09 19 2013 la jolla light

Page 1

CELEBRATING

100 YEARS

Vol. 101, Issue 38 • September 19, 2013

INSIDE

PRSRT STD U.S. POSTAGE PAID SAN DIEGO, CA PERMIT NO. 1980

ENLIGHTENING LA JOLLA SINCE 1913

Online Daily at lajollalight.com

Residential Customer La Jolla, CA 92037 ECRWSS

Children’s Pool is step closer to winter closure

This ‘turtle’ was spotted stumping for the cause Sunday afternoon at La Jolla Open Aire Market.

By Pat Sherman The City of San Diego’s Planning Commission voted 4-2 last week to recommend that the city council adopt a proposed ordinance that would close the beach at La Jolla Children’s Pool (aka Casa Beach) to all human access during the harbor seals’ five-month pupping season (Dec. 15-May 15). The proposed ordinance would declare the area an Environmental Sensitive Habitat Area, and require a SEAL WATCH coastal development permit and amendments to the Local Coastal Plan. Access to the beach would be restricted by placing a barrier at the top of the concrete steps leading to the beach. Posted signs would notify the public of the closure. Violation of the closure could result in a maximum fine of $1,000 or as much as six months in jail. Addressing the Planning Commission in support of the

Courtesy

Town Council has openings for new trustees, A4

See Children’s Pool, A11

Vikings score a season-opening victory, A21

Doctor and cervical cancer survivor have a mission, B1

Paper or

Plastic bag ban to come before San Diego City Council By Ashley Mackin istrict 1 City Councilmember and Council Pro Tem Sherri Lightner is leading the way toward San Diego’s reduction of singleuse plastic bags at grocery stores and retail outlets. If her path is smooth, the ban could go into effect by early January, 2014. On Sept. 11, the city council’s Rules and Economic Development Committee

D Here comes da judge’s new play! B10

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unanimously voted to move ahead with drafting an ordinance. “San Diego must take a leadership role in limiting plastic bag use and reducing the pollution associated with it,” Lightner said. “As we can see from other cities, the benefits are real and can be done without burdening our businesses or our most vulnerable residents.”

Consultant addresses cleanup of gas station slated for condo project By Pat Sherman The La Jolla Development Permit Review (DPR) subcommittee heard details last week about the removal of an existing gas station at the corner of Eads Avenue and Pearl Street, where the property owner hopes to develop a mixed-use, residential-retail project. Questions about potential migration of soils contaminated by gasoline and other petroleum products were raised during last Unocal 76 on Pearl Street month’s DPR meetings, where will be replaced with condos the project was first presented and retail space. Daniel K. Lew by architect Alex Faulkner and land use and planning consultant Joe LaCava. Chuck Houser, an environmental consultant and hydrogeologist (one who studies the distribution and movement of

See Plastic Bag Ban, A5

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Page A2 - september 19, 2013 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

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This home on Mt. Soledad was part of a case study of Mid-Century Modern homes commissioned by Art & Architecture magazine between 1945-1966. The home received a historic designation on July 24. Photos by Pat Sherman

Model Mid-Century La Jolla home receives historic designation By Pat Sherman A Mid-Century Modern residence on Rue de Anne was one of 10 “Case Study Houses” to be granted national historic designation in July, thanks to the efforts of the Los Angeles Conservancy, a nonprofit similar to San Diego’s Save Our Heritage Organisation and the La Jolla Historical Society (LJHS) that works to recognize, preserve and revitalize historic architecture and cultural resources. Eight of the other homes designated in July are in Los Angeles County, and one is in Ventura County. As part of the effort, an additional home on Rue de Anne in La Jolla was listed merely as “eligible for designation.” “Case Study 23 was the only case study project in San Diego County,” said LJHS Executive Director Heath Fox, who alerted

La Jolla Light to the designations. “There were three houses built in Case Study 23 (on Rue de Anne) — A, B and C. The house that got designated is 23C; 23B was not nominated because it’s been changed too much and the owner of 23A didn’t wish to pursue designation, so it got a ‘determined eligible’ status.” Fox said the Case Study Houses, commissioned by Art & Architecture magazine from 1945-1966, and designed by notable architects of the day, were “prototype houses for neighborhood development” to accommodate the influx of soldiers returning home from World War II. “The task was to design these houses in the modern style using what were relatively inexpensive industrial materials,” Fox said.

“After World War II there was a severe housing shortage, and this was a way to kind of jump-start that.” In the spring edition of LJHS’s Timekeeper magazine, historian Carol Olten writes that the La Jolla Case Study homes on Mt. Soledad were designed by architect Ed Killingsworth and made their debut in 1961, winning prizes for their style. “They were designed to be a ‘triad’ of houses, each related to the other with clear glass panels reaching from floor to ceiling, maximizing their fantastic ocean views,” Olten writes. “Features of the case studies included reflective pools, interconnected courtyards to various wings and a pristinely sparse landscape of olive trees and ground covers to unite the project.”

Adrian Scott Fine, Director of Advocacy at the Los Angeles Conservancy, said the organization’s volunteer Modern Committee began discussing the designation effort 10 years ago. “They have always been on our radar screen,” Fine said. “They were instrumental in terms of residential architecture during that period and moving forward.” Fine said the homes were built to “rethink how people should be living … with interior courtyards and indoor-outdoor special relationships.” In Olten’s article she notes that Art & Architecture publisher John Entenza, the mastermind behind the project, retired to La Jolla after leaving the magazine in 1962, residing at 840 Coast Blvd. until his death in 1984.

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Page A4 - september 19, 2013 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

Town Council seeks trustees, hears plan to keep spending local must submit a short biography to office@lajollatowncouncil.org

Debra Rosen, president/CEO of the San Diego North Chamber of Commerce, speaks about her organization’s ‘Think Local First’ effort. Photos by Pat Sherman outside the region, Rosen said. “We had some school districts spending up to 50 percent of their budget outside of the region,” she said. “Fifty percent of their general fund is made up of your money through property taxes. When we’re investing in the schools, they need to be investing back … in local commerce.” SDNCC is working with local school districts to create a collaborative that would collectively increase the districts’ purchasing power, as an incentive

Henry Chiu, a town council gold member and member of Kiwanis Club of La Jolla, shares details about the recently renovated La Jolla Professional Center at 1150 Silverado St., which has vacancies. to increase their local spending, she said. More online at sdncc.com

In other Town Council news n Trustees sought: The LJTC is seeking three new trustees to fill vacancies left by recently departed board members Sonia Olivas, Deborah Arnau and Greg Phillips. Interested candidates must have attended at least three LJTC meetings, be at least 16 years old, and either reside in or own a business in La Jolla. Candidates

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n Professional center vacancies: Henry Chiu, a member of the Kiwanis Club of La Jolla and owner of La Jolla Professional Center, noted that he has vacancies in his building at 1150 Silverado St., where the LJTC also rents space. Chiu purchased the building in 2010 and has since made renovations that include installation of solar panels and a telecommunications system that can support as many as 1,500 phone lines. The first floor is reserved for psychologists, social workers and others in the mental health profession. “I provide a total service office,” Chiu said. “It’s a flat rate for everything — utilities, phone, conference rooms, even the receptionists.” Contact Chiu at henry@ljpb.biz n La Jollan to be saluted: Glen McFadden Rasmussen will be honored for his work with the Boy Scouts of America 6-9 p.m. Nov. 7 during an event at La Jolla Community Center, 6811 La Jolla Blvd. Tickets are $80 and up. Rasmussen, an attorney who

serves as La Jolla Community Center’s board chair, is being honored with a “Good Scout of the Year” award during the event (chaired by LJTC trustee Charles Hartford and wife, Rebecca). For tickets or more information, contact Laura Scheid at laura.scheid@scouting.org or (619) 298-6121, ext. 222. n Postal Service audit: Sarah Czarnecki with the office of Congressmember Scott Peters (D-52nd) noted that the U.S. Office of the Inspector General is conducting an audit of the way the United States Postal Service (USPS) has been handling the sale of its buildings and properties, including La Jolla’s historic Wall Street post office, which it intends to sell. The audit should be complete in early November Czarnecki said. For more information, visit bit.ly/ postalaudit There are currently about 1,000 post office buildings across the country listed on the National Register of Historic Places (which includes La Jolla’s post office). More than 50 of these buildings have either been sold or are on the market. Though the USPS plans to sell La Jolla’s post office, it is

s

By Pat Sherman Debra Rosen, CEO and president of the San Diego North Chamber of Commerce (SDNCC), spoke about her organization’s efforts to convince cities and school districts in the region to spend more of their revenue locally during the Sept. 5 La Jolla Town Council (LJTC) meeting. Though the SDNCC focuses primarily on cities north of State Route 52, Rosen said she is reaching out to cities and merchant organizations throughout the county to garner additional partnerships in the effort. In launching Think Local First, Rosen said SDNCC worked with elected officials at the city, state and federal level to underscore the importance of keeping dollars in the region. “Those paychecks go right back into the local commerce to create more sustainable communities,” she said. “If we keep shoveling money outside the region, communities in the other states benefit from our dollars.” SDNCC sent Public Records Act request to each of the cities and school districts in North County San Diego seeking to ascertain how much of their expenditures beyond $15,000 were going


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LA JOLLA LIGHT - september 19, 2013 - Page A5

not yet on the market because the USPS has not found a suitable location to relocate services to within the Village of La Jolla, Czarnecki said. According to the National Trust for Historic Preservation, “The lack of a transparent and uniform national process from the USPS — one that follows federal preservation laws when considering disposal of these buildings — is needlessly placing the future of many historic post office buildings in doubt.” n Affordable Care Act: Czarnecki also noted that Peters’ office is providing, upon request to interested community groups, forums on the Affordable Care Act (aka “Obamacare”). “We had the 47th attempt to repeal or defund the Affordable Care Act this week (but) it’s the law of the land,” Czarnecki said. “It’s been passed by the House, the Senate, (and) signed by the President and approved by the Supreme Court. It’s not perfect, but we’ve got to work on how to fix it as opposed to taking it away completely.” To request a forum, call Peters’ office at (858) 455-5550. n Scam alert: Sterling McHale with the office of County Supervisor Ron Roberts advised people to beware of a con in which someone is fraudulently using the official county government seal to target veterans. The county is working with the sheriff’s and district attorney’s offices to investigate the fraud. n Prescription drug card: McHale also spoke about the San Diego County Free Discount Prescription Card, which individuals or families can use at 60,000 participating

pharmacies to save up to 75 percent on prescriptions, and up to 60 percent on vision and dental care. For more information, visit coast2coastrx.com or call (619) 531-5544. n Dance fundraiser update: La Jolla Dancing with the Stars organizer Nancy Gardner said individual tickets and tables for the dance competition fundraiser at Hilton La Jolla Torrey Pines, are selling fast. Tickets for the event, 6-11 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 5, are $175 per person or $325 for two. ljdancingwiththestars.com Auction items, such as vacation rentals, are still needed, Gardner said. All donations are tax deductible. Sponsorship in the event program is available for $500 a page or $250 a halfpage, she said. For more information, call Gardner at nancy@cmcfinance.com or (858) 456-3000. n Parade photographer needed: La Jolla Christmas Parade organizer Ann Kerr Bach noted that the parade committee is seeking a professional photographer to donate his or her time during this year’s event, 2 p.m. Dec. 8. E-mail Kerr Bache at akbsma@me.com Also, registration is open for parade entrants through Oct. 27. For more information, visit ljparade.com n Splash Bash: A membership drive ‘Splash Bash’ will be held noon to 4 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 6 at the community swimming pool at Coggan Family Aquatic Complex, 800 Nautilus St. Activities include inner tubes, inflatables, open swim, hot dogs, sliders and ice cream. Information: cogganaquatics.org or (858) 456-0945.

From Plastic Bag Ban, A1

to identify and address any practical and legal issues before the ordinance is developed and presented to the city council More than 70 California municipalities for its consideration. He also said he would have a similar ordinance, including Long seek corporate sponsors to promote free Beach, Los Angeles, Oakland, Santa Cruz reusable bag giveaways in disadvantaged and Solana Beach. communities. Lightner’s Communications Director Jill Among the recommendations being Esterbrooks explained the timeline. She said considered is a complete ban on plastic bags on Oct. 23, the city council’s Rules and in supermarkets, drug and convenience stores. Economic Development committee will Another suggestion is to have stores receive a progress report and draft the charge customers a small fee (typically 10 ordinance. cents) per paper bag used as an alternative, From there, a council advisory committee which Esterbrooks said keeps a shopper’s will review the ordinance and either make options open in cases where they forget to revisions or pass it along to the city council bring (or do not have) for a vote. a bag. However, Esterbrooks said restaurants, nonprofits, Lightner is hopeful the food stamp recipients ordinance will be and produce and meat forwarded to the products would be council and receive an exempt. approval by the first of discussed the year with n See Views, A18 theLightner potential ordinance implementation soon at the September La after, on the condition Jolla Shores Association meeting, citing a it is signed into law by whomever is mayor. report from the city’s Environmental However, if the signing mayor is Interim Services Department, which stated 500 Mayor Todd Gloria, Esterbrooks said she’s million single-use plastic bags are distributed confident it will be a go. “A plastic bag reduction ordinance simply annually in San Diego. About 3 percent of those are recycled, she said, with the bulk makes sense, and I am grateful to Council ending up in the trash or as pollution. President Pro Tem Sherri Lightner for Lightner pointed out that in addition to bringing this forward and helping me the environmental impacts, the city spends protect our environment,” Gloria said. $160,000 each year in landfill cleanup costs In a press release, he promised to alone — not including costs for plastic bag coordinate outreach with the city’s litter removal from streets, storm drains, Environmental Services Department, parks and beaches. stakeholders and the City Attorney’s office

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Page A6 - september 19, 2013 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

Jolla meets, 6:55 a.m. The Shores Hotel, 8110 Camino Del Oro. $20. (619) 992-9449. n American Legion La Jolla Post 275, 11:30 a.m. The Shores Hotel, 8110 Camino Del Oro, P.O. Box 188 La Jolla, CA 92038-0188

19 Community

Calendar

Thursday, Sept. 19 n Sunrise Rotary of La

n Pen to Paper writing group meets, noon, Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 552-1657. n Poetry Workshop, 2 p.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 412-6351.

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Triangle Rotary Club Breakfast Meeting, 7:15 a.m. La Jolla Marriott, 4240 La Jolla Village Drive. $20. (858) 395-1222 or LaJollaGTRotary.org n Computer Help Lab, 11 a.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 552-1657. n Kiwanis Club of La Jolla meets, noon, La Jolla Presbyterian Church, 7155 Draper Ave. $15 unless attending as a member’s guest. mmcalister@cgpinc.com n Ico-dance class, lowimpact, full body movement, 12:30 p.m. La Jolla Community Center, 6811 La Jolla Blvd. $5-10. (858) 459-0831. n Back to school family picnic, for La Jolla Elementary School, 6 p.m. upper field, 1111 Marine St. Bring-your-own-food and chairs or blankets. LaJollaElementary@gmail.com n Opening receptions, “The Kincade Chronicle” by Jim Machacek, 6:30 p.m. Athenaeum Music & Arts Library, 1008 Wall St. (858) 454-5872. n La Jolla Symphony & Chorus, 7:30 p.m. Mandeville Auditorium UC San Diego, 9500 Gilman Drive. (858) 534-4637.

Saturday, Sept. 21 n Computer Genealogy Society of San Diego meets, 9 a.m. Robinson Auditorium complex at UCSD, 7500

Gilman Drive. Alice Colby Volkert “Through Their Eyes.” cgssd.org n Seniors Computer Group, 9:30 a.m. Wesley Palms, 2404 Loring St., Pacific Beach. Free for guests, $1 monthly membership. (858) 459-9065. n Sip & See, afternoon tea party, noon to 4 p.m. La Jolla Community Center, 6811 La Jolla Blvd. $15-$20. (858) 459-0831.

Sunday, Sept. 22 n La Jolla Open Aire Market, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Girard Avenue at Genter Street. (858) 454-1699.

Monday, Sept. 23 n Art workshop, Aleph Art Room, 3 p.m. MyArtShed, 7426 Girard Ave. Workshops to celebrate Jewish culture. $18. (619) 977-8340. AlephArtRoom@gmail.com n La Jolla Parks and Beaches, Inc. meets, 4 p.m. La Jolla Rec Center, 615 Prospect St. LJParksnBeaches @gmail.com n Raja Yoga class, guided by the Nataraja Yoga and Meditation Center, 4:30 p.m. Congregational Church of La Jolla, 1216 Cave St. Donations accepted. (858) 395-4033.

Tuesday, Sept. 24 n The Boardroom San Diego meets for those changing careers, 8 a.m. La

Jolla Presbyterian Church, 7715 Draper Ave. Adriana Vela “Demystifying Nanotechnology — a historical look and peek into the future.” First three meetings free, then $25 three-month membership. RSVP: TheBoardroomSanDiego.org or (858) 522-0827. n Rotary Club of La Jolla, noon, Cuvier Club, 7776 Eads Ave. Lunch $30. (858) 459-1850. n Hatha Chair Yoga, 12:30 p.m. Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 552-1657. n La Jolla Shores Permit Review Committee meets, 4 p.m. La Jolla Recreation Center, 615 Prospect St. info@lajollacpa.org n Networking event, “Wine, Food & Business Expo,” 5 p.m. Marriott La Jolla 4240 La Jolla Village Drive. Build new business connections in Del Mar, Carmel Valley, Sorrento Valley, Torrey Hills, Rancho Santa Fe, La Jolla and UTC. Tickets from $30. WineAndFood2013sdccc. eventbrite.com n Toastmasters of La Jolla meets, 6:30 p.m. La Jolla Firehouse YMCA, 7877 Herschel Ave. Free for guests, $78 six-month membership. president@ tmlajolla.org n Art History Lecture by Linda Blair, van Gogh and Cezanne, 7:30 p.m. Athenaeum Music & Arts Library, 1008 Wall St. $14-19.

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Wednesday, Sept. 25 n Kiwanis Club of Torrey Pines meets, 7:15 a.m. Torrey Pines Christian Church, 8320 Scenic Drive North. First two meetings free, then $15. essheridan@ aol.com n Social Service League of La Jolla meets, 10:30 a.m. Darlington House, 7441 Olivetas Ave. SSL@ darlingtonhouse.com n Torrey Pines of La Jolla Rotary meets, 11:30 a.m. Rock Bottom Brewery, 8980 La Jolla Village Drive. $20. GurneyMcM@aol.com or (858) 459-8912. n Tapping to the Stars, dance classes for women, 12:30 p.m. advanced; 1:30 p.m. beginner. La Jolla YMCA Firehouse, 7877 Herschel Ave. For pricing, e-mail nancy@ tappingtothestars.com n La Jolla Parks and Rec meets, 4 p.m. La Jolla Recreation Center, 615 Prospect St. (858) 552-1658. n Book signing and discussion, “Haldol and Hyacinths: A Bipolar Life,” by Melody Moezzi, a blogger for The Huffington Post and Ms. Magazine, 7:30 p.m. Warwick’s Books, 7812 Girard Ave. (858) 454-0347. n Jazz at TSRI presents Larry Goldings, Peter Bernstein and Bill Stewart, 8 p.m. The Scripps Research Institute, 10640 John Jay Hopkins Drive. $30-35. (858) 454-5872.

Thursday, Sept. 26 n Sunrise Rotary of La Jolla meets, 6:55 a.m. The Shores Hotel, 8110 Camino Del Oro. $20. (619) 992-9449. n Pen to Paper writing group meets, noon, Riford Library, 7555 Draper Ave. (858) 552-1657. n La Jolla Traffic and Transportation Board meets, 4 p.m. La Jolla Rec Center, 615 Prospect St. info@lajollacpa.org All events are free unless otherwise noted.

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Did we miss listing your community event? • E-mail information to: ashleym@lajollalight.com • The deadline is noon, Friday for publication in the following Thursday edition. Questions? Call Ashley Mackin at (858) 875-5957.


