La Jolla Village News, November 30th, 2018 (Holiday Gift Guide & Parade Program)

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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2018

THIS WEEK

ENHANCING EXQUISITE VIEWS

La Jolla gallery charged with trafficking illegal ivory SEE PAGE 5

Tiare Thompson earns first WSL win at Soup Bowl SEE PAGE 7

New Children’s Pool Plaza is nearly complete.

Birch Aquarium strives to save seadragons SEE PAGE 4

COMMUNITY CELEBRATION SET TO UNVEIL RENOVATION OF CHILDREN’S POOL PLAZA BY DAVE SCHWAB

SUZANNE WEINER / LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

fter eight years, the Children’s Pool Plaza project has come to fruition – and those responsible are throwing a wing ding to celebrate.On Sunday, Dec. 9, La Jolla Parks and Beaches and Casa de Mañana are co-hosting a celebration unveiling the new plaza.

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SEE PAGE 2


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News

FRIDAY · NOVEMBER 30, 2018 LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

Celebration for improved Children’s Pool Plaza set for Dec. 9

What: La Jolla Parks and Beaches and Casa de Mañana are co-hosting a community celebration unveiling the plaza’s improvements in the 800 block of Coast Boulevard.

BY DAVE SCHWAB | LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

The community celebration, unveiling plaza improvements in the 800 block of Coast Boulevard, will include music by broadcaster Ron Jones, the “Voice of La Jolla,” along with a display by youth services La Jolla librarian Angie Stava with an on-site book check out. There will also be a photo stand (boy and girl surfers with face space) for photos as well as free sugar-free Zollipops and an ice cream truck. Spearheading the project was Phyllis Minick, a community activist and La Jolla Parks and Beaches member, who discussed what prompted to her take action. “What it really was was just huge crowds, not only along the sidewalk but out in the street, strollers with babies and bicycles and cars pulling in and out,” said Minick. “At the time, the sidewalk in many places was only about 18-inches, and now in some places that’s been widened to eight feet. It was dangerous (then) and ugly.”

CHILDREN’S POOL PLAZA COMMUNITY CELEBRATION

When: Sunday, Dec. 9 from 1 to 3 p.m.

The Children’s Pool Plaza as it was being renovated earlier in the year. KEN HUNRICHS / LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

Walkway improvements envisioned a vastly improved pedestrian flow along Coast Walk, double-seat walls, shade trees, repairs to the existing gazebo, the addition of interpretive/historical/educational signage and use of native plants on the bluffs to control erosion.

Asked if it was all worth it, Minick said the proof is in the end result. “It’s a much-beloved, much-visited area,” she noted, adding, “It’s one of the most-visited places in San Diego.” Minick said a total of $280,000 was raised privately for the plaza

project, while pointing out the City took over the project about mid-way through the process. The La Jolla Merchants Association was one of four major civic organizations along with LJPB, La Jolla Town Council and La Jolla Community Planning Association

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that supported plaza improvements, voting for the plaza project as their top choice for local park improvements. “As a result, the City Council provided funds in two consecutive budget periods to build this project,” said Minick. “Most importantly, a new bronze plaque bearing names of all major donors is now in place for permanent viewing. When you visit the site, you can find the plaque embedded in a boulder alongside a seating wall toward the north end of the plaza. Additionally, a large sign names all contributors of both funding and services,” Minick said.

Two blood drives coming to La Jolla La Jolla Presbyterian Church will host a mobile blood drive in partnership with San Diego Blood Bank from 8:15 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. on Sunday, Dec. 9 at 7715 Draper Ave., Life Center Building Room 3. La Jolla High School will host a mobile blood drive in partnership with San Diego Blood Bank from 8 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 12 in the Little Gym at 750 Nautilus St. About 1-in-7 people entering a hospital need blood. One pint of blood, which is the amount volunteers give when they donate blood, can save up to three lives. Since blood is always needed, volunteers are asked to give blood for patients, such as those going through cancer or trauma. Donors must meet the following eligibility requirements: be 17 and older, weigh at least 114 pounds and be in good health.

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Baba Blumkin was born in Costa Rica and grew up in the beach areas of La Jolla and Pacific Beach. He graduated from La Jolla High School and comes from a family that has been in the Jewelry and Pawn business for generations. His journey in the jewelry and pawn business started after he graduated from GIA with a Graduate Gemologists Degree. In Los Angeles, he worked and apprenticed under his cousin the “King of Pinks” (diamonds) Alan Friedman in Beverly Hills. After years of working and learning the jewelry business, he met Jordan Tabach-Bank and began working in the exclusive high-end pawn/loan business in Beverly Hills. He continued working at the Interna-

tional Gem Tower in New York City. After many years of hard work and success in NYC, Baba made the decision to move his family back to San Diego and join forces with his twin brother to open up Luxe Jewelry and Loan in their old beloved neighborhood. “I am really looking forward to being able to service old and new friends alike in my hometown,” says Baba. Juan Blumkin was born in Costa Rica with (identical twin brother Baba). Raised primarily in the beach areas of Pacific Beach and La Jolla, he was a local surfer and also attended La Jolla High School. Juan later went onto earn his B.S. in management and business analytics. In his career, Juan

has held many corporate roles including sales, management, buying and many other leadership positions at Berkshire Hathaway’s Nebraska Furniture Mart. This is where he learned how important each and every customer interaction is. “I am excited to join forces with Baba and to have the opportunity to carry on the role as a brand ambassador with our new company and build lifelong customers,” says Juan.


LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS · FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2018 · PAGE 3

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FRIDAY · NOVEMBER 30, 2018 LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

News

The new habitat has been designed to create the ideal environment to breed Leafy Seadragons, something that has never been done in captivity before. ERIK JEPSEN / LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

Birch Aquarium strives to save seadragons with new exhibition Next summer Birch Aquarium at Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UC San Diego is launching a new permanent exhibition that brings seadragon conservation to the forefront. The exhibition, which has yet to be named, will be home to Weedy and Leafy Seadragons, as well as several species of seahorses and pipefish. The centerpiece of the exhibition will be one of the most expansive seadragon habitats in the world. The 18-foot-wide, 9-foot-tall exhibit will hold 5,375 gallons of water — that’s 70 bathtubs. More than being a stunning display, the habitat has been designed to create the ideal environment to breed Leafy Seadragons, something that has never been done in captivity before. “We have had great success propagating seahorses for more than 20 years, but Leafy Seadragons have never been bred in an aquarium environment,” said Jennifer Nero Moffatt, the aquarium’s senior director of animal care, science and conservation. “The life history of seadragons is somewhat similar to their seahorse relatives, but a lot is still being learned,” Moffatt continued. “Seadragons in courtship can be seen mirroring one another, nodding and nudging one another and gracefully swimming to the surface where egg transfer can occur. We have designed an environment that

allows for the depth, the exercise, the social and behavioral requirements we feel will promote the best possibility of a successful egg transfer,” Moffatt said. Slated to open shortly before Memorial Day, the new seadragon exhibition will replace The Infinity Cube installation, as well as There’s Something About Seahorses, which opened in 2009. It will be the fourth major exhibition Birch Aquarium has opened in three years and the largest indoor aquarium addition since the grand opening in 1992. From an expanded seahorse nursery to a hands-on camouflage experience for young learners, and a sneak peek into the behind-thescenes Seadragon Lab, the exhibition will immerse aquarium guests into the underwater lives of seahorses and seadragons, while giving them a peek into the work Birch Aquarium’s world-class Husbandry Team is doing to ensure that these species survive into the future. The husbandry of these species is increasingly vital due to the impacts of climate change, warming oceans, and illegal collection of wild populations, whose numbers are still widely unknown. Once open, the seadragon exhibition will be included in the cost of Birch Aquarium admission. READ MORE ONLINE AT sdnews.com

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News

FRIDAY · NOVEMBER 30, 2018 LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

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La Jolla gallery charged with selling illegal ivory On Nov. 28, San Diego City Attorney Mara W. Elliott announced that criminal charges have been filed against the Carlton Gallery at 1144 Prospect St., its owner, and an employee for trafficking ivory. “Ivory trafficking is an illegal and reprehensible business that encourages the senseless slaughter of elephants and other endangered species,” said Elliott. “I hope this prosecution sends a strong message to anyone who sells or is thinking about selling ivory on the black market in San Diego. We will find you and prosecute you to the fullest extent of the law.” This prosecution follows the largest seizure of ivory products by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife since a state law banning their sale took effect in 2016. More than 300 pieces of ivory and items containing ivory were seized from the gallery and its warehouse. The investigation into Carlton Gallery began in May 2017, when wildlife officers from the Department of Fish and Wildlife’s Trafficking Unit observed two art-deco sculptures that appeared to be ivory in the gallery’s Prospect Street display window, said the City Attorney’s office in a released statement. The statement noted that, in December 2017 and March 2018, wildlife officers returned and observed additional items that appeared to contain ivory. In a sting operation on May 1, 2018, the City Attorney said undercover wildlife officers purchased an ivory sculpture from salesperson Sheldon Miles Kupersmith, who

International Fund for Animal Welfare infographic exposes shocking facts about illegal ivory trade in U.S.

offered to sell the officers three other sculptures containing ivory. Wildlife officers obtained and executed a search warrant later that day and seized 146 items containing ivory from the gallery. The gallery’s owner, Victor Hyman Cohen, then led investigators to a warehouse nearby where officers seized 192 additional pieces of ivory. Most of the items contained ivory from elephants, while some contained ivory from the teeth of hippopotami. Cohen and Kupersmith were charged as individuals. A law banning the sale of nearly all ivory in California was authored by state Senate President pro Tempore Toni G. Atkins of San Diego and

took effect on July 1, 2016. “I wrote AB 96 because the law governing ivory sales needed to be strengthened. But a law is just a law if it’s not enforced – and funded,” Atkins said. “In 2016, the legislature and the governor gave the Department of Fish and Wildlife the resources needed to investigate illegal ivory sales, and they have responded by rooting out criminals who profit from the brutal killing of elephants and other animals.” The ivory ban encompasses the teeth and tusks of elephant, hippopotamus, mammoth, mastodon, walrus, warthog, whale and narwhal, as well as rhinoceros horn, regardless of whether it is raw,

worked or powdered, or from a store or a private collection. Under the law, advertising the sale of any items containing ivory is also prohibited. Two types of ivory products are exempted from the ban: musical instrument that are made of less than 20 percent ivory and were manufactured no later than 1975, and antiques that are made of less than 5 percent ivory and are more than 100 years old. Neither exception applies to the items seized from the Carlton Gallery, the City Attorney’s statement said. A first-time violation of this law is a misdemeanor, subject to criminal penalties of up to a year in jail and

fines of $1,000 to $40,000, depending upon the value of the items. “Seizing more than 300 pieces of ivory as evidence, valued in excess of $1.3 million, is representative of innumerable elephants and other species of wildlife poached for their ivory,” said David Bess, California Department of Fish and Wildlife deputy director and chief of law enforcement. “With the authority granted by the legislature just a few years ago to prohibit trade of ivory and rhinoceros horn, and with the assistance of the San Diego City Attorney’s Office, our team is making progress to stop the trade of ivory here in California,” Bess said. To underscore the importance of protecting endangered animals from the cruel ivory poaching industry, Elliott announced the criminal prosecution at the San Diego Zoo’s Elephant Odyssey exhibit. The San Diego Zoo is a member the Wildlife Trafficking Alliance (WTA), which includes more than 60 partners worldwide dedicated to ending commercial wildlife trafficking. “In our work to conserve species San Diego Zoo Global works every day to raise awareness for extinction events being caused by wildlife trafficking,” said Dwight Scott, director of the San Diego Zoo, and advisory board member of the Wildlife Trafficking Alliance. READ MORE ONLINE AT sdnews.com

Couple from La Jolla recall knife attack at airport parking lot BY NEAL PUTNAM | LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

A couple who were attacked at an airport parking lot by a knife-wielding man told a judge on Nov. 14 about the impact on them before he was sentenced to 13 years in state prison. Dr. Donna Kashani, a child and adolescent psychiatrist in La Jolla, testified she and her husband, Robert Bobbett, were the ones attacked on Oct. 28, 2017 just after they returned from a Washington, D.C. conference. “We were viciously attacked… in broad daylight,” said Kashani about the incident in a long-term parking lot near the San Diego International Airport. Bobbett, a vice president of an IT company in San Diego, was stabbed six times and said he spent six days in the hospital. Alberto Moreno Jauregui, now 19, stared at the couple as they were reading their statements before San Diego Superior Court Judge Polly Shamoon.

“You put me in a headlock at knifepoint,” said Kashani to Jauregui, adding that her husband wrestled the knife away from him and “he saved my life.” Jauregui pleaded guilty Oct. 16 to attempted murder and admitted he caused great bodily injuries with a

knife. Shamoon imposed nine years plus three years for the great bodily injuries allegation and one year for the knife. “You cowardly attacked her from behind and held a 10-inch kitchen knife,” said Bobbett to Jauregui. Bobbett said he recalled offering

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his car keys, and wallet, but Jauregui only wanted to kidnap his wife. Bobbett said Jauregui yelled “I’m going to (expletive) kill her!” and screamed “die, die, die!” Bobbett said the stab wounds struck his left kidney and he had no feeling in a finger that was cut.

“We are both good people. What a horrible choice you made,” said Bobbett. “You are nothing but a small detour.” Bobbett said they have since installed a high-end security system for their home. He said he has frequent nightmares about the attack.

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FRIDAY · NOVEMBER 30, 2018 LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

Local

LA JOLLA LOOKING FOR PARK LAND

Hikers look south to La Jolla Cove from a lookout on one of the trails at Torrey Pines State Reserve.

THOMAS MELVILLE / LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

Residents suggest parklets and view corridors for more open space BY DAVE SCHWAB | LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

The public perception is that much of La Jolla’s public park space lies underwater. That point was debated at length at a recent La Jolla Parks and Beaches meeting where City park staffers discussed an ongoing update to the citywide parks master plan, which includes La Jolla. The City got an outpouring of ideas and opinions from La Jollans arguing their community is decidedly “under parked” with its above-ground parks and open spaces. LJPB planners have long held that much of the community’s available park space is in the submerged, 6,000-acre San Diego-La Jolla Underwater Park between Torrey Pines State Reserve and La Jolla Cove. On Oct. 22, Meredith Dawson, Shannon Scoggins and Rosalia Castruita representing the City’s Parks and Recreation Department invited residents to share their views on the quality of La Jolla’s existing park space, vetting where more space could possibly be found. “The City’s parks master plan has not been done since 1956 and we’re now laying out a new plan,” said Dawson. “We’re meeting with stakeholder groups who are invested in local neighborhood parks.” “Park advocates are key stakeholders,” Scoggins told LJPB’s board, adding the objective is to “create a roadmap” guiding parks master-plan revision.

