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Local Teen Receives Free Car at Vista Rod Run

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Local Teen Receives Free Car at Vista Rod Run
Freelance Writer Matt Simpson
For the third time in as many years, TJ Crossman of TJ Crossman’s Auto Repair in Vista gave away a car to a deserving local resident. This time around, however, things were different – and in more ways than one.
On Sunday, Vista’s 28th Annual Rod Run hit the streets of downtown and served, for the first time ever, as the perfect setting for this year’s giveaway. As car enthusiasts and Vista community members looked on, TJ Crossman handed the keys to a newly renovated 2002 Nissan Altima over to the winner, Juan Soberanes.
Each year, TJ Crossman receives nominations from community members for outstanding people who give back to the community and truly make a difference. A panel of judges is selected to rifle through the submissions and select a nominee who, above all else, is deserving of a new car. For this year’s judges, one nomination stood out in a major way.

A recent graduate of Vista High School, Juan Soberanes has a resume that is longer and more impressive than that of those who are three times his age.

Soberanes has served as a Platoon Sergeant and Recruit Instructor for the North San Diego Young Marines, interned for Congressman Darrell Issa, served as an AFJROTC leader, and been named Vista High School Student of the Year all before his 19th birthday. He also managed to find time in his day to run track and cross country for his high school. While the list of accolades and achievements are impressive, the most impressive thing about Juan Soberanes can’t be put on a resume. He is driven, hard-working, and intelligent beyond his years. His desire to improve his life is remarkable, but pales in comparison to his desire to improve the lives of others. “It’s just how I was raised,” he said. “I’ve always wanted to give back.
When asked about the feeling of receiving a car for free, Soberanes was quick to remind me of what really mattered.

“What people said about me in the nominations is what really got me. Just to know that I’ve made an impact like that hit me the most.”

In an emotional speech on Sunday, TJ Crossman held back tears while surprising Juan with his new ride. “People like you make it an honor to do this,” said Crossman. “Keep up the good work and please invite me to the White House when you get there!”
Juan Soberanes received the prestigious Falcon’s Scholarship and will be attending the Air Force Academy at no cost after completion of prep school classes that begin this month. The car will be an enormous help in his drive up to Santa Barbara.

TJ Crossman was as enthusiastic about Juan Soberanes and his accomplishments as Soberanes was about the gift he received. Both of these men share the gift of humility and the community of Vista is lucky to call them Vistans.

Join in the Trip of a Lifetime in 2018

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Join in the Trip of a Lifetime in 2018
By TR Robertson
What do you have on your bucket list of places to travel to in your lifetime? Join Travel and Entertainment Writer and former Anthropology/Sociology Instructor TR Robertson and his wife Carolyn for such a bucket list trip. TR and Carolyn have led tours to the Great Wall of China, the Terra Cota warriors, the Pyramids of Egypt, Angkor Wat and throughout southern Asia, the Nazca Lines and Machu Picchu and most of South America, all throughout Europe, the Baltic, Eastern Europe, Greece and the islands of the Mediterranean, Turkey, New Zealand, Australia, Japan, Easter Island and many more destinations. But there is one part of the world they have always wanted to include in their travels.

TR and Carolyn will be hosting a 13 day trip to Israel and Jordan, leaving November 3rd, 2018

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The excursion includes staying in and sightseeing in Tel Aviv, Nazareth, Haifa, Acre, Jerusalem, Jericho, and Mount Zion while in Israel. Museums, legendary sites, markets, and archaeological excavations will be included.
Some of the sites that will be visited include the UNESCO White City, the Sea of Galilee, the Mount of Olives, the Garden of Gethsemane, the Church of the Annunciation, Mount Carmel, the Hanging Baha i Gardens, the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, the Holocaust History Museum, the Western Wall and the Israel Museum – home of the Dead Sea Scrolls. Optional tours to an Israeli wine estate and Bethlehem are offered as well as an optional trip to the ancient desert fortress of Masada located high on a desert plateau then an evening Bedouin dinner.

Western Wall and the Israel Museum

From Israel the tour will then travel to Jordan to visit Jerash, one of the best preserved Roman ruins outside of Italy. From there the tour will continue to Petra and the amazing buildings carved into the valley cliffs.
Petra -Jordan

Petra was discovered in 1812 and made famous in the Indiana Jones movies. After Petra, a stop in Amman will include the Wadi Rum, also known as the Valley of the Moon. In Amman visits will be to St. George’s Church and Mount Nebo, Moses’ burial place and ancient old city ruins.
Fortress city of Masada.