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LA JOLLA LIGHT - september 19, 2013 - Page A7

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Page A8 - september 19, 2013 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

Councilmember Sherri Lightner visits Shores board meeting La Jolla

Shores

Association

In other LJSA news n Snorkeling rescues: Lt. Rick Strobel told LJSA that lifeguards see an increase in the number of rescues

Sherri Lightner (standing) with Tom Dugdale, Ray and Deborah Higgins, and Bob Barto. Ashley Mackin

involving snorkelers. He said during certain conditions, the rip current can be dangerous for inexperienced swimmers, and snorkeling attracts swimmers of all levels. Strobel said there is no certification required for snorkeling (compared to SCUBA diving, for which many participants go through some training process).

Lifeguard services reported to La Jolla Light that in the last 12 months, lifeguards conducted 224 rescues on snorkelers, but that number could be higher. Lifeguard Lt. Andy Lerum said the only way lifeguards know a snorkeler is involved is if it’s noted in the comment section of a report, and that lifeguards do not differentiate between swimmers

and snorkelers, yielding approximate estimates. Strobel told the Light that a weekend lifeguard has been stationed on the beach in front of The Marine Room for the summer to watch over snorkelers and swimmers in that area. To help regulate and create safety standards for snorkeling tour groups, he said a RFP is

s

By Ashley Mackin District 1 City Councilmember Sherri Lightner attended the La Jolla Shores Association (LJSA) meeting Sept. 11 to update the board on local issues. Lightner opened with information about the council’s recent step toward a plan to cut the use of plastic bags in San Diego. (See story, A1). “Today, the city council’s Rules and Economic Development Committee took a closer look at a citywide ordinance to reduce the use and disposal of plastic bags,” she said, noting the committee expects a progress report on Oct. 23. She also reported that the RFP (Request for Proposal) process for surf camps is underway and should be completed by Nov. 1. LJSA has long suggested the business fees paid by surf camps and other outdoor recreation businesses should go to park improvements,

and ideally, pay the salary for a park ranger at Kellogg Park. “Perhaps, perhaps, perhaps,” Lightner said of the ranger possibility. “This is something our office is looking into and we will provide updates as they become available.” Lightner further apprised LJSA that the city council approved the noticing of a hearing to be held Nov. 21 regarding potential water rate increases. “The notice, which you will receive by mail, will provide you with the details of the hearing and the opportunity to launch a protest in opposition,” she said. Though the new rate structure could mean a decrease for some single-family residences already working to conserve water, the proposed structure would affect many larger units. In sum, she invited the community to a ribbon cutting for the new La Jolla Shores lifeguard tower 9:30 a.m. Friday, Oct. 11. She said heartily, “Yes, it’s done!”

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LA JOLLA LIGHT - september 19, 2013 - Page A9

“highly possible.” n New board members: The LJSA elected Nick LeBeouf to a two-year term. LeBeouf, of SD Expeditions, moved to the Shores earlier this year and operated his business for five years prior to that. Ray Higgins, owner of Higgins Capital, an investment advisory firm that has been on Avenida de la Playa since 1995, was elected to a one-year term. n Playhouse Shores show: Tom Dugdale, a producer with the La Jolla Playhouse’s Without Walls (WoW) Festival, Oct. 3-6, informed LJSA of a performance piece that would play out in the waters at The Shores. Representing puppeteer Basil Twist, creator of the robots in the Playhouse’s “Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots,” Dugdale said the piece involves a creature constructed by Twist that would emerge from the ocean for performances at 1 and 3 p.m. during the festival. Modeled after “a happening” that anyone could stumble upon and be a part of, Dugdale said the performances would be free and open to the public. Resting far enough into the water to not be in plain sight, but not so far as to pose a hazard for surfers and swimmers, the puppet

creature would emerge to play with passersby and offer a 30-minute performance with Japanese woodwind music. The proposed location is a portion of La Jolla Shores beach below the Scripps Seaside Forum. Before the 1 p.m. performance and after the 3 p.m., the puppet will be stored at a nearby home. Since the Playhouse is getting the necessary permits and is working with lifeguards to ensure safety, LJSA voted to approve the theatrical concept. n Comfort Station facade: LJSA discussed materials that could be used for the north comfort station, to be built in October or November. Some board members argued that the stone should match the lifeguard tower and others argued it should match the south bathroom already in place. LJSA previously approved a design concept using slumpstone (to match the south bathroom), so the board discussed the change in materials, eventually endorsing the change to use regal-stone, the same stone used on the lifeguard tower. — The next La Jolla Shores Association meeting will be 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 9 at the Martin-Johnson House at SIO, 8840 Biological Grade.

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Windemere appeal set for Sept. 23 The San Diego City Council will consider whether to grant an appeal of an environmental determination the city issued that led to the demolition of Irving Gill’s “Windemere” cottage at 2 p.m. Monday, Sept. 23. The 1890s Craftsman-style cottage on Virginia Way was demolished unexpectedly Dec. 23, 2011 via an emergency demolition permit. The property owner wishes to redevelop the property, though La Jolla Historical Society (LJHS) preservationists say a full environmental impact report required per the California Environmental Quality Act was not conducted prior to the demolition. LJHS Preservation Committee Chair Leslie Davis said the

Irving Gill’s ‘Windemere Cottage,’ before it was demolished nearly two years ago. Pat Sherman appeal would be “precedent setting,” and would prevent developers, homeowners and city staff from circumnavigating the system to demolish potentially historic resources without first conducting a proper environmental review. “It’s not to say that after these environmental reviews

all of these sites will be deemed historic,” Davis said, “but we won’t know unless we have a review.” The LJHS is urging people to attend the meeting in support of the appeal. The City Council meets at 202 C St. in downtown San Diego (12th floor). — Pat Sherman

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Historic home demolished?

Questions arise about extent of changes to Cliff Robertson’s former estate Casa de la Paz/ The Dunes house ■ Owner (1922-1937): Philip Barber, developer of La Jolla’s Barber Tract neighborhood ■ Original design by: Architect J.H. Nicholson; the city’s Historical Resources Board stated in a 2002 report, ‘It cannot be established that (Nicholson) was a master architect.’ ■ Owner (1963-2005): Actor and native La Jollan Cliff Robertson ■ Robertson’s lost additions by: Master architect Thomas Shepherd Questioned about the ongoing development, project architect Tony Crisafi (of Island Architects) said the home’s historic designation is based only on the era when Philip Barber owned it, and that it is being restored to how it appeared in the 1920s. Windows have been removed temporarily for restoration, he said. “There were a lot of things that were added onto the façade — lighting and a number of different types of tiles and small decorative items that were not original to the

s

What remained last week during renovation of the 1922 estate home built by Philip Barber, founder of La Jolla’s Barber Tract neighborhood. Actor Cliff Robertson (19232011) bought the home in 1963, adding upgrades and securing a local historic designation for the property in 2002. He sold it in 2005. Pat Sherman

By Pat Sherman Preservationists driving by the estate home once owned by the late Academy Award-winning actor Cliff Robertson say they are alarmed by how much of the home has been demolished as part of an ongoing renovation. Only concrete and terracotta block walls of the historic home (sans roof) remained last week. Historic real estate specialist Linda Marrone said she contacted the city’s Historical Resources Board (HRB) recently, believing the property owner may have had too much of the home demolished. The HRB granted a local historic designation for the property in 2002, per Robertson’s request. “At first I assured neighbors that everything was going to be OK, because the house was designated, and of course the HRB staff would be looking at it and critiquing the plans,” Marrone said. “Then when I saw the façade being held up, basically by a couple of boards and beams, I thought, what’s going on here?” Philip Barber, who developed La Jolla’s coastal Barber Tract neighborhood, built the Spanish eclectic-style home and guest quarters/gatehouse in 1922 (it was designed with Barber’s guidance by architect J.H. Nicholson). It went through several changes of ownership before Robertson purchased it in 1963, residing there on a part-time basis until he sold it in 2005.

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An aerial view of the Dunemere Drive home Philip Barber built in 1922, as it appeared then, when it was referred to as ‘The Dunes.’ Actor Cliff Robertson bought the home in 1963, added an addition by master architect Thomas Shepherd, and rechristening it ‘Casa de la Paz.’ Courtesy La Jolla Historical Society house, so those are being removed,” Crisafi board members were at that time probably said. “We’re un-decorating it, if you will, and didn’t (handle the designation) right.” bringing it back to the original condition.” The HRB staff recommendation said that, Vonn Marie May, a former HRB member following Robertson’s restoration, the who Robertson hired to write and submit buildings were in “excellent condition and the nomination papers for the designation, retain their historic fabric and integrity of said those elements added by Robertson and design.” However, Crisafi said when he master architect Thomas Shepherd in the started work on it this year, much of the early 1970s were included in her home was deteriorating and not salvageable, nomination paperwork as part of the particularly Robertson’s additions, such as property’s historicity, and should have been the master bedroom and ornamental tile preserved (including a master bedroom from Mexico. designed by Shepherd, which was removed A majority of the time and cost of the as part of the ongoing renovation). renovation has gone into stabilizing the May contends that Robertson’s front walls, Crisafi said. “It’s an legacy was crucial to the history old structure,” he added. “It of the home. In a 2002 Final needed to come up to current Resolution deeming the project structural codes.” historic, the HRB refers to the Crisafi said some trees on the property by both the titles given property (planted by either it by Barber and Robertson, while Robertson or by Harriet Howe in a staff recommendation to when she owned it from 1937 designate the home historic, the to 1946 and designated as part HRB refers to the Robertson’s of the historical resource) have modifications as “sensitive to the been preserved, including a original character.” giant ficus and several Norfolk “Cliff actually saved it,” May Island pines. Cliff Robertson in 1965 said, noting that before The guesthouse, relocated Robertson purchased and renovated the years ago from its original location on the home, the Realtor was marketing it as a property, has already been restored to its “tear-down,” on which a buyer could original condition, he said. rebuild a more modern home. In response to preservationists’ concerns “He grew up in La Jolla; he used to play in about the ongoing work, Crisafi was that house with the (Barber) kids,” May added. scheduled to meet this week with members “He knew that house and when he finally of the La Jolla Historical Society (LJHS). got money, he went back and bought it.” “When I called to set this up, it was pretty Robertson occupied the home longer than clear to me that Tony (Crisafi) and the Barber, noted May, who interviewed Philip owners are being as sensitive to the Barber’s now deceased daughter Barbara historicity of the building as they can,” said Barber Stockton (1914-2009) as part of the LJHS Executive Director Heath Fox. nomination process. “I feel very confident of that, and I think “Barber had to sell it during the that we will know a lot more, in a lot more Depression (after) the stock market crash detail, after Tony briefs our committee and and they moved the whole family into the everyone has a chance to ask questions and WindanSea Hotel,” she said. to interact with him on what they’re doing, “I think whoever the (HRB) staff and and why they’re doing it the way they are.”

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Page A12 - september 19, 2013 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

From Gas Station, A1

process, and raise their own questions.

groundwater in soil and rocks of the Earth’s crust), offered a presentation on the proposed cleanup, fielding questions from DPR trustees and attendees. Some petroleum hydrocarbons (like those found in oil-based products) are naturally occurring in the Earth’s subsurface, he said. Whether natural or having seeped into the ground from gas tanks or the existing service station, Houser said they will be monitored during excavation for the underground garage. “This is not rocket science,” he said. “We can keep very good control of what’s going on.” Though Houser said it is “highly likely” work crews will encounter contaminants during the process, he said the majority of them would probably be hydrocarbons with low volatility and migration levels. “Oil is far less of a potential health risk then diesel, which is far less than gasoline,” he said, adding that bacteria in the soil naturally eat away some hydrocarbons. “A community health and safety plan is part of the property mitigation,” Houser said, assuring that his crew would have an on-site lab to monitor any hydrocarbon vapors or dust that might be pushed into the air during excavation. A notice about the work will be delivered to residents in the immediate vicinity, and crews will also test for the presence of lead. “We’ll analyze until we’re not detecting it,” he said. “My cell phone number is going to be on that notice, so if a neighbor in the area is concerned about something they see

Removal of third story Perhaps most concerning to neighbors at the previous DPR meeting was a third-story proposed for the real residential building along Eads Avenue. Faulkner said he has since removed the third story from his plans, moving those two condominium units to some “leftover space” (above) the commercial units of the two-story building along Pearl Street. Though residents expressed concerns about the garage driveway being located off Eads Avenue, LaCava said after further consideration, it was determined that to avoid traffic congestion, Eads was still the best location. “The city has kind of agreed in that direction,” LaCava said. “We think it’s better for the neighborhood … and it’s going to be safer for everybody all around. “The rest of the project would remain about the same,” he added. Additional concerns broached during the meeting included: the perceived reduction of common space required by the community plan; the steepness and safety of the portion of the driveway nearest the sidewalk; and the redistribution of density from the front of the property to the rear (the latter of which is zoned for a lowerdensity residential use). The applicant will return to a future DPR meeting with revised plans for the trustees’ final vote on the project.

Artist rendering of a two-building mixed-use project proposed for the (former gas station) corner of Eads Avenue and Pearl Street. Plans include mix of condominiums, retail space and a restaurant. Courtesy or smell, I get a phone call and I will deal with that.” Any contamination in the subsurface will be cleaned up and removed to the lowest point of the garage, he said. If it is believed contamination exists below that level, it will be noted in county reports that will be available online. The consultant must demonstrate to the county that any remaining hydrocarbons will not present a risk to adjacent homes. “We give them recommendations, and they evaluate those recommendations,”

Houser said. “The county wants a less than one-in-a million-chance that someone’s going to get sick.” Houser said the water table is about 30feet below the surface, and that the excavation would not get “anywhere near close to that.” He said the soil would be taken to a disposal facility in Otay Mesa, or it could be heat-processed elsewhere and used as ground cover at a landfill. DPR chair Paul Benton said city and county geologists will review the cleanup

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Supporting Sunny … and others

La Jollan is founding member of an Alzheimer’s care group What is Alzheimer’s Disease? ■ Alzheimer’s is the most common form of dementia, a general term for the loss of memory and other intellectual abilities serious enough to interfere with daily life. Alzheimer’s accounts for 50 to 80 percent of dementia cases. ■ Alzheimer’s has no current cure, but treatments for symptoms are available and research continues. ■ The most common early symptom of Alzheimer’s is difficulty remembering newly learned information because Alzheimer’s changes typically begin in the part of the brain that affects learning.

L

Sunny (left) with Maruca Leach on an outing at La Jolla Cove. Ashley Mackin

for her, but now she is more decisive about what she wants to eat,” Leach said. “I don’t know what’s happened, but it’s pretty amazing.” These days, Sunny better remembers the news and stories people tell her, and can even acknowledge her Alzheimer’s condition. Leach said Sunny tells people, “because of my Alzheimer’s, I have a hard time remembering things.” Alzheimer’s Association San Diego Chapter CEO Mary Ball met with Sunny’s friends to

guide them in their activities with her. “I think what they’re doing is fantastic; this incredible group of women are making such a difference in Sunny’s life as she goes through the journey with Alzheimer’s disease. Their friendship shows that caregivers do not necessarily have to be family members, they can be friends, people from your church or neighbors,” she said. “It’s important for the person (with Alzheimer’s) to continue to be engaged,

s

Source: alz.org

By Ashley Mackin a Jolla resident Maruca Leach is one of six women helping their friend, Sunny, who has been living the last few years with Alzheimer’s disease. Having formed the “Sunny Support Group,” the women agreed that they’ve seen improvements in their pal and hope others will follow their lead and reach out to those who are experiencing dementia. “I’ve been close to Sunny for 15 years, and when she got diagnosed, I felt like I was losing my best friend,” Leach said. Two years ago, Leach and her friends started to notice that Sunny was having a hard time making decisions and wasn’t thinking straight. After her Alzheimer’s diagnosis, Sunny’s friends and family decided to create a specialized care program for her. The friends take Sunny, a Point Loma resident, out one day a week for activities that promote brain activity. They accompany her to restaurants and parks, salon pedicures, and to watch old movies and listen to music, and insist they’ve seen an improvement in her condition. Acknowledging that this upswing could be part of a cycle, and that Sunny might lose lucidity in the future, Leach said Sunny’s current state is nonetheless “amazing.” “We’d take her to restaurants and choose

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LA JOLLA LIGHT - september 19, 2013 - Page A15

to know that there are people who care about them, people who are patient with them as the disease progresses. That kind of environment is going to help them have a higher quality of life.” Insisting a friendship with an Alzheimer patient is both beneficial and attainable, Leach said that the key comes from trial-and-error. She said after doing some research, each friend tried something with Sunny that she thought Sunny would like. One mistake occurred when a friend took Sunny to the movies. The film’s plot and theater’s darkness confused Sunny to the point of discomfort. “Look at those activities and think about how they can be simplified, how they can be shortened, and how that person can still do the kinds of things they would do in the past,” Ball advised. Leach said each woman in the group is different and that provides the necessary variety to keep Sunny engaged. “Some of us are very finicky, we cross all the t’s and dot all the i’s, and some of us are free flowing,” she said. “We provide her with a variety of situations and experiences.” After they spend time with Sunny, each member of the group contacts the others by e-mail to explain how the visit went. This also contributes to their success, Leach said. An added, but unexpected benefit, is the joy Sunny’s supporters said they get out of their time with her. Instead of feeling helpless, they feel proactive. “It reduces our sorrow, disempowerment and anguish,” Leach said. “We don’t feel our sorrow as deeply.” Ball added that the Alzheimer’s Association has resources and information for those who want to help a friend or family member with the disease, including a “Memory Café” at the 6632 Convoy Court facility. For literature, home activities and related services, there is a 24/7 Alzheimer’s Association hotline: 1-800-272-3900.

Alzheimer’s play to raise funds for research

A

star cast will take the stage at Shiley Theatre on the campus of the University of San Diego, 6:45 p.m. Friday, Sept. 27 for an ensemble reading of Act 1 of “Surviving Grace,” an original play by comedy writer Trish Vradenburg (“Designing Women,” “Family Ties,” “Kate and Allie”), and co-founder of USAgainstAlzheimer’s, a national advocacy organization committed to stopping Alzheimer’s by 2020. Based on Vradenburg’s experience as a caregiver to her mother who died of Alzheimer’s in 1992, “Surviving Grace” sheds light on the emotional ups and downs that 15.4 million Alzheimer’s caregivers in the United States go through each day. The cast includes local philanthropist Darlene Shiley, Helen Reddy, Diane Rehm, Marilu Henner, Susan Taylor, Robert Foxworth and Jim Laslavic. Proceeds from tickets sales will benefit Shiley-Marcos Alzheimer’s Disease Research

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Page A16 - september 19, 2013 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

Business

www.lajollalight.com

Spotlight on Local

Evans Hotels excels at beach and bay luxury By Marti Gacioch Perhaps nothing says San Diego more than its breathtaking bay and beaches. Evans Hotels, a leader in the southern California hotel industry since 1953, offers three resorts that easily match their beautiful venues: The Bahia Resort Hotel, The Catamaran Resort Hotel and Spa, and The Lodge at Torrey Pines. The Catamaran Resort Hotel and Spa and the Bahia Resort Hotel sit on Mission Bay offering a range of water sports, including sailing and paddle boarding. The Catamaran Resort Hotel and Spa, amid tropical gardens, is steps from the bay. The Bahia Resort Hotel sits on a 14-acre peninsula with a beach. The Bahia Belle sternwheeler cruises guests between both resorts. The Lodge at Torrey Pines overlooks the Pacific. It is adjacent to the Torrey Pines State Park Reserve where lodge guests can walk down to the beach, hike the scenic reserve or play golf. “Their locations makes these hotels standouts for visitors to San Diego, “ said Rachel Korfman, Evans Hotels advertising manager. Luxurious rooms come with multiple amenities at all three resorts. The Bahia Resort Hotel, which provides

Aerial view of Evans Hotels’ The Lodge at Torrey Pines in La Jolla. bay views from 314 rooms, will soon feature newly renovated rooms. The Catamaran Resort Hotel and Spa offers 312 spacious guests rooms with either a private balcony or patio, wireless Internet, flat screen HDTVs and personal safes. The Five-Diamond The Lodge at Torrey Pines, known for its classic California Craftsman architecture, offers 170 guest rooms, including eight spacious suites with views of the Torrey Pines Golf Course or The Lodge’s garden courtyard. High-end spas offer relaxation at both The

Courtesy

Lodge at Torrey Pines and the Catamaran Resort Hotel and Spa. The full-service Torrey Pines Spa features 14 private treatment rooms, multiple restorative treatments, facials, body wraps, Vichy shower and hydrotherapy, saunas, steam rooms, a grand pool and whirlpool. The Catamaran Spa has 10 treatment rooms, a couple’s room, steam and sauna rooms, an outdoor whirlpool, fresh-air yoga and Pilates classes, a full-service salon and more. Their health club offers the latest in cardio and strength training equipment.