How much park space is in La Jolla? Addressing the actual amount of public park space in La Jolla, and whether or not any of it is underwater, the City confirmed the community is “under parked,” but said none of its calculated park space is inundated. “Population-based park acreage requirements come from the Recreation Element of the City’s General Plan and are generally made up of community parks, neighborhood parks, mini parks and joint-use areas,” said City spokesperson Tim Graham. “We are to provide 2.8 acres of usable parkland per 1,000 residents.” Noting useable parkland is generally flat enough for recreational use, Graham said, “In 2106 La Jolla was determined to be 30.51 acres in deficit of useable parkland, and are projected to be 37.66 acres short in 2035.” Graham said La Jolla is a little unusual in that, “There are areas along the coast, such as south of

Children’s Pool, that appear to be parkland,” while adding, “But they are actually street right-ofway. Those types of areas are not included in the calculations because they are not designated parks.” Added Graham, “Then you have Charlotte Park, which is nothing more than a rocky beach that can only be accessed from the ocean except maybe in an extremely low tide.” Graham said Charlotte Park was likely donated to the City many years ago, and was probably designated as a park because, “There wasn’t any other category it would fit into.” “The San Diego La Jolla Underwater Park is counted toward the City’s overall park acreage, but not towards La Jolla’s population-based park needs,” said Graham, pointing out the underwater park is considered more as a regional park because it attracts people from all over, not primarily La Jolla.

Scoggins said the City wants to standardize its definition of what a park is, as well as make parks more publicly accessible. “We want people to live a minimum of a 10-minute walk and 20-minute bike ride from meaningful open space,” Scoggins said. An audience member replied those time intervals might be excessively long for moms with strollers or seniors, adding the

City needs to consider the multi-generational needs of park users. Resident Gail Forbes inquired if the San Diego Unified School District had been approached about sharing school recreational spaces. Scoggins replied that, with today’s heightened school security, it has become increasingly difficult for the public to use school space without shared-use agreements.

“We are the most under parked community in San Diego,” contended LJPB board member Melinda Merryweather. “We need to come up with some more land.” Merryweather suggested Pottery Canyon, a designated City historical site off Torrey Pines Road, would be ideal for a picnic park. LJPB board member Patrick Ahern said pocket parks and view corridors shouldn’t be overlooked. The Cove’s Coast Walk trail ought to be considered for park space, argued one audience member, to which another replied, “That trail is a dedicated street. The homeowners own the land so it can’t become a park.” Another resident argued La Jolla needs more off-leash dog space, complaining popular Capehart dog park on Mount Soledad is inadequate. Bird Rock resident Sharon Wampler noted the city ought to take a closer look at parklets and remnant lots in its quest to find more park space. Architectural historian Diane Kane said the city ought to consider the historical and cultural resources of parks in its parks master-plan update. “That is what we want to hear,” said Dawson in response to the public’s comments. “We’re going to be fleshing out trends coming from these listening sessions.”


Sports

FRIDAY · NOVEMBER 30, 2018

LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

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La Jolla’s Tiare Thompson earns first WSL win at Soup Bowl BY VICTORIA DAVIS | LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

Off the shore of Bathsheba, Barbados, three junior pros sat on their surfboards in the Atlantic Ocean, foreheads freckled from sun and salt, as they waited for the Soup Bowl swell they each hoped would carry them to first place. Samantha Sibley, Ava McGowan and Tiare Thompson were on high alert as the last two minutes of the finals heat ticked away at the World Surf League’s Live Like Zander Junior Pro surf competition. Thirty seconds later, Thompson saw her chance, paddled past her fellow surfers, caught the wave and used her clutch forehand attack to earn a 6.23, which added to her previous 7.00, gave her just enough points to beat McGowan. “I saw this inside wave that looked really good,” said 17-year-old Thompson, recalling the moment. “There was a minute and a half left and I just thought, ‘This is the wave.’ I catch it and ripped it so hard, riding it all the way to the beach. I come in with 50 seconds left and just hear the announcer go, ‘Tiare Thompson gets the score!’ It was almost surreal feeling.” Nov. 10 marked the day Thompson earned her first big win as a surfer. While she’s already made a name for herself with four California state titles, and by being chosen by the USA Surf Team to represent the United States every year since 2014, Thompson says her victory with WSL was a great way to end the season and prepare for her last year as a Pro Junior. “It was so amazing,” said Thompson. “I was so stoked that I won and

‘There was a minute and a half left and I just thought, ‘This is the wave.’’ TIARE THOMPSON LA JOLLA SURFER

Tiare Thompson used her clutch forehand attack to win the World Surf League’s Live Like Zander Junior Pro competition.

as my dad and sister were carrying me up the beach, I was shaking because I was so excited. There was a lot of adrenaline.” The La Jolla-born surfer wasn’t the only one emotional that day. As her family watched beachside while Thompson ripped through the wave’s white caps, her father, Foster, was shouldering the emotions of both a diligent coach and proud parent. “During Tiare’s competitions, it’s totally nerve-wracking and she doesn’t realize it, but I got the butterflies in my stomach,” said Foster,

who is an avid surfer himself. “I’m the one who’s pacing back and forth, biting my fingernails watching her every minute throughout the heat.” Tiare, named by her Hawaiian mother after the Tahitian word for Gardenia, has been surfing competitively for 13 years. Thompson’s love of the sport began in Fiji, while visiting the outer island Tavarua with her father. Foster says he still remembers placing his 4-year-old daughter on the large starter board and pushing her through the tropical, crystal blue waters.

“She had this uncanny sense of balance,” said Foster. “It was amazing how, at four years old, she didn’t fall off the board. She’d just stand up and ride it all the way to the beach. It wasn’t the biggest wave or smallest board, but I knew from that point forward that it was her destiny to surf.” Her father says from that day forward, Thompson has been in the water for hours every day, surfing even on the coldest days of the year. While Foster says Thompson blew her competition out of the water growing up, now that she’s making

her way in the pro world, there’s a whole new set of girls doing all they can to fulfill their own destinies. But Thompson’s got something that sets her apart, other than just her “dynamite” initials, T.N.T. While a majority of her competitors are homeschooled, Thompson has gone to public school her whole surfing career, currently attending her last year at La Jolla High School. Instead of isolating surfing, Thompson’s aquatic niche is interspersed with her family, friends, school, and soon her college career. While it’s a lot to balance, Thompson says surfing remains one of the more “fun” parts of her life. “My favorite moment is when I do well in a heat, coming into the beach on that wave and seeing how happy my dad is,” said Thompson, who says her surfing heroes range from Bethany Hamilton to Tom Curren, both of whom she’s met. “Also, when I really need to score, seeing a perfect wave coming just to me, it’s like my whole priority and all that matters in that moment. There’s nothing like it.” Tiare is currently one of four junior women to represent the USA in the under 18 division, and for a fourth year in a row, will represent the USA in the Pan America games in Peru, Dec. 2-9.

Boys basketball outlook for La Jolla schools BY ED PIPER | LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

think that will do more than anything else to make us successful.” Key players: Three senior captains: Ryan Langborg, 6 feet 4 inches tall guard; Jayson Taylor, 6 feet 10 inches tall center; Ray Lu, 5 feet 9 inches tall guard. Plus Sam Coleman, a 6 feet 3 inches tall junior forward.

Local basketball teams, including eighth-ranked La Jolla Country Day, Bishop’s, and La Jolla, are already finding their “identity” as the young season moves through the holiday tournament season. Below is an outlook for the local teams, plus a few of BISHOP’S their upcoming opponents. Last year: 17-11 overall, 5-7 Coastal Conference. LA JOLLA COUNTRY DAY Something new: A new attack. Last year: 22-11 overall, 8-4 Team motto or word: “Focus on Coastal Conference (second to each of our roles. Control what kind Foothills Christian). Something new: Freshman of teammate we are.” Coach’s insight incorporated twins James and John Hapgood, 6 into his program: Coach Nick feet tall. Team motto or word: “Attack Levine: “I’ve learned that you develeverything: on offense, defense, even op a relationship with each player, water break and putting on your motivate each one to develop them as people and to make it a great shoes.” Coach’s insight incorporated experience for them overall.” Key players: Christian Rose, 6 into his program: Coach Ryan Meier: “Relationships. This year, feet 6 inches tall senior. Zach White, more than any other year, we’re point guard. Anthony Wood, 5 feet stressing relationships as a team. We 10 inches tall junior guard.

LA JOLLA Last year: 12-15 overall, 5-7 Western League. Something new: Jett Wilson, a 5 feet 10 inches tall senior guard from Mira Mesa. He brings “intensity,” in Coach Paul Baranowski’s words. Coach’s philosophy: Team play within the offense and defense. This season’s approach: Forward Evan Brown and guards Gabe and Diego Solis are recovering from broken collarbones sustained in football. Be patient. Take what the season gives you. The Bishop's boys basketball team breaks huddle during an early-season game. Key players: Nick Hulquist, 6 feet ED PIPER / LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS 4 inches tall senior guard. Behzad er. People make you out to be more Hashemi, 5 feet 11 inches tall senior Maisano, 6 feet tall guard.” Team motto or word: Coach than you are. Be humble. Treat peoguard. Will Cunningham: “Just be hungry. ple with respect.” That’s going to be reflected in our CATHEDRAL CATHOLIC SANTA FE CHRISTIAN Last year: 13-14 overall, 7-5 play and in our style.” Last year: CIF Division 1 champs. Coach’s insight incorporated Western League. Lost in the Division 1 quarterfinals. into his program: “Treat people 20-12 overall, 7-5 Coastal ConferSomething new: “Not really – the way you want to be treated. SEE BASKETBALL PG. 25 one senior, like last year: A.J. You’re a quote-unquote varsity play-


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FRIDAY · NOVEMBER 30, 2018 LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

Parade

La Jolla Christmas Parade & Holiday Festival Foundation Honorary Parade Marshals Police Academy and is currently a patrol officer. Chief Nisleit is also a professor of criminal justice at the University of San Diego and Alliant University. Bill Kellogg wears many hats, but his primary job is In his spare time, Chief Nisleit enjoys running, serving as President of the La Jolla Beach & Tennis Club, cycling, golf and spending time with his wife, three kids, a fourth-generation family business that has become a and grandson. world-famous icon and signature element of La Jolla Shores. In addition to the Beach Club, the family holdCOMMUNITY MARSHAL ings include The La Jolla Shores Hotel, The Marine Kristi Pieper Room Restaurant, the Playa del Oro Apartments and Kristi, a La Jolla native, is a graduate of La Jolla Elethe F. W. Kellogg Building. Bill served for 25 years as President of the Mt. Soledad mentary, Muirlands Junior High, La Jolla High and the Memorial Association, the organization that built, oper- University of Southern California where she received a ates and now owns the world-class, National Veterans B.S. in Public Administration with a minor in Business Memorial that sits atop Mt. Soledad. He served five years Administration. Having a love for fashion, Kristi became as President of the La Jolla Shores Association, partici- a part of “Teens in Fashion” on behalf of JC Penny. pated in community efforts to rewrite the La Jolla Com- From there, she went on to management positions for munity Plan. He has been a member of the Scripps Bullocks-Wilshire and Robinsons-May, before changInstitution of Oceanography’s Director’s Circle Cabinet ing careers to Banking, becoming a paralegal and ultiand is currently an Honorary Member of the Commu- mately a Property Manager. With a passion for volunteerism, Kristi became active nity Advisory Council of Scripps Memorial Hospital. with Starlight Society by serving on various committees Bill continues to reinforce the tennis traditions of the to becoming President and continuing the Civic Light La Jolla Beach & Tennis Club, which was never more evident than when he arranged to bring, a first round Opera Board. Extremely active with the Junior League Davis Cup Tie and a Quarterfinal Fed Cup tie to La Jolla of San Diego, Kristi Co-Chaired their annual event in Shores. He also brought a Fed Cup Final to the San 1992, served on their Board of Directors in 1993-1994. Diego Sports Arena and built a clay tennis court in left In 1995, Kristi became active with the Globe Guilders, field at Petco Park to host another amazing Davis Cup chairing the “Oscar de la Renta” fashion show in 1996, Tie in downtown San Diego. Bill’s tennis legacy includes and Country Friends, by sitting on their Board of Direcbringing the Barnes Tennis Center to life, serving as tors and chairing the “Appearance of Autumn” fashion President of Youth Tennis San Diego, the Southern Cal- show in 1997 and being honored in 1998. Lovingly ifornia Tennis Association and serving on the board of active with the Gold Diggers, Kristi chaired their annual “Hats Off” event, became the groups President in the United States Tennis Association. Following in the footsteps of his grandfather, William 1996- 1997 and was their Honorary “Hats Off” Chair Scripps Kellogg, Bill was inducted into the San Diego in 2015. Joining the Thursday Club, Kristi sat on both Tennis Hall of Fame on August 23, 2008 and into the the TC Juniors Board and TC Board. Adopting her first Southern California Tennis Hall of Fame in 2017. This son in 1997 did not slow Kristi down . . . nor did it with year, the International Tennis Hall of Fame presented the adoption of son number two in 1999 and daughter him with the Samuel Hardy Award in recognition of his in 2000. Kristi went on to Co-Chair the St. Germaine Siltireless efforts to promote the sport of tennis, both at ver Tea, sat on the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society Board of Directors, Salvation Army Women’s Auxilhome and abroad. Bill and his wife, Tricia, reside in La Jolla Shores and iary with the honor of being selected as a ‘Woman of Dedication’ in 2000, chairing the event the following have two daughters and five grandsons. year. Co-Chairing the Rady-Children’s Hospital Charity Ball in 2004 and 2015, Kristi was also President of CIVIC MARSHALS Children’s Action League. Active with the Trojan David Nisleit League and R.I.T.Z. gala committee for the San Diego David Nisleit was promoted to the City of San Zoo, Kristi served for 2 years as the President of the Diego’s 35th Chief of Police on March 2, 2018. Chief Muirlands Middle School Foundation, 2010 –2012 Nisleit oversees the eighth largest police department in with a Board position on the La Jolla High School Founthe nation. He is a native San Diegan and grew up in the dation, co-chairing their Gala in 2014 and Chairman Rolando Community. Chief Nisleit is a graduate of the in 2015. Kristi and her daughter Nan joined National University of Redlands, Master’s Degree in Business Charity League in 2013. Kristi has been a member of Management. In December of 2014, Chief Nisleit gradLas Patronas and Co-Chaired the 2010 Jewel Ball. 2015 uated from the FBI National Academy, FBINA #258. was a great year when Kristi chaired the Vista Hill FashChief Nisleit began his career with the San Diego ion Show, an event she co-chaired in 2014. Also active Police Department in February 1988, following his with the National CHEERS Foundation, Beach & Counfather’s footsteps, retired Captain Randy Nisleit. David try Guild, March of Dimes, Friends of Balboa Park and has worked many of the Department's patrol comPatrons of the Prado where positions held have includmands and has extensive investigative experience. His ed Historian and Gala Co-Chair 2016, Chair 2017 and prior assignments include Assistant Chief of Patrol Communication Chair in 2018. Currently, Kristi sits Operations, Watch Commanders Office, Headquarters on the Advisory Board for Promises 2 Kids and is a part Front Counter, Homeless Outreach Team, Special Operof their Gala 2018 auction team. Also, Kristi had the joy ations, Investigations II (Robbery, Gangs, and Homiof Co-Chairing the San Diego History Centers Gala in cide), field lieutenant, SWAT, Special Events, Narcotic 2018, Co-Chairing the National CHEERS Foundation Team 10, Sex Crimes, and Internal Affairs. David serves Gala 2018 and Chairing the ‘Gold Shield’ Gala 2018 for as a liaison to the Downtown Redevelopment, Crime the San Diego Police Foundation. Kristi has sat on the Commission, Community Relations Officers, LEAPS, Board of Trustees for Meals on Wheels. Police Historical Association, Labor Relations, Gang Commission, San Diego Police Foundation, and the CULTURAL MARSHAL Chief’s Community Advisory Board. Chief Nisleit is a member of the San Diego County Erika Torri Police Chiefs’ and Sheriff’s Association, Major Cities Erika Torri, is the Executive Director of the Joan & Chief’s Association, Police Executive Research Forum, Irwin Jacobs Athenaeum Music & Arts Library, has IACP, STAR/PAL, SANDAG, and the SWAT Association. been the spirited catalyst in the remarkable growth of He has received numerous awards and citations the organization since she came aboard in 1989. She led throughout his career which has included a Congres- the Campaign to Reclaim, the most ambitious fundraissional Recognition in 2008. ing effort in the Athenaeum’s 113-year history. The Chief Nisleit has assisted in the security planning for Campaign raised nearly $5 million, allowing for the several large events in San Diego such as the Super creation of an endowment fund and allowing the Bowl, Comic-Con, Rock n Roll Marathon, Balboa Park Athenaeum to reclaim all spaces in its three historic December Nights, LGBT Pride, International Associa- buildings for use by the library. tion Chiefs of Police Convention, yearly holiday events Torri’s knowledge and expertise have been instruand other major conferences. mental in the shape and focus of the Athenaeum’s everChief Nisleit comes from a law enforcement family expanding collections. A highlight is the Athenaeum’s and has a legacy with the San Diego Police Department. Artists' Books Collection, a prestigious collection of oneHis father Randy Nisleit served over 35 years with the of-a-kind or limited-edition books created by artists and Department and retired as a Captain in 1999. His son works of art in their own right. Under her leadership, all Ryan Nisleit recently graduated from the San Diego music and art programs of the Athenaeum have grown