For more detailed information for those interested in this exciting tour go to http://carolynrobertson.grouptoursite.com/ and tour number 62445096. Interested persons can also call 800-438-7672 – Go Ahead Tours – for more information. The tour will include hotels, 7 breakfasts, 4 dinners, 11 guided sightseeing tours, a tour director and local guides, all ground transportation on a private deluxe motor coach. Temperatures in Israel and Jordan in November range between 65-75 degrees.
Cost for the tour is $2,738.00 and cost for air transportation is $1,600.00, but those on the tour can arrange their own transportation if they wish. There is a July promotion of $75.00 off the tour or an optional excursion. A deposit of $450 holds a reservation spot on the tour. The final payment is not due until August 25, 2018. For those that are concerned about safety travel to the mid-east, Go Ahead Tours only travels to countries on accepted travel destinations for the United States. Any additional questions can be directed to Carolyn at kodyrobertson@yahoo.com.
Don’t miss out on this trip. Our recent trip to Japan was amazing. This trip will top that.

Marijuana Initiative Notice Received in Carlsbad

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Carlsbad was one of a number of San Diego County cities last week to receive a “notice of intent” to circulate a petition to change local marijuana regulations. The notice was submitted by the Association of Cannabis Professionals.

Under the California Elections Code, the city attorney has until Aug. 11 to provide a ballot title and measure summary, after which the proponents may publish a notice of intent in the newspaper and then begin gathering signatures. To qualify for a special election, proponents must submit valid signatures for 15 percent of registered voters in Carlsbad. To qualify for the 2018 general election they must gather valid signatures from 10 percent of registered voters.

If enough valid signatures are collected, the City Council may adopt the initiative without any changes or put the initiative on the ballot.

A copy of the initiative is available on the city’s website and in the Office of the City Clerk, 1200 Carlsbad Village Drive.

For more information
City of Carlsbad, City Clerk’s Office, 1200 Carlsbad Village Drive and Faraday Administration Center, 1635 Faraday Ave., clerk@carlsbadca.gov, 760-434-2808

City of Carlsbad media contact
Kristina Ray, kristina.ray@carlsbadca.gov or 760-434-2957

Future of Bud Williamson Park Discussed at Tonights Council Meeting

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After a break for the summer the City Council will have three lively discussions tonight. Meetings are held at 5:30 pm in the Civic Center Council Chambers located on the second floor of the Civic Center, 200 Civic Center Drive, Vista, CA 92084.

In June, Mayor Ritter requested the City Manager place a discussion item on an upcoming City Council meeting agenda to discuss a request from Solutions for Change for funding support of their Solvelt Initiative as described FULL REPORT http://records.cityofvista.com/WebLink/0/doc/1539915/Page1.aspx
Councilmember Rigby requested the City Manager place a discussion item on an upcoming City Council meeting agenda to discuss the appointment process for the Planning, Traffic, and Community Safety Commissions.
FULL REPORT http://records.cityofvista.com/WebLink/0/doc/1539919/Page1.aspx
Councilmember Rigby requested the City Manager place a discussion item on an upcoming City Council meeting agenda to discuss planned renovations for Bud Williamson Park. There will be a large public input to this topic. FULL REPORT http://records.cityofvista.com/WebLink/0/doc/1539920/Page1.aspx

FULL AGENDA FOR TONIGHTS MEETING http://records.cityofvista.com/WebLink/Browse.aspx?dbid=0&startid=35311&cr=1

A Chip That Reprograms Cells Helps Healing, At Least In Mice

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August 8, 2017·5:00 AM ET
by Angus Chen
Scientists have created an electronic wafer that reprogrammed damaged skin cells on a mouse’s leg to grow new blood vessels and help a wound heal.

One day, creator Chandan Sen hopes, it could be used to be used to treat wounds on humans. But that day is a long way off — as are many other regeneration technologies in the works. Like Sen, some scientists have begun trying to directly reprogram one cell type into another for healing, while others are attempting to build organs or tissues from stem cells and organ-shaped scaffolding.

But other scientists have greeted Sen’s mouse experiment, published in Nature Nanotechnology on Monday, with extreme skepticism. “My impression is that there’s a lot of hyperbole here,” says Sean Morrison, a stem cell researcher at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center. “The idea you can [reprogram] a limited number of cells in the skin and improve blood flow to an entire limb – I think it’s a pretty fantastic claim. I find it hard to believe.”

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When the device is placed on live skin and activated, it sends a small electrical pulse onto the skin cells’ membrane, which opens a tiny window on the cell surface. “It’s about 2 percent of the cell membrane,” says Sen, who is a researcher in regenerative medicine at Ohio State University. Then, using a microscopic chute, the chip shoots new genetic code through that window and into the cell where it can begin reprogramming the cell for a new fate.

Sen says the whole process takes less than 0.1 seconds and can reprogram the cells resting underneath the device, which is about the size of a big toenail. The best part is that it’s able to successfully deliver its genetic payload almost 100 percent of the time, he says. “No other gene delivery technique can deliver over 98 percent efficiency. That is our triumph.”