View monthly spa specials on the web. Count on exceptional cuisine at all three resorts. Guests at The Lodge at Torrey Pines can dine at award-winning A.R. Valentien Restaurant where Executive Chef Jeff Jackson works culinary magic, or choose The Grill for casual meals. The Bahia Resort Hotel offers Café Bahia for breakfast, lunch and dinner choices and the Tangier Bar for a daily 3-6 p.m. happy hour. The Catamaran Resort Hotel and Spa’s Atoll Restaurant offers a breakfast, lunch and dinner menu of fresh California Coastal Cuisine and guests can relax Moray’s Lounge. For more information, visit EvansHotels. com or call (858) 777-6711. n Catamaran Resort Hotel and Spa, 3999 Mission Blvd., San Diego, catamaranresort.com n Bahia Resort, 998 West Mission Bay Drive, San Diego, bahiahotel.com n The Lodge at Torrey Pines, 11480 North Torrey Pines Road, La Jolla, lodgetorreypines.com The Business Spotlight features commercial enterprises that support the La Jolla Light.

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LA JOLLA LIGHT - september 19, 2013 - Page A17

TRACK Trails for Kids comes to three county parks

La Jolla’s Gems of the week

true or false? Fall 2013 begins on Sunday, Sept. 22. True. It’s one of the two days of year when the north and south halves of the world face the Sun in equal amounts! Surprisingly, etymologists don’t really know where the word “autumn” comes from. It was used as far back as the 1300s (by Chaucer), and Shakespeare often used the word. As English spread to the New World, the common season names split as well. The use of the word “fall” fell out of favor in England. Today, American English uses the word “fall” while British English uses “autumn” almost exclusively. — hotword.dictionary.com

From County News Center Reports

In a first for the state of California, San Diego County Parks and Recreation celebrated the opening of the TRACK Trails network at three San Diego parks on Sept. 7. Children can earn prizes by visiting the TRACK Trails website and tracking their adventures on their online nature journal through a smartphone. Part of the national “Kids in Parks” campaign, TRACK Trails features kiosks on the trail with brochures on turning an ordinary hike into an adventure. “It’s tough these days to get kids to step away from their electronics,” County Parks and Recreation Director Brian Albright said. “If you can use an electronic device like a smartphone to draw them outdoors, they’ll see for themselves everything County Parks has to offer.” The system can be found at the San Elijo Lagoon Ecological Reserve, and Lindo Lake and Louis Stelzer County Parks in Lakeside.

WISH I’D SAID THAT!

Free Korean Film Festival

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n celebration of Korean Thanksgiving Day (Sept. 19), the San Diego Cinema Heritage Foundation will host a two-day Korean film festival in La Jolla theaters. Thursday, Sept. 19: 7 p.m. Opening ceremony followed by “Pluto” screening at ArcLight Cinemas, 4425 La Jolla Village Drive. Sunday, Sept. 22: Korean Film Marathon at AMC La Jolla, 8657 Villa La Jolla Drive; “The Thieves” at noon; “Paparoti” at 2:35 p.m.; “The Berlin File” at 5:02 p.m.; “Fists of Legend” at 7:22 p.m. Reserve free tickets at sdcinemaheritage.org

“Don’t you love New York in the fall? It makes me want to buy school supplies. I would send you a bouquet of newly sharpened pencils if I knew your name and address.” — The late Nora Ephron

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OPINION

Page A18 - september 19, 2013 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

La Jolla

Light

565 Pearl St., Suite 300 La Jolla, CA 92037 (858) 459-4201

Views

www.lajollalight.com

What do you think about a possible ban on plastic bags in San Diego?

We asked this question in the Village on Sept. 16. Compiled by Ashley Mackin

www.lajollalight.com La Jolla Light (USPS 1980) is published every Thursday by MainStreet Media San Diego. Adjudicated as a newspaper of general circulation by Superior Court No. 89376, April 1, 1935. Copyright 2013 MainStreet Media San Diego. All rights reserved. No part of the contents of this publication may be reproduced in any medium, including print and electronic media, without the expressed written consent of MainStreet Media San Diego.

Publisher •P hyllis Pfeiffer ppfeiffer@lajollalight.com (858) 875-5940 Executive Editor •S usan DeMaggio susandemaggio@lajollalight.com (858) 875-5950 Staff Reporters • Pat Sherman pats@lajollalight.com (858) 875-5953

I don’t think they should ban them. Plastic bags have multiple uses and a lot of people take the position that they get thrown into the ocean, but I don’t agree with that. If you take care of the plastic bags properly, you can re-use them for many things. Bob Farber

Absolutely, yes! Ban them. I usually have my reusables with me (when I go shopping). I’m tired of seeing plastic all around. I think it’s a great idea. Tamra Earlywine

Residents ban together to effect changes in town

Page Designer / Photographer • Daniel K. Lew daniel@lajollalight.com (858) 875-5948

Chief Revenue Officer • Don Parks (858) 875-5954 Media Consultants • Jeff Rankin (858) 875-5956 • Jeanie Croll (858) 875-5955 • Sarah Minihane (Real Estate) (858) 875-5945 • Kathy Vaca (858) 875-5946 Website/Internet Manager • Graig Harris graigh@lajollalight.com Business Manager • Dara Elstein Administrative Assistant • Ashley O’Donnell Graphics • John Feagans, Production Manager • Rick Pearce, Graphics Manager • Katie Zimmer, Graphic Designer Obituaries • ( 858) 218-7237 or inmemory@ myclassifiedmarketplace.com Classified Ads • ( 858) 218-7200 ads@MainStreetSD.com

Anything we can do to ban to plastic bags would be a good thing (because) they end up in our oceans. If I ever have a plastic bag, I try to re-use it as a garbage can liner, but at the end of the day, they all get thrown away. Margot Washburne

OUR READERS WRITE

• Ashley Mackin ashleym@lajollalight.com (858) 875-5957

Contributors • Will Bowen, Kelley Carlson, Lynne Friedmann, Lonnie Burstein Hewitt, Linda Hutchison, Inga, Catharine Kaufman, Catherine Ivey Lee, Diana Saenger

It’s a good policy. I know in some cities they already did that. I’m originally from Las Vegas and I think it’s going to happen there, too. It’s positive for the environment. Dmitry Dykhyn

Bottom row: Steve Skinner, Paul Scurio, Mark Jaffe, Johnny Foster, Rayph Cosford, Nick Cosford and Jacques Naviaux. Top row: Luke Skinner, Dominic Scurio, Blake Furby, Thomas Evans and Christophe Naviaux. Courtesy

Boy Scout Troop 506 conquers Mt. Whitney Boy Scout Troop 506 recently completed its High Sierra Trek, backpacking 80 miles from Crescent Meadows in Sequoia National Park to Mt. Whitney Peak (elevation 14,508 feet). The troop’s hikers took eight days to complete the hike and ascended over three miles in elevation to reach the peak. The troop hikers also conquered Eagle Scout Peak (elevation 12,037 feet). They trained in June at San Gorgonio Mountain where they backpacked the famous 9 Peaks Trail, summiting at the highest peak in Southern California, San Gorgonio Peak (elevation 11,503 feet) and hiking more than 38 miles. Troop 506 is sponsored by La Jolla Methodist Church in Bird Rock and is celebrating its 50th year in the Scouting program. Those interested in joining the troop for high adventure and exciting events, can contact Scoutmaster Jacques Naviaux at jacquesnaviaux@yahoo.com Blake Furby Troop 506 Scribe

For months neighbors along Torrey Pines Road (from La Jolla Village to La Jolla Parkway and La Jolla Scenic Drive) have been subjected to noise and horrendous speeds of up to six motorcycles racing every Thursday at 10 p.m., for 5 or 10 minutes. Finally, working with officer Tom Underwood of San Diego Police Department’s Northern Division, we got police to set up a speed trap on a recent Thursday night and, according to Underwood, it was successful and citations were issued. We are hopeful that this will put an end to this annoyance and also prevent someone from getting killed in our area. The message here is that, as a community, we can work together and make a difference. With this in mind, we also hope to be able to help put an end to littering in La Jolla, slowing down the traffic in La Jolla that ignores speedlimit signs, improve the crosswalks (like in Del Mar), and establish an emergency plan for La Jolla. No small task, but by bringing those of us together who share the same concerns, nothing is impossible. Willis M. (Bill) Allen La Jolla

Kudos to country club’s quick response to danger I wanted to thank and commend Dennis Fowler, the landscaping supervisor of La Jolla Country Club. A few days ago, I brought to his attention that there is a dangerous bend on Country Club Drive and the pavement on that corner was covered with overgrown shrubs and dirt from the Country Club golf course. Mr. Fowler immediately arranged for the cleaning up of that corner and the trees and

I think it’s fair because of the biodegradable aspect, I don’t know how long it takes to break a plastic bag down, but it’s a perversion to the environment, without a doubt. And it’s unnecessary, at one point it was convenient, but not anymore. Rob Mackey

shrubs were cut back so people walking up or down that corner could step on the sidewalk when cars are passing by. Shahram Sharafi La Jolla

Some La Jolla pedestrians need a dose of consideration I am often a pedestrian and driver in our beautiful Village of La Jolla. My pet peeve is the general rudeness and sense of entitlement that some pedestrians have while sharing the streets in our Village — some, not all! I believe we all understand that common sense and the law dictates that drivers always yield to pedestrians in situations that concern safety, but as a pedestrian, I feel we are sharing the streets of our town with drivers. When I’m a pedestrian and a car approaches a stop sign before I do, I generally yield to that car because it is their turn. I cannot tell you how many times I see uncaring pedestrians blindly and boldly bolt into crosswalks without stopping or even looking up. They seem to have a powerful sense of lawful entitlement with no fair, polite regard whatsoever for a previously waiting vehicle’s “turn.” Worse still is the common pedestrian nonstop 90-degree crosswalk-to-crosswalk march, never even looking up, acknowledging or perhaps thanking waiting vehicles with a wave. Once again, I absolutely understand that as drivers, we need to yield to pedestrians when their safety is at stake. I just feel we should all be polite and take turns. Greg Carron La Jolla

What’s on YOUR mind?

n Letters to the Editor for publication should be 250 words or less, and sent by e-mail to sdemaggio@lajollalight.com Please include the full name of the sender, city of residence and phone number for verification.


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LA JOLLA LIGHT - september 19, 2013 - Page A19

Merchants Association to hold board elections at Oct. 9 meeting La Jolla Village Merchants Association

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he La Jolla Village Merchants Association will hold its annual election for two-year term board members during its next meeting, 8:30-10 a.m. Wednesday, Oct. 9 at the Cuvier Club, 7776 Eads Ave. One manager or owner of each business in the La Jolla Business Improvement District may cast a vote. Their establishment must possess an active business tax license in the City of San Diego. Those wishing to vote must do so in person during the meeting. Here is a list of the candidates and portions of their statements.

For more information, e-mail info@LaJollabytheSea.com, visit LaJollabytheSea.com or call (858) 454-5718. n Corey Bailey, business owner Goldfish Point Café 1255 Coast Blvd. “I run a small family-owned business in La Jolla that has been here for over 20 years. I see what La Jolla used to be like, and, as part of a younger generation, I think it is important to get involved in my community. We need fresh ideas and forward thinking, and I want to help bring that to the Village.” n Claude-Anthony Marengo, principal-owner Marengo Morton Architects, Inc. 7724 Girard Ave. “As a lifetime member of La Jolla, I have grown up here with my family and our businesses. I feel it is very important to step up

Volunteers sought for Shores cleanup Saturday I Love A Clean San Diego’s 29th annual Coastal Cleanup Day will be held from 9 a.m. to noon, Saturday, Sept. 21 across San Diego, with La Jolla Shores as a site in need of volunteers. For more information and sign-up opportunities, visit CleanUpDay.org

and become a part of the solution to turn around La Jolla. I am committed to helping rebuild our Village and make it a better place to live, and the businesses a better place to shop.” n Carol Mills, RN, MA, CHTP; owner, 904 Kline St. “I have lived and worked in the Village for over two decades and have great respect and appreciation for the absolute beauty and history that is ours for the keeping. I am deeply concerned about the way I experience the Village shifting into a place that lacks civility, and where the treasures that we have so generously been given are becoming invisible. I want to do whatever I can to preserve and protect the Village of La Jolla.” n Kevin Smith, owner KevCo Enterprises

Sept. 8 n Fraud, 500 block Bonair Street, 2:30 p.m.

Sept. 9

Sept. 11 n Vehicle break-in/theft, 8300 block Camino del Oro, 12:30 p.m.

As I understand them, the same San Diego Police Department rules concerning stop signs and stop lights apply to bicycle riders, as well as automobile drivers. At street corners, I am most careful to watch and give the benefit of the doubt to bicyclists, yet it is still a danger to both when most of the cyclists ride through the stop signs, or at times, even the red lights! Please, bike riders, be more observant of the laws and stay safe, as I wish you all to be. P.S. When the police begin ticketing these offenses, there will be enough money to fix our crumbling streets and sidewalks! Cindy Peterson La Jolla

Hope Brick & Bell Cafe comes to Tucson I live in Tucson, Ariz. I was in La Jolla in June and met Peter Watry. I think he owns Brick & Bell Café on Silverado Street. He said they were going to open a new Brick & Bell here. I can’t find the location he mentioned and am wondering if, in fact, the café will be

opening here after all? It would be great if they do and working at the local hospital, I can spread the news to a lot of people. By the way, I love your town and plan to vacation there regularly! Lee Walsh Tucson, Ariz. Editor’s Note: A call to Brick & Bell Cafe revealed that Watry plans two new Brick & Bell’s — one in Tucson at 811 Wetmore (opening in 20 days) and one in La Jolla Shores at 2216 Avenida de la Playa, opening in March 2014.

Church to host pancake breakfast on Sunday As a preliminary event to the Nov. 9, Mary, Star of the Sea community festival, “So Fine on Kline,” the new Knights of Columbus Mary, Star of the Sea Council is sponsoring its “First Annual Pre-Festival Community Pancake and Sausage Breakfast,” 8 a.m. to noon, Sunday, Sept. 22 at the church, 7669 Girard Ave. We expect to have a good crowd in attendance, La Jollans and visitors. It’s $5 per person at the door. Rick Wildman La Jolla

n Nancy Warwick, owner/manager Warwick’s bookstore 7812 Girard Ave. “The Village of La Jolla is an incredible location for a business. It offers fabulous dining, superb shopping, varied cultural experiences and an incomparable setting. It is also a community challenged by emerging competition in areas such as UTC, North County, the Gaslamp District and elsewhere, as well as by aging infrastructure. As the owner of Warwick’s, I would like to serve on the board another term so I can continue to contribute to our board’s efforts to enhance the community, as well as attract more business.”

n Vandalism ($400 or more), 5500 block Linda Rosa Avenue, 11 p.m.

Sept. 13 n Vehicle break-in/theft, 1500 block Virginia Way, 4:30 a.m. n Vehicle break-in/theft, 2200 block Vallecitos, 3:30 p.m.

Sept. 15

Sept. 12 n Residential burglary, 2800 block Sugarman Court, 9:30 p.m.

OUR READERS WRITE

Bicyclists need to heed same laws as motorists

community chambers and business-centered organizations, I feel that I would be a good candidate to take part in the LJVMA.”

nV ehicle break-in/theft, 7000 block Charmant Drive, 9 p.m.

n Residential burglary, 1200 block Agate Street, 3 a.m. n Vehicle break-in/theft, 7800 block Herschel Avenue, 7 p.m.

n Justin Stewart, business delegate Opus Bank 7979 Ivanhoe Ave, Suite 150 “I hope to assist the business district of La Jolla by maintaining a world-class ambiance that attracts businesses, tourists and citizens to this great area. With my past involvement in various

CRIME REPORT

n Motor vehicle theft, 400 block Gravilla Street, 5:30 a.m.

Sept. 10

7660 Fay Ave., Suite H “I am a Southern California native and graduate of SDSU, and have lived in the area for 21 years. I am a true entrepreneur serving on the board of the LJVMA, a Realtor with Coastal Pacific Real Estate on Prospect, an active La Jolla Town Council member, the owner and trainer of KevCo Mobile Personal Training and have 20 years of restaurant and hotel experience. I am the former owner of Extreme Pizza, a member of the San Diego Chamber of Commerce and Business Alliance Groups. ”

n Carrying concealed dirk/dagger, 5300 block La Jolla Boulevard, 4:08 p.m.

TARNISHING OUR JEWEL This barber’s pole is worn out, but the owner says he will ‘fix it ... soon.’ Light Photo

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reader wrote to say, “A charming old-fashioned barbershop is so much fun to have in our town, but the striped barber pole out front has been broken for years. I know of a website where you can get a sleeve to slip in there to replace the striped cylinder for only $40. Please encourage the owner to fix it!” When contacted about his broken barber pole, Village Barber Shop owner Dean Blundell (who has been cutting hair in the La Jolla community for more 40 years) said, “Tell your readers I’m going to fix it … soon. It’s 10-12 feet off the ground and I just haven’t felt like getting up there to replace it. But I will.” The barbershop is at 7517 Fay Ave. The Light thanks Dean, for having a sense of humor about this! His shop is open from 6 a.m. Monday-Friday. (858) 454-2456. n Fellow La Jollans: Please send La Jolla Light your leads of Village eyesores and we will go after the perpetrators. E-mail the scenarios and attach a photo, or call us and we’ll investigate who or what is Tarnishing Our Jewel! Reach Editor Susan DeMaggio at (858) 8755950 or e-mail susandemaggio@ lajollalight.com


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Page A20 - september 19, 2013 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

Research Report LynnE Friedmann

Mechanism for cholera’s deadly effects revealed

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C San Diego biologists have identified an underlying biochemical mechanism that helps make the cholera toxin so deadly, often resulting in life-threatening diarrhea that causes people to lose as much as half of their body fluids in a single day. Two groups of scientists, working on fruit flies, mice and cultured human intestinal cells, discovered the cholera toxin exerts some of its devastating effects by reducing the delivery of proteins to molecular junctions that normally act like Velcro to hold intestinal cells together like a tight sheet in the outer lining of the gut. A consequence of these weakened cell junctions is that sodium ions and water can escape between cells and empty into the gut. The scientists also showed that many of the effects of the cholera toxin on the gut could be reversed by genetic manipulations

that bolster the delivery of proteins to these junctions. This could guide the development of new therapies against the deadly disease, which threatens millions of people world wide who live in areas with poor sanitation, with water supplies frequently contaminated by the cholera bacterium. — Findings are published in the journal Cell Host & Microbe. News release at http:// bit.ly/16nLOon

Touch goes digital Researchers at the UCSD’s Jacobs School of Engineering and Qualcomm Institute have developed technology that could pave the way for digital systems to record, store, edit and replay information related to touch. Except for touch-screen displays, touch was bypassed by the digital revolution

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because it seemed too difficult to replicate what human touch can produce. One of the critical challenges in developing touch systems is that the sensation is not one thing. It can involve the feeling of physical contact, force or pressure, hot and cold, texture and deformation, moisture or dryness, and pain or itching. Researchers reported the electronic recording of touch contact and pressure using a pressure sensor array made of transparent zinc-oxide, thin-film transistors. A companion tactile feedback display achieved the desired force and level of displacement to replicate the recorded touch. In addition to enhancing communication, touch signals could have far-reaching implications for uses in health and medicine, education, social networking, e-commerce, robotics, gaming and military applications. — The new technology is detailed in Scientific Reports (Nature Publishing Group). News release at http://bit.ly/17BEDoB

Scripps study to track San Diego’s top trophy fish Researchers with Scripps Institution of Oceanography (SIO) at UCSD are starting a study on one of the most popular trophy fish off San Diego, the California yellowtail

— so-named for its distinctive yellow tail — with the goal of better fisheries management. Tagging and tracking of the species is aimed at learning how far these animals travel along the coast, whether there is a resident year-round population in San Diego waters, the amount of mixing between different populations, and do these fish successfully spawn locally. There has been little basic research on the species’ life history characteristics off California since 1960, when the last comprehensive peer-reviewed study was published. This is a collaborative project between scientists and the local sport-fishing industry. In addition to researchers going out with anglers on charter boats to tag fish, month-long tag-and-release tournaments — one this winter and one in the summer of 2014 — will be held to engage the community in research and to encourage fisherman to report recaptured tags on caught fish. California Sea Grant at SIO is administering this research project on behalf of Collaborative Fisheries Research West, which provided the grant funding. — More at http://bit.ly/15DVB5d Lynne Friedmann is a science writer based in Solana Beach.

