the number of Project SARAH’s clients hit a record high of 325 and the nonprofit has expanded its staff to accommodate for any victim who is in need of their services. “One of the things we are trying to get across is that abuse can happen to anybody,” she said. “There is a point in the film when Nadia says that abuse doesn’t just happen in South Central L.A. People don’t like to hear that it happens in their own community.” General admission tickets to the film screening of “Crime After Crime,” including a post-film Q&A session with Potash and Safran, is $20. VIP admission, which includes preferred seating, pre-film wine and cheese reception with the filmmaker and post-film Q&A dessert reception, is $40. Tickets are available until the day of the event and can be purchased at the door. To purchase tickets beforehand or to donate to Project SARAH, call (858) 637-3200 or visit www.jfssd.org/projectsarah.

Police ask for help from public to find cabbie’s killer San Diego police have issued an arrest warrant for Ismael Raul Lopez, 28, for the murder of 68-year-old cab driver Mir Sahou, Ismael Raul Lopez who was slain by several gunshot wounds on the 6800 block of La Jolla Scenic Drive North on Sept. 28. According to police, witnesses reported hearing gunfire around 11:35 p.m. and called police. When police arrived at the scene, they found Sahou’s body on the sidewalk.

Around 2:30 a.m., police found Sahou’s green and white cab — named “Savitar” for his daughter — abandoned on Coast Boulevard between Cave Street and Girard Avenue. Police are asking for the public’s help in locating Lopez. He is described as a 5-foot-9-inch Hispanic male, weighing between 160 to 180 pounds. Anyone with information regarding Lopez’s whereabouts is encouraged to call the San Diego Police Department at (619) 531-2000. — Mariko Lamb

Baby scratcher gets jail time A former La Jolla real estate agent started her two-year jail term after admitting on Oct. 7 she was in violation of probation conditions imposed in January for scratching babies she had offered to hold at social events. Lisa Marie Hench, 45, appeared before San Diego Superior Court Judge Michael Smyth, who had let her remain free on $75,000 bond on Jan. 25 while she appealed several aspects of her case. She has now abandoned that appeal. U.S. marshals arrested her on Sept. 15 and Smyth gave her credit for 61 days, including time off for good behavior. Her projected release date is Sept. 13, 2012, according to the sheriff’s department. Deputy District Attorney Nicole Rooney said Hench admitted to testing positive for illegal drug use, not reporting to probation officials and failure

to enroll in a substance-abuse program. Some La Jolla residents who were parents of the victims attended the hearing. Hench’s crime has been described as “bizarre.” On several occasions, she volunteered to hold babies at various events and then scratched them with her fingernails, tearing off skin, scratching toes or ears and pinching them. At one school event, two babies were injured after Hench held them, which led to the realization that her actions were the cause. A psychological evaluation showed Hench had an anxiety disorder in which she reacted to stress by scratching babies. She pleaded guilty to eight misdemeanor counts of inflicting corporal injury upon a child. Her children are in the custody of her husband. — Neal Putnam


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SPORTS

THURSDAY · OCTOBER 20, 2011 LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

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and rocks. “Most people go at night because the lobsters are walking around then,” he said. “But if you’re going to an area that you’re not familiar with, you should first go during the day.” Even if a diver is familiar with the area, “conditions change frequently,” he said, urging divers to check surf, visibility and wind conditions beforehand and watch the water 30 to 45 minutes before entering. San Diego freediving instructor Mark Lozano recalled receiving a phone call last year from Daniel Garcia, diving buddy of Luke Ausdemore who died freediving for lobsters in Mission Bay last October. “They were diving together, but they were about 30 yards apart,” Lozano said. “If you go into the ocean with another person and they’re your buddy, but they’re 100 yards away from you, Steve Schur caught his lobster in a “secret lobster hole” in Mission Bay. Photo courtesy Mark Lozano

they’re not your buddy anymore.” Garcia detailed the night for Lozano, describing the moment when he noticed that Ausdemore was no longer at the surface of the water. Despite doing everything he could to save his friend, Ausdemore experienced a shallow water blackout — common in freedivers. By the time Garcia noticed he was missing in the water, 10 minutes had lapsed and it was too late to save him. Lozano urged divers to have someone watching and waiting for them at the surface of the water. “When you black out, you don’t make any noise,” said Lozano, explaining that when one blacks out, the muscle used to hold air in relaxes and the blackout only sounds like an exhalation of breath. “There are too many variables. Because of that, blackouts and motor control failures happen, and time is of the essence. [For] something so simple as lobster diving, there’s no real good excuse not to have a safety buddy.” Lozano said the majority of diver blackouts occur after they have resurfaced or are within 15 feet of the surface, so just because a diver is in shallow water does not mean the diver is safe. “This is one of those sports where ignorance is not bliss,” he said. “Ignorance can get you killed.” For more information about lobster diving regulations and safety tips, visit www.dfg.ca.gov or contact the Department of Fish and Game at (858) 467-4201. To check beach and weather conditions call (619) 221-8824.

Lobster

diving

safety

In 2008, San Diego officials formed a Diver Death Review Committee of medical experts, police, lifeguards and diving experts to evaluate scuba diver deaths and make safety recommendations to the scuba diving community. The committee issued the following recommendations: • Ensure physical fitness to dive. Heart disease was a major factor in half of the deaths from 2007-2010. Diving is a strenuous activity when it comes to heavy equipment, long swims and potentially strong currents or wave action. Be honest with yourself and your dive partners as to your fitness abilities. Train for your sport and be sure that you exercise regularly and follow a healthy diet. • Use the buddy system. Two fatalities occurred involving divers without a buddy and four others who left their buddies to return to a boat or shore on their own. • Follow your training: check your gauges often, respect depth and time restrictions and do not dive beyond your training limits. • Weight yourself properly and

remember to dump your weights when appropriate. Divers are often overweighted, contributing to buoyancy issues and possibly preventing surfacing in an out-of-air situation. Be sure that your weights can be dumped easily and that your diver partners know how to dump your weights if necessary. • Ensure that your skill level and familiarity are appropriate for conditions. Never dive if a swim seems too far, conditions too rough, or if you feel stressed about making a dive. Learn an area with daytime dives before diving it at night. • Have your equipment serviced and maintained regularly. • When diving in groups, a physical, individual response should be received from every diver before entering the water and after exiting to ensure that all members are safely accounted for. Counting tanks has proven inconsistent and may lead to miscounts. • Avoid overhead environments unless properly trained and equipped. • Breath-hold divers should remember to use the buddy system and be aware of the dangers of shallow-water blackout.

Knights humbled by Santa Fe Eagles BY LEE CORNELL | VILLAGE NEWS The injury-depleted Bishop’s School football team succumbed to a rapidly rising Santa Fe Christian High squad 56-13 under the lights at La Jolla High School Oct. 14. “I don’t want to make an excuse. Santa Fe played well,” Bishop’s head coach Joel Allen said. “I don’t think we coached it the best, starting with me. Yeah, we missed some guys but good teams find a way around that.” The Knights (4-2) entered the matchup against the undefeated Eagles without starting senior quarterback Joey Moreno, who was at the top of the list of injured players on the roster. But the Bishop’s players and staff refused to use injuries as an excuse for a poor performance by its vaunted program. “We’ve got to come out here with the guys we have. Everybody’s got to execute and play disciplined,” said sophomore Michael Hinkley, who served as Moreno’s replacement as quarterback. “We’ve got to get the job done. Tonight we did not.” SFC (6-0), which cracked the county’s top-10 list in the most recent edition of Spotlight Sports Magazine, used a relentless running attack and a stifling defense to quickly shoot out to a 42-0 first-half lead over the Knights. In particular, Eagles’ running back Jarrod Watson-Lewis was dominant. The senior scored four touchdowns in all and accounted for 160 of his team’s 431 yards on the ground. Most importantly, the shifty-yet-powerful runner was able to come up with big runs in key situations time and time again. “We didn’t tackle him. We missed

CIVIC REPORT CONTINUED FROM Page 3

Diego County voting materials in the upcoming elections, said John Weil, representative for Supervisor Pam Slater Price. • The public review period for the Clinical and Translational Research Institute and East Campus Recreation Area project has been extended through Nov. 2, said UCSD Physical and Community Planning representative Anu Delouri. • The La Jolla Village Merchants Association (LJVMA) voted to approve a five-year holiday décor

Bishop's sophomore tailback Jake Seau (#42) and junior quarterback Michael Hinkley (#10) look dejected as they leave the field during a lopsided loss to Santa Fe Christian on Oct 14. LEE CORNELL | Village News

tackles, we missed assignments and if he’s open, the guy gets it and takes it to the house,” Allen said of WatsonLewis’ performance. The Eagles came in gunning for a Bishop’s squad that’s coming off a prestigious state championship last year. The added motivation was apparent in SFC’s will to keep pouring on points throughout the first half. Sophomore running back Jake Seau ended the Knights’ first half on a positive note with an impressive 53yard touchdown run. Bishop’s came out strong in the second half with a scoring drive that culminated in a two-yard run by Seau. One other positive note from the game was a chance for Hinkley to get some playing time as quarterback. The sophomore also serves as the team’s middle linebacker and tight end. He had previously played just one other varsity game as quarterback and some at the junior varsity level.

