The Paper 08-08-19

Page 1

August 8, 2019

Volume 49 - No. 32

by lyle e davis

It begins with me. Then we add you.

Together, you and me make an “us.”

We add another and suddenly “us” becomes “we.” The Paper - 760.747.7119

website:www.thecommunitypaper.com

email: thepaper@cox.net

Add more, and more, and more, and in a very short time we have “We the People.” A determined, angry group of people who are focused on bringing this nation back to the greatness it once enjoyed. We the People have work to do.

When a determined group such as ours gets together and approach our legislators at the federal level, we have the power to say, “Get off your bony backsides and do the job you were elected to do! Stop this damned bickering and get the work done!”

It Begins With Me - See Page 2

(We may want to be just a wee bit more tactful than that, but the thrust of the message is there and needs to be clearly heard by our Congress Critters.) We’ve had similar problems in the past and Leadership stepped forward and helped


The Paper • Page 2 • August 8, 2019

It Begins With Me Cont. from Page 1

alleviate the problem.

We had heavy unemployment and a down economy. Way down.

Then President Franklin Delano Roosevelt issued an executive order creating the WPA (Originlly Works Progress Administration, later changed in 1939 to Works Project Administration). It was funded by Congress with passage of the Emergency Relief Appropriation Act of 1935 on April 8, 1935.

The WPA was largely shaped by Harry Hopkins, close adviser to President Roosevelt. The WPA was initially intended to be an extension of the Federal Emergency Relief Administration work program, which funded projects run by states and cities. Many were for infrastructure, such as bridges, roads and parks, but they also included archeological excavations of significant sites, the Historic American Buildings Survey, and other historic preservation activities. Both Roosevelt and Hopkins believed that the route to eco-

Give Us This Day Our Daily Chuckle This week, a compendium of wit, wisdom and neat stuff you can tell at parties. Enjoy! MY LAST TRIP TO COSTCO

Yesterday I was at my local COSTCO buying a large bag of Purina dog chow for my loyal pet, Kallie, the Wonder Dog. I was in the check-out line when a woman behind me asked if I had a dog. What did she think I had an elephant?

So because I'm retired and have little to do, on impulse I told her that no, I didn't have a dog, I was starting the Purina Diet again.

I added that I probably shouldn't, because I ended up in the hospital last time, but that I'd lost 50 pounds before I awakened in an intensive care ward with tubes coming out of most of my orifices and IVs in both arms.

I told her that it was essentially a Perfect Diet and that the way that it

nomic recovery and the lessened importance of "the dole" would be in employment programs such as the WPA. Today, we still have “the dole.” It comes under various names, “unemployment insurance,” “food stamps,” “welfare,” etc. Time moves on, but similar problems stick around. Until addressed. And solved.

One wonders why today’s leadership doesn’t get it in gear and come up with a similar plan. Back then, about 15% of the household heads on relief were women. Youth programs were operated separately by the National Youth Administration (the NYA). The average worker was about 40 years old (about the same as the average family head on relief).

WPA was the largest and most ambitious New Deal agency, employing millions of unemployed people (mostly unskilled men) to carry out public works projects, including the construction of public buildings and roads. In much smaller but more famous projects the WPA employed musicians, artists, writers, actors and directors in large arts, works is, to load your pants pockets with Purina Nuggets and simply eat one or two every time you feel hungry.

The food is nutritionally complete so it works well and I was going to try it again. (I have to mention here that practically everyone in line was now enthralled with my story.) Horrified, she asked if I ended up in intensive care, because the dog food poisoned me. I told her no, I stepped off a curb to sniff a poodle's butt and a car hit me.

I thought the guy behind her was going to have a heart attack he was laughing so hard.

Costco won't let me shop there anymore. ••••• A doctor that had been seeing an 80year-old woman for most of her life finally retired.

At her next checkup, the new doctor told her to bring a list of all the medicines that had been prescribed for her. As the doctor was looking through these his eyes grew wide as he realized Grandma had a prescription for birth control pills.

"Mrs. Smith, do you realize these are birth control pills?" "Yes, they help me sleep at night."

"Mrs. Smith, I assure you there is absolutely nothing in these that could possibly help you sleep!"

She reached out and patted the young doctor's knee and said, "Yes, dear, I

drama, media, and literacy projects. Indeed, The Paper has published several cover stories that were the result of writers from that era pulling together interviews with former slaves and former members of the Civil War, from both sides. Those archives are priceless today . . . and they exist because of the WPA. Almost every community in the United States had a new park, bridge or school constructed by the agency. The WPA's initial appropriation in 1935 was for $4.9 billion (about 6.7 percent of the 1935 GDP), and in total it spent $13.4 billion.

At its peak in 1938, it provided paid jobs for three million unemployed men and women, as well as youth in a separate division, the National Youth Administration.

Total expenditures on WPA projects through June 1941, totaled approximately $11.4 billion. Over $4 billion was spent on highway, road, and street projects; more than $1 billion on public buildings, including the iconic Dock Street Theater in Charleston, the Griffith Observatory in Los Angeles, and the Timberline Lodge on Oregon's Mt. Hood.

More than $1 billion was spent on publicly owned or operated utilities; and another $1 billion on welfare projects, including sewing projects for women, the distribution of surplus commodities and school lunch projects. One construction project was the Merritt Parkway in Connecticut, the bridges of which were each designed as architecturally unique. In its eight-year run, the WPA built 325 firehouses and renovated 2,384 of them across the United States. The 20,000 miles of water mains, installed by their hand as well, contributed to increased fire protection across the country.

The direct focus of the WPA projects changed with need. In 1935 priority projects were to improve infrastructure; roads, extension of electricity to rural areas, water conservation, sanitation and flood control. In 1936, as outlined in that year’s Emergency Relief Appropriations Act, public facilities became a focus; parks and associated facilities, public buildings, utilities, airports, and transportation projects were funded. The following

It Begins With Me Cont. on Page 3

Part-Time* Computer Tech/Clerical Part-Time* Computer Tech/ClericalAssistant Assistant San Marcos, CA

Company Description Health & Life Insurance Agent and Broker, in the business for over 47 years.

Job Description A person with computer and basic clerical knowledge such as: • Computer, Printer, Telephone, Wireless and Wired Internet, Software setup, and networking • Administrative Duties include: Data Entry, Filing, Supply Ordering, etc. *3 days a week, Hours flexible

If interested, please email or fax your resume:

info@hains.biz / Fax: 1.888.612.3985

know that. But every morning, I grind one up and mix it in the glass of orange juice that my 16-year-old Granddaughter drinks. And believe me it definitely helps me sleep at night." You gotta love Grandmas! ••••• A man was riding on a full bus minding his own business when the gorgeous woman next to him started to breastfeed her baby. The baby wouldn't take it so she said, "Come on sweetie, eat it all up or I'll have to give it to this nice man next to us." Five minutes later the baby was still not feeding, so she said, "Come on, honey. Take it or I'll give it to this nice man here." A few minutes later the anxious man blurted out, "Come on kid. Make up your mind! I was supposed to get off four stops ago!" ••••• Students in an advanced Biology class

were taking their mid-term exam. The last question was, 'Name seven advantages of Mother's Milk.' The question was worth 70 points or none at all. One student was hard put to think of seven advantages He wrote: 1) It is perfect formula for the child. 2) It provides immunity against several diseases. 3) It is always the right temperature. 4) It is inexpensive. 5) It bonds the child to mother and vice versa. 6) It is always available as needed And then the student was stuck. Finally, in desperation, just before the bell rang indicating the end of the test he wrote: 7) It comes in two attractive containers and it's high enough off the ground

Chuckles Cont. on Page 5


The

Evelyn Madison The Social Butterfly Email Evelyn at:

thesocialbutterfly@cox.net

Job Fair at Oceanside Boys & Girls Club on Friday – A Job Fair will be held on Friday, August 9th, from 9am to 2pm, at the Oceanside Boys & Girls Club, 401 Country Club Lane, Oceanside, 92054. Full time and part time positions available; full time, Associate Director of Operations and Townsite Club Director. Part-time, After School Program Specialists and Program Enrichment Specialist, Athletic Coordinator, Culinary Arts Specialist, Human Resources Associate, Manager on Duty, ROAD’s Program Instructor, and Sports Academy Coaches for Fall Sports: Girls Volleyball, Flag Football, Cross Counhtry. Find your dream job. Come prepared to meet the staff and discuss your qualifications, complete an application (to which you may attach a copy of your resume). During the job fair, initial screenings will be conducted and possibly secondary interviews. Dress accordingly. Hidden City Sounds Concert at CCAE Outlaw-Classic Country will be featured at Hidden City Sounds Music Series free

It Begins With Me Cont. from Page 2

year saw the introduction of agricultural improvements, such as the production of fertilizer and the eradication of fungus pests. As the Second World War approached, and then eventually began, WPA projects became increasingly defense related.

One project of the WPA was funding state-level library service demonstration projects, which was intended to create new areas of library service to underserved populations and to extend rural service. Another project was the Household Service Demonstration Project, which trained 30,000 women for domestic employment.

South Carolina had one of the larger state-wide library service demonstration projects. At the end of the project in 1943, South Carolina had twelve publicly funded county libraries, one regional library, and a funded state library agency.

During the middle of the Great Depression, the Elizabethton, Tennessee, city government utilized labor and resources provided by WPA to complete a

Social Butterfly

The Paper • Page 3 • August 8, 2019

music festival. Join us at the California Center for the Arts, Escondido (CCAE) every Friday through October 4th. On Friday, August 9th, classic country musician, Sara Petite performs at the CCAE starting at 7pm. She is a gritty Pollyanna, Minnie Pearl-type, Bruce Springsteen rocker with an Outlaw-Classic Country style, and possesses the ability to reach the hearts and souls of fans young and old. Her music ranges from country, bluegrass, rock and folk, and emerges into a sound completely her own. Raised in a Tulip farming town in Washington, she now resides in San Diego. For more information about her performance, visit http://artcenterorg/event/hidden-city-sounds-sarapetite/. Enjoy a different genre of live music each week along with DJ’s, food trucks, inflatables, and a cash bar. Learn more about the Hidden City Sound music series at http://artcenter.orgt/events/category/hidden-city-sounds-2/.

Snores & S'mores Family Campout August 10-11 - The City of Carlsbad’s Snores & S’mores family campout will be held from 5pm on Saturday, August 10th, to 9am Sunday, August 11th, at Aviara Community Park at 6435 Ambrosia Lane. Enjoy a night of roasting marshmallows, playing games and watching an outdoor movie, all while camping out in a neighborhood park. Set up a tent on the field and enjoy movie themed games, crafts and activities. The evening continues with dinner, s’mores, popcorn and the featured movie under the stars. Continue the camping experience Sunday morning with breakfast and an early morning hike. The event is $25 per person and is free for ages 3 and under. The event usually sells out, advanced registration required by Aug. 9. Visit www.carlsbadconnect.org under special events to register. For more information, contact Rachael Shay, special events supervisor, rachael.shay@carlsbadca.gov or 760-602-7519.

August Events, Classes, Volunteer Info Session at Botanic Garden - Volunteers wanted, needed, loved! Join us for the Volunteer information session on Friday,

newly established nine-hole municipal golf course on seventy acres of land that was deeded in 1936 to the city for $1.00 by local golfers.

Wyandotte County Lake, in Kansas City, Kansas, was a part of the New Deal Act proposed by President Roosevelt. The construction of the lake was a way to employ residents while providing a method of water conservation for Wyandotte County. Construction on the lake started in 1936 and it was not fully complete until 1943. Headed by Harry Hopkins, the WPA provided jobs and income to the unemployed during the Great Depression in the United States. Between 1935 and 1943, the WPA provided almost eight million jobs. Full employment, which emerged as a national goal around 1944, was not the WPA goal. It tried to provide one paid job for all families in which the breadwinner suffered long-term unemployment. When federal support of artists was questioned, Hopkins answered, “Hell! They’ve got to eat just like other people.”

The WPA supported tens of thousands of artists, by fund-

August 9th, 9:30am-12noon. Meet interesting, friendly pople, learn more about the beautiful San Diego Botanic Garden, and discover how you can get involved. For information, visit https://www.sdbtgarden.org/volunteer-2.htm.