Don’t miss any La Jolla news! Subscribe to the Light’s free alerts

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or a free copy of La Jolla Light’s weekly e-mail newsblast and/ or breaking news alerts, visit lajollalight.com/newsletter and give us your e-mail address. It’s simple. Log on to the website lajollalight.com/newsletter Or just click on any story and hit this “envelope” subscribe icon at the top right of each article.

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SPORTS

LA JOLLA LIGHT - september 19, 2013 - Page A21

La Jolla sneaks past Valley Center 23-20 in home opener

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a Jolla High School’s Vikings football edged the visiting Valley Center Jaguars, 23-20, in the Sept. 13 non-league battle and home opener. The Vikings’ varsity football team now possess a 1-2 record. They play next when they host Santa Fe Christian of Solana Beach for a non-league battle 7 p.m., Friday, Sept. 20. La Jolla will play an Eagles squad coming off a 35-0 non-league loss to Carlsbad. The Santa Fe Christian Eagles record now stands at 1-2. — Max Preps Photos by Pearl Preiss

The Vikings team squeak by Valley Center 23-20 in the season’s first home game.

A cheerleader has an encounter with the Viking mascot.

Friends and family come out to show their support.

Cheerleaders keep spirits up.

Nearly a thousand fans attend the annual Blast Off event to kick off football season.

La Jolla coaches and players watch the action from the sidelines.


SPORTS

Page A22 - september 19, 2013 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

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Fall is on!

La Jolla High fall sports underway Compiled by Ashley Mackin all sports at La Jolla High are officially underway, as every team has had its season opener. Here’s a wrap-up of how the year is starting for some Vikings.

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Girls Varsity Tennis In a match against Francis Parker School on Sept. 12, La Jolla High took home the victory 10-8. Coach Lisa Shih said this would be the first in a “tough schedule” against teams such as Torrey Pines High and La Jolla Country Day. She reports that senior Emily Kuo is leading the team and is No. 1 in singles. Other players to watch include Kylee Hum, Chloe Kuo, Taylor Mohrhardt and a transfer from a school in Missouri named Colleen Mellinger. “All of the girls are determined and are working hard on and off the court,” Shih said. Thursday, Sept. 19, Vikings tennis opens up Western League play with an away match at Cathedral. La Jolla Girls Cross Country Coach Roger Karnopp reports there were some outstanding runners in the Mustang

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Boys Varsity Water Polo Novice, JV and varsity teams each played at their home pool on Sept. 16 against their respective teams from Fallbrook. And all three won. Varsity defended the home turf, winning 14-2; JV kept it going, winning 15-2; and novice had the most impressive victory at 17-3.

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Girls Golf LJHS’s girls golf team remains undefeated in their league. In La Jolla High vs San Diego, 219 vs. 242, Waverly Whiston and Gabi Anastasi, 41, medalists, Madeleine Garay, 42. In La Jolla High vs Coronado, 201 vs. 261, Madeleine Garay and Waverly Whiston, 38, low scorers for La Jolla.

La Jolla High School students named as USA Water Polo’s Academic All-Americans

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Invitational on Sept. 13. Varsity runner and LJHS junior Lauren Roberts led the race from the start to finish to help the team finish in second place. Her time was a minute faster than last year. In the Junior Varsity race, the biggest “star” of the day was freshman Star Austin, who led the JV team to first place. Karnopp said she won the race by at least 200 meters.

Duke Becker and Cole Carpenter Courtesy

SA Water Polo announced the statewide 20122013 Academic All-Americans on Sept. 5. La Jolla Water Polo Club’s Duke Becker, Cole Carpenter, Isabella Cuellar, Tobin Groth, and Cassidy and Mackenzie Wiley were named as outstanding achievers. Becker, Carpenter and Groth were all members of the La Jolla High School Varsity Water Polo team. Kathryn Gauvin and Heidi Moreland, also of the La Jolla Water Polo Club, each qualified. Student-athletes needed a 3.6 GPA on a scale of 4.0 to qualify; those that received a 4.0 GPA were honored as outstanding achievers. This year, a record 932 studentathletes were named to the list.

Muirlands Surf Team will hold orientation meeting for newcomers

T

he Muirlands Surf Team has been surfing the waters around La Jolla for years. The club is associated with the neighborhood schools and has girl and boy surfers in grades 6-8. A parents meeting for those interested in the program will be held 6 p.m. Friday, Sept. 27 at a location TBD. The program takes all levels of surfers — from those just wanting to test the waters to full-on Kelly Slater protégés. The team competes in regional contests, goes on camping trips, supports surfing in the area and has weekly practices with experienced coaching. Annual dues are $179 (includes

$40 for mandatory insurance). For complete details about the program, visit msurf.org — James Wilson


www.lajollalight.com

LA JOLLA LIGHT - september 19, 2013 - Page A23

Coming Soon, September 23rd!

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Page A24 - september 19, 2013 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

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LifeStyles

ST. FRANCIS IS FOCUS OF ONE-MAN SHOW

MODERN LIVING B8

Thursday, September 19, 2013

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ATHENAEUM REVELERS TOAST NEW ORLEANS

SOCIAL LIFE B14

section b

Duo joins forces to combat ovarian cancer

A Researcher and pathologist Kelly Bethel, M.D. is conducting a study at Scripps Clinic to help doctors better understand the genetic evolution of ovarian cancer, in an attempt to identify relapse earlier and possibly contribute to earlier detection.

By Linda Hutchison lthough September is National Ovarian Cancer Awareness Month, two San Diego women are working hard to raise awareness of the disease every month of the year. They approach it from different directions and experiences. One, Joan Wyllie, is a five-year ovarian cancer survivor and the other, Kelly Bethel, M.D., is a researcher and pathologist at Scripps Clinic. Wyllie’s organization, Nine Girls Ask for a Cure for Ovarian Cancer, is helping fund a new study of ovarian cancer spearheaded by Dr. Bethel. Their common goal is to learn how ovarian cancer evolves, which could lead to earlier detection and treatment. They have already enrolled 20 women in the study who have or have had ovarian cancer and are looking for 20 more. See Ovarian Cancer, B?

Joan Wyllie is the founder and CEO of Nine Girls Ask for a Cure for Ovarian Cancer. Courtesy Photos

Bradbury/Farrell chair benefit for foster children

A

nnette Bradbury is a pharmacist and community volunteer. She served on The Gillispie School’s board of trustees, 20062012, and led it during the learning institution’s recent $4.5 million Endowment for Excellence in Teaching. She serves on The Bishop’s School board of trustees and is vice president of Las Patronas. Between 1985 and 2000, she held various pharmaceutical positions at companies and hospitals in San Diego, the U.K., and the United Arab Emirates. She received her Bachelor of Pharmacy in 1984 from London University and her Professional Certificate in Clinical Trial Design & Management in 1999 from UCSD. A native of England, Annette has lived in La Jolla for 18 years with her husband, Dan, and two children.

10 QUESTIONS

Annette Bradbury What brought you to La Jolla? My husband’s work in the biotechnology industry brought us to San Diego from England in 1995. We lived in UTC for a year while we got to know San Diego, before settling in La Jolla. La Jolla has been a wonderful community in which to raise our kids, now 16 and 13, with great schools and great friends. What might you add, subtract or improve in the area? If I could snap my fingers and change one thing about La Jolla it would be to remove the traffic congestion. All the four-way stops and pedestrians slow traffic to a snail’s pace. I’m used to roundabouts in England and think they are safer (you only have

See Annette Bradbury, B18

Along with their husbands, Annette Bradbury (left) and Lisette Farrell are co-chairing Voices for Children’s ‘Starry Starry Night’ gala, Sept. 28. The event benefits the 5,600 foster children of San Diego County. Alan Decker Editor’s Note: The 11th annual Starry Starry Night will be held Sept. 28 at Rancho Valencia Resort in Rancho Santa Fe, with a cocktail hour, followed by a gourmet dinner served al fresco, a live auction, musical entertainment, and dancing under the canopy of stars. Stellar tickets ($500 per person) and VIP Lunar tickets ($1,000 per person) are available at (858) 598-2222 or speakupnow.org

L

isette Farrell holds a Master of International Management from Thunderbird School of Global Management in Arizona, an M.B.A. from INCAE in Costa Rica, and a B.A. in Marketing (Magna cum Laude) from Universidad Santa Maria La Antigua in her native Panama. Before getting busy with her family, she worked at Visa International as the manager for consumer credit products for the Latin America and Caribbean regions. She was in charge of launching Visa Platinum throughout the region and responsible for the management of Visa Gold. She has been volunteering since college, where she was the secretary of the student government board of directors. She is an active member of Las Patronas and serves on the boards of San Diego Symphony and Voices for Children. She is a member of the Contemporary Collectors at the MCASD, the Director’s Circle at the Museum of Photographic Arts (MOPA) and the Symphony Sweethearts. Along with her husband, Mick, she is involved with the Athenaeum and the La Jolla Playhouse. She chaired the New Children’s Museum 2011 gala and was an honorary chair for the 2011 San Diego Center for Children’s gala. She also cochaired the 2012 Wine, Women and Shoes benefit for Voices for Children, was part of the committee for the New Children’s Museum 2012 gala, and will chair the 2014 San Diego Zoo gala, RITZ.

Lisette Farrell What brought you to La Jolla? My husband’s work at ResMed brought us to this

See Lisette Farrell, B18


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Page B2 - september 19, 2013 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

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LA JOLLA LIGHT - september 19, 2013 - Page B3

Step AWAY from the bin

Y

La Jolla Cultural Partners

ou know you’re turning into a curmudgeon when you can’t decide whether to write about dog poop or leaf blowers. The anti-leaf blower lobby is already gaining traction in the Letters section of the Light. Personally, I’m fine with whatever construction noise, leaf blowing and tree trimmer chain-sawing goes on during the week, but on the weekends, I’d love to give all of those guys mandatory time off. Fire up that leaf blower on a Sunday morning while people are outside reading the paper and the Noise Police would come and stuff you into a metal trash can which the neighbors could pound on with aluminum rakes until you promised never to do it again. Ah, I feel better already. OK, now that we’ve covered that, let’s whine about dog poop. Now, we don’t technically own a dog, although we seem to be habitually harboring our grand dog, Winston the Wonder Dog. We genuinely love dogs, and in particular, the perpetually-recalcitrant Winston. But if you opened our trash can on any given day, you’d think we were running a kennel for digestively-distressed canines. This is because our city-mandated-and-

dispensed black trash receptacle lives at the far end of our driveway nestled next to our house, its unfortunate accessibility making it the neighborhood poop dump of choice. In the pre-city-dispensed receptacle days, our trash cans lived safely inside our back gate away from excretory-abandoning miscreants. But the required new bins are too big for that space. I do not exaggerate when I say that opening the lid of a trash bin with a week’s worth of neighborhood pooch poop is a veritable biohazard, a fetid feculence, a mephitic miasma, a noisome nose full. It could drop a goat from 10 yards. Our neighborhood is truly Dog Central. You can’t go five minutes without seeing someone walking a dog. I can understand that dog owners don’t want to walk for a half hour clutching a bag of steamy effluvium. But so plentiful is the canine population in our area that there are a number of strategically-located dog poop bag dispensing stations which include a convenient bin to deposit their odiferously-amplified contents. I often see two guys driving up in their city truck to empty these bins and replenish the bag supply. I’m not sure what they pay them. But given our own experience, I’m

guessing it’s not enough. bin and visible from the street, I would be Despite the city’s uncharacteristic declaring open season on myself. (“Let’s prescience in providing these bins, we fill @trashcan with #dogpoop LOL!”) would hear the lid of our trash can Interestingly, a neighborhood friend said opening and closing all day long and the that when the sanitation truck missed her gentle thud of bags of trash one week and the leaden dog leavings hitting receptacle sat on the street the bottom. So we decide for four days, it acquired at to importune the offenders least two dozen bags of with a polite entreaty on puppy putrescence. Puzzling, the top: “Please — No dog she said, since there was a poop in the trash bin!” city doo-disposal bin Like that worked. exactly 16 feet away. I was telling my friend Despite the sign, I still Lorraine about this and she hear the lid of my trash said, “Well, geesh, Inga. You can being raised during totally DARED the dog the day, but more quietly people with that sign. I’m now, and I will have to surprised they haven’t say, much less often than tweeted your address!” I before. I confess that I probably agree that people sometimes entertain who leave jars of water on delicious fantasies of their grass (which are rigging it in some supposed to, but don’t excretorially vengeful way. Opening the lid of a trash bin actually, keep animal ordure with a week’s worth of But forget to disarm it off your lawn) or who post neighborhood pooch poop is a even once and the garbage curt “Curb your dog!” signs veritable biohazard, a fetid men would never pick up positively beg dog owners our trash again. feculence, a mephitic miasma, to do the opposite. After No, I think the real a noisome nose full. It could their dog dumps on your solution lies in wheeling drop a goat from 10 yards. sidewalk, a photo of the our bin to the middle of offending egesta is probably posted on our front yard and letting the evertheir Facebook page within minutes. unpredictable Winston chase the baggers But as I explained to Lorraine, in our around the front yard doing his crazed pit case, the sign (written on about half of an bull imitation. On one of those laps, 8x11 piece of paper) is discreetly taped to they’d see that the sign on the top now the top of the can. You have to actually read “Make My Day.” walk up to the trash bin at the end of our — Look for La Jolla resident Inga’s driveway to see it and then you can’t miss lighthearted looks at life in La Jolla Light. it. I agree that if it were on the side of the Reach her at inga47@san.rr.com

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Let Inga Tell You

CHECK OUT WHAT’S HAPPENING Athenaeum Jazz at TSRI

SEALAB with Ben Hellwarth

Wednesday, September 25, at 8:00 p.m.

Ocean Author Presentation & Book Signing

Goldings/Bernstein/Stewart The New York Times described Goldings/Bernstein/Stewart simply as "the best organ trio of the last decade." The Financial Times wrote that the trio members“clearly relish the chance to deliver the no-nonsense grooves and subtle interplay, crisp beats and flowing solos that the organ trio form demands. The band played with the intensity and creative spark to enthrall as well as excite. Goldings and Bernstein have a seemingly telepathic sense of each other’s sounds and textures, while Stewart’s steady pulse comes with a sharp supportive chatter. As a unit, they balance a warm heart with percussive bite, and sound terrific.” Series tickets: $84 members, $99 nonmembers Individual tickets: $30 members, $35 nonmembers (858) 454-5872 or ljathenaeum.org/jazz

In the early 1960s, while NASA was trying to put a man on the moon, the U.S. Navy launched a series of daring experiments to prove that divers could live and work from a base on the seafloor. In SEALAB, author Ben Hellwarth discusses these underwater habitats, one of which was set up just off our shore with the help of Scripps scientists. Members: Free

Public: $5

RSVP: 858-534-5771 or at aquarium.ucsd.edu

Lost in the Memory Palace: Janet Cardiff and George Bures Miller

La Jolla Music Society’s 45th Season

Janet Cardiff and George Bures Miller's multimedia installations seem to alter time, allowing fictional and historical narratives to merge with the viewer's own experiences. Their work is highly scripted, meticulously detailed, and often cinematic in scope, breaking down distinctions between fiction and everyday reality.

Don’t miss any of our exciting 2013-14 performances including: The Boston Pops, Yo-Yo Ma, Joshua Bell, Patt i LuPone, Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, Gala Flamenca and more. Visit our website for more information about all of our upcoming performances.

Also on View: • Scripps on Prospect: Evolution of Villa and Cottage • Dana Montlack: Sea of Cortez (858) 459-3728 www.LJMS.org

Single tickets on sale now!

(858) 459-3728 www.LJMS.org


Menu

www.lajollalight.com

On The

Page B4 - SEPTEMBER 19, 2013 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

See more restaurant profiles at www.lajollalight.com

Veggie Grill

4353 La Jolla Village Drive, Suite H28 at Westfield UTC Mall, La Jolla ■ (858) 458-0031 ■ veggiegrill.com ■

n The Vibe: Relaxed, casual

n Reservations: No n Signature Dishes: Santa Fe Crispy Chickin’ n Patio Seating: Yes Sandwich, All Hail Kale salad, Buffalo Wings, n Take Out: Yes Sweetheart Fries n Happy Hour: No n Hours: 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily n Open Since: August 2013

Baja ‘Fish’ Tacos with a Mexican side salad.

Buffalo Wings with celery sticks and housemade ranch dressing.

All-American Stack with a side of Sweetheart Fries made from sweet potatoes.

Savory Kale Caesar Salad consists of a mound of marinated kale, romaine hearts, tempeh (soy) bacon, avocado chunks, cucumber, croutons, veggie Parmesan and Caesar dressing.

Plant-based food menus fill the bill at new Veggie Grill By Kelley Carlson ast-casual restaurant chain Veggie Grill has planted roots in San Diego County. On Aug. 22, Westfield UTC Mall became its first location in San Diego, and 20th overall. Business appears to be blooming, as the eatery was full of people on a recent Saturday afternoon. “We’re very thoughtful about where we decide to open restaurants, focusing on communities containing mindful people who embrace and prefer delicious food that’s better for you,” said Greg Dollarhyde, chief energizing officer for Santa Monicabased Veggie Grill. The UTC incarnation is similar in appearance to the others and operates the same way. Customers pore over the menu of 100 percent plant-based food, order and pay at the counter, take a number, then sit and relax until the food is brought out, which can be only a matter of minutes. It’s a laid-back environment, enhanced by adult alternative tunes from artists such as Norah Jones and Matt Nathanson. Everything on the menu is free of dairy, eggs, animal fat, trans fats, cholesterol, hormones and high-fructose corn syrup. The “meats” are blends of several types of proteins and special spices. Yet the food — described as “Yumbelievable” by the establishment — is still delicious, customers said. “The food is unique,” General Manager Chris Radle said. “We make sure people got what they thought they ordered and are enjoying it. If not, we’ll get them something else.”

F

Just before the start of the lunch rush in Veggie Grill’s dining room at UTC Mall. PHOTOS By Kelley Carlson

On The Menu Recipe Each week you’ll find a recipe from the featured restaurant online at lajollalight.com Just click ‘Get The Recipe’ at the bottom of the story.

n This week’s recipe:

Veggie Grill’s Crostini Italiano

There’s quite a variety, from “burgers,” hot sandwiches and wraps to home-style plates, entrée salads and soups. Dollarhyde recommends arriving a little early for dinner before a movie, grabbing a booth and a glass of wine, and ordering a side of the spicy Buffalo Wings with celery sticks and house-made ranch dressing. For main dishes, try selections such as the Savory Kale Caesar Salad with a mound of marinated kale, romaine hearts, tempeh bacon, avocado chunks, cucumber, croutons, veggie parmesan and Caesar dressing. Baja “Fish” Tacos features corn tortillas stuffed with crispy “fish,” green cabbage, Baja sauce and cilantro. The All-American Stack is a tall sandwich of veggie-steak in a spicy house-made

marinade, lettuce, tomato and onion rings with a side of Sweetheart Fries made from sweet potatoes that’s dusted with veggie parmesan. The GF (Gluten-Free) Power Plate has kale, a salad of sliced tomatoes, basil, avocado and a three-layer stack of portobello mushroom, caramelized onions and tempeh that is drizzled with chipotle ranch. The Thai Chickin’ and Santa Fe Crispy Chickin’ wraps feature wheat tortillas filled with chickin’, lettuce, assorted vegetables and dressings. Among the beverages are organic iced teas: Green Pomegranate, Ginger Hibiscus and Unsweetened Black; regular and strawberry house-made lemonades; bottled drinks such as root beer and ginger ale; red and white wines; and two types of beer. If there’s room for dessert, delectables include the Chocolate Pudding Parfait — layers of pudding and cookie crumbles garnished with chocolate syrup, walnuts and a dollop of VG crema, served in a chilled glass. The moist Carrot Cake is frosted with a cream cheese that isn’t overpoweringly sweet and sprinkled with walnuts and carrot shavings. Veggie Grill offers a Kid’s Meal, which consists of an entrée (Chickin’ nuggets, burger or mac-n-cheese), a side (sweet potato fries, mandarin oranges, carrot sticks or steamed kale), dessert (chocolate pudding or cookies) and a drink for $5.95. The Veggie Grill chain has intentions to next open in Carlsbad.