“It was great to be in there and get some varsity action,” Hinkley said. “I try to help my team as much as I can and that’s all I can do.” Following the tough loss, Bishop’s will look to move on with a daunting schedule ahead. “As coaches, you move on. We’ve got to rev back up and find a way to get it done,” Allen said. “It starts in practice. We’ve got to change the focus in practice and get after it.” The Knights travel to Parker High Oct. 22 for a 1 p.m. start then return home to take on rival La Jolla Country Day on Nov. 29 at 7 p.m. Notes: After starting out 4-0 following 2010’s unbeaten season, the Knights have fallen to 4-2 with consecutive lopsided losses. Senior QB Moreno suffered a deep thigh bruise in a game against Bishop Union on Oct 7. Allen said Moreno could be back this weekend depending on how fast his injury heals.

plan, which includes rooftop lights on Girard Avenue from Torrey Pines Road to Prospect Street. The LJVMA is also at the tail end of a branding campaign and in the midst of building a new, robust website which will launch in January 2012, said Rosemary Murrieta, LJVMA’s executive director. • The Traffic and Transportation (T&T) board asked that modifications to on-street parking zones within the La Jolla footprint be first presented to the T&T, then to the La Jolla Community Planning Association, said T&T representative Rob Hildt. • The LJTC voted to sponsor can-

didate forums for San Diego mayoral and city council candidates in lieu of guest speakers during regularly scheduled LJTC meetings following the primary election. • Bache urged trustees and members of the public to donate to much-needed funds for La Jolla’s 54th annual Christmas Parade and Holiday Festival, which will take place on Dec. 4. To see sponsorship opportunities and benefits, visit www.ljparade.com. • The LJTC voted unanimously to support the La Jolla Brew House’s request to the city to permit live entertainment in their establishment.

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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2011 | VOL. 17, NO. 4

TI DE LI N E S

Spooky fish delivers

tricks and treats Below: At an inch-and-a-half, this youngster turbot is getting into the swing of color adaptation. Notice the piece of white shell peaking out below? It’s larger than the white turbot in the related picture.

Above: Eying the backgound, this young turbot has adopted white speckles, dark sand, and nearby sand dollars (which are the size of a silver dollar). All images © Judith Lea Garfield

Above: With my gloved fingertip for scale (lower left corner), a baby (quarter-inch long) horneyhead turbot may be hiding in plain sight to resemble a shell chip.

BY JUDITH LEA GARFIELD | VILLAGE NEWS Divers don’t need to wait for Halloween to enjoy a frightfully good time because the ocean constantly serves up both tricks and treats. One fish that looks to have been created in Frankenstein’s lab is the horneyhead turbot (Pleuronichthys verticalis). The only item missing on this flatfish is the screws to hold it together. As with all flatfish, the turbot begins its life like “regular” looking fish, with an eye on either side of its head. After a few days of existence, one eye migrates close to the other, and the mouth becomes strangely twisted. A neat trick for sure. Now that the important parts are face up, it’s ready to sink to the seafloor and live its life, which includes hunting for treats, crustaceans and other fish smaller than its mouth. The horneyhead is referred to as a right-eyed flatfish because both eyes are positioned on the right side of the head. And the bulbous eyes that can rotate independently of each other aren’t just for scoping out prey, being on the alert for predators and looking creepy. They are required for the fish to exact match its background as the landscape changes as it moves. In other words, a blind turbot is a doomed turbot. The common name “horneyhead” did not come about for the reason you might

think. A backward-directed spine situated at the rear of a bony ridge found between the eyes is sharp and hornlike, hence, its innocent name. When fining over sand, if I see what looks like a flying carpet, my eyes follow it to landing. Getting a close-up view is key to identifying a flatfish because they share big-picture traits. I make sure to keep my eye on the prize because if I look away when it settles, the turbot’s camouflage capabilities render it ghostly at best. The horneyhead turbot can change costumes in an instant, creating limitless looks with white and many shades of brown. From personal experience, age seems to have something to do with the look of very young juveniles. Minute-sized horneyheads are, oddly enough, stark white — a glaring contrast to the sandy colored bottom. Standard issue juveniles, invertebrate and vertebrate, are typically cryptic, matching their background until they grow big enough to defend themselves. Is being blinding-white some kind of evolutionary madness or could it be a clever way to trick potential predators into bypassing what looks to be a shell fragment? Or is it because their matchymatchy ability is undeveloped at this point? Other than these tiniest of horneyheads, blotches and spots of white and shades of brown are de rigueur. Adults,

which may grow to about a foot long, further their disappearing act by employing an undulating motion to cover themselves in sand. After only a few seconds, a mini dust storm is created, which quickly settles atop the fish. I have not seen this behavior in the very, very young. As with other flatfishes, this one is edible (of course, not in the San Diego-La Jolla Underwater Park Ecological Reserve) but not commercially taken. Even so, when purchasing fish, buy from a reputable establishment because trick-ortreating for seafood should be avoided. Bottomfish are particularly susceptible to contamination and pollutants because toxic materials often sink to and accumulate on the seafloor, the same place where the prey of flatfish eat detritus and are subsequently consumed by the predator. If you want to get into the spirit of the holiday, assure your seafood choices are sustainable from now on. Just visit http://www.blueocean.org/seafood and order a Seafood Watch Pocket Guide. Nothing is scarier than the thought of an empty ocean. Happy Halloween! — Judith Lea Garfield, biologist and underwater photographer, has authored two natural history books about the underwater park off La Jolla Cove and La Jolla Shores. Send comments to jgarfield@ucsd.edu

SCIENCEnews • Researchers at The Scripps Research Institute have uncovered the surprising details of how a powerful antiHIV antibody grabs hold of the virus. The findings, published Oct. 13 in Science Express, highlight a major vulnerability of HIV and suggest a new target for vaccine development. Researchers recently isolated the new antibody and 16 others from the blood of HIV-infected volunteers, in work they reported online in the journal Nature on Aug. 17. Since the 1990s researchers have been searching for such “broadly neutralizing” antibodies against HIV — antibodies that work against many of the various strains of the fastmutating virus — and by now have found more than a dozen. PGT 128, the antibody described in the new report, can neutralize about 70 percent of globally circulating HIV strains by blocking their ability to infect cells. It also can do so much more potently — in other words, in smaller concentrations of antibody molecules — than any previously reported broadly neutralizing anti-HIV antibody. • Scripps Research Institute scientists have discovered that a technique for reprogramming stem cells previously thought to be dangerous may be much safer than was originally believed. Kristin Baldwin, associate professor at SRI and senior author of a report published in the Oct. 7 issue of Cell Stem Cell found that mutations in stem cells previously thought to be caused by the reprogramming technique were likely caused by other factors, like incomplete reprogramming that impaired the cells’ DNA-maintenance mechanisms. “We’ve shown that the standard reprogramming method can generate induced pluripotent stem cells that have very few DNA structural mutations, which are often linked to dangerous cell changes such as tumorigenesis,” Baldwin said. • The SCImago Institutions Rankings (SIR) World Report has identified the Salk Institute as one of the top five research organizations in the world, based on excellence and high quality of its scientific findings. The independent survey analyzed the work of more than 3,000 institutions worldwide from 2005-2009, scoring each institute based on output, international collaboration, normalized impact, high-quality publications, specialization index and excellence rate. The Salk Institute ranked fifth in the categories of highquality publications and excellence rate. • A study by researchers at the UC, San Diego School of Medicine suggests that differences in brain activation in individuals with a low level of response to alcohol may contribute to their inability to recognize modest levels of alcohol intoxication. The findings could provide the potential to identify individuals who are at risk for developing an alcohol-use disorder before it develops — in essence, providing a marker for this vulnerability. Findings from the study will be published in the January 2012 issue of Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research. — Staff and contribution

Salk awarded $4.5 million NIH grant to accelerate brain research BY KENDRA HARTMANN | VILLAGE NEWS

Dennis O’Leary (Courtesy of Salk Institute)

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) awarded the Salk Institute for Biological Studies a $4.5 million grant to establish the Neuroscience Core Center, a new research center that will accelerate brain research and lay the foundation for developing new ways of treating congenital brain defects and neurological diseases. The five-year grant will support the work of Salk’s neuroscience researchers, who make up more than half the faculty at the institute. “We are very excited about this center because it will provide unique services of great use to many of the insti-

tute's investigators and will help expand our understanding of a range of neurological disorders,” said Dennis O’Leary, the Vincent J. Coates Professor of Molecular Neurobiology at Salk, in a recent statement. “Salk is already a leader in brain research and this center will be an exponential boost to our ability to do cutting-edge research in neuroscience.” O’Leary will serve as director of the new center, which is one of three established nationally this year by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke. The new center will focus its research support on three areas of neuroscience: genome manipulation,

imaging and behavioral studies. Genome manipulation research will help scientists study human neurological diseases like autism, schizophrenia and Alzheimer’s through genetically modified mice. The imaging core will help scientists visualize the cellular and molecular mechanisms at work in mental disease. “Brain researchers are increasingly focused on the links between genes and behavior, exploring how genetics play a role in brain development, which is ultimately manifested in a person’s ability to function,” O'Leary said. “These research cores will provide scientists with greatly needed resources and facilities for accomplish-

ing the goals of this research. By centralizing and expanding these services, the center will provide Salk scientists access to new research technologies and free them from having to reinvent the wheel for each new project.” The grant, administrators hope, will help speed up the process by which scientists discover new — and vital — information about the human brain and its functions. “This grant from the National Institutes of Health will provide a tremendous boost to the neuroscience research at the Salk, and we are grateful for their continuing support,” said Salk Institute president William R. Brody.