Events: Now thru April 2020, 9am-3pm, free with paid admission or membership, Sculpture in the Garden; an exhibition that showcases 10 sculptures from 9 artists. Most are for sale and are part of the Garden's fund-raising effort. Visit http://ww.sdbgarden.org/sculpture.htm. Sunday, August 11--Friday, September 27, daily, 9am-5pm, Ecke Building, free with paid admission or membership: Growing Wild Art Show, a botanical-themed exhibition by Oceanside Museum of Art's Artists Alliance, and features oil paintings, photography on metal, oil on copper and other mixed media. Visit http://www.sdbgarden.org/events.htm. Now--Labor Day, September 2, daily, 9am-5pm, free admission for active-duty military and up to 5 immediate family members. STBG is proud to participate in the Blue Star Museum program, offering free admission to all active duty, National Guard and Reserve members of the U.S. military and their families (card crrier plus 5 immediate family members. Visit http://www.sdbgarden.org/military-specials.htm.

Classes: Sunday, August 11, 1-4pm, Plein Air Painting in the Garden. Members $45; non-members $54. We'll set up our easels outdoors in the Garden and paint directly from life. Ample discussion on art materials, composition, color and light will give even the most beginner painter ample understanding to enjoy themselves. Students are required to bring their own supplies. Sunday, August 11, 9am-4pm, Mosaic Mini Totems. Members $75; nonmember $90; plus $75 materials fee paid directly to the instructor at class. Learn how to build a mini totem for garden or patio. Thursday, August 15, 9:30am10:30am; Open Air Yoga Experience. Members $20; non-members $24. Breathe in fresh air while being sheltered by trees surrounding your mat. Immerse your

ing creation of 2,566 murals and 17,744 pieces of sculpture that decorate public buildings nationwide. The federal art, theater, music, and writing programs, while not changing American culture as much as their adherents had hoped, did bring more art to more Americans than ever before or since. The WPA program in the arts led to the creation of the National Foundation for the Arts and the National Endowment for the Humanities.

The WPA was a national program that operated its own projects in cooperation with state and local governments, which provided 10%-30% of the costs. WPA sometimes took over state and local relief programs that had originated in the Reconstruction Finance Corporation (RFC) or Federal Emergency Relief Administration (FERA) programs. Liquidated on June 30, 1943, as a result of low unemployment due to the worker shortage of World War II, the WPA provided millions of Americans with jobs for 8 years. Most people who needed a job were eligible for at least some of its positions. Hourly wages were typically set to the prevailing wages in each area. But, work-

senses in the sights and smells of nature. Bring your own mat. Sunday, August 18, 9-11am, Shinrin-Yoku/Forest Bathing. Members $32; non-members $40. This is a way of connecting people to nature. This idea and positive health effects of being and walking in a state of relaxation in nature has undergone scientific testing and validation in Japan and Korea, and is trending in garden/nature reserves across the country. For all these classes, visit http://www.sdbgarden.org/classes.htm. San Diego Botanic Garden is located at 230 Quail Gardens Drive, Encinitas 92024. www.SDBGarden.org.

Escondido Arts Partnership (EAP) August Events – The EAP Municipal Gallery, at 262 E. Grand Ave, Escondido, will celebrate the diverse artistic talents of EAP’s members, with over 40 works in ceramic, fiber, found objects, oil, watercolor, acrylic, collage, and more. The public will determine the exhibition winners in this People’s Choice show; awards will be announced at the September 14th Saturday art reception. Meet the artists at the opening receptions during Second Saturday Artwalk, August 10th, 5:30pm-8pm. Gallery Hours: Tues. 11am-6pm; Thurs to Sat. 11am-4pm. Contact 760.480.4101 or mail@escondidoarts.ortg. Family-Friendly Free Art Lesson Embosses You with Foil! – The Education Department at the California Center of the Arts (CCAE) is hosting another free 2nd Saturday art lesson on Saturday, August 10th. Express your creativity during a free, family-friendly, one-hour art activity. This month’s lesson focuses on embossing, a process of creating raised relief images. Taking inspiration from the exhibition in the museum, you will then use your embossing to create a print of your own. After the lesson, visit the exhibition in the museum, for free. Held the 2nd Saturday each month, lessons include all materials, are adaptable for diverse learn-

Social Butterfly Cont. on Page 5

ers could not be paid for more than 30 hours a week before 1940, to meet the objections of the labor unions.

The WPA employed a maximum of 3.3 million in November 1938. Worker pay was based on three factors: the region of the country, the degree of urbanization, and the individual's skill. It varied from $19/month to $94/month. The goal was to pay the local prevailing wage, but limit the hours of work to 8 hours a day or 40 hours a week; the stated minimum being 30 hours a week, or 120 hours a month.

In 1940, the WPA changed policy and began vocational educational training of the unemployed to make them available for factory jobs. Previously, labor unions had vetoed any proposal to provide new skills, saying there were already too many unemployed skilled workers. Unemployment ended with the beginning of war production for World War II, as millions of men joined the services, and cost-plus contracts made it attractive for companies to hire unemployed men and train

It Begins With Me Cont. on Page 5


Local News

The Paper • Page 4 • August 8, 2019 Oceanside Students Moved from Garrison Elementary to San Luis Rey Because of Sinkholes

The Oceanside Unified School District Board voted unanimously last week to move both students and staff at Garrison Elementary School to San Luis Rey School because of sinkholes that appeared on campus earlier this year.

The board decided to move the students as it investigates what is causing the sinkholes, and determines whether they can repair the damage and renovate the site. The first sinkhole, which is about 5 feet long by 4 feet wide, formed in February. In May, school officials discovered a second sinkhole, about 4 feet long by 1 foot wide. It’s unclear how deep they are, but the school placed them off limits.

The school has been working with geologists to determine what caused the sinkholes, Soto said, but so far their investigation hasn’t turned up answers. Harvest Hills In, Safari Highlands, Out.

What for years had been on the drawing board as Safari Highlands Ranch, the developer, Concordia Homes, has rebranded the development as Harvest Hills, which will include 550 estate homes and a new fully equipped fire station within a footprint of 762 acres. The project has been reworked into a “net zero energy” “carbon neutral” agri-neighborhood that pushes its designed to please the environ-

mentally conscious community.

Escondido’s Mayor Paul McNamar had expressed reservations about the project after he was elected and asked that the developer take a hard look at modifications. The developer has responded and while Mayor McNamara has not endorsed the project he has expressed approval of the developer’s good faith efforts.

Concordia Homes announced a series of substantial design updates and a new name for its proposed housing project in Escondido’s San Pasqual Valley. According to Concordia, “Previously known as Safari Highlands Ranch, the project will now be Harvest Hills – Escondido’s first ever carbon neutral, net zero energy and agri-neighborhood housing community. The latest project updates are reflective of feedback received through community meetings, online mediums and the project’s environmental review process.” A new community center named The Farmhouse will serve as the heart of the community, creating a gathering place for new neighbors with an onsite working farm, an aquaponics greenhouse, and a recreational area and gathering space.

The update included reducing the project’s impact on the land by 50 acres, lowering and mostly eliminating the visibility of new homes from existing neighborhoods, increasing open space and preservation to 762 acres, and adding parking space resulting in 13 parks and pocket parks, in addition to The

Lyle Davis and by gosh they had heard of you. One said Lyle is a favorite son of Norway. Imagine my surprise at the breadth of your fame or is it notoriety. You must have made some kind of impression when you visited there. Ole says hi.

Man About Town

A memory from 2011:

Ed Gallo is not only a good friend but is a former member of the Escondido City Council.

Lyle, I spent the past four days in NJ staying at the Hyatt in Jersey City directly across from what will become the WTC Memorial. Very emotional visiting the temporary museum. Always enjoy the food in NJ, obviously Italian food.

While there I noticed every day about 20 to 30 airline men and women in blue uniforms. Pilots and stewardesses; most were blonde with an occasional brunette and one almost redhead. My curiosity got the best of me so I approached a group waiting for their charter bus to take them to the airport. They fly for SAS and they said they were from Norway and there are 3 flights daily to Newark. They have been staying overnights for the past 3 years. So I asked them if they knew

I must say the flight attendants were much more attractive than the ones on Continental which was my carrier. BTW, I had my worst travel day ever coming back to SD. On a non-stop flight I spent over 91/2 hours either in the air, at an airport or sitting on the tarmac arriving after midnight. It is now 4:30 pm Wed and my luggage just arrived. Must have gone to Santo Domingo instead of San Diego. Anyway, thought you'd like to know how well known you are in Norway. I had to ask them about the tragedy in Norway the other day and as can be expected they were noticeably upset that something of that magnitude happened in their country. Ed Gallo

Another Series of Memories - from an old War Correspondent (who was young once):

En route to S. Vietnam, a stop at Hickham Field in Hawaii - too much to drink and getting sick on the lawn of a BOQ (bachelor officer's quarters) . . . enjoying the warm, tropical air, the fragrance of Hawaii's flowers, and taking note of the meticulously manicured and maintained grassy lawn . . . while I was puking my guts out on that same beautiful lawn . . .

Departing the next day for S. Vietnam via Wake Island (which I had only heard about via the movies) - didn't see

Farmhouse, spread throughout the community. Pay Raises for San Marcos City Manager and City Attorney

San Marcos City Manager Jack Griffin will get a 3 percent pay increase, the City Council decided recently, also approving an hourly rate hike for City Attorney Helen Peak.

The council extended Griffin’s contract until June 2022. In addition to the 3 percent raise to his base pay, he will also receive another 3 percent deposited to his deferred compensation account, according to the agreement. The city has enough salary savings for the coming fiscal year to accommodate that pay increase, the council stated in the agreement. Griffin currently earns $251,658 per year, with total pay and benefits of $294,741, according to city records provided by City Clerk Phil Scollick.

Aan hourly rate increase for City Attorney Helen Peak to $230 per hour, from $220 per hour, the rate that she had received since 2017. Peak and her firm, Escondidobased Lounsbery Ferguson Altona & Peak, are tasked with enforcing San Marcos municipal code, prosecuting civil code violations, and defending the city in those actions. Letters to the Editor? We love ‘em! Our Readers do as well! Send them to: thepaper@cox.net

much; it was about 2 or 3 am when we stopped . . . I remember a big fat guy seated next to me, sweated profusely, he had some type of job where he had to island hop throughout the Pacific selling defense type goods I think. I did not envy him his job, no matter how much money he made. He did not look like a happy man.

A stop at Papeete, Tahiti (it's pronounced "papa-yay-tee,") - early morning arrival, still dark. Taxi into the resort hotel - beautiful thatch roofed rooms, on the ocean. I spent three days in Tahiti, deciding if I was gonna get shot at in Vietnam I damn sure was gonna enjoy life a bit before I got there. Rode into town from the resort on a tourist bus . . . the town itself reminded me of Tijuana - vendor stalls, a bit ramshackle type environment, not nearly as fancy as the resort hotel. Didn't care much for downtown Papeete'.

Don't remember his name but there was a nuclear or molecular physicist that had sailed to Tahiti on board his sailboat (yacht). He was as handsome as any movie star you've ever met and, obviously, was a brain. You don't become a physicist unless you're really, really smart. And he obviously had quite a bit of money, owning his own sailboat/yacht and able to take enough time off work to sail from LA to Tahiti. We seemed to hit it off and he offered me the chance to fly with him in the morning over to the island of Moorea' . . . about a one hour boat/ferry ride from Papeete'. He was going to rent a plane in the morning, hop over to Moorea' and we'd spend the day there then fly back. I canceled my ferry ride. Unfortunately, all the small aircraft were either rented or not available the next morning so I never got to see

Letters to the Editor A Response

I enjoyed reading Mr Gomez's article on The Silent Majority. But I read it with sadness, knowing that my own ItalianAmerican ancestors had been a victim of the same jingoism and prejudice during WW II. Perhaps Mr. Gomez would be so kind as to give equal time to Italians who have managed to avoid publicity over their own detention.

I enclose some informative endnotes from my pending autobiography, Path Perilous: Letters to the Editor Cont. on Page 9

Moorea. I'm told it's worth going back to see.

In the evenings we'd have a big firepit, great roast pig, beautiful Tahitian dancing girls dancing the Tamurae (the Tahitian version of the hula - much, much better). They try to get all the tourists up to try and dance the Tamurae - I don't remember for sure but I think I was successful in declining their offer.