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LA JOLLA LIGHT - september 19, 2013 - Page B5

The Kincade Chronicles

Artist tells fictional family’s history in Athenaeum exhibit From Athenaeum Reports

In his second exhibition at the Athenaeum Music & Arts Library, longtime San Diego artist Jim Machacek will turn the gallery into a walk-in novel. Visitors will step into the world of the Kincades, a fictional family that has lived in the Tidewater region of Virginia for three centuries. In a series of etchings, collages, artist’s books, installations, and created historical ephemera, Machacek marshaled all his creative talent to bring the Kincades to life. Machacek’s “The Kincade Chronicles” will be featured in the Joseph Clayes III Gallery, Sept. 21Nov. 2. The opening reception is set for 6:30-8:30 p.m. Friday, Sept. 20 and there will be a walkthrough with the artist, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 10. A highlight of the exhibition will be “The Kincade Chronicles ... A Visual Novel,” an editioned letterpress and digital artist book (a kind of exhibition in a box), which contains all of the stories and selected artworks from the show. Each gallery wall will become a

If you go ■ What: ‘The Kincade Chronicles,’ a walk-in novel ■ Where: Athenaeum Music & Arts Library, 1008 Wall St. ■ When: 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., Tuesday-Saturday; 10 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Wednesday; through Nov. 2. Closed Sunday, Monday ■ Admission: Free ■ Opening Reception: 6:30-8:30 p.m. Sept. 20 ■ Contact: (858) 454-5872 ■ Website: ljathenaeum.org chapter in the novel where visitors will “read” the art, as well as stories from Revolutionary War days to modern times, a blending of fact and fiction to illuminate and entertain. Actual historical events and cultural issues have been infused into the stories in order to heighten the Kincade reality. Guests can pick up a

souvenir bookmark and follow a timeline around the gallery visiting each generation. Machacek has been creating artworks in printmaking, artist’s books, collage, drawing and mixed media for more than three decades. He holds a M.F.A. from C.W. Post/Long Island University, a B.F.A. from Boston Museum School of Fine Arts, and a B.A. in journalism from Creighton University. He teaches in the Art Department at San Diego Mesa College, where he co-founded Mesa Arts Press to promote the art of letterpress printing in the production of artist’s books and prints. His artwork has been included in 100 exhibitions in museums and galleries nationwide and in international exhibitions in Japan, Mexico, Canada and Hungary. His artist’s books are in special collections at the Library of Congress, the Tate Museum Research Centre in London, the New York City Public Library, and 40 university libraries and 15 private collections in the United States.

Each gallery wall will become a chapter in the novel where visitors may ‘read’ the art. Courtesy

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Page B6 - september 19, 2013 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

From Ovarian Cancer, B1 Ovarian cancer is one of the most difficult forms of cancer to diagnose. There are no reliable screening tests and few symptoms. As a result, the disease is often not detected until its late stages, when survival rates are as low as 40 percent. This makes ovarian cancer the fifth leading cause of cancerrelated deaths among women and the deadliest of gynecological cancers, according to the Ovarian Cancer National Alliance. If ovarian cancer is caught early enough, however, survival rates can increase to 90 percent. Overall, the mortality rates for ovarian cancer have not improved in the 40 years since the War on Cancer was declared. Each year, approximately 14,000 women in the United States die of the disease. By contrast, the mortality rates for other forms of cancer have improved due in part to earlier detection. Statistics like these bring out the fighting spirit in Wyllie and Bethel. In fact, when Wyllie was first diagnosed with ovarian cancer in

February 2008, she reacted, not with fear, but with determination to learn all she could about the disease. She had been feeling ill for several months and saw no less than nine doctors, who incorrectly told her she had everything from stomach upsets to psychological problems. She finally insisted on laparoscopic (minimally invasive) exploratory surgery and received the dreadful diagnosis — Stage 3C4 ovarian cancer. She then endured seven hours of surgery followed by several months of chemotherapy. “I thought of the idea for the group while undergoing horrendous chemo,” she said. “I was so sick, but having survived, I was not afraid.” Before she finished treatment, she founded her non-profit advocacy group, Nine Girls Ask. The nine are her daughters, her granddaughters and herself. “I’ve always been an entrepreneur,” said Wyllie, who was raised on a dairy farm in the South Bay area. She and her husband are both realtors and ran a restaurant, Tomatoes, in Bonita for 10 years. In the five years since starting

expert

advice

RYAN MAThYS & TRACIE kERSTEN

Want to Know More? ■ Scripps Health • (760) 492-6600 ■G ynecologic Cancer Foundation • (800) 444-4441 ■N ine Girls Ask • (619) 708-7891 • ninegirlsask.com Nine Girls Ask, Wyllie has maintained the No Evidence of Disease (NED) state and has found her passion. “Our most important purpose is to raise funds and awareness,” she said. The group holds an annual fundraising dinner (the one planned for Sept. 14 is already sold out with 600 guests). In addition, the group offers one-on-one counseling information sharing. “I am always doing research, I want to learn everything about the latest studies and give women hope, let them know they have options, that they can be a partner in their own treatment,” she said. As a Scripps Clinic pathologist working on several cancer research studies, Dr. Bethel said she was

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aware of Wyllie’s organization and applied for funding support. With two fellow researchers — Peter Kuhn, a physicist at The Scripps Research Institute, and Jim Hicks, a molecular biologist at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in New York — she had a specific focus in mind for a new study. The group had already been working with a gynecological surgeon looking at and evaluating the cells of women first diagnosed with cancer. Now, with a more sophisticated, laser-enabled digital microscope and software algorithm developed by Kuhn, Dr. Bethel and her coresearchers can more closely analyze circulating tumor cells in the blood stream. Until now, these

DR. MAURICE ShERMAN

have been difficult to see, making this type of cancer harder to diagnose or track. “There’s been a lot of progress in blood cancers because we can see cells and see whether they are increasing or decreasing,” said Bethel. “Now we can use this new technology and platform to see how solid tumors are growing, even it’s only one in a million, and change therapy if the cancer cells are returning.” Bethel too has found her passion in fighting cancer. A graduate of George Washington University in Washington, D.C., she received her advanced medical training in San Diego from the U.S. Navy. “I love pathology, looking directly at cells, identifying the bad guy, getting power over it,” she said. Now, with the ability to see changes in solid tumors and identify them early, “we have a way to win this war,” she added. In addition to support from Nine Girls Ask, the study is also being funded by a grant from the physics oncology initiative of the National Cancer Institute at the National Institutes of Health.

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RELIGION & spirituality The Most Loving Non-Denominational Bible Church In San Diego

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1270 Silverado, La Jolla • (858) 454-2266 Reading Room • 7853 Girard Avenue

Sunday Services and Sunday School 10:00am Wednesday Testimony Meetings 7:30pm Psalms 136:1 – O give thanks unto the Lord; for he is good; his mercy endureth for ever.

Open Hearts, Open Minds, Open Doors

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Monday-Friday 9 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. Sunday School and Rev. Dr. Walter Dilg, Pastor Sunday Worship 10 a.m. 6063 La Jolla Blvd • 858-454-7108 www.lajollaunitedmethodist.org Child Care Available

Sunday Worship Services • 9 & 10:30am Rev. Dr. Michael J. Spitters, Lead Pastor

8320 La Jolla Scenic Drive North • La Jolla • CA 858.453.3550 www.torreypineschurch.org

As your faith is strengthened you will find that there is no longer the need to have a sense of control, that things will flow as they will, and that you will flow with them, to your great delight and benefit. ~Emmanuel

Invite readers to join in worship and fellowship. Contact Matthew Murray today to place your ad. 858.218.7234 · matthew@mainstreetsd.com


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Page B8 - september 19, 2013 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

Actor to portray St. Francis at All Hallows Parish event If you go ■ What: Mark Price portrays St. Francis of Assisi ■W hen: 4 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 29

East County resident Mark Price performs as St. Francis of Assisi. Courtesy photos

■ Where: All Hallows Parish, 6602 La Jolla Scenic Drive South ■C ost: Free (offering accepted) ■ I nformation: markprice.com, allhallows.com or (858) 459-2975 man shows in 1974, with an impersonation of the colorful Irish writer, Oscar Wilde. In 2009, his portrayal of Paul the Apostle, “One Body, Many Parts,” was filmed and shown in theaters around the country to celebrate the Year of St. Paul. He performed twice at the Vatican as St. Paul, and has portrayed six other biblical figures upon request, including Judas Iscariot, Doubting Thomas and Saint Luke. However, when a pastor and friend initially asked Price to portray St. Francis, he respectfully declined. “The biblical characters I’ve done have been ones from the

time of Jesus,” said Price, noting that St. Francis (1182-1226) came much later than Christ, of whom Francis was a disciple. “I sort of blew him off,” Price said, “but then when the new

pope chose the name Francis, he called again and asked me to reconsider.” This time, Price said yes. “The more I researched Francis the more I came to love and

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respect him,” said Price, who got into character by poring over 35 books on St. Francis, in addition to viewing French movies on his life from the 1950s. “He actually did go off to

s

By Pat Sherman When a person is referred to as a Franciscan, it generally means they are living in poverty, or have taken a vow of poverty. More literally, the term refers to people and religious groups who adhere to the spiritual teachings and disciplines of St. Francis of Assisi by emulating the ascetic life he led in service to God. But according to Mark Price, a professional impersonator and storyteller who portrays St. Francis and other biblical figures, the Italian Catholic friar’s beginnings were far from humble. “He was very, very wealthy,” Price said. “His father was a merchant and landowner, so Francis was raised with all the best things in life. He loved to sing and dance and stay out late and drink. He was known by his friends as the ‘king of revelers’ because of his partying nature.” Price will tell the story of Saint Francis’ transformation from a carousing, vainglory-driven young knight to one of the most revered spiritual figures in history, in character, during a performance at 4 p.m. Sept. 29 at All Hallows Parish in La Jolla. Price began performing one-


www.lajollalight.com war twice as a knight, but then he had a series of conversions … where he felt that God was calling him to something else,” Price said. “He writes in his own last will and testament that the thing that changed him the most was when he came across a group of lepers.” At that time in Assisi, a town in what would become Italy, lepers were forced to remain outside the city walls, and were permitted to enter only at night — by ringing a bell to warn others of their arrival. “All his young life he detested lepers; he couldn’t stand to look at them,” Price said of Francis. One day, Francis decided instead to reach out and show the lepers mercy. “He saw Christ in them, and realized that something had changed — and he gave himself fully to God,” Price said. Price said he was intrigued by the fact that no other pope before the one currently in power (born Jorge Mario Bergoglio in Buenos Aires) had chosen the name Francis. “They say he’s one of the most popular saints in the world,” said Price, noting speculation over why the current pope adopted the name. “Francis of Assisi was known for Actor Mark Price his love and caring of the poor, and for his love of nature and all of creation,” he said. “But he was also called by God to rebuild the church. … I wanted to maybe find some parallels between the Francis of the 12th Century and this new pope, who’s calling himself Francis.” Price will deliver his presentation in a form analogous to how Jesus is believed to have delivered The Beatitudes in The Sermon on the Mount, wearing facial bandages St. Francis wore as a nearly blind man in the latter years of his life and bearing the signs of stigmata (a term used by Christians to describe nail wounds and scars in the hands, wrists and feet where it is believed Jesus was crucified). Whether portraying St. Francis or another spiritual leader, Price said he removes the character from the pedestal on which society has placed him. “I think the message that they bring to us comes from their humanness — the fact that they were able to rise above their human nature with the same shortcomings, egos, highs, lows, passions, joys and sorrows as we have,” Price said. “I do it as an encouragement to people to say, ‘Here’s another person who turned his life around and made other choices.’ It’s a way of inspiring others to look for that better part that exists within all of us that we sometimes ignore or mask.”

LA JOLLA LIGHT - september 19, 2013 - Page B9

Art institute seeks volunteers for youth board Lux Art Institute in Encinitas is looking for art enthusiasts, ages 12-14, to participate in its second Junior Art Board during the 2013/2014 school year. Selected students will meet weekly after school to get to know Lux resident artists, create a portfolio of artwork and plan art programming for their peers. Members of the 2012/2013 board contributed to the Junior Art Board blog, LuxJuniorArtBoard. wordpress.com, to share their experience, as well as photos of their work and Lux events. Applications for this program are due by Oct. 7 and are available at LuxArtInstitute.org This free program is sponsored by a grant from The Thomas C. Ackerman Foundation. For more information, requirements and to download the application forms, visit LuxArtInstitute.org or e-mail education@LuxArtInstitute.org or call (760) 436-6611. Lux Art Institute is at 1550 S. El Camino Real.

Members of Lux Art Institute’s 2012 Junior Art Board Courtesy

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Blogger, playwright, ex-judge Sarokin brings new script to North Coast Rep If you go ■ What: The Retaliation Defense, reading of a new play by H. Lee Sarokin, directed by Jay Mower ■ When: 7:30 p.m. Monday, Sept. 23 ■ Where: North Coast Repertory Theatre, 987 Loma Santa Fe Drive, Solana Beach ■ Tickets: Free admission ■ Box Office: (858) 481-1055 ■ Website: northcoastrep.org development of a political climate in which, as he wrote at the time, “enforcement of Constitutional rights is equated with being soft on crime and indeed, even causing it.” Sarokin is, above all, a believer in the Constitution. Judges, he maintains, are supposed to carry out the law. His mission, to ensure due process, often found him ruling on the side of the underdogs. In the case he calls his most important, he ruled that warning labels on cigarette packages were not enough to keep tobacco companies from being liable to criminal charges and punitive

damages, and forced them to turn over documents that provided the basis for subsequent suits. “The tobacco industry may be the king of concealment and disinformation,” he wrote. His retirement did not mean abandoning the law. For years, he did arbitration and mediation, and was Distinguished Jurist in Residence at University of San Diego (USD), giving lectures, meeting with students, and supervising mock trials. He also started a blog, “X-Judge,” which, he confessed, “about two or three people would read, including my wife.” But mentioning the blog to a friend at MSNBC led to an upgrade: his words ended up on the desk of Ariana Huffington, and he’s been blogging for the Huffington Post ever since. “They’ve featured 98 percent of my pieces, and I get feedback, which I love,” he said. He responds to the feedback, too, as long as it’s polite. Sarokin has always enjoyed writing; it’s in his genes. His father was a newspaper writer, and his son writes for ESPN. In 2011, he wrote his first courtroom drama, “Who is the Enemy?” The play, about an innocent terrorist suspect wrongly imprisoned, had readings at San Diego’s Ion

s

Lee Sarokin with his adopted dog, Lee-Lee

By Lonnie Burstein Hewitt H. Lee Sarokin’s 84-year-long life has been rich in incidents, but what he is best known for took place in 1985, when, as a U.S. District Court judge in New Jersey, he reversed the 1967 murder conviction of Rubin “Hurricane” Carter, concluding that Carter did not get a fair trial. The earlier decision, he wrote, was “predicated upon an appeal to racism rather than reason, and concealment rather than disclosure.” In case you don’t know the Bob Dylan song, or the movie Denzel Washington starred in, “The Hurrican,” Rubin Carter was a middleweight boxer arrested for a triple homicide in a New Jersey bar. There were inconsistencies in the witnesses’ testimony; the only sure thing was: the killer was black, as is Carter. Previous appeals had failed, but Sarokin’s decision held, and every year on the anniversary of his release, Carter phones Sarokin to thank him. Sarokin, a Jersey boy who went on to Dartmouth and Harvard Law School, has been living in Rancho Santa Fe since 1996, the year he resigned from the bench. After 25 years as a trial lawyer and 17 years as a judge, he was not pleased with the


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Theater, and in Toronto. “I’d seen a lot of plays I didn’t like,” he said. “And I thought, instead of just griping, maybe I should take a crack at writing one myself.” He discovered he really loved it. “I’ve had a very active and happy life, but playwriting is such fun for me,” he said. “It’s a thrill to go in and hear your words spoken by actors.” So one play led to another: ”The Rape of the Chambermaid,” based on the case of a diplomat sued by a hotel maid for attempted rape, had a reading last April at North Coast Repertory Theatre in Solana Beach. And now, on Sept. 23, there’s a reading of Sarokin’s latest, “The Retaliation Defense,” about what happens after a student, whose family was killed by a drone strike, commits an act of terrorism. The play deals with the effect of money and politics on our judicial system, and whether revenge ever justifies murder. “What prompted it was the Boston Marathon bombing,” Sarokin said. “I asked myself: What could make people want to kill innocent people?” The venue again is NCRT, for which Sarokin has very warm feelings, reciprocated by the staff. “Lee is a great North Coast Rep friend and supporter and an amazing individual,” said Artistic Director David Ellenstein. “His plays are a fascinating glimpse into the justice system and issues facing society today.” Sarokin has other loves besides playwriting. He plays drums in a jazz group, The Joe Satz Trio, and mentors a student at Casa de Amistad in Solana Beach. But his truest love is the law, and his proudest possession is a photo inscribed by Supreme Court Justice William J. Brennan, Jr.: “For Lee Sarokin — valiant and stalwart champion of the rule of law.”

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What’s new?

Exhibit trio opens at Museum of Contemporary Art From MCASD Reports

The Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego (MCASD) will present three new exhibitions, running Sept. 21 through Jan. 12, 2014 at 700 Prospect St. in La Jolla. n Exhibit 1: “Lost in the Memory Palace: Janet Cardiff and George Bures Miller” Organized by the Art Gallery of Ontario and the Vancouver Art Gallery, this survey focuses on Cardiff and Miller’s work from the mid-1990s to today. The exhibition consists of a series of discrete immersive environments, which span the period from key early pieces, such as “Dark Pool” (1995) and “The Muriel Lake Incident” (1999), to recent works including “Killing Machine” (2007) and “Experiment in F# Minor” (2013). MCASD curators said these installations, all of which have a strong architectural character, are imaginary spaces where time slows down and is altered, allowing fictional and historical narratives to blend and merge with the viewer’s own experience and memory. As environments that viewers understand to be art, yet with which they willingly engage both physically and psychically, Cardiff and Miller’s works encourage shifts in consciousness and create uniquely compelling possible worlds. Cardiff began collaborating with

If you go ■ What: Three, new contemporary art exhibits ■ Where: Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, 700 Prospect St., La Jolla ■ When: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily (closed Wednesday)

Aerial photograph. 700 Prospect, St., La Jolla , circa 1924

■A dmission: $10; $5 students, seniors; free 5-7 p.m. third Thursday

Above: Untitled, Dana Montlack, 2013, lambda print mounted on aluminum

■ Box Office: (858) 454 3541 ■ Website: mcasd.org fellow Canadian artist and partner Miller in 1995. When they represented Canada at the 49th Venice Biennale with “The Paradise Institute” (2001), they won both La Biennale di Venezia Special Award and the Benesse Prize, which recognizes artists who “break new artistic ground with an experimental and pioneering spirit.” n Exhibit 2: “Scripps on Prospect: Evolution of Villa and Cottage” A collaboration between MCASD and the La Jolla Historical Society, this presentation examines the history of their respective buildings at 700 and 780 Prospect St. Constructed within less than a decade of each other at the turn of

Left: ‘Dark Pool,’ Janet Cardiff and George Bures Miller, 1995, mixed media, audio-videoinstallation Courtesy Photos

20th century, both institutions’ original buildings share an association with the Scripps family — MCASD was Ellen Browning Scripps’s residence, while Wisteria Cottage belonged to her half-sister, Eliza Virginia. They also have an association with modernist architect Irving Gill, who designed or remodeled each of the buildings. Robert Mosher and Robert Venturi made architectural additions to MCASD. Wisteria Cottage became the Balmer School, and later, The Nexus and John Cole’s bookstore.

n Exhibit 3: “Dana Montlack: Sea of Cortez” Working with micro lenses, photographer Dana Montlack makes the unseen visible in compositions that convey both specificity and mystery. Her richly hued images isolate and abstract biological specimens into beguiling graphic elements. Her newest body of work directly references John Steinbeck’s “The Log from the Sea of Cortez” (1951), which recounts his sixweek expedition through the Gulf of California with marine biologist

Ed Ricketts. Part intertidal taxonomy, part ecological travelog, the book considers themes of home, mapping and environmental harmony. Working with scientists and staff at UC San Diego’s Scripps Institution of Oceanography and Birch Aquarium, Montlack selected and photographed specimens and charts from the waterways Steinbeck explored. By isolating and layering this source imagery, drawn from the vast Scripps Oceanographic Collections, Montlack crafts a new taxonomy of place.