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SOCIETY

THURSDAY · OCTOBER 20, 2011 LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

The Bigs hit 50 and Kenny Loggins entertains Bigs: right: Paul Palmer (BBBS president/CEO), Linda Lang (Jack in the Box CEO), Lynn Swann (emcee; NFL Hall of Famer), James Brennan and Derek Bruton (event co-chairs)

Starry, starry nights

with Vincent Andrunas Bigs: left: Gerry Shonkwiler, Michelle Rohrbach, Dick Laventhol, Kit Sickels. Below: Karen Pellin, Janeece Tanaka, Mike Ribnik, Shauna Manoff, Kristin Placey

Infantil: left: Richard Berwick (board chair), Dr. Liliana Binner, Gloria Osio, Dr. Gabriel ChongKing (founder/president), J. Armando Valencia, John Rush, Dr. Antonio Loaiza (HIC director)

Bigs: above: Mariangela Contacessi, Margarita Wilder, Brittney Pearson, Fonda Hopkins, Yolanda S. WaltherMeade

Infantil: above: Roman Alemania, Susan and Paul Hering, Tom Telfer, Steve Redfearn and Ashley Constans (event chairs/producers)

The organization’s been doing its work for a half-century, celebrating its 50th anniversary with its annual gourmet dinner event, held at the Hyatt Aventine on Oct. 6. It began with a 75-minute reception featuring hosted bars, specialty drinks, hors d’oeuvres and a silent auction. The traditional fresh seafood buffet included a variety of sushi creations and copious quantities of huge U-11 shrimp (oxymoronic as that may seem). Moving to the ballroom for dinner, the guests (about 650) encountered a prophetic flash mob presentation of “Tonight’s Gonna Be a Good Night.” And it was. NFL Hall-of-Famer Lynn Swann (on the Bigs’ national board for decades) emceed the event and Linda Lang, CEO of Jack in the Box (whose foundation has supported the Bigs to the tune of more than $7 million over the last few years) received the Person of the Year award. Ron and Alexis Fowler posted a Fund-a-Match challenge gift of $100,000, which donors enthusiastically exceeded. The evening netted more than $550,000 (about 90 percent of which will directly support the Bigs’ mentoring programs). Many guests stayed for cigars and brandy on the patio at the evening’s end.

Most of us recognize that mentoring is very important to children’s development. Most of us enjoyed the benefit of parents who were available to support and encourage them. But what of those kids who aren’t fortunate enough to have two parents who are not only present, but also have the time, ability and inclination to guide their children toward productive and rewarding futures? Fortunately, there’s an organization dedicated to helping such children connect with people who can make a big difference in their lives. They’ve been around for a while, so you’ve probably heard of them. They’re called Big Brothers Big Sisters (known *** as the Bigs, in their own shorthand), and The Hyatt Aventine was the scene of the San Diego County branch is headed by Paul Palmer. They connect dedicated another fundraiser the very next night, mentors of both genders (“bigs”) with when legendary singer-songwriter the kids that need them most (“littles”). Kenny Loggins came to perform at the Concert for the Children fundraiser for the Hospital Infantil de las Californias (HIC). Proceeds will help support HIC’s Infantil: left: Tammy Nante, Rosio and Mike Indigent Care Program, which benefits Flynn, Karen Howard, families on both sides of the U.S.-Mexico Missy Murray, Kristi border who are unable to pay for their Pieper children’s surgical and treatment

expenses. More than 400 guests enjoyed traypassed hors d’oeuvres, along with chardonnay and claret from the prestigious Francis Ford Coppola winery. The first course, a chilled gazpacho soup, was on the table when they entered the dining room; filet and crab cakes followed. Live auction bidding was especially lively, often purposely exceeding the value of the items offered. A video illustrated HIC’s important work and generous pledges of financial support were made. The congenial Loggins performed an entertaining show, playing many of his familiar hits as well as songs popularized by others. One of his most famous creations was “This Is It,” with the lines “You think that maybe it’s over; Not if you don’t want it to be.” He told a story of how he visited his father in the hospital, just before a scheduled operation. His dad confided he was prepared to die on the operating table if necessary. Kenny felt it probably wouldn’t be a problem, since pops was only facing hemorrhoid surgery. The song may actually refer to relationships, though some think it may have to do with the upcoming NBA season. Nearing 64, Loggins remains a consummate and energetic performer. He’s retained both his looks and his abilities, can still hit the high notes and embraces new sounds as well as his famous old standbys. He engaged the audience, walking among the tables during one number; partygoers soon crowded in front of the stage, dancing, waving and jumping as he sang. Few remained in their seats and almost nobody left until the last note of the encore had been played and the audience had rendered an enthusiastic ovation.


MUSTGO For a full listing of La Jolla events from Oct. 20-27, visit www.sdnews.com

More than 125 challenged athletes will participate alongside 550 able-bodied triathletes, pros and celebrities to support the Challenged Athletes Foundation during the 18th annual Aspen Medical Products San Diego Triathlon Challenge on Oct. 23. Registration begins at 6 a.m. at La Jolla

Cove. Starting at 7 a.m., the athletes, legends and celebrities will parade around La Jolla Cove, followed by a onemile swim, 44-mile bike “Tour de Cove” and 10mile run. Celebrity guests will include basketball Hall of Fame legend Bill Walton, two-time Ironman World Champion Scott Tinley, former Congressman Jim Ryun, sports announcer Craig Hum-

EVENTS MUSTDO

mer, comedian Eddie Izzard and more. The fundraiser will include a silent auction, family fun zone, wheelie run course, Paul Mitchell “Cut-a-thon” and awards cookout at the La Jolla Bridge Club. All proceeds benefit the Challenged Athletes Foundation. For more information, visit www.challengedathletes.org or call (858) 866-0959.

THURSDAY · OCTOBER 20, 2011 LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

11

Special guest to join Torrey Pines beach cleanup

David de Rothschild, known for his adventurous explorations around the world, will be partnering with the San Diego Surfrider Foundation in a Torrey Pines State Beach clean up event on Oct. 22 at 9 a.m. Rothschild is known for his

expeditions across the Arctic and Greenland ice cap, Antarctic exploration and journey into the Ecuadorian rainforests. His most recent adventure involved completing an 11,000-mile voyage across the Pacific from San Francisco to Sydney aboard the “Plastiki,” a boat made of 12,500 reclaimed bottles.

The first 25 volunteers at the clean up will receive signed copies of “Plastiki: Across the Pacific on Plastic, an Adventure to Save our Oceans,” Rothschild’s book detailing his treacherous adventure across the Pacific. To sign up for the beach clean up, visit http://sandiego.surfrider.org or call (858) 792-9940.

MIND, BODY & SOUL San Diego Nurse Is SpeakerAt Care Managers Retreat Colleen Van Horn from Innovative Healthcare Consultants was among the 40 advanced geriatric care management professionals who attended The National Association of Professional Geriatric Care Managers Advanced Practice Retreat, which took place September 1518, 2011 in San Diego, CA. Professionals from around the country came together to share best practices from both the clinical and business prospectives. The conference was aimed at geriatric care managers with more than five years of experience and who are instrumental in the day to day management of a geriatric care management practice. The intimate setting allowed those in attendance to perfect and enhance the services they provide to those challenged by issues of aging. Highlights of the conference included: • New ideas on how to make hospital transitions positive. • How to add elements of “quality of life” to each client’s plan. • How to deal with resistance to care in kind and mindful approaches. More information about Innovative Healthcare Consultants can be found at www.innovativehc.com or call us at (760)731-1334 *** About NAPGCM The National Association of Professional Geriatric Care Managers (NAPGCM) was formed in 1985 to advance dignified care for older adults and their families. Geriatric Care Managers are professionals who have extensive training and experience working with older people, people with disabilities and families who need assistance with caregiving issues. They assist older adults who wish to remain in their homes, or can help families in the search for a suitable nursing

home placement or extended care if the need occurs. The practice of geriatric care management and the role of care providers have captured a national spotlight, as generations of Baby Boomers age in the United States and abroad. For more information please visit www.caremanager.org or NAPGCM on Facebook.