Seated near the firepit was a Sheikh all decked out in his native dress (which kinda looked like someone threw a bedsheet over him). We chatted a bit and I admired his watch. He handed it to me. It was platinum! Platinum, I learned, is heavy! It was probably a $5,000 to $10,000 watch. He began to sing some song but it was in Arabic so I had no idea what he was singing about. Eventually, I returned his platinum watch though I entertained the idea of running off to my hotel room with it - but they lop the heads off of thieves in Arabia. I thought it more prudent to return his watch. This was before I became a certified scuba diver - that would come many years later. But the snorkeling in the crystal clear aquamarine waters off the beach of the resort hotel was fantastic. I wish now I had known then how to scuba.

Time to depart. We passed Fiji - don't remember if we stopped there or not; if we did it was just an airport stop. I remember lots of palm trees, mountains, etc. Then on to Sydney,

Man About Town Cont. on Page 5


The Paper • Page 5 • August 8, 2019

It Begins With Me Cont. from Page 3

them. With the mass-employment need essentially gone, Congress terminated the WPA in late 1943.

The WPA paid low wages and it was not able to employ everyone — some five million were left to seek assistance from state relief programs, which provided families with $10 per week. However, it went a long way toward bolstering the self-esteem of workers. A poem sent to Roosevelt in February 1936, in block print, read, in part, “I THINK THAT WE SHALL NEVER SEE A PRESIDENT LIKE UNTO THEE . . . POEMS ARE MADE BY FOOLS LIKE ME, BUT GOD, I THINK, MADE FRANKLIN D.” Sources:

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amer icanexperience/features/general-article/dustbowl-wpa/ http://www.indiana.edu/~liblilly/wpa/wpa_info.html

Chuckles Cont. from Page 2

where the cat can't get it. He got an A+. •••• A woman and her 12-year-old son were riding in a taxi in Detroit . It was raining and all the prostitutes were standing under awnings. "Mom," said the boy, "what are all those women doing?" "They're waiting for their husbands to get off work," she replied

The taxi driver turns around and says, "Geez lady, why don't you tell him the truth? They're hookers, boy! They have sex with men for money." The little boy's eyes get wide and he says, "Is that true Mom?"

His mother, glaring hard at the driver, answers "Yes."

After a few minutes the kid asks, "Mom, if those women have babies, what happens to them?"

She said, "Most of them become taxi drivers." •••• An elderly, but hardy cattleman from Texas once told a young female neighbor that if she wanted to live a long life, the secret was to sprinkle a pinch of gunpowder on her oatmeal each morning. She did this religiously and lived to the ripe old age of 103. She left behind 14 children, 30 grandchildren, 21 great-grandchildren, five greatgreat-grandchildren and a 40 foot HOLE where the crematorium used to be. IF YOU DON'T PASS THIS ON TO

YOUR FRIENDS BY 11:30 AM TOMORROW, YOU WILL RECEIVE THREE ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS ABSOLUTELY FREE . •••• "Lexophile" describes those that have a love for words, such as "you can tune a piano, but you can't tuna fish," or "To write with a broken pencil is pointless." An annual competition is held by the New York Times to see who can create the best original lexophile. This year's submissions:

1. I changed my iPod's name to Titanic. It's syncing now.

2. England has no kidney bank, but it does have a Liverpool. 3. Haunted French pancakes give me the crepes.

4. This girl today said she recognized me from the Vegetarians Club, but I'd swear I've never met herbivore. 5. I know a guy who's addicted to drinking brake fluid, but he says he can stop any time. 6. A thief, who stole a calendar, got twelve months.

overly attentive stare and walked

directly toward her. (As All men will.) Before she could offer her apologies

for staring so rudely, he leaned over and whispered to her, 'I'll do anything, absolutely anything that you want me

to do, no matter how kinky, for $20.00... on one condition'

Flabbergasted, the woman asked what the condition was. The man replied,

'You have to tell me what you want me to do in just three words.'

The woman considered his proposition

for a moment, and then slowly

removed a $20 bill from her purse,

which she pressed into the man's hand along with her address. She looked deeply into his eyes, and slowly and meaningfully said... 'Clean my house.’

7. When the smog lifts in Los Angeles, U.C.L.A. 8. I got some batteries that were given out free of charge.

9. A dentist and a manicurist married. They fought tooth and nail. 10. A will is a dead giveaway.

11. With her marriage, she got a new name and a dress.

12. Police were summoned to a daycare center where a three-year- old was resisting a rest. 13. Did you hear about the fellow whose entire left side was cut off? He's all right now.

14. A bicycle can't stand alone; it's just two tired. 15. The guy who fell onto an upholstery machine last week is now fully recovered.

16. He had a photographic memory, but it was never fully developed.

17. When she saw her first strands of gray hair, she thought she'd dye. 18. Acupuncture is a jab well done. That's the point of it. 19. I didn't like my beard at first. Then it grew on me.

20. Did you hear about the crossedeyed teacher who lost her job because she couldn't control her pupils. 21. When you get a bladder infection, urine trouble. 22. When chemists die, they barium.

23. Stayed up all night to see where the sun went, and then it dawned on me.

24. I'm reading a book about anti-gravity. I just can't put it down. •••• A woman was sitting at a bar enjoying an after work cocktail with her girlfriends, when Steven a tall, exceptionally handsome, extremely sexy middleaged man entered. He was so striking that the woman could not take her eyes off him. The young-at-heart man noticed her

Chuckles Cont. on Page 6

Man About Town Cont. from Page 4

rassed, trying to explain the crazy things that we, as a nation, were experiencing.

I fell in love with Australia. The Aussies, once they learn you're a "Yank," will not let you buy a beer! There seems to be a mutual love affair between Aussies and Americans. We learned to love one another during a little dust up known as World War II.

Next stop, S. Vietnam.

Australia.

I stopped in Sydney so that I might visit and do stories about the RAAF (Royal Australian Air Force) base in Richmond, just outside of Sydney. The Aussies played a major role in fighting the VC and NVA in S. Vietnam. Wonderful warriors. Got lots of great photos and stories. Still have the photos somewhere, probably out in the garage - stored amidst dozens of boxes of other memorabilia. Sydney is best described as a modern day San Francisco - just located in Australia, and without all the smoke and grime that San Francisco's building have acquired over the years. It was a favorite R&R (Rest and Relaxation) port for the military who managed to escape for a couple of weeks from the war zone(s).

Since I was reporting for both radio and newspapers back home I decided to pay a visit to Sydney's top radio station, 2SM. There, they were treating me like a king when the teletype came to life and reported Bobby Kennedy had just been assassinated. They ushered me into the newsroom and interviewed me about the madness that was going on back home . . . JFK, then Martin Luther King, and now Bobby Kennedy. I can tell you I felt embar-

A final stop at Kuala Lumpur - another beautiful Indonesian country I'd love to visit but this, too, was just an airport stop.

I've already written about many of my adventures in S. Vietnam while on assignment. I may have more at another time. Let me instead jump to my departure from Vietnam - homeward bound! Kinda. We flew from S. Vietnam via the Vietnamese airline to Cambodia - an airport stop - then on to Bangkok, Thailand!

As luck would have it my seatmate was a reporter for Paris Match by name of Reggie Davis. We struck up a conversation that started because of our identical surnames. I wondered if he might be my wealthy relative I had always hoped to find. We laughed, we joked, we got on wonderfully well. On one occasion he had been assigned to do a story on the King and his court of Thailand. When he arrived they had cleared the entire palace grounds and parking lot and no one else was allowed on the grounds except him. He was treated, as they say, royally.

I stayed at the Bangkok Hilton; we only had an overnight and then departed the next day. I strolled the streets of Bangkok, taking in the sights. I still

Man About Town Cont. on Page 11


The Paper • Page 6 • August 8, 2019

Chuckles Cont. from Page 5

Social Butterfly Cont. from Page 3 ing levels, and are led by a Center Teaching artist. Seating is limited and registration is required. Sign up using the link below. The free art lesson is from 10am11am and space is limited; seats are available on a first-come, first-serve basis, and takes place in Studio 2. For easy access, park near Boys & Girls Club in the public parking lot off Woodward Ave and N. Escondido Blvd; enter the studio hallway near the Grape Day Park entrance by the Historical Train Depot. For questions/information about this program, contact Laurissa Rudgers at 760.839.4176 or lrudgers@artceter.org. For more info, visit http://artcenter.org/event/2nd-saturday-foil-relief-print/.

Summer of Songs and Poetry at Escondido Public Library - The 2nd Saturday Concert Series presents Lisa Sanders on Saturday, August 10th from 34:30pm in the Turrentine Room. Lisa Sanders and Karen "Brown Sugar" Hayes are a pair of electrifying, bodacious, harmonizing singers of genuine heartfelt songs, appropriate for all ages. On Tuesday, August 13, from 10am-11am Meet the Mayor at the Syngery Co"Working Centre, 140 N. Escondido Blvd. Come meet Escondido's new mayor, Paul "Mac" McNamara, at a series of montyhly community meetings that will be held throughout the city and are open to the public. A new catalog system is coming to the Library; they will be transitioning to the new collection management system, effective August 22nd. To prepare for this transition, the library will temporarily stop accepting hold requests for library materials between August 8 and August 22. San Diego County African Violet Society August Meeting - The San Diego County African Violet Society will meet Tuesday, August 13, at 10:30am in the Vista Public Library Community Room, 700 Eucalyptus Avenue. At the August meeting there will be a demonstration by Marge Siirila & Joe Phares on "Building a lighted African Violet stand out of PVC pipe using materials available from your local home improvement store". Parts list and detailed instructions will be handed out. At the conclusion of the demonstration, the stand will be donated to the club to be auctioned to the highest bidder. A Culture Class will be presented by Ms. Barbara Conrad on a unique method of replanting African Violets into a larger container. The San Diego County African Violet Society is affiliated with the African Violet Society of America, Inc., and meets on the second Tuesday each month at 10:30am. Visitors are welcome and encouraged to attend in a friendly, fun atmosphere, to learn how to care for African Violets. For additional information contact Barbara Conrad, bconrad999@yahoo.com.

Alliance for Regional Solutions, August Events – (1) Workshop: The Impact of Trauma and Maintaining a Compassionate Mindset, on Friday, August 16th, 9-11am, Vista Community Clinic, Classroom 2 & 3, Women’s Center, 1000 Vale Terrace. Cost $10. Equip participants to more clearly understand the impact of trauma on the brain and body while exploring the process of maintaining a compassionate mindset. For information or reservations, contact Marylynn McCorkle at 760.529.9979, x216, or mmccorkle@regionalsolutions.net. (2) Thanks(for)giving in August; Thursday, August 22, 6-9pm, at Green Oceanside Kitchen, El Corazon Senior Center, 3302 Senior Center Dr., Oceanside, 92056. Price $32. The North County Food Policy Council invites you to the second annual Thanks(for)Giving in August fundraising dinner to support the Turkey Tally Program, which provides nutritious, protein-rich turkeys to local families in need during the holiday season. The evening will include dinner, no-host cocktails and live music and the opportunity to bid on auction items during the Silent Auction. All proceeds will benefit the North County Food Policy’s efforts. (3) Essential Management Skills for Nonprofits – Alliance is partnering with CSUSM this fall to bring the Essential Management

Helping Wildlife

Caring for animals, including California’s native wildlife, is one of my passions. Last session my legislation setting up the Native California Wildlife Rehabilitation Fund was signed into law, allowing voluntary contributions when you file your tax return to support injured, orphaned or sick wildlife. Helping finance organizations that support native wildlife is important. If you've found an injured animal and need information on where to take it, please call: 619-225-WILD (9453) for Project Wildlife.

Fortunately, we have a number of outstanding local wildlife organizations in this region that can help, including Project Wildlife's North County drop off locations: Humane Society – Escondido Campus, 3500 Burnet Drive, Escondido, CA 92027, 619-299-7012, ext. 2737. Injured wild animals can also be dropped off at Oceanside Humane Society, 572 Airport Road or the Mission Animal Bird Hospital, located at 655 Benet Road, also in Oceanside. Other North San Diego County sites include Acacia Animal Hospital, at 755 W. Citracado Parkway, Escondido, and in Ramona, the Fund for Animals Wildlife Center, focusing on rehabbing predators, including bobcats, coyotes and hawks. In the Temecula area, Animal Friends of Skills for Nonprofits program to North County once again. Sessions start on September 19th. For information or to register, call 760.750.8706 or email professionaldevelopment@csusm.edu.