GRAND MARSHAL William (Bill) Kellogg

considerably. Today, more than 70 concerts, up to 24 exhibitions in 3 different galleries, art and music lectures, and special events are presented. Studio art classes have been offered through the School of the Arts for 25 years. A native of Bremen, Germany, Erika Torri received her master's degree in library science at the Library School, Hamburg; interned at the Bibliotheque Nationale and at the Sorbonne, Paris; and served as Assistant Department Head at Harvard University’s Countway Library. As a practicing artist, widely known for her miniature weavings, she has exhibited internationally, and her works are in museum and private collections. She is active in many arts-oriented organizations, serves on several boards and committees, is a sought-after lecturer and consultant, and often serves as juror for art exhibitions.

FLOATOLOGY MARSHAL Mike Glancy Mike Glancy is the current owner and grandson of the founder of Erling Rohde Plumbing, serving La Jolla since 1910. He started with the company 47 years ago after returning from Vietnam. Being a surfer, it was only natural for Mike to be a plumber and surfer in La Jolla. He started building floats for the La Jolla Christmas parade when it re-started in the early 80's. He has made over 30 floats, with numerous first place entries. It has always been a challenge creating unique and different floats each year. In the beginning and throughout the years, he has had his daughters and now grandsons participate by helping make and ride on each float. The joy from his daughters, grandsons, and the children on the parade route have made the La Jolla Christmas parade a very fulfilling experience.

PHILANTHROPIC MARSHALS John and Karin Donaldson John & Karin support the La Jolla Rotary, La Jolla Music Society, La Jolla Historical Society, La Jolla Presbyterian Church, La Jolla Christmas Parade, The San Diego Salvation Army, Lamb's Players Theater Coronado, and World Vision.

TECHNOLOGY MARSHAL Dawn Barry Dawn Barry is the president and co-founder of Luna DNA, the first community owned DNA and health data platform for discovery research As President, Dawn communicates and implements the company’s vision, mission, and overall direction. Dawn is an esteemed thought leader and veteran of the genomics industry. Prior to Luna DNA, Dawn served as the vice president of Applied Genomics at Illumina, Inc. Dawn joined Illumina in 2005 as their first market development specialist and held leadership roles in business units, sales, and marketing for the company. Dawn was named San Diego Business Journal’s 2017 Business Woman of the Year and was a speaker at TEDxSanDiego 2016. She holds a BS in biology from the University of Vermont and a MBA from the University of Connecticut School of Business.

MILITARY MARSHAL Lorin Stewart, Representing SDUSO In early 1941, the United States was on the verge of war. With tensions mounting, and the military growing, there was no single service agency focused on supporting the troops. President Franklin D. Roosevelt was concerned about the welfare and spirits of those headed for battle, and he appealed to the country to provide morale and recreational services to the troops. In response, six service agencies – YMCA, YWCA, Salvation Army, Jewish Welfare Board, Catholic Community Charities, and Travelers Aid Society – worked in partnership to create and support the launch of the United Service Organizations Inc. (USO). This partnership, and the financial support from American citizens, was essential to the USO’s founding. It also set a precedent for partnerships and volunteerism, both of which have played a significant role in the history of the USO; and both remain critical to the success of the present and future USO. For the first seven years of its existence, the USO opened 3,000 centers across the country, and became known as a home away from home. Hollywood was

also enthusiastic to demonstrate their patriotism, and through the USO, they provided live entertainment to the troops called Camp Shows. Between 1941 and 1947, the USO hosted over 400,000 Camp Shows with 7,000 volunteer entertainers that included Marilyn Monroe, Frank Sinatra, Humphrey Bogart, Fred Astaire, James Cagney, Jack Benny, and many more. The most notable celebrity to entertain the troops, Bob Hope, created a legacy unequaled. Bob Hope devoted 48 Christmases overseas with American troops, and his connection to the USO resulted with him being one of the most beloved entertainers of all time. His contribution to the USO started in 1941 and ended in 1991 during Operation Desert Shield. In 1996, the U.S. Congress honored Bob Hope and declared him the first and only honorary veteran of the U.S. armed forces. 1950’s At the end of World War II, the USO disbanded, in part due to lack of funding. However, in 1950, when the United States entered the Korean War, Secretary of Defense George Marshall and the Secretary of the Navy Francis P. Matthews requested that the USO be restored “to provide support for the men and women of the armed forces with help of the American people”. War historian Paul Edwards noted that between 1952 and 1953, the USO provided services in Korea every day of the year –in 1952, the USO was serving 3.5 million troops using much the same methods of operation as they did during World War II. By the end of the Korean War in 1953, over 113,000 USO volunteers were working at 294 centers in the United States and abroad. 1960’s During the Vietnam War, 23 USO clubs opened in Vietnam and Thailand and served as many as one million troops each month with a home away from home support. The USO also operated centers at major United States airports that provided a variety of services and a place to sleep between flights. Most of the same services are offered today – snacks, gift shops, telephone calls, and hot showers – whatever is needed by our active personnel and their families. 1970’s When the draft ended in the 1970s, the need for the USO was questioned. The United Way of America and the Department of Defense visited military bases around the world to observe USO programs and services. Their findings were unanimous: “If there were no USO, another organization would have to be created. Isolation of the military from civilian influences is not, we believe at this time, in the interest of our nation.” The USO launched into a new era of service, which included new programs and services to assist the military with effective transition into civilian life. Outreach programs were created worldwide, and additional USO centers were established at airports to assist with military travelers. 1980’s to today In 1987, the USO signed a new Memorandum of Understanding with the Department of Defense that states the USO is “the principal channel representing civilian concern for the United States armed forces worldwide.” USOs around the world have provided morale and support to active-duty military represented the United States in the Gulf War – Operation Desert Shield, and in Afghanistan and Iraq – Operations Enduring Freedom and Iraqi Freedom. Currently, the USO has over 160 centers around the world that make active-duty military’s lives easier. There are over 30 airport centers, and the variety of needs met is far-reaching, from assistance with layovers, connections, and missing luggage, to language translation and dignified transports. USO San Diego operates the Neil Ash Airport Center lounge at San Diego International Airport, a center at 303 A St. in downtown San Diego, and a center at San Diego’s Military Entrance Processing Station (MEPS) on Ruffin Road. “The centers are hubs for military personnel and their families to congregate for meals, entertainment, relaxation and social interaction,” Stewart said in the statement announcing his hiring. “These centers provide homecoming and deployment support and serve as the nexus for events that support our troops and their families.”


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FRIDAY · NOVEMBER 30, 2018 LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

La Jolla Christmas Parade Program

Message from the La Jolla Christmas Parade and Holiday Festival Foundation Welcome to the 61st Annual La Jolla Christmas Parade & Holiday Festival ‘The Sounds of Christmas’This year we honor William J. Kellogg as Grand Marshal, for his many contributions to La Jolla, San Diego and the nation. Honorary Parade Marshals are Chief of Police David Nisleit, SDPD (Civic), Kristi Pieper (Community), Erika Torri (Cultural), Mike Glancy (‘Floatology’), John and Karin Donaldson (Philanthropic), Dawn Barry (Technology), and Lorin Stuart, USO (Military). As is our tradition, the Parade starts at Girard and Kline with an Antique Aircraft Flyover, led by Bill Allen and the Antique Aircraft Museum planes. Bill started this tradition and has been delighting parade watchers for 40 years. Dozens of floats, bands, marching units, equestrians, and vintage vehicles, fire engines, and Beauty Queens will travel the parade route. A ‘Parade of Packards’, courtesy of the San Diego Packard Club will carry the Marshals and VIPs. The Holiday Festival is returning to its past tradition, with Stage Entertainment and Photos with Santa before the Parade. Once again, Santa returns courtesy of Sunrise Rotary and

Santa’s ‘sleigh’ is the La Jolla Beach and Tennis Club Old Black Goose, a 1915 Black Packard Convertible. The Parade kickoffs at Girard and Kline, travels down Girard, turns at Prospect and ends at the La Jolla Rec Center. This event is funded by community donations and grants from Foundations, businesses, and residents. It is made possible by the Christmas Parade and Holiday Festival Committee who dedicate countless volunteer hours to making each Christmas Parade and Holiday Festival the best ever! We offer special thanks to Pat Wells (Parade Administrator) and Mike Carlin (Parade Director) for their many years of service and expertise to insure a safe and fun event for the whole family and community.

Ann Kerr Bache President La Jolla Christmas Parade and Holiday Festival Foundation

Honorary Parade and Festival Chairs: Ann Kerr Bache, Jack McGrory, Bill Kellogg and Peter Farrell.

Don't miss out on a fabulous night full of holiday cheer & shopping!

Please join The Faded Awning for our

9th Holiday Open House December 6th 4:00 pm -9:00 pm 858.456.7464 7464 Girard Ave., La Jolla thefadedawningcoastalinteriors.com

Parade Sponsors Audrey S. Geisel San Diego Foundation Dr. Seuss Foundation Darlene Marcos Shiley In Memory of Donald Shiley

Festival Sponsors John & Karin Donaldson La Jolla Beach & Tennis Club Band Sponsors Park La Jolla Apartments Jocelyn & Dick Vortmann

Youth Sponsors ACE Parking Management, Inc. Crystal Pier Cottages - Claudia & Bill Allen Bache Family Bradbury Family Chartable Fund Walter and Mary Munk Robert A. Collins Company Tom & Cookie Sudberry, Jr.


La Jolla Christmas Parade Program

FRIDAY · NOVEMBER 30, 2018 LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

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Happy Holidays! From our family to yours... LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

Silver Sponsors Florence Riford La Jolla Community Fund at The San Diego Foundation La Jolla Management Company The Albergram, La Jolla Country Market, Sycamore Court, The Wall Street Building, Village Corner McGrory Family Fund of the Jewish Community Foundation

The Hartford Group, Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Inc. The LaValencia Hotel Website Sponsor Betsy & Scott McClendon


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FRIDAY · NOVEMBER 30, 2018 LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

La Jolla Christmas Parade Program Holiday Festival & Parade Event Day Timetable

Special Guests

8:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 10:30 10:30

Parking Lots Closed for Parade use See Parade Map For Lots Affected Towing Starts INFO BOOTH opens for check-in Herschel Avenue Closed from Torrey Pines to Silverado for Parade Assembly. Kline Street Closed between Ivanhoe and Girard for FIRE ENGINES, MARCHING UNITS, and BANDS. Girard from Torrey Pines to Kline Closed

Major Change This Year – Holiday Festival Moved To Wall Street before the parade. 2018 Holiday Festival Opens 10:30am- 1 pm at the Athenaeum (1008 Wall Street) 10:30 10:30 11:45 12:00 12:00

The Pre-parade, Festival Stage featuring live entertainment, face painting and photos with Santa. Scheduled to appear are: 10:30-11am – American Songbook vocalist Donnie Finnell w/Simon Leader (drums) and Gary Wilson (piano); 11-11:30 – Jazz Vocalist Aja Lee Fasse; 11:30noon – Tahoe City Productions Singer/songwriter Rick Diaz; 12-12:30 – Oh La La Dance Academy presents “Moana”; 12:30-1pm – Disney Princess Review featuring Anna from “Frozen”.