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THURSDAY · OCTOBER 20, 2011 LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

Getting ‘Raw’ at La Jolla Playhouse BY CHARLENE BALDRIDGE | VILLAGE NEWS Dance aficionados know La Jolla native John Malashock’s 23-year-old Malashock Dance as one of San Diego’s best modern dance troupes. Malashock Dance is currently in residence at La Jolla Playhouse, presenting the second edition of even more provocative world premiere works in the second edition of “Malashock/Raw,” aptly titled “Malashock/Raw2.” Choreographer Malashock, who graduated from La Jolla High School, danced with New York’s renowned Twyla Tharp Dance and after touring for nearly a decade, returned to the San Diego area, determined to go into business in order to provide a more “normal” life for his wife Nina and son Duncan. “But you know how dance is,” Malashock said. “It called me back. There was not much choice.” Malashock’s Emmy Award-winning works, whether filmed for television or performed in a theater, usually tell a story. They are playful, intimate and

human. With the advent of “Raw” last year, other adjectives apply. Fourteen years ago, Malashock invited an incendiary Los Angeles-based dancer named Michael Mizerany to join his troupe. Mizerany did so, commuting by Amtrak until he moved to San Diego six years ago. As dancer and choreographer, Mizerany, who is remembered for his poignant portrayal of a loser in Malashock’s Emmy Award-winning dance film “The Soul of Saturday Night,” brings an edgy, more overtly sexual energy to the troupe. Opening tonight (Oct. 20) and continuing through Saturday in the Mandell Weiss Forum Theatre at La Jolla Playhouse, “Malashock/Raw2” features new works by Malashock, Mizerany and guest choreographers Henry Torres and Angel Arambula from Tijuana’s LUX BOREAL. Mizerany is the producer. When asked what a producer does, Mizerany said, “He does everything. Nothing is too big; nothing is too incidental. I choreograph, I run rehearsals

for LUX when LUX isn’t here. I run rehearsals for John’s piece. I process ticket orders. I sweep the floor. It’s always crunch time — not in a bad way; I really enjoy it.” Asked if he was responsible for putting the raw in “Raw,” Mizerany said no — it was a collaborative effort. The company wanted to attract a younger age demographic (25 to 40) and decided that something more cutting edge and provocative might do that. It did. Following sold out performances at downtown’s Sushi, the wildly successful repertoire titled “Malashock/Raw” was remounted at Malashock’s dance studio at Liberty Station. This season’s repertoire includes Malashock’s new dance, titled “Piece of Work!” — referring to the infinite variety of humans struggling to survive despite opposing psychological forces. In characteristic fashion, Malashock’s characters are presented in a series of humorous yet disturbing solos, duets and trios. Mizerany says LUX’s “Harem” con-

cerns five women “connected” with one guy, who goes to each to get what he wants. “The guy wants something from each and so he goes to get it,” he said, “and in the end the women rebel and put him in his place.” As for his work titled “Desperate Love,” Mizerany says it concerns the things we compromise for the idea of love or being in love. “The characters are really flawed — interesting but dysfunctional,” he said. “They compromise their emotions, their bodies and their physical safety for what they think they’ll get out of love.” Mizerany said “Malashock/RawII” is more provocative and cutting edge than it was last year. Provocative? Certainly. Offensive? Perhaps. But it’s all in the eye of the beholder. An innovation this year, “Live in the Splash Zone,” allows patrons who want to see sweat and effort to be seated onstage to experience “Malashock /Raw2” from the dancers’ perspective. It’s billed as up close and personal and possibly dangerous. According to Mizer-

LA JOLLA DINING SCENE FINE

DINING IN AND AROUND

Nicholas Strasburg and Christine Marshall in “Malashock/Raw 2” Photo by Raymond Elstad

any, those seats sold out almost immediately. Malashock/Raw 2, Mandell Weiss Forum Theatre, La Jolla Playhouse, Oct. 20-22, 8 p.m., $20, $25 (day of show), (619) 260-1622, www.malashockdance.org

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Expires 11-03-11


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DRIVER NEEDED We seek for a dedicated and reliable driver who possess good knowledge with great service skills. Candidate must have a valid drivers license, must have clean driving record and drug free. Send your resume via email to stphmiller@yahoo.com ECONOMIST – San Diego, CA FAX resume to Source One Staffing 626/337-0221 Attn: Elma Gonzales, Human Resources Manager

Alaska shore plants & vessels. Free round trip transportation from Seattle to job site. Must be eligible to work in the U. S. and the ability to work up to 16 hours per day. Competitive pay offered at $7.75 straight time and overtime hours will be paid at $11.62. Working on a vessel provides an opportunity for bonus pay! To be guaranteed an onsite interview, you must complete an application online at www.tridentseafoods.com prior to attending the Trident Position Presentation scheduled for October 21th and 22nd at 8 am. Ramada Plaza Hotel, 2151 Hotel Circle South, San Diego, CA. Presentation begins promptly at 8 am. Please visit our website for additional information on Trident Seafoods. Trident Seafoods Corporation is an Equal Opportunity Employer. EOE/AA M/D/V

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LEGAL ADS 900 STATE OF CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF INDUSTRIALS RELATIONS WORKER’S COMPENSATION APPEALS BOARD SPECIAL NOTICE OF LAWSUIT WCAB No. ADJ1982668 To: DEFENDANT, ILLEGALLY UNINSURED EMPLOYER: DEFENDANT CARL J. WAGNER, ET AL. APPLICANT(S): MELVIN E. VASQUEZ-FIGUEROA NOTICES 1) A lawsuit, the attached Application for Adjudication of Claim, has been filed with the Workers Compensation Appeals Board against you as the named defendant by the above-named applicant(s). You may seek the advice of an attorney in any matter connected with this lawsuit and such attorney should be consulted promptly so that your response may be filed and entered in a timely fashion. If you do not know an attorney, you may call an attorney reference service or a legal aid office (scc telephone directory). You may also request assistance / information from an information and Assistance Officer of the Division of Workers’ Compensation (see telephone directory). 2) An Answer to the Application must be filed and served within six days of the service of the Application pursuant to Appeals Board rules; therefore, your written response must be filed with the Appeals Board promptly; a letter of phone call will not protect your interests. 3) You will be served with a Notice(s) of hearing and must appear at all hearings or conferences. After such hearing, even absent your appearance, a decision may be made and an award of compensation benefits may issue against you. The award ccould result in the garnishment of your wages, taking of your money or property or other relief. If the appeals board makes an award against you, your house or other dwelling or other property may be taken to satisfy that award in a non-judicial sale, with no exemptions from execution. A lien may be imposed upon your property without further hearing and before the issuance of an award. 4) You must notify the Appeals Board of the proper address for the service of official notices and papers and notify the Appeals Board of any changes in that address.TAKE ACTION NOW TO PROTECT YOUR INTERESTS! Issued by: WORKERS’ COMPENSATION APPEALS BOARD 7575 METROPOLITAN DR., STE 202 SAN DIEGO, CA. 92108 COMPLETED BY: Manuel J. Rodriguez, Jr. 2204 S. El Camino Real, Ste. 300, Oceanside CA 92054 (760) 433-9009 NOTICE TO THE PERSON SERVED: You are served as an individual ISSUE DATE(S): SEPT 29 OCT 06, 13 AND 20, 2011 STATE OF CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS WORKERS’ COMPENSATION APPEALS BOARD APPLICATION FOR ADJUDICATION OF CLAIM CASE No. ADJI982668 Mr. Melvin E. Vasquez Figueroa 412 Amunition Rd. Fallbrook, CA. 92028 Carl J. Wagner, etal 1144 Laguna St. Oceanside, CA. 92054 IT IS CLAIMED THAT: The injured employee, born 12/10/83, while employed as a heavy labor on 08/28/07 at 1608 Alvarado St., Oceanside, Ca. 92054 By the employer sustained injury arising out of and in the course of employment to pain to low back and right leg The injury occured as followes lifting and moving a large piece of stucco. Actual earnings at the time of injury were: $500 per week (12.50 x 40) or ($100 / day x 5 days / wk) The injury caused disability as folloews: 9/19/07 to present

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2011 and continuing. Compensation was paid no $333.33 Unemployment insurance or unemployment compensation disability benefits have been received since the date of the injury no. Medical treatment was received yes All treatment was furnished by the employer or Insurance Company no Other treatment was provided or paid for by applicant Did Medi-Cal pay for any health care related to this claim no doctor not providing or paid for by employer or insurance company who treated or examined for this injury are Fallbrook Hospital; W. Chobun, D.C.; Vista Clinic This application is filed because of a disagreement regarding liability for: Temporary disability indemnity, permanent disability indemnity, reimbursement for medical expense, medical treatment, Compensation at proper rate, Rehabilitation. Penalties, interest, travel expenses, VRMA, and all appropriate benefits provided by law Dated at Fallbrook, California 10/01/07 Manuel J. Rodriguez, Jr. 2204 S. El Camino Real, Ste. 300 Oceanside, CA. 92054 (760) 433-9009 ISSUE DATE(S): SEPT 29 OCT 06, 13 AND 20, 2011