San Diego Humane Society Events - On Saturday, August 17, at all SD Humane Society locations, they will be participating in the fifth-annual Clear the Shelters. All day, adoption fees will be waived for available animals. The nationwide adoption drive is in partnership with NBC and Telemundo. Last year, SDHS sent 431 animals into new homes in a single day -more than any other shelter in the country! Ready to adopt now? SDHS always waives fees for adopters aged 55+ and currently has a special $5 adoption fee for small pets. And, make your pet a star! The 2020 Photo Fundraiser online is continuing but the deadline is Sunday, August 31. SDHS is looking for pet models for the 2020 calendar. Enter your pet's best photo today for a chance to be featured as pet of the month in next year's wall calendar. There are always many events going on every month. Contact SDHS at 619.299.7012, or any of the campuses to find out about the events.

Republican Club of Ocean Hills General Membership Meeting – On Wednesday, August 21st, the meeting will start at 1pm, and at 1:15pm the Keynote Speaker, Tony Krvaric will speak. Tony Krvaric is the Chairman of the Republican Party of San Diego County, and this is the opportunity to meet and hear Tony’s presentation: “What are we doing differently this year to work towards Republican victories and what are the different dynamics in 2020 vs. 2018?” Tony is an optimistic and inspirational speaker so plan to attend this important meeting. Learn how you can contribute your time and talent to help for Republican victories in 2020. The meeting takes place at the Broken Yolk Café, 22434 Vista Way, Oceanside, 92054. Join us for this luncheon meeting at 12noon; payment is by check (payable to RCOH) or cash at the door. Sorry, no credit cards. Order any meal on the menu

the Valleys accepts wildlife and will transfer injured or sick animals to Project Wildlife. They are located at 33751 Mission Trail, in Wildomar. If you need assistance containing a wild animal, call Wildlife Assist at 858-278-2222. For emergency transport options, call the Humane Society at 619-299-7012. Do not attempt to care for the animal yourself. Do not give it food or water because it could cause further injury. Please do keep the animal in a dark, quiet box or crate and bring it to a wildlife drop-off location. We Californians are blessed with amazing habitats and truly special native species. In so many ways, their well-being is up to us. These outstanding organizations can help us fulfill that responsibility.

Assembly Republican Leader Marie Waldron, R-Escondido, represents the 75th Assembly District in the California Legislature, which includes the communities of Bonsall, Escondido, Fallbrook, Hidden Meadows, Pala, Palomar Mountain, Pauma Valley, Rainbow, San Marcos, Temecula, Valley Center and Vista.

plus a non-alcoholic drink. Price is $15 and includes tax and tip. There will be an Opportunity Drawing. Payment of annual dues, $15/person, can be made at the meeting. Guests are welcome to attend and to join the Club. RSVP to Don at dcsyvs@cox.net or 760.724.7371.

Carl DeMaio to Speak at Carlsbad Republican Women's Meeting - The Carlsbad Republican Women welcome Carl DeMaio on Tuesday, August 27th, as their keynote speaker. Carl is chairman of Reform CA and host of The DeMaio Report, heard daily during afternoon drive on AM-600 KOGO. Carl DeMaio knows how to reform government – and he has built an entire business and a political career on making broken government programs work again for the people. According to the San Diego UT, “DeMaio’s passion for reforming government has taken him from a difficult upbringing to a career as a successful entrepreneur with a national reputation.” On August 27th, DeMaio will present, "Carl DeMaio's Plan to Take Back California". This is a “can’t miss” luncheon as we speed into the 2020 elections! At the age of 23, Carl DeMaio started his first company — the Performance Institute — to provide training and consulting solutions to help financially-troubled government entities cut costs while improving performance. He turned his business success into a life-long crusade to improve the performance, transparency, efficiency, and accountability of government at all levels. DeMaio won a seat on the San Diego City Council in 2008 and helped turn the city around from the brink of bankruptcy through his “Roadmap to Recovery” reform agenda. DeMaio is now tackling state-wide fiscal reform policy in his role as Chairman of Reform California. He is also continuing to speak out on local issues on his radio show, providing investigative

Social Butterfly Cont. on Page 8


The Paper • Page 7 • August 8, 2019

Driving lyle Nuts

Confessions of an absent minded driver:

Do you ever take off somewhere in your car and forget where you were going? Happens to me all too often.

Last night I was in the mood for a delicious Italian Meatball Sandwich made by Agrusa's - a long time Italian eatery, mainly take-outs, about 12 blocks away from my home.

I jumped into the car and went on my merry way, day-dreaming, I'm sure. Suddenly I wondered to myself, "where the hell am I?" I was halfway across town. "Drat! I should have turned south on Rose St. about three miles back." Made a left turn, then another, was now eastbound on E. Valley Parkway . . . found Agrusa's, ordered my sandwich, came home and enjoyed it.

Other times, if I have someone in the passenger seat and am talking with them I forget where it is I'm going. I could drive clear across Escondido and then wonder, "where the hell am I?" Sure enough, I missed a turn somewhere because I was so involved in my conversation. Evelyn has gotten used to this. On the freeway, well in advance, she's say . . ."you have an off-ramp coming up in about a mile; you may want to move over to the right lane." And, of course, she's always right. Listen to Your Children!

For weeks, maybe months, eldest son, Scott, has been bugging Father Lyle:

"Dad . . . you've got to either lock your car at night or take your cell phone into the house with you. You leave the car wide open, your cell phone openly visible; someone is going to get into your car, steal your cell phone and anything else of value you have." His comments fell on deaf ears. (I"m old, you know).

Two days ago I got into my car to go someplace and right away noticed that some long-legged individual had been in the drivers seat. The seat had been pushed back and the back rest area of the seat had also been changed. I was wondering who had gotten into my driver's seat and then I noticed a lot of papers on the floor in front of the passenger seat, a series of expired auto registration forms, the owner's manual for the car, a couple of other items. And then I noticed the cord that charges my cell phone and plugs into the cigarette lighter was gone (about a $10 item). Fortunately, I had taken my cell phone into the house the night before. Scott's prediction had come true!

My car had been burgled.

The burglar, however, was quite considerate. I had a windbreaker jacket in the back seat. He had

folded it neatly and left it in the front passenger seat.

I have my cell phone intact; will buy another charger today . . . and I have learned my lesson.

Historically Speaking by Tom Morrow

I No Speak Vietnamese!

I believe I'm gonna learn how to say, in Vietnamese, "I speak your language and understand everything you are saying." I reckon the manicurist attending me will panic and actually believe I overheard her . . . and if she was saying something about me, or other Anglos, then she'd probably turn a bright red. I get pedicures often, initially because I'm a diabetic and you have to take good care of your feet. Once I started, however, I found it to be a very relaxing experience, one that women have kept hidden from us menfolk for years.

The frustrating part of all this is the difficulty in finding a manicurist that both speaks and understands English. Today I had a rookie manicurist who gave me a pedicure. She (a) put a dirty towel on the footrest, (b) put the blue antiseptic powder in the foot bath but then poured in cold water! I told her I did not want a dirty towel. She didn't understand so I asked for the manager. Manager came and she didn't speak or understand English much better. You need hot water to make the antiseptic powder mix properly; cold water just makes the powder glob up. I explained this to her and she said, "oh, we sometimes have problem with hot and cold water."

"You can't do that!" I told her. That's a health issue. You could lose your license by endangering your customers. After the pedicure was finished I called the salon manager and told her I didn't think their manicurists were properly trained and they were in danger of a health inspector shutting the salon down and, further, I would not be back for a pedicure. We'll see what happens.

Detective Mary: Father lyle comes home from running an errand. As is his habit, he removes his shirt in his office, carefully hanging it up (BS - he throws it on a large file cabinet) . . first removing his wallet from the left upper pocket, placing said wallet on his desk so he can grab it at a moment's notice. An established routine.

Several hours later Father lyle is ready to go, having promised Mother Mary a trip to the beauty salon for a cut and blow and a manicure/pedicure; panic time! Father lyle cannot find his wallet. His driver's license, his credit cards, all the things needed to survive and to move about town! Frantic, he searches and researches his desk. He enlists the help of Mary's caregiver as well as Mary herself. Lyle goes to the car thinking he may have left it in the car

Driving Lyle Nuts Cont. on Page 11

Wernher von Braun: ‘I Shoot for the Stars!’ (Occasionally He Hit London)

One of the more controversial decisions of post-World War II was bringing to the U.S. a group of German rocket scientists under “Operation Paperclip.” Headed by Wernher von Braun, the group had brought down death and destruction upon England, but later, their technology took us to the Moon.

Born March 23, 1912, von Braun was the leading figure in the development of German rocket technology before and during World War II. The U.S. progress in manned space travel can be directly traced to von Braun.

More people died building the V-2 rockets than were killed by it. Von Braun admitted visiting the slavelabor plant at Mittelwerk on many occasions, and called conditions at the plant "repulsive," but claimed he never witnessed any deaths or beatings, although it had become clear to him by 1944 that deaths had occurred. Some prisoners claim von Braun engaged in brutal treatment or approved of it.

Von Braun designed and developed the V-1 and V-2 rockets at Peenemünde launch site on the Baltic Sea. Hitler’s “Vengeance” rockets rained down death and destruction on London and other English cities. Von Braun always claimed he had his eye on conquering space rather than weapons, especially building a rocket to reach the Moon and Mars. Critics had a black-hearted joke for von Braun: “I shoot for the stars, but occasionally I hit London.”

He was supposedly a major in the SS, but he maintained being a Nazi was forced upon him – a point that is debatable.

Von Braun had been under Gestapo surveillance since October 1943, because he expressed more interest in space travel than weapons of war. Nazis considered this a "defeatist" attitude. SS chief Henrich Himmler launched a false charge saying von Braun was a “communist sympathizer” and had attempted to sabotage the V-2 program. Additionally, von Braun regularly piloted his government-provided airplane that might allow him to escape to England. On March 14, 1944, von Braun was

arrested and detained and was taken to a Gestapo cell. Von Braun gained conditional release when Albert Speer, Reichsminister for Munitions, persuaded Hitler to reinstate von Braun so the V-2 program could continue. In his memoirs, Speer wrote that Hitler conceded von Braun was to be "protected from all prosecution as long as he was ‘indispensable.’

In early 1945, the Soviet Army was close to Peenemünde. Von Braun asked his staff to decide how and to whom they should surrender. Unwilling to go to the Soviets, they all chose the Americans. Von Braun led a group of 500 scientists to Austria, surrendering to the American Army. Fearing documents and blueprints would be destroyed by the SS, von Braun had ordered them hidden in an abandoned mine shaft before surrendering to the U.S. Army. On June 20, 1945, the U.S. Secretary of State approved the transfer of von Braun and his specialists to the United States where they were assigned to Fort Bliss just north of El Paso, Texas.

Following the war, von Braun worked developing U.S. ballistic missiles. He became a U.S. citizen and was assimilated into the National Aeronautic and Space Administration (NASA) where he served as director of the newly formed Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. Von Braun was the chief architect of the Saturn V, which propelled the Apollo spacecraft to the Moon. On Jan. 31, 1958, the U.S. launched America’s first satellite, Explorer 1, which signaled the birth of NASA’s space program. Despite von Braun’s successes, the U.S. press dwelled on von Braun's past as a member of the SS and the slave labor used to build his V-2 rockets. However, as publicity for space travel grew, von Braun was brought into American living rooms by Walt Disney, who often featured the scientist on his Wonderful World of Disney, a weekly TV program. Disney also opened his space-oriented “Tomorrowland” at Disneyland.

Von Braun developed preliminary plans for a human mission to Mars that used a space station as a staging point. By 1960, the German scientist had become a central figure at NASA. His Saturn V rocket propelled the Apollo program to the moon. Now, some 50 years later, NASA is working toward completing von Braun’s dream of going to Mars – a distance considerably further than the Moon. Reaching the red planet would be a giant step of von Braun’s dream of reaching the stars. Unfortunately, von Braun never realized that goal. He died on June 16, 1977 of pancreatic cancer in Alexandria, Virginia at age 65.