12:00 12:00 12:00 12:00 12:00 12:15 12:00 12:30 1:00 1:30 3:30

4:00 4:30

STAGE ENTERTAINMENT AND PHOTOS WITH SANTA FLOATS begin arriving on Herschel. 11:30 FLOAT JUDGES report FLOATS in place for Judging FLOATS JUDGED All Vehicles Remaining Along Parade Route Are Towed Promptly Along Prospect On Parade Route, And Lots At 7700 Girard And 7700 Draper – See No Parking Map CUB SCOUTS report for Banners at Kline and Girard. 12:00 Kline from Girard to Drury Lane Closed MARCHING UNITS arrive. BANDS and ROTC Units arrive. VIP VEHICLES ARRIVE US Bank Parking Lot VIP Area Open for Marshal and VIP Check in and Assembly JUDGES FINISH – report FLOAT AWARD results 12:30 MISC. VEHICLES arrive Drury Lane. MARSHALS AND VIPS ARRIVE ADA Seating Area setup on Girard AMBULANCE POSITIONED at Silverado between Girard and alley behind Chase Bank. PARADE STEPS OFF from Kline and Girard and proceeds to Prospect at Draper. PARADE END – participants disperse – all vehicles exit on Prospect to La Jolla Blvd. and Pearl Street PEDESTRIANS return along Silverado. FLOATS drop off on Cuvier cul-de-sac and La Jolla Blvd. BANDS RELOAD on Prospect between Cuvier cul-de-sac and EXIT La Jolla Blvd. EQUESTRIANS return on Draper to Kline to Girard, exit horse trailers onto Torrey Pines Rd. STREET SWEEPERS clean long parade route – AMBULANCE departs. Equestrian Area Cleaned. Barricades, traffic cones & signs, removed.


La Jolla Christmas Parade Program

FRIDAY · NOVEMBER 30, 2018 LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

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2018 La Jolla Christmas Parade Entrants EQUESTRIANS Antique Aircraft Flyover Willis (Bill) Allen flying a Silver and Dark Blue Biplane (Steve McQueen’s Plane) Bob Simon flying Custom Red and Silver Stearman Bucker Jungmans flown by John Hickman, Mike Weaver and Dave Stillinger

Goodwill Industries of San Diego

Grand Ladies & Gents of the Old West

Herencia Hispana San Diego

Jamie’s Jamul Feed & Supply

Lady Shadow, Vampyre Fashionista

La Jolla Village Montessori School

La Jolla Presbyterian Church

Lakeside Frontier Riders

La Jolla Riford Library

Scripps Miramar Saddlebred Horses

La Jolla Volleyball Club

Victorian Roses Ladies Riding Society

La Jolla YMCA Adventure Clubs

Winchester Widows

La Jolla YMCA Gymnastics Team Las Patronas

CLOWNS

BANDS

Clumsy Mumsy & Cricket the clowns

Army and Navy Atikinson Warrior Marching Band Cameron Highlanders Pipe Band Granite Hills High School Eagle Band and Guard

San Diego Padres

Old Mission Beach Athletic Club (OMBAC)

Seal Conservancy Soroptimist International of La Jolla

La Jolla High School Marching Band

FLOATS

Southwest Middle School Mariachi

Pacific Experience Barbershop Quartet

Erling Rohde Plumbing

University City HS Marine Corps JROTC

Kiwanis Christmas Float

Standley Middle School Marching Band

La Jolla Golf Carts

SUHSD African Drum Ensemble University City HS Centurion Sound Marching Band & Colorguard

BEAUTY QUEENS/PRINCESSES 2018 Miss Rancho Bernardo

La Jolla Post 275, The American Legion

MISCELLANEOUS VEHICLE

La Jolla Veterinary Hospital

1915 Packard Twin Six , “Old Black Goose”

Nightingale Music School

1930 Packard Model 726 Touring

Ooh La Dance Academy, Inc

1934 Packard Model 1100 Touring

San Diego French American School

1934 Packard Model 1105 Dietrich Convertible Sedan

Stella Maris Academy & Mary Star of the Sea

2018 Miss Rancho Bernardo Teen 2018-2019 Miss Sycuan Pow Wow Princess Greater California Pageants

WindanSea Surf Club

La Jolla Sunrise Rotary

Miss Poway Scholarship Pageant

Old Mission Beach Athletic Club

Ms. UCLA Pow Wow Princess

MARCHING UNITS

CANINE UNITS Canine Companions for Independence

12th Regiment Cal Cadet Corps at Altus Schools

Freedom Dogs with Cher Conner and Associates

Academy of Dance Arts

Greyhound Adoption Center

Boy Scout Troop 506 La Jolla

Guide Dogs of America

Coastal Bay Softball

Muttropolis

Coldwell Banker “Pete Knows Real Estate”

San Diego Golden Retriever Meetup

Girl Scouts of San Diego Daisy Troop 4843

Float Sponsors Capital Growth Properties Anne Evans Kiki’s Alterations La Jolla Sunrise Rotary Nadhir Family Warwick’s Santa’s Helpers Roy & Diane Murrow Bell

Renee Comeaur & Terry Gulden Mark Edwards Martin & Casey Fenton Julie B. Fiss Bob & Carole Franks Bill Haggarty Harry’s Coffee Shop Heenan Family Joanne Hutchinson Associates

1936 Packard Club Sedan 1939 Packard Super 8 Touring Sedan

FIRE ENGINES

Miss Coastal Cities Titleholders

Southern Sea Dragon & Lion Dance Association Studio K Dance & Fitness

All Hallows Academy

Santana HS Royal Regiment Band & Colorguard

San Diego Hauling Hunks

La Jolla Sunrise Rotary

La Jolla Country Day School Marching Torreys Mt. Miguel Alumni Jazz Band

Rady Children's Hospital La Jolla Auxiliary Unit San Diego Girl Scouts − Pacific Jewel Service Unit

FIRE ENGINES

Deb O'Neill Bands

Metro Dance

Syd Jones La Jolla Nurses Homecare Ruth & Dick Kelly Stan & Phyllis Minick Patti & Mark Nussbaum Carolyn & Ed Parrish Betty-Jo Petersen Kristi Pieper Ruth, Chris, & Jen See

1948 Packard Station Sedan (Woodie) 2014 Marine Blue Convertible Porsche 911Turbo 2015 BMW 4281 2018 White Audi

Join Us For The Festival! Sierra Mar Properties Dale & Mark Steele Surf Diva Place Tegland Gerri & Leonard Teyssier Mr. & Mrs. Alfred Vandendriesse Washburn Family Trust H. Norman Watkins Howard & Christy Zatkin


PAGE 14 · FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2018 · LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

Holiday Dining Guide Brockton Villa Restaurant Located directly across from the world – famous La Jolla Cove, Brockton Villa offers stunning coastal views from our dining rooms, patio and veranda. Although we serve Breakfast, Lunch, Social Hour, and Dinner...we specialize in Private Events for 10 - 100 guests. From Holiday Parties to Business Lunches, Bridal and Baby Showers to Wine Dinners, our quaint and historic cottage offers a unique setting that wows locals and visitors alike. For more information, visit www.brocktonvilla.com or call 858-729-0242

Dominic’s Table Chef Dominic Tedesco is a true, creative Renaissance man and Master Chef. Add to this his irresistible southern charm and old fashioned business ethics and you have a great recipe for success. Raised in the Midwest by his Italian immigrant parents, he is the youngest of eight boys. Chef Dominic has always stayed true to his Sicilian roots. He opened his first restaurants in Indiana and Kentucky. He also became well known on the competitive circuit, winning the Int’L Pizza Championship, as well as various awards. In 2006, he decided to return to the classroom and finishED his culinary degree in Las Vegas where he became an Executive Chef to a new audience, including celebrities. He can also be credited as a producer for the Production Company Red Velvet Entertainment, Inc. Currently, he is in development of his own series of television cooking shows and filming a movie he was cast in to be released in theaters, early 2019. In 2017 Chef Dominic left Las Vegas to make his dream a reality and took his already successful career to a higher level in La Jolla. His culinary masterpieces have found a new home with the opening of his new restaurant. Dominic’s Table… a place where his favorite comfort foods and award winning recipes are being served up daily in this beautiful beach city. 875 Prospect St., Ste. 102, La Jolla 858-352-6811 • dominicstable.com

Nautilus Tavern Nautilus Tavern answers Windansea’s and La Jolla’s call for a modern-coastal destination dedicated to quenching thirsts and rising the tide on flavor.Their forward-thinking cocktail collection rivals a tasty selection of up to 30 tap beers, celebrating many local craft brews. They feature a shipload of scratch-made favorites, such as one of our epic burgers, or a steaming plate of savory wings. Open for brunch, lunch and dinner, they invite you to stretch out and enjoy our front or back patio, or catch a game, a brew and a bite with friends at the bar. There’s a place for everyone here. At Nautilus Tavern, “local” is a word they use to describe the food they source and the beer they serve. It’s also who they aim to please. Make sure to visit our other 6830 La Jolla Blvd Suite. 103 location, Pillbox Tavern, on your next trip www.nautilustavern.com (858)750-2056 up the coast.

LIVE JAZZ Every Fri. & Sat. Night & Sun. Brunch Stop by Before or After the Parade!

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Lupi Italian Restaurant Lupi Italian restaurant and wine bar has always been a La Jolla favorite for those who appreciate fine Italian wine and mouthwatering authentic cuisine. There’s always something new and delicious at Lupi Italian Restaurant. Partners Andriano Gasparo and Luigi Tornatore are constantly adding a new twist to the menu while keeping all your favorites. Stop by for Happy Hour specials from 5- 7 PM Sunday thru Thursday. Enjoy dining on the sunny outdoor patio. Listen to live music on Wednesdays, Fridays and Saturdays . You can also bring your pet for some special hos”pet”ality . So stop by and see what's new at Lupi's-your palate will be glad you did.

“Chef to the Stars” Dominic Tedesco

(858) 750-2056 6830 La Jolla Blvd. Ste. 103 La Jolla NautilusTavern.com

Happy Holidays!

We appreciate your patronage!

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Partner Adriano Gasparo (left) with Luigi Tornatore

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HAPPY HOUR 5-7PM SUNDAY - THURSDAY

Live Music! Wednesday, Friday & Saturday

www.lupivinocucina.com • 858.454.6421 • 5518 La Jolla Blvd. La Jolla


La Jolla Christmas Parade Program

LA JOLLA 1250 Prospect Street 858-450-6666

FRIDAY · NOVEMBER 30, 2018 LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

SAN DIEGO GASLAMP QUARTER 570 K Street 858-237-9700

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FRIDAY · NOVEMBER 30, 2018 LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

La Jolla Christmas Parade Program

SHOP La Jolla•Bird Rock

THINK LOCAL, SHOP LOCAL, BUY LOCAL FOR THE HOLIDAYS HAPPY HOLIDAYS!

upslajolla@gmail.com 5580 La Jolla Blvd

FREE CHOCOLATE OF THE DAY 1 chocolate per coupon/per customer, while supplies last. Exp. 12/16/18

Nimisha Amin, Owner (858) 459 459-4077

Olive Oil & Balsamic Vinegar FREE Tasting Bar Over 50 Infused Flavors

La Jolla’s Premier Deli, Bakery, Restaurant & Catering for over 30 Years

$2 OFF Hanukkah starts December 2nd! We have Menorahs!

7863 Girard Ave. Suite 204 La Jolla, CA 92037 (Next to Beaming) 858.230.6337 www.teuschersandiego.com

a single bottle with ad

Let Us Cater Your Holiday Party!

Located in La Plaza in La Jolla

we wish you a wonderful year of happiness and good health.

7863 Girard Avenue Ste #107 La Jolla,CA 92037 (858) 246-6350 olivedipity.com

“From Our Garden To Your Plate” 858.454.3325 | www.girardgourmet.com | girardgourmet87@gmail.com

@Olivedipity

@teuschersandiego.com

Give a Gift with

Best wishes for a happy holiday season and our sincere thanks for your loyalty throughout the year.

7830 Fay Avenue, La Jolla, CA 92037

STAYING POWER

858-459-4461 or 1-800-526-4545

LOOK FOR US AT THE PARADE!

www.innbytheseaatlajolla.com

New Deluxe Suite • Spacious Rooms with Balconies

711 Pearl St. | (858)454-3806 www.cafemilanolajolla.com

• Free Wi-Fi • Gift Cards Available

La Jolla Barber Shop Haircut, Fade, Shave and Shampoo

HAPPY HOLIDAYS... ...and Thank You for your business

Vuong Do Adults $16 • Children $14

New Deluxe Suite • Spacious Rooms with Balconies

Mon to Sat: 9 AM to 6 PM Sun: 10 AM TO 3 PM

• Free Wi-Fi

Tel: (858) 459-5792 LaJollaBarberShop@hotmail.com 7760 Fay Ave #F La Jolla

• Free workout with La Jolla Sports Club across from the hotel

• Gift Cards Available

WEDDING AND GROUP RATES AVAILABLE


La Jolla Christmas Parade Program

FRIDAY · NOVEMBER 30, 2018 LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

17

SHOP La Jolla•Bird Rock

THINK LOCAL, SHOP LOCAL, BUY LOCAL FOR THE HOLIDAYS 7742 Herschel, Suite N, Crosby Center

HEADWAY HAIR STUDIO OF LONDON Est. 2007

$15

Men / Boys New & Established Clients

Haircuts

Reg. $22 Exp. 12/31/18

HAPPY HOLIDAYS

and THANK YOU FOR YOUR BUSINESS! 858.456.2936 858.525.2339 (cell) Call for Appointment

GREAT SPECIALS ON

EVERYTHING! 50% OFF all Silver Jewelry ‘till Christmas

You’ll find that Special Gift for your Special Someone Master Jeweler and Designer Mario Sandoval

7515 Fay Avenue La Jolla, California (858) 454-0952

ENJOY THE PARADE - HAVE A HAPPY HOLIDAY!