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Laissez les bons temps rouler! It’s Cajun-style fun at Athenaeum’s annual gala

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he saints came marchin’ in at the Athenaeum Music & Arts Library’s 24th annual gala Sept. 6, which featured a salute to “New Orleans and All That Jazz.” Guests in their Mardi Gras marvels were treated to cocktails and appetizers, a Creoleinspired dinner catered by the La Jolla Hyatt Regency, and a high-energy afterparty with dancing and entertainment from jazz bands and zydeco performers. Proceeds from the gala support the Athenaeum’s arts and music mission. The design committee spent two weeks bringing the Bayou to the library’s rooms and table settings. Ann Craig chaired the event with co-chairs Ginny Black and Alice Brana, assisted by a committee of 36.

Photos by Susan DeMaggio

Barry Raspotnik, Bob Black and Annina Torri

King Lewis Branscomb poses with the cook (Melissa Elliot) and Queen Connie Branscomb.

Guests dance in the library foyer after dinner.

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At the Welcome Table, guests pick up their beads and programs.

Ruth Yansick and Athenaeum Executive Director Erika Torri

Joy Frieman with Ed and Martha Dennis

Euphoria Brass Band greets gala-goers along Wall Street.

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Finding Family Roots

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Genealogist Alice Colby Volkert (pictured) will present “Through Their

The La Jolla Community Center will host its second annual “Sip & See” Tea Party, noon to 4 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 21 at 6811 La Jolla Blvd. In addition to tea and treats, guests may shop from exclusive boutiques, bid on silent auction items and join raffles. Tickets include valet parking: $15 members, $20 nonmembers. (858) 459-0831. ljcommunitycenter.org

Eyes,” with insights on how to find “mystery” relatives at the next Computer Genealogy Society of San Diego meeting, 9 a.m. to noon, Saturday, Sept. 21 in the Robinson Auditorium complex at UC San Diego. Map and parking details at cgssd.org

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Free Jazz Concert

Fall Music Series

The La Jolla Symphony & Chorus orchestra, conducted by Steven Schick, will give a free performance reading of five new works, 7:30 p.m. Friday, Sept. 20 at Mandeville Auditorium, UC San Diego campus. The concert is the culmination of a yearlong program with the Jazz Composers Orchestra Institute and the five composers will be in attendance. An audience Q&A will be held after the show. Reservations: (858) 534-4637 or eventbrite.com Parking information: lajollasymphony.com or ucsd.edu

Tale of Two Painters

Cezanne’s ‘The Card Players’

Art historian Linda Blair will continue her lecture series “Vincent van Gogh & Paul Cézanne,” 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 24 at the Athenaeum Music & Arts Library, 1008 Wall St. The discussions will examine their art, the role of art in their lives and the possible relationship between their burdened personalities and the art they produced. Tickets: $14 or $19. (858) 454-5872. ljathenaeum.org/lectures

The Athenaeum Music & Art Library’s jazz program returns to The Auditorium at TSRI, 10640 John Jay Hopkins Drive, for its annual 8 p.m. fall series, featuring San Diego debuts by three top ensembles — the Hammond B3 organ trio of Goldings/ Bernstein/Stewart (Sept. 25); trumpet-virtuoso Dave Douglas’s latest celebrated quintet (Oct. 9); and pianist Fred Hersch’s trio (Nov. 11). Seating is limited for the Wednesday night concerts and early reservations are advised. Series tickets for members are $84, non-members $99; individual concerts are $30, $35 at (858) 454-5872 or ljathenaeum.org/jazz

Moon Festival The San Diego Chinese Historical Museum will celebrate the brightest full moon of the year, 1-3 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 21 at 404 Third Ave, downtown San Diego. Mooncakes will be served, and storytellers will relate Chinese legends about the jade rabbit and fairy princess living on the moon. There will also be arts, crafts and a calligraphy demonstration. Admission: $4. Kids age 12 and younger attend for free. (619) 338-9888. sdchm.org

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Page B18 - september 19, 2013 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

From Annette Bradbury, B1 to check for vehicles coming in one direction!) and keep the traffic flowing. Who or what inspires you? San Diego has been very good to us, so the wonderful life that we enjoy here inspires me to give back to the community. My work with Las Patronas has shown me how 50 dedicated, hard-working women can make a tremendous difference in our community; donating more than $17 million to San Diego-based nonprofits over the last 67 years. My husband and I have supported Voices for Children for many years because of the critical work they do with San Diego’s foster children and it has been a pleasure to work with Lisette and Mick Farrell to make this year’s Starry Starry Night the most successful ever. If you hosted a dinner party for eight, whom (living or deceased) would you invite? Jane Austen; Nelson Mandela; Winston Churchill; Charles Darwin; Andy Murray (the first British man to win Wimbledon in 77 years); my favorite musician, John Legend; and my husband, Dan, and me. What are you currently reading? After a busy summer, I’m catching up on my summer book club reading — “And the Mountains Echoed,� by

Khaled Hosseini and “Wishful Drinking,� by Carrie Fisher. What is it that you most dislike? People who are not genuine; I want people to say what they mean and mean what they say. What is your most-prized possession? Life experiences are more important to me than possessions, but my photographs are the one possession I’d be devastated to lose. What do you do for fun? Photography is my creative outlet. I enjoy documenting my family’s life and travels, and I love messing around in Photoshop. Much to my 16-year-old daughter’s chagrin, I’m a newly avid fan of Instagram! What is your philosophy of life? I have always believed you should treat all people the way you would like to be treated and I love this quote from Napoleon Hill, “If you cannot do great things, do small things in a great way.� What would be your dream vacation? I’m lucky to have traveled extensively and seen a lot of the world. My dream vacation would be any exploration with my family involving new experiences, a different culture, and great food and wine.

If you go â– What: 11th annual Starry Starry Night gala, benefits the programs of Voices for Children to help foster children â– When: 5 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 28 â– Where: Rancho Valencia Resort, 5921 Valencia Circle, Rancho Santa Fe â– Tickets: Stellar tickets ($500 per person), VIP Lunar tickets ($1,000 per person) â– C ontact: (858) 598-2222 â– Website: speakupnow.org

What are you reading? I am currently reading “A Fortunate Life,� an Australian classic about the extraordinary journey of an ordinary man.

From Lisette Farrell, B1 beautiful part of the world. We are so blessed to live in La Jolla, and cannot imagine a better place to raise our children. Also, we have found so many great friends that we now consider family! What might you add, subtract in the area? I would make the La Jolla Shores beach water as warm as the Caribbean and I would eliminate the marine layer — no more June gloom or May gray! Who or what inspires you? My husband and my two beautiful children inspire me every single day. Also, so many children in need and suffering inspire me to dedicate my time and effort to work with great charities to try to help and make

Contributing  Editor  at  Fortune  series  around  The  Emperor  of  Maladies,  magazine  and  author  of  The  Truth  in  series  around  The  Emperor  of  A ll  AMll  aladies,  The  Ethics  Center  and  its  partners  are  magazine  and  author  of  The  Truth  in  Small  Doses:  Why  We’re  Losing  the  a  Pulitzer-­prize  winning  book  highlighting  a  Pulitzer-­prize  winning  book  highlighting  â€œLessons  from  a  The  Ethics  Center  and  its  partners  are  â€œLessons  from  a  Small  Doses:  Why  We’re  Losing  the  framing  the  2013-­2014  Exploring  Ethics  War  on  Cancer—and  How  to  Win  It

framing  the  2013-­2014  Exploring  Ethics  War  on  Cancer—and  How  to  Win  It One-­Eyed  Surgeonâ€? One-­Eyed  Surgeonâ€? series  around  The  Emperor  of  All  Maladies,  series  around  The  E mperor  of  A ll  M aladies,  a  Pulitzer-­prize  winning  book  highlighting  â€œLessons  from  a  of  the  series  of  free,  public  programs  and  of  the  series  of  free,  public  programs  and  a  Pulitzer-­prize  winning  book  highlighting  â€œLessons  from  a  Wednesday,  October  2 One-­Eyed  Surgeonâ€? events  throughout  San  Diego  that  will  Wednesday,  October  2 events  throughout  San  Diego  that  will Â

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If you hosted a dinner party for eight, whom (living or deceased) would you invite? Benjamin Franklin, Pablo Picasso, Christopher Columbus, Jesus Christ, Albert Einstein, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Mother Teresa and my husband, Mick.

What is it that you most dislike? Dishonesty.

Overthrowing  the  Emperor  Overthrowing  the  Emperor  All  Maladies:  Moving  of  of  All  Maladies:  Moving  Overthrowing  the  Emperor  Clifton  Leaf Forward  Against  Cancer Clifton  Leaf Forward  Against  Cancer Overthrowing  the  Emperor  Contributing  Editor  at  Fortune  Contributing  Editor  at  Fortune  of  AAll  Maladies:  Moving  ll  Maladies:  Moving  magazine  and  author  of  The  Truth  in  magazine  and  author  of  The  Truth  in  of  The  Ethics  Center  and  partners  are  The  Ethics  Center  and  its  its  partners  are  Small  Doses:  Why  We’re  Losing  the  Small  Doses:  Why  We’re  Losing  the  Clifton  Leaf Forward  Against  Cancer framing  the  2013-­2014  Exploring  Ethics  War  on  Cancer—and  How  to  Win  It Clifton  Leaf framing  the  2013-­2014  Exploring  Ethics  Forward  Against  Cancer War  on  Cancer—and  How  to  Win  It Contributing  Editor  at  Fortune Â

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a difference in their lives. Voices for Children is one of them, and it is dear and near my heart for the superb work they and their volunteer CASAs (Court Appointed Special Advocates) do on behalf of San Diego’s foster children.

What is your most-prized possession? Although they are not my material possessions, my daughter, my son and my husband are my most valuable and priceless treasures. What do you do for fun? I love to dance and enjoy a great meal and a nice glass of wine with good friends and family. What is your motto or philosophy of life? Dance like nobody’s watching; Love like you’ve never been hurt. Sing like nobody’s listening Live like it’s heaven on Earth. What would be your dream vacation? I would go with my family to relax in Bora Bora, one of the most beautiful islands I have ever seen.

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Here’s a list of places to hear music live in La Jolla

F

rom a soothing jazz ensemble to a rocking ’80s dance band, music lovers are sure to find cool sounds to usher in the fall season at one or more of the following La Jolla venues: n Amaya La Jolla: Entertainers in the lounge, 7-11 p.m nightly, 1205 Prospect St. (858) 750.3695. AmayaLaJolla.com n Barfly: (Live salsa music) 7-9 p.m. Fridays, (DJs) 10 p.m. to close Friday-Saturday, 909 Prospect St., barflylajolla.com n Bird Rock Coffee Roasters: (acoustic) 10 a.m.-noon Saturday-Sunday, 5627 La Jolla Blvd., (858) 551-1707, birdrockcoffeeroasters.com n Beaumont’s Eatery: (R&B/funk, classic rock, 80s-90s, acoustic) 8 p.m. Wednesday-Thursday, 9 p.m. FridaySaturday, 11 a.m. Sunday, 5662 La Jolla Blvd., beaumontseatery.com n Café Milano: (light jazz) 5-10 p.m. Saturday, 711 Pearl St., cafemilanolajolla.com n Club M at Amaya La Jolla: (jazz, blues, top 40), 7:30 p.m. nightly, 1205 Prospect St., amayalajolla.com n Eddie V’s: (jazz) 5-9 p.m. Sunday-Tuesday, 6-10 p.m. Wednesday-Thursday, 7-11 p.m. Friday-Saturday, 1270

LA JOLLA LIGHT - september 19, 2013 - Page B19

Prospect St., eddiev.com n Finch’s Wine Bar and Bistro: (jazz, flamenco, blues, bossa nova) 6-10 p.m. Friday-Saturday, 7644 Girard Ave., finchslajolla.com n The Hake, (jazz) 7:30-10:30 p.m. Wednesdays, 1250 Prospect St., thehake.com n Hiatus at Hotel La Jolla, (acoustic pop and alternative) 6:30-9:30 p.m. Thursday-Saturday, 7955 La Jolla Shores Drive, hotellajolla.com n Iberico Spanish Bistro and Gin Club, (Spanish guitar/ piano), 8-11 p.m. Friday-Saturday, 909 Prospect St. (second floor), ibericobistro.com n La Valencia Hotel: (flamenco weekends; light jazz weekdays), 6-9 p.m. nightly in La Sala Lounge, 1132 Prospect St., lavalencia.com n Manhattan of La Jolla: (piano/vocalist, classic/modern standards) 7-10 p.m. Wednesday-Thursday 8-11 p.m. FridaySaturday, 7766 Fay Ave., manhattanoflajolla.com n Porters Pub & Grill: (hip-hop, indie) 8 p.m. dates vary, 9500 Gilman Drive, porterspub.com n Prospect Bar and Grill: (singer-songwriters, classic rock, beach, acoustic jams), 6-9:30 p.m. weekdays, live music noon-4 p.m. and DJs 4 p.m. to close Friday-Sunday, 1025 Prospect St. #210, prospectbar.com — Compiled by Pat Sherman

Jon Sandoval will play jazz and contemporary standards at Amaya La Jolla. Courtesy

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Page B20 - september 19, 2013 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

Kitchen Shrink

Sweet and Sassy Radish Salad

Catharine L. Kaufman

It’s time to root for the rad radish

D

ear Kitchen Shrink: I love to experiment with new foods and every time something interesting pops up in the produce aisle, I grab it and then I’m left standing in my kitchen, pondering how to use it. For example, radishes have become my latest challenge. I need a crash course in what else to do with this zippy tasting root besides carving them into decorative rosettes. Also, does radish have any health benefits? — Dina R., La Jolla For years radishes have been persona non grata in the veggie world, left untouched on crudité platters, partially chewed and deposited in kids’ crumpled napkins, even the butt of jokes as in the “Seinfeld” episode when Kramer prepared a radish rose in the shower. Radishes have powerful healing properties and superb flavors that dial up the taste

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and appearance of even the most unlikely food mates. Here’s a primer to help you get the best out of these remarkable roots. n Radish: The new Rolaids Radishes are a member of the Brassicaceae family with cruciferous cousins including cabbage, broccoli, cauliflower, horseradish and kale — all mighty anti-cancer warriors. Besides having a zip-a-dee-doo-dah taste and satisfying crunch, radishes are rife with immune-boosting Vitamin C, folic acid, potassium, stress-busting B6, magnesium and bone-enhancing calcium. This low-cal carb (20 calories per cup) has also been prized for cooling internal heat, soothing sore throats, acting like nature’s Dristan in clearing stuffy sinuses, fine-tuning digestion by disintegrating food particles and flushing out assorted toxins that cause bloating and indigestion.

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n Ingredients: • 3 bunches assorted radishes, coarsely chopped or smashed • 2.5 tablespoons brown sugar • 2.5 tablespoons apple cider vinegar or Meyer lemon juice • 1 teaspoon toasted sesame oil • Sea salt to taste n Directions: • Combine ingredients in a large bowl. • Mix well and chill. • Sprinkle with toasted sesame seeds and garnish with tender radish greens. • Serve as a side for chicken, fish, quinoa or brown rice. There’s more. Packed with water, phosphorous and zinc, radishes will keep you well hydrated and plump up thirsty cells, giving your complexion a healthy, youthful glow. n Many faces of radish The root grows in a variety of colors, textures and sizes with differing levels of pungency determined by the amount of “isothiocyanate” it contains. They are typically categorized as spring/summer or fall/winter types. The latter group includes the Daikon aka the Japanese radish, elongated like carrots, with lily-white roots having a moderate to mild kick. The Black Spanish sibling is either round or elongated, with rough black skin and

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hot peppery white flesh. The watermelon radish has a gorgeous pink flesh, with a milder disposition, adding sweetness and intense color to smoothies and salads. Green radishes are emerald-fleshed with a sweet mellow flavor, while the California Mammoth White, is a Daikon on steroids, growing 8-inches-long yet a gentle giant in mildness. The spring/summer varieties include the well-known reddish-skinned Cherry Belles and Scarlet Globes with peppery white flesh, the mild and crispy French Breakfast, which fades from carmine to white at the elongated tips, the White Icicle that resembles an albino carrot, and the hearty Plum Purple. — For additional radish recipes, e-mail kitchenshrink@san.rr.com

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LA JOLLA LIGHT - september 19, 2013 - Page B21

Artists Debby and Larry Kline pose with poet David Antin.