The Paper • Page 8 • August 8, 2019

MEN WANTED FOR HAZARDOUS JOURNEY. LOW WAGES, BITTER COLD, LONG HOURS OF COMPLETE DARKNESS. SAFE RETURN DOUBTFUL. HONOUR AND RECOGNITION IN EVENT OF SUCCESS.

Ernest Shackleton, Antarctic explorer (1874-1922) The advertisement above, placed in a London newspaper in 1912, inspired nearly 5,000 replies. Shouldn’t you be advertising in The Paper, your local, community paper?

Social Butterfly Cont. from Page 6

journalism and inside knowledge with an eye on solutions.

Carlsbad Republican Women Federated general meetings are held the fourth Tuesday of the month at the Green Dragon Tavern and Museum, 6115 Paseo del Norte, Carlsbad, 92011. Doors open at 11:00am and the program begins at 11:30am. Cost is $30/members and $35/non-members. Check or cash only. For more information, contact Ann at (760) 415-7006 or annie13035@yahoo.com. Please RSVP no later than Friday, August 23rd at 2pm. Check us out at www.CarlsbadRepublicans.com. PACC Hosting “Taste of Oasis” in North County - The Park Avenue Community Center (PACC) in Escondido will be hosting “Taste of Oasis” on Wednesday, August

28 from 10:00am – 12:00pm in their Auditorium, 210 Park Avenue. This free event will highlight upcoming programs and activities sponsored by San Diego Oasis, a non-profit organization supporting successful aging through lifelong learning, healthy living, and community service. For more details on Taste of Oasis and additional information about San Diego Oasis, please visit www.sandiegooasis.org or call 760-796-6020.

San Diego Oasis also operates an intergenerational literacy tutoring program that encourages older adults to work with atrisk children to improve reading skills and self-esteem in Title One designated elementary schools throughout San Diego. “You can help bring a smile to the face of an at-risk student by bringing a new or slightly used age appropriate book for students K-4 to the Taste of Oasis event, and help us reach our goal of distributing 100,000 books to these students,” says Simona Valanciute, San Diego Oasis

President and CEO. Over 700 older adult tutors work in 11 school districts, sharing their time, talents and wisdom with students who need their help.

San Diego Oasis offers almost 3,000 classes, activities, and trips throughout the year with lectures and sessions in health and wellness, exercise and dance, arts and crafts, history and humanities, finance, technology, languages and personal development at more than 45 partner locations. Oasis was most recently awarded 2019 Impact Awards from both the North San Diego Business Chamber and the Escondido Chamber of Commerce. “This is a wonderful opportunity for community members to meet many of our instructors and community sponsors, while also helping our youth by donating a book that will be distributed to children throughout our county,” states David Beevers, San Diego Oasis Program Manager for North County. Light refreshments and giveaways will also be provided.

Bonsall Woman’s Club Begins New Year on September 5th - The Bonsall Woman’s Club (BWC) will begin its new season on Thursday, September 5th with a special program and lunch. The Fallbrook Ukulele Strummers, brought back by popular demand, will be an integral part of the program. To complement the ‘Strummers’ there will be Hawaiian Hula dancers. The Luau-style lunch will be perfect for this most entertaining event. BWC meets the first Thursday of the month at The Golf Club of California, 3742 Flowerwood Lane, Fallbrook. Doors open at 9:00am for coffee/tea. The meeting starts at 10:00. Each month the meeting is followed by a program and lunch. The cost is $23. To reserve, send your check, payable to BWC, to hospitality chair Barbara Hartloff, 4202 Palomar Dr., Fallbrook, 92028. The deadline is Tuesday, September 3rd. For information on BWC, visit

Social Butterfly Cont. on Page 9

WE DELIVER!


The Paper • Page 9 • August 8, 2019

Letters to the Editor Cont. from Page 4

Between 1935 and 1939, Congress passed four neutrality acts that began the process of the internment of Italians, Japanese and Germans to follow. In 1939 and 1940, prior to any participation of the United States in the European conflict, the Roosevelt administration and Congress passed and invoked legislation that significantly removed the rights of Americans of Italian extraction as well as alien Italians. On June 28, 1940, Congress passed the Alien Registration Act of 1940. The following year, as the national paranoia increased, the government began to employ the provisions of this act, which allowed for the arrest of aliens for sedition and conspiracy. Often, evidence for such arresting activity was no more than individuals being of Italian origin.

Under the authority of this act, the US Navy and Coast Guard moved against Italian ships: On March 30, 1941, the US Coast guard confiscated 28 Italian Ships, accusing the crews of sabotage and arresting them. On December 7, 1941, conditions became even more severe for Italians. The Social Butterfly Cont. from Page 8 Bonsallwomansclub.org

attack by the Japanese at Pearl Harbor transformed into enemy aliens some 600,000 Italian-Americans. Acting on the lists compiled a couple of years before, thousands were arrested within 24 hours of the attack. For the most part, it was the males, heads of households, who were arrested. Their assets were frozen, sources of support taken from those who remained, inflicting terrible hardship on tens of thousands of innocent family members. On December 9, 1941, the FBI took 98 Italian Aliens into custody. Those who were arrested were transported to holding facilities at Fort Lincoln, North Dakota, Crystal City, Texas, as well as Missoula, Montana. Every immigrant not naturalized was considered a threat. People lost their jobs and could not find employment because of their enemy alien status. The evacuation of 10,000 ItalianAmericans in California occurred so forcibly and swiftly, there were several suicides. December, 1941, at the Panama Canal, the Italian Luxury Liner Conte Biancamano was commandeered, converted to a troopship, and commissioned in the United States Navy as the USS Hermitage. 483 Italian crewmen were taken into custody. See Fallbrook Srummers in Photo Below

Under terribly crowded conditions, they were brought to Ellis Island where they were essentially incarcerated with virtually no amenities and stripped of any rights. After enduring these harsh conditions, they were transferred by trains with small, barred windows to Missoula, Montana. In May, after three days in the cramped dark train cars not unlike the mode of transportation provided in Germany for the transportation of the Jews to death camps, they arrived at Fort Missoula, Montana. Although not charged with any crime, they were indefinitely detained.

became known within Italian Circles as The Secret History. Unlike the Japanese recently compensated for WWII internment, none has been requested by or offered to the Italians. In addition to the forced removal of Japanese Americans for purposes of confinement in War Relocation Authority (WRA) camps, the Justice Department oversaw the internment of more than thirtyone thousand civilians during the Second World War. This total included approximately 11,500 people of German ancestry and three thousand people of Italian ancestry, many of whom were United States citizens.

Italian-Americans could not believe that the /s/ Richard Dell’Orfano country they loved so much San Diego County, CA. would do this to them. Spring and summer of 1942 was the worst of anti-Italian prejudice. Many business owners used the occasion to eliminate their We LOVE Letters to Italian competition. the Editor! Send Knowledge of the persecution them to: and internment suffered by the Italians during WWII has been all but forgotten. Much of this thepaper@cox.net is because the Italians themselves wanted to quickly put keep them to 250 this very difficult experience Try to words or less. behind them. They loved the Let’s hear what you United States and only wanted have to say! to continue to achieve the dreams that they had come to this country to pursue. It


The Paper • Page 10 • August 8, 2019

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME

PLANNING A SPECIAL EVENT IN 2019?

Wedding? Quinceaneras? Reception? Birthday party? Recital? Church Event? First you need to pick your date, then your venue!

The Clubhouse of the Escondido Woman’s Club is the place to be! 751 No. Rose, Escondido Large kitchen and stage Maximum 170 people 24-hour insurance required

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME

STATEMENT

STATEMENT

#2019-9019015

#2019-9018592

The name of the business, W.C. Trucking

The

and Logistics, located at 3281 Hidden

Appraisal Group, Inc., Agamata, located at

Estates Ln., Escondido, CA. 92027.

750 Paseo Tierra, San Marcos, CA. 92078.

This business is registered by:

This business is registered by:

W. C. Investments and Management

Agamata Appraisal Group, Inc.

3281 Hidden Estates Ln,

750 Paseo Tierra

Escondido, CA. 92027 This

business

is

name

of

the

business,

Agamata

San Marcos, CA. 92078 conducted

by

a

This

business

is

conducted

by

a

corporation.

corporation.

First day of business 8/02/19.

First day of business 7/23/14

/s/Darnita Watt, CEO

/s/John Agamata, President

Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County

Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County

Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 8/02/2019

Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 7/29/2019

8/08, 8/15, 8/22 & 8/29/2019

8/08, 8/15, 8/22 & 8/29/2019

____________ FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME

____________

STATEMENT

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME

#2019-9018811

STATEMENT

The name of the business, Stagehub, The

#2019-9018140

Stage Hub, located at 450 S. Melrose, Vista,

The

CA. 92081.

Landscaping, located at 3942 Lonita Way,

This business is registered by:

San Marcos, CA. 92078.

Anne Firjee 1176 Lupine Hills Vista, CA. 92081 Tawni Oppenheim 5349 Blackberry Way Oceanside, CA. 92057 This business is conducted by Co-Partners. First day of business n/a.

name

of

the

business,

HC

This business is registered by: Hector Caro Leon 3942 Lonita Way\ SAn Marcos, CA. 92078 This

business

is

conducted

by

an

individual. First day of business n/a.

/s/Anne Virjee

/s/Hector Caro

Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County

Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County

Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 7/31/2019

Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 7/29/2019

8/08, 8/15, 8/22 & 8/29/2019

8/08, 8/15, 8/22 & 8/29/2019

____________

____________

Call 760.743-9178

Pet Parade

Olive is pet of the week at your Rancho Coastal Humane Society. She’s a 3-1/2 year old, 6 pound, female, Domestic Short Hair with a black coat.

Olive loves exploring the nooks and crannies of any room, and climbing up high to get a better look at her surroundings. She is playful and interactive with humans, especially if they let her play with wand toys or ping pong balls.

The $100 adoption fee for Olive includes medical exams, vaccinations, spay, and registered microchip. For more information call 760-753-6413, visit Rancho Coastal Humane Society at 389 Requeza Street in Encinitas, or log on to SDpets.org.

Walter is an 8-year-old tabby cat looking for a new home. He is initially a little shy, but his sweet personality will shine once he has time to warm up. In his previous home, Walter got along well with another cat and a 3-year-old child. He would be happiest with multiple litter boxes throughout the home. You can adopt this charming boy at our Escondido Campus. His adoption fee includes his neuter, current vaccinations, permanent microchip identification, a certificate for a free veterinary exam and waived enrollment fee for medical insurance from PetFirst. Walter is available for adoption at San Diego Humane Society’s Escondido Campus at 3500 Burnet Drive. To learn more about making him part of your family, please call (619) 299-7012.

The Pastor Says...

Since retiring from professional football, Ware has dedicated himself to the youth of Oceanside, serving in our local school district and helping at-risk youth.

Pastor Hal Seed New Song Community Church, Oceanside

Tim Ware and Free Footballs at New Song

A Labor Day tradition at New Song is to treat the community to an inspiring story. This year’s story is Tim Ware.

Tim starred as a wide receiver at USC during their Rose Bowl Championship years and went on to play with Dan Fouts and the San Diego Chargers, along with a stint with the Los Angeles Raiders. To hear Tim is to be encouraged!

During each service, Tim will visit youth and children’s classrooms, where we will be giving each child a free football.

Tim speaks to Fortune 500 companies, professional sports franchises, universities and educational conferences. His works have been featured in Sports Wrap, Journalist Roundtable, and several other Southern California publications.

New Song will host Tim at both of our campuses on successive weekends. Here’s his schedule: - Sunday, August 25, he’ll speak at both services (9 and 11 a.m.) at our Carlsbad Campus, 3780 Pio Pico Drive. - Saturday, August 31 (5p.m.) and Sunday (9 and 11 a.m.) he’ll speak at our Oceanside Campus, 3985 Mission Avenue.

Ware brings wisdom, passion, intensity, humor and his unique life experiences to his message.

We invite you to come, wear your favorite team jersey, and have Tim autograph a football for your child. If you’re over 18, bring your own football and Tim will autograph that for you as well.