Having a Party or Special Event? RESERVE OUR BANQUET ROOM FOR UP TO 100 PEOPLE! CATERING ALSO AVAILABLE! Happy Hour 12-6 Everyday & All Day Mon. & Thurs. Bottled Beer, Draft Beers, Wine, Mimosas, and Well Drinks All Desserts & Bread Fresh Baked Daily on-site

✶ Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner ✶ La Jolla’s BEST Desserts ✶ Open 7am - 2am Everyday ✶ Full Bar ✶ Daily Lunch Special ✶ Hooka Happy Hour 12-6 pm daily upstairs ✶ Cigar Lounge (2nd Floor) ✶ Wine Bar w/ Large Selection of Wine

READERS CHOICE AWARDS

B E S T R E S TA U R A N T S

2 0 1 8

VOTED BEST CAFE & LATE NIGHT EATERY

Ocean Views from our Banquet Room

Enjoy the Ocean views from our 2nd floor

1010 Prospect St., La Jolla, CA 92037 • 858.459.1187 • livingroomcafe.net

WISHING YOU A SHINY & BRIGHT HOLIDAY SEASON AND THANK YOU FOR VOTING US #1 BEST FOR CAR WASH & DETAIL

READERS CHOICE AWARDS

2 0 1 8


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FRIDAY · NOVEMBER 30, 2018 LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

La Jolla Christmas Parade Program

2018 La Jolla Christmas Parade Board and Volunteers Foundation President & Event Chair Foundation Vice President & Secretary Registration & Administration Director of Parade Festival Chair and MC Parade Coordinators Awards & Trophies Bands/Beauty Queens Canine Units Equestrians

Ann Kerr Bache Charles Hartford Pat Wells, Morgan K. McGowan Mike Carlin Ron J. Jones Gail Forbes Cynthia Adams-Carlin Mike Carlin Donna Scurio, Dominic Scurio Amelia Scurio Warren Heenan, Louise Heenan, Abby Scrivener, Nicky Scrivener

Floats & Safety Marching Units

Dave Irwin Cynthia Adams-Carlin, Patti Ann Carlin, Katie Carlin

Marshals & VIPs Miscellaneous Vehicles Parade Operations Scouts Scout Banners Software & Website Ops Toastmasters/Announcers

Ann Kerr Bache Diane Gormsen Steve Carlin Dan Irwin Otis Benton, Dave Russell, Tom Bache Jacques Naviaux Irene McCann David Bache Phil Covington, Chris Brewster, Ron J. Jones, Leilani Macedo, Cody Petterson, David Ross, Edward Sanchez, Kristen Tantuwaya, Tim Troy, Josh Rutherford, David Yapo Cindy McGowan, Sally Fuller, Laura Scheid Patti Ann Carlin, Jerri Hunt

VIP Reception VIP Vehicle

The event website (www.ljparade.com) includes maps, parking, street closures, and complete event information. 2018 Official La Jolla Christmas Parade Program produced and published by LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS


La Jolla Christmas Parade Program

FRIDAY · NOVEMBER 30, 2018 LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

19

SHOP La Jolla•Bird Rock

THINK LOCAL, SHOP LOCAL, BUY LOCAL FOR THE HOLIDAYS

106 573 Lic.

Look for us in the Parade!

For 109 Years Rohde Plumbing has helped make the spirit of

This Holiday Season Wrap up Your Holiday Shopping Locally

Nobody delivers your Holiday Packages faster and better than LA JOLLA MAILBOX (well almost nobody!)

THINK LOCAL! SHOP LOCAL! BUY LOCAL! LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS Mike Fahey: 858.337.8546 Paul Welsh: 858.926.9063

Your one stop for Holiday Packaging & Shipping Supplies UPS

FedEx

USPS

DHL

ANITA WOOD OWNER / NOTARY 5666 La Jolla Blvd • Tel 858-456-2216 • Fax 858-456-3962 • lajollam@san.rr.com M-F 9:00am - 5:00pm • Sat 9:30am - 12:30pm

Perfect Gifts for the Holidays HOME GOODS GIFTS CREADERS HOICE CARDS AWARDS BOOKS BEST GIFTS FURNISHING

BMW and Mini Service BMW Parts and Restorations

RETAIL/SERVICES

5648 La Jolla Blvd. San Diego, CA 92037 858.291.8040 • progressbirdrock.com

Holiday Grilling Season! The most thorough BBQ and oven cleaning service! We come to you! Have your BBQ or oven professionally steamcleaned using non-toxic, biodegradable, USDA-approved products.

No Appointment needed for oil changes www.bimmerdoc.com 5535 La Jolla Blvd., San Diego, CA 92037

(858) 488-1555

• We service all makes and models • Experienced, reliable, local staff $25 • Extend the life of your BBQ FF O with this ad. • Improve the quality and flavor of food • Eliminate carcinogens for healthier cooking • Use your appliance the same day after cleaning

Call Today! (858) 210-2034 www.CalBBQ.com

You’ll be amazed at the transformation!


FRIDAY · NOVEMBER 30, 2018 LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

The Pinnacle of Pancakes - san diego magazine

La Jolla Christmas Parade Program

“World Famous Apple Pancake”

Celebrate Christmas with Richard! FREE ENTREE! Lesser value entree free. Must present original coupon, Limit one per table. Not valid with any other offer. Expires 12/21/2018

BUY ONE ENTREE & 2 BEVERAGES, GET 1 ENTREE FREE! VALID ANYTIME richardwalkers.com

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LA JOLLA

858.459.8800 909 Prospect St., Between Girar and Fay

DOWNTOWN 619.231.7777

520 Front St., Just South of Market


Community Women with hair loss can have thick and healthy hair and look years younger! Volume is the most requested service of all clients. Thick, healthy hair is never out of style! Even with all the excellent professional volumizing products available, nothing compares with the real thing: thick , healthy human hair! The unique patented process used at Judy's salon attaches a protein bond of real human hair to a small section of your own hair. The bonds are so discreet you can style your hair anyway you choose. Once this application process has been applied, you will be amazed at the transformation that occurs, not only in your hair, but also in your outlook! How do you match extensions to a clients existing color? If you are blending colors choose extensions that are the same level of color as the clients own hair. If you are changing the level of the client’s hair choose a shade that works well with the skin tone. How do you customize extensions for a client with thinning hair ? Use an extension with a smaller attachment bond and a single strand application process so the hair is not damaged and can hold the weight of the extension. This will give natural looking volume and length to thinning hair. What type of hair extensions do you use? Judy uses Great Lengths® all-natural hair extensions and prefers these extensions because they are created from 100% human hair and use a unique, application process that attaches a bond of protein the same molecular structure as your hair. This is an extremely hightech method of bonding the hair strand to your own hair. Whether creating a new look, following fashion or with a special occasion on the horizon. Judy’s

hair extensions have over 55 colors to choose from and blend with your own hair for perfect color matches. Can hair extensions damage my hair? No, they will not. Actually, even very fine and damaged hair can become healthier if you’re wearing hair extensions because they will protect your hair from things that could damage it like curling irons, blow dryers, styling heat and environmental damage. Because of the unique application bonding system, the extensions can be easily removed. This is different than many hair extension methods that bond too tightly to your hair. Most people don’t even notice a difference between the hair extensions and their own natural hair. Those old methods can lead to hair breakage when being removed. Judy’s La Jolla hair extensions are joined to your natural hair by using a safe, all-natural, keratin protein bond application system. How do I maintain my extensions at home and between visits to the salon? Judy is fully trained on how to educate her clients to professionally take care of their hair extensions at home. Judy will recommend hair care products, brushes, combs and appliances for use at home. Hairstyling is very similar to how you style your hair without extensions. Contact Judy in La Jolla today for answers to any more of your hair extensions questions. Judy Judy Judy Hair Salon 7734 Herschel Suite #P, La Jolla hairextensionsoflajolla.com 858-456-2344 Call today to receive $200 off on your first full head of hair replacements!

FRIDAY · NOVEMBER 30, 2018 LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

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8 clever gift ideas for people who are hard to please Struggling to find gifts for picky recipients can make anyone feel like a Grinch. Avoid the holiday shopping blues this season with this list of go-to gift ideas, all of which are available on such shopping sites as Amazon. Whether shopping for an indecisive relative or your incredibly particular best friend, you can rest easy knowing you’re covered with presents that appeal to everyone.

3. ME to WE Neema Necklace 6. Nespresso Creatista The holidays are the season of Plus giving, so consider selecting something that gives back to a bigger cause, like this necklace from ME to WE. Homemade by a woman in Kenya, your purchase gives healthcare access to a mother or child in the same community where the necklace is made, helping them live full, healthy lives.

7. Amazon Echo

4. Arbor pulldown kitchen 1. Tile faucet with MotionSense Perfect for those who can never Wave find their car keys or constantly lose track of their phones, this Bluetooth tracker, paired with Tile’s intuitive app, makes it easy to find everything. Gift it to your niece to keep tabs on her favorite stuffed animal or to a friend who always forgets where she parked.

2. “Good Housekeeping” Cookbook Featuring 1,200 recipes, the newest edition of the “Good Housekeeping Cookbook” is great for every type of cook, from serious home chefs to kitchen novices. This culinary bible is one food guide friends and family will actually want to use… and maybe they’ll test out their newly mastered recipes on you!

A coffee lover’s dream, the Creatista Plus not only makes stellar coffee, but comes with a milk frother, too (a non-negotiable for many java addicts). It brews everything from an espresso to a mocha cappuccino with the touch of a button.

For the techie who dreams of a connected smart home, the Amazon Echo is a perfect place to start. It can play music, make calls, set alarms and timers, start a digital shower and control smart home devices via voice command -- just ask Alexa.

Whether it’s for your friend who’s constantly baking delicious -- but messy -- brownies, or your tech-obsessed uncle, this Moen faucet is the ideal present. Its touchless activation allows users to easily turn water on and off 8. Osmo Genius Kit with the wave of a hand, providing This award-winning game sysadded convenience and some seri- tem aims to turn any 5- to 12ous cool factor in the kitchen. year-old into a genius. It transforms a tablet into a hands-on 5. Instant Pot learning tool to foster social intelA smart choice for everyone ligence and creative thinking. from foodies to busy parents, this Those kids spend so much time on handy device does the work of their devices anyway, they may as nine common kitchen appliances well learn something! and can prepare almost anything, from cake to rice to yogurt. Plus, it We all have those friends or famcooks up to 70 percent quicker ily members who are notoriously than other devices and its func- hard to shop for. With these gift tions make mastering one-pot ideas, you’re sure to have them meals a breeze. wondering “How did you know?”


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FRIDAY · NOVEMBER 30, 2018 LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

SERVICE DIRECTORY HANDYMAN

BBQ CLEANING

INTERIOR DESIGN

RENT-A-HUSBAND Handyman with 30 years experience Many Skills

6 19.922.3322

Hourly or Bid

Non-licensed

Prompt, Affordable, Professional Insured

PAINTING

Chuckie’s

Ask for Bob 858-454-5922

Painting Company

(619) 795-9429 www.chuckiespainting.co

HAULING

LANDSCAPING

Exceptional Interiors! AlexisBurris Interiors.com

chuckgjr@cox.net CA Lic. #925325

POINT LOMA LANDSCAPE

PLUMBING

State Lic #783646 RESIDENTIAL EXPERTS

Bill Harper Plumbing.com

• SPRINKLER DOCTORS IN REPAIR • TUNE-UP WIRING ISSUES WI-FI UPGRADES DRIP CONVERSIONS

Licenced Plumber

• MAINTENANCE

WEEKLY • BI-WEEKLY MONTHLY • 1-TIME

ACCREDITED 2018

• SPRING CLEAN-UPS • PROPERTY MANAGEMENT APT • CONDOS • HOMES NET 15 • LICENSED

(619) 523-4900

I&J

$50 OFF Full Truck $25 OFF 1/2 Truck 619.508.5565 619.559.4922

FREE ESTIMATES

Licensed & Insured. Lic# 201701543

SENIOR SERVICES

HELP WANTED 250 WANTED PERSONAL ASSISTANT Female w/ transportation, Monday - Friday approx. 9am-3pm, light housecleaning, meal preparation, and dog walking. $100/day. Call 858-449-7744. Leave a message for interview.

ITEMS FOR SALE 300 FAST FOOD DISCOUNT CARDS Fast Food Discount Cards that never expires. 24 Restaurants including Arbys, Wendys, Pizza Hut, Krispy Kreme and more. Cost $20. R. T. 3115 WhiteHorse Road PMB 177, Greenville, SC 29611. (864) 2955551 MANGOSTEEN THE QUEEN OF FRUITS Feel better now and try risk free today: www. MyMangosteen.net RECENT UCLA GRADUATE helps students of all ages with studies! ~$15/ hr. tutorLindsey@gmail.com

ITEMS WANTED 325 WANTED! Get Cash for your RV! We buy all types of motor homes. Running or Not. We pay cash on the spot. Call (951) 8588315

SENIORS SERVICES 376 In-Home Care Always There, LLC Licensed, Bonded, & Insured Hourly & 24 Hour Care Services Skilled Professional Caregivers for ADL's, Dementia & Parkinson's, Bathing, Meals, Med. Reminders, Transportation, Laundry, Light Housekeeping, & Companionship BEST PRICE GUARANTEE! CALL SHERRI for FREE assessment: 619-997-8301 Lic. 374700092

Compassionate Caregiver

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

We Repair Broken Sprinklers

(619) 203-4542 (858) 625-1404

Lic #504044

Del’s Independent In-Home Care

Complete Tree Care

•Tree Trimming •Lawn Maintenance •Flower Planting •Sprinkler Systems •Sodding & Seeding •Fences

CALL BILL 619-224-0586

Junk Removal, Applicances, Construction Debris, Yard Waste, Old Furniture and more!