Enlarge this image

Chandan Sen, a researcher at Ohio State University, holds a chip his lab created that has reprogrammed cells in mice.

Wexner Medical Center/The Ohio State University

To test the device’s healing capabilities, Sen and his colleagues took a few mice with damaged leg arteries and placed the chip on the skin near the damaged artery. That reprogrammed a centimeter or two of skin to turn into blood vessel cells. Sen says the cells that received the reprogramming genes actually started replicating the reprogramming code that the researchers originally inserted in the chip, repackaging it and sending it out to other nearby cells. And that initiated the growth of a new network of blood vessels in the leg that replaced the function of the original, damaged artery, the researchers say. “Not only did we make new cells, but those cells reorganized to make functional blood vessels that plumb with the existing vasculature and carry blood,” Sen says. That was enough for the leg to fully recover. Injured mice that didn’t get the chip never healed.

When the researchers used the chip on healthy legs, no new blood vessels formed. Sen says because injured mouse legs were was able to incorporate the chip’s reprogramming code into the ongoing attempt to heal.

That idea hasn’t quite been accepted by other researchers, however. “It’s just a hand waving argument,” Morrison says. “It could be true, but there’s no evidence that reprogramming works differently in an injured tissue versus a non-injured tissue.”

What’s more, the role of exosomes, the vesicles that supposedly transmit the reprogramming command to other cells, has been contentious in medical science. “There are all manners of claims of these vesicles. It’s not clear what these things are, and if it’s a real biological process or if it’s debris,” Morrison says. “In my lab, we would want to do a lot more characterization of these exosomes before we make any claims like this.”

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Sen says that the theory that introduced reprogramming code from the chip or any other gene delivery method does need more work, but he isn’t deterred by the criticism. “This clearly is a new conceptual development, and skepticism is understandable,” he says. But he is steadfast in his confidence about the role of reprogrammed exosomes. When the researchers extracted the vesicles and injected them into skin cells in the lab, Sen says those cells converted into blood vessel cells in the petri dish. “I believe this is definitive evidence supporting that [these exosomes] may induce cell conversion.”

Even if the device works as well as Sen and his colleagues hope it does, they only tested it on mice. Repairing deeper injuries, like vital organ damage, would also require inserting the chip into the body to reach the wound site. It has a long way to go before it can ever be considered for use on humans. Right now, scientists can only directly reprogram adult cells into a limited selection of other cell types like muscle, neurons and blood vessel cells. It’ll be many years before scientists understand how to reprogram one cell type to become part of any of our other, many tissues.

Still, Morrison says the chip is an interesting bit of technology. “It’s a cool idea, being able to release [genetic code] through nano channels,” he says. “There may be applications where that’s advantageous in some way in the future.”

Sunset Boulevard at Moonlight Starts August 16

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The next performance of the summer season will begin August 16th, it will be brilliant.
Sunset Boulevard weaves a magnificent tale of faded glory and unfulfilled ambition. Silent movie star, Norma Desmond, longs for a return to the big screen, having been discarded by tinsel town with the advent of “talkies.” Her glamour has faded in all but her mind. When she meets struggling Hollywood screen-writer Joe Gillis in dramatic circumstances, their subsequent passionate and volatile relationship leads to an unforeseen and tragic conclusion. Based on the film noir classic by Billy Wilder that starred Gloria Swanson and William Holden, it received seven Tony Awards, including Best Musical and features some of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s most soaring melodies including, With One Look and As If We Never Said Goodbye.

http://www.moonlightstage.com/performances/sunset-boulevardhttp://www.moonlightstage.com/performances/sunset-boulevard
http://www.moonlightfoundation.com/foundation/history-of-moonlight-cultural-foundation

Vista Rod Run 28 Was Classic

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August 6, 1989 was the 1st Annual Vista Rod Run. This Sunday, was the 28th year and it was yet again a Hot Rod success. The streets of Historic Downtown Vista were lined with classic Pre-74 vehicles, cruisers, trucks and all things Rod Run. The sun was a mild 78 degrees with a steady breeze and people strolled from car to car admiring the beautiful paint jobs, engines and interiors. You could hear conversations like, “Remember When”, “I Had one like that”, and “My Dad had one like that when we were little”. The grand kids were seeing hundreds of cars that are not made like that anymore.

The DJ, High Quality Entertainment, located his sound systems on each corner block to announce what was happening while he played wonderful songs of years gone by for the visitors to enjoy. Also, returning to Vista were the “Millionaire Beach Bums”. They are four San Diego kids, ages 13-16, that started playing gigs together in 2013 when they discovered they all shared a love of surf music. Today they rocked the gazebo on the corner of Main and Indiana.