The Paper

• Page 11 •

August 8, 2019

A Weekly Message from the Mayor of Your Community published in the belief that it is important for elected leaders to communicate with their constituents and that constituents have a means of hearing from their elected leaders.

San Marcos • Mayor Rebecca Jones San Marcos Welcomes New Fire Chief

We are proud to announce that the City of San Marcos has selected Dan Barron as the City’s new fire chief. Dan is a 21-year fire service veteran who has served our fire department in many roles, including firefighter/paramedic, engineer, captain, battalion chief and division chief. Dan took the helm after former chief Brett Van Wey retired after 33 years of service.

At a recent community event, a gentleman approached Dan to thank him and the fire department for saving his home here in San Marcos. This special moment truly highlighted the positive impact that Dan and his department make in the lives of San Marcos residents every day.

Stop by the City of San Marcos Fire Department booth at the Farmers Market at 1035 La Bonita Drive on August 20 from 3-5 p.m. to say hello to our firefighters and learn more about the important work they do to serve our community.

Escondido • Mayor Paul “Mac” Mcnamara Greetings Escondido,

I wish I could say it was a slow summer week but it never is. I’m always meeting people who are working on something to improve Escondido. We have many irons in the fire and it is exciting to be around so many people who have something in the works for the betterment of our community.

While all the details have not been worked out, we are planning on having a Veteran’s Day parade on November 11th. So, save the date and make sure you join us on Grand Ave. It should be a lot of fun, some great activities and a great way to show how proud we are of all of the Veterans who live in Escondido and North County. More to follow. Another thing we are working on is an Agricultural Museum. Again, we have some great volunteers who are interested in putting this together.

I went to 3 Eagle Scout Courts of Honor to see some very fine young Escondido men achieve this prestigious rank. Additionally, I attended the ribbon cutting for the completion of the Tulip street capital improvement program. It was a long time coming but thanks to their community group, it was finally completed. Thank you for all you do for our city!

Semper Fi, Mac, Paul P. McNamara, Mayor of Escondido pmcnamara@escondido.org

Driving Lyle Nuts Cont. from Page 7

(not likely, but worth checking).

Father lyle does not find the wallet in the car and hangs his head low and walks back toward the front door. Detective Mary approaches him with a big smile on her face. She has his Hawaiian blue floral shirt in hand . . . and inside that shirt is lyle's wallet. Father lyle rewards Detective Mary with a big hug.

(Father lyle has several blue Hawaiian floral shirts that resemble one another - thus the confusion on Father lyle’s part. (He’s old, you know).

For Advertising Information or to subscribe, Call (760) 747-7119

Man About Town Cont. from Page 5

remember spotting a black star sapphire stone in a jewelry store. They wanted $400 for it. It was about the size of a nickle (for star sapphires, that's huge!) I had about $400 of my expense money left and was sorely tempted to buy the stone - thought sure I could smuggle it home. And was sure that it would probably fetch at least $5000 at home. But I chickened out and never bought the stone and I still brood about it. (As I recall, my thinking was . . ."I don't know gems. What if I get ripped off and it's a phony?")

Next day we took off and I can say I've visited New Delhi, India. But, alas, it was 3am and only an airport stop. I remember later flying over and enjoying the sight of the Swiss Alps. We landed in London and I arranged transport to Glasgow, Scotland, there to be met by my in-laws, Mary's parents. We journeyed from Glasgow to Prestwick, the city where Mary was raised. A few days with the in-laws, telling stories of our adventures and then back on the plane to head home to Chicago - there to be reunited with Mary and my two young sons.

More random memories about my second trip to Vietnam - but that will have to wait till another day.

Vista • Mayor Judy Ritter

Last Movie Wraps Up Summer

Join us on Saturday, August 10, for our final free Movie in the Park. Take the whole family and head to Brengle Terrace Park for “How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World”. The movie begins at 8 pm. Come early with a family picnic and get a good seat. The final movie is a great way to say good-bye to a great summer! Check online at CityofVista.com for details or for the full summer series schedule across San Diego County, visit SummerMoviesInthePark.com.

Have a few hours to spare this summer? There’s still time left to volunteer. If you enjoy helping seniors in the community and have a few hours to spare this summer or even once a month – consider becoming a volunteer driver at the Senior Center. Drivers provide door-to-door transportation assistance for shopping, medical appointments and other necessary activities for seniors unable to drive or who are homebound. Interested? Please call the Gloria McClellan Senior Center at 760.639.6161 for volunteer information. The program enhances the lives of many seniors and volunteer drivers receive mileage reimbursement and supplemental auto insurance.

Oceanside • Mayor Peter Weiss

North County Health Services Saves Money!

North County Health Services provides comprehensive services in 12 health centers in North San Diego County. Services include adult and pediatric care, obstetrics, behavior health, dental, chiropractic, health and nutritional education, immunizations. Pharmacy and transportation services. North County Health Services serves over 65,000 patients annually. Of these, over 97% are low-income. The cost effective services provided by NCHS save the state of California an estimated $132 million by reducing emergency room visits and hospital admission. In 2018 the newly renovated Mission Mesa Women’s Health Center open its doors and is designed to better serve Oceanside with improved efficiency and enhanced care delivery.

By making healthcare accessible to all, NCHS removes a barrier to success for many. It gives each of their patients their opportunity to pursue the American dream and succeed based on their initiative, drive, and determination. Given an opportunity- and good health- they will contribute and succeed. More Travel Observations:

During both tours to S. Vietnam I either arrived in or departed from Japan.

I fell in love with the country and the people. Seiously considered emigrating there, thinking it would be a great place for the family, particularly my two young sons, to learn of and appreciate the beauity and grace of the Japanese culture; but if you weren’t a national you could not find decent employment in radio broadcasting, which was my career at the time. Some interesting things about Japan:

• Hiroshima has returned to what it was economically before the atomic bomb was dropped. • Japan prevents the use of mobile phones in trains, restaurants and indoors.

• For first to sixth primary year Japanese students must learn ethics in dealing with people. • Even though one of the richest people in the world, the Japanese do not have servants. The parents are responsible for the house and children.

• There is no examination from the first to the third primary level because the goal of education is to instill concepts

and character building.

• If you go to a buffet restaurant in Japan you will notice people only eat as much as they need without any waste because food must not be wasted.

• The rate of delayed trains in Japan is about 7 seconds per year! The Japanese appreciate the value of time and are very punctual to minutes and seconds. • Children in schools brush their teeth (sterile) and clean their teeth after a meal at school, teaching them to maintain their health from an early age. • Japanese students take half an hour to finish their meals to ensure proper digestion because these students are the future of Japan.

The Japanese focus on maintaining their culture. Therefore, • No political leader or a prime minister from an Islamic nation has visited Japan: not the Ayatollah of Iran, the King of Saudi Arabia or even a Saudi Prince! • Japan is a country keeping Islam at bay by putting strict restrictions on Islam and ALL Muslims.

Man About Town Cont. on Page 12


The Paper • Page 12 • August 8, 2019 Marriot, Friend Finder, E bay and Equifax. These attacks exposed over three billion user accounts. That’s nearly ten times the entire population of the USA. If the professional army of security experts couldn’t defend these institutions against cyber-invaders, what chance do we civilians have against attack from the criminal underworld?

Paul & Nome Van Middlesworth, The Computer Factory

www. thecomputerfactory.net "San Diego's Best Computer Store 2017-18" Union Tribune readers poll

PC Owner’s Survival Guide. Part II

Of the 180 million PCs in America, (desktops and notebooks), nearly half are in large institutions (corporations, schools, government offices etc). Their security is guarded by armies of professionals called ITs (information technologists). These highly paid professionals protect the data and networks in their charge 24/7 fighting off data thieves on behalf of their employers. The other half of America’s PCs sit virtually unprotected in our homes and businesses with only us, rank amateurs, to protect them and their valuable contents. The top five data breaches in recent years were the heavily guarded fortresses at Yahoo,

Man About Town Cont. from Page 11

1) Japan is the only nation that does not give citizenship to Muslims.

2) In Japan permanent residency is not given to Muslims. 3) There is a strong ban on the propagation of Islam in Japan 4) In the University of Japan, Arabic or any Islamic language is not taught. 5) One cannot import a 'Koran' published in the Arabic language.

6) According to data published by the Japanese government, it has given temporary residency to only 2 lakhs, Muslims, who must follow the Japanese Law of the Land. These Muslims should speak Japanese and carry out their religious rituals in their homes.

7) Japan is the only country in the world that has a negligible number of embassies in Islamic countries.

8) Muslims residing in Japan are the employees of foreign companies. 9) Even today, visas are not granted to Muslim doctors, engineers or managers sent by foreign companies. 10) In the majority of companies it is stated in their regulations that no Muslims should apply for a job.

11) The Japanese government is of the opinion that Muslims are fundamentalist, and even in the era of globalization they are not willing to change their Muslim laws.

Surprisingly our chances aren’t that bad. It takes a lot of technology and money to mount an attack on well protected data bases but the reward for capturing personal and financial data of millions of users justifies the effort. The potential gain from hacking individual home or small business users is not worth much effort. Those who attack us are typically not expert in the dark art of cyber-hacking. Their expertise is that of the street hustler, it’s the computer version of “Three Card Monte” and getting you to play is the object of the con.

that one simple step that gives them control.

There are hundreds of TV ads offering protection for a price. If you are super-prone to getting yourself in trouble on a daily basis one of these subscription prices might actually work for you but for most folks that remote subscription services are largely a waste of time and money. Many subscriptions services like Norton/Lifelock, offer VPN (virtual private network) services. Businesses that electronically store customer files with personal, financial and medical information are typically required to have this kind of encrypted service. For most small business and home users VPN service slows your Internet speed without offering significant benefits. To guard against theft, users should frequently check bank and credit card

activity. A scammer might find a way to use your credit or bank account but if you catch and report it within thirty days your funds are nearly always restored.

In summary: Keep your Windows “automatic updates” on. Get your PC evaluated for compatibility, speed and storage and plan to upgrade it to Win10 by Feb. 2020. Keep your anti-malware protection up to date. Don’t fall for “phishing” exploits on line or by phone. Check your bank accounts and credit cards weekly for suspicious activity. Before buying a new PC, have us check out your old and if you really do need new hardware, consider one of our “refurbs.” Most importantly, call us if you have any question. The only dumb question is the one not asked.

Almost all of the serious malware infections we see are a result of the user being tricked into taking some action. It’s a cliché, but true “the most vulnerable part of a computer lies between the user and the keyboard.” By far the best defense is an informed and suspicious user. While both free and paid anti- malware programs offer protection against the most common forms of attack, nothing can protect you from yourself. Fear, greed, compassion and ignorance are the tools of cyber-scammers to get users to take 12) Muslims cannot even rent a house in Japan. 13) If anyone comes to know that his neighbor is a Muslim then the whole neighborhood stays alert.

14) No one can start an Islamic cell or Arabic 'Madrasa' in Japan. 15) There is no Sharia law in Japan.

16) If a Japanese woman marries a Muslim, she is considered an outcast forever. 17) According to Mr. Kumiko Yagi, Professor of Arab/Islamic Studies at Tokyo University of Foreign Studies, "There is a mind frame in Japan that Islam is a very narrow minded religion and one should stay away from it."

The Japanese might have lost the war, but they are in charge of their own country.

There are no bombs going off in crowded business centers, "Honor Killings", nor killing of innocent children or anyone else. Why I Always Wanted to be a Writer:

The reason is pretty simple really, my song writing career never took off.

I was raised with Country music. My uncle was a trucker; his favorite line was he only liked two kinds of music, Country and Western. (There's a difference, trust me.) So growing up I listened to such classics as Red Sovine "Giddy-Up Go" "Phantom 309" and that heart-break-

ing tear-jerker "Teddy Bear", and Marty Robbins' cowboy classics. In between all of those were the usual Country fare, George and Tammy, Conway and Loretta, Porter Wagner, Bob Wills, and Buck Owens and the Buckaroos just to name a few. Plus all of the trucking songs of the 60's and 70's.