Landscaping

Complete Garden Care!

with years of experience in residential homes Prompt, Professional and Affordable Phone Estimates, Cash Discounts

CLASSIFIEDS MARKETPLACE

619-933-4346 www.iluvjunk.com

10% Senior Discount

Helping Maintain Your Independence & Safety At Home Your Trusted Source for Live-In and 24/7 Hourly Care ADL AM / PM Care Rides to Church Medication Reminders Doctors Appointments Hospice Care 15 Years Alzheimer’s Expierence Maria 619-761-1656

Licensed/Bonded 619-779-3555

SERVICES OFFERED 450 Cleaning

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

BUSINESS OPTS. 550 Income Opportunities SHAKLEE—THE BEST VITAMINS and the best business opportunity! Call Fran 619-224-1030. WANT TO purchase minerals and other oil & gas interests. Send details P. O. Box 13557, Denver, Co 80201

RENTALS 750 Business/Office Rentals

L A J OLLA V ILLAGE N EWS B EACH & BAY P RESS P ENINSULA B EACON 1621 Grand Ave., 2nd Floor, Ste C San Diego, CA 92109 (858) 270-3103 Fax: (858) 713-0095

PUBLISHER EDITOR

PENINSULA BEACON BEACH & BAY PRESS

JULIE MAIN THOMAS MELVILLE (x131) tom@sdnews.com

LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

BLAKE BUNCH (x133)

REPORTER

DAVE SCHWAB (x132)

blake@sdnews.com

reporter@sdnews.com

PRODUCTION

CHRIS BAKER BARBARA ROGEL MARKETING DIRECTOR HEATHER LONG (x115) ADVERTISING SALES MIKE FAHEY (x117) MICHAEL LONG (x112) HEATHER LONG (x115) RICK SANTOS (x116) PAUL WELSH (x105)

LEGAL / CLASSIFIEDS ACCOUNTING

PERNISHA GAINES (x140) HEATHER HUMBLE (x120)

PHOTOGRAPHERS DON BALCH, JIM GRANT, SHARON HINCKLEY, JOHN COCOZZA, MIKE MCCARTHY

CONTRIBUTORS BART MENDOZA, DIANA CAVAGNARO, KAI OLIVER-KURTIN, NEAL PUTNAM, NATASHA JOSEFOWITZ, NICOLE SOURS LARSON, SCOTT HOPKINS, LINDA MARONE, DAVE THOMAS, PAIGE FULFER, SAVANAH DUFFY, JUDI CURRY, LUCIA VITI, ED PIPER, JEMMA SAMALA, VICTORIA DAVIS, KATHY MILLER GRAY

MASSAGE THERAPIST, or like minded professional. Session room available in Point Loma Business office.Please call Angela for details (619) 857-0077

LEGALS ADS 900 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2018-9026038 Fictitious Business Name(s) a. REACH OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY. Located at: 3916 RIVIERA DR. UNIT 404, SAN DIEGO, CA 92109. c. Is registered by the following: a. BRITTANY ANN JOHANSEN. This business is conducted by: a. INDIVIDUAL. The first day of business was: 10/08/2018. Registrant Name: BRITTANY ANN JOHANSEN. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: OCTOBER 15, 2018 ISSUE DATES: NOVEMBER 8, 16, 22, 30, 2018 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2018-9027245 Fictitious Business Name(s) a. SHREDLIGHTS. Located at: 3780 HANCOCK STREET, SUITE B, SAN DIEGO, CA 92110. c. Is registered by the following: a. SHREDLIFE, INC. This business is conducted by: f. CORPORATION. The first day of business was: 05/20/2015. Registrant Name: SHREDLIFE, INC. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Cor-

poration, Title of Signor: PRESIDENT, ERIC BIRKMEIER. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: OCTOBER 30, 2018 ISSUE DATES: NOVEMBER 8, 16, 22, 30, 2018 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2018-9027095 Fictitious Business Name(s) a. ZAGREBIN CLEANING COMPANY. Located at: 1339 MONSERATE AVE., CHULA VISTA, CA 91911. c. Is registered by the following: a. NICOLAS ZAGREBIN. This business is conducted by: a. INDIVIDUAL. The first day of business was: N/A. Registrant Name: NICOLAS ZAGREBIN. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: OCTOBER 29, 2018 ISSUE DATES: NOVEMBER 8, 16, 22, 30, 2018 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA CIVIL DIVISION, COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO CENTRAL DIVISION CASE NO: 37-201800055349. FILE DATE: NOVEMBER 1, 2018 PETITIONER OR ATTORNEY: HANNAH MARIE DALKE HAS FILED A PETITION WITH THIS COURT FOR A DECREE CHANGING PETITIONER'S NAME FROM: a. HANNAH MARIE DALKE to HANNAH MARIE REINA SOL DALKE-RYDER. The Court orders that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that indicates the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING TO BE HELD ON JANUARY 10, 2018 TIME: 10:30 AM, DEPARTMENT 903, SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO, 1100 UNION STREET, SAN DIEGO, CA 92101. A copy of this Order to show cause shall be published at least once each week for four consecutive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: The Peninsula Beacon & La Jolla Village News. ISSUE DATES: NOVEMBER 8, 16, 22, 30, 2018 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA CIVIL DIVISION, COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO CENTRAL DIVISION CASE NO: 37-201800055342-CU-PT-CTL. FILE DATE: NOVEMBER 1, 2018. PETITIONER OR ATTORNEY: JUSTIN YOUSRY BARBER HAS FILED A PETITION WITH THIS COURT FOR A DECREE CHANGING PETITIONER'S NAME FROM: a. JUSTIN YOUSRY BARBER to BODHI JAMESON METWALI SOL RYDER. The Court orders that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that indicates the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING TO BE HELD ON JANUARY 10, 2018 TIME: 10:30 AM, DEPARTMENT 903, SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO, 1100 UNION STREET, SAN DIEGO, CA 92101. A copy of this Order to show cause shall be published at least once each week for four consecutive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: The Peninsula Beacon & La Jolla Village News. ISSUE DATES: NOVEMBER 8, 16, 22, 30, 2018. NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF FREDERICK RICHARD CONVERY, deceased CASE NO. 37-201800037501-PR-PW-CTL. To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both, of: FREDERICK RICHARD CONVERY. A PETITION FOR PROBATE has been filed by: MARK CONVERY; LINDA NEAGLEY in the Superior Court of California, County of SAN DIEGO. THE PETITION FOR PROBATE requests that MARK CONVERY; LINDA NEAGLEY be appointed as personal representative to administer the estate of the decedent. THE PETITION requests the decedent’s will and codicils, if any be admitted to probate. The will and any codicils are available for examination in the file kept by the court. THE PETITION requests authority to administer the estate

under the Independent Administration of Estates Act with full authority. (This authority will allow the personal representative to take many actions without obtaining court approval. Before taking certain very important actions, however, the personal representative will be required to give notice to interested persons unless they have waived notice or consented to the proposed action.) The independent administration authority will be granted unless an interested person files an objection to the petition and shows good cause why the court should not grant the authority. A HEARING on the petition will be held on DECEMBER 6, 2018 at 1:30PM in Dept. 503 located at SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO, 1100 UNION ST., SAN DIEGO, CA, 92101, CENTRAL COURTHOUSE. IF YOU OBJECT to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney. IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR or a contingent creditor of the decedent, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within the later of either (1) four months from the date of first issuance of letters to a general personal representative, as defined in section 58(b) of the California Probate Code, or (2) 60 days from the date of mailing or personal delivery to you of a notice under section 9052 of the California Probate Code. Other California statutes and legal authority may affect your rights as a creditor. You may want to consult with an attorney knowledgeable in California law. YOU MAY EXAMINE the file kept by the court. If you are a person interested in the estate, you may file with the court a formal Request for Special Notice (DE154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code section 1250. A Request for Special Notice form is available from the court clerk. ATTORNEY FOR THE PETITIONER: SHIRIN ASGARI, ESQ., 1525 FARADAY AVENUE, SUITE 140, CARLSBAD, CA 92008. Telephone: 858-3451720. ISSUE DATES: NOVEMBER 16, 22, 30, 2018 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2018-9027963 Fictitious Business Name(s) a. VSSL AGENCY. Located at: 4918 N. HARBOR DR., STE 203, SAN DIEGO, CA, 92106. c. Is registered by the following: a. DIGITAL STYLE TECHNOLOGIES, LLC. This business is conducted by: l. LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY. The first day of business was: N/A. Registrant Name: DIGITAL STYLE TECHNOLOGIES, LLC. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor; PRESIDENT, DAVID TILLSON. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: NOVEMBER 07, 2018 ISSUE DATES: NOVEMBER 16, 22, 30, DECEMBER 6, 2018 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2018-9028130 Fictitious Business Name(s) a. PORTOFINO REALTY & MORTGAGE, INC. Located at: 914 CAMINO DE LA REINA #41, SAN DIEGO, CA 92108. c. Is registered by the following: a. PORTOFINO REALTY & MORTGAGE, INC. This business is conducted by: f. CORPORATION. The first day of business was: 4/24/2004. Registrant Name: PORTOFINO REALTY & MORTGAGE, INC. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor; PRESIDENT, EHSAN JAHANGIRI. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: NOVEMBER 9, 2018 ISSUE DATES: NOVEMBER 16, 22, 30, DECEMBER 6, 2018 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2018-9027843 Fictitious Business Name(s) a. COASTAL ASPHALT AND SEAL b. COASTAL ASPHALT AND SEAL INC. Located at: 4475 MISSION BLVD., STE 245, SAN DIEGO, CA 92109. c. Is registered by the following: a. COASTAL ASPHALT & SEAL, INC. This business is conducted by: f. CORPORATION. The first day of business was: 10/30/2018. Registrant Name: COASTAL ASPHALT & SEAL, INC. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor; PRESIDENT, JUSTIN HINES. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: NOVEMBER 6, 2018 ISSUE DATES: NOVEMBER 16, 22, 30, DECEMBER 6, 2018 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2018-9026552 Fictitious Business Name(s) a. TEC AMPLIFY. Located at: 827 TEMPLE ST. SAN DIEGO, CA 92106. c. Is registered by the following: a.

TEC CONSULTING, LLC. This business is conducted by: l. LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY. The first day of business was: 10/22/2018. Registrant Name: TEC CONSULTING, LLC. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor; CEO, TODD COHEN. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: OCTOBER 22, 2018 ISSUE DATES: NOVEMBER 16, 22, 30, DECEMBER 6, 2018 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2018-9028286 Fictitious Business Name(s) a. GILL GLOBAL VENTURES, LLC b. THEBEER ANDWINE SHOP.COM c. RATEMARKETPLACEUSA.COM d. HARPLOANQUIZUSA. Located at: 3054 RUE D ORLEANS UNIT 125, SAN DIEGO, CA 92110. c. Is registered by the following: a. GILL GLOBAL VENTURES, LLC. This business is conducted by: l. LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY. The first day of business was: 08/01/2016. Registrant Name: GILL GLOBAL VENTURES, LLC. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor; OWNER / PRESIDENT, JOSEPH WILLIAM GILL. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: NOVEMBER 13, 2018 ISSUE DATES: NOVEMBER 16, 22, 30, DECEMBER 6, 2018 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2018-9028217 Fictitious Business Name(s) a. MIMMI’S CREATIONS. Located at: 924 HORNBLEND ST. UNIT 203, SAN DIEGO, CA, 92109. c. Is registered by the following: a. MIMMI LOUISE KARLSSON. This business is conducted by: a. INDIVIDUAL. The first day of business was: N/A. Registrant Name: MIMMI LOUISE KARLSSON. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: NOVEMBER 9, 2018 ISSUE DATES: NOVEMBER 22, 30, DECEMBER 6, 14, 2018 SUMMONS ON COMPLAINT. Notice to Defendant: WILL DONALD GARDNER. You are being sued by Plaintiff: THE PENSION PEOPLE, INC DBA COAST CONSULTANTS. NOTICE! You have been sued. The court may decide against you without your being heard unless you respond within 30 days. Read the information below. YOU HAVE 30 CALENDAR DAYS AFTER THIS SUMMONS AND LEGAL PAPERS ARE SERVED ON YOU TO FILE A WRITTEN RESPONSE AT THIS COURT AND HAVE A COPY SERVED ON THE PLAINTIFF. A LETTER OR PHONE CALL WILL NOT PROTECT YOU. YOUR WRITTEN RESPONSE MUST BE IN PROPER LEGAL FORM IF YOU WANT THE COURT TO HEAR YOUR CASE. THERE MAY BE A COURT FORM THAT YOU CAN USE FOR YOUR RESPONSE. YOU CAN FIND THESE COURT FORMS AND MORE INFORMATION AT THE CALIFORNIA COURTS ONLINE SELF-HELP CENTER (www.courtinfo.ca.gov/selfhelp), YOUR COUNTY LAW LIBRARY, OR THE COURTHOUSE NEAREST YOU. IF YOU CANNOT PAY THE FILING FEE, ASK THE COURT CLERK FOR A FEE WAIVER FORM. IF YOU DO NOT FILE YOUR RESPONSE ON TIME, YOU MAY LOSE THE CASE BY DEFAULT, AND YOUR WAGES, MONEY AND PROPERTY MAY BE TAKEN WITHOUT FURTHER WARNING FROM THE COURT. THERE ARE OTHER LEGAL REQUIREMENTS. YOU MAY WANT TO CALL AN ATTORNEY RIGHT AWAY. IF YOU DO NOT KNOW AN ATTORNEY, YOU MAY WANT TO CALL AN ATTORNEY REFERRAL SERVICE. IF YOU CANNOT AFFORD AN ATTORNEY, YOU MAY BE ELIGIBLE FOR FREE LEGAL SERVICES FROM A NONPROFIT LEGAL SERVICES PROGRAM. YOU CAN LOCATE THESE NONPROFIT GROUPS AT THE CALIFORNIA LEGAL SERVICES WEB SITE (www.lawhelpcalifornia.org), THE CALIFORNIA COURTS ONLINE SELF-HELP CENTER (www.courtinfor.ca.gov/selfhelp), OR BY CONTACTING YOUR LOCAL COURT OR COUNTY BAR ASSOCIATION. NOTE: THE COURT HAS A STATUTORY LIEN FOR WAIVED FEES AND COSTS ON ANY SETTLEMENT OR ARBITRATION AWARD OF $10,000 OR MORE IN A CIVIL CASE. THE COURT’S LIEN MUST BE PAID BEFORE THE COURT WILL DISMISS THE CASE. Case Number: 37-2017-00020546-CU-CLCTL. The name and address of the court is: SUPERIOR COURT , 330 WEST BROADWAY, SAN DIEGO, CA 92101. The name, address, and telephone number of plaintiff’s attorney, or plaintiff without an attorney is: TIMOTHY J. GALVIN, 1951 CABLE STREET, SAN DIEGO, CA 92107, (619)222-0503. DATE 06/07/2017, CLERK, BY V BAHENA, DEPUTY. Notice to the person served: Issue Dates: Nov 22, 30, Dec 6, 14, 2018

continued on page 23


Legals

FRIDAY · NOVEMBER 30, 2018 LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

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A good reason for living longer: An older brain is a wiser brain Doing it Better By Natasha Josefowitz, Ph.D. Let us start with how a normal brain ages. This should help us older folk to stop worrying whether we have Alzheimer’s; most of us don’t. If your wallet is not in the toaster and your keys are not in the fridge, you’re okay. In our 20s, we form long-term memories and these are productive years. However, it is important to remember that the decision-making parts of the brain do not fully mature until the mid-twenties, hence the stupid stuff adolescents and young adults engage in. In our 30s, the brain begins to slowly lose volume, but not noticeably so. In our 40s, we begin to notice some change in our short-term memory; some cognitive slippage — such as forgetting phone numbers — becomes

LEGALS ADS 900 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA CIVIL DIVISION, COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO CENTRAL DIVISION CASE NO: 37-2018-00051606. FILE DATE: OCTOBER 12, 2018. PETITIONER OR ATTORNEY: MARIBEL MARTINEZ AND ELOY VAZQUEZ on behalf of minor HAS FILED A PETITION WITH THIS COURT FOR A DECREE CHANGING PETITIONER'S NAME FROM: a. THONNANCY GUADALUPE VASQUEZ to GUADALUPE TONANTZIN VAZQUEZ. The Court orders that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that indicates the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING TO BE HELD ON DECEMBER 20, 2018 TIME: 10:30 AM, DEPARTMENT 903, SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO, 1100 UNION STREET, SAN DIEGO, CA 92101. A copy of this Order to show cause shall be published at least once each week for four consecutive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: The Peninsula Beacon & La Jolla Village News. ISSUE DATES: NOVEMBER 22, 30, DECEMBER 6, 14, 2018. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2018-9028441 Fictitious Business Name(s) a. VISION SOLUTIONS OPTOMETRY. Located at: 8235 UNIVERSITY AVE., LA MESA, CA 91942. c. Is registered by the following: a. VISION SOLUTIONS OPTOMETRY, INC. This business is conducted by: f. CORPORATION. The first day of business was: 11/2/2018. Registrant Name: VISION

more apparent. In our 50s, the loss of brain volume accelerates so that learning new things takes longer, not remembering the name of the movie we just saw drives us crazy, and multi-tasking is more difficult, but we still feel at the top of our game. In our 60s, the tip of the tongue experiences become more common because the brain has to work harder to retrieve names and words. We tend to mix up dates and events. The 70s, 80s, and 90s continue to show decline in cognitive skills, but at different speeds for different people. Some can remain sharp as a tack well into their late nineties and some even beyond past a hundred. This is not all as dire as it sounds. According to Dr. Molly Wagster, of the National Institute on Aging, “the brain does not lose cells in the numbers once supposed and remaining cells retain the capacity to replicate.” Starting at about age 50, the brain shrinks. The average 50-yearold brain weights three pounds; 15 years later it weighs 2.6 pounds.