Deborah and Larry Poteet Photos by Maurice Hewitt

Mesa College Gallery show takes poke at convention By Lonnie Burstein Hewitt Debby and Larry Kline are a husbandand-wife team of artist-provocateurs who try to make pieces that turn people’s heads. “We pose provocative questions, challenge preconceptions and generally screw with context to make a point,” they say in their artists’ statement. Their latest exhibit, “POKE,” at Mesa College Gallery, is well worth the drive from La Jolla. A selection of pieces from three different series, it takes jabs at religious imagery, the persistence of war and our over-medicated society, and explores the unlimited possibilities of creating art out of restaurant-table rubble. On view is “The Age of Enlightenment,” a temple of 8-foot tall columns, each representing a different belief system, all ornamented with figures from commercial molds that have been cleverly re-purposed by the Klines. Then there’s “The Candy Store,” which includes a pharmaceutical Ferris wheel and a wall of canopic vessels, not filled with body parts preserved for an ancient Egyptian afterlife, but topped with glazes containing some of the ground-up prescription medications that contemporary pill-poppers, encouraged by willing doctors, consume like candy. Last but not least is a smorgasbord of photos from their restaurant tabletop art series “My Dinner with the Klines,” some of which were shown at the La Jolla Athenaeum last fall. Winners of the 2013 San Diego Art Prize, and soon-to-be-featured artists at this year’s Art Fair, the Klines have had exhibitions and commissions around the world. Their work is definitely mixed media, including photography, clay, cement, tobacco, wood, wire, plaster and ketchup. Their style is surreal, and their sense of humor is both intelligent and open hearted, a rare combination in the art world and beyond. For a good time, let yourself get “POKED” at Mesa’s Gallery: You may well go out more enlightened than you came in. See POKE, B25

If you go ■ What: POKE: A Series of Provocations by Debby and Larry Kline ■ When: 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. MondayWednesday; 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Thursday until Sept. 26 ■ Where: Mesa College Art Gallery, 7250 Mesa College Dr., D101 ■ Parking Details: sdmesa.edu/parking ■ Special Artists’ Talk: 1 p.m. Sept. 20 ■ Website: sdmesa/edu/art-gallery/619-388-2829

Did you know? ■ ‘ Poke’ is a term used on Facebook that means to reach out and virtually touch someone. Source: netlingo

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of the real property described above is purported to be: 336 PLAYA DEL NORTE #C, LA JOLLA, CA 92037 The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the street address and other common designation, if any, shown herein. Said sale will be made without covenant or warranty, express or CUT YOUR STUDENT LOAN implied, regarding title, possession, or PAYMENTS IN HALF or more encumbrances, to pay the remaining even if Late or in Default! principal sum of the Note(s) secured Get Relief FAST! Much LOWER by said Deed of Trust, with interest thereon, as provided in said Note(s), payments! Call Student advances if any, under the terms of Hotline 855-589-8607 the Deed of Trust, estimated fees, (Cal-SCAN) charges and expenses of the Trustee and of the trusts created by said GET FREE OF CREDIT CARD Deed of Trust. The total amount of the unpaid balance of the obligations DEBT NOW! Cut payments secured by the property to be sold by up to half. Stop creditors and reasonable estimated costs, from calling. 888-416-2691. expenses and advances at the time (Cal-SCAN) of the initial publication of this Notice of Trustee`s Sale is estimated to be $211,892.66 (Estimated), provided, GUARANTEED INCOME however, prepayment premiums, For Your Retirement. Avoid accrued interest and advances will market risk & get guaranteed increase this figure prior to sale. income in retirement! CALL Beneficiary`s bid at said sale may for FREE copy of our SAFE include all or part of said amount. In addition to cash, the Trustee will MONEY GUIDE Plus Annuity accept a cashier`s check drawn on a Quotes from A-Rated state or national bank, a check drawn companies! 800-375-8607 by a state or federal credit union or (Cal-SCAN) a check drawn by a state or federal savings and loan association, savings association or savings bank specified in Section 5102 of the California Financial Code and authorized to do business in California, or other such funds as may be acceptable to the Trustee. In the event tender other FICTITIOUS BUSINESS than cash is accepted, the Trustee may NAME STATEMENT withhold the issuance of the Trustee`s File No. 2013-024369 Deed Upon Sale until funds become Fictitious Business Name(s): available to the payee or endorsee as a. I Am Handyman a matter of right. The property offered b. GD Services Located at: 3314 Mission Blvd., #2, for sale excludes all funds held on San Diego, CA, 92109, San Diego account by the property receiver, if County. Mailing Address: 3314 applicable. If the Trustee is unable Mission Blvd., #2, San Diego, CA to convey title for any reason, the 92109. This business is conducted successful bidder`s sole and exclusive by: An Individual. The first day of remedy shall be the return of monies business has not yet started. This paid to the Trustee and the successful business is hereby registered by the bidder shall have no further recourse. following: Tamir Tommy Raz, 3314 Notice to Potential Bidders If Mission Blvd., #2, San Diego, CA you are considering bidding on this 92109. This statement was filed with property lien, you should understand Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ that there are risks involved in County Clerk of San Diego County on bidding at a Trustee auction. You 08/22/2013. Tommy. LJ1507. Sept. 19, will be bidding on a lien, not on the property itself. Placing the highest 26, Oct. 3, 10, 2013 bid at a Trustee auction does not APN: 351-381-36-00 TS No: automatically entitle you to free and CA01000092-31 TO No: 95303331 clear ownership of the property. You NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE should also be aware that the lien YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER being auctioned off may be a junior A DEED OF TRUST DATED June lien. If you are the highest bidder at the 24, 2009. UNLESS YOU TAKE auction, you are or may be responsible ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR for paying off all liens senior to the PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT lien being auctioned off, before you A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU NEED AN can receive clear title to the property. EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE You are encouraged to investigate OF THE PROCEEDINGS AGAINST the existence, priority, and size of YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A outstanding liens that may exist on LAWYER. On October 10, 2013 this property by contacting the county at 10:00 AM, at the entrance to recorder’s office or a title insurance the East County Regional Center company, either of which may charge by statue, 250 E. Main Street, EI you a fee for this information. If you Cajon, CA 92020, MTC FINANCIAL consult either of these resources, you INC. dba TRUSTEE CORPS, as should be aware that the same Lender the duly Appointed Trustee, under may hold more than one mortgage or and pursuant to the power of sale Deed of Trust on the property. Notice contained in that certain Short Form to Property Owner The sale date Deed of Trust and Assignment of shown on this Notice of Sale may be Rents recorded on June 25, 2009 postponed one or more times by the as Instrument No. 2009-0349620 Mortgagee, Beneficiary, Trustee, or of official records in the Office of a court, pursuant to Section 2924g the Recorder of San Diego County, of the California Civil Code. The law California, executed by DANIEL requires that information about MIHALKANIN AND CARRIE Trustee Sale postponements be made MIHALKANIN, HUSBAND AND available to you and to the public, WIFE, as Trustor(s), in favor of THE as a courtesy to those not present at TERRY W. LEWIS JR. AND LYNE A. the sale. If you wish to learn whether LEWIS FAMILY TRUST DATED MAY your sale date has been postponed, 16, 2001 as Beneficiary, WILL and, if applicable, the rescheduled SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE time and date for the sale of this HIGHEST BIDDER, in lawful money property, you may call Priority Posting of the United States, all payable at and Publishing at 714-573-1965 for the time of sale, that certain property information regarding the Trustee’s situated in said County, California Sale or visit the Internet Web site describing the land therein as: AS address on the previous page for MORE FULLY DESCRIBED IN information regarding the sale of SAID DEED OF TRUST AND ALL this property, using the file number RELATED LOAN DOCUMENTS The assigned to this case, CA01000092property heretofore described is being 31. Information about postponements sold “as is”. The street address and that are very short in duration or that other common designation, if any, occur close in time to the scheduled

MONEY MATTERS

Financial Services

LEGAL NOTICES

sale may not immediately be reflected in the telephone information or on the Internet Web site. The best way to verify postponement information is to attend the scheduled sale. Date: 9/13/2013 TRUSTEE CORPS TS No. CA01000092-31 17100 Gillette Ave, Irvine, CA 92614 949252-8300 Matthew Kelley Trustee Sale Officer SALE INFORMATION CAN BE OBTAINED ON LINE AT www.priorityposting. com FOR AUTOMATED SALES INFORMATION PLEASE CALL: Priority Posting and Publishing at 714-573-1965 TRUSTEE CORPS MAY BE ACTING AS A DEBT COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED MAY BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. P1060175 9/19, 9/26, 10/03/2013. LJ1506 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2013-025925 Fictitious Business Name(s): Barre 59 Located at: 7928 Ivanhoe Avenue, La Jolla, CA, 92037, San Diego County. This business is conducted by: A Limited Liability Company. The first day of business has not yet started. This business is hereby registered by the following: PBL Fitness, LLC, 14755 Caminito Lorren, Del Mar, CA 92014, California. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 09/09/2013. Lisa Lehmkuhl, President. LJ1505. Sept. 19, 26, Oct. 3, 10, 2013 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2013-025703 Fictitious Business Name(s): Kelli Fogg Cares Located at: 4801 Aberdeen St., San Diego, CA, 92117, San Diego County. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The first day of business has not yet started. This business is hereby registered by the following: Kelli Fogg, 4801 Aberdeen St., San Diego, CA 92117. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 09/06/2013. Kelli Fogg. LJ1504. Sept. 19, 26, Oct. 3, 10, 2013 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2013-025648 Fictitious Business Name(s): World Wide Import Distribution Located at: 9454 Campo Rd, Spring Valley, CA, 91977, San Diego County. This business is conducted by: A Corporation. The first day of business has not yet started. This business is hereby registered by the following: T.E.N. Investment, Inc., 9454 Campo Rd., Spring Valley, CA, 91977, California. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 09/05/2013. Marilyne Borges, President. LJ1501. Sept.12, 19, 26, Oct. 3, 2013. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2013-025995 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Freskos b. Runuts Located at: 6067 Castleton Dr., San Diego, CA, 92117, San Diego County. This business is conducted by: A Limited Liability Company. The first day of business was 01/010/2013. This business is hereby registered by the following: Agropolis, 6067 Castleton Drive, San Diego, CA 92117, California. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 09/09/2013. S. Petrou, President. LJ1503. Sept.12, 19, 26, Oct. 3, 2013. SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO 330 West Broadway San Diego, CA 92101 PETITION OF: KARIAN BETH


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PAGE B24 - SEPTEMBER 19, 2013 - LA JOLLA LIGHT MITCHELL for change of name. ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER 37-2013-00066040-CU-PT-CTL TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner: KARIAN BETH MITCHELL filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: Present Name KARIAN BETH MITCHELL to Proposed Name KARIAN BETH FORSYTH. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two 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 Date: 10-252013 Time: 9:30 AM Dept 52 The address of the court is 220 West Broadway, San Diego, CA 92101. A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: La Jolla Light. Date: Sept. 09, 2013. Robert J. Trentacosta Judge of the Superior Court LJ1502. Sept. 12, 19, 26, Oct. 3, 2013 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2013-025875 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Resort Pool Management San Diego b. RPM San Diego Located at: 6604 La Jolla Blvd., San Diego, CA, 92037, San Diego County. This business is conducted by: A Married Couple. The first day of business has not yet started. This business is hereby registered by the following: #1. Steve Lindley, 6604 La Jolla Blvd., San Diego, CA, 92037, #2. Ann Marie Lindley, 6604 La Jolla Blvd., San Diego, CA, 92037. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 09/09/2013. Steve Lindley. LJ1500. Sept.12, 19, 26, Oct. 3, 2013. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2013-025681 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Alesmith Brewing Company b. Alesmith c. Alesmith Brewing Located at: 9368 Cabot Dr., San Diego, CA, 92126, San Diego County. This business is conducted by: A Corporation. The first day of business was 07/16/2002. This business is hereby registered by the following: JDZ, Inc., 9368 Cabot Dr., San Diego, CA, 92126, California. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 09/06/2013. Peter Zien, President. LJ1499. Sept.12, 19, 26, Oct. 3, 2013.

ANSWERS 9/12/13

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2013-025066 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. The Branch Church b. Branch Church San Diego Located at: 2760 Burgener Blvd, San Diego, CA, 92110, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 2760 Burgener Blvd,

San Diego, CA, 92110. This business is conducted by: A Corporation. The first day of business has not yet started. This business is hereby registered by the following: San Diego Branch Church, 2760 Burgener Blvd, San Diego, CA, 92110, California. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 08/29/2013. Charles Allers, President. LJ1498. Sept.12, 19, 26, Oct. 3, 2013. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2013-024199 Fictitious Business Name(s): Ocean House on Prospect Located at: 400 Prospect Street, La Jolla, CA, 92037, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 4582 S. Ulster St., Suite 1100, Denver, CO 80237. This business is conducted by: A Limited Partnership. The first day of business was 07/29/2013. This business is hereby registered by the following: AIMCO Prospect 400 GP, LLC, 4582 S. Ulster St., Suite 1100, Denver, CO 80237, Delaware. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 08/21/2013. Lucinda M. Ehrhard, Assistant Secretary. LJ1491. Sept. 5, 12, 19, 26, 2013 T.S. No.: 13-01368 Loan No.: 720960-73259 T.O. 01180-50214 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST DATED 8/1/2007. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE OF THE PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. A public auction sale to the highest bidder for cash, cashier’s check drawn on a state or national bank, check drawn by a state or federal credit union, or a check drawn by a state or federal savings and loan association, or savings association, or savings bank specified in Section 5102 of the Financial Code and authorized to do business in this state will be held by the duly appointed trustee as shown below, of all right, title, and interest conveyed to and now held by the trustee in the hereinafter described property under and pursuant to a Deed of Trust described below. The sale will be made, but without covenant or warranty, expressed or implied, regarding title, possession, or encumbrances, to pay the remaining principal sum of the note(s) secured by the Deed of Trust, with interest and late charges thereon, as provided in the note(s), advances, under the terms of the Deed of Trust, interest thereon, fees, charges and expenses of the Trustee for the total amount (at the time of the initial publication of the Notice of Sale) reasonably estimated to be set forth below. The amount may be greater on the day of sale. Trustor: Ilyas Chaudhary, a married man as his sole and separate property Duly Appointed Trustee: Stewart Default Services Recorded 8/9/2007 as Instrument No. 2007-0531240 of Official Records in the office of the Recorder of San Diego County, California, Date of Sale: 10/7/2013 at 10:00 AM Place of Sale: At the entrance to the East County Regional Center by statue, 250 E. Main Street, El Cajon, CA Amount of unpaid balance and other charges: $309,989.49 Property being sold “as is – Where is” Street Address or other common designation of real property: 8591 Via Mallorca #A La Jolla, CA 92037 Legal Description: As more fully described in said Deed of Trust A.P.N.: 344-320-30-03 The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the street address or other common designation, if any, shown above. If no street address or other common designation is shown, directions to the location of the property may be obtained by sending a written request to the beneficiary within 10 days of the date of first publication of this Notice of Sale. NOTICE TO

POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If you are considering bidding on this property lien, you should understand that there are risks involved in bidding at a trustee auction. You will be bidding on a lien, not on the property itself. Placing the highest bid at a trustee auction does not automatically entitle you to free and clear ownership of the property. You should also be aware that the lien being auctioned off may be a junior lien. If you are the highest bidder at the auction, you are or may be responsible for paying off all liens senior to the lien being auctioned off, before you can receive clear title to the property. You are encouraged to investigate the existence, priority, and size of outstanding liens that may exist on this property by contacting the county recorder’s office or a title insurance company, either of which may charge you a fee for this information. If you consult either of these resources, you should be aware that the same lender may hold more than one mortgage or deed of trust on the property. NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNER: The sale date shown on this notice of sale may be postponed one or more times by the mortgagee, beneficiary, trustee, or a court, pursuant to Section 2924g of the California Civil Code. The law requires that information about trustee sale postponements be made available to you and to the public, as a courtesy to those not present at the sale. If you wish to learn whether your sale date has been postponed, and, if applicable, the rescheduled time and date for the sale of this property, you may call 888-210-6524 or visit this Internet Web site www.priorityposting. com using the file number 13-01368 assigned to this case. Information about postponements that are very short in duration or that occur close in time to the scheduled sale may not immediately be reflected in the telephone information or on the Internet Web site. The best way to verify postponement information is to attend the scheduled sale. Date: 9/5/2013 Stewart Default Services 7676 Hazard Center Drive, Ste 820 San Diego, California 92108 (888) 210-6524 Olesya Williams, Trustee Sale Officer If the Trustee is unable to convey title for any reason, the successful bidder’s sole and exclusive remedy shall be the return of monies paid to the Trustee and the successful bidder shall have no further recourse. P1058717 9/12, 9/19, 09/26/2013. LJ1497. STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF USE OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME File No. 2013-024195 Fictitious Business Name(s): Preserve at La Jolla Located at: 400 Prospect Street, La Jolla, CA, 92037, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 4582 S Ulster St., Suite 1100, Denver, CO 80237. The fictitious business name referred to above was filed in San Diego County on: May 1, 2013, and assigned File No. 2013-012939 is (are) abandoned by the following registrant (s): Aimco Prospect 400 GP, LLC, 4582 S Ulster St., Suite 1100, Denver, CO 80237, Delaware. This statement was filed with the Recorder/County Clerk, Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., of San Diego County on 08/21/2013. Lucinda M. Ehrhard, Assistant Secretary. LJ1493. Sept. 5, 12, 19, 26, 2013 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2013-024702 Fictitious Business Name(s): Wellspring of Light Located at: 6583 Jaffe Ct., Apt. 6, San Diego, CA, 92119, San Diego County. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The first day of business has not yet started. This business is hereby registered by the following: Marcia Ann Hilger, 6583 Jaffe Ct., Apt. 6, San Diego, CA 92119. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 08/27/2013. Marcia Ann Hilger. LJ1492. Sept. 5, 12, 19, 26, 2013

SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO 220 West Broadway San Diego, CA 92101 PETITION OF: PATRICIA MARGEURITA GLIDDEN for change of name. ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER 37-2013-00063831-CU-PT-CTL TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: Present Name PATRICIA MARGEURITA GLIDDEN to Proposed Name PATRICIA MARGEURITA BAILEY. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two 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 Date: October 11, 2013 Time: 8:30 AM Dept C Room 46. The address of the court is 220 West Broadway, San Diego, CA 92101. A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: La Jolla Light, 565 Pearl Street, Ste. 300, La Jolla, CA 92037. Date: Aug. 22, 2013. Robert J. Trentacosta Judge of the Superior Court LJ1489. Aug. 29, Sept. 5, 12, 19, 2013 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2013-024139 Fictitious Business Name(s): Ally Construction of San Diego Located at: 5385 Toscana Way #335, San Diego, CA, 92122, San Diego County. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The first day of business has not yet started. This business is hereby registered by the following: Evelyn Swain, 5385 Toscana Way #335, San Diego, CA 92122. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 08/20/2013. Evelyn Swain. LJ1488. Aug. 29, Sept. 5, 12, 19, 2013 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2013-022779 Fictitious Business Name(s): Sweet Sage Productions Located at: 7272 Arillo St., San Diego, CA, 92111, San Diego County. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The first day of business was June/30/2013. This business is hereby registered by the following: Rita Grant, 7272 Arillo St., San Diego, CA 92111. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 08/07/2013. Rita Grant. LJ1487. Aug. 29, Sept. 5, 12, 19, 2013 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2013-023902 Fictitious Business Name(s): Convention DMC Located at: 5366 La Jolla Blvd., La Jolla, CA, 92037, San Diego County. Mailing Address: same. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The first day of business was 07/15/2013. This business is hereby registered by the following: Mark O’Beirne, 5366 La Jolla Blvd., La Jolla, CA 92037. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 08/16/2013. Mark O’Beirne, Owner. LJ1486. Aug. 29, Sept. 5, 12, 19, 2013

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2013-024402 Fictitious Business Name(s): Iridicor Located at: 7933 Silverton Ave., Suite 717, San Diego, CA, 92126, San Diego County. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The first day of business was 8/22/13. This business is hereby registered by the following: Gabriel Evanoff, 8452 New Salem St. #19, San Diego, CA 92126. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 08/22/2013. Gabriel Evanoff. LJ1490. Aug. 29, Sept. 5, 12, 19, 2013 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2013-026346 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Black Wolff b. Black Wolff Leather Located at: 3600 Columbia Street, San Diego, CA, 92103, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 3600 Columbia Street, San Diego, CA 92103. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The first day of business was 9/11/13. This business is hereby registered by the following: Emily Criscuolo, 3600 Columbia Street, San Diego, CA 92103. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 09/12/2013. Emily Criscuolo, Black Wolff. LJ1508. Sept. 19, 26, Oct. 3, 10, 2013 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE TS No. 13-0007788 Title Order No. 13-0023902 APN No. 465653-26-00 YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST, DATED 05/23/2005. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE OF THE PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. Notice is hereby given that RECONTRUST COMPANY, N.A., as duly appointed trustee pursuant to the Deed of Trust executed by NAYEREH F. PANAH, A MARRIED WOMAN AS HER SOLE AND SEPARATE ESTATE, dated 05/23/2005 and recorded 5/31/2005, as Instrument No. 2005-0454435, in Book N/A, Page 24367, of Official Records in the office of the County Recorder of San Diego County, State of California, will sell on 10/11/2013 at 9:00AM, SHERATON San Diego HOTEL & MARINA 1380 Harbor Island Drive, San Diego, CA 92101 at public auction, to the highest bidder for cash or check as described below, payable in full at time of sale, all right, title, and interest conveyed to and now held by it under said Deed of Trust, in the property situated in said County and State and as more fully described in the above referenced Deed of Trust. The street address and other common designation, if any, of the real property described above is purported to be: 4450 CAMINITO OCIO, SAN DIEGO, CA, 92108. The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the street address and other common designation, if any, shown herein. The total amount of the unpaid balance with interest thereon of the obligation secured by the property to be sold plus reasonable estimated costs, expenses and advances at the time of the initial publication of the Notice of Sale is $402,011.91. It is possible that at the time of sale the opening bid may be less than the total indebtedness due. In addition to cash, the Trustee will accept cashier’s checks drawn on a state or national bank, a check drawn by a state or federal credit union, or a check drawn by a state or federal savings and loan association, savings association, or savings bank specified in Section 5102 of the Financial Code and authorized to do business in this state. Said sale will be made, in an ‘’AS IS’’ condition, but without covenant or warranty, express or implied, regarding title, possession or encumbrances, to satisfy the

indebtedness secured by said Deed of Trust, advances thereunder, with interest as provided, and the unpaid principal of the Note secured by said Deed of Trust with interest thereon as provided in said Note, plus fees, charges and expenses of the Trustee and of the trusts created by said Deed of Trust. NOTICE TO POTENTIAL BIDDERS If you are considering bidding on this property lien, you should understand that there are risks involved in bidding at a trustee auction. You will be bidding on a lien, not on a property itself. Placing the highest bid at a trustee auction does not automatically entitle you to free and clear ownership of the property. You should also be aware that the lien being auctioned off may be a junior lien. If you are the highest bidder at the auction, you are or may be responsible for paying off all liens senior to the lien being auctioned off, before you can receive clear title to the property. You are encouraged to investigate the existence, priority, and size of outstanding liens that may exist on this property by contacting the county recorder’s office or a title insurance company, either of which may charge you a fee for this information. If you consult either of these resources, you should be aware that the lender may hold more than one mortgage or deed of trust on the property. NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNER The sale date shown on this notice of sale may be postponed one or more times by the mortgagee, beneficiary, trustee, or a court, pursuant to Section 2924g of the California Civil Code. The law requires that information about trustee sale postponements be made available to you and to the public, as a courtesy to those not present at the sale. If you wish to learn whether your sale date has been postponed, and, if applicable, the rescheduled time and date for the sale of this property, you may call 1-800-281-8219 or visit this Internet Web site www.recontrustco.com, using the file number assigned to this case 13-0007788. Information about postponements that are very short in duration or that occur close in time to the scheduled sale may not immediately be reflected in the telephone information or on the Internet Web site. The best way to verify postponement information is to attend the scheduled sale. DATED: 09/05/2013 RECONTRUST COMPANY, N.A. 1800 Tapo Canyon Rd., CA6-914-01-94 SIMI VALLEY, CA 93063 Phone/ Sale Information: (800) 281-8219 By: Trustee’s Sale Officer RECONTRUST COMPANY, N.A. is a debt collector attempting to collect a debt. Any information obtained will be used for that purpose. FEI # 1006.246251 9/05, 9/12, 9/19/2013. LJ1494 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2013-023682 Fictitious Business Name(s): National Motors Located at: 8650 Miramar Rd., Unit M, San Diego, CA, 92126, San Diego County. This business is conducted by: A Corporation. The first day of business has not yet started. This business is hereby registered by the following: National Motors Group Inc., 8650 Miramar Rd., Unit M, San Diego, CA 92126, California. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 08/15/2013. Enaiatolah Eftekhary, Secretary. LJ1495. Sept. 5, 12, 19, 26, 2013

LEGAL NOTICES Call 858.218.7237 fax 858.513.9478


www.lajollalight.com

LA JOLLA LIGHT - september 19, 2013 - Page B25

FROM POKE, B21

Live Here. Give Here.