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on: 01/01/02 The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on: SEP 27, 2011 ISSUE DATE(S): OCT 06, 13, 20 AND 27, 2011 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2011-028060 THE NAME(S) OF BUSINESS: MOVE PLUS, MOVE PLUS RELOCATION SERVICE located at: 9085 JUDICIAL DR. #2240 SAN DIEGO, CA. 92122 is hereby registered by the following owner(s): A MOVE PLUS INC. This business is being conducted by: A CORPORATION A MOVE PLUS INC. 9085 JUDICIAL DRIVE #2240 SAN DIEGO, CA. 92122 CALIFORNIA The transaction of business began on: 08/31/11 The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on: OCT 05, 2011 ISSUE DATE(S): OCT 13, 20, 27 AND NOV 03, 2011 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2011-026803 THE NAME(S) OF BUSINESS: LALEH FITNESS located at: 7850 STALMER ST. APT D-2 SAN DIEGO, CA. 92111 is hereby registered by the following owner(s): LALEH YAGHOUBI This business is being conducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL The transaction of business began on: 09/20/11 The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on: SEP 22, 2011 ISSUE DATE(S): OCT 13, 20, 27 AND NOV 03, 2011

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2011-026575 THE NAME(S) OF BUSINESS: BALDWIN located at: 1131 BAY BLVD., STE C CHULA VISTA, CA. 91911 is hereby registered by the following owner(s): WALAIC, INC. This business is being conducted by: A CORPORATION WALAIC, INC. 1131 BAY BLVD., STE C CHULA VISTA, CA. 91911 CALIFORNIA The transaction of business began on: NOT YET STARTED The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. County Clerk of San Diego County on: SEPT 21, 2011 2011-027402 THE NAME(S) OF BUSINESS: SOULFUL ISSUE DATE(S): SEPT 29 OCT 06, 13 AND 20, 2011 TOUCH located at: 2180 GARNET AVE. STE 2-H SAN DIEGO, CA. 92109 is hereby registered by the following FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. owner(s): MEGAN L. MALAN This business is being con2011-026671 THE NAME(S) OF BUSINESS: MAR- ducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL The transaction of business KETING GURUS located at: 8969 COMPLEX DR. SAN began on: 09/01/11 The statement was filed with Ernest DIEGO, CA. 92123 is hereby registered by the following J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego owner(s): JORDAN M. FARAR This business is being con- County on: SEP 28, 2011 ISSUE DATE(S): OCT 13, 20, 27 ducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL The transaction of business AND NOV 03, 2011 began on: NOT YET STARTED The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. San Diego County on: SEPT 21, 2011 ISSUE DATE(S): 2011-026537 THE NAME(S) OF BUSINESS: PETOPIA SEPT 29 OCT 06, 13 AND 20, 2011 PET SITTING SERVICES located at: 4225-186 PORTE DE PALMAS #186 SAN DIEGO, CA. 92122 is hereby regSUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF SAN istered by the following owner(s): BARBARA ANDERSON DIEGO 330 W. BROADWAY HALL OF JUSTICE SAN This business is beingconducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL The DIEGO, CA. 92101 CASE NO: 37-2011-00098232- transaction of business began on: 12/24/02 The stateCU-PT-CTL PETITIONER OR ATTORNEY, CHRISTOPHER ment was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / JOHN REYKA 1992 LAW ST. SAN DIEGO, CA. 92109 860- County Clerk of San Diego County on: SEP 20, 2011 335-3558 HAS FILED A PETITION WITH THIS COURT FOR ISSUE DATE(S): OCT 13, 20, 27 AND NOV 03, 2011 A DECREE CHANGING PETITIONERS NAME FROM CHRISTOPHER JOHN REYKA TO CHRISTOPHER WITT FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. THE COURT ORDERS THAT all persons interested in this 2011-027906 THE NAME(S) OF BUSINESS: EMPIRE matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indi- ENTERPRISE located at: 4926 NEWPORT AVE. SAN cated below to show cause, if any, why the petition should DIEGO, CA. 92107 is hereby registered by the following not be granted. Any person objecting to the name owner(s): KENNETH L. FREEMAN, NANCY M. FREEMEN changes described above must file a written objection This business is beingconducted by: HUSBAND AND WIFE that indicates the reasons for the objection at least two The transaction of business began on: 01/10/75 The court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on: OCT 04, petition should not be granted. If no written objection is 2011 ISSUE DATE(S): OCT 13, 20, 27 AND NOV 03, 2011 timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING TO BE HELD ON NOV 08, FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2011 TIME : 8:30 AM DEPT: 8 220 WEST BROADWAY SAN 2011-027907 THE NAME(S) OF BUSINESS: OCEAN DIEGO, CA. 92101 ISSUE DATE(S): SEPT 29 OCT 06, 13 BEACH ANTIQUE MALL located at: 4926 NEWPORT AVE. AND 20, 2011 SAN DIEGO, CA. 92107 is hereby registered by the following owner(s): KENNETH L. FREEMAN, NANCY M. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. FREEMEN This business is beingconducted by: HUSBAND 2011-025797 THE NAME(S) OF BUSINESS: BLISS- AND WIFE The transaction of business began on: FUL EXCHANGE, HUMBLE HOME BOOKKEEPING lo- 06/01/01 The statement was filed with Ernest J. Drocated at: 2915 GOVERNOR DR. SAN DIEGO, CA. 92122 is nenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County hereby registered by the following owner(s): ANANDA on: OCT 04, 2011 ISSUE DATE(S): OCT 13, 20, 27 AND HILER This business is being conducted by: AN INDIVID- NOV 03, 2011 UAL The transaction of business began on: NOT YET STARTED The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dro- FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. nenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County 2011-028834 THE NAME(S) OF BUSINESS: KISS MY on: SEPT 13, 2011 ISSUE DATE(S): SEPT 29 OCT 06, 13 TACO located at: 8866 BRALORNE WAY SAN DIEGO, CA. AND 20, 2011 92126 is hereby registered by the following owner(s): ABEL ALVAREZ This business is beingconducted by: AN FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. INDIVIDUAL The transaction of business began on: NOT 2011-024718 THE NAME(S) OF BUSINESS: SOCAL YET STARTED The statement was filed with Ernest J. DroAQUAFARMS, SOCAL AQUASCAPES located at: 4008 nenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County TAYLOR ST. SAN DIEGO, CA. 92110 is hereby registered on: OCT 13, 2011 ISSUE DATE(S): OCT 20, 27 NOV 03 by the following owner(s): DANIEL MARTINEZ, MARLON AND 10, 2011 CRUMP This business is being conducted by: A GENERAL PARTNERSHIP The transaction of business began on: FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 08/01/11 The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dro- 2011-026856 THE NAME(S) OF BUSINESS: DInenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County NOBLISS MISC SERVICES located at: 24941PAPPAS RD. on: AUG 30, 2011 ISSUE DATE(S): SEPT 29 OCT 06, 13 SAN DIEGO, CA. 92065 is hereby registered by the folAND 20, 2011 lowing owner(s): DENISE PLESSIS This business is beingconducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL The transaction of FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. business began on: NOT YET STARTED The statement 2011-027214 THE NAME(S) OF BUSINESS: RIVER was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / ROCK PROMOTIONS located at: 4203 GENESEE AVE County Clerk of San Diego County on: SEPT 23, 2011 STE 103 SAN DIEGO, CA. 92117 is hereby registered by ISSUE DATE(S): OCT 20, 27 NOV 03 AND 10, 2011 the following owner(s): SANDRA CARDET This business is being conducted by: A GENERAL PARTNERSHIP The SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF SAN transaction of business began on: NOT YET STARTED The DIEGO 220 W. BROADWAY CENTRAL COURTHOUSE statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., SAN DIEGO, CA. 92101 CASE NO: 37-2011-00099107Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on: SEP 27, CU-PT-CTL PETITIONER OR ATTORNEY, CHRISTY ANN 2011 ISSUE DATE(S): OCT 06, 13, 20 AND 27, 2011 ROSADO 4050 ROSENDA CT #243 SAN DIEGO, CA. 92122 702-822-0563 HAS FILED A PETITION WITH THIS FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. COURT FOR A DECREE CHANGING PETITIONERS NAME 2011-027274 THE NAME(S) OF BUSINESS: CUSTOM FROM CHRISTY ANN ROSADO TO CHRISTY ANN HOWCRAFTED BARS located at: 2729 TONTO WAY SAN LAND THE COURT ORDERS THAT all persons interested DIEGO, CA. 92117 is hereby registered by the following in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearowner(s): LEE GRANDPREY This business is being con- ing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petiducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL The transaction of business tion should not be granted. Any person objecting to the began on: NOT YET STARTED The statement was filed name changes described above must file a written obwith Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of jection that indicates the reasons for the objection at least San Diego County on: SEP 27, 2011 ISSUE DATE(S): OCT two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard 06, 13, 20 AND 27, 2011 and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF SAN timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a DIEGO 330 W. BROADWAY HALL OF JUSTICE SAN hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING TO BE HELD ON NOV 29, DIEGO, CA. 92101 CASE NO: 37-2011-00098530- 2011 TIME : 8:30 AM DEPT: 8 220 WEST BROADWAY SAN CU-PT-CTL PETITIONER OR ATTORNEY, DAVID MORTON DIEGO, CA. 92101 ISSUE DATE(S): OCT 20, 27 NOV 03 4918 DAWES ST. UNIT #1 SAN DIEGO, CA. 92109 619- AND 10, 2011 813-4112 HAS FILED A PETITION WITH THIS COURT FOR A DECREE CHANGING PETITIONERS NAME FROM DAVID FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. KELLY MORTON TO DAVE KELLY MORTON THE COURT 2011-028885 THE NAME(S) OF BUSINESS: PLATORDERS THAT all persons interested in this matter shall INUM AUTO SPORTS II located at: 1316 NATIONAL CITY appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to BLVD. NATIONAL CITY, CA. 91950 is hereby registered by show cause, if any, why the petition should not be the following owner(s): S&H CORP This business is begranted. Any person objecting to the name changes de- ingconducted by: A CORPORATION S&H CORP 2707 scribed above must file a written objection that indicates GARNET AVE. SAN DIEGO, CA. 92109 CALIFORNIA The the reasons for the objection at least two court days be- transaction of business began on: 10/01/11 The statefore the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear ment was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not County Clerk of San Diego County on: OCT 14, 2011 be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court ISSUE DATE(S): OCT 20, 27 NOV 03 AND 10, 2011 may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING TO BE HELD ON NOV 16, 2011 TIME : 8:30 AM FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. DEPT: 8 220 WEST BROADWAY SAN DIEGO, CA. 92101 2011-028801 THE NAME(S) OF BUSINESS: SAN ISSUE DATE(S): OCT 06, 13, 20 AND 27, 2011 DIEGO FIRE DOOR INSPECTION located at: 1412 KNOXVILLE ST. SAN DIEGO, CA. 92110 is hereby regisFICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. tered by the following owner(s): MARK ROMANOWSKI 2011-027223 THE NAME(S) OF BUSINESS: MC This business is beingconducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL The ELROY TUTORING located at: 2180 GARNET AVE. #2K transaction of business began on: NOT YET STARTED The SAN DIEGO, CA. 92109 is hereby registered by the fol- statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., lowing owner(s): MCELROY TUTORING INC. This business Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on: OCT 13, is being conducted by: A CORPORATION MCELROY TU- 2011 ISSUE DATE(S): OCT 20, 27 NOV 03 AND 10, 2011 TORING INC. 2180 GARNET AVE. #2K SAN DIEGO, CA. 92109 CALIFORNIA The transaction of business began FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2011-028804 THE NAME(S) OF BUSINESS: INDUSTRIAL LOCK AND SAFE, FIRE DOOR INSPECTION COMPANY located at: 1412 KNOXVILLE ST. SAN DIEGO, CA. 92110 is hereby registered by the following owner(s): MARK ROMANOWSKI This business is beingconducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL The transaction of business began on: NOT YET STARTED The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on: OCT 13, 2011 ISSUE DATE(S): OCT 20, 27 NOV 03 AND 10, 2011