SOLUTIONS OPTOMETRY, INC. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor; PRESIDENT, JAMIE S PETERS. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: NOVEMBER 14, 2018 ISSUE DATES: NOVEMBER 22, 30, DECEMBER 6, 14, 2018 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2018-9028527 Fictitious Business Name(s) a. SECRET SPA & SALON. Located at: 1035 SILVERADO STREET, LA JOLLA, CA 92037. c. Is registered by the following: a. MANDANA AZIZI AHMADABADI. This business is conducted by: i. INDIVIDUAL. The first day of business was: N/A. Registrant Name: MANDANA AZIZI AHMADABADI. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: NOVEMBER 15, 2018 ISSUE DATES: NOVEMBER 22, 30, DECEMBER 6, 14, 2018 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2018-9028416 Fictitious Business Name(s) a. FELSPAR APARTMENTS. Located at: 1343 – 1347 FELSPAR STREET, SAN DIEGO, CA 92109. c. Is registered by the following: a. LAUREN TURK b. MARK TELES. This business is conducted by: b. MARRIED COUPLE. The first day of business was: 11/14/2018. Registrant Name: LAUREN TURK. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: NOVEMBER 14, 2018 ISSUE DATES: NOVEMBER 22, 30, DECEMBER 6, 14, 2018 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2018-9027015 Fictitious Business Name(s) a. LIVINGSTON MOTORS. Located at: 4015 PARK BLVD. STE #209, SAN DIEGO, CA 92103. c. Is registered by the following: a. FORTYSEVEN AUTOMOTIVE LLC. This business is conducted by: l. LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY. The first day of

This shrinkage is due to loss of water content and shrinking dendrites which are responsible for our taking time to remember. Often at breakfast, someone asks me to do something. By the time I come home, not only do I not remember what was asked, but who asked. I have been known to call my breakfast mates and ask if anyone remembers who asked me what; no one else remembers either. Even though we continue to form new synapses, they seem to lose strength more quickly in older brains. However, there is an upside to this. What we have learned, such as walking, talking, reading, and writing cannot be overwritten by new connections. The old saying that wisdom comes with age has proven to be correct. Dr. Shelley H. Carson of Harvard University finds that while the aging brain’s gradually widening focus of attention makes it more difficult to remember one fact, such as a name or a phone number, it increases the amount of information available to the conscious mind. Older people

business was: 5/23/2018. Registrant Name: FORTYSEVEN AUTOMOTIVE LLC. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor: MEMBER, RYAN GUANZON. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: OCTOBER 26, 2018 ISSUE DATES: NOVEMBER 22, 30, DECEMBER 6, 14, 2018 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2018-9028467 Fictitious Business Name(s) a. MARAMBA MEDIA. Located at: 28322 MEADOW GLENWAY WEST, ESCONDIDO, CA 92026. c. Is registered by the following: a. NIMRAD CAMACHO MARAMBA JR. This business is conducted by: a. INDIVIDUAL. The first day of business was: N/A. Registrant Name: NIMRAD CAMACHO MARAMBA JR. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: NOVEMBER 14, 2018 ISSUE DATES: NOVEMBER 22, 30, DECEMBER 6, 14, 2018 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA CIVIL DIVISION, COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO CENTRAL DIVISION CASE NO: 37-2018-00057737-CU-PT-CTL. FILE DATE: NOVEMBER 15, 2018. PETITIONER OR ATTORNEY: ANDREA LYNN LADWIG HAS FILED A PETITION WITH THIS COURT FOR A DECREE CHANGING PETITIONER'S NAME FROM: a. ANDREA LYNN LADWIG to ANDREA LYNN KNIGHT. The Court orders that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that indicates the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING TO BE HELD ON JANUARY 17, 2018, TIME: 9:00 AM, DEPARTMENT 903,

have a broader attention span; their peripheral awareness helps them take in more information from a situation and combine it with their greater store of knowledge, giving them a nice advantage. This characteristic plays a significant role in why we think of old people as wiser. As John H. Cochrane III, president and CEO of HumanGood retirement communities, explains: “there is a growing body of evidence to suggest that our overall sense of well-being actually improves with age. Friendships deepen and grow stronger, and we do a better job of prioritizing what’s more important to us.” (be.magazine, Volume 5, Issue 1) This increase in emotional stability means we not only grow wiser as we age, but mellower. According to Dr. Dilip V. Jeste, director of The Stein Institute for Research on Aging, wisdom is the prerogative of aging. Some of what defines wisdom: “Acknowledgements of uncertainty, self-reflection, sense of humor, tolerance, gratitude, positivity, pro-social behaviors, finding peace and joy.” (UC San Diego

SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO, 1100 UNION STREET, SAN DIEGO, CA 92101. A copy of this Order to show cause shall be published at least once each week for four consecutive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: The Peninsula Beacon & La Jolla Village News. ISSUE DATES: NOVEMBER 22, 30, DECEMBER 6, 14, 2018. SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA CIVIL DIVISION, COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO CENTRAL DIVISION CASE NO: 37-2018-00056077-CU-PT-CTL. FILE DATE: NOVEMBER 06, 2018. PETITIONER OR ATTORNEY: KARINA ISABEL GOMEZ-JONES HAS FILED A PETITION WITH THIS COURT FOR A DECREE CHANGING PETITIONER'S NAME FROM: a. KARINA ISABEL GOMEZ-JONES to KARINA ELIZABETH JONES. The Court orders that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that indicates the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING TO BE HELD ON DECEMBER 20, 2018, TIME: 9:00 AM, DEPARTMENT 903, NINTH FLOOR, SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO, 1100 UNION STREET, SAN DIEGO, CA 92101. A copy of this Order to show cause shall be published at least once each week for four consecutive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: The Peninsula Beacon & La Jolla Village News. ISSUE DATES: NOVEMBER 22, 30, DECEMBER 6, 14, 2018. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE

School of Medicine, SIRA Successful Aging newsletter, March 2018) Wisdom is knowing the difference between the extraordinary and the ordinary; it is finding extraordinary pleasure in ordinary things. “The art of being wise is the art of knowing what to overlook.” (William James). (The amygdala of older people has been shown to overlook the negative.) I would like to end with my two favorite quotes: The first one from Gandhi, “It is unwise to be too sure of one’s own wisdom.” And the second from Thomas Gray, which humorously obliterates all of the above, “…where ignorance is bliss, 'tis folly to be wise.” So now you know!

Natasha Josefowitz is the author of more than 20 books. She currently resides at White Sands Retirement Community in La Jolla. Copyright © 2018. Natasha Josefowitz. All rights reserved.

NO. 2018-9029111 Fictitious Business Name(s) a. PRIMAL MUSCLE. Located at: 9815 CARROLL CANYON RD, STE 202, SAN DIEGO, CA, 92131. c. Is registered by the following: a. ULTIMATE FITNESS NUTRITION, INC. This business is conducted by: f. CORPORATION. The first day of business was: 02/01/2006. Registrant Name: ULTIMATE FITNESS NUTRITION, INC. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor; PRESIDENT, JOHN DEVERE CRIBBS III. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: NOVEMBER 26, 2018 ISSUE DATES: NOVEMBER 30, DECEMBER 6, 14, 20, 2018 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2018-9028368 Fictitious Business Name(s) a. STEADFAST FINANCE. Located at: 955 HARBOR ISLAND DR. #140, SAN DIEGO, CA, 92101. c. Is registered by the following: a. RICHARD ALAN MITCHELL DAY. This business is conducted by: a. INDIVIDUAL. The first day of business was: 01/01/2014. Registrant Name: RICHARD ALAN MITCHELL DAY. Title of Officer, if Limited Liability Company/Corporation, Title of Signor. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego County on: NOVEMBER 14, 2018 ISSUE DATES: NOVEMBER 30, DECEMBER 6, 14, 20, 2018 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA CIVIL DIVISION, COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO CENTRAL DIVISION CASE NO: 37-2018-00055592-CU-PT-CTL. FILE DATE: NOVEMBER 02, 2018. PETITIONER OR ATTORNEY: JOSEPH ANTHONY KPANDU MAGA HAS FILED A PETITION WITH THIS COURT FOR A DECREE CHANGING PETITIONER'S NAME FROM: a. MAGA, JOSEPH ANTHONY KPANDU to MAGA, TARIQ MAHMOUD KPANDU. The Court orders that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objec-

tion that indicates the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING TO BE HELD ON JANUARY 10, 2019, TIME: 9:00 AM, DEPARTMENT 903, SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO, 1100 UNION STREET, SAN DIEGO, CA 92101. A copy of this Order to show cause shall be published at least once each week for four consecutive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: The Peninsula Beacon & La Jolla Village News. ISSUE DATES: NOVEMBER 30, DECEMBER 6, 14, 20, 2018. STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF USE OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME FILE NO. 20189029035 Fictitious Business Name to be Abandoned: PEPTION LLC. Located at: 3525 DEL MAR HEIGHTS RD #605, SAN DIEGO, CA, 92130. The Fictitious Business name referred to above was filed in San Diego County on: 03/21/2017 and assigned File No. 2017-007807. Fictitious Business name is being abandoned by: PEPTION LLC 3525 DEL MAR HEIGHTS RD #605, SAN DIEGO, CA, 92130. This business is conducted by: l. LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. (A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to section 17913 of the Business and Professions code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000).) Registrant name: CHANG-HO BAEK. Title of officer, if limited liability company/corporation CEO. The statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on: NOVEMBER 21, 2018. Issue Dates: NOVEMBER 30, DECEMBER 6, 14, 20, 2018.


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FRIDAY · NOVEMBER 30, 2018 LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

Arts / Music

New sculpture at UC San Diego pays homage to the first instant message Artwork by Mark Bradford one of three additions to Stuart Collection

What: The campus and local community are invited to learn more about the piece from contemporary artist Mark Bradford, who will speak at Galbraith Hall.

At 195-feet-tall, it is the tallest structure on campus. Contemporary artist Mark Bradford’s new sculpture is a monumental ode to the origins of today’s lightningspeed communications. It is the 20th addition to UC San Diego’s renowned Stuart Collection, a unique collection of site-specific works by leading artists of our time. His work is soon to be followed by two more pieces, including a mural by Alexis Smith and a sensory environment by Ann Hamilton.

When: 6 p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 1.

New sculpture Bradford’s conspicuous work stands prominently in Urey Plaza in Revelle College. Perched high atop an industrial pole, a lamp blinks silently, fast and slow. The sculpture continuously signals in Morse code, transmitting the first message ever sent by electric telegraph: “What Hath God Wrought.” The experiment was led by Samuel Morse and his partner Alfred Vail in 1844 and marked an important step in launching our nation’s communication network. The sculpture, titled What Hath God Wrought, is intended to reflect on the powerful influence of technology while silently referencing impending change.

Mark Bradford “Mark is a crusader for social change while at the same time being one of the most successful painters of his generation,” said director of the Stuart Collection Mary Beebe, who first invited Bradford to consider creating a work for the campus in 1995. “At first he wasn’t interested in doing a permanent work. I’d call him every few years, and finally he said, ‘I like your persistence and I like what you’ve been doing.’” Bradford visited UC San Diego in May 2013 to discuss possibilities. Meandering the campus with Stuart Collection project director Math-

WHAT HATH GOD WROUGHT

Perched high atop an industrial pole at Urey Plaza in Revelle College, a lamp blinks silently, fast and slow. The sculpture continuously signals in Morse code, transmitting the first message ever sent by electric telegraph: ‘What Hath God Wrought.’

ieu Gregoire and Revelle College Provost Paul Yu, they made an exciting discovery. In the plaza adjacent to Urey Hall, they uncovered a forgotten plaque. It marked the spot where, in 1961, leaders of the newly founded university dedicated the site where construction broke ground. It was a fortuitous sign that Bradford’s retrospective work should reside where UC San Diego’s story began. The luminaire that crowns the work harkens to a time long past, but one that is inextricably tied to the instant messages that pervade our lives today. Fabricated by the Marine Sciences Development Center at Scripps Institution of Oceanography, the lamp’s 300 LEDs can be adjusted for intensity and color, shining brighter on sunny days and dimmer at night. Bradford was born in Los Angeles

and is known for producing largescale, abstract paintings and collages made from leftover artifacts from city spaces. He builds up layers of found materials, then cuts away at them, revealing a kind of map of urban life, networks and relationships. In 2009, he was awarded a MacArthur Fellowship, followed by a National Medal of Arts in 2015. Two years later, Bradford was selected to represent the United States at the Venice Biennale, a prestigious international art exhibition.

in 2020. The painting, titled “Same Old Paradise,” served as the inspiration for Smith’s “Snake Path,” the sinuous trail that connects Warren Mall to Geisel Library. The idea for the mural came to Smith in a dream she had while visiting San Diego over three decades ago. She describes the work as a “distilled vision of the promise of the open road and a fruitful land most commonly referred to as the American dream.” Below the metamorphosing snake, eight panels feature souvenirs representing an American road trip, along with an eightNew mural sentence recap of Jack Kerouac’s Bradford’s sculpture is one of novel “On the Road,” which served three new pieces planned for the as inspiration for the painting. ever-expanding Stuart Collection. A 20 by 60-foot mural by artist Alexis The passageway Smith will be displayed in the North On the east side of campus, Torrey Pines Living and Learning another work is distilling. Massive Neighborhood when it is completed trackways are taking shape on the

periphery of campus in preparation for the trolley arrival. The movement of people and the opportunity to create an immersive sensory space piqued the interest of artist Ann Hamilton. She visited the campus in 2013 to talk about a proposal that involves a series of swings that will hang from the Pepper Canyon transit station trestle as well as a 400-foot embossed pathway that leads into the heart of the university. The passageway is envisioned as a concordance featuring hundreds of quotations from faculty members and other notable figures connected to the campus such as Thurgood Marshall and Eleanor Roosevelt. Running down the middle are intersections that the passages share. The work, still in development, will be the collection’s 22nd installation. All pieces in the Stuart Collection are site-specific, permanently built into the university’s landscape and architecture. Each sculpture is funded by private donations and must be approved by an advisory board — comprised of museum directors, artists, educators and community members — as well as the Chancellor’s Office. The process can take years, but the product is often notoriously bold.