Artist Patricia Frischer, flanked by her husband, Darwin Slindee and sculptor Jeffery Laudenslager

La Jolla is home, and like all homes, it needs maintenance and TLC. Gallery director Alessandra Moctezuma with Smokin’ Columbia

Jewel Goode

Mere tax dollars aren’t enough. Together, we can pool our resources to keep La Jolla the jewel that it is. The La Jolla Community Foundation (LJCF) was created to enrich the environmental, social and cultural experience of La Jolla. So far, we have funded the fire pits along the Shores, commissioned world-class murals around town, repaired the “Teardrop” entrance on La Jolla Parkway, created educational coastal signage, and are now developing a plan to maintain the Village on an ongoing basis. Membership is open to all La Jollans who care. Join the LJCF and have a voice in selecting annual grant recipients – making a difference here, at home, where you live.

Rod Lingren, Becky Guttin and Jeffery Laudenslager

Ocean HOuSe On PrOSPect 400 PrOSPect Street la jOlla, ca Studio, 1- and 2-bedroom apartment homes with stunning ocean and village views from patios and balconies. Penthouse-style apartments available. Stainless steel appliances and granite counter tops available, or choose a classic beach kitchen. Heated swimming pool, hot tub and sundeck. Smoke-free, small pet friendly, premium location, across from La Jolla Tennis Club. Look for the Prospect 400 Sign. Starting from $3,299/mo

call 858-202-5235 or visit OceanHouseonProspect.com for more information

Please join us. Annual local projects will receive 75% of your contribution and the other remaining 25% will go into a permanent endowment. To make a contribution, please go to lajollacommunityfoundation.org and click on GET INVOLVED. Become a member today!

lajollacommunityfoundation.org


www.lajollalight.com

Page B26 - september 19, 2013 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

LA JOLLA HOMES Don’t miss any La Jolla news! Subscribe to La Jolla Light’s free alerts

F

Call me today for information on our mortgage pre-approval process!

Whether you’re a first-time homebuyer or an experienced investor, U.S. Bank Home Mortgage may have a program this is just right for you. We have the resources, the skills and some of the most innovative mortgage products to help get you where you want to be... HOME! usbank.com/mortgage

Chuck Helsel Mortgage Loan Originator NMLS #: 501884 7733 Girard Avenue La Jolla, CA 92037 858.729.2513 chuck.helsel@usbank.com

858.729.2513

Loan approval is subject to credit approval and program guidelines. Not all loan programs are available in all states for all loan amounts. Interest rates and program terms are subject to change without notice. Visit usbank.com to learn more about U.S. Bank products and services. Mortgage products offered by U.S. Bank National Association, Member FDIC. 022112-16159 ©2012 U.S. Bank

HOME OF THE WEEK

HOMES SOLD: Sept. 10-17 ADDRESS

or a free copy of La Jolla Light’s weekly e-mail newsblast and/or breaking news alerts, visit lajollalight.com/newsletter and give us your e-mail address. It’s simple. Log on to lajollalight.com/newsletter Or just click on any story and hit this “envelope” Chuck Helsel La Jolla Light Ad.pdf 4/23/2012 2:05:14 PM subscribe icon at the top right of each article.

It’s a great time to purchase a home!

REAL ESTATE 3.5

$2,300,000

n 2020 Soledad Ave.

3

3

$1,825,000

n 319 Bird Rock Ave.

2

2

$1,700,000

n 7703 Via Capri

4

2.5

$1,615,000

n 7475 Caminito Rialto

3

3

$1,375,000

n 1040 S. Coast Blvd., Unit 302

2

2

$1,025,000

n 1001 Genter St., Unit 2C

2

2

$840,000

n 5522 Linda Rosa Ave.

2

1

$800,000

n 4155 Executive Drive, Unit E412 2

2

$500,000

n 8335 Sugarman Drive

4

2.5

$495,000

n 8560 Via Mallorca, Unit J

1

1

$260,000

n 7520 Draper Ave., Unit A

3

3.5

*0

n 3175 Evening Way, Unit C

2

1.5

*0

Note: *0 means buyer did not want sale price disclosed.

Agent of the Week

Open · Fri 11-3 & Sat 1-4

7337 Olivetas Avenue

Ryan Mathys & tRacie KeRsten ProFund Real Estate, Inc.

Ryan - BRE #01361942 | Tracie - BRE #01137669

What is your greatest accomplishment? We definitely would have to say our children, Simone 3 ½ and Quinn 10 months. We have two happy kids that keep us on our toes and are a lot of fun.

What do you love about La Jolla? What we really love about La Jolla is the local community and neighborhood feel from the 4th of July in Bird Rock to the Holiday Parade on Girard. You can pretty much go into any shop or restaurant and see someone you know and really feel like you are a part of the community. There is a cohesiveness to the community that you don’t really see in the suburbs.

What advice would you give to sellers in today’s market? Market momentum and buyer sentiment change quickly. Obtain honest advice on your pricing. Valuation along the coast is tricky and knowing how to build, present and market that value to buyers locally and globally is critical. Your marketing plan and agent should showcase your home accordingly.

How long have you been in real estate? Tracie has been in real estate for 20 years and Ryan has been in the business for 10 years. We opened up our own office in 2004 and are located in The Village on Fay Avenue.

What advice would you give to buyers in today’s market? Be patient but decisive. Learn the market, know what you want and be ready to move when the opportunity presents itself. If you are not prepared and educated you won’t know an opportunity when you see it. If you are, it will be apparent and you will feel comfortable with your decision. Also, working with an agent who knows the market and inventory will increase your chances of finding/winning the home you are looking for.

www.LaJollaAgent.com • (858) 405-4004

• 2nd level is dedicated to a master bedroom retreat with 2 balconies, fireplace, 2 walk-in closets and study • Cooks kitchen with granite countertops and all appliances • Large dining room with separate breakfast nook • Hardwood flooring throughout • Mature landscaping and private grassy yards • 0.3 miles from The Bishops School and near public schools Offered at $3,000,000

Lauren Forster · 858-405-9605 lauren.forster@sothebysrealty.com www.lajollalauren.com

PRICE

4

Charming Cape Cod Estate

• 4 bed/4 bath designers home

BATH

n 6606 Avenida De Las Pescas

SOURCE: DataQuick

• 200 feet from Marine Street Beach in the Beach Barber Tract

BED

What is your specific area of expertise? Our primary area of expertise is luxury coastal properties. We primarily focus on La Jolla, Del Mar, Pacific Beach and Rancho Santa Fe. We work with a lot of move up buyers and 2nd home owners/buyers both domestic and international. What sets you apart from the crowd? We use technology & communication to set us apart. There are so many great new tools and technologies available for marketing and reaching new audiences that much of the industry has not adopted yet. It is a fast paced world now and people want to know that they have immediate accurate information. Being able to communicate effectively is critical in this industry whether with clients, other agents or vendors.

Three Fun facts about you 1. We have collectively run over 38 half marathons and 4 full marathons, including the La Jolla Half at least 8 times each. 2. Ryan is originally from Utah and Tracie is a local San Diegan born and raised. 3. When not working, we enjoy socializing with other local families and traveling….anywhere!


www.lajollalight.com

LA JOLLA LIGHT - september 19, 2013 - Page B27

Just Listed! Open This Sunday 1-4PM Remodeled with the Best Views in La Jolla · Private Muirlands Cul-de-sac Location

OPEN HOUSES More open house listings at lajollalight.com/homes

...if it'S blUE it'S NEw!

The most unbelievably spectacular views in all of La Jolla from this just remodeled 5BR/5BA Muirlands home. Situated on almost a one-half acre. 821 Havenhurst Point, La Jolla Offered between $3,900,000 & $4,600,000 www.821HavenhurstPoint.com

David Schroedl 858·459·0202

DavidKnowsLaJolla.com BRE #00982592

Just Listed! · Open This Sunday 1-4PM

DAVID KNOWS LA JOLLA The inventory of quality homes in La Jolla is down. There are Buyers looking for your home! Call an expert. Call David for a consultation on your home’s current market value.

DavidKnowsLaJolla.com BRE #00982592

David Schroedl 858·459·0202

With more than 25 years of luxury real estate experience. Consuelo, La Jolla David is5538 your Caminito La Jolla property specialist. Call Offered today to find the best opportunities in La Jolla. between $725,000 & $825,000 This fabulous highly remodeled 3BR/3BA La Jolla Home is situated in one of the communities’ To Buy or Sell your home call best locations. Quiet & private set amongst the trees withDavid wonderful canyon & mountain views.

(858) 459-0202

Enjoying life in La Jolla for over 40 years. DRE #00982592

Pacific

Sothebys INTERNATIONAL REALTY

L

ocal Expertise. International Reach.

Realty Affiliates LLC. A Realogy Company. All Rights Reserved. Sotheby's International Realty® is a registered trademark licensed to Sotheby's International Realty Affiliates. An Equal Opportunity Company. Equal Housing Opportunity. Each Office is Independently Owned and Operated. CA DRE#01767484

©MMVII Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates LLC. A Realogy Company. All Rights Reserved. Sotheby’s International Realty® is a registered trademark licensed to Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates. An Equal Opportunity Company. Equal Housing Opportunity. Each Office is Independently Owned and Operated. CA DRE#01767484

$475,000 2 BR /2 Ba

6455 La JoLLa BLvd #108 Jeny HeRnandez/CoLdweLL BankeR ReSidenTiaL

SaT 1:00PM - 3:00PM 858-220-1419

$557,500 3 BR/2 Ba

8860 viLLa La JoLLa dR. #108 JaneT dougLaS/ReaL Living LifeSTyLeS

Sun 1:00PM - 4:00PM 619-540-5891

$725,000 - $825,000 3 BR /3 Ba

5538 CaMiniTo ConSueLo david SCHRoedL/PaCifiC SoTHeByS ReaLTy

Sun1:00PM - 4:00PM 858-459-0202

$830,000 3 BR /2.5 Ba

5818 CaMiniTo eMPReSa kaRen HiCkMan/PRudenTiaL CaLifoRnia ReaLTy

Sun 1:00PM - 4:00aM 858-229-7773

$839,500 3 BR /2.5 Ba

5508 CaMiniTo ConSueLo PaTRiCia denning/CoLdweLL BankeR ReSidenTiaL

Sun 1:00PM - 4:00PM 858-449-5899

$896,000 2 BR /2.5 Ba

101 CoaST #1e kaTe woodS/CoLdweLL BankeR ReSidenTiaL

$1,095,000 2 BR /3 Ba

322 PaLoMaR avenue LaLeH & niLoo MonSHizadeH/CoLdweLL BankeR ReSidenTiaL

$1,125,000 3 BR /3 Ba

1317 CaMiniTo fLoReo geof BeLden/PRudenTiaL Ca ReaLTy

$1,145,000 3 BR /3 Ba

7678 CaMiniTo CoRoMandeL dina LandeR/gaLLeRy PRoPeRTieS

Sun 1:00PM - 4:00PM 619-992-4532

$1,249,000 4 BR /3 Ba

1334 CaMiniTo aRRiaTa gaRy kowLewSki/wiLLiS aLLen Re

Sun 1:00PM - 4:00PM 619-227-8722

$1,285,000 4 BR /2.5 Ba

8239 CaMiniTo LaCayo MeLiSSa MaTe/wiLLiS aLLen Re

Sun 1:00PM - 4:00PM 858-242-2468

$1,339,000 3 BR /2 Ba

5523 LadyBiRd Lane MaRk & kaRLa STuaRT/PRudenTiaL

$1,395,000 3 BR /2.5 Ba

6845 faiRway Road TiM HineS/PRudenTiaL Ca ReaLTy

$1,450,000 3 BR /2.5 Ba

6502 avenida Manana gReg noonan/PRudenTiaL Ca ReaLTy

$1,695,000 3 BR /2 Ba

482 PaLoMaR avenue LaLeH & niLoo MonSHizadeH/CoLdweLL BankeR ReSidenTiaL

Sun 1:00PM - 4:00PM 858-864-6464

$1,695,000 3 BR /2.5 Ba

997 SCoTT STReeT PoinT LoMa LeSLie ReynoLdS/PRudenTiaL

Sun 1:00PM - 4:00PM 619-987-4156

$1,945,000 4 BR /2 Ba

6402 CaRdeno dRive Renee giLd/PRudenTiaL Ca ReaLTy

Sun 1:00PM - 4:00PM 619-339-6000

$1,945,000 4 BR /2 Ba

6402 CaRdeno dRive MiCHeLLe SiLveRMan/PRudenTiaL Ca ReaLTy

SaT 2:00PM - 4:00PM 619-980-2738

$1,999,000 5 BR /4.5 Ba

6901 PaSeo LaRedo MoniCa LeSCHiCk/PRudenTiaL Ca ReaLTy

Sun 1:00PM - 4:00PM 858-752-7854

$1,999,000 5 BR /4.5 Ba

6901 PaSeo LaRedo LauRen gRoSS /PRudenTiaL Ca ReaLTy

SaT 1:00PM - 4:00PM 619-778-4050

$2,100,000 5 BR /3.5 Ba

1622 eL CaMino deL TeaTRo MaRC LiPSCHiTz/PaCifiC SoTHeBy'S inT'L ReaLTy

SaT 1:00PM - 4:00PM 619-857-2882

$2,299,000 4 BR /3.5 Ba

2521 via vieSTa david MoRa/PRudenTiaL Ca ReaLTy

$2,595,000 - $2,895,000 5 BR /4.5 Ba

6325 CaSTeJon dRive Suzanne M. gianneLLa/PaCifiC SoTHeBy'S inTeRnaTionaL ReaLTy

Sun 1:00PM - 4:00PM 858-248-6398

$2,600,000 - $2,950,876 4 BR /3 Ba

7930 RoSeLand dRive SuSana CoRRigan/PRudenTiaL

Sun 1:00PM - 4:00PM 858-229-8120

$3,200,000 4 BR /5.5 Ba

2325 avenida de La PLaya gigi genTRy/PRudenTiaL Ca

Sun 1:00PM - 4:00PM 858-775-9269

$3,395,000 - $3,995,000 5 BR /5 Ba

838 foRwaRd STReeT Suzanne M. gianneLLa/PaCifiC SoTHeBy'S inTeRnaTionaL ReaLTy

Sun 1:00PM - 4:00PM 858-248-6398

$3,475,000 4 BR /3.5 Ba

1540 La JoLLa RanCHo Rd CaRoL doTy/PRudenTiaL Ca ReaLTy

Sun 1:00PM - 4:00PM 858-997-8151

$3,900,000 - $4,600,000 5 BR /5 Ba

821 HavenHuRST PoinT david SCHRoedL/PaCifiC SoTHeByS ReaLTy

Sun 1:00PM - 4:00PM 858-459-0202

$4,995,000 5 BR /7 Ba

1540 viRginia way naTaLie HaRRiS & Joan HuffMan/CoLdweLL BankeR ReSidenTiaL

$5,900,000 - $6,400,867 5 BR /5 Ba

7166 via CaPRi THe TaSH TeaM/PRudenTiaL Ca ReaLTy

SaT & Sun 1:00PM - 4:00PM 858-525-2510 Sun 1:00PM - 4:00aM 858-864-6464

SaT & Sun 1:00PM - 4:00PM 858-752-1000

Sun noon - 3:00PM 619-981-3574 Sun 2:00PM - 5:00PM 619-316-2604 SaT & Sun 1:00 PM - 4:00 PM 858-551-3302

Sun noon - 3:00PM 619-994-2438

Sun 1:00PM - 4:00PM 858-926-9343 Sun 1:00PM - 4:00PM 858-367-0303


www.lajollalight.com

Page B28 - september 19, 2013 - LA JOLLA LIGHT

www.teamchodorow.com 858-456-6850 Cape Cod in point Loma This picture perfect, two story 3BR/2.5BA New England style home will appeal to you from the moment you walk up to the wrap around front porch. Nestled on a corner lot a few steps from the bay and marina, you will delight in the Western Red cedar siding & Azek trim, Brazilian cherry hardwood floors, crown moldings, dining room with adjacent dining balcony with hillside views, and cherry entry staircase. There is a great room/living room with a bead board vaulted ceiling a windowed nook and a balcony. The superb kitchen has white bead board cabinets, under cabinet lighting, Carrera marble countertops, a Viking oven-range and refrigerator, and a Bosch dishwasher. Ideal as a primary residence or vacation home, this is a one of a kind property. $1,695,000

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Dynamic Duo

StyLiSh Contemporary with ViewS Dazzling bay and city views, this stylish contemporary sitting on .8 acres boasts 5BR/6.5BA and is ideal for both family living and entertaining. $4,995,000

arChiteCturaL Beauty Designed by Frederick Liebhardt, a La Jolla architect who apprenticed for Frank Lloyd Wright, most rooms in this home overlook the Pacific and Country Club area. $2,895,000

“Thank you so much… You two are fabulous!” -MK

Contemporary ShowpLaCe We proudly offer this single level 5 bedroom / 3 1/2 bath custom contemporary show case in the coveted Muirlands Village area. $2,050,000

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rare opportunity The best use for this almost one level acre site is to develop the property as an estate with a single or multi story home, pool, possible tennis court and guest quarters. $3,475,000

wind’n’Sea home on BeLVedere Build & Design your 2 story w/rooftop deck home to Enjoy Delightful Sunsets & Ocean Views. Steps to the Beach. $1,795,000

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inCrediBLe ViewS in paCifiC BeaCh Unobstructed-180 degree VIEWS: Ocean, Mission Bay, Sea World Fireworks, City, etc. Last house at the end of the street, sits on a 7200 sq. ft. lot with room to build. $898,000

Bright and Cheery mt. La JoLLa Freshly painted with brand new carpet, this two story end unit “D” plan in Mt. La Jolla has 3BR2.5BA, a large wraparound patio and much more. $645,000

7780 Girard Avenue, La Jolla, CA

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exCeLLent LoCation Located in sought-after Las Palmas in La Jolla Colony, this 2 bedroom, one bathroom upper level end unit condo is a must see. $399,000


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