CARZ

www.SanDiegoCarz.com

Cars starting at $2,990 MARK or JASON 3196 MIDWAY DR. (619)224-0500

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2011-028629 THE NAME(S) OF BUSINESS: TRIDENT STRATEGIC EQUITY MANAGEMENT, LLC located at: 1322 SCOTT ST., STE 102. SAN DIEGO, CA. 92106 is hereby registered by the following owner(s): TRIDENT STRETEGIC EQUITY MANAGEMENT This business is beingconducted by: A LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY TRIDENT STRATEGIC EQUITY MANAGEMENT 1322 SCOTT ST., STE. 102 SAN DIEGO, CA. 92106 DELAWARE LLC The transaction of business began on: 10/03/11 The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on: OCT 11, 2011 ISSUE DATE(S): OCT 20, 27 NOV 03 AND 10, 2011


14

SERVICE DIRECTORY - LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2011

ASSISTANT

CONSTRUCTION

Do you have projects left undone? Do you need a second pair of hands? Is your life in disarray and you want clarity? Then you are ready for

Trinity Pacific

Your Own Girl Friday

Summer is almost over!

www.yourowngirlfriday.com Stacey Blanchet (619) 997-7601

c o m p a s s i o n a t e c a re g i v e r

Traditional Hardwood Flooring

Construction 10% Discount!*

• REFINISHING • REPAIR • INSTALLATION

Call today to get your home ready for the winter!

CAREGIVER

Del’s Independent Home Care

HARDWOOD FLOORING

*New customers • Labor only

SPECIALIZING IN HARDWOOD FLOORS

See our work at:

Over 20 years experience in San Diego

www.trinitypacific.net

JOHN WEIGHTMAN

RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL

Call #619.674.8967

PAINTING

Chuckie’s

Painting Company

(619) 795-9429 www.chuckiespainting.com

chuckgjr@cox.net CA Lic. #925325

Painting & Handyman Services • Power Washing • Lighting • • Electrical • Plumbing • • Carpentry • Dry Wall •

Ca. G.C.Lic#: 945528

(619) 218-8828

Call Don 858-273-4239

Activities of Daily Living 24 Hour Care Hygiene Shower Service Medication Reminders Doctors Appointments ALZHEIMER’S CARE

ELECTRICAL

HAULING

619.674.6373

25 Years of Experience Licensed 619-366-0379 619-573-5367

JOSHUA PARMENTER

HELPING MAINTAIN YOUR INDEPENDENCE & SAFETY AT HOME

CLEANING

A VETERAN HAULING Insured · Reliable Best Prices & Free Estimates

10% Discount - Senior & Veteran

Call A Veteran RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL TROUBLESHOOTING EMERGENCY CALLS FREE SAME DAY ESTIMATES

Maid Service

858.431.9669

Top to Bottom detailed cleaning

LIC.# 951604

Weekly • Monthly • Special Occasions

www.jwpelectric.com

MOVE OUT SPECIALS FREE ESTIMATES!

Call Valentina

GARDENING·LANDSCAPING

(858) 229-0016

619-225-8362

You Call-We Haul! No Job Too Small! Evictions, cleanouts, construction debris, tree trimming, etc.

FREE ESTIMATES

R&V Ruperto Vazques

Competitive Pricing. Weekend and same day service.

A Perfect Shine

Cleaning Service APerfectShine.com

by Cecilia Sanchez

Tree Trimming · Hauling Sod Lawn · Clean Up Trash Concrete · Gardening Fertilized · Landscaping · Drain Water Sprinkler Installation · Wood Fencing

Family owned & operated 15 years experience. Office, residential & vacancy cleanings #1 vacation rental experts Free estimates & excellent references (619) 248-5238

Maribel’s

Jose’s

maribel.cleaningservice@gmail.com

US KNOW WHAT WE CAN DO FOR YOU.

858-692-6160

MOVING

COLEMAN

MOVING SYSTEMS INC.

Office/Residential | Free Wardrobes 7 DAYS A WEEK | FREE ESTIMATES FAMILY OWNED SINCE 1979

619.223.2255

License # 068798 Insured

CONSTRUCTION

BBB MEMBER | INSURED LIC #CAL T-189466

All Work Guaranteed 30+ Years Experience Lic. # 694956

Repairs • Lath & Plaster Re-Stucco • Custom Work Clean • Reliable • Reasonable

D’arlex 619-846-2734 Cell 619-265-9294 Email: darlex0907@hotmail.com

As low as

$45/week!

Call Sonya 858.270.3103 x136

Call Kim 858.270.3103 x140

FREE ESTIMATES!

BLUEOCEANWINDOWCLEANING.COM

TREE SERVICE • FINE PRUNING & THINNING • ARTISTIC TREE LACING • TREE & STUMP REMOVAL WWW.CROWNPOINTCLIPPERS.COM

(858) 270-1742 Fully licensed and insured. Lic# 723867

WINDOW CLEANING

JB’s Window Cleaning & Service

• Mini Blinds • Screens

• Mirrors Pressure Washing

619.450.6553

Your Ad Here! As low as

$45/week!