See the sculptures Want to see the sculptures? Visit stuartcollection.ucsd.edu to learn more about each artist and work, and download a map for a selfguided tour. The Stuart Collection relies on philanthropy to bring new sculptures to life. To learn more about how to help support, contact Mary Beebe at mbeebe@ucsd.edu or call 858-534-2117.

La Jolla live music calendar: Acts around town Nov. 30-Dec. 4 Friday, Nov. 30 Ben Benavente, singer-songwriter. Noon. UTC Palm Plaza; Ben Benavente, singer songwriter. 4 p.m. Duke’s; Allegra Duchaine, blues to soul. 5 p.m. Alexandria; TBA, acoustic covers. 5 p.m. La Jolla Cove; Jake London, singer-songwriter. 5 p.m. Herringbone; Whitney Shay, Latin sounds. 6 p.m. La Valencia; Christian Taylor, singer-songwriter. 6 p.m. Drift; Mario Marauak, flamenco guitar. 6 p.m. The Turquoise;

AJ DeGrasse Trio, piano jazz, 7 p.m. Eddie V’s; tba, singer-songwriter. 7:45 p.m. Smokeyard; Gene-O Cole, standards. 8 p.m. Covo Lounge; Tad Sisler, vocals, piano, keyboards. 8 to 11 p.m. In the lounge, The Manhattan; dB Jukebox, classic covers. 9 p.m. Beaumont’s; Big Boss Buble, covers. 9 p.m. The Turquoise.

Joanna Gerolaga, singer-songwriter. Noon. Herringbone; Ryan Hiller, singer-songwriter. 3 p.m. Herringbone; Roman Palacios, Rat Pack covers. 6 p.m. La Valencia; Mario Marauak, jazz. 6 p.m. The Turquoise; Peter Marin, standards. 8 p.m. Covo Lounge; Craig Dawson Trio, piano jazz. 7 p.m. Eddie V’s; Allegra Duchaine, singer-songwriter. 7 p.m. Indulge; Saturday, Dec. 1 Tad Sisler, piano standards. 8 p.m. TBA, singer-songwriter, Noon. In the Lounge, The Manhattan; UTC Palm Plaza; Rare Form, rock covers. 9 p.m.

Beaumont’s; 6:30 p.m. The Turquoise; Jeff Dalrymple, jazz. 9 p.m. The Luciana Souza: The Book of LongTurquoise. ing, jazz. 7:30 p.m. TSRI;

Sunday, Dec. 2

Monday, Dec. 3

TBA, singer-songwriter, Noon. UTC Palm Plaza; tba, classic covers. 11:30 a.m. Beaumont’s; Jarred Matthew, singer-songwriter. Noon. Herringbone; Aquile, singer-songwriter. 3 p.m. Herringbone; K. Emeline, jazz and standards. 6 p.m. The Lot; Ray Briz Trio, 6 p.m. Eddie V’s; Adam Wolffe Perspective, jazz.

David Yuter, singer-songwriter. 11:30 a.m. Alexandria; Shelly Taylor Trio, piano jazz. 6 p.m. Eddie V’s; Javid & Naoko, acoustic guitar. 6 p.m. La Valencia.

Tuesday, Dec. 4 Adam J. Eros, singer-songwriter. 11:30 a.m. Alexandria; Mikan Zlatkovich Trio, piano jazz. 6 p.m. Eddie V’s.


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ence (third behind Foothills Christian and La Jolla Country Day). Something new: 6 feet 2 inches tall senior guard Chase Pagon, a transfer from Virginia. Team motto or word: “Level 6.” Six levels of core values that build on each level: attitude, commitment, work ethic, accountability, trust, love. Based on a Christian worldview. Coach’s insight incorporated into his program: “We’re going to go to Uganda this coming summer and build two basketball courts. Mission trips taught me how to use my passion to honor the Lord.” Key players: Sophomore Trevan Martin, sixth man last year, and 6 feet 5 inches tall senior Griffin Morris.

25

MISSION BAY Last year: Open Division champions; lost in the state playoffs. Western League champs. 27-6 overall, 11-1 Western League. Something new: “Nothing,” says Coach Marshawn Cherry. “We have everyone back, including all five starters.” Team motto or word: “Family. We’re a family. We do everything as a family.” Coach’s insight incorporated into his program: “Be a student athlete, not an athletic student. A student athlete takes care of their grades. An athletic student plays sports and lets the grades fall where they will.” Key players: Four four-year starting seniors: Rejean (Boogie) Ellis, 6 feet 2 inches tall guard, CIF Player of the Year. Jamaryee Norton, 6 feet 2 inches tall. Ronnie Latting, 6 feet 7 inches tall. Andrea Scott, 6 feet 1 inch tall.

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FRIDAY · NOVEMBER 30, 2018 LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

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Film producer Valentina Castellani-Quinn at the Standing Rock site.

Producer discusses new documentary on pipeline protests at Standing Rock BY DAVE SCHWAB | LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

Film producer Valentina Castellani-Quinn was in La Jolla recently to promote her latest documentary “The White Snake,” about alternative fuels, oil and how it effects Native Americans. The White Snake chronicles Native Americans in 2016 protesting the then-proposed pipeline from the Bakken oil fields in western North Dakota to Southern Illinois running near the Standing Rock Indian Reservation. Many tribal members considered the pipeline a threat to the region's clean water and ancient burial grounds. In April 2016, Standing Rock Sioux elder LaDonna Brave Bull Allard established a camp as a center for cultural preservation and spiritual resistance to the pipeline, which grew to thousands of people drawing considerable national and international attention. An Italian native, Valentina is the widow of Francesco Quinn, son of Oscar-winning actor Anthony Quinn, who died in 2011. In 2012, she created Quinn Studios, in memory of her late husband. Quinn Studios is a production and post-production company continuing the Quinn legacy in entertainment, the arts and world peace. Castellani-Quinn talked with La Jolla Village News about her socially conscious filmmaking and about The White Snake. “It is a film that sprouted from my previous documentary, “One Rock Three Religions” (exploring humanity’s connection to The Temple Mount in Jerusalem) about peace in the Middle East,” she said. “With The White Snake, we didn’t want to do a documentary that was just political, because people don’t relate to that personally.” “The White Snake” is about technology versus humanity, said Castellani-Quin who pointed out, “The two do not walk together any-

‘People are way more connected and together there than the media, or we, perceive.’’ VALENTINA CASTELLANI-QUINN FILM PRODUCER

more with nature.” The film producer said doing a film about Native Americans was a transcendent experience. She noted the Sioux tribal chieftain asked her one question when she first arrived to film, “Are you coming in peace? “That opened my heart, and at the same time, broke it,” CastellaniQuinn said. Though her documentaries are often about conflict, CastellaniQuinn’s point of view is optimistic. “I firmly believe we are on the verge of a new era where man actually finds a connection to the earth, his nature, his emotions and his spirituality,” she said. “People are waking up.” In “One Rock Three Religions,” Castellani-Quinn wanted to establish a “dialogue about peace” while admitting, “We live in a fragile, confusing time.” Concerning the Middle East, the film producer noted, “People are way more connected and together there than the media, or we, perceive.” Noting The White Snake was screened in Jerusalem on the same day that 30 people had gotten stabbed, Castellani-Quinn said, “Security didn’t want us to do the screening, but I said, ‘No, we have to move forward and do it.’ We left the doors open and 200 people showed up that night.” From that screening, CastellaniQuinn learned that, “If we have an open dialogue, our hearts will resonate with the dialogue, and we will find and carve a new path.” For more information visit onerockthreereligions.com.

5 BED 3+ BATH 2,416 ESF 6,500 Sq. Ft. LOT Built in 1968

VICKI DUTCH JONES 3560915 6010 Agee Street

This home has been completely updated with quality finishes throughout. Gourmet kitchen, beautiful solid custom Envoy cabinets, quartz counter tops, classic backsplash, newer appliances, coffered ceiling, recessed lighting, crown moulding, attic fan, dual A/C. Large open Family Room with custom large built-in wall unit. First floor Master enSuite. French doors to private backyard. Second floor has 4 Bedrooms (one is being used as an office). Laundry Room, Private serene backyard, well maintained landscaping. Close to Curie Elementary, Standley Middle School, UC High, restaurants and shopping

OFFERED AT: $1,150,000

Vicki Dutch-Jones REALTOR® DRE#01384539 Direct: 619-723-7010 Vicki@VickiDutchJones.com ©2018 Ascent Real Estate® is a registered trademark licensed to Ascent Real Estate, Inc. An Equal Housing/ Equal Opportunity Company. Information deemed accurate but not guaranteed. Buyer to verify all before close of escrow. If your property is currenlty listed for sale, this is not intended as a solicitation.


Open House LA JOLLA Sat 1-4pm . . . . . . . . . .5842 Sagebrush Road . . . .6BR/4BA . . .$2,995,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Reed Team 858-395-4033 Sat 10am-1pm . . . . . . .1031 La Jolla Rancho Rd. .4BR/3.5BA .$2,500,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Carly Keene 619-920-2307 Sat & Sun 1-4om . . . . . .6170 Inspiration Way . . . . .4BR/3BA . .$2,250,000 - $2,550,000 . . . .The Tash Team 858-367-0303 Sun 1-4pm . . . . . . . . . .1929 Titus St . . . . . . . . . . .4BR/3BA . .$1,375,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Moira Tapia 858-337-7269 Sun 1-3pm . . . . . . . . . .5606 Dolphin Place . . . . . .3BR4BA . . . .$2,695,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Meredith Wilkes 404-317-0873 Sun 10pm-1pm . . . . . . .1350 Virginia Way . . . . . . .5BR/6BA . . .$3,895,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Melissa Mate 858-242-2468 Sun 1-4pm . . . . . . . . . .5911 Folsom Dr. . . . . . . . .3BR/3BA . . .$2,390,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Tim Hines 619-316-2604 Sun 12-3pm . . . . . . . . . . 6010 Agee St. . . . . . . . . .5BR/3BA . .$1,150, 000 . . . . . . . . . . . .Vicki Dutch-Jones 619-723-7010

FRIDAY · NOVEMBER 30, 2018 LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

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*$750,000* Klatt Realty listed this 2BR/1.75 BA Pacific Beach one-level single family residence for sale on Fortuna Avenue for the price of $750,000. The home is leased through August 2018. Call us at 858-454-9672 for more details

OCEAN BEACH Sun 1-4pm . . . . . . . . . .4944 Cass #407 . . . . . . . .1BR/1BA . . . $549,000 . . . . . . . . . .Catrina Russell 619-226-2897 (BUYS) Sun 1-4pm . . . . . . . . . .4477 Mentone #210 . . . . .2BR/1.5BA . $385,000 . . . . . . . . . .Catrina Russell 619-226-2897 (BUYS) Sun 12-3pm . . . . . . . . .4930 Del Mar #11 . . . . . . .1BR/1BA . . . $439,000 . . . . . . . . . . Catrina Russell 619-226-2897 (BUYS)

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MISSION HILLS Sun 1-4pm . . . . . . . . . .4320 Goldfinch St . . . . . . .3BR/2.5BA .$1,695,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . .Elizabeth Courtier 619-813-6686

Klatt Realty has been serving La Jolla and surrounding areas since September 1972

PACIFIC BEACH Sun 12-3pm . . . . . . . . . .4961 Kendall St . . . . . . . . .4BR/4.5BA .$2,079,000-$2,279,000 . .Scott Booth & Kathy Evans 858-775-0280 Sun 1-4pm . . . . . . . . . . .1243 Hornblend St . . . . . . .3BR/3BA . . .$869,000 . . . . . . . . . . .Scott Booth & Kathy Evans 858-775-0280

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Classic mid-century single level home. View of the ocean from the living room. Patio & wraparound yard + 2 car attached garage. Owners have plans & permits to help you create your dream home. Michelle Dykstra DRE # 01141195 858-344-SOLD(7653) | MichelleDykstra.com | michelle@michelledykstra.com

Thinking Of Selling Your Condo With a View? Call Tim Tusa To Sell it Fast Off Market! No MLS! No Annoying Agents! No Open Houses! Trust & Estate Specialist info@jasminejohan.com 858-444-7405 CA Lic# 01955276

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4 bed - 4.5 bath - 2308 sqft. Enjoy panoramic ocean views from the tallest building on the block. Located just west of La Jolla Blvd near Bird Rock’s restaurants, Calumet Park, art galleries and boutiques. This home features three balconies, an attached guest studio, a designer west-facing entertainer’s kitchen, elevator for ease of access, and two car dedicated parking with garage. Much to see and offered at an incredible value. Offered at $1,695,000

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Elegant Condo 464 Prospect St. #608 2BR / 2.5BA • $2,475,000 Elegant 2BR/2.5BA, a gracious single story condo home, featuring high ceilings, spacious entry foyer, large eat in kitchen, living room with fireplace & a huge dining room. The master has superb storage, its bathroom has dual sinks, spa tub and separate shower. There are two wonderful patios and a ramp for private entry. The renowned common areas and amenities, include valet parking, onsite management, gym, pool, magnificent roof deck and party room!

Panoramic ocean and golf course views abound throughout this pristine 2013-built home that lives like a single-level estate. Much can be enjoyed from the entry level that flows from the motor court, into the open concept living and kitchen, and out to the flat yard with pool, spa, and outdoor kitchen. Retreat up the elevator to a serene lounge with terrace before escaping to your master suite overlooking the ocean and lush fairways of LJ Country Club. 3 car garage, solar and more.

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PAGE 28 · FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30 , 2018 · LA JOLLA VILLAGE NEWS

Just a few of the Million Reasons to Call David

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