Having had my fair share of troubled marriages and relationships I thought I was well qualified to put thoughts to pen and pen to paper and kick out a few good tunes for my Country heroes to sing. I mean at one point in my life I was convinced someone from Reba's record company was following me around and taking notes, her songs hit that close to home! So no offense to the great Miss Reba and all, we all know I love her, but why should she be riding the gravy train on my misery? It is after all my misery! Here are a few titles I tried to sell, alas to no avail. "If You're Trying To Tick Me Off It's Working" "Hello Darling-I See The Restraining Order Didn't Work"

"You're Pretty Handy With A Frying Pan (Too Bad You Can't Cook Too!)" "There's A Hole In My Heart (That'll teach me to leave a gun by the door)"

"I Swear (I don't know whose lipstick that is on my collar)" "Honey Don't Go (Feed the cat first)" "She Wants Me Back (In Jail)"

"50 Ways to Leave Your Lover (Just pick one and go already)" -(Paul Simon threatened to sue me over this.)

"A Love Like Ours (Even the Pope flinched when he heard we got married)"

"She Left And Took My Dog (Damn I miss that bitch)" (rejected because they said it was too ambiguous)

I don't know why they didn't sell.... I figured David Allan Coe or Johnny Paycheck at least, right? A Message Sent in 2018:

The Washington Redskins allowed 11 of their players to take a knee for the National Anthem Monday night, enraging fans and local law enforcement in Philadelphia. After the game, the 14 officers assigned to seeing the team safely to their bus decided to show them the same respect they’re showing our veterans.

The men lined up in front of the door, took a knee, put a fist in the air and shouted “Blue Lives Matter!” Then the captain informed them that they were “on their own” and the corp walked out. With nobody to make sure they weren’t mauled by angry fans, they ‘Skins decided to hunker down for the night and have a little slumber party right in their locker room instead. Because they had no other choice. Their buses sitting right outside and a long ride ahead of them, it wasn’t until after 5 AM when tailgating closes at the stadium that the team was safe enough to start their long-haul back to DC.

The Philadelphia Police Department

Man About Town Cont. on Page 13


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Man About Town Cont. from Page 12

released a statement that those officers are on the stadium payroll during games and therefore not subject to disciplinary action. Stadium officials say the matter will be handled internally.

In other words, good job, fellas. Show those entitled brats how things really work. •••• Our friend with the Valley Center Museum, Bob Lerner, says, “Our Space exhibit is out of this world Legendary aerospace engineer John Leland Atwood of Valley Center with a model of the Saturn V rocket that propelled Apollo 11 to the moon 50 years ago. Atwood designed the rocket as well as the command module which housed the three astronauts on their historic journey to the moon and back to Earth. Record crowds have been visiting the Valley Center History Museum which is featuring a major space exhibit including a NASAauthorized model of the space capsule. The museum at 29200 Cole Grade Road is open Tuesday through Saturday from 12noon to 4pm. Admission is free.

Part-Time* Computer Tech/Clerical Assistant San Marcos, CA

Company Description Health & Life Insurance Agent and Broker, in the business for over 47 years.

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Present name:

Laura Lee Higby to

ed. 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: September 10, 2019 8:30 a.m., Department 23.

The address of the court is: 325 S. Melrose, Vista, CA. 92081. A copy of the 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 newspa-

per of general circulation, printed in this county: San Marcos

News Reporter, dba, The Paper, 845 W. San Marcos Blvd,

This business is registered by:

2029 Sycamore Drive

business

is

by

First day of business n/a. /s/Janelle Pyle, Secretary Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 6/19/2019

#2019-9016223

Parkway,

This business is registered by: Nicole My Tu 5955 Mira Mesa Blvd., Ste B, San Diego, Ca. 92121 This business is conducted by an individual. First day of business n/a /s/Nicole My Tu Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 7/01/2019 7/25, 8/01, 8/08 & 8/15/2019 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME

The name of the business, Organic Weeds

located at 1250 S. Santa Fe Ave., Suite K,

Control, located at 26961 Cougar Pass Road,

Vista, CA. 92084.

Escondido, Ca. 92026.

This business is registered by:

This business is registered by:

Ana Nguyen

First day of business 4/01/2018

Daniel P. Loftus

This business is conducted by an individual.

/s/Ana Nguyen Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County

First day of business 7/03/19.

Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 6/28/2019

/s/Daniel P. Loftus

7/25, 8/01, 8/08 & 8/15/2019

Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2019-9015174 The name of the business, Starrs Auto Detailing, located at 737 Los Arboles Blvd., Oceanside, CA. 92058 This business is registered by: Gregorio Mendez, Jr. 737 Los Arboles Blvd. Oceanside, CA. 92058 This business is conducted by an individual. First day of business 1/1/02. /s/Gregorio Mendez, Jr. Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 6/17/2019 7/18, 7/25, 8/01 & 8/08/2019 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2019-9017477

8/01, 8/08, 8/15 & 8/22/2019

JDM Cart; Tuner Cart, located at 4994 Malaga Dr., Oceanside, Ca. 92057. Shaun Anthony Walters Murrieta, Ca. 92562

For Advertising Information or to subscribe, Call (760) 747-7119

Valley

The name of the business, Tasty Pho,

Patrick Ryan Hays 4994 Malaga Dr. Oceanside, CA. 92057 This business is conducted by a General Partnership. First day of business 7/15/2019 /s/Patrick Ryan Hays Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 7/15/2019

7/18, 7/25, 8/01 & 8/08/19

E.

STATEMENT

This business is registered by:

a

corporation.

1696

#2019-9016589

26531 Bladen Avenue

conducted

at

Escondido, CA. 92027.

STATEMENT

San Marcos, Ca. 92078. Dated July 26, 2019

San Marcos, CA. 92069 This

located

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME

The name of the business, Modified Stance;

/s/Sim von Kalinowski, Judge of the Superior Court

Plant Source, Inc.

The name of the business, Bella Nails & Spa,

Escondido, Ca. 92026

any, why the petition for change of name should not be grant-

Marcos, CA. 92069.

HOME GENERAL MAINTENANCE REMODELS Bath/Kitchen Designs, Tile Installation, Electrical, Paint, Fences, Concrete. Lic#33509 760.484.1302 760.529.1239

STATEMENT #2019-9016328

TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner Laura Lee

this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if

located at 2029 Sycamore Drive, San

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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME

26961 Cougar Pass Road

that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before

The name of the business, Lively Root,

Home Maintenance Improvements

This business is conducted by an individual.

Proposed name Laura Lee Sorenson. THE COURT ORDERS

#2019-9015507

Do you or your aging loved one need help? Experienced and professional caregivers. For information and assessment call us today! 951.387.0055 Lotus Care Home Care, Hospital Care and Companions lotuscare.ca@gmail.com

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2019-9017529 The name of the business, Pacific Shore Family Child Care, located a 223 Todd Ct., Oceanside, Ca. 92054. This business is registered by: Alfonso and Brianna Sanchez 223 Todd Ct. Oceanside, Ca. 92054 This business is conducted by a Married Couple. First day of business n/a. /s/Alfonso Sanchez Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 7/16/2019 7/25, 8/01, 8/08 and 8/15/2019 ____________

Vista, CA. 92083

names as follows:

STATEMENT

Call 800.783.3127 or 760.424.2400 24 hours/day 7 days/week.

ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME

Higby filed a petition with this court for a decree changing

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME

Specializing in short and long term care assistance for all ages, with all activities of daily living, in your home. Drive to/from doctor appointments, new mommy assistance/infant care, Alzheimer patient care, general assistance before/after surgery, respite care for parents of disabled children, and much more. Rates startatat$22 $16.00 Rates Start perper hour hour for companion services.

415 Plymouth Dr., Apt 7

37-2019-00038840-CU-PT-NC

John Leland Atwood, above

MASSAGES

Home Care

7/25, 8/01, 8/08 & 8/15/2019

Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 7/03/2019 7/25, 8/01, 8/08 & 8/15/2019

ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME 37-2019-00036576 CU-PT-NC

TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner Lenika

Arroyo on behalf of a minor child filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: Present name: Deanna Ruby Anguiano to Proposed name Deanna Ruby Arroyo. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in

this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indi-

cated 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: September 3, 2019 8:30a.m., Department 23.

The address of the court is: 325 S. Melrose, Vista, CA.

92081. A copy of the 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 newspa-

per of general circulation, printed in this county: San Marcos News Reporter, dba, The Paper, 845 W. San Marcos Blvd, San Marcos, Ca. 92078. Dated July 17, 2019

/s/Sim von Kalinowski, Judge of the Superior Court 7/25, 8/01, 8/08 & 8/15/2019


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Brian Fieldman, Esq. 760.738.1914 sdbrf@cox.net NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF DEIRDRE MARIE SIMS Case No. 37-2019-00039337-PR-LA-CTL To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate or both, of Deirdre Marie Sims. A Petition for Probate has been filed by Paul Andrew Sims, Jr. in the Superior Court of California, County of San Diego, 1100 Union St., San Diego, Ca., 92101, Probate Division. The Petition for Probate requests that Paul Andrew Sims, Jr. be appointed as personal representative to administer the estate of the decedent. The petition requests authority to administer the estate under the Independent Administration of Estates Act (This authority will allow the personal representative to take many actions without obtaining court approval. Before taking certain very important actions, however, the personal representative will be required to give notice to interested persons unless they have waived notice or consented to the proposed action.) The independent administration authority will be granted unless an interested person files an objection to the petition and shows good cause as to why the court should not grant the authority. A hearing on the petition will be held in this court as follows: Date: September 3, 2019 Time: 11 a. m. Dept: 504 Address of court: Same as noted above. If you object to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney. If you are a creditor or a contingent creditor of the decedent, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within the later of either (1) four months from the date of first issuance of letters to a general personal representative, as defined in Section 58(b) of the California Probate Code, or (2) 60 days from the date of mailing or personal delivery to you of a notice under section 9052 of the California Probate Code. Other California statutes and legal authority may affect your rights as a creditor. You may want to consult with an attorney knowledgeable in California law. You may examine the file kept by the court. If you are a peson interested in the estate, you may file with the court a Request for Special Notice (form DE-154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code section 1250. A Request for Special Notice

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form is available from the court clerk. Attorney for Petitioner: Thomas F. DiPaolo 9820 Willow Creek Road, Suite 200 San Diego, California 92131 858.408.0621 8/08, 8/15 & 8/22/2019 ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME 37-2019-00039731-CU-PT-NC

TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner Diane Hilz on

behalf of a minor child filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: Present name: Natalie Beth Morrison to Proposed name Natalie Beth Hilz. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter

shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below

to show cause, if any, why the petition 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:

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2019-9016070 The name of the business, Torito’s & Bonita, Inc., El Torito Market and El Torito, located at 422 San Diego St. Oceanside, CA. 92058 This business is registered by: Torito’s & Bonita Inc. 422 San Diego St. Oceanside, CA. 92058 This business is conducted by a corporation. First day of business 4/01/2002 /s/Roberto Ricardez, President Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 6/26/2019 7/18, 7/25, 8/01 & 8/08/2019 ____________ FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2019-9015984 The name of the business, Premier Lending Group, Premier Real Estate, located at 3615 Barranca Ct., Carlsbad, CA. 92010. This business is registered by: Jane Riley 3615 Barranca Ct. Carlsbad, CA. 92010 This business is conducted by an individual. First day of business n/a. /s/Jane Riley Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 6/26/2019 7/18, 7/25, 8/01 & 8/08/2019 ____________ FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2019-9017847 The name of the business, APECO Engineering, located at 415 N. Santa Fe Ave., Vista, Ca. 92084. This business is registered by: Muna Jalal Rahman 415 N. Santa Fe. Ave. Vista, Ca. 92084. This business is conducted by an individual. First day of business 7/17/19. /s/Muna Jalal Rahman Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 7/17/2019 7/25, 8/01, 8/08 & 8/15/2019 ________

Date: September 17, 2019 8:30 a.m., Department 23.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME

The address of the court is: 325 S. Melrose, Vista, CA. 92081. A copy of the 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 newspa-

STATEMENT #2019-9016069 The name of the business, Bonita Foods; Bonita Market; Rancho La Bonita; Rancho

per of general circulation, printed in this county: San Marcos

Bonita; Rancho Bonita Foods,

San Marcos, Ca. 92078. Dated July 31, 2019

This business is registered by:

8/08, 8/15, 8/22 and 8/29/2019

422 San Diego St.

located at

News Reporter, dba, The Paper, 845 W. San Marcos Blvd,

311 N. Main Ave., Fallbrook, Ca. 92028.

/s/Sim von Kalinowski, Judge of the Superior Cour

Torito’s & Bonita, Inc.