Call

(619) 248-2778

10% Senior Discount

Taylor Made

HEALTH & WELLNESS

CLEANING

WINDOW

Call Sonya 858.270.3103 x136

services offered: •Interior & Exterior

Window Cleaning •Construction Clean-up •Residential •Small Commercial •Store Fronts

Call Kim 858.270.3103 x140

619.981.0169 licensed & insured

–Bill HARPER PLUMBING & HEATING–

Judy Callihan Warfield

Bill Harper Plumbing.com

Certified Hypnotherapist, NLP, Imagery

HOME IMPROVEMENT

ORTIZ

HOME IMPROVEMENT

All Customer Discounts Plumbing & Drain Services Self Employed w/ 25 years Experience Lic #504044

CALL BILL 619-224-0586 SENIOR SERVICES

Concrete Work Wood Decks Interior Remodeling Patio Cover Painting - Interior/Exterior Landscaping Hardscaping Custom Showers

Religious Directory

858.349.9698

RENT-A-HUSBAND Handyman with 30 years experience All Trades • Hourly or Bid Prompt, Affordable, Professional Insured

Ask for Bob 858-454-5922

NON-DENOMINATIONAL SAN DIEGO BAHA’I COMMUNITY

ROOFING

HOME IMPROVEMENT High Quality Home Improvement

Interior Plaster/Drywall Repairs

$15 off for new customers

POOL CARE

Ocean Home Services

Re-Stucco Specialists

CROWN POINT CLIPPERS, INC.

Experienced

successhypnotherapy.com

Non-licensed

(619) 715-2888

LET

TREE SERVICES

619.303.8511

COASTAL LANDSCAPING

Cleaning Services

• Commercial / Residential • Foreclosures • Vacation Rental Expert • Move In / Outs • Same-Day Service Once - Weekly - Bi-Weekly - Monthly • Cleaning Supplies Provided • Best Prices • Great References • Free Estimate •

Free Estimates Lic # 428658 858.566.7454 858.382.2472

PLUMBING

Gardening Clean-up

• C OMPLETE W EEKLY M AINTENANCE • F ENCES • T REE T RIMMING • S PRINKLER S YSTEMS & R EPAIRS • D ESIGN & C ONSTRUCTION • C LEANUP & H AULING • L OWEST P RICES G UARANTEED

Instant Quotes Online 24/7

Repairs, re-grouts & installations of all ceramic tile & stone. All work done by owner.

Pain • Fear • Sports Addictions • Sleep • IBS Relationships • Stress Weight • Smoking

P.O. Box 710398 San Diego, CA 92171

619-847-1535

www.LaJollaPainting.biz

HYPNOSIS WORKS!

Ph: (858) 573-6950 Cell: (858) 518-0981

Hedges hauling • Reasonable Rates Free Estimates • References

alan@lajollapainting.biz

D.K. TILE

www.iluvjunk.com

619.269.1745

Cleaning Service

Lic# 620471

WINDOW CLEANING

619-933-4346

REFERENCES

San Diego’s Premier House Cleaning and Carpet Cleaning Service

Residential Commercial • Free Estimates • Senior Discounts • Lead Safe Work • Bonded & Insured • 30 Yrs Experience •

TILE

Master Carpenter w/ 25 years experience. Interior /exterior woodworking (ex-termite inspector) Quality design fence work wood /vinyl Professionally Installed windows & doors Drywall Install/Repair and finish work. Detail Quality Painting Light Electrial & Plumbing Call Scott

(619) 241-1231 not licensed

Scott Smith, has been serving the beach communities since 1979.

858-272-ROOF (7663) 619-224-ROOF (7663)

SURFBOARD REPAIR

COCONUT PEETS SURFBOARD REPAIR REPAIRS • RESTORATIONS • SALES OPEN 10AM – 6PM • 12PM – 6PM TUES. 619.224.2010 PLA – OBMA – A+ RATING

6545 Alcala Knolls Dr. (off Linda Vista Rd.) SUNDAY 9:00 - 10:00 Interfaith Devotions; 10:30 - 12:30 Introductory Talk & Discussion Please Call 858-274-0178 for Directions or for more information General Baha’i Info - www.bahai.org www.sandiegobahai.org

VIDEO to DVD Film 8mm & 16mm to DVD | Slides & Photos to DVD

10 % OFF Clip This Ad Video Tapes Deteriorate Don’t Lose Your Memories Record to DVD • Play on Computer or TV NEW ADDRESS! 5390 Napa St. • 619.220.8500 • videotoodvd.com


REAL ESTATE DIRECTORY · LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

OPEN HOUSES

15

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2011

HOT REAL ESTATE PROPERTIES

LA JOLLA

Thurs & Fri 1-3pm . . . . . . . . . . . .6933 Neptune . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4BR/3BA . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$5,325,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . .Ozstar De Jourday • 619-248-7827 & Patricia Denning • 858-449-5899 Sat & Sun 12-3pm . . . . . . . . . . . .8031 La Jolla Scenic Dr. North . .6BR/6.5BA . . . . . . . . . . . .$2,045,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Tony Francour • 858-688-1177 Sat & Sun 12-5pm . . . . . . . . . . . .887 La Jolla Rancho Rd. . . . . . . .5BR/6BA . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$2,195,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Robert Nelson • 858-531-4555 Sat & Sun 1-4pm . . . . . . . . . . . . .6933 Neptune . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4BR/3BA . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$5,325,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . .Ozstar De Jourday • 619-248-7827 & Patricia Denning • 858-449-5899 Sat 1-4pm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7215 Calabria Ct. #73 . . . . . . . . .2BR/1.5BA . . . . . . . . . . . .$339,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Claire Melbo • 858-551-3349 Sat 12-3pm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7530 Draper #3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3BR/3.5BA . . . . . . . . . . . .$899,000-$925,000 . . . . . . . . . . .Kathy Evans • 858-488-7355 Sun 1-4pm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5370 La Jolla Blvd. Unit 302 . . . .2BR/2BA . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$495,000-$545,000 . . . . . . . .Jenny Williams • 619-261-7636 Sun 1-4pm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8120 Gilman Ct. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5BR/3.5BA . . . . . . . . . . . .$1,075,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Claire Melbo • 858-551-3349 Sun 1-5pm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2695 Schenley Terrace . . . . . . . .4BR/2BA . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$599,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Charles Schevker • 858-449-8250 Sun 12-4pm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2433 Sagebrush Court . . . . . . . .3BR/2BA . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$1,275,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Jim Holland • 858-405-6442 Sun 1-4pm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5433 Beaumont Ave. . . . . . . . . . .5BR/4BA . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$1,345,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .The Reed Team • 858-456-1240 Sun 1-4pm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5412 Thunderbird Lane . . . . . . . .4BR/4BA . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$1,358,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Julie Davis • 619-399-6304 Sun 1-5pm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7482 Caminito Rialto . . . . . . . . . .3BR/2.5BA . . . . . . . . . . . .$1,399,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Carole Graham • 619-961-5556 & Mimi Swenson • 858-735-9850 Sun 2-4pm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1105 La Jolla Rancho Rd. . . . . . .5BR/5.5BA . . . . . . . . . . . .$1,795,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .The Reed Team • 858-456-1240 Sun 1-4pm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2810 Hidden Valley Rd. . . . . . . . .4BR/4BA . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$2,595,000 . . . . . . . . . .Barbara Leinenweber • 619-981-0002 Sun 1-4pm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2220 Avenida de la Playa . . . . . .3BR/3BA . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$2,600,000-$2,950,876 . . . . . . .Joyce Gutzeit • 858-220-0866 Sun 1-4pm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7344 Olivetas Ave. . . . . . . . . . . . .4BR/3BA . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$2,695,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Cher Conner • 858-354-1735 Sun 1-4pm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6444 El Camino Del Teatro . . . . .4BR/4.5BA . . . . . . . . . . . .$3,625,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .David Schroedl • 858-459-0202

PACIFIC BEACH / MISSION BEACH / CROWN POINT Sat & Sun 1-4pm . . . . . . . . . . . . .4076-4080 Morrell St. . . . . . . . . .4BR/3.5BA . . . . . . . . . . . .$859,000-$869,000 . . . . . . . . . . .Kathy Evans • 858-488-7355 Sat 10-4 Sun 1-4pm . . . . . . . . . .1056 Chalcedony St. . . . . . . . . . .4BR/3.5BA . . . . . . . . . . . .$959,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Kathy Evans • 858-488-7355 Sat 1-4pm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3916 Riviera Dr. #402 . . . . . . . . .$999,000-$1,049,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Matthew Jenner • 858-603-1812 Sun 1-4pm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1365-1371 Hornblend St. . . . . . .3BR/2.5BA . . . . . . . . . . . .$529,000-$549,000 . . . . . . . . . . .Kathy Evans • 858-488-7355 Sun 10-4pm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4627 Ocean Blvd. #221 . . . . . . . .2BR/2BA . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$769,000-$829,000 . . . . . . . . . . .Kathy Evans • 858-488-7355 Sun 2:30-5:30pm . . . . . . . . . . . . .3947 Sequoia St. . . . . . . . . . . . . .3BR/4BA . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$849,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Kathy Evans • 858-488-7355

Pacific Beach Bewitching 18 room, 1912 Craftsman. BE A PART OF HISTORY!! Live in over 4800sf! including 5-6 Br's, parlor rm, sunrm,dramatic Liv & Din rms on sprawling, elevated 1/4 acre + corner lot, with bay views. Reduced to $1,129,000 to MOVE YOU! 2176 Diamond.