Millionaire Beach Bums
Yellow Ford Woody Station Wagon

This year there were over 300 entries and 30 winners of various categories. The Overall Best Of Show and Best Chrome was the father of Ryan Bikakis with his 1956 Ford F-100. He has registered his vehicle in his sons name every year since his son passed.

An added feature to this years Rod Run was TJ Crossman from TJ Crossman’s Auto Repair, gave away a car to 18 year old Juan Soberanes. Read all about it this week in the North County Daily Star.

Best of Show and Best Chrome, Mr. Bikakis, showing his vehicle in his sons name, Ryan Bikakis
Jason and Amy Moore, 36 Plymouth

The North County Daily Star sponsored the Corvette category, and the winner was Alex Matkovich, age 77, and his wife Barbara, who entered a Blue 1961 Chevrolet Corvette. There were only 419 of this color made. Alex bought the car 54 years ago and he just recently finished refurbishing the car. This was his first competition.
Thanks to the Sponsors, North County Ford, PDT Inc and Vista Village Business Association. Debbie Medrano, with Five Star Premier Events coordinated the event. Large crowds enjoyed the day and they came from cities all over North County and beyond. They enjoyed all that Historic Vista has to offer with the hustle and bustle of the many tasting rooms, restaurants and shops.

We are now anticipating the 29th Annual Rod Run which will be August 5th, the first Sunday in August 2018. See you all then.

Juvenile Whale Spotted in Lagoon

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Beachgoers were treated to a rare up close and personal sighting of a 15 foot juvenile gray whale Monday afternoon, when the little guy found his way (or her way?) under the bridge to the Agua Hedionda Lagoon in Carlsbad. Sightings were first reported around 2 p.m., prompting Carlsbad public safety officials to call in whale experts from Sea World and set up traffic and security patrols around the lagoon inlet to ensure the safety of all mammals in the area, human and whale alike.

“We got reports of people trying to swim with the whale,” said City of Carlsbad Fire Chief Mike Davis. “It may be small by whale standards but you’re still talking about a 2,000 pound sea creature. One flip of the tail could easily incapacitate a curious swimmer.”

Police officers set up traffic controls around the bridge and urged onlookers to keep an eye out for distracted drivers and pedestrians.

Sea World officials said the whale did not appear to be in distress and should be left alone to explore, rest and do whatever else whales do. Mostly the whale cruised around just east of the bridge, giving people along Carlsbad Boulevard and nearby trail an impromptu nature show met with oohs and ahhhs, along with lots of questions. “Where’s it’s mother?” “Is it okay?” “Why is it here?”

Alas, before these questions could be answered, around 4 p.m. with one final spray out the blowhole, the whale dipped once again under the bridge and headed back out to sea, leaving the small crowd with only their memories (and iphone videos).

Woman’s Club of Vista Throw Party for “Gunfighters”

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Members of the Woman’s Club of Vista GFWC and the Contemporary Women of North County ( CWONC) joined together for a Beach Bash for the Helicopter Members of the Woman’s Club of Vista GFWC and the Contemporary Women of North County ( CWONC) joined together for a Beach Bash for the Helicopter Marine Light Attack 369 Squadron, known as the “Gunfighters”, at Camp Pendleton. The City of Vista has adopted this squadron and almost 500 Marines and their families attended.

The ladies pictured are preparing a Dessert Table, in addition to barbeque food and soft drinks for the squadron’s members and families

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Several activities for everyone included a dunk tank, volleyball, drum demonstration, and children’s activities. The Woman’s Club meets the second Wednesday of the month at the Shadowridge Golf Club at 10AM for a meeting and luncheon; all are welcome. For reservations, call 919-847-2786. www.womansclubofvista.org, known as the “Gunfighters”, at Camp Pendleton.

Operation HOPE-Vista Celebrates Birthday of Year Round Program

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Board of Directors and Volunteers L-R Kathleen Higgins, Anita Gunther, Nicole Katcher, Tracy Lyons, Beth Haight, Beatriz Palmer, Mary Donovan

Operation HOPE-Vista (Homeless Outreach Providing Encouragement), hosted a birthday celebration on Saturday, August 5th in honor of its first full year as a 12-Month Program. The celebration of this tremendous milestone brought the community and family members together with food and fun activities such as face painting, games, and live music.

In fiscal year 2017 they have served 215 individual unique clients which includes men, women, and children. Last November in 2016, there were 100 families on the wait list as the homeless population continues to grow and the need is always there. There has not been less than 45 families on their waiting list.

Operation HOPE Vista first opened its doors in 2003 as an emergency winter shelter. With the support of the community and all of their donors throughout the years, the shelter was able to open its doors as a year round shelter on August 1, 2016 to provide services to homeless families and children all year long to help them regain their hope and self sufficiency.

The shelter’s First Birthday is to celebrate all the community support and generous financial contributions from donors who together, have made this all possible for their clients.

https://www.operationhopeshelter.org/about-us

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