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Call 760.747.7119

Oceanside, CA. 92058 This

business

is

conducted

by

a

corporation. First day of business 1/01/2000 /s/Roberto Ricardez, President Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 6/26/2019 7/18, 7/25, 8/01 & 8/08/2019 ____________


LEGALS

The ThePaper Paper •• Page Page1515 •• August April 4,8,2019 2019

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2019-9018577 The name of the business, Garden Craft, located at 940 Poinsettia Ave., San Marcos, CA. 92078. This business is registered by: David L. Scaparo 940 Poinsettia Ave. San Marcos, CA. 92078 This business is conducted by an individual. First day of business 1/1/19. /s/David L. Scaparo Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 7/29/2019 8/8, 8/15, 8/22 & 8/29/2019 ____________ FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2019-9018532 The name of the business, Clear Concepts, located at 34475 Via Espinoza, #B, Capistrano Beach, CA. 92624. This business is registered by: Manuel Theodore Camarena 34475 Via Espinoza #B Capistrano Beach, Ca. 92624 This business is conducted by an individual. First day of business n/a. /s/Manuel Theodore Camarena Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 7/29/2019 8/8, 8/15, 8/22 & 8/29/2019 ____________ FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2019-9018943 The name of the business, West Point Heating and Cooling, located at 1044 Heron Dr., Vista, CA. 92081. This business is registered by: Thomas John Hallberg 1044 Heron Dr. Vista, CA. 92081 This business is conducted by an individual. First day of business 8/01/2019. /s/Thomas John Hallberg Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 8/01/2019 8/8, 8/15, 8/22 & 8/29/2019 ____________

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2019-9016948 The name of the business, Niche Systems, located at 1549 Morenci St., San Diego, CA. 92110. This business is registered by: Trevor Ray Hall 1549 Morenci St. San Diego, CA. 92110 This business is conducted by an individual. First day of business 7/09/19. /s/Trevor Ray Hall Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 7/09/2019 7/18, 7/25, 8/01 & 8/08/2019 ____________

To place Legal Ads Call The Paper 760.747.7119

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2019-9017282 The name of the business, Sparkl Productions, located at 3010 Segovia Way, Carlsbad, CA. 92009. This business is registered by: Ednalu Amante Peck 3010 Segovia Way Carlsbad, CA. 92009 This business is conducted by an individual. First day of business 6/01/2019. /s/Ednalu Amante Peck Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 7/12/2019 7/18, 7/25, 8/01 & 8/08/19 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2019-9017940 The name of the business, Gro Search Partners, located at 1798 Larkhaven Glen, Escondido, CA. 92026. This business is registered by: Dane Karno 1798 Larkhaven Glen Escondido, Ca. 92026 This business is conducted by an individual. First day of business 7/19/2019. /s/Dane Karno Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 7/19/2019 8/01, 8/08, 8/15 & 8/22/2019 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2019-9017446 The name of the business, Accurate Home Inspections, located at 29115 Valley Center Rd., #K184, Valley Center, CA. 92082 This business is registered by: Glenn Allen Swift 29115 Valley Center Rd, #K184 Valley Center, CA. 92082 This business is conducted by an individual. First day of business n/a. /s/Glenn Allen Swift Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 7/15/2019 8/01, 8/08, 8/15 & 8/22/2019 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2019-9017534 The name of the business, Dew Manufacturing; Custom Cycle Engineering; Dew Machine & Tool,, located at 1970 Peacock Blv d., Oceanside, CA. 92056. This business is registered by: Intuitive Racing, Inc. 1970 Peacock Blvd. Oceanside, CA. 92056 This business is conducted by a corporation. First day of business 7/03/19. /s/Jean Linville, Secretary Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 7/16/2019 7/25, 8/01, 8/08 & 8/15/2019 ____________ FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2019-9017149 The name of the business, On Schedule Auto Repair Center, located at 151 N. Rose St., Ste A103, Escondido, CA. 92027. This business is registered by: Ken Nhat Vu 1920 E. Grand AVe., Spt #53 Escondido, CA. 92027 This business is conducted by an individual. First day of business 8/09/09. /s/Ken Nhat Vu Filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg Jr., County Clerk/Recorder of San Diego on 7/11/2019 7/18, 7/25, 8/01 & 8/08/2019 ____________

NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF GOURETE BRITO Case No. 37-201900032722-PR-LA-CTL To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate or both, of Gourete Brito. A Petition for Probate has been filed by Wm. Nicholas Manousos in the Superior Court of California, County of San Diego, 1100 Union St., San Diego, Ca., 92101, Central. The Petition for Probate requests that Wm. Nicholas Manousos be appointed as personal representative to administer the estate of the decedent. The petition requests authority to administer the estate under the I n d e p e n d e n t Administration of Estates Act (This authority will allow the personal representative to take many actions without obtaining court approval. Before taking certain very important actions, however, the personal representative will be required to give notice to interested persons unless they have waived notice or consented to the proposed action.) The independent administration authority will be granted unless an interested person files an objection to the petition and shows good cause as to why the court should not grant the authority. A hearing on the petition will be held in this court as follows: Date: September 11, 2019 Time: 1:30 p. m. . Dept: 502 Address of court: Same as noted above. If you object to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney. If you are a creditor or a contingent creditor of the decedent, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within the later of either (1) four months from the date of first issuance of letters to a general personal representative, as defined in Section 58(b) of the California Probate Code, or (2) 60 days from the date of mailing or personal delivery to you of a notice under section 9052 of the California Probate Code. Other California statutes and legal authority may affect your rights as a creditor. You may want to consult with an attorney knowledgeable in California law. You may examine the file kept by the court. If you are a peson interested in the estate, you may file with the court a Request for Special Notice (form DE-154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code section 1250. A Request for Special Notice form is available from the court clerk. Attorney for Petitioner: Alex Scheingross 3772 Clairmont Drive San Diego, CA. 92117 (858) 792.5988 8/01, 8/08 & 8/15/2019`

NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF DAVID W. SCHRECK Case No. 37-201900036500-PR-PW-CT To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate or both, of David W. Schreck, David Schreck, David Walter Schreck, Dave Schreck, A Petition for Probate has been filed by Harry T. Ferrari in the Superior Court of California, County of San Diego, 1100 Union St., San Diego, Ca., 92101, Central. The Petition for Probate requests that Harry T. Ferrari be appointed as personal representative to administer the estate of the decedent. The petition requests the decedent’s will and codicils, if any, be admitted to probate. The will and any codicils are available for examination in the file kept by the court. The petition requests authority to administer the estate under the I n d e p e n d e n t Administration of Estates Act (This authority will allow the personal representative to take many actions without obtaining court approval. Before taking certain very important actions, however, the personal representative will be required to give notice to interested persons unless they have waived notice or consented to the proposed action.) The independent administration authority will be granted unless an interested person files an objection to the petition and shows good cause as to why the court should not grant the authority. A hearing on the petition will be held in this court as follows: Date: August 22, 2019 Time: 1:30 p. m. . Dept: 503 Address of court: Same as noted above. If you object to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney. If you are a creditor or a contingent creditor of the decedent, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within the later of either (1) four months from the date of first issuance of letters to a general personal representative, as defined in Section 58(b) of the California Probate Code, or (2) 60 days from the date of mailing or personal delivery to you of a notice under section 9052 of the California Probate Code. Other California statutes and legal authority may affect your rights as a creditor. You may want to consult with an attorney knowledgeable in California law. You may examine the file kept by the court. If you are a peson interested in the estate, you may file with the court a Request for Special Notice (form DE-154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code section 1250. A Request for Special Notice form is available from the court clerk. Attorney for Petitioner: J. Mark McNeill, Esq 16885 W. Bernardo Dr., Ste 325 San Diego, CA. 92127 (858) 613.2970 7/25, 8/01 & 8/08/2019`

NOTICE OF INTENDED DECISION (Administrative)

The Planning Division Manager of the City of San Marcos has considered the proposed project and does intends to APPROVE the Director’s Permit DP19-0006 on August 19, 2019. Project No.: DP19-0006 Applicant(s): AmeriCare, ADHC, Inc. Request: Director’s Permit Renewal to allow the operation of a 7,900 square foot adult day health care facility in the Heart of the City Specific Plan Area-Commercial Manufacturing (SPA-CM) Zone. Environmental Determination: The Director’s Permit is Categorically Exempt (EX19025) from environmental review pursuant to CEQA Section 15301 Class 1 of the California Code of Regulations (CCR) in that the proposed use is located within an existing commercial center and involves no expansion of the existing commercial center. Location of the Property: 340 Rancheros Drive, Suite 196, more particularly described as: The certain parcel of land shown and delineated as remainder of San Marcos Parcel Map No. 17671, in the City of San Marcos, County of San Diego, State of California, filed in the Office of the County Recorder of San Diego, March 14, 1996. Assessor’s Parcel Number: 220-311-07-00. Further information about this notice can be obtained from Jordan Yanke, Assistant Planner by calling 760-7441050 extension 3204 or jyanke@san-marcos.net. NOTICE: Any interested person may appeal the decision of the Planning Division Manager to the Planning Commission provided the appeal fee is paid ($20 for residents; $1,155 for non-residents) and a written appeal is submitted to the Planning Division Secretary within ten (10) calendar days of the date of the decision (due no later than 5:30 PM on August 29, 2019). The written appeal should specify the reasons for the appeal and the grounds upon which the appeal is based. The City’s Planning Commission will then consider the filed appeal/s at a later public hearing. The Planning Division can be contacted at 760-744-1050, extension 3233 or ghenderson@sanmarcos.net. The City of San Marcos is committed to making its programs, services and activities accessible to individuals with disabilities. If you require accommodation to participate in any City program, service or activity, please contact the City Clerk’s office at 1 Civic Center Drive, San Marcos, CA. 92069, or call 760-744-1050, extension 3145. Phil Scollick, City Clerk, City of San Marcos. PD: 08/08/19.

NOTICE OF INTENDED DECISION (Administrative)

The Planning Division Manager of the City of San Marcos has considered the proposed project and does intends to APPROVE the Director’s Permit DP19-0007 on August 19, 2019. Project No.: DP19-0007 Applicant(s): Sky Zone San Marcos, Inc. Request: Director’s Permit Renewal to allow the continued operation of an existing indoor recreation facility (trampoline park) and a reduction in the amount of required off-street parking in the Light Industrial (LI) Zone in the Business Industrial District. Environmental Determination: In accordance with the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA), the City of San Marcos did find the project Categorically Exempt (EX19020) pursuant to Section 15301 Class 1 of the California Code of Regulations (CCR), in that this is an existing facility with no expansion. Location of the Property: 860 Los Vallecitos Blvd., Suite 160, more particularly described as: Lot 17 of City of San Marcos Tract No. 211, in the City of San Marcos, County of San Diego, State of California, According to Map Thereof No. 9676, Filed in the Office of the County Recorder of San Diego County on June 10, 1980. Assessor’s Parcel Number: 219-172-55-00. Further information about this notice can be obtained from Megan Jouflas, Planning Consultant, via email at planconsultant@san-marcos.net, or Art Piñon, Associate Planner by calling 760-744-1050 extension 3234. NOTICE: Any interested person may appeal the decision of the Planning Division Manager to the Planning Commission provided the appeal fee is paid ($20 for residents; $1,155 for non-residents) and a written appeal is submitted to the Planning Division Secretary within ten (10) calendar days of the date of the decision (due no later than 5:30 PM on August 29, 2019). The written appeal should specify the reasons for the appeal and the grounds upon which the appeal is based. The City’s Planning Commission will then consider the filed appeal/s at a later public hearing. The Planning Division can be contacted at 760-744-1050, extension 3233 or ghenderson@sanmarcos.net. The City of San Marcos is committed to making its programs, services and activities accessible to individuals with disabilities. If you require accommodation to participate in any City program, service or activity, please contact the City Clerk’s office at 1 Civic Center Drive, San Marcos, CA. 92069, or call 760-744-1050, extension 3145. Phil Scollick, City Clerk, City of San Marcos. PD: 08/08/19.

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