Kathy Evans 858.488.SELL

*CONSIDERING LISTING YOUR PROPERTY?* Klatt Realty has been serving the needs of La Jolla Real Estate owners since September 1972. If you are thinking about selling or leasing a property you own, call us. We are experienced off-site property managers too.

POINT LOMA / OCEAN BEACH Sat & Sun 11-4pm . . . . . . . . . . . .885 Armada Terrace . . . . . . . . . .2BR/2BA . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$995,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Robert Realty • 619-852-8827 Sat & Sun 12-3pm . . . . . . . . . . . .3631 Plumosa Dr. . . . . . . . . . . . .4BR/3BA . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$1,095,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Tony Francour • 858-688-1177 Sat & Sun 1-4pm . . . . . . . . . . . . .616 San Antonio Ave. . . . . . . . . . .4BR/3BA . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$1,200,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Robert Realty • 619-852-8827 Sat 12-3pm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1820 Froude St. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3BR/2.5BA . . . . . . . . . . . .$895,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Tony Francour • 858-688-1177 Sun 1-4pm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4068 Bernice Dr. . . . . . . . . . . . . .4BR/2BA . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$599,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Tami Fuller • 619-226-8264 Sun 1-4pm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3911 Centraloma Dr. . . . . . . . . . .3BR/2BA . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$649,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Robin Borrelli • 619-368-9373 Sun 1-4pm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3620 Amaryllis Dr. . . . . . . . . . . . .4BR/2.5BA . . . . . . . . . . . .$995,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Tami Fuller • 619-226-8264

BAY PARK Sat 12-3pm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2652 Burgener Blvd. . . . . . . . . . .3BR/2BA . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$679,000-$699,000 . . . . . . . . . . .Monty Grout • 619-549-3812

COLLEGE Sat 1-4pm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5496 Baja Dr. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3BR/2BA . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$325,000-$339,000 . . . . . . . . . . .Lisa Ashkins • 619-888-2117

DEL MAR Sun 1-4pm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .521 Avenida Primavera . . . . . . . .3BR/2BA . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$1,600,000-$1,800,876 . . . . . . .Claire Melbo • 858-551-3349

La Jolla Village

No Tricks, Just Treats. Selling a lifestyle, not just a fabulous 4 year new DRE #00872108 2,242 sq ft 3BR townhome with private elevator and 3 car garage. Shop, dine, then leisure stroll home. 7530 Draper Ave #3 Coastal Properties Open Sat & Sun 1-4

RENTALS $9,750* RPM: This fully furnished beautiful Ocean View home in Prestwick Estates has a panoramic vista of La Jolla Shores, the Scripps Pier and the La Jolla Cove! The home features a swimming pool, an JOSEPH DEAN KLATT PhD LIST WHERE THE REAL ESTATE office and multiple luxury items. You must see it to ACTION IS appreciate it! Available now for a one-year lease at KLATT REALTY INC. (858) 454-9672 $9,750* RPM! Sorry, no pets and no smokers please. 1124 Wall St., La Jolla *Owner requires an acceptable credit check, security deposit, and first and last month’s rent in advance.

Enya

e-mail: DrJosephKlatt@san.rr.com

www.KlattRealty.com

SERRA MESA Sun 1-4pm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2706 W. Canyon Ave. . . . . . . . . . .3+BR/3BA . . . . . . . . . . . .$599,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Tami Fuller • 619-226-8264

UTC Sat 12-4pm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6937 Lipmann St. . . . . . . . . . . . .3BR/2BA . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$559,999 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Lillian Lo • 949-682-8697

PLACE YOUR LISTING AT: sdnews.com by Monday 5 p.m.

Wonderful Family Home!

Panoramic Views!

Perfect Home For Extended Family. ING D N PE

Wonderful Family Home! This Home is a Hidden Jewel in Very Desirable Bay Ho! Exceptional Corner Lot Has Ample Space for the Entire Family! Tastefully Updated Throughout! Attached Studio/Granny Flat or Office! Open Spacious Floor Plan! Newer Windows! French Doors! Upgraded Kitchen w/ Plenty of Cabinetry & Counter Space! Two Master Suites & 2 Bedrooms, XLG Over Sized Soaker Tub! Low Maintenance Yard, Cozy Patio R.V. Parking! 3586 Elsinore Place

4502 Melisa Way Desirable Bay Ho Community with Spectacular views of Mt. Soledad! 2,713 square feet with 3 Bedrooms, 3 Baths, Granny Flat with 1 Bedroom 1 Bath. Mature Fruit Trees. Close to Freeways and Schools.

Reduced to $659,000

Relax On Your Private Upper Deck & Enjoy Panoramic Bay, Ocean &Canyon Views. Magnificent Sunsets! SeaWorld Fireworks! Located In The Most Desirable Bay Ho Community! This Two Story Offers Cherry Wood Flooring, Well Appointed Kitchen, Designed For Family Entertaining. Spacious Master w/Walk In Closet, Spa Tub & Vaulted Ceilings! Loft Office W/Custom Built-Ins! This Home Also Offers Surround Sound Throughout! Exercise & Enjoy Sun Room w/Stationary Swim Spa/Lap Pool! Gated RV Parking, Fruit Trees, & So Much More!! 3381 Ecochee Ave.

Offered at $879,000

Unobstructed Ocean Views! D! SOL

Panoramic Views of Ciy, Bay & Ocean! D! SOL

Unobstructed Panoramic Ocean & Bay Views Encourage Year Round Indoor and Outdoor Living! Lush Private Garden with Gazebo and Spa, Open Beam Ceilings, Skylights, Fireplace, Large Master Suite with Walk In Closet! Freshly Painted and Move in Ready! And So Much More!! 4018 Kenosha

Vicki Dutch-Jones

Big Yard & Pool! D! SOL

3 Bedroom, 3 Bath, 1,732 Sq. Ft. 1/3 Acre with Panoramic Views of City, Bay & Ocean . $250K Remodel. New Light and Bright Kitchen 2425 Poinsettia Dr.

3 BR 3BA 2,046 square feet. Big yard, pool & spa! 15356 Via La Gitano

We still have Buyers looking for 3 BR+! Can be a fixer. Any home on canyon or view Lot

Vicki Sells San Diego, Vicki Sells Bay Ho

(619) 723-7010 Vicki@VickiDutchJones.com www.VickiDutchJones.com

6112-A Regents Road San Diego, CA 92122 DRE# 01384539


PAGE 16 | THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2011 | LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

Just Reduced! • Open Sunday 10/23 from 1-4pm Spectacular Gated Muirlands View Estate

Just Reduced! • 6444 El Camino Del Teatro • Open Sunday 1- 4 This amazing & spacious, one-level home features 4BR/4.5 BA and boasts 180 degree panoramic ocean, village, golf course and north shore views. The gourmet cook's kitchen and luxurious master suite incorporate the highest quality finishes and details. The elegant master suite also enjoys the same sweeping panorama and includes an enormous walk-in closet. Enjoy romantic sunsets year-round. Incredibly private - your own secret garden on .42 acres. The backyard is a virtual paradise and includes multiple lush lawns and tree-lined pathways. Wonderful for entertaining! Complete with a separate guest suite and a game/exercise room plus wine-storage room. An exceptional estate, perfect for having a large gathering or raising a family. Just a short distance to the Village and Windansea Beach. Very seldom does a premier property of this caliber with these views become available. Call David or Marc for a private tour.

Offered at $3,625,000 • Also available for lease $7,950/mo. fully furnished

Marc Lipschitz

www.6444ElCaminoDelTeatro.com

David Schroedl

619 • 857• 2882

We get Results! • Call Us to Buy or Sell your Home Top 1/2% of all Prudential Agents in the Entire United States

dgs@san.rr.com DRE #00982592

mlipschitz@prusd.com DRE #01048968

www.MarcKnowsLaJolla.com

COLDWELL BANKER

858 • 459 • 0202 www.DavidKnowsLaJolla.com

californiamoves.com

LINDA MARRONE (858) 456-3224

Beach Living with Spanish Style

lmarrone@san.rr.com www.LindaMarrone.com

Located in the heart of La Jolla’s famed Barber Tract, this historically designated 3BR/2BA 1930

Selling La Jolla’s Barber Tract since 1990

Spanish Bungalow has been restored to perfection and is filled with custom features both inside and out. A spacious living and dining room open to a sun-drenched walled patio and a

DRE License 01081197

beautiful white sand beach is only a block away down a secluded cul-de-sac. With Mills Act property tax savings in place, this alluring home will make you smile in more ways than one!

www.7144MonteVista.com

Offered at: $1,998,000

La Jolla Office | 930 Prospect Street | 858.459.3851 3,800 Offices

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